Seven Days, July 2, 1997

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EVERY CORNER OF THE GLOBE FIRE L A N C S New York City workers installed a new fire hydrant at the intersection of Tremont Avenue and Boston Road in the Bronx. Acknowledging complaints that the hydrant was in the street, five feet from the curb, requiring traffic to go around it, a city official said the hydrant had been installed properly. He explained the curb lane was scheduled to be replaced by a sidewalk, but bad weather >, delayed its construction, although the hydrant was installed on time. • After a Boston newspaper . published a photo of Teresa HeinzVJeep Cherokee parked/ . illegally at a fire hydrant in front

in 1969, told a parole board in March that hes too busy to be free. “I’m involved in too many things — — II have have aaWeb Web site site I’m I’m things working-on,” he told the threemember panel, which obligingly denied his parole. ‘ Rodney King, who received $3.8 million after Los Angeles police . beat him in 1991, ended his selfimposed isolation to announce the

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V I R T U A L I T y B IT E S Among the hottest computer games for teenage boys in Japan are love simulations, whose object is to try t0 get teenage gWs to faU jn jove wjdh them. The games have even spawned a magazine, Virtual Idol, which provides fictional biographies ,of the virtual girls, One letter writer credited Virtual Idol with being “just the right; kind of magazine for a person « fm like me who’s not inter­ 'I t ested in real girls.” S O R E L O S E RmS After a referee tee in ^ S* Tripoli, Libya, made a ^ questionable call against a soc-

----*>— Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.), paid to have the hydrant moved around the corner. “This both improves the pictorial environment,” said Kerrys spokesperson,1Michael Meehan, “and frees up a parking space.” B U Sy LIVES Charles Manson, 62, who is serving a life sentence in California for the murders of actress Sharon Tate and six others

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* Officials in eastern Romania began legal proceedings to oust Stefan Pavel, elected last year to a second term as mayor of Pirgaresti, after discovering that he was working illegally abroad. The European reported that Pavel took _____ A 'L .IM ' . T 1 a_____ one-month, holiday to Italy shortly after his re-election and never returned, claiming he could earn much more than his mayors salary.

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the official and the other team, When spectators jeered, Qaddafi and his bodyguards opened fire on them, killing as many as 50 peopie, including the referee. After the incident, Qaddafi declared a period of mourning, during which t . . ' . / the state television network broad­ cast only in black-and-white. M - I - C - K - E - y M -O -U -S - C Other Brazilians were offended by videotapes distributed by Disney World intending to teach

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them how to behave at the Florida amusement park. The 2000 tapes were sent to travel agents with instructions to show them to peopie who booked visits. “On the 10-minute tape, which is so irritating as to be an incitement to vandalize, kids are told how to stand in line, bathe without flooding bathrooms and put litter in proper trash cans,” Sao Paulo’s Veja magazine noted. “The high point is when the narrator suggests that children refrain from screaming when having fun.” ' . C A PH V e A V D ie N C S S Jamie Brooks, 18, filed a $5million lawsuit against Kiowa County, Oklahoma, charging that it is the county’s fault she became pregnant while in the jail awaiting her trial for murder. She said the father, inmate-trustee Eddie Alonzo, impregnated her through the bars of her cell. W ATER, WATER E V E R yWHERE Vancouver’s Global Water Corp. signed a 15-year contract with the city of Sitka, Alaska, allowing it to harvest glacial runoff amounting to 4.8 billion gallons of water a year to sell to the, Chinese. The water will be sold in

500-milliliter bottles costing 70 cents each, far cheaper than the $5.25 for bottled water from . Europe. Russia is considering exporting icebergs to countries where fresh water is scarce, accord­ ing to parliamentary vice-chairman Artur Cheiingarov. To kick off the enterprise, two Russian tugs will tow a two-million-ton iceberg to Portugal for next years World Ocean festival. Gebroulaz glacier in the French Alps is being sold by the Etievent family, which has owned the 988-acre ice chunk for 143 years. Located near two popular ski resorts, France’s only privately owned glacier is expected to bring between $870,000 and $1 million, O V E R C O M IN G A D V E R sn y While New Mexico State mens basketball team was warming up at Idaho’s Kibbie Dome, a discus from a trade meet at an adjoining area sailed oyer a grandstand surrounding the court. It landed near guard Denmark Reid, bounced once, then struck him in the chest. Reid suffered a bruised sternum but played in the game, scoring 19 points — his highest total of the season. ®

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WRONG SPIN ON COUNCIL Ah, Peter Freyne. He never writes about women unless there is something negative to say. Well, what can we expect from the man whose idea of how to treat a female press colleague is to ask her to perform an obscene act on him? The spin in his story (Inside Track, June 25) . is: Here’s the new, unencumbered director of the 1 Women’s Council bravely facing down the Progs A few years ago, Robert while the ex-director kowtowed to them. Good Tom, owner of 135 Pearl, start­ spin — just not true. In my 10 years as the ed an event that he thought director, no one from the administration or the would help spice up Pride. That Progressive party suggested what the Womens year’s event was titled “Unity.” Council agenda should be. In reality, the However, it was far from that. Council developed policies and sometimes went Many people in the gay com­ to the administration for support. And got it for munity were outraged to think some very worthy projects, such as self-defense that Robert would try to pull classes for women, a women in the trades ordi­ people away from Pride and nance, oversight of BPD domestic violence treat­ into his own venue. I was one ment, and transitional housing for women. person who felt the same way. If But the foulest part of Freyne’s column is the this was supposed to be about lesbian baiting. Freyne quotes Maureeen Dyer, unity, then why is everyone try­ saying that I did not know Jennifer was a hetero­ ing to do different things on the sexual when I hired her, and that she and some­ same day and creating competi­ one else fooled me into thinking Matthews was tion? Doesn’t the gay communi­ a lesbian, because they allege I would not have ty have enough problems about hired her otherwise. This is sheer fabrication... being accepted for who they Maureen used to call me nearly everyday at the ^ ! are, without having turmoil in Council with the latest conspiracy theory on her I their own community? mind and is now using lesbian-baiting to dis­ I was very upset when I saw credit me. I absolutely knew that Matthews was the ad for the dance in your heterosexual when I hired her... ; paper. The derogatory remarks No candidate for the job of director was ever that ad created was underhand­ questioned about their sexuality or their political ed and in poor taste. Robert is party affiliations. From conversations about pro­ not trying to destroy Pride, only grams and about relocating here with her family, add something else to it... I knew that Jennifer had a male partner. A few years ago, Pride was Contrary to Maureen’s off-the-wall allegations, I celebrated over a seven-day peri­ hired her knowing that. My issues with od with theater events, dances, Matthews have nothing to do with her sexuality cruises and such, with absolutely no conflicts and I did not call her a homophobe... whatsoever. Isn’t it about time to look back to If women didn’t come to the Council while I yesteryear and celebrate Pride the way it should was there it was not because they were not wel­ be celebrated? come or that the Council was not open. When As for Vermont CARES, I’m shocked that feminists express support for women they are they would allow such an ad to be placed. often called man-haters and, apparently to some, Robert has done so many things for them and an out, proud lesbian must not like straight the community at large... wom en... As President of BCPI [Burlington City — Peggy Luhrs Players], my organization has refused to support Burlington VT CARES until such a time that they can show me that they have matured and will evalu­ ate how and where they want to get their money from. As for Constance Craving Productions, I think a public apology is required... — Dean Pratt Burlington

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PRIDE COMETH I’m responding to and prais­ ing the letter Bob Bolyard wrote (Weekly Mail, July 25) pertaining to the ad about the Pride Dance during Pride Week and the controversy in the gay community.

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FICTION: TINA'S ISLAND By Laurel

Savi l l e

.................................page 7

GOOD NEWS & BAD NEWS Theater Review: News o f the City, Talk o f the Town

By Amy Rubin

....................................... page 14

IMPERSONAL POLITICS Book Review: O utsider in the House

By Peter Freyne.................................. ...page 19

LIFE SENTENCES Ten must-reads from a cranky critic By Peter Kurth .....................................page 21

RE BORN ON THE FOURTH OF JULY Everyone loves a parade, fo r 10 m inutes in Moscow, Vermont

By Robert Kiener

.........

...page 23

OUTDOORS; THE OUTSIDE SCOOP I f you cant spend all your tim e outdoors this summer, ju s t read about it

By David Healy

........................

page 31

WRITING AND SUBMITTING FICTIONTHE RULES By Jeremy Rosenberg............................... page 32

READY TO WARE A ntique o f the Week

By Gail

Rosenberg.................................. page 37

d e p a r t m e n t s news q u i r k s ............................. p a g e 2 page 3 w e e k l y m a i l ............................... exposure ................................... page 3 s t r a i g h t d o p e ............................... page 4 inside track ............................ page5 backtal k ................................... page 6 ............................... page 8 sound advi ce cal en dar .......................................page 24 art l i s t i n g s ............................. page 38 v i d i o t s a v a n t ............................... page 40 ta lkin g pictures .........................page 41 wellness d ir e c t o r y ..................... page 42 h ea lth q&a ................................... page 42 real a s t r o l o g y ............................ page 43 c l a s s i f i e d s ................................... page 44 g r e e t i n g s fromdug nap ................ page 44 p e r s o n a l s .......................................page 45 l o l a , the l ove c o u n s e l o r . . . . page 46

s t a f f COPUBLISHERS/EDITORS Pamela Polston, Paula Routly ARTDIRECTORS Samantha Hunt, Michael Barrett PRODUCTIONMANAGER Samantha Hunt WWWGUYJames Lockridge CIRCULATION MANAGER/CLASSIFIEDS/PER50NALS Glenn Severance SALESMANAGER Rick Woods ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Michelle Brown, Sam Kunz, Eve Jarosinski, Nancy Payne, Rick Woods CALENDARWRITER Clove Tsindle CONTRIBUTINGWRITERS Nancy Stearns Bercaw, Marialisa Calta, Rachel Esch, Peter Freyne, David Healy, Ruth Horowitz, Samantha Hunt, Kevin J. Kelley, Rick Kisonak, Peter Kurth, Lola, R Finn McManamy, Tom Paine, Bryan Pfeiffer, Ron Powers, Amy Rubin, Molly Stevens PHOTOGRAPHER Matthew Thorsen ILLUSTRATORS Paul Antonson, Michael Barrett, Gary Causer, Sarah Ryan INTERN Jessica Rowse SEVEN DAY S is published by Da Capo Publishing, Inc. every Wednesday. It is distributed free o f charge in greater Burlington, Middlebury, Montpelier, Stowe, the Mad River Valley, Rutland, St. Albans, and Plattsburgh. Circulation: 16,500. Sixm on th First C lass su b scrip tion s are available for $30. O n e -y ea r First C lass su b scrip tion s are available for $60. S ix -m o n th T h ird C lass su b scrip tion s are available for $15. O n e-year T h ird C lass su b scrip tion s 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 Classjfieds/Personals or display advertising, please call the number below. L j VERIFIED m fTfl AUDITCIRCULATION M

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Dear Cecil, / just hit 40 and still have an unanswered question from my teens that has always bothered me. Aerosmith in "Sweet Emotion’sings about being accused o f impregnating a girl. At the end o f the verse they sing, “Cant catch me cause the rabbit done died, “referring to a pregnancy test. Arguments start overjust what this test entails. Most say the bunny will die, but cant agree as to why. Some say the rabbit will always die because they kill it before they take its blood (which seems pretty dumb). Some say they inject it with some fluid taken from the woman and it dies a horri­ ble, convulsive death. And some say they have to dissect the rabbit after it has been injected This was before those home test kits, but wasn’t there a better way? — Joe ShredI, Colonial Heights, Virginia The rabbit test isn’t used much anymore, and, feeling a need to conserve neurons, I hadn’t studied the matter too closely myself. Frankly, I had the idea that the death of the rabbit signified a positive result; i.e., you were pregnant. Always struck me as weird. What were you supposed to do, cheer for the rabbit to die? Turns out I was misinformed. The bunny dies regardless of the out­ come of the test — not altogether happy news, but at least we get away from the unfortunate equation of one more human » one less rabbit. I learn this from Clark, head of the surgical division of the Straight Dope Science Advisory Board. Clark scoffed at the idea that one could obtain * accurate scientific knowledge from Aerosmith tunes. He preferred UM*A*S*H” (the TV show), which had a relevant episode. Here’s the background. In the rabbit test and other pregnancy “bioassays” (animal-based tests), you injected some of the woman’s urine m t o ^ < ^ e r and observed what ^pencd^P uri»8 «vly?pwgri nancy the hi^ejontains an elevated level of hCG (human chorionic ^ gonadotropin),,%bkirtrigger$. “corpora b<lno«•hag^ca’, (bulging mass­ es) in the female rabbit’s ovaries. Grim though these sound, the real problem for the rabbit was that you couldn’t see them if the rabbit . dissect it. The difference in the “M*A*S*H” episode — I believe they ..... pregpftt -T- was that

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I I ------- ---------------------------; ■ - „ Summer in the mountains. The town’s full * of tourists. Sailboats on the lake. But where is 1 our governor, Howard B. Dean III? | The governor’s office didn’t fax around a I weekly schedule of “public appearances” for this jj week, so yours truly called ’em up on the tele1 phone. Gubernatorial Press Secretary Stephanie | Carter said there was no schedule because Gov. | Dean was not making any public appearances I this week. “Where is he?” we asked. I “On vacation,” she said. | “Where?” we asked. | “In Virginia,” she replied. “What town?” we asked. 1 Stephanie said she didn’t know. W hat’s up? | Surely Ho-Ho’s trusted press secretary and | spokesperson must know where Ho-Ho is at ®any given moment. Part of the job. But ®Stephanie wasn’t saying. Why the secrecy? 1 “Vacation,” she repeated. “He’s on vaca| tion.” I So we called the office of our first lady, HoHo’s doctor wife, Judith Steinberg, and learned 1 that she was on the job Monday seeing patients. 1 Vacation without the missus? Then we called Lite-Gov Doug Racine *' down at the car dealership. Dougie checked his schedule and confirmed he’d been the acting governor of Vermont all weekend. See, whenever the Gov departs the Green Mountains and cfosses the state line, the Lite-Gov takes over. Doug said he’d be the act­ ing governor of Vermont through next weekend. And no, he didn’t know where Ho-Ho was. Look, it’s a big country out there, and Virginia’s a big state, and we don’t have the time or resources to go looking for the governor of Vermont in Dixie. So if anyone reading this sees Dr. Dean, the kind of short chief executive with the thick neck and flashing smile, please tell him to call home. As for his royal spokesper­ son, well, obviously she’s not in the information business. On the Road — Our congress­ man was also on the road this weekend and, unlike the strange situation with our governor, our congressman’s staff had no qualms about saying where he actually went. Bernie Sanders went to Palo Alto and Berkeley, California, to promote his new book among left-wingers on the West-Coast. Hey, they love him out there. Fact is, Outsider in the House needs promoting. For a review of Bernie’s Bible, check page 19 in this issue. Women’s Council Update — The former direc­ tor of the Burlington Women’s Council did not take kindly to last week’s Inside Track. Peggy Luhrs blew her stack when she read it, and her I first stop was City Hall. The current council ®director, Jennifer Matthews, tells Inside Track I that Luhrs was in a foul mood when she | stopped into the office. Seems that what irked | Peggy rnost was the insinuation that she did not „ know Matthews was “straight” when she ^ approved her hiring as the BWC’s second direc1 tor. Matthews says Peggy insisted they’d had a | conversation about the new director’s significant I other — a male — prior to taking over the jj reins. But Matthews tells Inside Track she told i Luhrs that conversation occurred after taking | the job. | That didn’t sit well with Peggy. Matthews says she slammed the door on the way out and 1 also gave it a tattoo with her foot S “It was quite an exit,” says Matthews. “She SMMMM MM MM MMMMMMMM IMMS

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slammed the door quite loudly and kicked it three or four times. I got up to tell her that was totally inappropriate,” she says, “but she’d run | out of the building.” g That brought other City Hall workers out * ELISHA MORGAN of their offices to see what the commotion was. 1 S enior G e m o l o g is t Matthews say she followed the advice of the custodian and informed Burlington Police of g Highest Prices Paid the confrontation. Large Diamonds Shortly thereafter, Officer Bill Ward had the 1 unpleasant task of asking Ms. Luhrs to get off § Fine Estate Jew elry her bicycle on Church Street. Bikes and skate- | Vintage & Fine Watches boards are verboten on the city’s pedestrian mall. _ Ward caught an earful, and says Luhrs com­ 802-651-0811 plained there was no “bike path” on Church J o h n A n t h o n y D e s ig n e r 131 Main St, Burlington, VT Street. The city council ought to look into that. | 130 Church St. • Burlington, V T Accredited Gemologists Assn. (802) 660-9086 Okay. § RecognizedbyThePlatinumGuildInternational- USA Peggy’s next stop was the office of this dis- ** tinguished little weekly, where her high-decibel I visit caused quite the stir. Finally Ms. Luhrs calmed down and depart- g [ m a r t in ed. She apparently went to the nearest pay phone and called yours truly. Practically bit my 1 ear off — and this was three days before the Holyfield-Tyson bout. Peggy did not appreciate g Saturday, July 26 the recounting of her rap sheet, and had noth- g ing kind to say about Maureen Dyer. Says it’s » Attractions will be not true about being led to believe Jennifer was 1 • Irv Gordon and his 1.5 million mile Volvo a lesbian. Dyer says it is. • New, all-w heel-drive Volvos And the beat goes on • The awesom e new C 7 0 C oupe • VCOA's 1 9 6 5 2 1 0 Hearse Censorship is alive and well, as ® Media Notes • air b a g and sa fety dem onstrations • parts g a r a g e sa le we know from WCAX-TV’s • specials on new and used Volvos refusal to sell air time to the • free safety inspection b y appointm ent - with 1 5% off Vermont Department of Health g su ggested work com pleted within 3 0 d a y s for safe-sex advertisements pro- ’ 9 8 5 - 1 0 3 0 1 - 8 0 0 - 6 3 9 - 5 0 8 8 • 3 E xecu tive Dr., S h elb u rn e moting the use of condoms. But 8 that’s not all the censoring that f goes on at Vermont’s CBS affili- | ate. Station owner Stuart “Red” MIDDLEBURY M artin tells Inside Track the 15 P v fc Stre et * 3 8 8 -9 8 0 9 1 station has also censored BURLINGTON “Seinfeld.” The episode that 19 Center Street ' 882-98091 dealt with masturbation never Tf made it on Ch. 3’s airwaves. 4 OEM Whew! We’re all saved! Greer Update — A roller-coast- | ow n CAMPING er ride last week for Glenn ■ SUPPLIES ■ In tra n e t Koski of South Hero — he k —J came within a whisker of get_ g p | ting released pending sentencI ing. Unlike the other four I ■ ■ defendants, Koski was found \M I guilty on just one charge — R Rm violating the U.S. Maritime C o n v e n ie n tly Locate d jTWKXS Drug Act. He appeared before Magistrate Jerome Niedermeier g to try to get the detention order * removed. Friends and neigh1 bors, including a South Hero § selectman, testified he was an g TOYOTA upstanding citizen, a great father and would in » no way be a danger to the community or a dan- * M o n -F r i 8 a -7 p S a t 9 a -5 p ger of flight. The president of the local Little 1 NISSAN League told the magistrate that if Koski were | released on bail he’d be behind home plate on g P O N T IA C . Oldsmobile []] Saturday umpiring a ballgame. But the way federal drug laws are written, 1 Koski’s lawyer, M artin Maley, had to show there was a “substantial likelihood” he would be | acquitted or win a new trial on appeal. Maley „ argued the Canadian “consent” to allow the U.S. to apply its drug laws on Canadian territo- | ry came much too late — after the statute of | limitations ran out. Niedermeier shocked every- g one by buying that argument. He ordered Koski released on just $1000 cash bail. A visibly | angry Assistant U.S. Attorney Greg Waples asked for a 24-hour stay of the release order. g Koski went back to the slammer for what he expected to be his last night in jail. But the next 1 day all that changed. Down in federal court in j Rutland, Judge J. Garvan Murtha overruled Niedermeier. No release. No umpiring on Saturday. Close but no cigar. This week attorneys for the five convicted drug smugglers filed motions for acquittal as well | as for a new trial. It ain’t over till it’s over. ® m

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Hosting symphony soloists is usually no big whoop. A well-tempered clavier here, a wellpressed tuxedo there. But country crossover artist Mark O ’Connor came to Vermont looking for a fight — specifically the Mike Tyson match. The fiddling sensation — who has played with Lyle Lovett and Yo Yo Ma —- played a series of con­ certs with the Vermont Symphony Orchestra last week. But off­ stage he wanted boxing, not Bach. It took a small challenge grant from the Vermont Symphony to get a local bar in Ascutney to buy the fight on pay-per:view so O ’Connor could catch it between concerts. Then symphony director Tom Philion spent a day rounding up the sheet music for the guest fiddler’s next big gig — the Washington wedding of A1 Gore’s daughter. Burlington’s Rollingstock Music came through with the Baptist hymns. And symphony cellist Eugene Kim delivered at the Shelburne Farms concert, on the bluegrass standard “Limerock.” Even O ’Connor agreed he was Ma-velous.

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Strawberry Time AT THE ONION RIVER CO-OP

CRAFT CORNER The new executive director o f Frog Hollow is a banker, but not the anal, cash-counting kind. Bill Brooks worked for 20 years as chief executive officer of a savings bank with 35 branches. At 50, he gave up the gold to go to graduate school in folk art studies. More specifically, to count hat boxes as an intern at the Shelburae Museum. Now assistant to the owner of the Virginia Lynch Gallery in Little Compton, Rhode Island, Brooks claims to have “plenty of experience in the retail promotion and selling of painting and sculpture.” And he knows how to run a cash register, too.

W elcom e B ack R iver B erry Farm !

Fresh Local Strawberries! • Excellent for sm ooth­ ies, fruit salads, dipped in chocolate, shortcake, rhubarb pie, just plain!

Come to our Straw berry Spirulina Sm oothie demo - W ednesday, Ju ly 9th, 5 -7 pm.

Food For People, Not For Profit. lV

FILM SHORTS Phish out of water? Just months after his publishing debut, Phish bassist Mike Gordon is anticipating his cinematic one. Athough no one at the Vermont International Film Foundation has seen Good Wood, there is no doubt the seven-minute short will bring new viewers to an upcoming showcase of Vermont filmmakers in~S«. Albans — albeit baggyassed patchouli pilgrims. Nothing like “developing new audi­ ences for independent media,” as Jay Craven would say . . . Fred Tuttle has a cameo. Dave Giancola is directing. And one of four local leaders — Bernie Sanders, Patrick Leahy, Howard Dean or Peter Clavelle — will play the politician in a family video to be shot in mid-July at Shelburne Farms. New vaudevillean Woody Keppel stars in the film he wrote about a bumbling farmhand — sort of an agricultural “Sorcerer’s Apprentice” from It’s a Fine Mess Productions. He spent two years trying to con­ vince Shelburite to buy into the jjfoject.^ “Ndbhdy is, going to say, ‘Great video, lousy setting,”’ Keppel comments . . . The bad news about Lorraine Good? She is leaving Vermont with her husband, Karel Samsom, for a three-year stint in the Netherlands. The former director of the Vermont International Film Festival has been a huge help to the newly founded Vermont Film Commission. “I am going to wear the Vermont flag wrapped around me with a film strip hanging from my back,” says Good, who will return twice a year in her new role as “European link” to the commission. “So you are not getting rid of me so easily.”

NEW SUNDAY HOURS 11-7!

BRIEF The majority of Vermont artists are not alt-rock musicians, but painters and sculptors, according to a survey con­ ducted by the Vermont Arts Council. Thirty-seven percent of the respondents are visual artists. The next largest category is multidiscipline,” with 25 percent. Ten percent are musicians, 9 percent are writers and 7 percent are craftspeople. Weighing in with less than 1 percent of the artistic population, opera singers and design artists must be living someplace else . . . Last seen at the Academy Awards for his performance in Fargo, actor Bill •Macy was spotted on a Burlington-bound plane on Monday. The rubber-faced actor is teaching at Trinity as part of the sixweek intensive theater school started by David Mamet. His schedule is a little crazy right now, but the folks at Adantic Theater Company are trying to get him “to do something” on stage” . . . Speaking of guest appearances, what a surprise to see Free Press reporter M att Sutkoski perched naked on a rock in the current issue of Vermont Unveiled, a naturalist guide to statewide skinny-dipping. Thankfully he is covering his, well, bases.

274 North Winooski Avenue, Burlington 863-3659 WE’RE OPEN EVERY DAY! Mon-Sat. 9:30-8:00 • Sun, 11-7 e r 5u page 6

SEVEN DAYS

July

2

& ^9 ,

1997


'm watching an old "Gilligan's Island" rerun when Mom yells at me Irom the kitchen, "Tina, I'm making a G&T. Would you like one?"

I

My mom has this idea that as long as she drinks with someone else, she's not an alcoholic. She told me that once. Alcoholics are only peo­ ple who drink belore live in the evening or drink alone. I don't drink much, but she only needs someone to share the first one of the day with her. She pretty much handles the rest of the night's drinking on her own.

I’ve been through “Batman & Robin/j “Lost in Space,” “The Addams Family,” some public television show on fish­ ing, “Catching the Big One.” And now, Gilligan’s getting into trouble. But that’s what it’s always like on this show. Gilligan gets everyone into trouble, and then gets everyone out of trouble, too. Mom’s standing in the door­ way. No drinks in her hand, just standing there, pulling at her fingers. “What?” I say. “There’s no tonic up here. Could you go check the down­ stairs fridge?” She looks at her hands. “Please? For me?” She hates going down there. Ever since that time she went down and found my brother banging his girlfriend on the pool table. There’s still a stain, still looks wet, right where you’re supposed to cue up the white ball. “Next commercial,” I say. She bends around the door frame and looks at the televi­ sion. “It’s a commercial now,” she says. “I know. That’s why it’s gotta be the next commercial. It might start anytime.” She stands there for a minute. Then the show comes back on, and she goes away. The Professor and the Skipper are trying to comfort Maryann. She’s got no clue that they’re really just jonesing to untie her little red-and-white top and pull down her pigtails. Sometimes, I wonder what it’d be like to be her. All wide-eyed and innocent. Dumb and soft like a rabbit. There are girls like that at

W I N N I N G

school. They always have some jock hanging all over them, a big, meaty arm laying over their shoulders when they walk down the hall. They pretend to push the guy away when he leans over them outside class, nearly cramming them into their lock­ ers, trying to get a kiss, cop a feel. They wander into class, all red and blushing, not looking at anyone, pretending to be embarrassed. I’ve never been like that. I’ll never be like that. Silly and simple and sweet. Way too late for that. Mom’s standing there again. No drinks. “Tina. Would you please come downstairs with me?” “Next commercial.” “I got the tonic,” she says. “It’s something else.” I look at her. Her mouth is two thin, red lines of lipstick, like always. I’m wondering why. Like who’s going to see? She rubs her forehead. Her nails are red, too. All of a sudden, I’m wondering when she got so skinny, when her skin got so hammered. All the cigarettes. The TV volume jumps up loud with someone talking and laughing. We both look. It’s just a commercial. I get up, turn it off, and follow her into the kitchen, down the stairs by the pantry. I haven’t been in the basement in a long time. I hate it down here, too. Ugly wood paneling, little shitty windows at the top of the walls all cov­ ered with dirt and cobwebs from the outside. Pool table, old furniture, yellow bean-bag chair covered with black ciga­ rette burns. Continued on page 15

W O R D S

Congratulations to Laurel Saville of Jericho for taking top honors in the first annual Emerging Writers in Short Fiction competition, sponsored by Seven Days and the Book Rack. Her story, “Tinas Island,” was one of 250 entries — a testament to our local literary talent pool, my thanks to our esteemed judges — Huddle, Abigail Stone, Philip Baruth, Jay Parini and Tom Paine — whose collective fiction remains an inspiration to us. And to the Book Rack in Winooski, for its generous support of local writing and publishing. Owners Mike DeSanto and Rene Reiner donated a $750 cash prize to the winner and $100 gift certificates to the three runners-up: Creston Lea and M. Brooke Capps o f Burlington, and Peg and Laurie King o f Hinesburg. Awards be presented on July 30, 7 p.m., at the BO O K the Champlain Mill. RACK P o ll %«• 1 “ r. V I E K . . ' ' '•

i u l y .2

& 9,

19 9 7

SEVEN DAYS fk

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them O U f ! Club T o ast! W e d n e s d a y , J u ly 2 • 1 0

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• S atu rd a y , J u ly 5, 9 am , F arm er's m a r k e t, W a itslie ld • S atu rd a y , J u ly 5, 7 pm, A m e r ic a n F la tb rea d , W a itslie ld S e e th e m at S o la r fe s t '9 7 - Friday. J u ly IS Call 4-96-3911 lor in fo rm ation

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July 8 6:oo

BBQ byThe Daily Planet

8:oo

ShowTime

Spill (above) comprise one-30th of this afternoon-to-wee-hours nonstop show case. It’s another shout heard

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NRBQ July 23

and don’t m iss the apocalypso July 12.

