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04.20.11-04.27.11
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THE LAST WEEK IN REVIEW
facing facts
APRIL 13-20, 2011 COMPILED BY CATHY RESMER & TYLER MACHADO
Entergy Sues to Keep Vermont Yankee Open
O
n Monday, Entergy, owner of the Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant, filed a lawsuit against the state of Vermont in U.S. District Court. The Louisianabased company claims the Nuclear Regulatory Commission — not Vermont lawmakers — should decide whether the plant can continue operating beyond 2012. The NRC has already granted Vermont Yankee a 20-year license extension, but the Vermont Senate voted last year to deny Entergy permission to keep operating the 39-year-old plant beyond next year. The lawsuit comes as no surprise. “Fair Game” columnist Shay Totten explored the possibility that Entergy would sue in a story in the February 17, 2010, Vermont Yankee issue of Seven Days.. Here’s how Totten handicapped the legal battle last February:
BUS STRIKE AVERTED
That’s how many letters (the oldfashioned kind) Gov. Peter Shumlin has fielded since he took office in January, according to his press secretary. See more numbers from the governor’s first 100 days in office at sevendaysvt.com/blurt.
NUCLEAR WAR?
MOST POPULAR ITEMS ON SEVENDAYSVT.COM
Ten hours of mediation, an 11th-hour deal. Who knew public transportation could be so damn dramatic?
Entergy is suing the state to keep Vermont Yankee open. The official “reaction”? Bring it on.
Rep. Tony Klein (D-East Montpelier) said he has discussed the issue with several attorneys and believes Vermont is on solid legal footing. Others are not so sure. Vermont Law School professor Cheryl Hanna says Entergy could have a strong case against the legislature. That’s because Vermont is the only state whose lawmakers have given themselves the authority to weigh in on this debate. Entergy could argue in court that a political body does not have the scientific background or expertise to make such a decision, says Hanna. Gov. Jim Douglas has been making similar arguments for months: The legislature should let the “experts” decide Yankee’s case.
LEOPOLD LEAVING
The BT scandal, and a botched hip surgery, felled Burlington’s shrewd CAO. He should sue his doc — for $17 million.
Find Totten’s story linked on Blurt, the Seven Days staff blog, at sevendaysvt.com/blurt.
BABY TO GO
What’s better than ice cream? FREE ice cream. Alice Levitt braved the crowds for her free scoop on Ben & Jerry’s Free Cone Day. Watch the video at sevendaysvt.com.
A woman gave birth in the breakdown lane on Interstate 89. Wonder if she’ll name the baby Exit 14. FACING FACTS COMPILED BY PAULA ROUTLY
Looking for the newsy blog posts? Find them in “Local Matters” on p.15
TOPFIVE
1. “Energy Bill Would ‘Pay’ Vermonters to Produce Their Own Power” by Andy Bromage. Have a wind, solar or biomass system at home? You can feed the excess power it generates back into the grid — and get credit for it. 2. “Fair Game: Identity Theft” by Shay Totten. Two Vermont Abenaki tribes finally get recognized by the Senate — the first Native American tribes in the state to receive official recognition. 3. “Whiskey Tango Foxtrot: What’s with all the Grateful Dead music on Vermont Public Radio?” by Ken Picard. “Morning Edition” local host and proud Deadhead Mitch Wertlieb sneaks his favorite band on to VPR’s airwaves. 4. “The Green Veneer” by Ken Picard. A Q&A with author and reporter Heather Rogers, who explains what climate change “solutions” are actually part of the problem. 5. “Deep Roots” by Alice Levitt. A new farm-totable restaurant brings localvore cuisine to Rutland’s restaurant scene.
tweet of the week: @ChampAlum Looking for a fun way to stay active in #BTV this summer? WAKA Kickball is where it’s at! http://bit.ly/10oqlo (4/19)
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Bite Club TV: Ben & Jerry’s Free Cone Day
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SEVEN DAYS WEEK IN REVIEW 5
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TOQUING UP. E D I T O R I A L / A D M I N I S T R AT I O N -/
Pamela Polston & Paula Routly
/ Paula Routly / Pamela Polston
FEEDback READER REACTION TO RECENT ARTICLES
Don Eggert, Cathy Resmer, Colby Roberts Margot Harrison
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BYE-BYE, BOOKS
In Margot Harrison’s story, “Print Versus Pixels” [April 13], Robin Ingenthron states that “hard-rock metal mining is by far the most horrible polluting activity by man on the planet.” Is Robin high? That’s an outright lie. The “academic scrutiny” he’s missing here is the devastating pollutants generated by the meat industry! Christ, that takes five minutes to fact-check on Google. Is hard-rock mining worse than oil spills? Ingenthron goes on “...if you have an e-reader and you don’t read...” WTF! Who has an ereader who doesn’t read?! I don’t know many people who buy $300 devices for no reason at all; that is a ridiculous argument. I’ve published five New York Times best sellers, been “on press” during massive first-print runs and visited countless booksellers from Maine to California, so I feel I have some insight into the battle over e-readers and traditional books. The bottom line, in my expert opinion, is that traditional books are worse for the planet than reading devices, and if I hear one more “book lover” tell me how much they “love the feel of a book,” I’m going to throw up. On the book lover. These people collect their reads like trophies, display them all on bookshelves for everyone to see. Pathetic. If you love something, let it the fuck go (I’m paraphrasing from Love Story
TIM NEWCOMB
here), especially if the thing you love is destroying the planet. Oh, and by the way, I did the math, and I can fit roughly 94,000 copies of Infinite Jest on my iPad. That’s 102,272,000 pages, not including Wallace’s notes! Do you have any idea how much energy it takes to make 94,000 copies of a 1008-page book? I didn’t think so. But, in the end, what’s really important is the work itself — the content, right? Ideas, after all, are green. Harry Bliss
SOUTH BURLINGTON
DON’T BUY AN E-READER
Thank you for Margot Harrison’s thoughtful investigation of publishing trends [“Print Versus Pixels,” April 13]. The real story here is how stupid all the eco-green witch hunters look when someone mentions that the waste involved with the paper industry doesn’t hold a candle to the ore mining for computer parts. Our culture of planned obsolescence is what’s filling landfills, not literature. If people are really interested in reducing waste, pollution and destruction, they could start by flooding the streets and demanding that our military be downsized. Books are sacred. Margot, from one lover of books to another, I beg you not to buy an e-reader. Why don’t you wait a few years, until the Crow
wEEk iN rEViEw
Bookstore is demolished and replaced with an eco-friendly Internet kiosk where we can have Shakespeare uploaded directly into our brains? Ben Aleshire burlingTOn
Ben Aleshire is editor of Burlington-based The Salon: A Journal of Poetry & Fiction.
FlAwED logic
burlingTOn
golD iS gooD
been a common money for only the past 40 years. So, thousands of years ... or 40 years? Which are you willing to bet was the delusion? The fact that Lauren Ober and most other people think that paper is money will be a delusion that soon comes to an end. There will come a time in the not-sodistant future when Lauren and most other people come to their senses and realize they’ve been a part of one of the greatest swindles in world history.
Sat. April 23 • 9:30-11:00am
Designing with Stone, Statuary & Water Charlotte Albers To register call 660-3505, ext 4. Pre-registration is required. All classes are $10.00 per person and held at Gardener’s in Burlington. See www.GardenersSupplyStore.com for details.
128 Intervale Road, 472 Marshall Avenue, off Riverside Ave, Burlington Taft Corners, Williston (802)658-2433 • Spring hours: Open daily 8am to 6pm 6h-Gardeners042011.indd 1 170_SeminarApr23_7D_cas.indd 1
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EXPLORE REGIONAL ITALIAN CUISINE AT
kevin mcElroy WaTerbury
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Alas, so-called “net metering” never “pays” money — only provides a credit, which is confiscated at the end of the next calendar year [“Energy Bill Would “Pay” Vermonters to Produce Their Own Power,” April 13]. That means that if you put up a “net metering” system and your usage is frugal, you will give the excess power away. You can blow the credit on heating, but that’s a waste of precious solar power. (Use wood!) A very small system is not cost effective. “Group net metering” is just extra paperwork. But they don’t want you to conserve, thus the hurdles. No good deed goes unpunished. moshe Braner eSSex
Editor’s note: We put the word “pays” in quotations to suggest the arrangement is more complicated than that. feedback
» P.18
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RISTORANTE 126 COLLEGE ST., BURLINGTON
802.863.5200 WWW.LAMANTE.COM
Introduction to
Italian Wine Seminar & Lunch at L’Amante
Come on down Good Friday Night and check out the Second to Last Supper art show!
Saturday April 30th 11:00 to 1:30
An introduction to the regions and wines of Italy with a tasting and discussion of 6 wines followed by an informal, family-style lunch with Chef/Co-Owner Kevin Cleary. Kevin will discuss food and wine pairing during the lunch.
Seven days reserves the right to edit for accuracy and length.
Happy Birthday, Mr. Mitchell! WED 4/20 AMIDA BOURBON PROJECT 7PM DJ CRE8 10PM CRAIG MITCHELLS’ 40TH BIRTHDAYDAY EXTRAVAGANZA! THU 4/21 DJ NASTEE 8PM DJ A-DOG 10PM / DJ CRE8 10PM FRI 4/22 KYLE THE RIDER 6PM LOVEWHIP 9PM SAT 4/23
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feedback 7
Your submission options include: • sevendaysvt.com/feedback • feedback@sevendaysvt.com • Seven days, P.O. box 1164, burlington, VT 05402-1164
HAPPY EARTH-EASTERPASSOVER-DAY!
SEVEN DAYS
It’s not surprising that someone in the media doesn’t understand gold [“Gold Fever,” April 6]. First things first: Glenn Beck is a hack. He shills for Goldline for the same reason that Shaquille O’Neal shills for Icy Hot: because they pay him to. Glenn Beck has about as much to do with the current bull market in gold as Shaq has to do with why old people and athletes have back pain. Don’t think of gold as some confusing, archaic metal that is in some way like money. Gold is money. It’s been money for thousands of years. It hasn’t
Last week’s “Fair Game” contained some incorrect information. Dave Skinas can take part in future scholarly panels to review Native American petitions for recognition as long as he does so on his own time and it doesn’t conflict with his official duties as a federal employee.
04.20.11-04.27.11
Patrick Standen
corrEctioN
SEVENDAYSVt.com
I felt the need to respond to the editorial introduction as well as Jon Adler’s letter in “Feedback” [April 6]. Both commit errors in reasoning. Seven Days creates a false dichotomy claiming that there’s “a growing conflict” between schools and students with disabilities. To which Mr. Adler’s letter adds that parents of special-ed students are flocking to Vermont to capitalize on the largesse of schools that, say, build elevators. Both treat persons with disabilities as scapegoats for our current budgetary woes. Nothing can be further from fact. Special-ed classifications often include students from poor, ethnic and linguistic minorities as well as students with physical, emotional, intellectual or behavioral issues. Our schools serve many with few dollars. This leads to elevators. Mr. Adler implied that only a “few” will use the elevator at Edmunds. It won’t just be the mobility-challenged student but also the teacher with one leg, the custodian moving desks, the parent with a skiing injury, the elderly citizen attending an after school event. The heart of my point: If we avoid prejudicial logic as in the above examples, we would not find ourselves in these tight places. While it is expensive to retrofit a building or educate a child well when you need to scramble for accommodations, if we think creatively and thoroughly from the beginning, we can do it well and cost effectively.
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contents
LOOKING FORWARD
APRIL 20-27, 2011 VOL.16 NO.33
Vermont Restaurant Week doesn’t start until April 29, but we hope this issue
will whet your appetite. In the cover story, Alice Levitt finds answers to the question WHY DO CHEFS MOVE AROUND SO MUCH? Ken Picard looks into a new growth industry: RESTAURANT CONSULTANTS. Lauren Ober does the math on TIPPING, and investigates New England’s SUSTAINABLE SEAFOOD. Corin Hirsch profiles a COMPANY THAT SUPPLIES JUST ABOUT EVERYTHING else to Vermont’s restos. And Carolyn Fox has edgy inquiries for a KNIFE SHARPENER.