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BBQ byThe Daily Planet

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REGGAE EXPLOSION:

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Maxi Priest Third World The Original Waiters

HULLABALLOO (rock), Breakwater Cafe, 4:30 p.m. NC. GOPHER BROKE (bluegrass), Cactus Cafe, 8 p.m. NC. SAUDADE (live Brazilian jazz), 133 Pearl, 9:30 p.m. $4. NIGHT OF THE CRISPY CRITTERS (soul shakedown party), Java Love, 8 p.m. NC. BIG HEAVY WORLD PRESENTS TOAST UNPLUGGED W/DAVID ROSENSTEIN, FULL MOON HEART, STEPH PAPPAS EXPERIENCE (acoustic), Club Toast, 9:30 p.m. $1/5. HEARTQUAKE97 (house DJ Roberta Renna), Club Metronome, 9 p.m. NC. SETH YACOVONE (blues), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. NC. BOKO MARV (jazz), Vermont Pub & Brewery, 10 p.m. NC. CRAIG MITCHELL &ORANGE FACTORY (funk/acid), Manhattan Pizza, 10 p.m. NC. A

July 28 6:00

BBQ byThe Daily Planet

8:00

ShowTime

Little Feat August 12 6:00

BBQ byThe Daily Planet

8:00

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T he

O kO

U N T e jiN

D a n c e h a ll

The Flynn Box Office Pure Pop Records

To charge by phone or for more

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information call 86-FLYNN Produced by A ll Points Booking. Co-sponsored by:

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Date and Tim e are subject to change. Applicable service charges additional. Must be 18 + to enter, 21+ with positive ID to drink.

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FIREWORKS PARTY, Breakwater Cafe, 4:30 p.m. NC. ALEX SMITH (folk favorites), Windjammer, 6:30 p.m. NC. JAMES HARVEY &JENNI JOHNSON (jazz), Leunig’s, 8 p.m. NC. OPEN MIKE NIGHT W/MARK GALBO (jazz-blues), Cactus Cafe, 9 p.m. NC. SAUDADE (Brazilian), Halvorson’s, 9 p.m. $2. THE RETRO "PALACE (DJ Psychotrope), 135 Pearl, 10 p.m. $4. LOVE-ASHBURY: NO TIME TO HAIGHT (freestyle groove gumbo), Java Love, 8 p.m. NC. DECA-DANCE (’80s & ’90s DJ), Club Toast, 9:30 p.m. $5. THE PANTS (modern rock), Club Metronome, 9 p.m. $4. THE X-RAYS (rock), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. NC. BOKO MARV (jazz), Manhattan Pizza, 10 p.m. NC. JIM'S BLUES BASH, Vermont Pub & Brewery, 10 p.m. NC. RUSS & CO. (rock), Alley Cats, 9 p.m. NC. OPEN COMEDY W/KAMIKAZE, Breakers Entertainment, Williston, 8 p.m. NC. TNT (karaoke), 1 hirsty lurtle, Waterbury, 9 p.m. NC. AB/tlR BROS, (rock), Rusty Nail, Stowe, 9 p.m. $5. OPEN MIKE, Gallaghers, Waits field, 8:30 p.m. NC. WARREN PARADE ALLSTAR BAND (funk/jazz), Mad Mountain Tavern, Waitsfield, 9:30 p.m. $3. JIM & IAN (DJs), Charlie-o’s, Montpelier, 9 p.m. NC. Q

FRIDAY

STRANGEFOLK (groove rock), Battery Park, 3 p.m. NC. RUSS & CO. (rock), Breakwater Cafe, 4:30 p.m. NC. CLYDE STATS TRIO (jazz), Windjammer, 5 p.m. NC. LIVE MUSIC (jazz), Mona’s, 6:30 p.m. BOOTLESS & UNHORSED (Irish), Last Chance, 7:30 p.m. NC. BROOKE CHABOT & MARK GALBO (contemporary jazz), Cactus Cafe, 8 p.m. NC. JAVAPALOOZA 4: "GIVENESS" (multi-band musical hootenanny), Java Love, 4 p.m. NC. MIDLIFE CHRYSLER (oldies rock), Halvorson’s, 10 p.m. $4. DANCE PARTY (DJ Craig Mitchell), 135 Pearl, 9 p.m. $4/5. BAD LIVERS, CONSTRUCTION JOE, CRANIAL PERCH (bluegrass, alt), Club Toast, 9:30 p.m. $7. VIPERHOUSE, DOWN LOW CONNECTION (acid jazz), Club Metronome, 9 p.m. $4. THE X-RAYS (rock), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. NC. AUGUS­ TA BROWN (groove rock), Manhattan Pizza, 10 p.m. NC. SAUDADE (Brazilian), Vermont Pub & Brewery, 10 p.m. NC. TWILIGHT IDOLS (rock), Alley Cats, 9:30 p.m. NC. COMEDY ZONE (stand-up), Radisson Hotel, 8

pgiat™

The Old Lantern Dancehall is located o ff the Ferry Road in Charlotte.

page

THURSDAY

Tickets are on sale at

Sound Source in Middlebury

BREEWIR0NMENR

WEDNESDAY

BAND NAME OF THE WEEK:

yankee Poodle

Rhythm & News will return July 16. Seven Days is on vacation next week.

SEVEN DAYS

july

2 & 9,

19 9 7


The 3rd A n n u a l

S U M M E R FOLK FESTIVAL E N JO Y PO R C H & D E C K D IN IN G W IT H C O M P L E T E L Y A C O U S T IC M U S IC

T

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m o u n t a i n T

u e s d a y

&

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O P E N S E V E N D a y s AT

& 10 p m $7 SMOKIN' GUN (rock), Franny O ’s, 9:30 p.m. NC. PARKS-VACHON (acoustic rock), Jake’s, 7 p m NC TAKE 2 (rock), Patches Pub, Holiday Inn, 9 p.m. NC. MOBILE MUSIC (DJ dance party), Breakers Club & Cafe, 9 p.m. NC. POCAHONTAS UNZIPPED (original rock), Trackside, Winooski, 9:30 p.m. $2. ABAIR BROS, (rock), Rusty Nail, Stowe, 9 p.m. $5. SHANE BRODY (folk), Three Mountain Lodge, Jeffersonville, 6 p.m. NC. TAMMY FLETCHER & THE DISCIPLES (blues, soul), Cafe Banditos, Jeffersonville, 9:30 p.m. $4. MIKE TROMBLEY EXPERIENCE (rock), Thirsty Turtle, Waterbury, 9 p.m. $2. AARON HERSEY (funk), Gallaghers, Waitsfield, 9:30 p.m. NC. KELLY BURKE HOMEGROWN (classic rock), Charlie-os, Montpelier, 10 p.m. NC. TOM VITZHUM (acoustic guitar), Main Street Bar & Grill Downstairs, Montpelier, 8 p.m. NC. DIAMOND JIM JAZZ BAND, Diamond Jims Grille, St. Albans, 8 p.m. NC. LONE WOLF (rock), Swany’s, Vergennes, 9 p.m.

NC

A

l o d g e 6 :3 0

4 :0 0

- 9 :3 0

p m

PM

8 0 2 . 6 4 4 .5 7 3 6 S M U G G L E R S ’ NOTCH ROAD, R T E .

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SATURDAY

LIVE MUSIC (jazz). Monas, 7 p.m. NC. JAVAPA100ZA 4: "GIVENES5" (multi-band musical hootenanny), Java Love 4 p m NC. CHRIS EARLY (jazz-blues), Cactus Cafe, 8 p.m. NC. DEAD MAH'S HAND (groove rock), Ruben lames, 9 p.m. NC. WILBUR'S D06 (rock), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. NC. LITTLE MARTIN (DJ), 135 Pearl 9 p m $4/5 RETRONOME (DJ Craig Mitchell), Club Metronome, 9 p.m. NC. DYSFUNK5HUN, THE HOGS, MARGOT DAY (hip-hop, punk, funk), Club Toast, 9:30 pm. $5. STEPH PAPPAS EXPERIENCE (blues), Manhattan Pizza, 10 p m N C BOOTLESS & UNHORSED (Irish), Last Chance, 7:30 p.m. NC. BROTHERHOOD (rock), Vermont Pub & Brewery, 10 p.m. NC. TWILIGHT IDOLS (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. NC. TAKE Z (rock), Pat^ “ Holiday Inn, 9 p.m. NC. BOB GESSER (jazz guitar), Tuckaway’s, Sheraton Hotel, 9 p.m. NC. POCAHONIAS UNZIPPED (original rock), Trackside, Winooski, 9:30 p.m. $2. LIVE MUSIC (acoustic), Greatful Bread, Essex let noon NC. LONE WOLE (rock), Swany’s, Vergennes, 9 p.m. NC. RICHARD RUANE (singer-songwriter), Rip,on Community Coffee House, 7:30 p.m. $3. MIKE TROMBLEY EXPERIENCE (rock), Thirsty Turtle Waterbury, 9 p.m. $2. ANGRY SALAD (rock), Gallagher’s, Waitsfield, 9:30 p.m. NC. WARREN PARADE ALLSTAR BAND (funk/jazz), Mad Mountain Tavern, Waitsfield, 9:30 p.m. $3. VIPERHOUSE (acid jazz), Rusty Nail, Stowe, 9 p.m. $5. MARK LEGRAND A SARAH MUNRO (folk), Main Street Bar and Grill Downstairs, Montpelier, 8 p.m. NC. scon KOKIN (blues-rock), Charlie-o’s, Montpelier, 9 p.m. NC. ^ SUNDAY JOHN BOEHM (folk legend series), Java Love, 8 p.m. NC. FLEX RECORDS NIGHT (DJ), Club Metronome, 9 p.m. NC. CROSBY, STILLS & NASH PRESHOW PARTY, Club Toast, 7 p.m. $6. NERBAK BROS, (rock), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. NC. LIVE MUSIC (acoustic), Greatful Bread, Essex Jet., 1 p.m. NC. TNT (karaoke & DJ), Thirsty Turtle, 8 p.m. NC. GLENDAN ENGALLS (acoustic), Main Street Bar and Grill Downstairs, Montpelier, 11 a.m. NC. SARAH MUNRO & MARK LEGRAND (acoustic), LaBrioche Cafe, Montpelier, 11 a.m. NC.

. . . KING OF THE MOUNTAIN For the fifth year, Kllllngton’s W EBK radio hosts a whompin’ Mountain Jam at Pico. The original headliner, Cake, canceled last w eek (vocalist John M cCrea’s “exhaustion” brought down the band’s whole tour, including a date at the Flynn), but E B K scram bled mightily and cam e up with the laudable Jam es McMurtry. The rootsy, Austinbased singer-songwriter tops a line-up that includes Naked, Fool’s Progress, Robert Bradley’s Blackw ater Surprise, Genghis Angus and local bands Satin and Gypsy Reel. C h e ck out the tower of power July 1 2 — Long Trail’s on

SATURDAY, JULY 5th S pecial G u e st P e rfo rm a n c e VIPERHOUSE b o o g e y in g b ack fro m Ben & J e r r y 's F est fo r a m e re $5

SATURDAY, JULY 20th o u r o w n re g g a e fe s t w ith L o b ste rb a k e ja m m in ' to C hannel 2 Dub an d m o re.

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S T ^ N E

253-NAIL

Continued on page 10

145 CHERRY SLBURL1NET0DI -863 0539 July

2

& 9,

1997

SEVEN DAYS

page

9


O n c e U p o n A T im e

DERRIK Jl

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Records, CD) — I thought I was an optimist, but Vermont/New York singer-song­ writer Derrik Jordan makes me feel like a hardened cynic. You might guess from the title of this 11-song collection, recorded at Brattleboros Soundesign Studio, that he either has a sunny dis­ position or is awaiting his first child. I don’t know about the lat­ ter, but I can tell you that Jordan could benefit from an occa­ sional dark cloud. Despite a substantial, heartfelt voice, packageperfect playing and crystalline production, Expecting a Miracle is too cheery and synthesized for my tastes, kind of a born-again Michael Bolton. Jordan veers toward Stevie Wonder territory, but sans the grit. Some o f these songs are drenched in New-Agey sen­ timent and so polished there’s not much to hang onto — nor to distinguish between tunes like “Something Beautiful” or “Expecting a Miracle” or “Heal the Wounded Child.” Jordan takes the bumper sticker, “Mean People Suck” a little too serious­ ly. But he turns a corner with bluesier stuff like “I Knew You When” and the funk-tinged “Let the Buyer Beware,” thanks to a versatile voice that could wrap around a roadhouse rocker if he wanted it to, and to some fine guitarwork from Marc Shulman (I th in k — producer Tom “T Bone” Wolk is credited with guitar, too). And, despite its humanity-is-fucked preachiness, Jordan demonstrates memorable hooks on the political “Just Another News Day.” The multi-instrumentalist can play some mean per­ cussion, too — his conga, steel drum and guica flavor the upbeat “Gonna Give You Love” with Carib riddims, and he’s down with acoustic guitar and piano as well. Expecting a Miracle starts and ends with pure schmaltz, but in the middle Jordan cautiously cranks up — as if he doesn’t know whether to kick butt or give you a massage. (No surprise to learn he’s previously released a meditation tape.) I suppose he thinks he’s showing versatility, but if he asked me — come to think of it, he did — I’d say lose the honky, smiley-face ballads and use that talent for beefier fare. And I’m a vegetarian. Derrik Jordan entertains the brunch bunch at LaBrioche in Montpelier, Sunday the 13th.

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(self-released CD) — This project from Craftsbury-by-way-of-New York resident Margot Day is short and sweet — a mere five songs. The eponymous EP is a slice o f pop electronica, sampling power tools, crick­ ets, children, birdies and god knows what else. Mosdy, though, it earns playing prowess from Day’s threeoctove voice — she’s studied opera — and producer/musician Jeff Cooper’s imaginative arrangements. According to her bio, Day was once “an intrigal (sic) part o f the New York City club scene,” performing at The Limelight and CBGB s, but we’re not given specifics. Now living in Vermont, the young diva is exercis­ ing her considerable vocal talent, and flute playing, on dance music in the Ofra Haza vein — you can also hear strains of Nina Hagen, Laurie Anderson, Kate Bush and Yoko Ono. There’s even something about this offbeat collection that Kurt Weill might like; melodies with a weird, slighdy atonal bent and unusual song structures. Instrumental contributions here are from Cooper on percussion, keyboard and samples, Dan Mazur (the band (sic)) on keyboard and Moog bass, Jim Harduby (Channel Two Dub Band) on guitar, additional keys from Paul Harriman and percussion on “Kismet” from someone called Serendipity. DJ Frostee from DysFunkShun. Days weakness is lyrics, epitomized by the line, “W hen I grow up I want to marry a prince and live in a beautiful castle” in “Wishes.” There’s not enough irony pre­ sent to make you think she doesn’t mean it. Romantic, sensual and mystical tendencies give these songs a girlish, fairy-tale bent. Nonetheless, Day’s got a strong melodic sensibility and powerful voice, and her self-possession shines through. Something tells me she’ll pull off a provocative live show —- Day opens for The Figgs and DysFunkShun Saturday, July 5* at Toast. (Bonus: That’s the night you can get your butt — or any other anatomical tu rf— tattooed with a Big Heavy World logo.) Continued on page 11

July

2

& 9,

199 7

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SPACESHIP GAIA PRESENTS "SONIC RAINBOW" (ambient trip-hop groove), Java Love, 7 p.m. NC. UPROOT (reggae/wo rid), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. NC. BUZZ HOMEBREW NIGHT W/SPIll, SALAD DAYS, LAKE TROUT (alt, pop rock), Club Metronome, 9 p.m. $3. ELECTRONIC DANCE MUSIC (DJs), 135 Pearl, 10 p.m. $4. ALLEY CAT JAM (rockblues), Alley Cats, 9 p.m. NC. SWING NIGHT (Mobile Music DJ; dance lessons), Breakers Club & Cafe, 7 p.m. $5.

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198 C o lle g e Stre e t, B u rlin g to n • (802) 660-8150

e

MR. FRENCH (rock), Breakwater Cafe, 4:30 p.m. NC. AVAIL, THE MARSHES, COMMON GROUND (hardcore), 242 Main, 8 p.m. $5. WILD BRANCH (bluegrass), Cactus Cafe, 8 p.m. NC. SAUDADE (live Brazilian jazz), 135 Pearl, 9:30 p.m. $4. OPEN MIKE (all types), Burlington Coffeehouse at Blue Couch Cafe, 8 p.m.; 7:30 sign-up. NC. APPLE HOUSE STYLIE (zion train with DJ Pa), Java Love, 8 p.m. NC. STEVE FORBERT & THE NEXT BIG THING (rock), Club Metronome, 8 p.m. $10, followed by RETRONOME, 10 p.m. NC. HANNIBAL & AGOSTI (rock), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. NC. TBA, Vermont Pub & Brewery, 10 p.m. NC. RUN FOR COVER (rock), Patches Pub, Holiday Inn, 9 p.m. NC. ONION RIVER JAZZ BAND (New Orleans style), Rio’s, Winooski, 9 0

•See staff for contest rules

TUESDAY

THE BURLYTOWN BEANERY OPEN MIC KNIGHT (acoustic), Java Love, 7 p.m. NC. FUNKELBERRIES (rock), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. NC. FLASHBACK: HITS OF THE '80S (DJ), Club Toast, 10 p.m. No cover/$5 under 21. BUZZ NIGHT (DJ), Rasputin’s, 10 p.m. NC/$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. NC. OPEN MIKE W/MARKGALBO (all genres), Breakers Club & Cafe, 8 p.m. NC. MIKE DEVER & LAUSANNE ALLEN (folk), Three Mountain Lodge, Jeffersonville, 6 p.m. NC. SETH YACOVONE (blues), Tones, Johnson, 6:30 p.m. NC. SHEILA METCALF (piano), Gallagher’s, Waitsfield, 8 p.m. NC. WEDNESDAY

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PARROTHEAD PARTY (Jimmy Buffett tunes), Breakwater Cafe, 4:30 p.m. NC. ALEX SMITH (folk favorites), Windjammer, 6:30 p.m. NC. JAMES HARVEY & JENNI JOHNSON (jazz/blues), Leunig’s, 8 p.m. NC. OPEN MIKE NIGHT W/MARKGALBO (jazz-blues), Cactus Cafe, 9 p.m. NC. LIVE MUSIC, Halverson’s, 9 p.m. $2. THE RETRO PALACE (DJ Psychotrope), 135 Pearl, 10 p.m. $4. CHERRY GARCCINO (grateful grooves with DJ Ma), Java Love, 8 p.m. NC. 4TH ANNIVERSARY PARTY/DECA-DANCE (’80s &c ’90s DJ), Club Toast, 9:30 p.m. $5. RETRONOME (disco party), Club Metronome, 9 p.m. NC. HANNIBAL & AGOSTI (rock), Nectars, 9:30 p.m. NC. MAGIC PEB­ BLES (groove rock), Manhattan Pizza, 10 p.m. NC. TRACY TOMASI TRIO (blues), Vermont Pub & Brewery, 10 p.m. NC. RUN FOR COVER (rock), Patches Pub, Holiday Inn, 9 p.m. NC. OPEN COMEDY W/KAMIKAZE, Breakers Entertainment, Williston, 8 p.m. NC. TNT (karaoke), Thirsty Turtle, Waterbury, 9 p.m. NC. JAM SESSION (blues), Charlie-o’s, Montpelier, 9 p.m. NC. CHAD HOLLISTER & FRIENDS (pop), Rusty Nail, Stowe, 9 p.m. $5. OPEN MIKE, Gallagher’s, Waitsfield, 8:30 p.m. NC.

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Who ; " Unity Pro Team Demo Where: Boat launch ■; ’ ' parking lotFrom boat house, fake bikepath north a quarter mile. What: Crazy skateboard tricks, stunts and more! You can't believe what these guys can do! Vyyeur

865-HERB M ain Street • Burlington :orner of Pine & M ain Streets - Sa t 1 0 - 6 Sun 1 2 - 5

Continued on page 12

july

2 & 9,

1997

SEVEN DAYS

145 CHERRY ST. BURLINGTON 883 0539


:•

5 ~*r-*s'**v ,-.-^**r-.sr^?

■■■— '

„ SOUND ADVICE

Continued from page 11

Q

C h o c o la te -R a s p b e rry M o u s s e C a k e , P a s s io n fru it M o u s s e , C r e m e B ru le e ,

the

Fund Raiser for Rhombus GAiiERy Expansion

FRIDAY

SURFS UP (rock), Breakwater Cafe, 4:30 p.m. NC. CLYDE STATS TRIO (jazz), Windjammer, 3 p.m. NC. LIVE MUSIC (jazz), Mona’s, 6:30 p.m. BOOTLESS & UNHORSED (Irish), Last Chance, 7:30 p.m. NC. BROOKE CHABOT & MARK GALBO (contemporary jazz), Cactus Cafe, 8 p.m. NC. DYLAN & THE ORGANIC GROOVE FARMERS (poetry, groove rock), Blue Couch Cafe, 8 p.m. $3-6. LISA MCCORMICK, PATTY CASEY & BOB GAGNON (singer-

T r ip le -C h o c o la te M o c h a M o u s s e ,

songwriter; benefit for Outright Vermont), Champlain College Auditorium, 7 p.m. $8-15. BURLINGTON SOUL EXPLOSION (soul shakedown party), Java Love, 9 p.m. NC. MANGO JAM (zydeco), Halvorson’s, 10 p.m. $4. DANCE PARTY (DJ Craig Mitchell), 135 Pearl, 9 p.m. $4/5 (1930) Marlene Dietrich 8 P.M. Sat. July 5 VERTICAL HORIZON, THE GATHERING FIELD, SALAD DAYS (folk rock, pop), Club . SUPPORTTHEARTS Toast, 9:30 p.m. $5. ROBERT BRADLEY'S BLACKWATER SURPRISE (rock/blues), lflU U S Wo 862-1179 198 m ain street • burlington Club Metronome, 9 p.m. $5. THE MIX (rock), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. G a l l e r y / F ilm S er i e s M ezani ne L evel 658-3 0 7 4 186 C ollege S treet, B url. NC. BOKOMARV (jazz) Manhattan Pizza, 10 p.m. NC. LOST POSSE (bluegrass), Vermont Pub & Brewery, 10 p.m. NC. RMS (rock), AlkxQats, 2,:30jj.fn. NC. COMEDY ZONE (stand-up), Radisson Hotel, 8 & 10 p.m.*$7: ABAIRBROS. (rock), Franny O ’s, 9:30 p.m. NC. PARKS-VACHON (acoustic rock), Jake’s, 7 p.m. NC. EMPTY POCKETS (rock), Friday • Saturday • Sunday July 18,19,20,1997 Patches Pub, Holiday Inn, 9 p.m. NC. SAM ARMSTRONG (jazz), Middletown Springs, Vermont - Rain or Shine Tuckaway’s, Sheraton, 9 p.m. NC. MOBILE MUSIC (DJ dance party), Headline Performers this year include Breakers Club & Cafe, 9 p.m. NC. LONE WOLF (rock), Trackside, Patty Larkin, Sun John Gorka, S a t, Dar Williams, Fri., Winooski, 9:30 p.m. $2. TWILIGHT IDOLS (rock), Hooper’s, Winooski, 9 p.m. NC. PULSE (Top 40 dance), Rusty Nail, Stowe, 9 p.m. $5. Michael Manring, S u n , Lucy Kaplansky, Fri. MIKE DEVER & LAUSANNE ALLEN (folk), Three Mountain Lodge, Don’t miss the third annual weekend-long festival of outstanding performances of great diversity-Powered entirely by the sun! Jeffersonville, 6 p.m. NC. MIRAGE (rock), Thirsty Turtle, Waterbury, Performing on two stages, and in between—Modern and African dance, storytelling, 9 p.m. $2. SANDOZE (emo-core), Gallagher’s, Waitsfield, 9:30 p.m. puppet shows, bands, blues, reggae, funk, folk, rock-n-roll and more! NC. SANDRA WRIGHT BAND (blues, r&b), Mad Mountain Tavern, Also at the weekend community; Waitsfield, 9:30 p.m. $3. LIVE MUSIC (rock), Charlie-o’s, Montpelier Solar demonstrations • Alternative Energy Workshops • Theatre-in-the-W oods • Children’s 10 p.m. NC. MICHAEL OAKLAND & ERIC KOELLER (jazz), Main Street Bar & Activities • Group Games • Food and Craft Vendors • Puppet Shows • Jam Sessions • Bodies...etc! Grill Downstairs, Montpelier, 8 p.m. NC. DIAMOND JIM JAZZ BAND, $35 for the weekend or day passes: Fri. $15 • Sat. $20 • Sun $15 Children under 12 free Diamond Jim’s Grille, St. Albans, 8 p.m. NC. NO GREATER SIN (rock), For tickets and additional information call 807 235 2641 Swany’s, Vergennes, 9 p.m. NC.

C h o c o la te L a y e r C a k e , E c la irs ...

M IR A g ELLES

SOL A R f E S T '97

Q

SATURDAY

BIG HEAVY WORLD'S GROOVE APOCALYPSE W/SPILL, (SIC), SOMAH, AUGUSTA BROWN (funk, groove, alt), Battery Park, 2 p.m. NC. GROOVE APOCALYPSE W/CHAINSAWS & CHILDREN, LAST ONES STANDING, HOBNAIL, HUMANS BEING, NEVER ONLY ONCE, DROWNINGMAN (hardcore), 242 Main, 2:30 p.m. $5. CHAD HOLLISTER (pop), Breakwater Cafe, 4:30 p.m. NC. LIVE MUSIC (jazz), Mona’s, 7 p.m. NC. RETURN OF JAVATHON (acoustic benefit & fundraiser), Java Love, 4 p.m. Donations. GREG GREENAWAY (singer-songwriter), Burlington Coffeehouse at Blue Couch Cafe, 8 p.m. $8. CHRIS EARLY (jazz-blues), Cactus Cafe, 8 p.m. NC. BLUE FOX &THE ROCKIN' DADDIES

. . . SEX AND CONSEQUENCES The

lovely and loveable Lisa

M cCorm ick returns to Burlington with her edgy folk-rock in a bene­

fit for Outright Vermont at Cham plain Co llege Auditorium July 11.

page

12

SEVEN DAYS

July

2 & 9.

199 7


. . . COWPUNKS Tw isted, outrageous, goofy, moody, happy,

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5

S e r v in g d in n e r daily a 4 pm t o 11:30 pm l a t e n ig h t m u n ch ie s 4 A p p e tize rs, b u rg e rs , pasta, salads, M a n d a g r e a t v a rie ty o f e n tre e s .

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(blues-rock), Ruben James, 9 p.m. NC. THE MIX (rock), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. NC. LITTIE MARTIN (DJ), 135 Pearl, 9 p.m. $4/5. GROOVE

value) absolutely FREE. Thats two for the price of one.

0

SUNDAY

ACOUSTIC BRUNCH W/DAVE GRAVELIN (singer-songwriter), Burlington Coffeehouse at Blue Couch Cafe, 11 a.m. Donations. RETURN OF JAVATHON (acoustic benefit & fundraiser), Java Love, 4 p.m. Donations. FLEX RECORDS NIGHT (DJ), Club Metronome, 9 p.m. NC. MIGHTY FAB KINGTONES (rock), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. NC. LIVE MUSIC (acoustic), Greatful Bread, Essex Jet., 1 p.m. NC. TNT (karaoke & DJ), Thirsty Turtle, 8 p.m. NC. PAUL LOLAX (acoustic), Main Street Bar and Grill Downstairs, Montpelier, 1 1 a.m. NC. DERRIK JORDAN (singer-songwriter), LaBrioche Cafe, Montpelier, 11 a.m. NC.

Q

169 Church Street • 865515S f

BATTERY F0E8

1997

frosty mugs

Middlebury

1 7 Y EA R S OF

MUSIC IN THE M R K THURSDAY EVENINGS 7 PM TO DUSK

MONDAY

Q

throwin* frisbees very, seriously. W e stock a selection IS //T than any one V Y / J on the east ^ coast Ultim ate discs, glow in the dark discs, goif discs, frisbees that change color in sunlight and lots morel

TUESDAY

THE BURLYTOWN BEANERY OPEN MIC KNIGHT (acoustic), Java Love, 7 p.m. NC. AUGUSTA BROWN (rock), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. NC. FLASHBACK;HITS OF THE'80S (DJ), Club Toast, 10 p.m. No cover/$5 under 21. BUZZ NIGHT (DJ), Rasputin’s, 10 p.m. NC/$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. NC. OPEN MIKE W/MARK GALBO (all genres), Breakers Club & Cafe, 8 p.m. NC. MIKE DEVER & LAUSANNE ALLEN (folk), Three Mountain Lodge, Jeffersonville, 6 p.m. NC. SHEILA METCALF (piano), Gallagher’s, Waitsfield, 8 p.m. NC. 0 j Ml y. j 2 , & 9 ,

8 0 0 -2 8 6 -2 1 8 9

Nopaper onJuly 9th. Seeyouagain on the 16th.

GRATEFUL JAVA JELLY (grateful/Marley jam), Java Love, 8 p.m. NC. COLD STEEL BREEZE BLUES BAND, Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. NC. BUZZ HOMEBREW NIGHT W/FIVE SECONDS EXPIRED, CHIN HO!, THIN LIZARD DAWN (hardcore, alt), Club Metronome, 9 p.m. $3. ELECTRONIC DANCE MUSIC (DJs), 135 Pearl, 10 p.m. $4. ALLEY CAT JAM (rock-blues), Alley Cats, 9 p.m. NC. SWING NIGHT (Mobile Music DJ; dance lessons), Breakers Club & Cafe, 7 p.m. $5.

A U T O M O B IL E S A L E S

c e le b r a t in g o u r 21st y e a r! North M ain St. S t.A lb a n s . V t.

APOCALYPSE W/GLADLY, SANDOZE, INVISIBLE JET, DYSFUNKSHUN, ZOLA TURN, LINDY PEAR, CONSTRUCTION JOE (alt-rock, funk/hip-hop), Club Metronome, 7:30 p.m. $5. GROOVE APOCALYPSE W/BAnERSHELL, FIVE SECONDS EXPIRED, THE COSSACKS, NON COMPOS MENTIS, CHIN HO!, STARLIGHT CONSPIRACY, CRANIAL PERCH (alt-rock), Club Toast, 7:30 pm. $5. GROOVE APOCALYPSE W/CHAD, SALAD DAYS, STEPH PAPPAS, DIANE HORSTMYER, CHARLIE MESSING, LINDA BASSICK (pop, singer-songwriters), Manhattan Pizza, 9 p.m. NC. BOOTLESS & UNHORSED (Irish), Last Chance, 7:30 p.m. NC. LITTLE JOYCE (blues, r&b), Vermont Pub & Brewery, 10 p.m. NC. RMS (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. NC. EMPTY POCKETS (rock), Patches Pub, Holiday Inn, 9 p.m. NC. MICKEY FIELDS &LAR DUGGAN (jazz), Tuckaway’s, Sheraton Hotel, 9 p.m. NC. LONE WOLF (rock), Trackside, Winooski, 9:30 p.m. $2. TWILIGHT IDOLS (rock), Hooper’s, Winooski, 9 p.m. NC. GROOVE APOCALYPSE W/BELIZBEHA, VIPERHOUSE, ORANGE FACTORY (acid jazz/funk), Rjo’s, Winooski, 3 p.m. $10. LIVE MUSIC (acoustic), Greatful Bread, Essex Jet., noon. NC. FULL CIRCLE (rock), Sha-Booms, St. Albans, 8 p.m. $5. NO GREATER SIN (rock), Swany’s, Vergennes, 9 p.m. NC. MIRAGE (rock), I hirsty Turtle, Waterbury, 9 p.m. $2. PETE MCCONNELL (rock), Gallaghers, Waitsfield, 9:30 p.m. NC. JALAPENO BROS, (rock), Mad Mountain Tavern, Waitsfield, 9:30 p.m. $3. PULSE (Top 40 dance), Rusty Nail, Stowe, 9 p.m. $5. ALEX BETZ TRIO (jazz), Main Street Bar and Grill Downstairs, Montpelier, 8 p.m. NC. BLUES BUSTER, Charlieo’s, Montpelier, 9 p.m. NC. DELTA BLUES PARTY, J.J. Newberry’s, White River Jet., 8 p.m. $10.

DU SSAU LT

AUGUST LINDY PEAR & ZOLA TURN

new CVe

GRIFFIN

SEVEN DAYS 145 CHERRYST.

SEVEN DAYS

883 0530


evening of reflection and entertainment. Unfortunately, it never gels, due to a script that fails to exploit the visual nature of theater. The play frequently sabo­ tages itself by telling — rather than showing — us about facts, events and people. We hear about an incident of prejudice, but were robbed of the power of seeing it. A nar­ rator lists historical facts like a school teacher. We learn about a figure from the past through a recorded voice rather than from a full enact­ ment. With so many missed, natural opportunities to evoke emotion, the play relies on Kathleen Keenan’s sweet melodies to do the job. The results, sadly, turn Keenan’s notable efforts into heavyhanded sentiment; instructing the audience when it’s time to feel something. This script’s potential is suggested in its too-infrequent moments of dramatization and monologue. A paper’s first female reporter tells her own story; a woman con-

The Vermont International Film Foundation presents The fourth evening o f

The To u rin g Film m akers S e rie s Meet and see films by Vermont Filmmakers:

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Ted Lyman

o f the U niversity o f Vermont

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Thursday, July 17th, 1997 6:00pm Welden Theatre 104 N. Main Street, St. Albans R eception to follow at Chow! Bella For inform ation call VIFF in Burlington 8 0 2 -6 6 0 -2 6 0 0 Sponsored by:

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News of the City/Talk of the Town, w r itt e n by Geof H e w it t . pro duced by Lost Nation T h e a te r. M o n tp e lie r. J u l y 2-6 .

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Bv Amy R u b i n ost Nation Theater has done it again. With News o f the City/Talk o f the Town, this Montpelier troupe once again creates community theater in the purest sense. This evening of scenes and songs is by no means polished fare. Rather, it’s an example of Lost Nation’s touching com­ mitment to its community — both in topic and method. Researched by company members and written by Calais poet Geof Hewitt, News 'is a 100-year retrospec­ tive of Montpelier and Barre newspapers and the events and people they covered. Clearly, it took a herculean effort to compile the data for this loving tribute to central Vermont. The play manages to touch on an impressive range of topics which shaped the state, including granite workers, a flood, an epidemic, the hippie migration and nuclear waste. Lost Nation’s primarily local, multi-genera­ tional professional/amateur cast nicely mirrors the grass­ roots nature of this piece. The evening unfolds chronologically, starting with the growing pains of 1897 Vermont — when The Barre Daily Times was founded — and ending with environmen­ tal issues of the 1990s. This is fascinating fodder for an

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/•page

14

SEVEN DAYS

fronts her husband with evi­ dence — in the news — that his business partner runs a cat house; an editorial comes to Continued on page 3 6

A paper's first f e m a le rep o rter tells her own story; a woman confronts her husband with e v id en ce - in the news that his busi­ ness p artn er runs a cat house; an edi­ to ria l comes to life when a skateboarder pleads her case for use of the sidewalk. July

2

& 9,

199 7


Mom.” I say. “Mom.” Get my purse,” she says.

tainers. For awhilei encourage my interest m tography.” She even bought me a decent camera and a book, How to Take Better Pictures. My brother pawned the camera, but IVe still got the book somewhere. She opens the fridge and pulls something out, some kind of plain brown box. She sits down in an old wicker chair and looks at me. Just looks. I pull over the bean bag, curl up at her feet. She turns the box towards me and pulls the top open. Three layers of jewelry. No cheap stuff, no pookashell necklaces or fake turquoise and silver. All real, all gold and stones. She knows who brought it here, but me, I can see it all, just how it must have # happened. My brothers at some party — some kid’s parents are in Bermuda or 1 something. Now, don’t have f ? a party while we’re gone honey, we’re counting on you, , were trusting you* But w otd * gets out, and everyone at ^ school comes over anyway, ^ and he starts coming on to 5 some chick, takes her into the parents’ room,; bangs i her on rheir big, cushy, ~ king-size bed, and then, 5 while she’s in the bathroom £ fixing her mascara, he sees il the box on the dresser and takes it. Wraps it up in his jacket. Just fucking takes it. Probably left the girl in the bathroom without even saying

>ut nrr

would give her things like this. I won­ der where it is, if she’s still got any of it, locked away some­ where. All 1 ever see her wear is pearl studs and a matching short necklace. She’s got them on now. I want td ru b my teeth against them, see if they’re real.

w

c o p s

th in k . N ic e

h o u se on t h e h ill,

but b a d k id s . Someone told me that once. If they’re rough, then they’re real. She’s staring past me, over my shoulder.

Snaking back roads Open straightaw ays Hairpin turns They re all there Waiting for you to dig right in Of course you It need the proper utensil A Saab 900 S Endowed with a 2.3-liter multivalve engine, front-wheel drive and turn-on-a-dim e steering, the 900 S

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he starts smoking. Menthols. God, I hate — menthols. I check the

c e

ZZ>

djj;

me my purse. She’s in the garage, in the car, when I get back. The running, the garage r is open. I hop in. The box is on the seat between us. She backs out fast. Forgets to hit the electric door closer thing. I reach over and press the but­ ton, hold it for a minute, but we’re already out the drive and into the street, heading down the road.

hold onto the smoke, try to make it last, make it potent, % out, o p p w like it’s a joint. off. Then it’s their problem. She just smokes and drives. Then he’s their problem. We’ll Looking ahead like she’s going go back horde, have that G&T, * some place important, a wed­ watch a little more TV. But she ding or a funeral, hands in one keeps going, out of town, past spot on the wheel, eyes for___ ____._v ____0_ „ ____ the industrial park, the wale- p* ward, the only change is when she pushes in the lighter, shakes houses, the suburbs, into the another cigarette up, out of the country. Boyfriends, or guys pack, tugs at it with her lips, who thought they were my like she’s, a truck driver. I keep boyfriends, have taken me out looking over at her. She doesn’t here. They park the car, climb notice. V over>suck face and dry hump. I’m wondering if she’s going They never unbutton their to the police station. She’s pants. Too scared I’ll say no. going in that direction. I’m Sometimes I wish they would, wondering if she’s going to just because I don’t know what turn him in. Cops have been I would say and I kind of want stopping to find out, hear the words that by the might come out o f my mouth, house for I’m wondering if she knows years, but where she’s going, what she’s they never doing, if she drives around like tag him this, if this is part of what she for anydoes all day. Sits at the kitchen thing. table in the morning, smokes And she’s cigarettes, drinks coffee, then no help. gets up and does some houseNever hold stuff, spreads out her little knows chores; makes them last, until anything the mail comes, sifts through about the junk, looks for a check from Dad down in Florida, gets in the Car, goes to the bank and then drives around. All he’s been. afternoon. Cruises, looking Nice lady, into peoples windows. I bet the Im wondering how she met cops ink. Dad, if he drove her out here when they were young and Nice parked the car, put his tongue house on in her mouth, rubbed his the hill, hands over her chest. All this | but bad stuff that might have happened kids to her, all this stuff that hap­ inside. pens when I’m not around, all She takes this stuff that happened before the quickest route through our me. I find another cigarette neighborhood, down Main Street, past the school, and Continued on page 30 then past the police station.

exclude anyone from this indulgence So now we re serving it up for $299 a month As an added bonus take

glove box. A mostly empty, squashed, soft pack of Merit Lights. I hate those, too. But I light up anyway, pull hard,

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July

2 & 9,

1997

SEVEN DAYS

145 CHERRY ST. 863 0539 page

15


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punched him in the face. He doesn’t even have a kind, loving word for his wife, Jane — his or those of you who’ve not companion since his 1981 mayhad the pleasure of attend­ oral victory and ing Bernie Sanders’ press founder of the conferences over the last 16 Mayor’s Youth years, here’s a chance to catch the Sanderista sermon all in one Office — other than to note she’s sitting. In a book that is three talented at han­ quarters a political speech and dling the media. one quarter a superficial mem­ His 1989 trip to oir, Vermont’s best-known Cuba with Jane, political folk hero hits the bookshelves this summer with a for example, gets all of three little 10,000-copy first edition. sentences: Unfortunately, it’s a book that “Jane and I only true believers will enjoy. visited Cuba in Granted, it’s not easy to 1989. I had slam a book in which one is hoped to meet quoted by the author as “an with Castro, but astute and long-time observer of the Vermont political scene.” that didn’t work Flattery should count for some­ out. But I did meet with the thing. But then honesty gets in mayor of Havana 112VC 3 the way. and other offiOutsider in the House is the cials. Little Red End of Chairman Bei story. But political phil0S9f»£y. why didn’t Originall] it work book was out? And but the pu what wisely requ Outsider in the did Sanders and the more person House, by Cuban mayor talk touch. Thus B e rn ie Sanders about? Who were a herky-jer w ith Huck the other officials? that jumjjj|j Gutman. V erso, And what did he and forth 244 pages. $25 and Jane do? The mons to answers to those version o questions would no political doubt be characterone that iers as “political tized to poltllfitsliu something he rightgossip image. usly disdains. So be it. J^ilsist|ng Sanders wt It’s the same story when writing is nders visited Nicaragua in of the Eh 85 for the seventh anniver­ the Universi sary of the Sandinista Huckleberry Revolution as “the highestthough, and it’ ranking American official pre­ delect Gutma sent.” He meets with President in this;Very d r Daniel Ortega, we re told, but, a long-time po once again — no story. Not a Sanders who was appointed to peep about what was discussed. the Airport Commission in the Not a hint of an impression of 1980s by Qrtega. Just the fact that they then•. ■ met.

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For example, the Congressman writes of his college days at the University of Chicago. He’d have us believe he spent most of his time there “burrowed deep in the stacks” of the university library. Pretty exciting stuff. He graduated in 1964. Then there’s a sevenyear gap, after which he pops up in Vermont in 1971, in the midst of the anti-Vietnam War movement, and captures the Liberty Union Party _ . _ nomination for iClUO* the U.S. Senate. But there’s not a peep about Liberty Union founder Peter Diamondstone. Nor is there an answer to the number-one question that all red-blooded American men who came of age in the 1960s had to answer: what to do about the draft. How did Bernie Sanders man­ age to avoid conscription? The answer is not to be found in this book. Then there’s the sanitized recollection of his 1981 politi­ cal miracle — winning the race for mayor of Burlington. In Sanders’ memory, he achieved victory almost singlehandedly. “Starting with the low-income and working-class wards, I knocked on as many doors as possible. As I walked through the neighborhoods, I told peo­ ple that I would do my best to represent those in the city who had long been locked out of City Hall.”

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WALKS Informal tours open to the public every Sunday at 10 AM.

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The “persor memoir” sections of the book are lacking in both detail and color — scent is completely absent. And Sanders gives little credit to those who supportedJu||i in the political trenches beyond mentioning their names. No descriptions; Sanders apparently wouldn’t know an anecdote if it

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IMPERSONAL POLITICS C o n tin u ed fro m page 19

Sanders claims he even won support from “upper-income citizens” by attacking a plan to build luxury high-rise condo­ miniums on the city’s water­ front. What he neglects to mention is that he was not in a head-to-head race with Mayor Gordon Paquette in 1981. Apparently, he forgot that the real key to his historic victory was the candidacy of Independents Richard Bove, who received 1091 votes, and Joe McGrath, who garnered 139 votes. Sanders won that mayoral race by 10 votes with far less than a majority — 40.1 percent. Maybe this was omit­ ted for space reasons. And that also must be the explanation for omitting his ardent support for a $100 mil­ lion waterfront development four years later. The Alden Plan, as it was known, was to be the feather in Bernie Sanders’ cap. The plan was boutiques, snazzy restaurants and 120 luxury condominiums on the “people’s waterfront,’ and Bernie Sanders was its chief proponent. It would have been a done deal had the voters not balked. Too bad Outsider in the House doesn’t include the inside track on that political escapade. But what did anyone really expect — an honest tell-all or a self-serving reconstruction of history? The only mistake our hero owns up to in the entire book is not responding quickly enough to Republican chal­ lenger John Carroll’s television ads in the 1994 congressional race. W hat a revelation! Outsider in the House is not heading for the best-seller list any time soon. And with a $25 price tag, it’s hardly “afford­ able” for the poor, working class and elderly people Sanders champions. But not to worry. By the Christmas shopping sea­ son, Bernie’s book will be ' marked down to $1.99 — a great stocking-stuffer for Vermont political junkies. ®


mately transcendent. Putting it simply, the difference between Lear and Hamlet is the differ­ ence between mythology and psychoanalysis, and Lear has better mad scenes.

Bv P e t e r

Kurth

ne of the advantages of being a pundit is that every now and then someone asks you to make a list of your favorite films, or your worst mem­ ories, or the peo­ ple you’d like to find yourself with if you’re ever stranded on a desert island. For this issue, I’ve compiled a list of 10 books

O

M O B Y DICK, by Herman Melville. W hat King Lear is to world literature, Moby Dick is to ours, and for the same rea­ sons. It is simply uncontainable, larger by far than the sum

parable, part love story and part biting satire, The Master and Margarita is an oddly familiar tale of sin and redemption, Russianstyle, written in the darkest years of the Stalinist terror and shin­ ing through the murk of this awful century, with its blasted dogmas, its stupid isms, and its pathological need to think in absolute terms. This magical book contains the most moving account of the suf­ ferings of Jesus any-

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H E RO SE OF TIBET, by ionel Davidson. Perfection, ’he ultimate in adventure sto

readers must now be putting on Ahab’s quest for the great white whale. If Oprah chose Moby Dick for her book club, Ahab would be classified as dysfunctional and a “worka­ holic,” while Ishmael, when he leaves New Bedford to “sail about a little and see the watery part of the world,” would doubtless be accused of seeking to avoid his problems through a geographifrcuffpft^

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TH E M ASTER A N D M AR­ GARITA, by Mikhail Bulgakov. Part fantasy, part

Anthropology Art Botany Business Administration Chemistry Computer Science Economics

Counseling Early Childhood & Human Development Elementary Education Foundational Studies General Education Health Education Leadership & Policy Studies Library Science Music Special Education

nemo

where dive ty is just another woi lor samenes and utter c< formity to t status quo. for talent, ii tive and the born with, l Plus fa char meme chose.

UVM is still offering courses in all o f these disciplines:

Education:

1 think everyone ought to read before dying. Not to be grim, but it won’t be long before no one in America reads anything at all — we’ll all be too busy ANIMAL FARM. downloading, upgrading, accessing, interfacing, channelo - m S B S ~ • « surfing, micro-managing and revisiting time for beauty and truth. mals who take over the farm If there’s a connecting and proqjld to run amok with theme here, it’s about ns ought to be showdown everyone needs w lafwfced reading for every have with oneself, in order to American citizen. I mean that find out what’s important and seriously. You shouldn’t be what matters. I’ve listed my allowed to vote unless you’ve selections simply under fiction read Orwell, .. and non-hction,:ia l t o r i U g l ^ ^ | p » a m Q | k t o # ^ * * ^ # terms of the effect each o f you re voting for I these books has had on me, the city council or distinction is artificial. the school H board, w h e p ^ B they^m ^' of the Eg K IN G LEABHoyV Shakespeare, m n e all, of course, just t drama evei^wtiltcn greatest pcsMSKlp language. 1 say this knowing i '■ that most people prefer Hamlet, but that’s only because I T 1 F j t^ 1 Hamlet and his relatives v . remind them of themselves and their own families, and because the whole thing could have been avoided if Hamlet had only listened to his mother and gone back to Wittenberg. Hamlet is a cautionary tale, in other words, while King Lear is a portrait o f the universe in blood and thunder — epic, violent* fearful, mysterious, wrenching, beautiful and ulti-

O

\CVOk )

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 Work Sociology Spanish Statistics Theatre Women's Studies C

all

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ridiculed,” says Spark, “but ridiculed properly rather than, well, wailed over. I do believe in satire as a very potent art form.” Memento Mori is her story of elderly people in an “efficient”, world th'Jtt shows . ., ,' • . - . them neither respect nor fecl-

SEVEN DAYS

3H B TSbN E E SSIO N S OF S T AUGUSTINE. Speaking of cautionary tales, I’ve included this M ount Olympus of neu­ rotic insecurity, this Goliath of male paranoia, so you’ll all know exactly when and where the world went wrong — in 397 A.D., when the Bishop of

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~ . , Continued on

page

21


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LIFE SENTENCES

Continued from page 21

controversial. Christians claim Hillesum as a martyr to their faith; Jews, understandably, are upset when they do. In fact the diaries are the surest

the soul. Hillman is a former Jungian analyst and the founder of archetypal psychol­ ogy, who laments the focus in conventional psychotherapy on childhood and trauma. He begs us to remember what our grandmothers knew: that we each are born with our charac­ ter already in place, and that it is our mission to live up to ourselves. “I believe that we have been robbed of our true biography,” Hillman writes, “and that we go to therapy to recover it. [Our] innate image can’t be found, however, until we have a psychological theory u th a t grants primary psycholog­ ical reality to the call of fate.”

Hippo penned his famous advice, -Seek for yourself, O Man. He who seeks will find himself in God,” and the Catholic Church decided! THE DIARIES OF ETTY HILLESUM 1941-43 to take him liter­ ally. Augustine looked at him­ self and mistook what he saw for eternal truth, just as Freud, later, came to terms with his own neuroses by saddling the human race with bogus sexual W IT H IN TH E C O NTEXT obsessions and a OF N O CONTEXT, by false paradigm of George W .S. Trow. An family dynamics, e* multi-dimensional, where the ado­ brilliantly writ­ lescent reigns ten essay on the supreme and evil nature of the runs in only one split-second direction: from society, now \ 1 I ' parent to child. If Hell were proof that with a new run by women, and mothers dogmatic introduction in particular, Augustine and thinking that is just as Freud would have a circle to itself is the good as the themselves. problem. “I original work. :■] l \ S e a r c h o f \ find life “In the absence i C H A R A C 11- II A RO O M OF O N E'S O W Ni beautiful of adults, peo­ by Virginia Woolf. This is the and I feel | VXD C'.AI 1 IX G 2 ple came to put I j their trust in book that convinced me I free,” l ^ could write. It’s as simple as Hillesum experts,” Trow that. Woolf was talking about wrote. observes, coax­ women — give her 500 % 3 TAMFS HILLMAN I ing truth after “The sky pounds a year and a room of within me truth from the her own and she will astonish Is as wide mesh of slogans, you.” But her message is to all as the one stretching above my deceptions, celebrities and lies writers and all artists, to any­ head. I believe in God and I that define American culture one, that is, who hopes to go believe in man and I say so at the end of the century: “A through life in full awareness, child watching television will without embarrassment. Life as a creative being. is hard, but that is no bad not encounter a discussion of thing. If one starts by taking how he might marry or how A N INTERRU PTED LIFE. one’s own importance serious­ he might work, but he will The Diaries o f Etty Hillesum, ly, the rest follows.” find material relating to how 1941-43. Hillesum was a he should be honest in com­ Dutch Jew who lived in TH E SO U LS CODE, by ing to terms with his divorce, Amsterdam and died in James Hillman. Not his best, and he will encounter much Auschwitz, having refused to but Hillman’s most accessible material that has as the source leave Holland during the Nazi work, and the best-seller he so of its energy his confusion and occupation. Her diaries are the richly deserves after watching unhappiness.” Perfect for the record of her spiritual trans­ other people — most recently, beach. © formation on the way to the Thomas Moore — get rich gas chamber. The work is still and famous on his concept of

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-flaneffe Lepoft at 'Q liv je i B e t t e ’s

F OURT H OF JULY Everyone loves a parade 10 minutes in Moscow, Vermont —

Bv

Robert

Kiener

came to Moscow, the tiny hamlet that straddles the Little River just south of Stowe, to see a woman about a lawn chair. Or, more precisely, several women about several lawn chairs. The mem­ bers of the Moscow All Ladies Lawn Chair Drill Team are, according to some people, the real talent behind Moscow’s quirky Fourth of July parade. “Talent? Hardly!” exclaims Lynne Scarpa, one of the veter­ an marchers who each year, uh, thrill parade-goers with their synchronized folding and unfolding of lawn chairs to the strains of John Philip Sousa. “Believe me, talent has very lit­ tle to do with this parade,” Scarpa adds. Each July 4, somewhere around 10 a.m., most of Moscow’s 100-or-so residents gather on Tom Hamilton’s front lawn to take part in what has become one of Vermont’s — and the nation’s — most off­ beat Independence Day parades. The Moscow version has no organizing committee, no Grand Marshal, no fancy floats and, most importantly, no pretension. W hat it does have is a healthy helping of wry Vermont humor. As Fourth of July visitors to Moscow soon find out, there’s no irony defi­ ciency in this offbeat hamlet. “We’ve been called bizarre,” explains longtime parade partic­ ipant Anne Lusk, “and we take that as a compliment.” This

I

July

2

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1997

from a woman who one year dressed as a cow with, in her words, “gigantic udders” and a sign proclaiming, “I owe it all to BST.” (Lusk was protesting,

Believeme,

talent has very little to do with this parade. —

Lynn

Scarpa Member, the All-Ladies Lawn Chair D rill Team Moscow-style, the growth hor­ mone fed to cows.) Another year she and her husband pushed a brass bed full of chil­ dren though the parade, in honor of the hamlet’s label as “Stowe’s bedroom community.” The parade traces its origins to 1976, when some civicminded Muscovites decided to

Sandal-

celebrate the U.S. Bicentennial. “There were about 20 of us marching and about eight vil­ lagers watching,’ recalls Tom Hamilton. “It took us less than five minutes to march the 150yard parade route down Main Street, so when we passed the general store, we decided to turn around and march back.” The route hasn’t changed since, but other things have. For one, the crowds have swelled; last year more than 1000 bystanders gathered along the route. And the hamlet has, grudgingly, accepted entrants from nearby Stowe. While some parade purists balk at the Stowe Fire Department’s entries — two pumper trucks, a rescue vehicle and a hazardous terrain vehicle, all with flashing lights and wailing sirens — others have made them feel welcome to the otherwise decidedly lowtech parade. “After all, we feel sorry for them because they don’t have their own parade,” Hamilton notes. Another recent change: the absence of horses. “Stowe’s sirens scared them away,” says Scarpa. “We’ve asked them to turn them off this year.” Many hope for the return of the horses. After all, for years the newest residents of Moscow were responsible for following in the parade’s wake with a wheelbarrow and shoveling up horse droppings. “It was our way of saying, ‘Welcome to Moscow, ” says Hamilton. Although there were no horses in last year’s parade, the hamlet’s newest residents, George and Jacquie Gay, duti­ fully brought up the rear, armed with a shovel and a

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Q Wednesday musi c

VERMONT SYMPHONY ORCHES­ TRA: Tom Chapin teams up with the Vermont Symphony for a red-white-andblue evening of pop — and pops. Middlebury College Stadium, 7:30 p.m. $25. Info, 800-VSO-9293. BAND CONCERT: Members o f the 40th Army Band lead “A Broadway Journey” to Cats, Showboat and Fiddler on the Roof. Church Street Marketplace, Burlington, noon. Free. Info, 654-0460. ‘BANDS IN BLACK’: Burlington bands Zola Turn and Chin Ho! warm up for Men in Black — the film premiere. Also known as “Rock the Sunset Drive-In.” Porters Point Road, Colchester, 7-9 p.m. $6.50. Info, 862-1800. VAUGHAN RECITAL SERIES: Instrumentalists from the Weathersfield Music Festival play chamber music in Faulkner Recital Hall, Hopkins Center, Hanover, N.H . Free. Info, 603-6462422.

FARMERS MARKETS: Local produce and crafts are available at the Champlain Mill Parking Lot in Winooski, 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 OM EN’S SUPPORT GROUPS: Women Helping Battered Women facilitates a group in Burlington, 6:30-8 p.m. Free. Info, 658-1996. Also, the Shelter Committee facilitates a meet­ ing in Washington County, 1-2:30 p.m. Free. Info, 479-9310.

STORIES & CRAFTS: Ages three 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: Children listen, snack and craft at the Childrens Pages, Winooski, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 655-1537. STORY TIME: Kids get an earful at Chassman & Bern Booksellers, Burlington, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 862-4332.

singing in the Castleton State College Fine Arts Center, 7:30 p.m. $5. Info, 468-1119.

dr a ma ‘FUNNY MONEY’: See July 2. ‘NEWS OF THE CITY/TALK OF THE TOW N’: See July 2. ‘GUYS & DOLLS’: See July 2. ‘THE SO U N D OF MUSIC’: See July 2. ‘MACBETH’: See July 2. ‘GODSPELL’: See July 2, 8 p.m. ‘O N GOLDEN POND’: See July 2, 8 p.m.

dance ‘FREE SPIRIT DANCE’: Join the bare­ foot boogie at Earth Dance Healing Arts Studio, Chace Mill, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $5. Info, 863-9828. CONTACT IMPROV: Make contact with other movers in the Memorial Auditorium Loft, Burlington, 7:15 p.m. $1. Info, 860-3674. ‘42N D STREET’: 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, Burlington. 8 p.m. $19.50-37.50. Info, 863-5966. ‘FUNNY MONEY’: 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. NEWS OF THE CITY/TALK OF THE TO W N’: Lost Nation Theater honors the Times Argus centennial with an original play by G eof Hewitt. Anecdotes, clips and interviews docu­ ment the drama. Montpelier City Hall, 8 p.m. $11. Info, 229-0492. ‘THE SO U N D OF M USIC’: The hills are alive with wannabe von Trapps. Hear the musical story of love, family and escape from the Nazis at Stowe Town Hall, 8 p.m. $12. Info, 253-3961. ‘MACBETH’: “Too full o’ th’ milk o f human kindness?” Morality is the mes­ sage in this classic Shakespearean tragedy. Unadilla Theatre, Calais, 8 p.m. $10. Info, 456-8969. ‘GUYS & DOLLS’: As luck would have it, Unadilla Theatre is bringing four blockbuster musicals to Barre this year. Get into the gambling — and great music — at the Barre Opera House, 8 p.m. $10. Info, 456-8969. ‘GODSPELL’: This legendary rock opera follows a band o f young ragamuffins as they reenact such famed parables as the prodigal son and the good Samaritan. Weston Playhouse, Village Green, 3 & 8 p.m. $23. Info, 824-5288. VAUDEVILLE NIGHT: Burlington sto­ ryteller Peter Burns plays a part. Singalong with your saltimbocca at Villa Tragara, Waterbury Center, 6:30 p.m. $38 includes dinner. Info, 244-5288. ‘THE PROMISED LAND’: Land use issues can be dramatic. Playwright Dana Yeaton reads his new very Vermont work at Castleton State College Fine Arts Center, 7:30 p.m. $5. Info, 468-1119. ‘O N GOLDEN P O N D ’: Norman Thayer is an irascible old man who man­ ages to scare everyone off — except his wife and young Billy, who arrives unex­ pectedly for a summer o f fishing. Dorset Playhouse, 2 & 8 p.m. $17-26. Info, 867-2223.

wcrds ‘CRIME & PU N ISH M EN T’: A book discussion series considers Sophocles’ Antigone. Stowe Library, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 253-6145.

music

VERMONT SYMPHONY ORCHES­ TRA: See July 2, Shelburne Farms. CHAMBER CONCERT: A faculty ensemble from the Point Counter Point Music Camp performs chamber music at the Salisbury Congregational Church, 7 p.m. Donations. Info, 352-6670.