APRIL 29-MAY 5
This week also brings a new 7Nights — the annual Seven Days guide to 850+ Vermont restaurants and bars — and, inserted in this issue, the Vermont Restaurant Week Guide with loads of menus. Time to make some rezzies.
NEWS 14
How Vermonters Shot Down Two Proposed Northern Nukes
FEATURES
30 Champlain Volley
Fitness: Serving up table tennis in Shelburne
BY KEVIN J. KELLEY
15 16
BY SARAH TUFF
News on Blurt
32 Chefs on the Move
BY SEVEN DAYS STAFF
Is It Cheaper to House Vermont Prisoners In or Out of State? It Depends.
BY KEN PICARD
Food: Why don’t Vermont’s top cooks stay in one place? BY ALICE LEVIT T
20 “Weird Tale” From a UVM Grad Plumbs New England History BY MARGOT HARRISON
Food: Vermont’s food and restaurant scene is breeding a cottage industry: consulting BY KEN PICARD
Food: When it comes to seafood, “local” means New England BY LAUREN OBER
BY PAMELA POLSTON
21
Rockwell’s Granddaughter Finds Her Own Icons
23
Vermont Plate Special
BY PAMELA POLSTON
Food: Provisions International brings the world to the Green Mountains, and vice versa
BY SHAY TOT TEN
25 Hackie
A cabbie’s rear view BY JERNIGAN PONTIAC
29 Work
BY CAROLYN FOX
43 Side Dishes Food news
BY CORIN HIRSCH & ALICE LEVIT T
Music news and views BY DAN BOLLES
68 Eyewitness BY MEGAN JAMES
83 Mistress Maeve
Your guide to love and lust BY MISTRESS MAEVE
BY LAUREN OBER
58 Quiet Riot
67 Art
Julia Baum, Green + Blue Gallery
BY MAT T BUSHLOW
11 48 55 58 67 72
The Magnificent 7 Calendar Classes Music Art Movies
04.20.11-04.27.11
72 Movies
Music: A famed drummer and a former poet laureate find common ground
STUFF TO DO
Don’t forget to check out our name contest at theshoeshopvt.com
Win Win; Jane Eyre
VIDEO
24 76 77 78 78 78 78 79 79 79 79 75 81
CLASSIFIEDS homeworks vehicles housing fsbo services 7D crossword buy this stuff music art legals calcoku/sudoku puzzle answers jobs
COVER IMAGE: MAT THEW THORSEN COVER DESIGN: DIANE SULLIVAN
C-3 C-3 C-3 C-4 C-4 C-5 C-6 C-6 C-6 C-6 C-7 C-8 C-9
“On the Marketplace” 38 Church St. • 862-5126 theshoeshopvt.com Mon-Thu 10am-7pm Fri-Sat 10am-8pm Sun 11am-5:30pm
sevendaysvt.com/multimedia
4v-shoeshop042011.indd 1
CONTENTS 9
straight dope free will astrology news quirks bliss lulu eightball the k chronicles troubletown, ted rall bill the cockroach red meat tiny sepuku american elf movie quiz personals
SEVEN DAYS
FUN STUFF
Stuck in Vermont: Vermont Foodbank. The Vermont Foodbank feeds 86,000 hungry Vermonters a year. Eva Sollberger visits the Foodbank’s distribution center to find out how they do it.
SEVENDAYSVT.COM
46 Tipping Points
REVIEWS
Brian McCarthy Quartet, Brian McCarthy Quartet; The Haps, Hanon Drive Heroes
Open season on Vermont politics
BY CORIN HIRSCH
Food: Gratuity etiquette for confused consumers
63 Music
12 Fair Game
Taking note of visual Vermont
42 Invisible Web
BY MEGAN JAMES
COLUMNS
59 Soundbites
39 Go Fish
20 Monkey See
‘Cause you can’t predict the weather...
Vermonters on the job
36 Menu Mavens
ARTS NEWS
H U NTE R
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Farm to Plate Vermont’s 10 Year Plan for Local Food Free Public Presentation Tuesday, April 26 7:30 – 9:30 p.m. Main Street Landing Performing Arts Center, Black Box Theater
HOW MUCH WOOD COULD A
WOODCHUCK
Come early for
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6:00 – 7:30 p.m. First 125 pints free! Plus free local nosh!
If a woodchuck had a brand new, V-8 1-ton pickup to haul it?
SEVEN DAYS
04.20.11-04.27.11
SEVENDAYSvt.com
Green Drinks
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LOOKING FORWARD
the
FRIDAY 22 & SATURDAY 23
MAGNIFICENT
Instant Classic
MUST SEE, MUST DO THIS WEEK COMPI L E D BY CAR OLYN F OX
THURSDAY 21
Revue This
COURTESY OF TOWN HALL THEATER
Sometimes, musical revues feel a little played out. That’s why we’re digging the attitude and wit behind Sarah Stone’s Laverne DeVoe — Isn’t She Dead? The singer (pictured) masquerades as a has-been star on a comeback mission, busting out jazz, blues and show-tune favorites to piano accompaniment by sidekick Fred Barnes. It’s cabaret with a side of comedy.
SATURDAY 23
Clowning Glory Blame it on Ronald McDonald, or the abundance of scary-clown movies out there, but plenty of people turn up their noses at jokesters sporting the big, red schnoz. Let the world-class acrobatics, juggling, plate spinning and unicycling tricks in the Fleming Museum’s Circus Extravaganza reinvent the meaning of “clowning around” for you. SEE CALENDAR SPOTLIGHT ON PAGE 52
SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 50
In January, arts writer Megan James wrote about Scrag Mountain Music’s vision for upping the accessibility of classical music by bringing it to more intimate venues, such as barns. That plan is right on track as special guests and Carnegie Hall regulars Owen Dalby and Meena Bhasin flesh out works from the baroque era to the 20th century at a Northfield farm on Friday, and a church and Langdon Street Café on Saturday. SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 52 AND CLUB DATE ON PAGE 64
SATURDAY 23
Oh, Baby! Billings Farm & Museum’s third annual Family Day at the Farm is sure to put some spring in your step. Green-thumbed gardeners dig heirloomseed-planting activities while others hitch a wagon ride and visit lambs, chicks and calves. Baby farm animals? We’re so there. SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 52
ONGOING BILL FORCHION AND SERENITY SMITH FORCHION
Seeing Red
SEE ART REVIEW ON PAGE 66
WEDNESDAY 20-SUNDAY 24 & WEDNESDAY 27
Dog Do
everything else...
FRIDAY 22 Since joining Grace Potter and the Nocturnals on their recent winter tour, Vermont band Chamberlin have crisscrossed the country ... before even crisscrossing their home state. Indeed, in a February review of the newcomers’ debut album, Bitter Blood, music editor Dan Bolles called them “the biggest local band no one in VT has ever really heard of.” We can finally get up to speed at the Higher Ground Showcase Lounge on Friday. SEE CLUB SPOTLIGHT ON PAGE 64
COURTESY OF BRETT HARREWYN
CALENDAR .................. P.48 CLASSES ...................... P.55 MUSIC .......................... P.58 ART ............................... P.67 MOVIES ........................ P.72
MAGNIFICENT SEVEN 11
Long Way Home
SEVEN DAYS
SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 50
04.20.11-04.27.11
Dog lovers really are a breed of their own — you either are one or you aren’t. This has never been truer than in A.R. Gurney’s Sylvia, in which an ebullient stray mutt paws her way into one couple’s marriage. Greg is instantly smitten, Kate is emphatically not, and the pup becomes the “other woman” in this odd romantic triangle presented by Vermont Stage Company. Get a dose of puppy love, through May 8.
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When Julia Baum got wind of the rumor that redheads are going extinct, she reacted by picking up her camera and pointing it at everyday people with carrot tops. The rumor turned out to be false, but her mesmerizing series of portraits, “A Rare Breed,” explores how that flaming hue has shaped its wearer. Seven Days sends two of its own gingerhaired reporters to check out the exhibit at Stowe’s Green + Blue Gallery.
COURTESY OF FLEMING MUSEUM
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Fresh spring looks.
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OPEN SEASON ON VERMONT POLITICS BY ANDY BROMAGE
So Long, Leopold ONATHAN LEOPOLD is resigning as Burlington’s chief administrative officer. But that doesn’t mean the powerful honcho’s troubles are
over. Hanging over Leopold’s head are a citizen lawsuit that seeks repayment of $17 million in city funds loaned to Burlington Telecom and an ongoing criminal investigation into the city’s failure to pay back the loan within 60 days — a violation of its state license. Another wrinkle: The city isn’t committing to defending Leopold in those legal proceedings after his scheduled departure on July 1. Asked whether the city’s insurer will continue to pay for Leopold’s legal defense in the Burlington Telecom civil case, or defend him in the event he is charged criminally, a spokesman for Mayor BOB KISS wouldn’t say. “As you know, Jonathan will clothes for women be leaving as of July 1, about 10 102 Church Street weeks from now,” mayoral assisBurlington tant JOE REINERT tells Fair Game. “In general, it’s premature to say anything related to the status of FACTORY OUTLETS 8v-Expression042011.indd 1 4/18/11 2:06 PM either of these issues as they may essex shoppes & cinema stand on July 1.” Maybe Kiss expects everything will be wrapped up by the time Leopold splits? After resisting numerous calls for his ouster as a result of the BT fiasco, Leopold announced his resignation last week on his terms. He attributed it to “serious health problems” resulting from a 2007 car accident. First hired when BERNIE SANDERS was mayor, Leopold earned a reputation as a shrewd money manager during a career that spanned three decades. Unfortunately for him, Leopold is more likely to be remembered for the big screwup at the end of his tenure and how it weakened the city’s financial position. Burlingtonians hoping for Leopold’s mea culpa got something, but not much, in his resignation letter last week. After he had finished rattling off his financial accomplishments, Leopold conceded: “I regret the difficulties the city has faced as a result of the BT controversy, and I hope Inspirations ARTS & CRAFTS the city is able to resolve these issues. In hindsight, I believe that we could have Inspirations made a more complete disclosure of the ARTS & CRAFTS violation of Condition 60 when we first learned of it in November 2008. This has Inspirations & The ARTS eARTS ssex shoppes & Cinema, & CRAFTS CRAFTS resulted in unfortunate division within 21 essex Way, essex JunCTion, VT 05452 the city. LoCaTed aT The inTerseCTion of VT-289 & rT-15 “I believe it is time for Burlington 802.878.2851 | WWW.essexshoppes.Com to come together and move forward. I
do not want my continued role as chief administrative officer to polarize the city further or hinder progress in addressing the challenges of the future.” Left unsaid in the CAO’s letter: Kiss’ chances of reelection are slim. And when the Prog mayor goes, Leopold would likely be out of a job, too.
Wisconsin Dreamin’
To me, it always seemed like Vermont and Wisconsin were cut from the same cheesecloth — blue states known for their liberal politics, dairy cows and quality cheddar. In fact, Madison and Burlington are almost mirror images of each other. Both are lakeside college towns that serve as laboratories for leftleaning social policies.