A 1.8-mile "fun run" starts at noon. followed by fabulous food and fireworks. M ayo Farm. Gates open at 5 p.m. / Info, 2 53-3000. / A

Live

dram a ‘FUNNY MONEY’: See July 2. ‘WHAT DO ESN’T KILL US’: See July 3, 8 p.m. ‘NEWS OF THE CITY/TALK OF TH E TO W N ’: See July 2, $13. ‘GUYS & DOLLS’: See July 2, $12.50. ‘THE SO U N D OF MUSIC’: See July 2. ‘MACBETH’: See July 2, $12.50 ‘GODSPELL’: See July 2, 8 p.m.

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vNa r ^ e n : Light your fire at Sugarbush South, Info, 583-22021

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A day of music, races and family fun includes the "Detergent Box" Derby at 2 p.m.

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CHILDREN’S THEATER FESTIVAL: Professionals from the North Country Center for the Arts act out Annie Oakley. St. Johnsbury Recreation Area, 10:30 a.m. $3.75. Info, 800-805-5559.

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Fireworks follow a community photo shoot.^\> Bay Park, Info, 5 2 4 -4 6 3 7 .

S l/^ A R S V S H The Mozart Festival gets a handel on independence. ^ Gates open for picnickinq at 5:30 p.m. (W Mt. Ellen, Sugarbush Resort, 8 p.m. $ 18. 'I Info, 8 6 2 -7 3 5 2 .

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Food, crafts, games and a band concert lead up loathe taJjUhow.

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etc SISTER CITY MEETING: City coun­ cilors keep the peace at a BurlingtonBethlehem-Arad meeting. Burlington City Hall, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 863-4848. LESBIGAY YOUTH ’ZINE MEET­ ING: Lesbian, bisexual, gay and “ques­ tioning” folks under age 23 gather monthly to publish a ’zine. Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 800-452-2428. HOME-BUYING 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, 434-6434.

INTRODUCTION TO CHIROPRAC­ TIC: Dr. Sherman puts your spine in line at Helpful Healing, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free. Info, 862-2477. NATURAL MEDICINE: Two naturo­ pathic physicians answer questions. State Street Market, Montpelier, noon - 1 p.m. Free. Info, 229-2038.

Q fhursday music

VILLAGE HARMONY: The youth ensemble performs Balkan music and tra­ ditional and contemporary shape-note

etc FIREWORKS CRUISE: What better way to see the fireworks? Blues for Breakfast gets down with the rockets and red glare. Lake Champlain Trans­ portation, Leaving the King Street Ferry Dock, 7:30-10:30 p.m. $25. Info, 864-9804. RANDOLPH PARADE: Bands, floats, organizations and local celebrities join in the parade titled “Showtime at the Chandler.” Field activities follow from noon to 4 p.m. Downtown Randolph. Free. Info, 728-9027. TAKE THE PLUNGE’: Politicians, cops and other local celebs take the plunge at a fresh-water fundraiser for Champlain Valley Kids on the Block. Dunkees include Peter Clavelle, Doug Lewis, Ben Cohen and Corporal Robert Booher. Waterfront Park, Burlington, 5-9 p.m. $2 per throw. Info, 879-8425. ADO PTIO N ALLIANCE OF VER­ MONT: All “triad” members are wel­ come at the Shelburne Methodist Church, 6:30- 9:30 p.m. Free. Info, 985-2464.

friday

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The Randolph Fire DeDartmertf promises "bigger ana brighter" fireworks this year. Stock Farm Road, Randolph, Info, 7 28-9027.

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kids STORY HOUR: Kids convene at Flying Pig Children’s Books, Charlotte, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 425-2600.

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spontaneous humor. Breakers, S. Burlington, 8 p.m. Free. Info, 864-2069.

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‘WHAT DO ESN’T KILL US’: This light romantic comedy deals with life after-an auto accident “in which cruelty is applied like whipped cream and even the shrink is heartless,” writes the Village Voice. Growling Pup Theater Festival, Magic Hat Brewery, 6 p.m. $15. Info, 863-5966. MURDER 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. AMATEUR COMEDY NIGHT: The Kamikaze Comedy improv collective wel­ comes your suggestions for an evening of

O UTH OUSE RACE: The Bristol Rotary Club sponsors this creative cele­ bration of independence. The 8 a.m. race is followed by a 10 o’ clock parade. Pure Pressure plays at noon. Bristol Green, 8 a.m. - dusk. Free. Info, 453-3741. CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION: A three-day celebration o f St. Albans starts today with free country, big band, army and soft-rock music in the park. The bar­ becue starts at 4 p.m. Bay Park, St. Albans, all day. Free. Info, 524-4037. FOURTH OF JULY AUCTION: Look for baked goods, books, toys, sporting goods and clothing at a fundraiser and barbecue lunch. Shelburne United Methodist Church, 10 a.m. $7. Info, 985-3981. WATERBURY ‘WORKS: An hour-long parade with floats and marching bands leads to pony rides, food booths and live music at the D.P. Rowe Recreation Field. Live bands play until blast off. Waterbury. Donations. Info, 244-8465. INDEPENDENCE DAY: A parade starts at the covered bridge, then “field day” activities move to Brookes Field. A shuttle bus runs back and forth until fire­ works. Downtown Warren, 10 a.m. dusk. $1. Info, 583-2202. CALVIN COOLIDGE BIRTHDAY PARADE: The only president born on Independence Day gets toasted with a noon march to the cemetary and follow­ up barbecue. President Calvin Coolidge State Historic Site, Plymouth Notch, Parade is free. Tour is $5. Info, 672-3387.


Club, 1-5:30 p.m. Donations. Info, 244-8537. KILLINGTON MUSIC FESTIVAL: Hear a new work by Vermont composer Erik Nielsen, along with works o f Schubert and Faure. Skyeship Base Station, Route 4, Killington, 7:30 p.m. $15. Info, 422-6767. MIXED COMPANY: Hear * cappella gospel, doowop and swing in the Joslyn Round Bam, Waitsfield, 7:30 p.m. $10. Info, 496-7722.

dr a ma ‘WHAT DOESN’T KILL US’: See July 3, 2 p.m. NEWS OF THE CITY/TALK OF TH E TOW N’: See July 2, 7 p.m. $11. ‘GUYS & DOLLS’: See July 2, $12.50. ‘MACBETH’: See July 2, $12.50. ‘OTHELLO’: See July 5, 2 p.m. ‘GODSPELL’: See July 2, 7 p.m. $19. VARIETY SHOW DINNER CRUISE: Looking for dining and diversion? This floating variety show features music, games and an interview with Samuel Champlain. Spirit of Ethan Allen, Burlington Boathouse, 6:30-9 p.m. $34.95 Reservations, 862-8300.

film ‘A STRANGER IN THE KINGDOM ’: 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 the Savoy Theater, Montpelier, 6:30 p.m. $25. Info, 1-800-462-4490.

werds NATURE WRITING: Writing enhances observation. Document your thoughts and feelings about the natural world. North Branch Nature Center, Montpelier, 2-3:30 p.m. $3. Info, 229-6206.

s port MOOR SHAKESPEARE jealousy takes a deadly course in the Vermont Stage performance o/'Othello — a classic study o f spousal distrust. The play opens Saturday at Royall Tyler Theatre. ‘OLD VERMONT FOURTH’: Celebrate independence in turn-of-the century style with patriotic speeches, sack races, ice cream-making and a spelling bee for adults. Billings Farm & Museum, Woodstock, 10 a.m.- 5 p.m. $7. Info, 457-2355. ‘A CAMELOT OF CRAFTS’: Look for the practical and whimsical under two regal tents. Woodstock Union High School, Route 4, 10 a.m 6 p.m. $3. Info, 457-3981.

Q Smusi a t u rcd a y ROYAL FIREWORKS’: The Mozart Festival Orchestra gets into the “indepen­ dence” spirit with a performance of Handel’s Music for the Royal Fireworks. Gates open for picnicking at 5:30 p.m. Mt. Ellen, Sugarbush Resort, 8 p.m. $18. Info, 862-7352. ROCK ’N ’ ROLL CRUISE: Rock the boat, baby. Downpour plays for passen­ gers on the Lake Champlain Ferries, King Street Ferry Dock, 8-11 p.m. $20. Info, 864-9804.

dance BURKLYN BALLET: Pre-professional dancers perform excerpts from La Bayadere. Dibden Center for the Arts, Johnson State College, 8 p.m. $8. Info, 635-1386. CONTRA DANCE: Bill Olson calls for Scrod Pudding. Capitol City Grange, Montpelier, 8 p.m. $6. Info, 426-3734.

dram a ‘FUNNY M ONEY’: See July 2, 2 p.m. for $13 or 8 p.m. for $18. ‘WHAT DO ESN ’T KILL US’: See July 3, 2 & 8 p.m. NEWS OF THE CITY/TALK OF THE TO W N ’: See July 2, $13. ‘GUYS & DOLLS’: See July 2, $ 12.50. ‘THE SO U N D OF MUSIC’: See July 2. ‘MACBETH’: See July 2, $12.50 ‘O N GOLDEN P O N D ’: See July 2, 4

3

-7

& 8:30 p.m. ‘GODSPELL’: See July 2, 3 & 8 p.m. $19 matinee, $26 evening. ‘OTHELLO’: The moor does in his dar­ ling Desdemona in the tragedy by William Shakespeare. Vermont Stage Company performs at Royall Tyler Theatre, UVM, Burlington, 8 p.m. $1218. Info, 656-2094.

kids STORIES: Kids over three listen at the Fletcher Library, Burlington, 11-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 865-7216.

sp ert VERMONT EXPOS: The home team takes on the Williamsport Cubs. Centennial Field, Burlington, 7 p.m. $3. Info, 655-6611. BOATHOUSE RUN: Race five or 10 kilometers on the bike path to North Beach. Burlington Boathouse, 9:30 a.m. $6. Info, 864-0123.

etc ‘A CAMELOT OF CRAFTS’: See July 4, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION: See July 4. “Bay Day” in St. Albans centers on a celebration o f ethnic diversity. A community photo will be snapped after the giant “historical” parade. Fireworks follow at dusk in Bay Park, St. Albans, 10 a.m. - 10 p.m. Info, 524-4037. SMALL BOAT SHOW: Regional boatbuilders show off their handcrafted ves­ sels and the methods for making them. Cruises, kids activities and food will be available. Lake Champlain Maritime Museum, Basin Harbor, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. $7. Info, 475-2022. FLEA MARKET: Your bargain benefits the Vermont Campaign to End Childhood Hunger. Outside Tanglewoods Restaurant, Waterbury, 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Free. Info, 865-0255. NATURE'S FIREWORKS: Check out the natural sound and light show in a woodland exploration of night. Green Mountain Audubon Nature Center, Huntington, 8:30 p.m. $3. Info, 434-

306R PEASANT MARKET: Browse for books, greenery, crafts, vintage clothing, antiques — and lunch. Middlebury Green, 9 a.m - 4 p.m. Free. Info, 388-7200. AGRICULTURAL MUSEUM FIELD DAYS: See tractors, engines and equip­ ment, as well as an antique tractor pull. Live entertainment is included too in Randolph, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. $3. Info, 728-5274. BEREAVEMENT EDUCATIONAL GROUP: Lost a loved one? Learn to cope at the Vermont Respite House, Williston, 9 a.m. Free. Info, 860-4410. 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, 8770080. Free.

0 Sunday music

VERMONT SYMPHONY ORCHES­ TRA: See July 2, Three Stallion Inn, Randolph. $19. CROSBY, STILLS & NASH: The har­ monious trio of rock ’n’ roll legend offer an intimate evening at the Flynn Theatre, Burlington, 8 p.m. $43.04-56.29. Info, 863-5966. ‘MUSIC IN THE MEADOW’: The Vivaldi Travelling Virtuosi live up to their name in the Trapp Family Concert Meadow, Stowe, 7 p.m. $18. Info, 253-7792. GREEN MOUNTAIN JAZZ H OUNDS: Gene Childers and his band play Dixieland jazz in the gazebo behind the Cambridge Elementary School, 2-4 p.m. Free or a donation for the Jeffersonville Food Shelf. Info, 644-8055. NORTHEAST FIDDLERS ASSOCIA­ TION: Fiddling folks convene for a musical meeting at the Montpelier Elks

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VERMONT EXPOS: See July 5, 2 p.m. CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION: St. Albans celebrates a century with sport. The Great Race Triathalon starts at 10 a.m. Volleyball and horseshoes competitons are also scheduled. Bay Park, St. Albans, 10 a.m. - dusk. Free. Info, 524-4037. NATURE WALK: Explore waterfalls, beaver ponds and pools along the Browns River. Bring lunch, binoculars and a magnifying glass to Old Mill Park, Jericho, 9 a.m. - noon. $2. Info, 863-4864.

etc ‘FESTIVAL O N TH E GREEN’: Acclaimed by Vermont Life as “the best series o f free performances in Vermont,” this week-long arts festival starts with piping at 5:30 p.m. The Middlebury Community Players make an appearance at 6 p.m. Middlebury Village Green. Free. Info, 388-2727. BARN TOUR: Architectural historian Tom Visser, author o f a Field Guide to New England Bams and Farm Buildings, leads an instructive tour through the out­ buildings at the Rokeby Museum, Ferrisburgh, 3 p.m. Free. Info, 877-3406.

Q monday musi c

OPERA HOUSE REDEDICATION: The Vermont Symphony Orchestra breathes new life into the historic Vergennes Opera House, 7:30 p.m. $20. Info, 877-6737. BAND CONCERT: The community band plays in City Park, Vergennes, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 877-0080. OPEN REHEARSAL: Women lend their vocal cords to a harmonious rehearsal o f the Champlain Echoes. S. Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 864-6703.

film ‘BATMAN’: Forget about George Clooney and Uma Thurman. The dynamic duo o f Burt Ward and Adam West make this original Gotham City movie best. Blue Couch Cafe, Burlington, 7:45 p.m. $2. Info, 865-5066.

words WRITERS READ: Award-winning author Grace Paley reads from her short fiction. John Dewey Lounge, UVM, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 656-5796. MADELEINE BLAIS: The Pulitzer Prize- winning author o f In These Girls, Hope is a Muscle reads in the Haybarn Theater, Goddard College, Plainfield, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 454-8311.

etc FESTIVAL O N THE GREEN: See July 6. Mike Quinn serves up a musical “brown bag special” at noontime. Evening entertainment is provided by La Musgana, a three-piece instrumental band offering traditional music o f the Castillian countryside, 7 p.m. VERMONT FARMHOUSE DINNER: A five-course “prix fixe” dinner serves up all Vermont products from Orb Weaver Farm. Mary’s at Baldwin Creek, Bristol, 6-9 p.m. $25. Info, 453-2432. ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY MEET­ ING: Bob Horton offers an introduction to astronomical photography. 457 Waterman Building, UVM, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 985-3269. 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. EMOTIONS ANONYMOUS: People with emotional problems meet at the O ’Brien Center, S. Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Donations. Info, 660-9036.

0 tuesday musi c

JUNIOR WELLS: The 62-year-old Chicago blues legend plays harp at the Magic Hat Concert Series, Old Lantern, Charlotte, 8 p.m. $18. Info, 863-5966. ‘CELTIC COLLEGE’: Brian Perkins provides a learning opportunity for musi­ cians interested in playing traditional Irish session music. College Street Congregational Church, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 660-9491. CRAFTSBURY CHAMBER PLAYERS: The Vermont-based ensemble kicks off a six-week summer festival with a free bandstand concert o f works by Haydn, Rossini and Einhorn. Craftsbury Common, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 1-800-639-3443. OPEN REHEARSAL: The Amateur Musicians Orchestra welcomes new play­ ers in the Music Room, S. Burlington High School, 7:30 p.m. $5. Info, 985-9750.

dram a ‘FUNNY MONEY’: See July 2. ‘OTHELLO’: See July 5.

film ‘A STRANGER IN THE K INGDOM ’: See July 6, Capitol Theater, Montpelier.

film ‘FREAKY FRIDAY’: Bring your own lawnchair to an alfresco film courtesy of Ben and Jerry. Simultaneous showings at Burlington Parking Garage and the Waterbury Plant, 8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 962-9620 or 244-5641.

words WRITERS’ GROUP: Take a journal and your writing spirit to the Blue Couch Cafe, Burlington, 7 p.m. Donations. Info, 865-5066.

kids PET SHOW: Kids get animal awards for having the pet with the longest ears, the most hair or the most talent. There are nine other competition categories at Battery Park, Burlington, 6 p.m. Free. Info, 864-0123. ‘FATHERS & CHILDREN TO GETH ­ ER’: Spend quality time with your kids and other dads at the Wheeler School, Burlington, 5-7 p.m. Free. Info, 860-4420.

Continued on next page

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STORY HOUR: 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 FESTIVAL O N THE GREEN: See July 6. Roger the Jester serves up a comic “brown bag special” at noontime. Evening entertainment is provided by Southern singer-songwriter Jack Williams, 7 p.m. and Martin and Jessica Ruby Simpson, at 8 p.m. ‘MENOPAUSE NATURALLY’: A naturopathic physician compares natural therapies to standard hormone replace­ ment in the treatment o f menopausal complaints. Centennial House, Hardwick, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 229-2038. FARMERS MARKET: Get it fresh at the Wheeler School, Burlington, 3:30-6:30

p.m. Free. Info, 865-0255. 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.

Q Wednesday music

VAUGHAN RECITAL SERIES: See July 2. BATTERY PARK CONCERT SERIES: Buck and the Black Cats entertain against an Adirondack backdrop. Battery Park, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7166. CRAFTSBURY CHAMBER PLAYERS: The Vermont-based ensemble mixes mas­

ter composers with modern ones in con­ certs designed to be “lively, lyrical, melo­ dious and upbeat.” UVM Recital Hall, Burlington, 8 p.m. $11. Info, 1-800639-3443. A free kids’ concert starts at 4:30 p.m. KILLINGTON MUSIC FESTIVAL: The Grammy Award-nominated St. Petersburg String Quartet plays Brahms and Schubert at the Skyeship Base Station, Killington Resort, 7:30 p.m. $18. Info, 773-4003.

tilm

dance ‘FREE SPIRIT DANCE’: See July 2. CONTACT IMPROV: See July 2.

‘PAPERMAKING’: July 28 August 1. Shelburne Craft School. $175. Info, 9853648. Fiber artist Cindy Lewis leads a week-long intensive that takes you from raw materials> through pressing to advanced techniques o f embossing, lami­ nating and casting. ‘LEARN TO CROCHET’: Thursdays, 9-11 a.m. Wheeler School, Burlington. Free. Info, 864-0377.

Her ",Spirit o f the Moon” work­ shop addresses all the associated ailments.

martial arts C H ’UAN FA KUNG FU: Thursdays, 5:30-7 p.m. & 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 abilities are welcome.

massage

dance DANSKINETICS: Thursdays, 7:30-8:45 p.m. Earth Dance Studio, Burlington. Saturdays, 9:3010:45 a.m. Movement Center, Montpelier. $10. Info, 229-6282. Creative expression is the goal o f this dancercise class.

health MENSTRUATION AWARENESS: Thursday, July 17, 6:30-9 p.m. Montpelier. $20. Info, 2231688. Licensed acupuncturist Josephine Spilka believes the menstrual cycle is a dynamic toolfor understanding and uti­ lizing our personal energies.

‘BASIC MASSAGE’: Ten weeks beginning Thursday, July 3, 5:30-7:30 p.m. Vermonc Institute o f Massage, Burlington, $900. Info, 8621111. Participants will learn full-body massage.

meditation 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 medita­ tion integrates stretching selfmassage, ki-gong, breathing and meridian exercises. Classes meet in Burlington, Wolcott, St. Johnsbury and Montpelier.

drama

wo rds WRITERS READ: See July 7. Poet Alan Broughton is featured. BOOK SIGNING: Provincetown author Michael Klein reads from his recently published book o f memoirs, entitled Track Conditions. Bear Pond Books, Montpelier, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 229-0774. ‘CRIME & PUNISH M ENT’: A book discussion series considers The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Warren Library, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 496-3913. HAYDEN CARRUTH: A former resi­ dent of Vermont and current poetry edi­ tor at Harper’s, Hayden Carruth won the National Book Award last year for Scrambled Eggs & Whiskey. He reads from his works at the St. Johnsbury Athen­ aeum, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 748-8291.

DAY-LONG MEDITA­ TION: Saturday, July 5, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Montpelier Unitarian Church. Info, 4264111. yd day-long "nyin thun” begins with an intro to calmabiding and insight medita­ tion, followed by a silent potluck lunch and talk on “giv­ ing and receiving. " MEDITATION: First & third Sundays, 10 a.m. noon. Burlington Shamhbala Center. Free. Info, 658-6795. Instructors teach non-sectarian and Tibetan Buddhist practices. YOGA & MEDITATION: Thursdays, 7-8:30 p.m. Old Brick Church, Williston. $10. Info, 879-4195. Green Mountain Learning Center presents yoga and meditation.

‘CREATIVE EXPRES­ SION’: Eight Wednesdays beginning July 16, 6:30-9 p.m. $200. Info, 985-4045. Theresa Bacon uses The Artists Way and other sources to facili­ tate a womens group exploring the creative process. EATING WITH GRACE’: Eight Mondays beginning July 14, 4-6 p.m. Burlington.

$160. Info, 985-4045. Theresa Bacon facilitates a sup­ port groupfor women seeking healthier relationships to food

tai chi HWVYU: Register now for t’ai chi classes in Montpelier, Hardwick & Greensboro, in the morning, evening and in

the open air. Info, 456-1983Instructor Ellen Hayes dram from more than two decades o f experience. TAI CHI: Tuesdays, 6:30-8 p.m. & 8-9 p.m. Food For Thought, Stowe. $10. Info, 253-4733.

ving tsun MOYYATVTNG TSUN KUNG FU: Classes forming now. Info, 658-7821. Develop health, fitness and inner strength while learning a prac­ tical and applicable martial art. Womens 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: Follow the format, including a to to 20 word descriptive sentence. Mail or walk it in. with $5 for one week or $tg tor a month, by the Thursday before publication. Free classes are listed without charge.

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kids STORIES & CRAFTS: Ages three 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: Children listen, snack and craft at the Children’s Pages, Winooski, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 655-1537. STORY TIME: Kids get an earful at Chassman & Bern Booksellers, Burlington, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 862-4332.

etc FESTIVAL ON THE GREEN: See July 6. Frisbee champion Gary Auberbach is on the spot at noon. The evening agenda features newfangled bluegrass and con­ temporary folk from Dee Carstensen and Salamander Crossing. FARMERS MARKETS: See July 2. CHEAP COM MUNITY SUPPER: See July 2. BATTERED W OM EN’S SUPPORT GROUPS: See July 2. INTRODUCTION TO CHIRO­ PRACTIC: See July 2. NATURAL MEDICINE: See July 2. STREAM BANK PARTY: The Lewis Creek Association organizes volunteers into a stream stabilization work party at the Silver Street crossing of Lewis Creek, Hinesburg, 5:30-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 434-4113.

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• Vis #l Used Clothing Store • Buy and sell used Levi's • Consignments wanted!!

‘A STRANGER IN THE K INGDOM ’: See July 6, Capitol Theater, Montpelier.

‘FUNNY MONEY’: See July 2. ‘GUYS & DOLLS’: See July 2. ‘THE SO UND OF MUSIC’: See July 2.

classes crafts

‘OTHELLO’: See July 5. VAUDEVILLE NIGHT: See July 2. ‘AMERICAN BUFFALO’: Michael Evans is producing this David Mamet play about three crooks in a junk shop plotting to rip off a coin collection. Growling Pup Theater Festival, Magic Hat Brewery, 8 p.m. $8. Info, 863-5966. ‘ARCADIA’: Tom Stoppard explores truth, time and the disruptive influence o f sex. Unadilla Theatre, Calais, 8 p.m. $10. Info, 456-8969.

MADBALL

FRI, JUL 18

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JULIANNA HATFIELD M s SAT JUL, 19

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® tmusi h u r cs d a y CRAFTSBURY CHAMBER PLAYERS: See July 10, Hardwick Town House, 8 p.m. $11. The kids’ concert starts at 2 p.m. OLD-TIME COUNTRY MUSIC: David and Emily Murphey show off their close-knit vocal harmonies on a wide range o f old-time country favorites. Rusty Parker Park, Waterbury, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 244-7726.

d r a ma ‘FUNNY M ONEY’: See July 2. ‘A MERICAN BUFFALO’: See July 9. ‘GUYS & DOLLS’: See July 2. ‘THE SO U N D OF MUSIC’: See July 2. AMATEUR COMEDY NIGHT: See July 3. ‘OTHELLO’: See July 5. ‘ARCADIA’: See July 9. MURDER MYSTERY CRUISE: See July 3. AMATEUR COMEDY NIGHT: See July 3. ‘ANNE FRANK’S W ORLD’: Children and adults from Central Vermont use music and movement to illustrate the courage and faith of a 15-year-old Jewish girl in the face o f Nazi persecution. Northfield Auditorium, 8 p.m. $10. Info, 476-8188. ‘A DELICATE BALANCE’: A touch of the absurd graces this humorous drama by Edward Albee about a middle-aged couple who move in with friends. Montpelier City Hall, 8 p.m. $6 for tonight’s preview. Info, 229-0492. ‘PICASSO AT THE LAPIN AGILE’: This thought-provoking comedy by actor Steve Martin puts Picasso and Einstein in a Paris bar filled with amusing eccentrics. Weston Playhouse, Village Green, 8 p.m. $23. Info, 824-8167. ‘M OON OVER BUFFALO’: A couple of actors have a chance at a future in film when director Frank Capra flies to Buffalo to see them in a matinee. The author o f Lend Me a Tenor penned this Broadway comedy. Dorset Playhouse, 8 p.m. $17-26. Info, 867-2223.

tilm A STRANGER IN THE KINGDOM ’: See July 6, Capitol Theater, Montpelier.

words WRITERS READ: See July 7. Jean Marzollo is featured. BOOK SIGNING: Vermont author Robert Shure signs copies of his Beckettesque new book, The Story o f Digby and Marie. Chassman & Bern Booksellers, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 862-4332.

kids STORY HOUR: Kids convene at Flying

fulafel Middlebury

Want to be a Chef? W h e th e r you are already working on th e line, o r w ant to sta rt a career in th e culinary arts, we have th e o p p o rtu n ity fo r you, ri g h t now. • 7 to 1 student/teacher ratio, • Hands -on training (more time cooking) • Paid, personally tailored internship • A O S degree in Culinary Arts • Bachelor of Arts Degree in Service

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Career D iscovery O pen H ouse Sunday, July 6, 1:00 pm at T h e Inn at E s s e x 7 0 E ssex Way, Essex, V erm ont

Call (802) 223-6324 today to RSVP

SAVOY THEATER THE SA V O Y THEATER

26 Main S t Montpelier 223-0050

26 Main S t Montpelier 229-0509

(or 1-800-898-0050 from 12-9)

page

26

Financial aid for qualified students. Accredited member ACCSCT

INSTITUTE

SEVEN DAYS

i u1

2 & 9.

1 9 9 7___


ATLANTIC THEATER COMPANY: The New York-based theater company offers a staged reading of Mojo, by Jez Butterworth. Burlington City Hall Auditorium, 8 p.m. $5. Info, 865-7166.

Pig Children’s Books, Charlotte, 10:30 а. m. Free. Info, 425-2600.

etc FESTIVAL O N THE GREEN: See July б. Wolf Song serves up Native American stories at noon. The evening features Benoit Bourque and Gaston Bernard per­ forming French-Canadian music with step­ dancing. The Kennedys will also appear. ROYAL LIPIZZAN STALLIONS: The high-stepping white stallions offer equine ballet four times a week in North Hero, 6 p.m. $15. Info, 372-5683. CRUISE-INE: The chefs at the Dog Team Tavern serve dinner onboard. King Street Ferry Dock, Burlington, 7-9:30 p.m. $30. Info, 863-5966. ‘NATURE ART’: Join artist and educa­ tor Annie Caswell for an evening intro to natural sculpturing. Green Mountain Audubon Nature Center, Huntington, 69 p.m. Free. Info, 434-3068. FOOD & W INE EXPO: A “full menu” of panel discussions, wine tastings, cook­ ing demos and other cultures stresses appreciating “the good life.” Most meals are included in this four-day food fest. Stoweflake Inn & Resort, Stowe, 5-8 p.m. $295 excludes meals and tax. Info, 253-7321. TOASTMASTERS MEETING: Discover the relationship between public speaking and personal growth at the Econolodge Conference Center, S. Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 878-3550. TROPICAL FISH CLUB: Tom Grady discusses killifish at a meeting of piscean promoters. VFW Hall, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 482-3616.

dance PEPSI STREET DANCE: Downpour gets you dancing on the top block o f the Church Street Marketplace, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 863-1648.

wcrds STEPHEN DOBYNS: The author of the Saratoga mystery series reads from his new psycho-thriller, The Church o f Dead Girls. Chassman & Bern Booksellers, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 862-4332.

kids CHILDREN’S THEATER FESTIVAL: See July 4. Actors from North Country Center for the Arts perform Yellow Dwarf. SINGING: 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. A “stellar sing-along” starts at 11 a.m. Fletcher Library, Burlington. Free. Info, 865-7216. STORY HOUR: Toddlers listen to sto­ ries at the Milton Public Library, 10:30 а. m. Free. Info, 893-4644.

etc

O fmusi r i d acy BASIN BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL: Ten bands from the Northeast try “pickin’ by the pond.” Bring your own lawn chair for three days of blistering bluegrass. Wymans Ponds, Brandon, 3-10:45 p.m. $29 for the weekend. $9 for Friday only. Info, 247-3275. LISA MCCORMICK: This lesbian songwriter sings out for Outright Vermont. Champlain College Auditorium, Burlington, 7 p.m. $8-15. Info, 1-800-452-2428. BLUES CRUISE: Big Joe Burrell and the Unknown Blues Band play for pas­ sengers on the Lake Champlain Ferries. King Street Ferry Dock, Burlington, 8-11 p.m. $20. Info, 864-9804. FOLK MUSIC: Rebecca Padula plays guitar at Deerleap Books, Bristol, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 453-5684. SPIDER M OON: The all-female a cappella quartet performs folk songs, rounds and chants from around the world. Salisbury Congregational Church, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 352-6670.