BURLINGTONIANS HOPING FOR LEOPOLD’S MEA CULPA GOT SOMETHING, BUT NOT MUCH,
public-employee unions — but neglected to mention that he is not asking wealthy Vermonters to pony up more to help close the state’s $176 million deficit. Nonetheless, the gov boasted that Vermont is evidence of what states can do when they “put aside partisan differences” and “tone down” the rhetoric. The evening before Shumlin’s big day, Republicans assembled at the Burlington Hilton for their annual fundraising dinner and turned up the rhetoric — albeit in a super-polite, Vermont sort of way. The fundraiser’s headliner was Republican National Committee chairman REINCE PRIEBUS, a Wisconsinite who helped get Walker elected. Earlier in the day, several dozen union demonstrators marched from Church Street to the hotel to protest Priebus’ appearance and his role in undoing collective bargaining rights in Wisconsin. Addressing the GOP faithful, Priebus mocked the Vermont union protesters, saying, “In Wisconsin, we’re used to protests of, you know, 70,000. I call that a coffee klatch across the street.” There is one way, however, that Priebus hopes Wisconsin and Vermont prove identical: their ability to topple liberal U.S. senators. “You’ve got a guy here by the name of Bernie Sanders that’s a whole lot like a guy named RUSS FEINGOLD, who was defeated by somebody named RON JOHNSON from Wisconsin,” Priebus said to huge applause. “You can do it here. Just like Russ Feingold got beat in Wisconsin, Bernie Sanders can get beat [in Vermont.]”
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IN HIS RESIGNATION LETTER LAST WEEK.
NOW OPEN S U P P L I E S
12 FAIR GAME
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Last week, though, politicians from the two states were showing their differences. The starkest contrast came last Thursday, when Wisconsin Gov. SCOTT WALKER sat next to Gov. PETER SHUMLIN at the witness table before Congressman DARRELL ISSA’S (R-Calif.) House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. Shumlin, a silver-tongued liberal, was invited by the committee’s ranking Democrat to serve as counterweight to Walker, the now-notorious Republican union buster. The topic was “State and Municipal Debt: Tough Choices Ahead.” Shumlin sought to draw a sharp line in the sand between the choices he’s making and the path Walker has followed. In his opening remarks, Shumlin proclaimed, “I do not believe that those to blame for our current financial troubles are our law enforcement officers, firefighters and other state employees whose services we take for granted. The notion that a state trooper making a middle-class living with health care benefits for her family, or a snowplow driver who works long hours in dangerous conditions and makes a decent but modest wage, is responsible for this problem is simply false.” Shumlin said that he’s asked “everyone to sacrifice” in Vermont — including
Butting In
Burlington city councilors have tried — and failed — twice to pass an ordinance to get cigarette smoking off the Church Street Marketplace. Will the third time prove to be the charm? That’s the hope of six councilors who introduced a resolution last week that would snuff out smoking across a wide swath of downtown. The group is led by Councilor JOAN SHANNON (D-Ward 5), chair of the committee that will shape the ordinance proposal. She’s also a possible mayoral candidate for next year. Shannon says a smoking ban is about economics and public health — not about ridding the Marketplace of unsavory characters. Since 85 percent of Chittenden County residents don’t smoke, she figures an outdoor smoking ban would lure more shoppers to Church Street. And since the
OPINION purpose of a “smoke-free” downtown? “I think what we’re looking for here is an improvement,” Shannon says. “We all have to accept the fact that what we’re coming up with here won’t be a perfect solution.”
Up in Smoke
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Can’t wait till Wednesday for the next “Fair Game”? Tune in to WPTZ NewsChannel 5 on Tuesday nights during the 11 p.m. newscast for a preview. Shay Totten is on vacation. His column returns next week.
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Speaking of smoking —it is 4/20, after all — here’s an update on pot-related legislation in the Statehouse. The medical marijuana dispensary bill passed in the state senate last week by a vote of 25 to 4. As passed, S.17 would permit nonprofit providers, overseen by state authorities, to grow and dispense marijuana from two locations to qualifying patients suffering from AIDS, cancer, multiple sclerosis and other chronic conditions. Right now, patients on the registry have the choice of growing their own, or buying it on the black market if they’re unable to cultivate a crop. The bill now heads to the House and, if passed, on to Gov. Peter ShumliN, who cosponsored a similar bill last year as a state senator. But don’t expect Vermont to become Amsterdam West. The marijuana registry has strict criteria for getting in — this ain’t California, where a case of athlete’s foot is enough to get you a legal ounce of kind bud — and the dispensaries will keep the sativa under heavy security. Another marijuana-themed bill — to decriminalize some pot possession and make the penalty a civil offense, like a traffic ticket — never got out of the gates. The tripartisan legislation would have imposed a civil fine of $150 on anyone 21 or older possessing an ounce or less of pot. Shumlin supports decriminalization as a cost-saving measure that would ease the obligation to prosecute and imprison low-level dealers and tokers. The bill got marooned in the House Committee on Judiciary without so much as a hearing. Talk about a buzz kill. A few days sooner and H.427 could have been H.420, man! m
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surgeon general says that no amount of secondhand smoke is safe — the EPA classifies cigarette smoke as a known human carcinogen — Shannon and others think it’s good policy to expand Burlington’s smoking ban, from bars and restaurants to the great outdoors. The last attempt to make the Marketplace smoke free went down in flames when merchants revolted over concerns about losing business — particularly from puffing Canadians. A survey by the Church Street Marketplace Commission last year showed that more than half of the 100 or so merchants opposed the smoking ban. What’s changed since then? Not much beyond some less-than-convincing “anecdotal” evidence. The Marketplace Commission is touting an informal poll it conducted of Québecois shoppers on Church Street as evidence that Canadians wouldn’t bolt if smoking were banned. Using Frenchspeaking college students as interviewers, commission chairman Jeff Nick says the commission approached “more than 100 visitors” and found “general support” for the ban. For her part, Shannon observes: “You used to see a lot more strollers on Church Street. People with kids have a big reaction to the amount of smoke in the downtown area.” What the Marketplace commission and city officials haven’t done — since the last attempt to prohibit outdoor smoking — is solicit more input from merchants or, apparently, from American visitors. Plus, while the health risks associated with indoor secondhand smoke are clear, the science on the hazards of outdoor smoke is far from settled. Also unsettled is how far the nosmoking zone would extend — and how smoke-free the Marketplace would actually be. Councilor ed AdriAN (D-Ward 1), a cosponsor of the proposed ban, envisions the borders extending from Pearl Street to Main Street, and from South Winooski Avenue all the way to the waterfront. New this time around: The ordinance would provide for designated smoking areas within the no-smoking zone. Adrian envisions indoor smoking rooms like the kind you see in airports. More significantly, to help sell the idea to merchants, the proposal would let cafés with outdoor seating simply “opt out” of the smoking ban. And Shannon, for one, expects that a lot of them would. So, wouldn’t that kind of defeat the
LOCALmatters
How Vermonters Shot Down Two Proposed Northern Nukes B Y K E VI N J. K ELLEY
D
oes “out of sight, out of mind” apply in the case of nuclear power? If so, northern Vermonters likely feel no more threatened by the state’s sole nuclear power plant in Vernon than they do by the one in Fukushima, Japan. But what if a nuke with a 50-story-tall smokestack had been built in Orwell, alongside the Mount Independence historic site and half a mile from a fault line? And how would Chittenden County residents feel about a nuclear plant with roughly twice the generating capacity of Vermont Yankee on Lake Champlain in Charlotte? Those weren’t hypothetical questions 40 years ago. Few remember the controversies today, but in the 1960s and ’70s, Charlotte and Orwell were seriously considered as sites for nuclear energy facilities. Nascent citizen movements put an end to both plans. And their victories helped nurture a conservation ethic that has since spread around the world. Many concerns were expressed in regard to the nuke that Central Vermont Public Service proposed for Charlotte, recalls Nancy Wood, now the editor of the Charlotte News. “The big one that ended the idea of the plant was the impact of thermal pollution on Lake Champlain,” she says. Activists associated with the Lake Champlain Committee argued in the late’60s that heated water discharged from the 1000-megawatt station would badly damage the lake’s ecosystems. In Orwell, the fledgling Vermont Public Interest Research Group aided locals
opposed to a later plan by the same utility and by the Vermont Electric Power Co., aka VELCO, for what would have been known as the Hough Crossing nuclear plant. One of the key objections involved its potentially destructive impact on Mount Independence, which was then gaining recognition as Vermont’s most important Revolutionary War site. The Orwell plant was “the first project of its kind defeated for reasons of historic preservation,” says Shoreham attorney Ron Morgan, a leader of the Mount Independence Coalition. Two other locations in Vermont came up as potentially suitable for nuclear plants in addition to the one on the Connecticut River that became the home of Vermont Yankee. CVPS spokesman Steve Costello says his company purchased “several hundred acres” in Shoreham in the ’60s with a view toward possibly constructing a nuclear or fossil-fuel facility there. At least theoretical consideration was also given in a 1974 VELCO report to splitting atoms for energy on the banks of the Missisquoi River in North Troy. Neither of those plans was developed as fully as the proposals for Charlotte and Orwell. CVPS was apparently dead serious about building a second Vermont nuke at one of those sites. The Charlotte plant was to have been installed on a 140-acre, 19th-century apple orchard purchased by CVPS in 1967. Today, chickens strut there along a gravel road lined with horse fencing and enormous homes with million-dollar views of the lake and Adirondacks.
makers responded to citizens’ misgivings about the technology. CVPS eventually abandoned its Charlotte plan and later sold the land it had bought in Shoreham, but the utility moved forward with VELCO in seeking to build a nuke plant in a thinly populated part of Orwell along East Creek. Many of the same economic arguments were put forward in this mid-’70s showdown. “Most of the community was sold on the idea that you can forget about having to pay property taxes once the plant is established,” says Bob Maguire, a Shoreham attorney active in the campaign against the Orwell nuke. He notes that Vermont Yankee, which started operating in 1972, was being cited as a model of how tax burdens would be lightened in a rural community clever enough to entice a nuclear utility. The 1979 partial meltdown at the Three Mile Island plant in Pennsylvania was
CHARLOTTE AND ORWELL WERE BOTH SERIOUSLY
CONSIDERED AS SITES FOR NUCLEAR ENERGY FACILITIES.
Nevertheless, “a substantial majority” of Charlotte residents did not want a nuke in their neighborhood, says Sallie Soule, an 82-year-old former Vermont legislator. The battle over the plant “turned me into an environmental activist and got me involved in the Lake Champlain Committee,” Soule recollects. Some 1200 Vermonters turned out for a presentation on September 11, 1969, by the head of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission and 39 of its staff members. The New York Times reported on the four-hour meeting in the University of Vermont’s Patrick Gymnasium, organized by Gov. Deane Davis, characterizing it as the first public forum at which federal nuclear policy
still a few years off when Orwell residents considered the Hough Crossing proposal. Some were firmly opposed because of the plan to create a 1700-acre cooling pond by damming East Creek, described today by Joe Taparauskas, then an Orwell antinuke activist, as “an ecological wonderland.” The local opposition proved formidable, despite the attraction of the tax-reduction angle. In a nonbinding 1977 referendum, Orwell voters rejected the plant by an eight-vote margin, 152-144. Maguire had made an eloquent and prescient case against the proposal in the student newspaper published by Middlebury College. “It would be difficult to NORTHERN NUKES
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ENERGY
Back in the 1960s, Charlotte was not so prosperous. Many of the town’s farmers were being squeezed by property taxes that had not yet been eased by a state program, known as Current Use, that was crafted to encourage productive use of agricultural land. “Farmers were being forced out of business,” Wood remembers. “They wanted the plant because it would pay a lot in property tax and reduce their own rates.” This was also an era when the risks of nuclear power were not well understood; atomic energy was widely seen as the answer to the country’s burgeoning demand for electricity. The November 1965 blackout, which left 30 million New Englanders and New Yorkers in the dark, added fuel to that fire. In addition, the environmental consciousness awakened by Rachel Carson’s 1962 best seller, Silent Spring, was only beginning to influence public debates on energy issues.
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SHUMLIN’S FIRST 100 DAYS: BY THE NUMBERS
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(Downtown) On April 18, Gov. Peter Shumlin’s office released 176 Main Street a roundup of all the things our esteemed leader HAPPY Pizzeria / Take Out HAPPY EASTER Delivery: 862-1234 has done since he took office in January. And you thought he was just working on his tan in HAPPY EASTER Dominica for the last three and a half months. Nope! Dude’s actually been doing stuff. And not 8h-juniors-042011.indd 1 just cutting ribbons, breaking ground, holding Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (left) giant checks, signing proclamations, shaking and Vermont Gov. Peter Shumlin hands, crafting, receiving honorary degrees, standing at podiums and fishing — all the things I want my governor to be good at.
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Below is a sampling of the gov’s activities from a list provided by press secretary Bianca Slota. Note: Comments in parentheses were not part of the original press release. Meetings with President Obama: 3 (Shumdog wrecked the prez in a game of streetball. “That’s how we do it in Vermont, Barry!”)
4/18/11 2:31 PM
Simplicity.
Hand-poured soy candles.
Ski areas visited: 5 (Sick pow, brah!) Town meetings attended: 6 (Sore butt.) Potholes filled: 4 (Part of the governor’s “join a chain gang for a day” initiative.) Bills signed: 10 (Gosh, his hand must be tired.) Towns visited: 50 (Only 201 to go!) Tweets: 246 (@VTGovernor: “Can’t seem 2 shake statie bodyguard. How’s a single gov supposed 2 have fun? LOL! #vt #montp #goldendome”)
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Classic Style
Constituent emails fielded: 1806 (Interns!) L AUR EN O B ER
BERNIE SANDERS SPONSORS BILL TO FREE LAB CHIMPS Never let it be said that U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders doesn’t give a damn about all working stiffs — be they human or of the tree-swinging variety. Last week, Sanders co-introduced S.810, known as the “Great Ape Protection and Cost Savings Act,” which would ban “invasive research” on chimpanzees and send all governmentowned chimps into early retirement at private sanctuaries within three years.
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According to the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), up to 90 percent of the chimps currently in U.S.-run labs are no longer being used in active research, but are essentially warehoused at taxpayers’ expense. Under a federal law passed in 2000, government-owned lab chimps must be cared for throughout their entire lives and cannot be euthanized. The price tag for Uncle Sam’s simian safety net: about $44 per day, per chimp, or $25 million to $30 million annually. An undercover investigation by HSUS of the largest chimp lab in the world, the New Iberia Research Center at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, revealed the psychological and physical suffering that chimps are forced to endure every day — some for more than 50 years. One chimp named Kitty (pictured) was caught in the wild and kept in captivity most of her 49 years to breed babies that were used in animal experiments. Opponents of Sanders’ proposed legislation credit the use of lower primates for major advances in medical research, including drugs used for treating hepatitis B and C in humans. That said, the United States is now the only developed country in the world that hasn’t banned or strictly limited the large-scale confinement of chimps in labs.
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localmatters
Is It Cheaper to House Vermont Prisoners In or Out of State? It Depends. B y K En Pi CA R d
04.20.11-04.27.11
SEVENDAYSVt.com
l
ast week, the Vermont Senate unanimously approved legislation to shrink the cost of housing inmates in Vermont and reduce the likelihood that they will end up behind bars again. The bill, dubbed “The War on Recidivism Act,” spells out a variety of new approaches for curbing crime and dealing with low-risk offenders, including alternatives to imprisonment such as in-home confinement. If approved, the bill would save the Vermont Department of Corrections an estimated $1.6 million annually. Keeping nonviolent offenders out of prison obviously eliminates the expense of housing, feeding and clothing them. But how much is that worth, exactly? For years, Vermonter taxpayers have been told the cost of housing an inmate at an in-state prison is roughly double that of sending one out of state — on average, $50,000 per year in Vermont versus $24,000 at out-ofstate facilities, such as those in Kentucky, Arizona and Massachusetts. Applying that logic, it should be cheaper to send prisoners out of state. But the DOC now claims bringing those inmates back to Vermont would save the state money. Has the cost of housing prisoners at out-of-state facilities changed that dramatically? Not at all, says Ira Sollace, the DOC’s director of finance. As he explains, when the DOC reports that it costs $50,000 per year per inmate, that number reflects all the fixed costs of operating a prison, such as health care, payroll for corrections officers and staff, program services, insurance, and the maintenance and upkeep of the facilities themselves. However, when the state exceeds its prison capacity — there are slightly more than 1600 beds in the system — the DOC must “buy a bed” and send inmates
elsewhere. Typically, those who get sent out of state are usually serving longer sentences and have fewer health care needs. Out-of-state beds are still cheaper than in-state beds, Sollace explains, but only when Vermont doesn’t have the capacity within its own system. “So, if we have the capacity, it’s better to use our own beds than to buy additional capacity.” The in-state cost per prisoner is also a factor of the “density” of each facility,
The DOC nOw Claims bringing inmaTes baCk TO VermOnT wOulD saVe mOney.
HaS THE COST Of HOuSINg pRISONERS aT OuT-Of-STaTE faCIlITIES CHaNgEd THaT dRamaTICally? he adds. As with any business model, the higher the volume, the lower the per-unit cost. For example, at the Northern State Correctional Facility in Newport, which has a large inmate population, the cost per inmate runs about $40,000 per year, Sollace reports, versus at St. Johnsbury’s smaller Northeast Regional facility, where the per-inmate cost is $55,000 annually.
Vermont is the second most peaceful state in the nation, and its crime rate held steady between 1996 and 2006. During the same time period, though, the state’s prison population doubled — a consequence of Vermont’s particularly high rates of incarceration and recidivism; 50 percent of offenders who left Vermont prisons in 2003 had been convicted of a new crime by 2006. To cope with that increase, corrections spending jumped 129 percent, from $48 million in 1996 to $130 million in 2008. That same year, the Pew Center on the States projected that if Vermont’s incarceration trends continue, the state’s prison population would jump 23 percent by 2018, resulting in additional costs of between $82 million and $206 million. Since then, Vermont’s prison population growth has slowed. In the last year, it actually declined. With fewer offenders behind bars, does that mean vacancies in Vermont prisons? Fewer out-of-state beds to buy? That’s the goal, says Sollace. Nonetheless, in January the DOC put out a request for proposals to house as many as 500 inmates classified as “minimum, medium and close-custody offenders” at out-of-state facilities starting on June 1. That’s when one of the state’s current contracts — with Corrections Corporation of America — is set to expire. CCA is the biggest for-profit prison corporation in the U.S. Sollace cannot comment on the terms of the new two-year contract, which, according to the request for proposals, will be inked any day now. Nor can he say which entity it’s with or whether the deal will require Vermont to export a minimum number of inmates each year. The state’s current CCA contract requires that a
minimum of 400 inmates are housed at Lee Adjustment Center in Beattyville, Ky. Sollace says having such a contract in place is vital, even if it contradicts the DOC’s goal of keeping Vermonters in Vermont. “We always want to have that relief valve, because you never know what’s going to happen,” he says. “It doesn’t necessarily mean we’re going to fill those 500 beds … We’d rather spend that money in the Vermont economy than in the Kentucky economy.” m
CORRECTIONS
Northern Nukes « P.14 conceive of a more reckless and wasteful misuse of a natural resource,” Maguire wrote in the 1972 Middlebury Campus article. “But it is more difficult not to despair of a society willing to accept such outrages in the name of ‘growth’ and ‘progress.’” Giovanna Peebles, an archaeologist with the Vermont Division for Historic Preservation, wrote in a 2004 scholarly account of the controversy that the Orwell plan “died for a variety of reasons, not the least being that the project was half a mile from a known fault line.” But a consulting firm retained by the state at the time had come to a different conclusion. Maguire paraphrased the findings of its report in his article: “There has been no activity along this fault in millions of years, so it should not pose any problem.” Coincidentally, the sponsors of the Fukushima plant said they had built it to withstand earthquakes and tsunamis of a magnitude that were judged highly unlikely to occur. m
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VERMONT’S CONS CAN’T CALL OUT — WITHOUT PAYING FILE: STEFAN BUMBECK
Why should Vermonters care if the state’s prisoners and their families pay exorbitant phone rates? Because “there’s a widely known and researched correlation between prisoners who maintain contact with their families and those who are successful in staying out of prison after they are released,” according to John Dannenberg, author of an investigative report in the April issue of Brattleboro-based Prison Legal News. Founded by ex-con Paul Wright, PLN is the country’s oldest and largest jailhouse publication. In the report, which was two years in the making, Dannenberg analyzed the prison telephone contracts in all 50 states, including Vermont, and found most everywhere inmates are paying way more to phone home than your average customer. PLN also found that 42 states, including the Green Mountain one, accept commissions from prison phone companies such as Unisys, Securus and Global Tel*Link. In some cases, commissions account for 60 percent of the prison phone revenues. Ira Sollace, who is director of finance at the Vermont Department of Corrections, claims the commissions go to an inmate recreation fund that finances the purchase of board games, weight machines, sporting goods, etc. “That’s simply not true,” says Wright. “This is just another form of price gouging and racketeering. “This is like Bernie Madoff saying, ‘I donate millions to charity each year.’ Yeah, you do — with other people’s stolen money.”
If interested, please contact Dr. C. Lawrence Kien at amwadswo@uvm.edu or 802-656-9093.
Roald Dahl’s
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Central Vermont Community Players presents
Sponsored by: Vermont College of Fine Arts and Minuteman Press
April 28 & 29, 7:30pm April 30, 2pm & 7:30pm May 1, 2pm
The Barre Opera House 476-8188 or www.barreoperahouse.org TICKETS: $20 adults, $15 students/seniors, $10 age 5 and under
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ANDY B R O MAG E
04.20.11-04.27.11
File this one under “alternative energy vs. historic preservation.” Russ Scully installed the small wind turbine on his surf-themed restaurant, the Spot, to power his kitchen appliances and make a statement about renewable energy. But Burlington city planners say the turbine is historically out of character on Russ Scully (left) the gas-station-turned-café. In their estimation, it and Mike Gervais breaks the terms of his permit — and have slapped him with a violation notice that he is now appealing. Scully won approval to erect the Honeywell-made turbine last year based on drawings of an early design. The turbine he installed was a newer model and came with “fins” that keep the turbine pointed into the wind to maximize energy production. City planners say the fins violate conditions of Scully’s approval and must be removed. Scully and his contractor, Mike Gervais, admit they should have secured necessary approvals for the fins but have appealed to the Development Review Board to keep them on. In a 30-page report on the matter, associate planner Mary O’Neil writes that the former Phillips Service Station, built in 1964, is a classic example of space-age, “exaggerated modern” roadside architecture and that the addition of the fins “detracts from the public’s ability to appreciate and understand the building.” While some may view the turbine as evidence of Burlington’s “fertile atmosphere” for alternative energy, O’Neil writes that having the turbine “immediately roadside and atop a historic building component is not ideal.” A longtime surfer, Scully’s passion is wind sports, and he wants the restaurant to harness as much power as possible from wind. “You’d be surprised how much juice a toaster can suck up,” he says. “If we can capture some of that back, our margin will improve.”
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[Re: “The Green Veneer,” April 13]: While I haven’t read her book, Green Gone Wrong, and fully agree with her statement that “You can’t have real hope if you are deceiving yourself or allowing yourself to be deceived,” I must say that Heather Rogers seems to have fallen into the trap of denial and deception when she elaborates her “we need to consume less” prescription by saying, “I’m talking about cutting out the kind of waste we have in our system that it must have in order to grow.” While waste is enormous and pandemic to our economic system, reducing waste alone will no more avert global calamity than shaving the waste from federal spending programs will eliminate the national debt. And it is not waste that is the engine for economic growth, but a debt-based monetary system and a profit-oriented commercial system. At this point, even the poorest nations are consuming more than their “fair share” of the ecological footprint (because of the sheer numbers of people), and the U.S. population consumes 25 percent of the world’s resources. We have to have the courage and prescience and wisdom to actually consume less — a lot less. And until we’re willing to acknowledge that “inconvenient truth,” we have no chance of living sustainably on this little planet.