TRUE BLUES Muddy Waters, Buddy Guy, Van Morrison, Tracy Chapman. Sixty-two-year-old Junior Wells has jam m ed with all o f them. He blows Chicago blues in Charlotte, Tuesday at the Magic H at Concert Series, Old Lantern. CONCERT A N D DANCE: “ZN of Cowboys” performs originals, jazz and swing at Edgecomb’s Barn, Warren, 8 p.m. $7. Info, 496-2826. WAREBROOK CONTEMPORARY MUSIC FESTIVAL: This three-day festival presents ''utting-edge classical against the traditional backdrop of a

Queen City Quartet

working dairy farm. A reception precedes the opening .concert at Irasburg Town Hall, 8 p.m. $8. Info, 754-6631.

dram a ‘FUNNY MONEY’: See July 2. ‘AMERICAN BUFFALO’: See July 9. ‘GUYS & DOLLS’: See July 2, $12.50

‘THE SO U N D OF MUSIC’: See July 2. ‘OTHELLO’: See July 5. ‘ARCADIA’: See July 9, $12.50 ‘A DELICATE BALANCE’: See July 10, $ 13. ‘ANNE FRANK’S WORLD’: See July 10. ‘PICASSO AT TH E LAPIN AGILE’: See July 10. ‘M OON OVER BUFFALO’: See July 1(7.

Saint Michael’s Playhouse

7/12 7/19 7/26

Lake Street • St. Albans

D R A M A T i C I M P R O V 1S A T i O N

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experience by performing characters who are not close to oneself.

Leeeza figbSins Burlington, V T 802-860-9562

Through July 12

E xp erienced and n o n -ex p erien ced actors w elco m e. W orkshop co n d u cted in B u rlin gton

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July

Continued on next page

N EW G R O U P TH EATRE OF V E R M O N T

fo r Weddings & (Receptions Full Circle Bad Example Downpour

ROYAL LIPIZZAN STALLIONS: See July 10. FOOD & W INE EXPO: See July 10, 10 a.m. - 10 p.m. FESTIVAL O N TH E GREEN: See July б. Sharon Kennedy is the noontime “brown bag special.” A 7 p.m. perfor­ mance by Blink — a dancing duo that uses silent comedy and object manipula­ tion — is followed by an acid-jazz dance party with Viperhouse. BATTERED WOMEN’S SUPPORT GROUPS: See July 2, Burlington, 9:30-11 a.m. BALLOON FESTIVAL: Bring a picnic to a mass balloon launch to the Andean folk sounds o f Yarina. Stoweflake Resort, Stowe, 6:30 p.m. $3. Info, 253-7321. GEOLOGY PROGRAM: Geologist and naturalist David Laing leads an armchair journey back in time to the ancient core of the Green Mountains. North Branch Nature Center, Montpelier, 7:30-9 p.m. $7. Info, 229-6206. OPEN OBSERVATORY: Get a good look at the summer sky with observers from the Vermont Astronomical Society. Green Mountain Observatory, Hinesburg, dusk. Free. Info, 985-3269. SENIOR SWIM: Folks over 50 exercise in an 86-degree pool. YMCA, Burlington, 2-4 p.m. Free. Info, 862-9622. LESBIGAY YOUTH SUPPORT MEETING: Lesbian, bisexual, gay and “questioning” folks under 23 are wel­ come at Outright Vermont, Burlington,

SEVEN DAYS

T h e B u rk ly n B a lle t Saturday performances at 8 p.m. July 5 Bayadere Act II Untitled/]ones Untitled/Cafferella July 12 Cinderella (Ballroom Scene) Sleeping Beauty Prologue July 19 Don Quixote Act I Jardin Animee Little Waltz July 26 Young Choroeographer Showcase August 2 Swan Lake; Paquita Sunday Matinees 2 p.m. July 20 Children's Program Performance “ July 27 Edinburgh Sneak Preview All Ballets are excerpts. Tickets: $8 General Admission, | $4 seniors, students, and children under 12.

Koam In te r n a t io n a l P e rc u a a lo n W o rksh o p G a la P e rfo rm a n c e August 9 8 p.m. Tickets: $5

A n n ie presented by The Unity Community Theater Company August 21, 2 2 , 23 8 p.m. and August 24 at 4 p.m. Tickets: $7 general admission; $5 seniors, students and children under 12.

For an elegant evening, come early and bring a picnic to enjoy by the Lower Pond (below Dibden).

For information & schedules calM-802-635-1386 JOHNSON; | The Dibden Center for the Arts is air conditioned and

STATE COLLEGE

| handicapped accessible.,.....

Johnson , Vermont

,,

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page

27


Nature Center, Montpelier, 10 a.m 4 p.m. $17. Info, 229-6206.

7 p.m. Free. Info, 800-452-2428. OPEN FENCING: Make your point for fitness. Memorial Auditorium Annex, Burlington, 6:30-9 p.m. $3. Info, 865-1763.

s por t OFFRO AD TRIATHALON: This three-part test o f strength involves a she- kilometer moun­ tain bike, she miles of running and a refreshing swim on Lake Hosmer. Craftsbury Outdoor Center, 9 a.m. $15. Info, 729-7751. INTRO TO SCUBA: Non-diving folks get an intro to underwater expedi­ tion from Waterfront Diving Center. North Beach, Burlington, 10 a.m. $15. Info, 865-2771.

0 Saturday music

K105 MOUNTAIN JAM: Killington s WEBK radio presents its fifth daylong festival with headliner James McMurty and six other bands. Pico Mountain, Killington, noon. $15/20. Info, 422-3156. BASIN BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL: See July 11, 10 a.m. - 10:40 p.m. $15 for Saturday only. WAREBROOK CONTEMPORARY MUSIC FESTIVAL: See July 11. Lectures, workshops and a panel discus­ sion precede the 8 p.m. concert o f works by Paul Burst, Alec Wilder, Donald Martino and Aaron Copland. Newport High School, $8. Info, 754-6631. GROOVE APOCALYPSE: Thirty mostly local bands take over Burlington. Club Toast, Battery Park, Manhattan Pizza, 242 Main, Club Metronome, Rio’s. See club listing for details. Info, 800-303-1590.

dance CONTRA DANCE: Mary DesRosiers calls for the Last Elm String Band at a benefit dance for the Champlain Valley Festival. Southwick Ballroom, UVM, Burlington, 8-11:30 p.m. $8. Info, 800769-9176. BURKLYN BALLET: Pre-professional dancers perform excerpts o f Cinderella and Sleeping Beauty. Dibden Center for the Arts, Johnson State College, 8 p.m. $8. Info, 635-1386.

etc ROYAL LIPIZZAN STALLIONS: See July 10, 2:30 p.m. BALLOON FESTI­ VAL: See July 11. 6:30 a.m. & 6:30 p.m. Coolyour heels where the music is hot — and free. Pete and Maura FOOD & WINE Kennedy are among dozens o f performers in the annual eight-day festival o f perform­ EXPO: See July 10, 10 a.m. - 10 p.m. ing arts that starts Saturday in Middlebury. FESTIVAL ON THE GREEN: See July 6. The music starts in the morning with ‘ARCADIA’: See July 9, $12.50 Mountain Top Morris. Stick around for ‘PICASSO AT THE LAPIN AGILE’: STORIES: Kids over three listen at the Wind That Shakes the Barley, North See July 10, 3 p.m. $19. 8 p.m. $26. Fletcher Library, Burlington, 11-11:30 Union and the a street dance with the ‘M O O N OVER BUFFALO’: See July a.m. Free. Info, 865-7216. Vermont Jazz Ensemble. 10, 4 & 8:30 p.m. ‘MISSION MAGNET’: Your fridge will FARMERS MARKETS: See July 5. never look the same after this hands-on GEOLOGY DRIVING TOUR: magnet making session. Fletcher Library, WRITERS READ: See July 7. Leslie Vermont’s geologic past covers a span of Burlington, 2-4 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7216. Ullman and Daniel Lusk are featured. on billion years. Cover it in just one day WILDCRAFTING FOR TEENS: What BERNIE READING: Vermont’s lone on a driving tour of the Winooski River do ostrich ferns, cattails and nettles have congressman reads from his political Valley, from Montpelier to Burlington. in common? At some point in their memoir, Outsider in the House. Bear Pond North Branch Nature Center, Montpelier, growing seasons, they can be safely eaten. Books, Montpelier, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. $20. Register, 229-6206. Nova Kim leads a hands-on wildcrafting 229-0774. CHARLOTTE LIBRARY PARTY: Get workshop for teens. North Branch

LIVE KENNEDYS:

kids

dr a ma ‘FUNNY MONEY’: See July 2, 8 p.m. ‘A MERICAN BUFFALO’: See July 9, 2 & 8 p.m. ATLANTIC THEATER COMPANY: See July 11. ‘GUYS & DOLLS’: See July 2, $12.50 ‘THE SO U N D OF MUSIC’: See July 2. ‘A NNE FRANK’S WORLD’: See July 10. ‘OTHELLO’: See July 5. ‘A DELICATE BALANCE’: See July 10, $13.

words

11am

Im m e d ia te ly A fte r Parade

Historic Community Photo in the Park Everyone's invited!

1pm

7th Heaven

SEVEN E

• Our new Small Boat Livery opens July 5th for rentals! • Take part in the 3-mile CHALLENGE Race on July 6th! ,

Riris ^ L , M E X I C A N RESTAURANT

1897-1997

Greater St. Albans M iddle School Band Performance by the area's finest young musicians

Ju ly 4, 1997

Electric Youth Dancers

Picnic & Concerts in the Park (Bring your picnic or purchase it there)

3pm

Black Star

Country & Western Band

4pm

(802) 475-2022

Located 7 miles west of Vergennes, VT. on Lake Champlain

FOSTER CARE

C/\R/

CONSIDER FOSTER PARENTING... Did you know that there are 300 children and teens in Chittenden County that are unable to live with their families? If you have a little extra space in your home and lots of love to share, consider becoming a foster parent. CHILDREN OF A LL AGES IN NEED OF CARING HOMES: 4 • Emergency pare ‘ Longterm • Short term • Legal risk/Adoption (Financial support and training provided.)

SHOW YOU CAM ... Chittenden County Foster Care Program IdTofflce SRS-Burlington District Office »* v*’ '

■*\

page

28

musi c

BASIN BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL: See July 11, 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. $10 Sunday only. ‘MUSIC IN TH E MEADOW’: See July 6. Tammy Fletcher makes an appearance with the all-female jazz big band Diva. WAREBROOK CONTEMPORARY MUSIC FESTIVAL: See July 11. The concert today features works by Theodore Antoniou, Jakov Jakoulov, Lukas Foss, Linda Bouchard, Gyorgy Ligeti and Owen Underhill. Haskell Opera House, Derby Line, 2 p.m. Donations. Info, 754-6631. VERMONT MOZART FESTIVAL: A dressage exhibit kicks off the three-week music festival with works by Rossini, Strauss, Schubert and, o f course, Mozart. Shelburne Farms, 6:30 p.m. $18. Info, 862-7352. KILLINGTON MUSIC FESTIVAL: A “Music in the Mountains Concert” fea­ tures works by Beethoven, Chopin and Cesar Franck. Skyeship Base Station, Route 4, Killington, 7:30 p.m. $15. Info, 422-6767.

Giant "Historical" Parade

Saturday & Sunday July 5-6

L A K E C H A M P L A IN M A R IT IM E M U S E U M at Basiti Harbor, Vermont

0 Sunday

Ju ly 5, 1997

Smatf (Boat Show Don't miss seeing beautifully handcrafted vessels!

a read on the groundbreaking while your kids check out hay rides, live music and an old-fashioned fire engine. Charlotte Town Hall, 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. Free. Info, 425-3958. TRADITIONAL CRAFTS DAY: Basketmakers, weavers, woodworkers and textile artists show the way it was. Sheldon Museum, Middlebury, 10 a.m. 4 p.m. Info, 388-2117. BIRD BANDING DEMO: Get a good look at some o f Vermont’s “summer resi­ dents” at a bird-banding demonstration with Mark LaBarr. Green Mountain Audubon Nature Center, Huntington, 8 a.m. $10. Info, 434-3068. LIVING HISTORY PROGRAM: A Revolutionary War period encampment features drilling demos and skirmishes. Hubbardton Battlefield, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. $2. Info, 759-2412. LONG TRAIL HIKE: A moderate ninemile hike takes 13 hours, including car travel and dinner. Meet in Montpelier, 7 a.m. Free. Register, 223-5603.

Legion begins Legendary-B-B-Q Meal

ASK ED Sun June 29th - Sat July 5th Rio's will be closed for renovations. Every Tuesday night James Harvey Quintet featuring Paul Asbeljeff Salisbury, Aaron Mursey and Dave Grippo Wed 7/9 Onion River Jazz Band -NewOrleans Stylejazz Sat 7/12 Groove Apocalypse with Belizbeha, Viperhouse& Orange Factory 'AY;

e- r

2:45pm

Fenian Four

Traditional Irish Music

3pm

Wacky Races on Main Street

-•

Champlain Mill, Winooski

655-RIOS sever days

3:30pm

Mary Hamm

10am -6pm

An accomplished violinist from St. Albans

5-6:30pm (concert)

Eklectik Zurn

Franklin County Historical Museum open Sterling Weed's Big Band Sound

7-8:30pm (concert) 40th Army Band

3:45pm

International music performed by Brooks, Mary Dove & Bridget

4:30pm

French Heritage

8:45-10pm (concert)

Allard Brothers-Soft Rock

5:15pm

LA M B S B R E A D

Burlington's Legendary Reggae Band

Ju ly 5, 1997

-- 7 : v 4-..

Boston award-winning & Summer camp dancers

4pm

St. Lukes-lce Cream Social

T

1:45pm

10am -4pm

Franklin County Museum open

10am

FIREW O RKS AT DU SK St. Albans Town Dock

Ju ly 6, 1997

Events in Park for Ethnic Festival (on-going entertainment)

The Bay Park, St. Albans Bay 10am

11am ETHN IC FESTIVA L w / TONS o f GREAT FOOD

The Great Race Triathalon (running, biking, canoeing)

Everything from baklava to burritos

Volleyball Tournam ent 4-6 person teams

10am

Jon G ailm or

12:00

The Great Children's Race and activities

1:00pm

Horseshoe Tournament (S’ ]n up it 1? 30) 1 0 a m -4 p m

Vendors

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9.

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d r a ma ‘OTHELLO’: See July 5, 2 p.m. ‘GUYS & DOLLS’: See July 2, $12.50 ‘A DELICATE BALANCE’: See July 10, 7 p.m. $11. ‘ARCADIA’: See July 9, $ 12.50. ‘ANNE FRANK’S W ORLD’: See July 10, 3 p.m. PICASSO AT TH E LAPIN AGILE’: See July 10. 7 p.m. $19. ‘M OON OVER BUFFALO’: See July 10. VARIETY SHOW DINNER CRUISE: See July 6.

kid a ‘THE PRINCE A N D TH E PAUPER’: Green Candle Theater puts a Monty Python twist on the classic tale of swapped identities. Growling Pup Theater Festival, Magic Hat Brewery, 1 & 3 p.m. Donations. Info, 863-5966.

e tc FREE D IN NER: See July 6. ROYAL LIPIZZAN STALLIONS: See July 10, 2:30 p.m. BALLOON FESTIVAL- See July 11 • 6:30 a.m. FO O D & W IN E EXPO: See July 10, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. LIVING HISTORY PROGRAM : See July 12. Relive the “battle” 9 a.m. - 2 p.m. ACQUATIC PLANT WALK: A wetland walk turns up various examples of acquatic vegetation. Green Mountain Audubon Nature Center, 2 p.m. $5. Info, 434-3068. ‘A SYM PHONY OF GA RDENS’: The Flynn benefits from lectures, demonstra­ tions and tours of six spectacular private gardens in Charlotte, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. $30. Reservations, 863-5966. GEOLOGY OF T H E GREEN M O U N TA IN S’: Explore the rock n' roll history of northern Vermont on a hike up Belvidere M ountain with geologist Jon Kim. Green M ountain Club, 9 a.m. 4 p.m. $15. Info, 244-7037.

© monday m u s i c

BAND CONCERT: See July 7. OPEN REHEARSAL: See July 7. SALLY PINKAS: The pianist compares notes with soprano Jane Bryden in an all-

Schubert program with guest flutist Christopher Krueger. Spaulding Auditorium, Hopkins Center, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H ., 8 p.m. $12.50. Info, 603-646-2422.

words WRITERS READ: See July 7. Stephen Dobyns is featured. ‘BOOK N IG H T’: The lives of two women veer irrevocably off course in The Price o f Salt, by Patricia Highsmith. Come ready to discuss the original Thelma and Louise at Blue Couch Cafe, Burlington, 7:45 p.m. $2. Info, 865-5066.

etc VERMONT FARMHOUSE DINNER: See July 7. Fresh products from North Hollow Farm are featured. TEEN HEALTH CLINIC: See July 7. EMOTIONS ANONYMOUS: See July 7.

© fuesday m u s ic

OPEN REHEARSAL: See July 8. ‘CELTIC COLLEGE’: See July 8. ‘PRESSLER IN RECITAL’: Grammynominated pianist Menahem Pressler plays Mozart and Chopin at the Cathedral of St. Paul, Burlington, 8 p.m. $18. Info, 863-7352.

862-9620 or 244-5641.

words WRITERS’ GROUP: See July 8.

kids ‘FATHERS & CHILDREN TOGETH­ ER’: See July 8. ‘SKY SHOWS OF VERMONT’: Astronomer Errol Pomerance brings his portable planetarium to the library for an exciting and educational experience of the night sky. Fletcher Library, 1-1:45 p.m. and 2-2:45 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7216. STORY HOUR: Kids between three and five engage in artful educational activi­ ties. Milton Public Library, 10:30 a.m. &C 1 p.m. Free. Info, 893-4644.

etc

PRODUCTIONS presents

an evening o f superb food and music in our theatre b a m ...

Italian

dMusic fe stiv a l

(S u nd ay J u l y

FARMERS MARKET: See July 9. FREE HEALTH CLINIC: See July 9. HEALTH SCREENING: Get a choles­ terol reading at Fletcher Allen Wellness Center, Burlington, 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. $14. Blood pressure screenings are free. Info, 865-2278. TOASTMASTERS M EETING: Practice public speaking in conference Room 2, Blue Cross-Blue Shield Building, Berlin, 5:30 p.m. Free. Info, 229-5757.

6 , 1997

6:30

pm

‘Variety ISlfght ^ W ednesday J u ly

9 ,1 9 9 7 6:30 p m

Calendar is written by Clove

d r a m a ‘M O O N OVER BUFFALO’: See July 10. ‘PICASSO AT T H E LAPIN AGILE’: See July 10, 8 p.m. $19‘CH RISTIE, C H R ISTIE ’: Two guests arrive at a London flat expecting a dinner parry', but murder is on the menu. Get two Christie capers — The Rats and The Patient— for the price o f one. St. Michael’s Playhouse, Colchester, 8 p.m. $18. Info, 654-2281.

m conjunction with. EARNEST

S 3 8 / d m n e r <&en terta in m en t; liquor, ta x & g r a tu ity a re n o t in clu d ed

Tsindle. Submissions for calendar,

(non -refu n dable 2 4 hours p rio r to th e show ). P r e p a id reserva tio n s a re re q u ired a s sea tin g is lim ited.

clubs, and art listings are due in

244 5288

Fax 802 244 4130

writing on the Thursday before pub­

'Regular dining still available on our porch during theatre nights.

lication. SEVEN DAYS edits for

R o u te 1 0 0 ~ six m iles so u th o f S to w e

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space and style. Send to:

film

SEVEN DAYS, P.0. Box 1164,

‘A STRANGER IN T H E K IN G D O M ’: See July 6, Playhouse Theater, Randolph, 7 p.m. T H E APPLE D U M PLIN G G A NG’: Bring your own lawnchair to an alfresco film courtesy of Ben and Jerry. Simultaneous showings on top of the Burlington Parking Garage and the Waterbury Plant, 8:30 p.m. Free. Info,

Burlington, VT 05402-1 164. Or fax 802- 865- 1015. Email: sevenday@together.net

ARMY 8 NAVY MIDDLEBURY 5 P ark Street •3 8 8 -9 8 0 9 1

BURLINGTON 9 Center Street •8 8 8 9 8 0 9 1

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C a p t u r e ev e ry o u ts id e m o m e n t ol V e r m o n t a t

Want to complete your bachelors degree no time to take classes? Consider Burlington College’s Independent Degree Program 0DP) which meets for a fouFjjay residency once each semester, j The IDP offers self-designed B.Aj • Cinema Studies Fine Arts

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HERMANOS PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS

Latino D ance Party Saturday, July 12, 9 pm-1 am. $5 CB’s Huge Dancefloor ; Susie Wilson Road, Essex Junction

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TINA'S ISLAND

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Continued from page 15

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smashed into the corner of the pack, light it up and smoke hard. It’s dark. No street lights, just a few houses, no curtains on the windows of the ones we do drive by. The green glow of a television set comes through one window. I see a woman sitting at a table, her head bent down, like maybe she’s praying or something. Or just paying bills. I see some­ one watching TV, a couple having an argument, an old lady washing dishes, someone opening the door for the cat. I’m looking, looking for something. Like maybe I’ll see a naked couple doing it against the kitchen counter and I’ll know it’s not her husband. I want to see something ugly. Mom rolls down the win- z dow. Cold air ^on whips in, around the back ^ seat and hits me °° in the side of z the face. I’m ~ about to tell her ^ to shut the window, but she’s :j got the box open, her hand in it. She pulls up a fist full of stuff, gold chains dangling through her fingers like worms in some kid’s hand. She looks at them, then chucks them out the window. Just like that. One of the chains gets caught and she swats at it, shoves it over the edge. She takes a couple of hits on her cigarette. Then she reaches into the box again, feeling around with her fin­ gers, picks up a ring, tosses it out. Then another ring. Then the cigarette. A perfect flick, middle finger against thumb.

I’m thinking: This is someone’s stuff. We whip by a house, a woman standing at the win­ dow staring out. I’m picturing her in the morning, walking her dirty little dog, seeing something shiny along the road, stopping to pick it up. Then seeing something more a little further down. Would she keep it? When would she ever wear this stuff? I can see her putting it in a little cardboard box, stuffing it in the back of her underwear drawer, fishing it out once in a blue moon from the big white cotton undies and the industrial trength bras and just

box. It4.all hard, cold. And expensive. Just gold and stones in different shapes and sizes. I pick up a pair of earrings. Gold posts with dark, reddish brown stones dangling, the color of dried blood. I pull down the mirror on the back of the sun visor, hold them up to my ears. Okay, I think, with a little black dress, at a little French restaurant, dark red lipstick, hair all pulled up with a few strands hanging down. Then I think, yeah, right. I toss the earrings in my palm a couple of times, watch them catch the light, feel their weight. Then I roll down my window. Out they go. om looks over at me. She doesn’t smile, just looks; doesn’t turn her head, just her eyes. Then she closes them, holds them shut a sec­ ond, just long enough to make me wonder if she’s ever going to open them back up at all. When she does, she’s staring ahead at the road. But I know some­ thing happened. Like she said something to me that I’m not going to hear until a long time from now. We sort of take turns. She throws a few things, I throw a few things. We wait for long stretches of road to pass in between. She just grabs at stuff and chucks it sideways out the window. I take my time, sift through, maybe try on a ring, hold a bracelet up to the light, then reach out the window and drop it alongside the car. That way, maybe someone will find it.

M

looking at the stuff, running her fingers over it, until her husband or her kids yell from the kitchen, wanting some­ thing from her. I’m thinking: I never want to be that woman. Then I’m thinking about the women who have jewelry boxes like this one, filled with stuff like this. I don’t want to be one of those women, either. I watch Mom light another cigarette. I wonder if it’s too late to not want to be her. I put my hand into the

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Continued on page 35

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must admit that near the end o f the ski season, the pleasant thought o f read­ ing on a sun-baked beach occasionally enters my mind. Its a daydream of lazy days with cool drinks and vacuous, easy-to-digest Tom Clancey novels. But then, when the snow finally melts and the tem­ peratures rise, I find I can’t quite stom­ ach the lighter fare after all. There are just too many good books about the “outside” that I still haven’t taken in. From Thoreau to Abbey to McPhee — and perhaps now Krakauer — the book racks are filled with authors whose words lead us on an adven­ ture, or teach us something about the great out­ doors. The fol­ lowing list of suggestions is by no means com­ prehensive —• if it were it would have to include v Thoreaus Walden, a bike story M ile, From Nowhere

I

I f you

spend

reads. In keeping with this issue’s theme of summer read­ ing, here’s a top-10 list — in no particular order — of very readable adventures I’ve enjoyed, or cant wait to take. 1. A Sand County Almanac, by Aldo Leopold. Oxford University Press, 1949 (pp. 228) Published a year after Leopold’s death while helping his neighbors fight a grass fire, this is the seminal work on land stew­ ardship. But beyond teaching an ethic, Leopold maintains a seemingly

c

ayour

time outdoors this summer,

just read about

i

simple narrative on the comt

. . .

£'

' ''

the restoration of a worn-out “sand farm” in Wisconsin. Leopold should be required reading for developers.

the Everest tragedies, you can go back and read Krakauer’s Outside magazine story (September 1996).

2. Desert Solitaire, by Edward Abbey. The University of Arizona Press, 1968 (pp.238) Dubbed “the Thoreau of the American West,” Abbey bristled at the notion of being a nature writer — he was a writer, period. He was also a park ranger for the National Park Service for 16 years, including three seasons in Arches National Park in Utah, the setting for Desert Solitaire. Meant as an epitaph for Arches and the Southwest as a whole, the book is also an intensely personal perspective on the desert and the fertile mind of the author.

5. Annapurna, by Maurice Herzog. E.P. Dutton & Co., 1952 (pp. 316) Herzog was a climber, not a writer, by trade. But as the leader of the first expedition to summit an 8000-meter peak, he had as compelling a climb­ ing story as there is to tell. Considered a climbing classic, Annapurna is as readable and relevant today — for its mes­ sage about teamwork and the human spirit — as when Herzog and eight other French mountaineers scaled the heights of the world.

3. Ron Rood’s Vermont — A Nature Guide. The New England Press, 1988 (pp. 215) Written by one of Vermont’s best natural­ ists and illustrated by the celebrated nature artist Reed A. Prescott III of Lincoln, this is one of the few guide books that can be enjoyed as easily at home as in the field. But it’s summer, why stay home? The author shares a number of his favorite trips for all to sample. O n the trail of Vermont’s natural world, Rood reveals a multitude of gems that are bound to enrich the outdoor experience of tourist and native alike. 4. Into Jon Kr: Books, Kr; on this l your x > the bes Thin Air, his fi account o f last

6. The Snow Leopard, by Peter Matthiessen. Viking Press, 1978 (pp. 338) Passing under the shadow of Annapurna, Matthiessen makes a 250-mile trek across Tibet to study the bhraral, or Himalayan blue sheep, with world-renowned zoologist George Schaller. Imbued with the mysticism o f Buddhist reli­ gion and the prospect of encountering the near-mythic snow leopard, this tale is both a spirtual journey and one of the best natural history---you’ll ever read. 7. The N inem ile Wolves, by Rick Bass. Clark City Press, 1992 (pp. 162) Though less well-known, Bass is a contemporary writer worthy of discovery by anyone interested in the outdoors — or plain good writing. This extended essay advocates the reintroduction of wolves while relating the true story of one small packs fate near Marion, Montana.

Mowat. Little,

this book as “an attempt to explain to myself why I spent all those years as a slave to a sinking schooner.” Anyone who’s ever sunk their money into a boat will relate to Mowat’s text more than they may care to admit. 9. The John McPhee Reader, by John McPhee. Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, 1976 (pp. 385) For a writer as prolific and accomplished as McPhee, it’s difficult to recommend just one of his books. Fortunately, there exists not one but two John McPhee readers. Unfortunately, the second part is dominated by selections from his more recent geologybased “rocks books” — pretty heavy lifting for the beach. Not to worry; pick up the original and open up to old classics like the Brower v. Domlny section of Encounters with the Archdruid to discover why McPhee’s a champion. 10. W ild Snow, by Louis Dawson. American Alpine Club, 1997 (pp. 229) Call me crazy, but by mid­ summer its either read a ski book or head to the southern hemisphere. Books being cheaper, I often beat a quick to Classic Backcountry Skiing, by Waterbury author David Goodman, just to pon­ der the possibilities of winter. This summer, fanatics might take a dose of the new W ild Snow, which provides an indepth historical perspective on North American ski moun­ taineering. And if you prefer to surf, don’t neglect the Web site for Viking Voyage 1000 — the reenactment of Leif Ericsson’s epic journey from Greenland to the only confirmed settle­ ment o f Norsemen in North America, at L’Anse aux Meadows in Newfoundland. To follow the expedition’s progress, complete with journal entries from Huntington out www.viking voyage@www. viking1000.