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adoptive family from the birth mother. In fact, confidentiality was devised to protect the mother and child from public scrutiny and scandal in a time when birth mothers were considered “fallen women” and their children referred to as “bastards.” In addition to being a birth mother for 43 years and part of an extended family that includes three relinquishments and four adoptions, I am a clinical social worker who has worked with many people touched by adoption. I understand the importance of boundaries and, in fact, encourage establishing and maintaining boundaries in situations where the birth parent might actually pose a risk to the child, but these instances are extremely rare and they are even rarer with regard to adoptions involving separation of mother and child in infancy. Birth mothers are some of the most patient people I know. One last comment: Those of us in the adoption triangle do not necessarily agree with the idea that a third party should be involved in a search — and I just have to say that agencies, contrary to the comment in the article, have a significant investment in adoptions. In some circumstances this might be warranted, but, in most cases, those of us who have lived with adoption want to do our own work and we want the empowerment that comes with reconnecting and repairing severed relationships for ourselves. Kim Butterfield Williston
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I want to comment on the article “‘Friending’ Mother” [March 30], which is a good example of how birth parents and adult adoptees continue to be left out of public conversations about adoption. I have met both Wanda Audette and Dawn Smith-Pliner, and I’m sure that neither one of them would want to contribute to stereotypes and misinformation, but your article has done just that. Even though there are many well-spoken and well-informed members of the adoption community in Vermont, your reporter chose to interview just two adoptive parents who are also administrators of adoption programs, ignoring the voices of all the rest of us — the birth parents, adopted persons and adoptive parents who have, frankly, been speaking “truth to power” for decades. The idea that birth parents are some threatening entity from whom their children must be protected is certainly not in line with current enlightened adoption practice. It is also not the case that the purpose of confidentiality in adoption is to protect the adoptee or the
pooR tREAtmENt of SpEcIAl EDucAtoRS
This letter is in reference to your recent article “Classroom Divide” [March 30]. As a parent of an autistic child, my intent here is not to pit myself against other parents of children with special needs. Our daily reality when coping and negotiating even the most mundane of activities can be challenging on a level not understood by most individuals. My heart is with all of the families mentioned in your article. With that said, I’d like to address the editors of Seven Days. Your article was obviously not compiled to inform but rather to negatively attack an entire school district and, most of all, their special-education teachers and administrators. My experience with the teachers and administrators at the SBSD compels me to say without any reservation that they are committed to this community and to education excellence. It might have been a good idea to sit with at least one special-education teacher for one day in order to get an accurate idea of his or her level of commitment. It might have been a good idea to sit with a regular
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Kevin Kelley’s article “The Taxman Cometh: Nonprofits Anticipate Effects on Ticket Sales” [March 16] misses several important points in regard to taxation of ticket sales by nonprofit arts organizations. Most, if not all, of the nonprofits make no profit, as the name suggests, and in fact are kept in operation by the charitable gifts and other support received from members and interested community participants. Secondly, these nonprofits generate meaningful and substantial taxable business activity in their communities. The extent of that activity should not be underestimated. In Barre, local restaurateurs contact the Opera House to determine their personnel and inventory requirements for show nights. To the extent that this tax discourages attendance at nonprofit events or forecloses the activity altogether, a loss of economic activity and tax revenue will be the result. Between the costs of collection to the state, the costs of compliance incurred by the nonprofits and the discouragement of economic activity in our communities, there will be a net loss to all. There are other, broad-based taxes available to the Legislature that would cost little additional to collect the projected amount of revenue and without comparable negative economic consequences. What is required is the political courage to use them.
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William B. Field chelSea
Field is president of the Barre Opera House’s board of trustees. feedback 19
As a parent and taxpayer in South Burlington, I have been reading with great alarm the article and letters in Seven Days regarding criminal abuse of children with learning disabilities at Orchard school [“Classroom Divide,” March 30]. There are three distinct issues here: 1. The absolutely intolerable physical and emotional abuse of children by school staff, which I’m sure is punishable by law and at the very least should have led/be leading to the permanent dismissal of said staff from working in education in any capacity, for the rest of their lives. Has this happened? 2. The denial of a child’s right to feel safe after abuse has occurred. Why
would any administrator not see the link between abuse and safety? Those responsible for making such horrendous decisions should also be removed from their positions. Has this happened? 3. The lack of resources for specialed programming. One would expect that a constructive dialogue always be the first priority. However, that seems unlikely for the families who’ve suffered abuses by school staff and administrators, certainly until justice is served and the school system is accountable for these incidents. The public school system and all its employees are there by our power and choice. We are their bosses. Something is clearly very, very wrong in South Burlington and I, as I’m sure many others, would like to know what is being done about it!
SEVENDAYSVt.com
education teacher who has a specialneeds child in class. You’d be moved by their level of commitment. You chose not to. Why did Seven Days choose only two sentences from the interview that you conducted with my wife, Miriam Vega? Also, your article states, “The Vegas moved to South Burlington from New York City because of what they had heard about the district’s specialed program.” Correction: We moved to Vermont because I was hired to work at UVM as a senior lecturer in the music department. After receiving my appointment letter, I contacted many of the parents I had become friendly with during my tenure as artist-in-residence at the Flynn’s summer jazz youth program. I wanted to get their opinions on how special education was being handled by school districts in the Burlington area. The two districts that were on the top of the list were Essex Junction and South Burlington. Parents were raving about these districts and their excellence in addressing the myriad challenges pertaining to special-needs children. Your statement can be easily misunderstood. Did you even attempt to contact other families with opposing opinions concerning SBSD and special education? Does public education fall short sometimes? Yes, but not all of the time. I’m really sorry that we don’t live in a world where teachers can magically correct everything that falls under the highly complex umbrella of “special needs.” There is no magic bullet that will cure all things autism. I’ve already come to terms with the song “Day by Day.” Seven Days, in this article you chose to employ the model of FOX News. You were not fair and balanced.
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STATEof THEarts “Weird Tale” From a UVM Grad Plumbs New England History
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B Y M A R GO T HA R R ISON
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great, dark wilderness. Villagers eke out an existence on its edge. One by one, the young women vanish, and with them goes the town’s hope for the future. The situation is primal, archetypal: One could be describing the lost Norse colony of Greenland, a Grimm fairy tale or a slasher movie. For his debut novel, DANIEL MILLS of Hinesburg has chosen to set such a tale in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, in 1689. Published by Chômu Press, a small UK publisher specializing in literature of the “strange,” Revenants would never be mistaken for a Stephen King-style horror novel. Instead, it’s an insidiously chilling meditation on the darker side of New England history — in the tradition of Nathaniel Hawthorne — and a striking piece of prose poetry, particularly from a 25-year-old author. Take this passage in which a young man surveys the unmapped landscape where his fiancée has mysteriously disappeared: The forest flows from itself in waves that sketch the lay of the land, slate colored and oppressive, an ocean in winter. Its course is disrupted in a few places by ponds and meadows, stormcleared or beaver-made, linked together in a northward-reaching chain like beads on an Indian necklace or stars along the Milky Way: endless, ever-flowing. This country is too large, he thinks, as cold and inhuman as the Atlantic. But even the sea coughs up its wrecks and sailors, given time. He does not believe this continent will reveal itself, now or ever, nor will it give up its dead...
The fictional town of Cold Marsh, founded by Rev. Isaiah Bellringer and his followers, is a dot in this wilderness, and the “dead” whose spirits press around include the Native Americans who once inhabited
his mind, capturing New England meant conveying a “starkness” at odds with more conventionally “rhapsodic” nature writing. When he was “very young and impressionable,” Mills says, his parents
REVENANTS IS AN INSIDIOUSLY
CHILLING MEDITATION ON THE DARKER SIDE OF NEW ENGLAND HISTORY.
BOOKS
the environs. The young settlement’s grim secrets emerge only gradually, after 16-year-old Ruth Eliot vanishes in a thick fog. Her betrothed, the pious Edwin Brewer, searches frantically. But the reader knows something lured Ruth to the forest — a sound, a vibration, a “bass drone like the murmur of a heart.” The landscape is traversed by forces that the settlers must deny, much as they deny their own desires. Mills had just graduated from the University of Vermont and was working at IBM, in a “completely artificial environment,” when he conceived this story of people who live closer to nature than they’d like. An environmental studies major, he wanted to “capture something of the landscape I love so much,” he says. In
participated in local Revolutionary War reenactments, and he clearly knows his colonial history. The massacre of Indians he describes in Revenants was partially based on the Great Swamp Fight of 1675, in which English settlers struck preemptively against the Narragansett tribe. But Mills says he never saw the novel as straight historical fiction; the town of Cold Marsh is “allegorical ... crafted to evoke contemporary ideas about sin, grace and redemption.” Likewise, it isn’t a simple ghost story but a work that uses
MONKEY SEE
I
f you’ve spent any amount of time in Burlington, you’ve probably spotted the flying monkeys. The metal sculptures, that is, that lend a startling profile to the rooflines of UNION STATION and the MAIN STREET LANDING building at Lake and College streets. To longtime locals, the six simians are iconic public art and the stuff of legend. Not to mention whimsy. Last week, the man who created the monkeys, STEVE LARRABEE of Jericho, died at age 61 of an aneurysm, reports his dear friend RIK CARLSON. The artist and master cabinetmaker leaves behind his mother and a brother in Vermont, and another brother in New Hampshire. “Steve was just the most talented person I ever knew,” says Carlson, 63, the former owner of a waterbed store called Emerald City, who commissioned all the monkeys over a period of 30 years. The original pair arrived at Carlson’s first shop, at Bank and St. Paul streets, in 1976. Emerald City moved to Shelburne Road in 1986, and the monkeys, of course, went along. Local lore includes the story of one monkey being stolen, in 1992. It was eventually recovered, but not
Steve Larrabee’s original monkey on the roo f of Emerald City
COURTESY OF FRED G HILL
& EDWARD LOEDDING
supernatural motifs to illuminate something about our fear of the unknown. In that sense, Revenants belongs to the tradition of the philosophically tinged “strange” or “weird” tale, which helped it find a home at Chômu. After finishing his manuscript in 2009 and making the rounds of agents — one of whom signed him but concluded she couldn’t sell the book — Mills began submitting to small presses. He’d discovered like-minded editors and readers in the UK genre community: One of his short stories, which appeared in the anthology Strange Tales, Volume III was long-listed for a 2010 British III, Fantasy Award. Published in paperback and electronically by Chômu, which calls itself dedicated to “new vistas of irreality,” Revenants has won praise, as well. Booklist calls Mills a “promising new talent.” Mills has left IBM for his alma mater, where he’s a departmental assistant; meanwhile, he’s working on a group of linked short stories set in New England at the dawn of the 20th century. “In an ideal world, I would be able to write and make a living at it,” he says. In the real world, with so many books vying for attention, that’s seldom the case for writers. A novel like Revenants, with its long descriptions and slow-burn plot, doesn’t reach out and grab readers by the lapels. But this “Dream of New England” — as Mills subtitles it — could get under your skin, because every generation dreads and desires its own version of the wilderness beyond the circle of lights.
Revenants by Daniel Mills, Chômu Press, 292 pages. $15. chomupress.com
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Rockwell’s Granddaughter Finds Her Own Icons B Y M E G AN JA MES COURTESY OF TOM MCNEILL
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clothing and accessories. But as a young woman, she lost interest in art and dived instead into academia; she studied and taught Hindi literature at the University of California, Berkeley, until 2006. When Rockwell began painting again, it was under a pseudonym — Lapata, which means “anonymous” in Hindi. She didn’t want her work to be judged by her grandfather’s name. “I was kind of in hiding,” she says. So she uploaded images of her work to a friend’s blog, Chapati Mystery (where she still blogs). Most of its readers assumed she was a Pakistani artist. “In the absence of any information about me, people created a story,” Rockwell says. After a while she realized, “Maybe I’d prefer my own baggage.” Rockwell’s show at the Main Street Museum includes portraits of politicians as well as images of the recent uprising in Egypt’s Tahrir Square. “I’m a newshound,” Rockwell says. She consumes a massive amount of Al Jazeera and especially loves sites like Gawker and Perez Hilton for their photographs of politicians looking ridiculous.
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he portrait of Vladimir Putin nuzzling an extremely fluffy puppy comes straight from a posed photograph of the Russian prime minister. The painting of Sarah Palin in the Alaska governor’s office shows her surrounded by dead animals — a slain grizzly stretched along the back of the couch and a huge crab adorning the coffee table. Daisy Rockwell doesn’t make this stuff up. Rockwell knows an iconic image when she sees one. Perhaps it runs in the family — the artwork of her grandfather, Norman Rockwell, is practically synonymous with idealized American life. But Daisy Rockwell’s paintings are much darker, inspired by “political leaders, current events, war, torture, terrorism and politicians snuggling with animals,” she writes in her artist statement. Her sometimes grim topics do not prevent her use of brilliant color, however. Rockwell’s show “Political Animal” is at White River Junction’s Main Street Museum through June. Rockwell, who lives in New Hampshire, grew up in a family of artists. Even as a child, she had a clear focus: She loved drawing women dressed in elaborate
•
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before Carlson had a replacement made. “The third monkey is made of copper instead of steel,” he notes. “Steve just got so much better at them.” Now, half a dozen monkeys have one of the best views in town: the waterfront. The original couple straddle Union Station, along with a pair of babies that were “born” to them in 2004. No. 3 monkey is a female in heat, baying at … whatever, above the MAIN STREET LANDING PERFORMING ARTS CENTER. That’s why Larrabee’s final monkey — called the “Rogue Lover,” says Carlson — has his eyes on the howling female. “If you had binoculars, you could see that he is very excited about her,” Carlson hints. Steve Larrabee will be missed, but he left a legacy of ingenious artwork that will live on — to startle tourists and please locals — for a very long time.
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STATEof THEarts
Rockwell’s Granddaughter « P.21
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Putin is one of Rockwell’s favorite sub- leaderless revolution,” says Rockwell, jects because “he’s really into posing with though she highlights her images’ central animals,” she says. “I actually had to narrow characters by coating them in varnish. down the animals.” In addition In one, a protester throws to the puppy portrait — which rocks at security forces, Rockwell embellishes with a holding a cracked bucket pink, glitter-dusted background over his head for protection. — she painted the P.M. swimIn another, a man holds his ming with dolphins, petting a head in despair while listentiger cub and riding topless on a ing to overthrown President horse. Beside the Putin portraits Hosni Mubarak’s final adare a series of paintings of his dress to the nation. In “Pièce alleged mistress, former rhythde Résistance,” a couple are mic gymnast Alina Kabayeva. wed amid the protests. The In each of these images, called crowd is dark around the “Flexy,” “Bendy” and “Foldy,” bride, who wears an elaboher body is contorted and flying rate white veil, a sparkly through the air. gown and a look of disbelief DAISY ROCKWELL “When you paint someon her face. body, you learn about them,” It’s clearly one of Rockwell says. When she Rockwell’s favorites. In her painted George W. Bush out for a walk with artist statement, she says of the paint-12v(cmyk)-shoplocal.indd Condoleezza Rice and his dog Barney, for ing, “We see at last a seamless marriage example, she saw something gentle in the between the drawings of the artist as a president. “If there’s one thing I learned young girl and the recent paintings by a about Bush, it’s that he really, sincerely hardened political animal.” loves Barney,” she says. “That’s where his humanity lies.” “Political Animal,” by Daisy Rockwell, Main Street Museum, White River Her paintings of the Egyptian uprisJunction. Through July 1. ing have a darker palette and are focused mainstreetmuseum.org on small groups of protesters. “It’s a
WHEN YOU PAINT SOMEBODY,
YOU LEARN ABOUT THEM.
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SEVENDAYSVT.COM 04.20.11-04.27.11 SEVEN DAYS STATE OF THE ARTS 23
egulars at Handy’s Lunch in Burlington have probably noticed that its “artwork” consists mainly of sports photographs — frozen moments in hockey, basketball, golf, etc. — on the walls surrounding the U-shaped counter. A new sculpture by Burlington artist AARON STEIN joined the photos last week, and, unless you ask EARL HANDY about it, you might not guess its significance. The roughly 3-foot-high piece in the shape of Vermont is made from old license plates — Stein’s signature medium. These particular plates were once affixed to cars belonging to Handy’s late father, Robert Handy, in the years 1954 to ’81. Before 1967, Stein says, car owners got a whole new plate every year, not just a sticker indicating they’d renewed their registration. The sculpture also reveals the state’s experimentation with colors: There are white plates, black plates and two shades of green. Handy says his dad’s old plates were collecting dust in the garage when he decided to turn them over to Stein. “I always remember seeing the plates, ’cause my dad liked them,” he says. “He had them nailed to the wall in chronological order. “It’s so great to have this memento of my family,” Handy says, noting that his mother, Janet, who also works at the 65-year-old, family-owned diner, has been trying to remember all the cars each plate adorned. “A lot of people have said how nice it looks,” Handy adds. “And some of my customers who are Red Sox fans are happy not to see my Yankees jersey [on the wall] anymore.” Handy also commissioned bracelets fashioned from license plates — Stein calls them Tuff Cuffs — for himself, his wife, Alexis, and their twins, Genevieve and Nicholas. That is, for when the almost-3-year-olds turn 16. “That way, their first license plates will be ones that belonged to my dad,” Handy says. “We’ll all have a piece of my father’s legacy.” PAMELA POLSTON handyslunch.com, revivalstudio.com
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Dear cecil, I read an article recently about a man who says our current chronology is about a thousand years off and that the years between 500 and 1500 (to round it off) didn’t really happen. It’s a mistake made by historians. I kind of like this hypothesis because I never understood why there are no records for that period of time. Julie
everybody else — actually happened after the year we think of as 1000 AD. Are these ideas crazy? Of course they’re crazy, although some of the details can seem eerie at first glance. For example, the Illig-Niemitz group makes much of the fact that in 1582 Pope Gregory XIII removed 10 days from the newly reformed calendar to correct for the chronological drift caused by the old Julian calendar’s imprecise rules for inserting leap days. The Julian calendar had been introduced during the time of Julius Caesar,
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xcellent and, dare I say, timely question. There are actually two cryptochronology theories in circulation at the moment — I’m guessing you got them mixed up and, under the circumstances, who can blame you? The Eurocentric version, commonly called the Phantom Time hypothesis, is the work of two German historians of sorts, Heribert Illig and the late Hans-Ulrich Niemitz, plus several followers. They claim mysterious forces inserted 297 years into the calendar between 614 and 911 AD — in other words, what we’re calling 2011 is really 1714. The Russocentric hypothesis, known as the New Chronology, is even bolder. Devised by the mathematician Anatoly Fomenko, a professor at the University of Moscow, and based on the ideas of the eccentric Bolshevik Nikolai Morozov, the New Chronology holds that everything we think we know about historical dating is wrong. Virtually all events associated with the ancients — the Greeks, the Romans and
in 45 BC. However, a 10-day shift corrects for just 1257 years’ worth of accumulated error. Subtracting 1257 from 1582 gets us back not to 45 BC but to 325 AD. In other words, more than three centuries are unaccounted for! No, they’re not, nitpickers have pointed out. Gregory’s 10-day correction wasn’t meant to get the calendar realigned with Julius Caesar’s day, but rather with the Easter dating guidelines established at the First Council of Nicaea. When did the First Council of Nicaea take place? In 325 AD. The Phantom Time hypothesis doesn’t rest entirely on apparent oddities in calendar correction. Ultimately it arises from
the same observation you make, Julie. During what we inheritors of the western European tradition think of as the Dark Ages, pretty much nothing seems to have happened. Think about what they taught you in high school history (assuming, which I suppose one can’t safely do nowadays, that you even had high school history). Rome collapses, passing mention is made of the rise of Islam, and the next thing you know it’s the Battle of Hastings and the Norman Conquest. It’s easy to imagine — well, maybe not easy, but possible to imagine — that historians inadvertently inserted three blank centuries in our collective datebook. Except for Charlemagne. Charlemagne is something of a problem for the Phantom Time hypothesis. The leader of the Franks consolidated much of western Europe under his rule in the late 700s, and in 800 AD was crowned emperor of the Romans by Pope Leo III, all of it square in the middle of the intercalated 297 years. Illig explains this away by saying Charlemagne is an “invented figure,” that a famous domed chapel that was part of the Carolingian palace complex in Aachen couldn’t possibly
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have been built when everybody thinks it was built, and so on. The larger issue is that the Dark Ages are strictly a Western hang-up. Sure, Europeans may have spent the medieval period engaged in nothing more ambitious than slopping the pigs. However, there was plenty going on elsewhere in the world. If we turn our attention a mere thousand miles to the east, we find the Byzantine Empire jousting noisily with the forces of Islam for control of the eastern Mediterranean during the supposedly mythical three centuries; meanwhile in East Asia, the Tang dynasts were presiding over a golden era of Chinese culture. In short, the Phantom Time hypothesis makes no sense — not necessarily a deal breaker where popular beliefs are concerned, but this particular notion has gotten little traction. Compare that to the reception given Fomenko’s New Chronology. The theory is far too bizarre to explain, much less refute, here; nonetheless, in Russia Fomenko’s views have been widely disseminated — even chess luminary Garry Kasparov has seemingly embraced the idea that world history essentially started in 1000 AD. No doubt this stems from the fact that Russian history is traditionally held to have commenced in 862. You see what’s going on here. Western Europeans have several centuries of underachievement to rationalize, but Russians face a still greater challenge. Fans of the New Chronology apparently reason as follows: Our forebears accomplished nothing of note prior to 862; ergo, neither did anyone else. m
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around and under the shotgun seat. “Sorry, Larry,” I said. “I checked and I don’t see ’em.” “Could you come back to McKee’s so I could check myself?” “I can, but I’ll have to charge you, and I don’t want to waste your money.” “Don’t worry about that. Just come.” Larry was waiting at the curb when I pulled in front of the bar. He opened the passenger door and spent a good three minutes fruitlessly scouring the front and back seats. Finally he said, “Can I give you my number? I live in Schenectady and I’m going back tomorrow. You can call me if they turn up.”
front of us going 22 miles per hour. It was three in the morning. “Could they go any slower?” I asked rhetorically, to no one in particular. When we reached Plattsburgh Avenue, they took the right. Great. We continued to follow behind as the car maintained a galling pace between 20 and 23 mph. Sure enough, when we reached the light at the intersection with Porters Point Road — the road that also gets you to Colchester Point — great God, they took the left onto Porters Point. I was about to blow the proverbial gasket when James Taylor’s version of “How Sweet It Is (to Be Loved by You)” came on the radio.
At leAst once A shift, somebody in the cAb
is hell-bent on pounding somebody. “Sure, man. No problem,” I assented, thinking, Let it go, Larry. The glasses are
as gone as the jacket.
The remainder of the night went smoothly — no further pounders or poundees. We’re beginning to emerge from the long winter; people’s spirits were high. My last fare wanted to get to Colchester Point, but he asked me to go via North Avenue. I said, “The connector’ll be faster, you know.” “I need to stop at the ATM in the shopping center.”
Why not a downtown ATM while we’re here? I thought, but I let it go — practicing what I preach for a change. When we pulled out of the bank and back onto North Avenue, there was a car in
“Dude — I love this song,” said my customer. “I know just who he’s singing about, too, ’cause I got the same girl in my life.” He began to sing along with James: “I needed
the shelter of someone’s arms, and there you were. I needed someone to understand my ups and downs, and there you were.”