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saves the day, b) a struggling and unhappy graduate student in a writing program who saves the day, or cj a struggling and unhappy newspaper reporter who saves the day. \ 5. No swordplay; even in farce. 6. Don’t write what you know. Forget what you’ve heard:

possibly care about that? Go outside. Meet new people. And write about them. This means you, Phillip Roth. 7. Don’t use company brand names in your Fiction. It’s hard to be timeless and ascendant when your second generation of readers are trying to figure out

Bv Jeremv Rosenberg f ic t io n

1. Don’t repeat a sentence twice in the row. It doesn’t sound more important, just more annoying. In less civilized times, they put rocks in the mouths of stutterers. 2. Don’t have your story end with a sudden, out-of-the-blue irony. O. Henry’s dead. 3. Unless you’re Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and you’re writ­ ing the latest Sherlock Holmes, don’t ever describe anything as being “impossibly tall,” or “impossibly eloquent.” Once you’ve eliminated the possible — newsflash — nothing else remains. 4. Please, oh please, don’t let your protagonist be a) a strug­ gling and unhappy writer who

fakin’; mullah. 12. No more “Deus ex machina” plot devices. That shit died out with Willy Shakespeare. 13. Considering a memoir thin­ ly disguised as fiction, probably to avoid multiple libel suits? Here’s a hint: Give it up.

I mean, i f you overcam e a f e a r o f flying by lic k in g d o o rk n o b s, t h a t needs to be sh a re d w ith th e p eo p le-B u t a s f a r as f i c t i o n goes, shhW Leave a l i t ­ t l e m ystery, OK, Ms -12— Step s?

Our correspondent spent the past two months as the fiction reader for a major West Coast magazine. Here’s what he learned.

w r it in g

Zen/Krishna stories. The whole point of these Eastern religions is: Nothing ever happens. Not for millennia. W hat kind of story does that make? 10. Try to use these words in your fiction: Clydesdale; femur; Pensacola; watercress salad;

Nobody cares about your bor­ ing, pathetic life. You’re a writer, you sit at home in your pajamas and type. Who could

what the hell an RC Cola is. 8. No novels about dogs. No exceptions. 9. Enough with the Buddhist/

smarmy; pomegranate. 11. Try to avoid these words in your fiction: ponderous; neo­ phyte; tableau; clunky; funk-

Nobody cares about you.

su bk etu n g fictio n L Put your return address on n v q r.q 10

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graphic design and also the self-confidence that you expect a reply and are properly neu­ rotic to worry the letter could get lost in the mail. 2. Do not, under any circum­ stances, allow the name of the lead character in your story to match the name of the fiction edi­ tor you’re sub­ mitting to. Besides being a pathetic bit of groveling, it’s also completely inef­ fective, since the person whose name you used ISN’T READ­ ING YOUR MANUSCRIPT! 3. Note: Who does actually read your manuscript? Sometimes the receptiomst. Sometimes nobody at all. In certain cases, an actual intern. vOnce a year, the editor, i ~ 4. On your per­ sonal stationery, do not use a clip art quill pen, inkwell or — mn god forbid - - a scroll of papyrus as your oh-so-hip logo. Instead, to save some time, please just write, “I’m an untalented, uncreative sap with no hope for future suc­ cess” across the top of the page. 5. Unless it’s book-length, don’t ask for the manuscript back. It’s tacky. And defeatist. Why ask for some­ thing back? Expect the receiver to keep it. Remember, you’re a genius. Plus, realistically, it’s cheaper to reprint than to pay the postage. 6 . Or use my favorite phrase: “Yo, granolas, if you don’t want this shit, recy­ cle it.” 7. In the cover letter, please do not write: “My piece is a quick, fun read.” And if right now, you’re thinking, “And why not?” then please go work for an HMO. Or play the accordion. You’re not funny. 8 . Don’t write in the cover let­ ter how your story was written in a college class, or in some overpriced writers’ workshop. I

I did? Well, never mind then. 9. Despite what you may have heard, do not insult the reader by enclosing a crisp $5 bill as “processing fees.” Better to make it a clean $ 1 0 0 .

D o n 't w r i t e

w hat you know .

1 2 . That, and paying for an actual copyright, 13. In nonfiction stuff, yes, go ahead: Include biographical info in your cover letter, explaining why you arc the best person to write the piece. I mean, if you overcame a fear o f flying by loors, that needs to be shared with the people. But as

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FOURTHOFJULY C o n tin u e d f r o m p a g e 2 3

wheelbarrow. To make them feel part of the event, their children preceded them in a pick-up truck, dropping horse manure from its bed. The parade has only a few official rules. First, no one can prepare their float any earlier than the morn­ ing of the parade. Second, spending over $ 1 0 is frowned upon. Third, no one can practice. The women who make up the Moscow All Ladies Lawn Chair Drill Team, however, openly flout this rule. “We like to look sharp,” explains Scarpa. Anyone who has wit­ nessed the spectacle of this Drill Team, resplendent in floral print shirts, shorts and sunglasses, opening and closing their lawn chairs in perfectly synco­ pated rhythm while they march in formation, will forgive them their trans­ gressions. The men of the Moscow Radio All-Men’s Marching Band abide by the no-practice rule — and it shows. A somewhat dour, seemingly lackluster bunch

casts marching music especially for the parade. Other Muscovites place their blaring radios in open windows, while others turn up their car radios. It all seems very high-tech, in a low-tech sort of way. And WDEV’s cooperation is a bit of a mystery; no one in Moscow has ever asked the radio station to provide the parade’s musical accompaniment. “It just hap­ pened,” explains Tom Hamilton. “Kind of spooky, isn’t it?” Although the marching Muscovites are fond of taking pokes at politicos via their floats, they draw the line at allowing them to join their parade. In 1996 — the parade’s 2 0 th anniversary and an elec­ tion year — Governor Howard Dean and Congressional candi­ date Susan Sweetser inquired about joining in. They were told, in no uncertain terms, that they would not be espe­ cially welcome. Wisely, they stayed away. Each year, as word spreads, the parade grows in popularity, and more and more visitors crowd into tiny Moscow for the 1 0 -minute mini-pageant. CBS has covered the event; so has the Associated Press and The N ew York Times. Some res­ idents wonder if all this notori­ ety is a good thing. “We used

(insiders explain they abhor any hint of showmanship), they march through the streets with boomboxes solemnly perched on their left shoulders. On command from their leader, who marches backwards waving a baton at them, they switch their radios to their right shoulders. And back again. Somehow, this works. T h e

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to end the parade with every­ body going to the baseball field for Bloody Marys,” recalls Hamilton wistfully. “But now, with all these people and traf­ fic... those days are long gone.” Even the parade’s stars, the Moscow All Ladies Lawn Chair Drill Team, seem a bit jaded. A few years ago they were invited to the Fourth of July parade in nearby Morrisville to do their thing. “We’d never been invited to march anywhere else before and, frankly, were flattered,” says Scarpa. After finishing the Moscow parade the team loaded their lawn chairs into several vans and drove the 10 miles to Morrisville. “But by the time we’d gotten there, we’d changed our minds,” Scarpa remembers. “It just seemed like too much work, and their parade seemed way too organized. So we turned around and came home.” This year the parade, proba­ bly the shortest in America and surely the drollest, will start around 10 a.m. and finish shortly thereafter. Visitors may be in for a special treat. Rumor has it that members of the Moscow Radio All-Men’s Marching Band have been cheating — they’ve actually been practicing. (7)

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SEVEN DAYS

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life when a skateboarder pleads her case for use of the sidewalk. And, in one lively routine, a chorus of children in adult-size suit jackets become petty legislators. The evening begs for more such effective action, as well as an element linking the scenes. The plays attempt at a com­ mon thread — the narrator —- fails because the character is ill-defined. The script also shies away from controversy. The immense impact of immigra­ tion on Barre is sorely absent, racism receives a fleeting ref­ erence, environmentalism and anti-nuke attitudes are treated as common wisdom. And, while this play gives a well-deserved tribute to Vermont’s 1918 Spanish flu victims, it makes no mention of AIDS. Most blatandy missing is any reference to the current state of print media, other than a suggestion that the nice, quiet newspaper is bet­ ter than the unreliable com­ puter — an amazing state­ ment in the age of on-line publishing, which may alter or end newspapers as we have known them. While the acting ability is uneven, standouts in the 18member cast include veterans and novices alike. Judy Milstein’s marvelous interpre­ tations and singing are both an asset and liability in this play, sometimes bringing out the best of a scene, another times showing that even her wonderful talent can’t save the script. Tim Tavcar is pol­ ished and poised, Mark Doskow is a charming and highly skilled presence, Ken Carter shows consistent strength and dignity, 13-yearold Dan Kahn is a delight to watch, and nine-year-old Emma Van Susteren is a show-stopper of impressive vocal clarity. Thanks to a large thrust and ramp playing area, designer Ellen E. Jones was able to use most of the proscenium stage for her wonderful set. Delightfully oversized front pages are sus­ pended in air, two of which double as screens for intrigu­ ing historical slides. In all, N ew s is a massive project which deserves recog­ nition for good intentions and hard work. So, if you can keep its amateur status in mind, by all means go. You’ll see wonderful enthusiasm and learn something about your home state. And, after the show, when you walk out into the streets you’ve just heard about, you’ll have a new sense of your place in Vermont history, (f)

july

2

& 9,

1997


By Gall

Rosenberg

hen David Pikul started collecting French and European enameled ware in 1983, it wasn’t even consid­ ered collectible — not in France, anyway. Fourteen years later, the antiquer in Amsterdam, New York, is co­ owner of a business that spe­ cializes in the brightly colored kitchenware produced between World War I and II. Today the bold graphics and strongly defined shapes that characterize the utensil racks, coffeepots, canister sets and towel holders in his collection are in great demand. As happens when an antique item grows popular, market prices have risen dra­ matically and supplies have dwindled. “We call these pieces enam­ eled ware; other collectors use the term graniteware or agatewear,” Pikul explains. “The pieces are made by coat­ ing metal objects with a glass­ like porcelain composition. The challenge of the manufac­ turers was to get the two mate-

rials to expand at the same rate when heated.” Pikul taught high school chemistry in England, Germany, Scotia, New York and Amsterdam, but he claims his interest in enameled ware has little to do with the manu­ facturing process. “It’s like when I take photographs,” he

notes that enameled w; one of the few collecti where damage from normal use — is ed.” Pikul participates in select­ ed antique shows in the Northeast — including last Saturday’s exhibit at the Shelburne Museum. Hi§|

explains. “I’m not interested in the development process... For me, there’s magic in the pat­ terns and shapes of the enam­ eled ware.” His brother and sister-inlaw, who live in Burgundy, France, introduced Pikul to enameled ware and continue to search for and ship pieces to him. Luckily, most collectors are more interested in the color, design and rarity of the piece than its condition; Pikul

ness, The Chuctananurtdg.v^ Antique Company — named for the creek that runs through his property — featured a wide variety of coffeepots and coffee “biggins,” both of which serve as dripolators. Biggins have , three sections — the middle section holds ground c o ^ ’“ placed over a screen of cloth or special coffee s When these filters dete they were often discard a two-section coffeepot

W

* Patterns <ff

mffrfo forms, often in orange or|f>right blue white, and florals and '*x * :>y France, the floral p ai , . „ _ e rns and col­ bird motifs ors o f m udhof the F ren ch ^ ® desirable. In the United States, enameled ware are bold and collectors’ interests are fairly whimsical, there is also a high evenly divided between florals degree of regulation and order and geometric designs. among the items. Wall-hung Pink coffeepots and items with laundry sets held three cups, a “droopy check” — the pat­ usually containing sand (to act tern appears to have melted — as an abrasive), soap (to pro­ are considered rare. vide suds), and baking soda (as Pikul has received calls a gentle bleach). Towel holders from all over the world, though have positions marked for the j interest seems strongest in ^pugtowels it held — for.., . California — particularly after hands* silver’ china and glass. his collection was featured in a Kitchen utensil racks, designed February 1997 issue of Country to be hung near a stove, held Living. He sells the coffeepots three tools — a sieve, a drip­ and biggins to serious collec­ ping spoon and a tasting tors, to artists who use them in I spoon. still lifes, to interior decorators, It’s rare to find utensil racks seeking a French country look, > with the tools intact, Pikul in New York says. Construction o f die rack City. You don’t have to live in a provides clues to its age — if couni home,” Pikul notes. separate pieces have been rivet­ <f the pots range from ed together rather than stamped, the piece is ead|||. Pikul s inventory also Prices for the laundry sets are udes a large number of $95 to $295; for towel holders, ;htly colored canister sets $65 to $175; utensil racjks, (yarns potential buyers tfo $150 to 400. t requires ^ininimum of For a man who describes himself as a dilettante, David t f ^ » « M t e l e v o K d to his

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by Delia Robinson and painted silk by Martha Fitch. Vermont State Craft Center at Frog Hollow, Burlington, 863-6458. Reception July 11, 6-8 p.m. ART RESOURCE A S S O C I ­ A T IO N 1 9 9 7 ANNUAL SHOW, a group exhibit of

mixed media by members of the Central Vermont organiza­ tion, Main Gallery; also G. ROY L E V I N AND C A R ­ OLYN SH AP I RO, drawings

and assemblages, respectively, South Gallery. T.W. Wood Gallery, Montpelier, 828-8743. Reception July 11, 5-7 p.m. F A C E S OF N ATU RE, ceramic planters and masks for garden, home and greenhouse by six artists. Vermont Clay Studio, Montpelier, 223-4220. Reception July 11, 4:30-6:30 p.m. P A I N T I N G S AND P R I NTS by Dagmar Nickerson and Elinor Randall, a collaboration of curator Eva Schectman and Lost Nation Theater. Montpelier City Hall Auditorium Arts Center, 229-0492. Reception July 13, 5:30-7 p.m. R E C E N T A C Q U I S I T I O N S 11 , featuring paintings, larger prints and decorative arts. Wolcott Room, Fleming Museum, Burlington, 656-0750. Reception July 15, 5 p.m.

A-YUPNobody pho­ tographs Vermonters like Peter Miller — his book, Vermont People, is a classic

illustration of the state’s cit­ izens, mostly rural ones. For two years Miller criss­

crossed the Midwest; his by Hendrick Glaeser. Rhombus Gallery, Burlington, 860-3360. Through July. recent book, People o f the Z ION I $.H: Images of a State in the Making, a poster exhibit Great Plains, is the glorious CCjnfmemorating the 1 0 0 th anniversary of the first Zionism Conference in. 1897, from the Consulate General of Israel; and result. Now Miller shows RECENT WORKS by Martha Benjamin. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 863-3403. Through July. photos from both necks of P H I L: FROST, drawings and paintings by young New York graffiti artist. Exquisite Corpse Artsite, Burlington, 864-8040, the woods side-by-side at ext. 1 2 falfitodjih’^.ugust 8 . T H E U N I V E R S E OF P E R S O N A L MYTH, a group exhibit in his eponymous gallery in s.; Magic Hat Brewing Company* Waterbury. Above, “Joe Through July 27. f ‘PEOPLE OF THE GREAT PLAINS, Tuttle, Father of Fred (M an iij^photographs by Peter Miller. Peter . . uiry, 244-5339. Ongoing. W ith a P lan),” from 1995. . _ . .v7_ , . itMPEER, featuring work of nine Essex and CUntdn Ckmnty artists and vintage pieces. The Cupola tlouse c . •; , Folk F in 4 ^ t Gallery, Essex, N Y, 5 18-962^22.:T lupughJidy27. ~ ; V.;'‘V j;/.;'. MAR1 1 TA R E |f . MAGHES HEY, featuring watepeolors, oils, pastels and mixed media. Sweet Tomatoes Trattoria, Burlington, 863-7883. Through July. THE NIGHT GALLERY, blackrandrwhte photography by Claudia Rettqr. Deerleap Books, PA I N T I N G S

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ART I STS OF TH E GARDEN , floral art in mac^d iftedta by Vermont artistSvHelin Day Art 255-8358. Through'-August. 1 VERK ONM IASS 7, featuring works by bv Vermont’s Vermont’:*finest glass Hass artists Frno- Hollow Crafi iSS 199 1997, artists. Frog Craft CenteJ mjjddtebi 3 8 8 -3 |m P b r o i^ A u gusiM i^ ’: # , . ,

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NO HEROES, PLEASE, WE'RE .... works _____ in the mixed media o t | 5 graduates of the studio-art program. ARTISTS G. Roy Levin’s carMiddlebury College Museum o f Aft, 445-5007. Th A u gu st 3 . ! <- **■ n^ " ’ ( C toonish drawings are meant FO R T H E I * bja^k and white photographs of musicians and audiences :istj|jx Basso. The Working ; to deflate life’s “heroic” - Design G allery, :§ 64-2088. Through -Augljfefc. moments and poke at soci­ E L E C T R I C RENA IS ftjaiid sound multimedia exhibit by John Murray. Bh Burlington, ety’s obsession with con­ 865-5066. Through July 12. il|] ! j ij p § l§ C L O S E TO HOME , paintings and sculptures by Barbara sumption, among other Srriail. Furchgott Sourdi^, ... - CL~!t-00/0 “ :o, — ne, ooc 985-3848; T• jA 1) Through July 1 0 . ■ ‘ things. The director of NVAA 67TH ANNUAL d O R g j D l||l|f SHOW, featuring Vermont College’s MFA in mixed media work frohi fn^^bers o f die Norjhern Vermont jAnfists Associadon. Mary Bryan MemoiJal Art Qallery, \ Visual Art shares a gallery Jeffersonville, 8 9 3 -^ 5 i or 644-5 LOO^Through August 2 . *\ S ffA D &y.Pp P P ET OPEN HOUSE Hundreds of puppets, with Carolyn Shapiro, mULsk^ ajnd;artwork from the famous theater group are on displaj|:|Bread^& Puppet Museum, Glover, 525-6972. Through whose assemblages from Noyemb«^l. * r- y • i . vy MAKIN^NO/REMAKING VERMONT FARMSTEADS, an recycled and natural materi­ exhibit from the Verinont folklife Center examining how Vermont farmers have changed and shaped the landscape in als create an amusing 3-D two cen tres. Shelburne Farms, Shelburne, 985-8686. T hrough October 2 0 . counterpart. The show ART'S J^LIV€ OUTDOOR SCULPTURE by Susan Calza. Fleming Museum, Burlington, 656-0750. Through August 1 0 . opens at Montpelier’s Wood ANDRES AQ.|^^D^(®o^»mercial, fashion and fine art Gallery July 1 1 . Above, p h o to g r a $ i£ ^ Rochester, 767-9341. 5 Through sum nigyg$r . :• A Levin’s “Couple.” SU B L IlflpR American Color Landscape P h o to g fty ^ y ^ ^ d n$vdie work of five American photogra­ phers. f j |^ h g |^ e u m , Burlington, 656-0750. Through August 17.: ?v LANDSCAPES OF THE CHAMPLAIN VALLEY, watercolors and acrylic paintings by Marlene French Russell. Bulwagga Books & Gallery, Whiting, 623-6800. Through July 5 . SHAKf. A ® 6 Handmade printlin an pn^irig series o f jazz iind blues greats, by Roy Newton. R ea’Ortiph, Burlington, 572-5386. %tiroug^h Jfbiy 8 . NORTH END JMiSSION, mixed media marmalade o f local Vermont artist^ and beyond. Java , D^e Chilwty. Middlebury Center for

NORTHERN LIGHTS& B 3

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AD RI W ^ EB t ^ | | ( | | | t i P ^ ^ b d f : Also, EX I L ES p D ^ EM I G R ES , a mixed-media Nazism on European and American artistic and fron^I933tl945. Montreal Museum of Fine Arti; 514-285-1600. Both through S e p te m t> |r » ^ /’_ ~ 1 ^' \ ; f 1 I FROM BEF0 R E ^lM G RANDM Highlights of the Vermont Traditional Arts i ; Apprenticeship Progrim|photogr yy Jack Rowell. Vermont Folklife Center, Middlebury, ; A « •• !*&**# ■■ ' V / 388-4964. Through IiiW i t H ----------- — ^ Ruth Pope. Windstrom Hill Gallery, Montpelier, 229-

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SEVEN DAYS


SCREEN WRITERS Bv

Barry

Snyder

or the Summer Reading Issue of Seven D ays, Vidiot Savant will take a look at movies about writers — although writers have not been the favored subject of those pop bio-pics that have rolled off the Hollywood assembly line since its earliest days. For one thing, authors are often not wellknown enough to assure the kind of general audience neces­ sary for success. For another, their lives only rarely have those dramatic, larger-than-life ingre­ dients of, say, a Henry VIII or a Wyatt Earp. What’s more, the basic requirement of the screen biog­ raphy is to entertain rather than provide a factual account. Screenwriters of bio-pics about authors thus feel free to specu­ late and embellish — where they don’t blatantly fictionalize — and alienate that smaller portion of the audience familiar with the truth. One of the first films with a historical author as a character creates an entirely fictional con­ text: James Whale’s excellent 1935 The B ride o f Frankenstein. A brief prologue to the story

pictures Mary Shelley (Elsa Lanchester, who also plays the bride) explaining to her hus­ band Percy Bysshe Shelley and their guest, Lord Byron, that her intention was to pen a moral lesson. Joined by John Polidori, the writer whose vampire stories predate Bram Stoker’s Dracula, the same Romantic trio are pic­ tured getting together at Lord Byron’s Swiss villa for a night of laudanum, storytelling, sex and supernatural strangeness in Ken Russell’s lurid and hysterical Gothic (1987). Taking consider­ able poetic license, Russell imagines the event as the gene­ sis for two of the greatest fic­ tional creations of the modern era: Dracula and Frankenstein. Like Gothic , a number of bio-pics about authors seeks to explain, or at least suggest, the origins of a particular work for which an author is famous. With appropriate delicacy, writer Dennis Potter’s haunting D rea m ch ild { 1985) explores the unusual relationship between the quiet, aging mathematics professor we know as Lewis Carroll (wonderfully played by Ian Holm) and the child he immortalized as Alice in Alice

in Wonderland.

The circumstances behind F. Scott Fitzgerald’s writing of The Last Tycoon provide the back­ ground to the sappy and silly Beloved Infidel (1959), the story of the author’s gin-soaked days as a Hollywood reject, and his attachment to columnist Sheilah Graham. Along similar lines, the newly released In Love a n d War examines the real-life love affair between the 19-year-old Ernest Hemingway (Chris O ’Donnell) and an older nurse (Sandra Bullock) that inspired A Farewell to Arms. Based on a book and screenplay by Henry S. Villard — a fellow patient in the Milan hospital where Hemingway recovered from his famous war wound — the per­ spective fostered by In Love a n d War is that Agnes von Kurowsky’s jilting of Hemingway was the seminal event of the young writer’s life. The rebuttal allegedly hardened him forever to women and rela­ tionships, and psychologically set the stage for Hemingway’s subsequent habit of deserting his wives before they could desert him. Kurowsky served not only as the model for Catherine Barkley in A Farewell to Arms, but as the wife of the dying writer Harry (like Hemingway, he had a gangrenous leg

The Last Drive-in

wound) in The Snows o f . _ Kilim anjaro. Harry bitterly complains, “Love is a dung hill, and I’m the cock that gets on it to crow.” Interestingly, director Richard Attenborough previ­ ously directed a film about nov­ elist/theologian C.S. Lewis (fea­ turing Anthony Hopkins in one of his finest performances) that is in many ways the mirrorimage of the story told in In Love a n d War. Based on a play of the same title, Shadowlands (1993) is a deeply touching story of the unlikely love affair between the stuffy, repressed writer of O u t o f the Silent P lanet and The N a rn ia Chronicles and brash New York divorcee Joy Gresham (Debra Winger). Inspirational and destructive relationships are also the focus of director Agnieszka Holland’s recently released Total Eclipse, the story of the extraordinarily tempestuous and decidedly car­

nal relationship between poet Paul Verlaine (David Thewlis) and the young Rimbaud (Leonardo Di Caprio), who first seeks out Verlaine — a

poet of some standing as the story begins — and then pro­ ceeds to turn his life inside out. Holland’s stance toward the sor­ didness that transpires is res­ olutely nonjudgmental. By contrast, playwrights Michael Hastings and Adrian Hodges take a definite moral stance with regard to the actions of poet T.S. Eliot in Tom a n d Viv. Viv is Eliot’s wife, Vivienne Haigh-Wood, the woman whose family standing and wealth helped the newcom­ er gain entry to British society. Eliot subsequently abandons her when her personal eccen­ tricities and health problems become too much for him to bear. Oddly overlooked at the time of its original release, Tom a n d Viv contemplates the horri­ fying specter of genius without integrity, in a film enhanced by an extraordinary performance from Miranda Richardson as Vivienne. There are a number of other worthwhile films about authors, including The Basketball D iaries (Jim Carroll’s fictionalized auto­ biography) and Prick Up Your Ears (starring Gary Oldman as the homosexual playwright Joe Orton). My personal favorite remains Philip Kaufman’s 1990 H enry & June, a film that blends literary history, eroticism and humor in a singularly entertaining mix. Based on Anai's Nin’s own account, Henry & June recounts one of the more notable intersections in modern literary history: the meeting of Nin, the American expatriate Henry Miller and his siren-like wife in 1931. It was the year Miller completed Tropic o f Capricorn and Nin found her footing as a diarist. For anyone who ever enter­ tained fantasies about a life of writing, Kaufman’s evocation of the exotic lives of Left Bank literati during the early ’30s is positively irresistible. (Z) Videos courtesy o f Waterfront Video.

Mon - Thin* 11 am - 11 pm Fri & S a t 11am - Midnight 660 5545 (C orner o f Main & B attery)

Middlebury

Going to Burlington’s July 3rd Fireworks? Skip the tra ffic jam afterw ards—stop in and check us out!

We will be open till m idnight July 3rd, 4th & 5th!

New releases and old favorites arrive daily. M ars A ttacks! is here. If you like Tim Burton (Batm an, B eetlejuice, Batm an Returns, P eew ee9s Big Adventure), don’t miss

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SEVEN DAYS

july

2 & 9.

1997


THE HOYIS CINEMAS

FILM QUIZ

*■ + LOVE! VALOUR! COMPASSION! The B ig C h ill meets The Birdcage (well, sort of) in the big-screen adapta­ tion o f Terrence McNafiys hit Broadway play, a variously funny and moving look at the complex relationships within a group o f gay men who spend a series o f summer holidays in a majestic country home. Jason Alexander has received deservedly high marks for his houyant rendering o f the story’s comic centerpiece, a wise-ass cherub with musical theater — and HIV — in his blood. DON WE NOW OUR GAY APPAREL Alexander a n d company John Glove gives a great double perfor­ m ix punchlines w ith hemlines in the f ilm adaptation mance as an icy Englishman and the o f Terrence M cN ally s h it play, dying twin brother whose warmth and courage win everyone’s heart. The gathering weathers all manner o f social calamity, from petty bickering and jealousies to romantic betrayal, and somehow emerges at summer’s end with even better friends, in some cases better people. Director Joe Martello deftly keeps a daunting number o f narrative plates spinning all at once while shifting gracefully between moods o f exub&^nt humor and somber contemplation. McNally’s script is highly literate, immensely intelligent and vastly human. And the cast — which also includes Stephen Spinella, Justin Kirk and Randy Becker — is the definition o f ensemble brilliance. You’ll laugh. You’ll cry. You’ll say to yourself: Gee, A lexander really rem inds m e o f N ath an Lane here. Interestingly enough, Lane was originally slated for the role (he played the part on Broadway), but backed out at the last minute. M y guess is, Alexander has kept the original spirit o f the part alive while also bringing it an edge and gravity beyond that o f his predecessor. If his performance in The Birdcage is any indication, Lane is simply too sweet and bubbly a presence. Not, as George Castanza would say, that there’s anything wrong with that. * On another note; Keep an eye out for Jay Craven’s new movie. A Stranger in the K ingdom recently embarked on a statewide, 32-event Sneak Preview Summer Tour — a fundraiser — around Vermont after playing to a series o f packed and appreciative houses in South Burlington last week. T he latest collaboration between the director and Vermont author Howard Frank Mosher is their most impres­ sive yet. But stria Sundance Film Festival guidelines forbid reviews o f entries prior to competition, so you didn’t hear it from me.

P ? r

3

C JQ

PREVIEWS Time for one of the most popular versions of our quiz, in which we fesf your powers of reconstructive fhinking with an assortment of famous features, for which we need the owners' amous names...

a

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a

©

t _ © 1997 Rick Kisonak Don' t tor$et to watch "The Good. The Bad &

'

LAST WEEK'S WINNERS LEO THURBER ELLEN PERRY RON PREO GERARD FOURNIER RICK MILLER LANCE DESCHENES MARK LIBBY STEVE BATES , ROSS WAGNER AMY BERNARD

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MEN IN BLACK We are not alone. In fact, were lousy with extraterrestrial tourists. At least that’s the premise o f Barry Sonnenfeld’s effects fest in which Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones play shad­ owy government operatives whose job it is to police the misbehaving aliens among us. OUT TO SEA Jack Lemmon and Waiter Matthau team up for their 10th film together: a tale o f two friends who finagle passage on a luxury cruise ship by pretending to be dance instructors, Martha Cooiidge is at the helm. CONTACT Based on Carl Sagan’s 1985 best-seller, the latest from Robert (Forrest Gump) Zemeckis stars Jodie Foster as an astronomer who picks up the first extraterrestrial radio signals ever to reach Earth. W ith Matthew McConaughey, James Woods and Tom Skerritt. NOTHING TO LOSE Tim Robbins plays a stressed-out ad exec who’s carjacked by a fast-talking con man (Martin Lawrence) and winds up joining his abductor on a Thelm a & ItfKw-reminiscent spree. Written and directed by Ace Ventura 2 s Steve Oedekerk. WILD AMERICA T V ’s Jonathan Taylor Thomas joins Scott Bairstow and Devon Sawa for a look at the career o f the Stouffer brothers, who together made wildlife documentaries in the late ’60s and ’70s. BRASSED OFF Ewan ( Trainspotting) McGregor stars in Mark Herman’s account o f an English brass band that enters a competition in order to draw attention to economic problems in its home town.

SHORTS

S

BATMAN AND ROB IN** Joel Schumacher welcomes newcomers George Clooney, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Uma Thurman and Alicia Silverstone to the fourth and most expensive film yet in this ever-popular series. Rumor has it Arnold was paid a record $25 million for his six weeks o f work I guess every time they handed him a million he’d look down and thunder, “I’ll be back.” FACE OFF (NR) From Hong Kong action auteur John Woo comes the outre and blood-soaked saga o f a terrorist who surgically switches faces with the FBI guy on his trail. John Travolta and Nicolas Cage star. HERCULES (NR) Disney’s 35th animated feature offers a comic take on the legend, reinterpreting the fabled strongman as a sort o f sports celebrity. On vocals: Everyone from Danny DeVito and Charlton Heston to Bobcat Goidthwait and James Woods. MY BEST FRIEND’ S WEDDING ( NR) Julia Roberts stars in this romantic comedy about a young single woman who becomes unhinged upon learning her old pal (Dermont Mulroney) is about to be married and dedicates herself to sabotaging the ceremony. W ith Cameron Diaz as the other woman. SPEED 2: CRUISE 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 D e bont directs the sequel to his megahit. Jason Patric fills in for missing mega-boyfriend Keanu Reeves.

rating scale:

*

SHOWTIMES FILMS RUN FRIDAY, THROUGH THURSDAY,

JULY 4 JULY 10.

ETHAN ALLEN CINEMAS 4 North Avenue, Burlington, 863-6040. Liar Liar 1:20, 3:40, 6:30, 9. Grosse Point Blank 6:20, 8:50. Fifth Element 1 , 3:20. Buddy 1:30, 3:50. Sling Blade 6 , 8:30. Scream 1:10, 3:30, 6:10, 8:40. Matinees Sat.Sun. Evening shows daily.

CINEMA NINE Shelburne Road, S. Burlington, 864-5610 Men in Black* 11:40, 12:10, 1:50, 2:20, 4:10, 4:30, 6:35, 7:10, 9:25, 9:45. Wild America* 11:35, 1:55, 4:25, 6:55, 9:50. Nothing to Lose* 6:45. Contact* 7:30. Hercules 11:30, 1 2 , 1:40, 2:10, 4, 4:20, 7, 7:20, 9:20, 9:35. Face Off 12:30, 3:25, 6:30, 9:30. Batman & Robin 12:20, 3:15, 6:40 (not Sat.), 9:40 (not Sat.), 10:30 (Sat.). My Best Friend s Wedding 11:50, 2 , 4:15, 6:50, 9:55. Con Air 12:50, 3:45, 6:45 (not Sat.), 10. All shows daily.

*****

- i

o

NR = not reviewed CXI

SHOWCASE CINEMAS 5 Williston Road, S. Burlington, 863-4494. Men in Black* 12:15, 2:30, 4:40, 7:10, 9:40. Wild America* 12, 2:15, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30. Face Off 12:40, 3:40, 6:40, 9:25. Batman & Robin 12:30, 3:50, 6:50, 9:20. Con Air 3:20, 9:35. Lost World 12:35, 6:45. Evening shows Mon.-Fri. All shows Sat.-Sun.

NICKELODEON CINEMAS College Street, Burlington, 863-9515. Out to Sea* 12:50, 4:15, 7, 9:20. Brassed OfF* 12:40, 2:50, 5:10, 7:30, 1 0 . Hercules 12:20, 2:30, 4:45, 7:10, 9:15. My Best Friend’s Wedding 12:30, 2:45, 5, 7:20, 9:50. Speed 2 1:10, 4, 6:50, 9:40. Lost . World 1, 3:50, 6:40, 9:30. All shows daily.

o 7^

CO O

THE SAVOY Main Street, Montpelier, 229-0509. Love! Valour! Compassion!* 6:30 (not Sun.), 8:50. * S tarts Friday. M ovie tim es su bject to change. Please call the theater to confirm .

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By Rachel Esch

be eating to stay healthy?

You’re choosing bagels over donuts, pretzels instead of chips, and platefuls of pasta instead of pork for din­ ner, and despite all the fat-free food cartons in your cabinet, you still cant seem to shed those extra pounds. While less fat and more complex carbohy­ drates are key to healthy diets, local nutritionists say too many Americans are getting carried away with the carbohydrate craze and fat-free fad. According to Debi L’Herault Norton, adult nurse practitioner and nutritionist with the O’Brien Health Center in Winooski, complex carbohydrates have been linked to better health, but many people load up on less nutritious simple carbohydrates, which leads to weight gain. “The ingestion of complex carbohydrates... decreases risk for breast cancer, heart attack and dia­ betes,” says Norton. “But you have to be very careful in balancing carbohydrates, because they are sugars — your body breaks it down and basically stores it as fat if you don’t use it.” Instead of processed foods such as white bread and rice, Norton recommends whole grain and high-fiber carbohydrates. ^ ^ w While som'e people substitute carbohydrates for fat cravings, others stock up on Snackwells. But Siobhan Donegan, a registered dietician with the Burlington Health Department, says the fat-free frenzy has been detrimental to those who overindulge or compensate with carbohydrates and thereby consume more calories. “There are so many low-fat options, sve think as long as they are low-fat and non-frit, we can eat as many as we want,” Donegan says. “I think it’s impor­ tant to cat low-fat, but avoiding fats is not a license to eat all the carbohydrates you want.” Instead of fad filler foods, Donegan recommends snacking on fresh fruits and vegetables. Both Donegan and Norton say fruits, vegetables and lean protein sources are often ignored, but a well-balanced meal is essential to optimal health. Even if they know what types of foods they should eat, Norton concedes, many people still dorft eat well. They get themselves in situations “where they have to eat something that is not good for them.” For those with hectic schedules, Norton recommends preparing quick meals at the start o f each week, and learning where healthy lunches can be found near your workplace. As you embark on new eating habits, don’t stop with a few new meals; be sure to vary the types of pro­ tein and complex carbohydrates you consume. “Every food gives a different percentage or ratio of what you need in a days eating,” Norton says, “so you really need to be focused on trying to get as many types of foods as you can.” <2 > HELP US HELP YOU: Are you looking for new ways to address old ailments? Curious about different med­ ical methods? If you’re interested in exploring ways to enhance your physical, psychological or emotional well-being — or if you’re a health practitioner with some helpful ideas — send your questions or column suggestions to: Health Q&A, POB 1164, Burlington, VT 05402 (or fee 865-1015, or e-mail: sevenday@together.net). Neither Seven Days nor any practitioner quoted here may be held liable for any result o f trying a new remedy, practice or product 1 that is mentioned in this column. Please use common sense, listen to | your body, and refer to your own health practitioner for advice.

DAYS

•j u 1y . .2 & -9 ... -1.9.9 7


L IN D A S C O T T L ic e n s e d P s y c h o l o g is t

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p s y c h o th e r a p is ts SA H R A JU N E A SC H E N BACH, APRN. Licensed Clinical Specialist in Psychiatric & Mental Health Nursing. Awakening Center for Transformative Therapies &C The Healing Arts. Counseling, Psychotherapy, Transpersonal, Holistic, Psychospiritual. Shelb. 985-2346.

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J u ly 3 -July 9 A R I E S (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): Don’t feel guilty if you decide against carrying out this weeks assignment. The kind o f heroic introspection I have in mind is a luxury that may only be available to a select few childless, unemployed dreamers. Besides, you’ll have a deep, dark, sweet week whether or not you take my advice. But here goes anyway: I propose that you relive your birth experience in graphic, gorgeous detail. Interview your mother at length, if possible, and any other witnesses. Consider trying to recover your memories o f the event through hypnosis. Then you’ll be primed to get a feel for how your earliest experiences on Earth have conditioned everything that’s happened since — including the rebirth that’s dead ahead. T A U R U S (Apr. 20-May 20): All the following activities have been approved for your use in the next two weeks: practicing mental gymnastics; bending over backwards to explain yourself with crisp clarity; executing tiny (not humongous) leaps o f faith; turning the tables on those who are unrighteous and unjust; perfecting the art o f rubbing your tummy and patting your head at the same time; negotiating a truce in the war o f your left hand against the right; and disproving certain folks’ belief that the shortest distance between two points is a convoluted spiral. G E M I N I (May 21-June 20): When I was dating the exotic dancer who worked at me Lusty Lady dub, little did I know she’d one day have a gig as editor at the very publishing house where I most wanted to put out my ., ^ novel. If only I had ended out. j Rpionship less unceremoniously, f •" i

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m huckster, I must insist that in the next few weeks your beliefs really will create your reality.

VIRGO

(Aug. 23-Sept. 22): It’s truly an epic moment to be a Virgo. When shamanic scientists perfect time travel in the next century, I’m sure that July 1997 will be a time you’ll want to return to and live through over and over again. As hard as it might be to believe, though, there are still a few improvements you could make. Instead o f settling for mere popularity, for instance, why not use your high approval rating to triple your clout? And rather than forging just one new connection that’ll serve your ambitions for many moons, how about aiming for two? And as opposed to waiting for them to come to you, wouldn’t it be shockingly stylish for you to go to therrh

they can. Your tribe — which even in slow times is among the least boring o f signs — is now a raging inferno o f intrigue and allure. S A G I T T A R I U S (Nov. 22 -Dec. 21): Your astrological aspects are curiously mixed. On the one hand, it’s an excellent moment to declare your independence from anyone and anything that oppresses you, depresses you or discourages you from singing in the shower. On the other hand, it’s prime time to declare your interdependence with anyone or anything that fires you up, gets your juices flowing or encourages you to fantasize about sailing a hot-air balloon over the south o f France. Think you can figure out which is which? It shouldn’t be too hard. C A P R I C O R N (Dec 22-Jan. 19):

(Sept. 23-Oct. 22): My favorite word in the Iroquois language is ondinnonk. It refers to the secret wish of your soul as revealed in your dreams. I bring this up, Libra, because I think I’ve deduced the ondinnonk of your big dream this week: your need to be wilder and feistier and less predictable; not to the point of hurting anyone, o f course, but simply to confound and derail those wno would interfere with your plans to do the right thing. LIBRA

S C O R P I O (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): According to the folks at the Boring Institute in Maplewood, New Jersey,

' ........ J

(d r e a m e r y

__

a s t r o BY RlOB BREZSNY+* o g y* *

L E O (July 23-Aug. 22); Psychologists say that depressed people fill their minds with three recurring curses: 1) “The world is a negative place.” 2) “I’m worthless.” 3) “There's no hope for change.” All o f these are of course dirty lies. Yet if a dispirited soul holds them to be true with passionate certainty, they do indeed attract experiences which tend to confirm their validity. Now I’m not «yingyou ftt in this -life

• inability to feel relaxed • nervousness in social situations • fatigue • worry • panic • obsessive thinking • muscle tension • racing heart • low self-esteem

B or C h r o n i c P ain Sc D y s lu n c t io n

Vermont’s OMEGA Point!

C A N C E R (June 21-July 22): I was trying to compose your horoscope in my head today as I drove home. “Send me an omen,” I asked the cosmos. “What should I tell my fellow Cancerians?” Moments later, I arrived at the toll booth on the Richmond Bridge. To my surprise, die clerk waved me through. She said the car ahead o f me had paid my fare. I spied a black Chevy Lumina racing away, and followed it in hopes o f glimpsing the face o f my unknown benefactor. But the driver seemed intent on remaining anonymous, speeding off at 90 mph. I strained to keep up, but my old Ford Festiva overheated, and I had to pull off to the shoulder to recover. Here’s my interpretation o f the cosmic sign: You’ll soon receive a blessing from an unexpected source, but may be better off not knowing all the details o f how it came to you.

Build your self-confidence, reduce your anxiety.

N e u r o IM u sc u la r T h e r a p y

G E T Z E N

my mistake. Before you torch the bridge it would be so satisfying to burn down, be absolutely sure you’re never going to want to cross it again.

YOGA THERAPY. Tap into self-knowledge and body wis­ dom, leading to healing and transformation. Martha Whitney, 860-2814.

There’s an old “Twilight Zone” episode in which a nasty bigot suffers fate’s ultimate revenge. Is it a dream? He wakes up one morning to find he’s a Jew hunted by the SS in Nazi Germany. In counterpoint to this version of karmic comeuppance, the fairy tale tradition is full of characters who experience the opposite kind o f reversal. For instance, a peasant girl who goes Out o f her way to be kind to a scr^ggly old crone is rewarded with the key to a great treasure. It should be noted, Capricorn, that fate’s mysterious balancing action is rarely as extreme or literal as either o f those two examples.

© Copyright 1997

zodiac? What sign best understands the value o f indulging in siestas, and is most talented at dropping off into a brief but refreshing sleep at a moment’s notice? According to my research, Tauruses are the hands-down champions. But that could change in the next couple weeks. At least let’s hope it’ll change. It’s high time for you Aquarians to challenge the Bulls for the top spot. Never before has it been more important for you to master the skill o f stealing 40 winks. (While you’re at it, brush up on the art o f maintaining your cool while everyone around you is degenerating into drooling lunatics.) P I S C E S (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): You’ve probably guessed by now that you’ve slipped into the Season o f Sizzling (and Slightly Silly) Sensuality. Shall we incite your passions to an even more molten stage? HELL, YES! Below I’ve reproduced two untided love poems from Love’s Fire: Re-creations o f Rumi by Andrew Harvey. Read them aloud to your darling, then translate them into the language o f physical touch. (1) “The tender words we said to one another/Are stored in the secret heart o f heaven;/One day like rain they will fall and spread,/And our mystery will grow green over the world.” (2) “H ow open N: we were that day, tender and delicious,/No longer bodies at a soul./I’m afraid and alone sign;/Make us again as you m: then.”

______________ You c a n c a ll Rob B rex s n y , d a y o r n ig h t f o r y o u r

expanded w e e k ly h o ro s c o p e 1 -9 0 0 -9 0 3 -2 5 0 0 $ 1 .9 9 p e r m inu te. 18 a n d over. Touchtone ph on e. U p d ate d Tuesday n ight.

. M UMS

S f V f * ¥» 4 YS - L .;


C l a s s i f i e d s BURLINGTON: Two sunny stu­ dios - 300 sq. ft. & 200 sq. ft. Share open gallery space, kitchen &C bath with graphic designer. $275/$250 +. 266 Pine St. 8647756.

announcements WANTED: VIDEOS OF RT. 78 area in Highgate during Grateful Dead concerts of 1994 & 1995. Call Liz at 658-0220. NORMALIZING TH E PARA­ NORMAL. Explore the unexplain­ able: out of body experiences, angels, etc. Tues. July 15th, 7-9 p.m. Unitarian Church, Montpelier. $10 at the door. Fred Cheyette, M.A. 479-1034 for info. ORGANIZING SINGLE M O TH­ ERS who have lost custody of their children to actual or alleged mental illness through Vermont courts. 802-747-3086. ACTORS, 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.

JERICHO: Small office/retail/professional 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.

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 &C further infor­ mation contact firstCirde at 6609061 or kelz@javanet.com.

apartment for 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.

SO. BURLINGTON: Housemate wanted for farmhouse. Healthy environment, beautiful views, lots of land and no TV. Must be open & willing to help w/ usual house stuff. Inexpensive rent. 658-1390.

housemates wanted

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 MTN. 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 WOLFF T A N N IN G BEDS Buy DIRECT and SAVE! CommerciaJ/Home units from

BURLINGTON: Young profes­ sional looking for same for spa­ cious, sunny, downtown apt. Hardwood floors and porch. Must be responsible & neat. Avail, imme­ diately. $325/mo. + 1/2. 863-4856.

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 pennies on $ 1. Delinquent tax, repo’s, REO’s. Your area. Tollfree, 1-800-218-9000, Ext. H-6908 for current listings.

office/sfudio space ARTIST STUDIO SPACE: Large, North-facing studio to share w/ artist in downtown Waitsfield. $250/mo. 496-4347 or 496-5769.

COLCHESTER: Master bdrm. plus study for rent in nice house in Malletts Bay. Share other living space w/ lifestyle-compatible profes­ sional. Female preferred. $395/mo. + 1/3 utils. Dep. & refs, required. 658-4528. ESSEX: Spacious, quiet, country home. 2 rms. for single or couple. Shared kitchen, 2 1/2 baths, W/D, 20 mins, from Burl., gay-positive. 879-7883, leave msg. 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, 482-4004. MALLETTS BAY: Prof., nonsmok­ 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. 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.

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.

wanted to buy

TAN AT HOME

LOOKING FOR WITNESS 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.

automotive

$199.00 Low Monthly Payments FREE Color Catalog CALL TODAY 1-800-842-1310 YOU’RE N O T WEARING PANTIES. "Send $2 to #SD511, Jamaica Cottage Shop, P.O. Box 106, Jamaica, VT 05343. 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.

THE CHAMPLAIN COLLEGE Bookstore is looking for depend­ able, trustworthy and lively individ­ uals to take part in the temp, job of a lifetime. Mon.-Fri., 8/8-9Z5, Stop by 203 So. Willard St., Burlington to apply. No phone calls. AIRLINE EMPLOYMENT! $10$25 per hour. All positions, skilled/unskilled. Excellent pay/benefits. Call M-F, 8 a.m.-9 p.m. CST. (504)429-9229 ext. 4580A27. BOOK ARTIST OFFERING INTERNSHIP in So. Hero studio. Call Amy at 372-3960 after 6 p.m. to schedule an interview. Adjacent studio space also avail, for $285/mo. WE ARE A FAST-GROWING travelbook company in need of two fill-time warehouse workers. Competitive starting pay, flexible hours and a great benefits package! One position open immediately; one open mid-August. Please send resume to: Adventurous Traveler Bookstore, P.O. Box 1468, Williston, VT 05495. BURLINGTON MHP STAFF. VT CARES seeks HIV prevention staff for gay/bi men in Burlington area. lOhr./wk. For job description call 863-2437. Resume and cover letter by 7/10 to: CARES-MHP, P.O. Box 5248, Burlington, VT 05402.

FEEL WORKED? UNDERPAID? New office to fill. 863-6790.

TOO BUSY TO COOK, BUT YOU WANT GREAT MEALS? Call Missy, Personal Catering, 8620470. Great for families, vacation­ ers or anyone w/ great taste!

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.

LET’S TALK ABOUT PRIORI­ TIES!! So many things to be done w/ limited time & energy. Cleaning is a drag & 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.

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.

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.

O.K. Here’s the deal:

home improvement INTERIOR PAINTING & WALL PAPERING. Don’t have the time or the knack? Special techniques and patterns; meticulus, efficient, cheerful! Call Lisa, 660-4862.

$ 5 for 2 5 words per week (30 cents a word after first 25)

$ 1 8 . 5 0 per m onth

carpentry/painting A R e Y u ?

1M S -o o d - A R fe y o u G o o d f & o ? So, WfiATS i/£ v y ? N d r M uch is Yew

WiThMe. The. WeATheR tlAS. beet/ pReTry Good h^RecD

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$ 3 0 fo r 2 months

MR. PAINT: Painting (interior/ exterior) wall coverings, commercial/residential. Restoration is my specialty. Certified Child Lead Prevention. Insured & references. Free estimates. 862-5510. REPAIRS, RENOVATIONS, PAINTING, consultations, decks, windows, doors, siding, residential, commercial, insured, references. Chris Hanna, 865-9813.

Call 864-CCTA to respond to a listing or to be listed. BARRE/BERLIN to BURLINGTON. I’m an early bird. Need to be to work on Pine St. by 6:30 a.m. and i get out ar 3 p.m. Can meet ydttin Berlin’P/R if more <rnnct&$i£$an Barre. (2200) SEARS AREA to WATERBURY. Long time carpooler needs some new pool members. Wori^gifc,;state building, approx. 7:30 4 p.m. Leave Sears at 6:45 a m.

BURLINGTON to W KL Working nights? I t for a ride. My work hoi 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. If you ’ please respond. (2334) ^ WATERBURY to v A Commuter needs ride 1 Ave. D area to Waterin 30 p.m. Can wait Jwi willing to nay. (2WBm BURLINGTON to BE

f £ |L p R IJ N G T O N ,S tr id e .* together from Church St. to the Holiday Inn in Burlington. Working hours ate 7 0 0 adn. to 2 p.m., sometimes work to 5 p.m.

l u< wanted. Need to 1 \ muon 8:30 - *>a m. an up at 3:30 p.m. Willing in gas costs. Can be drt f at BOBS office |fm o« nient. (2201)

(2319) P L A fT S B U R O H > W ||!* t‘* save $! Work W-F 7 p.m. to

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COLCHESTER to WILLISg p * rd. ~J i i f ‘H F» 41 C 2362);#^||20LCH JESTRR w £K U n d e r h il l m ALLEN HOSP. Willing to share in driving. Weekends. 7 a.m. to

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SUMMER FLOWER AMBAS­ SADOR to deliver our flowers, Wed.-Fri., and help maintain our shop. Excellent driving record, extremely organized, knowledge of Chittenden County and a commit­ ment to exquisite customer service required. Vivaldi Flowers, 350 Dorset St., South Burlington. 8632300. 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. 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. 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. $1000’S POSSIBLE READING BOOKS. Part Time. At Home. Toll-free, 1-800-218-9000 Ext. R-6908 for listings.

CALL

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MHP COORDINATOR. VT CARES seeks FT HIV prevention project coordinator for gay/bi men in service area. For job description call 863-2437. Resume and cover letter by 7/10 to: CARES-MHP, P.O. Box 5248, Burlington, VT 05402.

household help

HOUSE CLEANING & ODD jobs done. Honest and reliable ser­ vice. Reasonable rates. Call Lavenia, 864-3096.

h T h o W

A tC M V tC E OF COTA

help wanted

business opp SMALL BAKERY FOR SALE. Industrial equip, in good condition: oven, mixer, pans, recipes & more. Home business or larger. 462-2103. STRESS-FREE home-based busi­ ness distributing natural health care &C homeopathic products. For information, call 802-244-1443. Leave name & address. VENDOR LICENSES AVAIL­ ABLE for Big Heavy Worlds Groove Apocalypse, Saturday, July 12, Battery Park, Burlington VT. Four bands, intense promotion. Contact Jim 802-373-1824.

tutoring SPANISH INSTRUCTOR/ TUTOR. VT certified w/ four years classroom & tutoring experi ence. All levels, flexible hours, rea­ sonable rates. Call 655-7691 for more info.

photography NUDE MODELS WANTED for non-erotic 1998 Vermont Naturalist Calendar. Free info. Also: Vermont Unveiled Skinny-Dipper’s Guide Book at bookstores or $22 to: NLI, Inc., P.O. Box 300-Z, Troy, VT 05868. 1-800-NL1-7020. nli@together.net. http://www. together.net/-nli/home.htm.

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Classifieds photography MODELS, FEMALES, NO 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.

1 OR 2 PIECE ACOUSTIC acts wanted for small restaurant/bar. Blues, jazz, folk, etc.) Call Erik B. at Coyotes, 865-3632. BASS PLAYER WANTED FOR Bloozotomy, original blues band: solid groove player w/ a good ear, attitude and a grasp of many styles. Vocals a +. Must love to play, have style and be willing to make a com­ mitment. Call 802-849-9749. 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 of 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 of American pop/rock. Call Bob, 863-5385. THE KENNEL REHEARSAL SPACE. Tired of getting busted for the noise complaints? Need a prac­ tice space to play loud 24 hrs./day? The Kennel Rehearsal Space can help! Rooms by hr./wk./mo. Appointments only. Call 660-2880

CLUB 135 PEARL IS NOW 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. 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. ARE YOU EXPERIENCED? Experience the total purity of this exceptional Taylor 4 10E acous./elec. guitar born on 10/93. Custom hard case inch $900. Call Shelby, 868-3174. GUITAR: TAYLOR 812, rose­ wood, Grand Concert, 6-string, cut-away w/ case. Fabulous instru­ ment w/ incredible sound and playability. Mint condition. $1,395 firm. 802- 496-7788. WHERE THE MUSIC COMES FIRST— BIG ED’S STUDIO 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.togetlier.net/-biged. ROAD GEAR, CLOTHING & ACCESSORIES. ROCKON LTD. T-shirts, hats, tour jackets & 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 ON WHEELS does it all. Live & Studio Recording, cassette design & dupli­ cation, ads, press kits, brochures & Website design. CDs & cassettes. 802-266-8839; email: biged@ together.net; Website: http://homepages.together.net/-biged. 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.bigheavyworld.com/

music instruction GUITAR LESSONS: Winner 1997 Advance Music Guitar Summit. I have 20 yrs. playing experience & have a mellow teach­ ing style. Recording credits include: Public Enemy, School of Fish & Queen. Call Nick, 652-0096. GUITAR LESSONS: All ages, lev­ els and styles. Reasonable rates. BA. 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.

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 PorterwootftDr., Williston, VT 05495.

massage THERAPEUTIC MASSAGE. Swedish Esalen body work. Affordable rate, convenient loca­ tion. Close to downtown. Call Mary Miller, 657-9228 (beeper). 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.

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL Burlington Electric Department, as part of the City of Burlington’s Minimum Rental Housing Energy Efficiency Standards Ordinance, is seeking an insured and experienced energy efficiency program project coordinator to assist with the implementation of the ordinance. This contract includes the develop­ ment of: administrative mecha­ nisms, public awareness of the ordi­ nance and available resources, pro­ ject management for the propertyowners and on-site energy inspec­ tions. B.E.D. reserves the right to accept or reject any or all proposals. Copies of the Proposal Documents may be obtained from: Burlington Electric Department Purchasing Office 585 Pine Street Burlington, VT 05401 Phone: 802-865-7456 Sealed proposals must be received by 4:30 p.m. July 23, 1997.