The guy’s voice was wonderful, so sweet and soulful that I found myself letting go of my frustration with the slowpoke in front of us. “You are great, man,” I said. “I mean, with pipes like that, you should really sing in a band.” My customer smiled. “I do sing in a band,” he said. “I’ve been singing pretty much my whole life.” Late the following morning, just a couple minutes after I turned on my phone for the day, Larry called again. “Any sighting of my
glasses?” he asked, slightly delusional, it seemed to me, in his optimism. “Sorry, man,” I replied. “They haven’t turned up. Have you tried What Ales You, or the police station, for that matter?” “Yeah, I have. I can’t believe it. I was so sure I left them in your cab. They were, like, expensive glasses.” Later that afternoon, I bought a slice of pizza and scarfed it down unceremoniously. Apparently it was a little too spicy for my blood, because I found myself reaching down for the small container of Rolaids I keep in the open compartment of the console that divides the seats. Lodged in a slim gap between the console and the passenger seat was a folded pair of prescription glasses. The frames were smoky gray, as are the seats and the console, which is why neither Larry nor I was able to pick them out the night before. I immediately got on the horn to Larry. “What’s up?” he whispered. “I’m at a meeting, but I stepped out to take your call.” “Guess what? I found your specs! They were wedged between the center console and your seat.” “Oh, that is awesome! Do they say ‘DKNY’ in small letters on the frame?” I checked. “They most certainly do,” I said. “Give me your address in Schenectady and I’ll mail ’em out to you. By the way, I never lost faith. It’s not like I thought you were drunk and a little OCD or anything.” Larry chuckled. “Oh, yeah,” he said, “I’m sure you didn’t.” m “hackie” is a biweekly column that can also be read on sevendaysvt.com. to reach jernigan pontiac, email hackie@sevendaysvt.com.
04.20.11-04.27.11
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swear to God, I’d pound him. I’d fucking pound him.” The customer sitting next to me was livid, in the grip of red-hot anger. At least once a shift, somebody in the cab is hell-bent on pounding somebody. This is usually not a problem so long as the designated poundee is not actually present in the vehicle with the would-be pounder. “How can a person steal a jacket from a bar?” my seatmate continued. His rant was directed mostly to his compadre in the back seat. “What a fucking worm. So much for Burlington, Dan.” “Somebody stole your coat from What Ales You?” I asked. From the rear, Dan interjected, “Not his coat — mine.” “Your coat? So, how come you’re so chill about it and he’s ready to kill?” “I guess you got to ask that to Larry,” Dan replied with a chuckle. I glanced over to see a half-smile come upon Larry’s face, signaling the worst was over. “Larry,” I said, “you got to let it go, brother. You gots to let it go.” “Do you mind if I light up a cigarette?” he asked. I replied, “If I say ‘no,’ I’m afraid you’re gonna pound me.” All three of us laughed, dissipating the last of Larry’s ire. When I dropped them at McKee’s on the Winooski roundabout, all was good, and I gave Larry my card in case they needed another ride. Back in downtown Burlington 20 minutes later, I took a phone call. “Hey, this is Larry, the guy you just dropped in Winooski.” The man sounded agitated again. “I think I left my glasses in your cab. Could you check? They’re new prescription glasses.” “Sure,” I said, and switched on the dome light, leaned over and carefully checked on,
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SUNDAY, MAY 1, 2011 Battery Park, Burlington 1:30pm Check-in For the past 22 years, the first Sunday in May has marked a time when nearly 1,500 friends and neighbors join together to walk the walk that a homeless person might take each day. Walk teams demonstrate their support by raising vitally needed funds to help operate all COTS facilities, including three family shelters and two shelters for individuals. The Walk begins and ends at Battery Park in Burlington. Opening festivities begin at 1:30 p.m., and the Walk kicks off at 2 p.m. Walkers return to Battery Park and enjoy free refreshments and great live music. This year’s lead sponsor, Seventh Generation, will be on site with products and information.
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SEVEN DAYS
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If you can’t join in the Walk yourself, make a donation to help an existing COTS Walker or Team reach their goal. It’s easy to donate online, too — just go to the COTS site at www.cotsonline.org.
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WORK
VERMONTERS ON THE JOB
jordan silverman
A Cut Above B y Ca ro ly n F ox
A
say is, when you’re cutting a carrot and the carrot kind of flies [up], then you know your knife is dull because you’re putting a lot of pressure down. SD: Say you’re at a restaurant. Can you tell a chef’s knife is dull from the chop of your carrot? KH: No, no, you can’t really tell. SD: What kind of knife-sharpening skills does the average person at home need? KH: I think something they should do is use a honing steel every time they use their knife, which will just help keep the edge and maintain it a little bit longer than usual. And then ... we can do sharpening here whenever they need. SD: Any other knife tips? KH: Make sure to use it on a wooden cutting board, or plastic. You don’t want to use it on glass or marble. Don’t put it in the dishwasher. SD: Is that for the sake of the blade or the handle? KH: Both. The really high heat and the soap, [which] is really harsh, can dull your knife faster. SD: How often should people get a knife professionally sharpened? KH: It really depends [on] how often they use it. We have chefs that come in every month, and then we have just your regular customer that comes in once every six months or once a year.
Definitely during the holidays, we have a lot more knives that come through ... just ’cause people are getting ready for Thanksgiving dinner and Christmas. And then we do have a lot of people coming after the holidays, because they realize their knives are dull. SD: What kinds of knives do people typically bring in? KH: Chef’s knives, paring knives ... we don’t do serrated knives. [Sharpening them is a] different process. You have to go through each serrate individually, so it’s just very time consuming. SD: Got any knife horror stories to share? KH: [Laughs.] We’ve all been cut. Sharpening, showing knives ... I’ve definitely cut myself sharpening, just accidentally. You’re done, and you’re just putting the knife in the sheath, and you cut yourself. SD: But nothing too horrific? You all have your fingers? KH: [Laughs.] We all have our fingers, yes. m “Work” is a monthly interview feature showcasing a Vermonter with an interesting occupation. Suggest a job you would like to know more about: news@ sevendaysvt.com. Kiss the Cook, 72 Church Street in Burlington. Info, 863-4226. kissthecook.net Comment? Contact Carolyn Fox at carolyn@sevendaysvt.com.
SEVENDAYSvt.com 04.20.11-04.27.11 SEVEN DAYS WORK 29
fter two years of lunching at Seven Days headquarters, I can say with some authority that our kitchen utensils are ... lacking. As at any typical workplace, there are weeks when the dishes simply disappear — to run away with the spoons, perhaps? Other times, I’d sooner skip a meal than use — or, God forbid, wash — a fork caked with some unidentifiable crustiness. But what really don’t cut it are our knives. Too many times, I grabbed a paring knife too dull to slice my orange and ended up taking a monstrous, serrated bread knife to the fruit instead. I didn’t know how much longer my fingertips would stay intact. Enter Kristy Heppner, assistant manager of Church Street culinary utopia Kiss the Cook. Like the rest of the shop’s employees, Heppner is a spinning wheel of leather, on the cutting edge of to smooth it. Depending on knife knowledge — literhow dull the knife is, he’ll do Name ally. Owner Mike Soulia this several times. Kristy Heppner trains each member of After round one, Witte his staff in the ways of Town holds a piece of scrap paper knife sharpening in a Burlington up in the air and brings the two-hour tutorial about knife down to it, testing its Job the manual Tormek T-7 sharpness. The paper wrinAssistant Manager, Sharpener, which retails kles but doesn’t slice. for about $600. For $3 to Kiss the Cook “This is not sharp $5 apiece, customers can enough,” he says, marvelhave their blunt kitchen ing with Heppner over the knives professionally extreme dullness of the blade. “It’s not polished on site. The two-year-old T-7 sharp at all.” Guess he has his work cut gets so much use that the grindstone out for him back on the machine. needs replacing about every six months. To prevent blade debacles such as To 26-year-old Heppner, a baking ours, I take the opportunity to grill enthusiast and Burlington native who’s Heppner on her knife know-how. worked at Kiss the Cook for three years, sharpening is just another part of the SEVEN DAYS: Why are sharp knives job, along with stocking, ordering and important, anyway? working the register. When I hand over KRISTY HEPPNER: Dull knives can a particularly dull knife from the office, be very dangerous, so sharp knives are she and shift supervisor Henry Witte get a lot better. I mean, obviously, they’re sharper, so you can cut yourself easier, to work. Heppner narrates as Witte clamps but a dull knife ... could make [chopping] the knife into the Tormek’s jig, using the clumsy. patended AngleMaster to set the angle SD: So, it’s actually safer to have a of the blade against the grindstone. sharper knife. Slowly and deliberately he draws the KH: Definitely. blade back and forth over the turning wheel, which runs with cool water for SD: I know my knife is dull when it lubrication and temperature control. bruises herbs rather than slicing Once the blade develops a sharp, new cleanly through. What’s your rule of edge — called a burr — Witte pulls it in thumb? the opposite direction against the strop, KH: That’s a good one. One thing they
Champlain Volley Serving up table tennis in Shelburne B Y SArA h t uff
SEVENDAYSVt.com
Fitness
Jack DeVine
SEVEN DAYS
04.20.11-04.27.11
the National Senior Games, or the Senior Olympics. And why not? These guys are good. The Champlain Valley group is also growing, as evidenced by the extra tables being wheeled out tonight, and the accents reveal Bosnian, Estonian and Ghanaian members alongside the native New Englanders. As many as 25 players congregate here on Friday nights; several of them also play in Burlington’s Old North End at the Miller Center on Monday nights. Says Albert’s son, Jack DeVine, “We’ve had a very good year.” Jack DeVine was one of the CVTTC’s founding members in 1980. He was inspired in part by watching his semipro dad, who won multiple National Senior Games medals in the sport before he died in 2009 at age 92. “Dad and I played when I was a kid; we had a dropleaf table in the dining room,” recalls DeVine, who lives in Ferrisburgh. The table-tennis club played in that town’s Union Meeting Hall for some 15 years, he says, then bounced around a bit before landing here in Shelburne. Meanwhile the GMTTC has also been playing table tennis around the state for 30 years and has 46 tournaments under its belt. That club’s president, Ronald Lewis, reports that there are also active groups in Barre, Norwich and Windsor. “It’s very competitive,” Ken Lynn of Essex tells me as he stands by waiting to jump into a game of singles or doubles. “Everybody’s got a different style.” Lynn points out Jim Hayford Jr., a sixtime state champion who, at age 74, has his much younger opponent scrambling all around the table.
mATThEw ThoRSEn
W
hen I hear about the Fridaynight Ping-Pong action at the Shelburne Old Town School, I’m game. After all, in my twenties — before my married-withtwo-kids life — I had passed countless hours tossing little hollow balls into paper cups. Games of beer pong provided major bonding time for my five brothers and me. But when I arrive at 6:30 p.m. on a recent Friday, there’s no beer in sight. No beverages at all, actually, unless you count the bottles of water stashed in gear bags. And, instead of laughter and shouting, the only sounds are squeaking sneakers, score calls and the pick-pock of volleys around several tables. Seriously focused guys clad in gym shorts and T-shirts are whacking the hell out of their balls. No way am I going to intrude in my Chuck Taylor sneakers and True Religion jeans. Clearly, this is not the basement version of Ping-Pong that many of us grew up playing. And the players don’t even call it Ping-Pong — the Parker Brothers registered that trademark decades ago. Besides, Ping-Pong sounds, well, like a basement game. This is the Champlain Valley Table Tennis Club (CVTTC), and its members are preparing for the Albert D. DeVine Memorial State Championships on April 23. Players from around the state, including from Rutland’s very strong Green Mountain Table Tennis Club (GMTTC) — which had its own tournament in March — will play in a giant round-robin, where state titles and trophies will be doled out. The tourney will also serve as the tabletennis portion of the Vermont Senior Games, a season of 25 events and hundreds of aging athletes vying for a spot at
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“I play a game that’s very economical; I try not to move too much,” Hayford explains when he finally takes a break. The last time he whupped everybody in Vermont, in 1996, he’d just had openheart surgery and, after five stints and a defibrillator, his chest still bothers him sometimes. Hence his strategy of making the other guy move. Growing up in the Northeast Kingdom, Hayford says, he played on a plywood table with cheap balls and sandpaper paddles. Today, his paddle, or “blade,” like most everybody else’s here, is as pricey as a tennis racquet. “It has two surfaces,” Hayford explains, showing me one side that’s rubbery smooth and the other stippled with bumps. “These are the long pips, which gives a knuckleball back, for topspin,” he says.