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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VOICI. MAILBOXES

WOMl - N SEEKING MEN WANTED: SOM EONE W H O enjoys the beach, movies, hiking, or just hang­ ing out w/ friends and is 18-22. I’m 18, have strawberry blonde hair & blue eyes. 64818 OWE; 46, SEEKING DWM, 40-50, for serious friendship on a long-term basis. Homebody, likes camping and intelligent conversation. Must be able to laugh. 64824 GERMAN F, 57, SELF-EMPLOYED, seeking interesting and intellectual M. Must love animals. 64823______________ DROP-DEAD GORGEOUS southern sunn-belle, 26, spending summer in VT. I enjoy step aerobics, fashion and enter­ taining. ISO ecstasy with an experienced 90s woman? I’m waiting. 64820 LEATHER & LACE. Pi us-sized beauty, 35, ISO LTR w/ intelligent, emotionally present, independent, 30-40ish profes­ sional. Working out,.movies & trying new restaurants are in my repertoire. Also searching for that exceptional gentleman

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w/ a streak o f dominance in the bed­ room. Serious inquires appreciated. 64828 CYCLING PARTNERS WANTED. DWF, 55, 5’9 ”, seeks friend who loves outdoors to share concerts, picnics, hikes, biking, campfires, exploring, dining out, quiet times and more. 64792 SWF, 27, FIT, INDEPENDENT, pro­ fessional, 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 CURVACEOUS LAKE NYMPH— blonde, Michelle Pfeiffer type w/ exten­ sive collection o f bathing suits— seeks suave, 30+, sailor who desires a decora­ tive, delightful 1st mate. 64794 SAILOR, SCUBA DIVER, TRAVEL­ ER, SWPF, 40’s, fun-loving, honest, diversified woman, likes to laugh, arts, fine cuisine & champagne ISO SWPM, 40’s or 50’s, w/ similar interests. 64802 CELTIC FIRE IN MY SOUL. Rubenesque, romantic, independent pro­ fessional, 32, not afraid o f a little pam­ pering— enjoys cooking, dining out, movies, theater, music, travelling, deep conversations— seeks gentleman who embraces life’s little challenges w/ courage & humor to share my passion for love and life. 64804 SWF, 28, LOVES TO BE SPOILED, prefer M who enjoys stock car racing, boating, camping and most sports, is outgoing, has great sense of humor and loves to laugh. 64809 SWF, 32, CUTE, FRIENDLY, intelligent and interesting, seeking SWM, 2735. Must be good looking, artistic, dar­ ing and responsible. 64797 INCREDIBLY LOVABLE, AFFEC­ TIONATE, playful, pretty professional, vegetarian, mid 30 s, ISO intelligent, active, humorful, handsome, kind, hon­ est, available. You can be nerdy, but not Republican. 64785 CLASSIQUE FANTASY: Dishy strawberry blonde, married, late 30 s, into lit­ tle black dresses and silly toenail polish

colors, seeks hip, funny smart, creative, handsome, younger man for summer sexploration. Wahoo! 64784 PRETTY SWPF, 26, W/ BEAUTIFUL eyes, sincere, active and independent, likes outdoor and indoor adventures, seeks SWPM, 25-35, to spend quality time with. 64789 HIKING PARTNER WANTED! SPF, 44, fit, attractive w/ broad interests and progressive politics, ISO growing M who likes dogs. Swing dancing a +. 64757 SF, 27, VIRGO SEEKING WATER sign. Organic farmer/poet enjoys work for its own sake, reading & rain. Make me laugh. Harmless weirdos O.K. 64765 DANCE PARTNER?? DWF, attractive, shapely lady desires ballroom/country dance partner, 45-60. 64777 TAKE A CHANCE! 23 YO NS SWPF, full-figured, cute. I’m very outgoing and financially secure. Love tennis, football, hockey, etc., as well as family and great nights out. Seeking stable, NS, financial­ ly secure SWPM with lots of imagination and an open mind. 64752 I’M A SWPF, 31, ATTRACTIVE AND educated, looking for a SWM, 30-35, who is well educated, handsome (JFK, Jr. type handsome); a financially secure pro­ fessional by day and a romantic, outdoorsy, creative, physically active sports­ man at night; and days off, too. 64770 ROMANTIC W ITH A HEART OF gold. SWF, 47, petite, blonde. I am emo­ tionally secure, independent, honest, kind, caring and loving. Hope to find the same in someone. Enjoy dining out, out­ door activities and quiet evenings at home. Honesty and sincerety required. No head games. 64766 46 YO DPF, RESIDING IN NE VT, seeks relationship with NS gentle man in. same age range. I enjoy good conversa­ tion, dancing and nature. I am practical, organized, yet have a flair for the wild side. Like to pamper and be pampered. 64758 CENTRAL VT DWF, 42, SEEKING A NS M w/ family values. I enjoy walking, animals, good conversation & still believe in happily ever after. 64735

SEVEN DAYS

PRETTY W OMAN. WJPF, 40’S: I’M active, affectionate, spiritual, sensual, romantic and funny. I love the outdoors, tennis, canoeing, biking & hiking. ISO intelligent, honest, caring WPM w/ simi­ lar qualities to share good times. 64734 WOMANLY BABE, 40, CYNICAL idealist, nature-loving urbanite, non-fanatic kayaker, biker x-c/tele skier. Love dogs, books, dancing & smart/funny men. 64739 LOOKING FOR A NICE, ATTRAC­ TIVE guy to spend my time with. NS, N D . Likes to have a party occasionally. Give me a call. C-ya!! 64742 DWPF, NS, N D , NA, 45, CREATIVE, intuitive, strong yet tender, good cook, loyal, sense o f humor & values, ready to move mountains w/ supportive, loving, evolved man for friendship and perhaps more. Middlebury. 64740 HONEST & SINCERE DPF, 41, educated, 5 4 ”, fit & youthful. Enjoys posi­ tive thinking, cooking, rock, nature, sun­ sets, cuddling. Seeking tall, emotionally secure PM, 38-48. 64728 DF, LATE 30’S, PROFESSIONAL, attractive, slim, seeks tall, husky, attrac­ tive, smart, left-wing guy who lives his values in his work. 64699 LOOKING FOR A CLONE? DATE yourself! Looking for someone to com­ plete your life? Give this well-read, witty, winsome woman, 39, a call. 64701 OUTGOING, FUN, INTELLIGENT, attractive, prof. SWF, NS, N D , NA, seeks the same qualities in a SPM, 27-33. I’m a happy, secure, motivated, positive thinker, enjoy movies, plays, dinners, music, exercise, taking classes & just lov­ ing life! Nothing’s by chance. 64711 IT ’S N O T THE DESTINATION, IT ’S the journey. Imaginative, attractive, intel­ ligent, athletic SWPF, 35, happiest play­ ing in the snow, sea (lake) and garden, pleasing the palate and traveling the world, seeks like soul for this wonderful journey. 64705 SWF, 20, SEEKS MEN, 19-25, W or B for adventures, romance and conversa­ tions. I am sensitive, fun and don’t mind silence. 64708

SMALL HOUSE IN COUNTRY SET­ TIN G , built in the late ’60s and artisti­ cally laid out w/ tasteful decorating, con­ temporary styling and a nice view; struc­ turally sound and well maintained w/ recent addition in the early ’90s. Call for details and an appointment. Prepare to negotiate. 64689 JUST MOVED FROM TH E BEACH life o f the West & looking for someone sweet. WF, 5’5”, 155 lbs., loves the coun­ try, pets, outdoor life, movies and plays, looking for WM, 19-30, 5’5” - 5’10”, who likes 1940s-’90s music and loves NBC shows and sports. Who knows what could happen. 64687 NEED A FEMALE BUDDY? I NEED a male buddy. DWF, 40, seeking 40+ M for fun & friendship — nothing heavy. Let’s go see the Expos this summer. 64666 DISILLUSIONED, BUT WILLING to try again. SWF, forty-something. Is there someone out there who wants to share all the good things life has to offer? 64676 YOU: 40 +, ATTENTIVE, ANY RACE. Me: 43, DWF ready to enjoy life. Breakfast, country drive, horseback ride or matinee? Let’s get to know each other. Call. 64646 PICTURE THIS: SPF W / TRADI­ TIONAL values, sincerity, balance or responsibility/spontaneity— enjoys travel, theatre, music, camping— seeks NS SM, 24-35, to enjoy life with. 64648 DWF, ATTRACTIVE, ENERGETIC, works nights, ISO S/DNSCW M , early 50’s, secure, stable, similar interests. Enjoys outdoors, home, hearth, dancing, CW history, football, companionship, family life. 64651

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MEN SEEKING WOMEN VERY CUTE SWM, 24, CLEVER, FIT, attentive, knowing, sexy, seeks confident, sensual, intelligent, brazen F, 35-50, for adult, summer play and hedonism. 64816 SWPM, 31, WANTING LESS WORK, more play to re-establish finer points in life. ISO mature, slender, athletic, talka­ tive, open-minded SWPF to share inter­ ests, thoughts, activities. 64821 TALL, CARING DWM, 47, ENJOYS walking, cooking and gardening. Seeking SF w/ similar and different interests. Looking for friend/possible relationship. 64832 LOYAL, OBEDIENT, HUMBLE SLAVE. Lifestyler sub. seeks collar o f F dom.— NT, CBT, TT, DT, foot worship, heavy tease... Please, only those who understand the true gift o f submission. Conscious, in shape, mischievous, 23-45. 64822. FARM GIRL WANTED. N S /N D M, 40s, 5’11”, 165 lbs., hard-working, handsome, healthy, energetic, fit, sexy, ISO attractive, fit, healthy N S/N D F within 50 mi. o f Burlington. 64791 DECENT GUY, GRAD STUDENT, young 40, seeking F companions for ten­ nis, skiing, intelligent conversation, music, water sports, hikes, friendship & possibly even affection. 64795__________ WANT A MASSAGE? Expert masseuse needs practice. Will massage you for hours. Honest, sincere, warm, fit, healthy and drug-free SWM, 29, 5’ 10”, 185 lbs. 64800______________________________ SEEKING NIRVANA. Me: positive, active, attractive. You: sane, crazy and fun for camping, sports, romance &C pos­ sible LTR. 64796 007 FROM VT. Mozart to Milton, NoKnee’s to Nietzsche. SWM, 31, w/ viscious sense of 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 of 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 mold, 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 SWM, 31, NS, SOCIAL DRINKER, thin, honest, seeks female for dining, movies, friendship and possible relation­ ship. 64807 SUGAR DADDY ISO SWEET YOUNG THING for fun times. No taboos. My treat. 64808 LONELY, SENSITIVE, GENTLE DWM with great hands seeking fun, open-minded F for adult fun and erotic encounters. You will not be disappointed. Marital status unimportant. 64812 SWM, 18, 5’10”, 175 LBS., energetic, smart and nice, ISO cool F cat to cuddle and strut romantic stuff with. 64781 ATTRACTIVE SWM, 22, ISO unin­ hibited, attractive SWF, 18-35, for secret romps. No strings attached. Explore, experiment or just have fun. Hurry! 64786 NEW TO MARKET! DWPM, 36, 6'1”, 195 lbs.— likes blading, biking, dancing, long walks and romantic times—- ISO fit D/SWF, 28-40, for friends/LTR. 64787 I CAN COOK, TOO! DM , 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, LOOKING for SWF for LTR who enjoys spending quiet times at home and on the lake. 64761 SAX ALL NIG H T LONG! Music is my life! Yours, too! I’m a tall, handsome, intelligent SW NSNDPM , 27, who also likes sports (tennis, basketball, swim­ ming, etc.), ISO SWF, 25-35, who is fit attractive and tall. 64767

N O TIME FOR GAMES. Tired of being ignored? 2 wild guys with no emo­ tional needs, only physical needs, looking for 2 women, 25-40, who want to ride on the wild side. Let’s go out of 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 COMPANION. Retired business exec, needs a young pair of 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, FUN, AND romance. SWPM, 30’s, witty, funloving, charming conversationalist. Adventurous, athletic type desires attractive, fit 30’s SWPF w/ a real zest for life. 64755

Personal of* th e Week women seeking women

INNORUSH. Intelligent, warm , secure, creative, trustworthy, plus-sized lesbian, 52. Interests: theology, spirituality, lit­ erature, movies, enjoy pets, laugh­ ter, often prefer sensuality to sexuality.

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SWM, 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 ONDER W H O YOU 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 SUMMER IS FINALLY HERE! SWPM, 42, tall, handsome & intelligent, seeks NS, attractive, funny S/DWPF, 3338, for biking, talking, skiing, dancing, swimming, wine, sunsets, and hopefully a relatonship. I value social justice and am an interesting cross between E.F. Schumacher & William Hurt. 64751 SWPM, 43, 5’8”, BRIGHT, humorous, principled, enjoys fitness, nature, music and home. Seeking special woman, 3545, under 5’5”, medium build, educated, no children. 64747 RUGGED BRAD PITT LOOK-ALIKE ISO petite, older woman for passionate play. Are you an outdoorsy, 60ish, bitter and colossally inept administrator? Call now! 64772

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IF CHEMISTRY’S THERE, 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 SPRING HAS SPRUNG, so to speak. Looking for soulmate, so to seek. 38 plus and a match. From writer, entrepreneur, gardener, canoeist— perhaps a catch. 64749 WM, 35, G OO D BODY & 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 SWM, 42, Virgo, seeking uninhibited Pisces F for friendship and fun. Discretion assured. Smoker preferred. 64762 SWM, 41, 5’8”, NA, SMOKER 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 TO LTR. I AM A SLEN­ DER SWM, 33, NS, ND. 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 20’s probably have better things to do than answer this ad. Worth a try, though. Unconventional. 64733 SO LET’S GET THIS STRAIGHT... you don’t smoke, you don’t like kids, you don’t like to dance, but you do like a variety of rock music, hiking, movies and you’re around 26-30, and we’re not together yet because...? SWM, 29, NS, LONG hair, 6’, 165 lbs. 64743 M, 33, A N D TRUSTY DOG 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 of mountain air. Infusions of blues, jazz & humor in smoky laboratory locations. Faint of heart not encouraged to apply. 64724 SWPM, 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. DWM, 48, runner, biker, fit, authentic, centered, passionate, optimistic, prof, who values balance between daily physical pursuits & love of film, humor, good food, travel & pop culture. ISO long-term partner of strong character w/ similar values. 64726 LIGHT-HEARTED DWM, 58, 6’1”, 235 lbs., blonde, bearded medical profes­ sional enjoys live entertainment, music, cooking, ISO sharp, tailored, prof, lady to share wonderful future. 64725 CANADIAN PROFESSIONAL: sophisticated, 52, tall, slim, educated, divorced, seeking professional lady for serious rela­ tionship. Photo, please. 64729 SWM, 26, STUDENT DREAMING of women (Bi & couples O.K.), 40+, for sexy, sensual evenings at your place. All replies answered. 64697 HANDSOME, INTELLIGENT, FUNloving, balanced dad (40)— musician, engineer— seeking F of beauty & depth (30-43) for companionship, preferably into music, martial arts, athletics or cre­ ative arts. 64698 DWM, 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 of petting, and, no matter what, I still get to sleep on the bed! 64702 LET’S WRESTLE EACH OTHER playfully and with ideas deeply. We can also walk the mountains, sail/canoe lakes, listen to/play beautiful music. 64703 SWM, 30, FIT G OO D LOOKING, stable, seeks same in a SWF, 25-35, fit­ ness buff (runner?!). Explore VT towns & trails, conversation, friendship. More? 64707 40-SOMETHING, ATTRACTIVE, educated, easy smile, great sense of humor. Loves the outdoors, clean, dependable, NS, full set of teeth, in great shape, seeks same. 64709 M, 40’S, HEALTH CONSCIOUS, NS, into diving, sunsets, romantic dinners, movies; great personality, easy-going, enjoys workouts, shopping & sailing. Call. You won’t be disappointed. 64710

11numbers away.

WM, 52, DOMINANT, 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 SOUGHT FOR FRIEND­ SHIP and, hopefully, a relationship. I am SWM, 27, attractive, blonde hair/blue eyes. Call and I’ll tell you more. 64684 TOM HANKS STU NT DOUBLE. SWM, 24, futbol nut w/ creative pizzazz, seeking SW lady, 21-26, fit, who’s not jealous (admittedly); impulsive, has dance moves and can be Haunted. 64696 SWM, 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 SWM, 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 SOUGHT FOR THE Dance o f Life. Priorities: exploration, cre­ ativity, wholeness, home, intimacy and laughter. Beautiful, sensitive, strong, SWM, 28, seeks F, 20-34, pf passion, vigor and dreams. 64690 SWM, ATTRACTIVE, FIT, 33, W / A passion for cooking, sailing, film, dance, & the outdoors. Seeks witty, artsy, intelli­ gent F’s, 23-33, for friendship. 64663 LONG-HAIRED COUNTRY BOY, 39, healthy, down-to-earth, independent, would like to meet someone w/ a sense of humor and a life. Age/race unimpor­ tant, but grown-ups need not apply! Call or write w/ your definition of 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, 43, 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: O NE 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/DWF for friendship for sure and hopefully more. I’m clever, witty & cute, so please don’t be mute! Smoker & joker, but serious, too. 64665 SURREALISM NEED N O T EXIST only in the personal section of your local ’zine. Grease up & slide into my twisted world of 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 ATHLETIC WM, 5’11”, 190 LBS., handsome and open-minded, ISO mature F for domination/submission; women’s shoe worship. 64652 LOVES THE OUTDO O RS, NO T the 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 of similar qualities w/ an appetite for romance and passion. 64653 DO M 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. & responsible, yet young & spontaneous. 64645 DO M INANT M A N D MASTER seeks submissive F pets & slaves, 24-42, who posse'ss beauty, class &C style for BDSM, rapture, ecstasy & communion. 64654 DWM, 46, TALL, FIT, PROFESSION­ AL, passionate, romantic, relatively sane. Musician into bicycling, sailing, skiing, motorcycles, etc. seeking attractive com­ panion, 30-45, to share laughter. 64656 SWM, 50, 5T 1”, 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 H O DARES, WINS. TALL, intelligent, blue-eyed SWM, 41, humorous, seeking shapely SWF who’s not afraid to look out into the starry heavens and dream. 64658

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D ear Lola, I h a v e n ev er h a d a re a l p h y sical a ttra c tio n . I'm only in te re ste d in a m a n ’s b ra in . Oh, su re . I ’ve h a d se x with m en. b u t only it th e ir I.Q. is well ov er ic c . And I c a n only re a c h o rg asm it th e y ’ve been p u b lish ed . C onsequently, I go through m en a t b r e a k ­ neck sp e e d — they n ever seem to be s m a r t o r c h a l­ lenging enough. I ’ve w rit­ ten to Don Delillo a n d a tew oth er fa m o u s m en in the h opes th a t on e c$ them will m a rry me. Aty fa ie n d s thin k I h a v e som e k in d ot d iso rd e r. I th in k I ju s t h av e high s t a n d a r d s . W hat sa y y o u ?

—- G enius in G eorgia D ear G enius. y o u ’re d a m n e d to u n h a p p in e ss . No on e c a n sta c k up to th o se k in d s ot

sta n d a rd s — not even to th e ir ed ito rs. I c a n ’t tis~ u re o u t w h a t y o u r p ro b ­ lem is, ex actly . It co u ld be th e fa m e -tu c k com ­ plex, o r th e m in d -fa c k tetish . R e g a rd le ss, y o u ’re tu ck e d up. P eople sh o u ld p a ir u p with p e o p le who co m p lem en t them , n o t b e c a u s e th e y ’re lookin g f a r com p lim en ts facm oth er people. Why d o n ’t y o u w rite a bock a b o u t a ll th e im p o rta n t m en y o u ’ve been with a n d th en m a s tu r b a te w hile yo u r e a d it. Call it Alone, L iterally. With love,

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c/o SEVENftp, P.0, tot u6i, 29 ChurchStreet, Burlington, V!

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WOMEN SEEKING WOMEN GEMINI WRITER ISO FIERY LEO to inspire me. Must be balanced, bold And beautiful. Willing to relocate for the right woman. 64826 - ' IN N O RUSH. Intelligent, warm, secure, creative, trustworthy, plus-sized lesbian, 52. Interests: theology, spirituali­ ty, literature, movies, enjoy pets, laughter, often prefer sensuality to sexuality. 64831 LOOKING FOR THAT 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 WHERE IS THAT 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 STUDENT, occa­ sionally spontaneous, enjoys outdoors exploring nature and being indoors exploring life, funny & intelligent, looking for friendship, maybe more. 64685 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 &c LTR. 64715 HI! 22 YO LESBIAN SEEKING friend­ ship w/ other lesbian(s) in the Montpelier area. I am really nice. You should call me. 64688 29 YO LESBIAN, PROFESSIONAL, athletic, NS, married to my first and only, curious and looking for more, seeks someone for no-strings-attached friend­ ship and fun. 64657

MEN SEEKING MEN ROMANCE IN THE AIR. 39 YO WM, hairy and bottom man, looking for GWM, 30-40, for friendship/relationship. 64817 QUEER STUDENT, 21, ISO SINEWY and sensuous Asian prinz in his 20’s for vodka cocktails, probing discussion, deep massage, a roof-top cigarette and “possibly maybe?” 64825 A FINE YOUNG BUCK. BiWM, 21, 5’9”, 140 lbs. blnd./hzl., college student, athletic, well-built, versatile, intense, ide­ alist, romantic, motivated Wyoming ranch boy. I’m straightedge, but openminded. 64827 MASC. GWM, 33, BLONDE, seeking my partner, 30-38. You: dark-haired, into sports; you drink and smoke too much, but physically look great. Call. I’m waiting. 64830 GUY NEXT DOOR ISO LOW-KEY friends able to stir up some occasional mischief. Mid 20’s, sense of humor, good taste in beer all appreciated. 64798

SUNSETS D O N ’T CUT IT FOR this fiery 22 YO NYC queen. ISO an alterna­ tive kind of wilderness. Show me there’s more to Vermont than scenery. 6 4 8 15 G OO D MAN/MANY QUALITIES, 37, 6’, professional, enjoys gardening, dining, theatre and other activities. Seeking GM, 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/Bi MEN, any age, for discreet fun in Rutland area. 64763 ONE OF THE WORLD’S GREAT kissers is lonely! GWM, 33, brown/hazel, sturdy build, seeks romance and moon­ light with sensuous, kindred spirit, 3045. 64776 BiWMM, 42, VISITS BURLINGTON regularly, seeks other BiWM or GWM, 18-45, for discreet, good times. Clean, honest, sincere only. 64478 BURLINGTON AREA GM, 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 CUTE, SWEET & LOVABLE GWM, 5’9”, 150 lbs., young 30’s-look & act 25. Enjoy rollerblading, water skiing, riding motorcycles. ISO same, 25-35- 64750 GWM, 40, 5’9”, 185 LBS., BLUE eyes/brown hair, seeks to meet another GWM for friendship &C possibly more. If you are out there, please respond. 64736

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QUEER MEN UNDER 30 SEEK same for growth and bonding. Have you been looking for a Young Queer Community? Well, you’ve found it. P.S. Queen City is coming! 64718 BiWM, 19, 195 LBS., ISO G/Bi MEN for discreet fun. 64731 SGM, 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 GWPM, 38, G OO D LOOKING, mas­ culine, muscular, active, passive, sense of humor; enjoys hiking, camping, tennis, fishing, etc.; seeking dominant males w/ same interests for fun, friendship. 64681 DWM, 40, 5 7 0 ”, 170 LBS., IS offering you a stress-relieving massage. You’re 1822, clean, thin, discreet and need a rea­ son to smile. 64692 BiWM, 5’9”, 165 LBS., NS, SEXY, discreet, 38, adventurous, submissive, ISO discreet, trim friend under 40 for fun, no relationship. Eager for your call. 64667

OTHER

R PCV/INTERNATIONAL traveler looking for professional, zany M/F, 2030, to enjoy summer; watersports, BBQ, music,. 4aitcing and margaritas. Witty, fit; adventurous and open-minded. 64788

ATTENTION GUY W / PET FERRET -at the Chew Chew, Sat. night, June 21. You thought I was a cop; I thought your eyes were beautiful. Unattached? If so, please call me. 64828 LAVENIA: Music is the message; taste the sweetness. Thank you, Wild Thing... 64806 WILLISTON RD. McDONALDS, 6/6, evening. You: beautiful blonde, pink jacket, blue jeans. Me: brown hair, blue shirt, khakis. Kicking myself for not talking. Gimme another chance? 64779 KEITH, GOT YOUR LETTER dated 5/12. Need your new phone number... Mountain Man. 64783

FLORIDA COUPLE, 39 & 44, HERE for the summer, very fit, very active, very sensual, very nice, seeking other attractive people for local sports or other endeav­ ors. 64819 SEEK INFORMATION O N THE Jahnke family from Westbrook, MN. 64813 LOOKING FOR A PARTNER TO GO camping with on weekends. Explore the Northeast with me. Be in shape, in thir­ ties and ready for fun. 64782

5 digit box numbers can be contacted either 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 jour response in an envelope, write box# on die outside and place in another envelope t $5 for each response and address to: i PERSON Jo f SEVEN DAYS, PO. Box 1164, 1^ Burlington, VT 05402

THIS IS-m FlT , ATTRACTIVE SWPF, NS/ND, 25, seeking SWPM, 25-30, also ISO the right person. You like to bike, run, hike, spend time outdoors, and romantic evenings. You are educated, attractive, witty, sincere. Dark hair a must. Photo + letter please. All responses answered. Box 161 SUBMIT BEAUTIFUL DOMINATRIX seeks obedient submissive. To be considered send photo and letter of intention. You won’t be disappointed. Box 158 CENTRAITVrDWFr?0TS;'ATTRACTIVE, sensitive, honest, caring and under­ standing. Some interests are quiet dinners, movies, yard sales, fishing & 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:-----10NED values seeks a ND one-woman M, 38-47, w/ family values, inner peace and enjoys camping, theatre, biking, concerts, farmers markets, good books and canoeing. Box 155

51 YO FIT, ACTIVE DWPF WITH pas­ sion 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 getic, independent, easy-going, many inter­ ests— travel. dimag. in/put—seeking com­ panionship of gentleman, 63 or under, NS, neat, kind &C honest. Let’s enjoy the sum­ mer together. Box 149 for fun, swimming, biking, blading, hiking, movies, dinner... You name it! Box 143 XX VERS. 1968 WTCRIN, 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. No head games, please! Box 142 crcet M, 25-35, to share erotic encounters. Photo a must. Discretion imperative. Pleasure assured. No phot/no dice. Box 141 DWF;40’S, NS/ND, SINCERE, honest, witty, sensitive, seeks soft-spoken, gentle giant, stable WM without baggage, head games or drugs. Like dancing, travel, oldies, fishing. Box 134 DO N’T SKI, DO N’T HIKE, D O N T snowmobile, can’t swim seeking man in 40’s w/ similar interests. Box 131

SINGULARLY SUPPLE SENIOR, slim six-footer, sensuous, sensitive, securely sinecured scribe, songwriter, seasonal skater, skier, swimmer, sinner seeks simpatico seniorita to share Shelburne sum­ mer siestas soon. Box 160 YOU’RE A NICE YOUNG LADY and no one would believe you dream about having a secret relationship. I’m your male equivalent. Let’s talk. Box 162 HANDSOME, FIT WM, EARLY 20’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, WELL-EDU­ CATED SWM, 25, happy, goofy, outgo­ ing, honest, 6 ’1”, blonde/blue, seeking sute, hip, flamboyant sweetheart for adventure, romance and fun. Box 156 CHEF IN TRAINING seeks intelligent, naturally beautiful, fun, slim, indepen­ dent guinea pig who is willing to try any­ thing once. Creative overthinkers, cynical insomniacs, lovers of great scotch, good wine and an occasional cheap beer encouraged. Box 152 LIVING IN MONTREAL. SBM, edu­ cated, 6 ’6”, 36 YO, NS, seeking an attractive and honest SF, 25-32, for a relationship and more. Box 148 SWM, 36, SEEKS S/DF W / HEP. C. I have same. I’d like to meet you. Box 146

HARD-OF-HEARING SWM, 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 OLDER WOMAN NEEDED. Goodlooking, very intelligent SWM, 26, very open & honest, friendly, passionate, romantic and sensual, desires S/DF, 3545, attractive & intelligent, not over­ weight, sensitive, friendly, open & hon­ est, sensual & romantic, who enjoys deep conversation, outdoors, good massage, dancing and much more. Box 136 STARTING TO DATE. Me. DPNSNDM , athletic, secure, handsome, hardbodied, honest, kind, many interests. You: attractive (inside &c out), exercise oriented, 35-45, Washington County preferred. Responses answered. Box 135

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

WM, MID-20’S, SEEKS Bi/GM, 18-25, and thin for discreet relationship. Box 157

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 GWM, 5’10”, 165 LBS., BRN./BL., looking for GWM, 20-40, for discreet, clean fun. No strings attached. Box 144 1*KJ1 URE 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 of 2 young children looking for an intelligent & humorous co-construc­ tor of a blueprint to build something excit­ ing &C meaningful. Submit your bids. No phone estimates. No reaconable offers refused. Box 145 SIZZLING WHITE MAN. BiWM seeks anyone for discreet, safe times, passionate massages and versatile daytimes. Any age, race, weight and lifestyle. Box 139 BiWM, 52, LOOKS MUCH YOUNGER, in great shape, seeks frolic and fun. Discreet. Let’s 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, 50’s, w/ libido to burn, 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 your FRCC person al 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 IR S T 2 5 WORDS ARE F R E E WITH PER SO N TO PE R SO N ( 4 5 W ORDS IF FAXED ON TH U RSD A Y ). ADDITIONAL WORDS ARE SO * 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 il e d t o y o u w h e n y o u PLACE YOUR AD.) IT’S SAFE, CONFIDENTIAL AND F U N !

How to respond to a personal ad: C on fiden tial In fo r m a tio n

• C h o o s e y o u r f a v o r it e a d s a n d n o t e t h e ir b o x n u m b e r s .

( W E N E E D T H IS T O R U N Y O U R A D )

• C a l l 1 - 9 0 0 - 9 3 3 - 3 3 2 5 FROM A TOUCH-TONE PH O N E . • F o l l o w i n g t h e v o ic e p r o m p t s , p u n c h in t h e 5 - d i g i t b o x # o f t h e a d y o u w is h t o r e s p o n d t o , o r y o u may b r o w s e a s p e c i f ic c a t e g o r y . c a l l s c o s t $ 1 .9 9 p e r m in u t e , y o u m u s t b e o v e r 1 8 y e a r s o l d .

Nam e Ad d r e s s . C i t y ______ Z ip

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1 -9 0 0 -9 3 3 -3 3 2 5

State. .P h o n e .

EXCEEDS 2 5 W O R D S, S E N D $ .5 0

PER EXTRA W O R D X 4

Ca lls co st $ i.g g a m in u t e

We e k s « IU U »

1 A d s w it h a 3 - d ig it b o x # c a n b e c o n t a c t e d t h r o u g h t h e m a il . S e a l y o u r r e s p o n s e in a n e n v e l o p e , w r i t e t h e b o x # o n t h e OUTSIDE AND PLACE IN ANOTHER ENVELOPE WITH $ 5 FOR EACH r e s p o n s e . Ad d r e ss to :

B o x # ___ ,

p.o.

B o x 1 1 6 4 , B u r l i n g t o n , VT 0 5 4 0 2 .

4 FRCC weeks for: 1 W j u n n c r i .1 ■vf. LIABILITY ^O R THE CONT^I

[in d e v Im e s r u i i M O N TO PEI

& 9.

1997

PROM THE ------UDING REASONVOICE MESSAGES PLACED

SEVEN DAYS'

W O M E N S E E K I N G ME N WOMEN SEEKING WOMEN MEN S EE KI NG WO M EN MEN S EE KI NG MEN

One FRCC week for: I SPY OTHER

V.. f

page

iJ *J H

47

•Wr-


enaissance

Swivel Chest spins to reveal a full length mirror

The w ord renaissance comes from the French and means rebirth. This new group of classical bedroom furniture combines elements of traditional design w ith the most m odern cabinet m aking techniques. Although it is som ew hat more formal than w hat Pier 1 w ould typically offer, our buyers felt that the Renaissance Group offered a value and quality that was too good to pass up.

Lingerie Swivel Chest 30.5"W, 21.5"W, 72"H

reg ’1199

Opening Order Special

*959 Each piece offers some unique feature. Pictured here is a detail of the large dresser showing a felt lined secret compartment, cedar drawers and a jewelry compartment in the top drawer. Be sure to ask about the special features of the piece you are interested in.

Large Dresser 35.5”h , 72.5"w , i8.5"D W/ Landscape Mirror 48.5"h , 5i.75"w , 2.75md

Armoire opens to fit a 32" television

reg. Dresser $999/ Mirror $499

Opening Order Special ETresser $ r y n n

399 799// M ir r o r §r%r%r%

We would like to invite our valued customers to come down and preview this wonderful new collection, and as a further enticement we will be offering a

20 % discount for those who want to get in on our

initial order. We have samples in stock Entertainment Armoire $n 9 9 of night stands, dressers, armoires, and 38.5-W, 23.75D, 72"H mirrors. Other pieces will also be Opening Order Special available for special order as well.

*959

Opening Order Special ends: Saturday July 13,1997

Per 1 hnoris associate store

52 Church Street On the Marketplace Burlington 863-4644

Mon.-Sat. 10a-9p Sun. 12p-5p


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