We try to beat the shit out of each other,
but afterward we shake hands and we’re friends again. JAck DE ViNE
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The Albert D. DeVine Memorial State Championships and Vermont Senior Games Giant Round-Robin Table Tennis Tournament is on Saturday, April 23, in the Shelburne Old Town School, starting at 8:30 a.m. The entry fee is $25 for adults, $15 for juniors; deadline to register is April 21. For more info, email brucekline@gmavt.net or call 453-2140. vermontseniorgames.org
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Bruce Kline, another CVTTC cofounder and the current club president, keeps his blade in a special case that pumps air, pressurizing the foam to add more speed to the ball. “We’re real gearheads when it comes to the racquets,” Kline says. “It makes for a fast game. It’s very physical — you have to be able to move your legs. You have to have good reflexes, good hand-eye coordination. You’d think it was your upper body doing the work, but it’s really the legs.” To train for table tennis, DeVine does footwork drills and lifts weights; he also has a ball-shooting robot that he plays against at home. Hayford, meanwhile, has erected his own table-tennis outbuilding in the backyard of his Burlington residence. Around the Shelburne gym, where players range from college-age kids to septuagenarians, tennis sneakers are the footwear of choice, except for Bennicent Agbodzie — he’s barefooted in the match he loses to Asmir Barucic, who moved here from Bosnia. Agbodzie, I learn, played table tennis professionally in Ghana, traveling to competitions in Nigeria, Togo, Côte d’Ivoire and Senegal, and winning some money along with products. “It has
been a long time since I’ve played,” he says. “But I like the competitiveness. I like that it’s one person who plays at a time, then I just have myself to blame for all the things that went wrong.” Agbodzie does not seem flustered by his losses this evening. “I’m gonna keep playing until I can beat everybody here,” he vows. Hank Buding, originally from Estonia, now makes the 65-mile trip from Redford, N.Y., to play here every Friday. “Nobody likes to lose,” he says. “It’s very hard, especially if you’re used to winning. Jim [Hayford] and I used to play doubles, and nobody could touch us for a couple of years. Now we can’t touch anybody.” Like Hayford, Buding is 74, and should be a top contender for hardware at the Vermont Senior Games. As I look around the Shelburne gym, I think I might have a shot at some sort of state title, even if I haven’t played table tennis in years. That’s because I’m the only woman here, and everyone is stumped when I ask about the last time a female player was on the scene in Shelburne. (Though there are a couple of competitive women in the GMTTC.) Encouraged, I allow DeVine to talk me into a short rally at one of the tables. “I’ve got a hundred and fifty bucks in this paddle,” he says, lending me a racquet with a friendly warning. “So don’t hit it against the table.” Even in my jeans and decidedly noncompetitive footwear, I manage to keep the ball in play, though I can tell DeVine is trying not to laugh at my easy lobs. “What am I doing that’s so amateur?” I ask. DeVine steps to my side of the table, demonstrating a better grip that will help me hit the ball at a better angle. Just for fun, I ask him to show me how he’d typically play in a game, and am instantly humbled by the whizzing whirr of white. I’d have to practice a heck of a lot more to not embarrass myself. Still, it’s a good time, even without the beer. “I like the camaraderie,” says DeVine. “We’ve been doing this for 31 years. We go out to the table and we try to beat the shit out of each other, but afterward we shake hands and we’re friends again.” m
Youth Suicide
32 FEATURE
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SEVENDAYSvt.com
APRIL 29-MAY 5
by alice levitt
says Blasberg. “By the time they’re 32, they’ve got 27 jobs on their résumé.” To find out more about this job jumping, we talked to chefs who have put down roots and ones who are still on the move. And we uncovered some of the most common reasons for the Green Mountain chef’s nomadic lifestyle.
tips weren’t coming in, and to pay the number of kitchen staff he needed to run smoothly on busy weekends. Tom Bivins, now executive chef at NECI, was the chef at the Inn at Shelburne Farms for eight years in the ’90s. To support himself during his restaurant’s off-season, from October to
every night. “I don’t think there’s a restaurant in the state that never has to go through a struggle, [when] they pray the money is coming in,” says Buchanan. “The cost of doing business up here is really high, especially when you rotate labor and you have to rotate people all the time.” For his part, though, Blasberg doesn’t buy this reasoning. “There’s a pub on every corner in Ireland, and they seem to do OK,” he says.
Living, Learning
sue norton
Almost every résumé I see is six months here and nine months there. By the time they’re 32, they’ve got 27 jobs on their résumé.
All in the Timing
» p.34
FEATURE 33
chefs on the move
SEVEN DAYS
Vermont is a state of seasonal economies. Outside Burlington, restaurants are largely dependent on tourists to remain afloat. In Blasberg’s case, his Champlain Islands resto fills up in the summer. Sean Buchanan, who left his position as executive chef at Stowe Mountain Lodge last year to become a salesman for Black River Produce, had become accustomed to a winter boom time followed by weeks of summer nights with no more than 20 diners. He found it difficult to maintain waitstaff when
May, he resorted to answering phones and filling the farm’s cheese orders. At times like that, says Bivins, “I would say everyone in Vermont starts to consider options besides restaurants.” Buchanan also points to what he sees as the relative excess of restaurants in the state. According to the Vermont Department of Health, there are currently 2307 eateries operating in Vermont. Figure in the 2009 state population of 621,760: That’s one restaurant for every 270 Vermonters. There simply aren’t enough people to keep every one of those places profitable
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Wa lt Bl asbe r g, No r th He r o H o use Inn & Restaur an t
Even when the economy is kind to restaurants, chefs have reasons not to settle down. As an educator, Bivins sees chefs at the very start of their careers, but he says cooks continue their educations in kitchens for years after they’ve graduated from NECI. “That’s how you get your experience — learning new things, working in a different kind of environment,” he explains. “You become a journeyman to learn new things.” However, Bivins notes that, given the economy in which they matured, many of his recent charges are less likely than are older chefs to expect, and bother to seek, stability in their work. Most leave NECI not planning to keep jobs for more than a year at a time, he says. Jeff Egan, kitchen manager at Hunger Mountain Co-op in Montpelier, is an extreme example of a nomadic chef. In fact, he named his catering company the Wandering Chef for his habit of leaving once he’s “mastered” a job. Egan began his culinary career at age 29, after 10 years as an environmental campaigner in Canada. Making up for lost time, he worked with upward of 80 other cooks at the Royal York Hotel in Toronto before cooking for reforestation workers in remote Alberta. Since moving to Vermont in 2002, Egan has had more than his fair share of jobs, including working as executive chef for the Cliff House at Stowe Mountain Resort and for Vermont Discovery Cruises. “I’ve cooked at every altitude in the state,” he jokes. But Egan says there is a method to his madness. “I stay in a place long enough to learn the things that are my goal,” he says. “Not every job is going to teach you everything you need to learn.” NECI’s Bivins also chalks up this propensity to the artistic spirit of those who specialize in fine cuisine. “Some people are just very creative, and once they reach a certain point at a restaurant, they say, ‘I’m ready to move on.’ Some folks really need a challenge.”
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matthew thorsen
nyone who has followed the business of high-end Vermont restaurants in the past year will be feeling a little whiplash. The rapid rotation of the state’s top chefs could be compared to a game of musical chairs, or even Candy Land, full of delicious rewards and pitfalls. Either way, many of the area’s most notable cooks just can’t seem to keep still. Seven Days spoke to Vermont chefs — and a restaurant owner — about what makes local restaurant staffing so unstable. They cited several factors that have kept them moving from place to place, or pushed them out of the kitchen entirely. In Burlington’s high-pressure market, the drama started last year when Aaron Josinsky left Bluebird Tavern and was replaced by Michael Clauss. Josinsky had come to Bluebird — he and the restaurant were nominated for a James Beard Foundation award last year — from gigs as sous-chef at the Waiting Room and the Inn at Shelburne Farms, as well as at the New York farm-to-table mecca Blue Hill. Clauss, a former New England Culinary Institute instructor, managed Daniel Boulud’s catering business in New York before returning to Vermont to head the kitchen at Burlington’s Daily Planet. Since leaving Bluebird, Josinsky, who was not available for comment for this story, has worked as a consultant at Topnotch Resort and Spa with the title “seasonal chef.” Meanwhile, his Bluebird Tavern sous-chef, Nathaniel Wade, who had previously cooked in prestigious Portland, Ore., kitchens, headed to ¡Duino! (Duende). This year, Wade was the one recognized by the Beard Foundation when he was named a finalist for best chef in the Northeast. Confused yet? With its pileup of restaurant names, the chart of local chefs’ careers begins to look like a more palatable version of those sex-ed visualizations of a person’s partners’ partners’ partners. It can be difficult for diners to remember who’s cooking where, and the chef shuffle is challenging for restaurant owners, too. Walt Blasberg, owner of the North Hero House Inn & Restaurant, has had five chefs in the last five years. Though his sous-chef and line cooks have generally been faithful to the place, Blasberg has struggled to keep a top dog. Aside from one instance where a customer hired away Blasberg’s staff to start a restaurant of his own, the innkeeper isn’t sure what to blame for the difficulty, other than the migratory nature of chefs. “Almost every résumé I see is six months here and nine months there,”
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Chefs on the Move «P.33 Bivins guesses this is the explanation for Josinsky’s wild ride through the restaurant scene. After his tenures at Shelburne Farms and Bluebird, “He learned you don’t have to stop at any one of those places,” suggests Bivins, who finds Josinsky’s “seasonal chef” title at Topnotch, a position that ended April 1, particularly interesting. “He made it very clear he’s keeping his options open, and Topnotch had to keep their options open,” Bivins says, adding that he’s excited to see where the young chef ends up next.
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34 FEATURE
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a skilled chef are bound to cause creative conflict. “When you’re passionate about this one thing, and you’re in it, and you’re driving and driving and driving and you come up against a lot, you say, ‘Why am I putting up with it?’” he says. In retrospect, Pace thinks it was nothing more than ego that led him to leave his restaurants once he attained the level of executive chef. Of course, he points out, a bossy streak is implied in the very job title. In French, “chef” means boss or leader, a vestige of the militaristic kitchen system introduced by Georges Auguste Escoffier in the 19th century. However, unless a chef owns his own restaurant, he has to answer to another boss — a recipe for potential conflict. Sean Buchanan says chefs shouldn’t receive sole blame for that friction. He believes the restaurants that work best, despite employing a chef who’s neither an owner nor a partner, are those whose owners have a clear understanding of what they want from their employees. Chefs who lack the freedom to put their stamp on a restaurant may become bored and leave, starting a vicious cycle. A chef has to gain the trust of the restaurateur before he or she can stray from the established
Burlington menu, but that doesn’t happen overnight. When chefs are constantly in transition, trust can be elusive. With that in mind, Blasberg says he’d prefer to eventually share ownership of the North Hero House with a chef — if the right person came along. Bivins agrees with that principle and adds that, if he were consulting with Blasberg, he would recommend the restaurateur look to older chefs. They may demand a higher starting salary, but they’ve learned to be team players.
COMFORTABLY NUMB
Personality conflicts aren’t the only things that make a chef’s job grueling. The Food Network may have made cooking look glamorous, but it’s essentially a blue-collar career with hot work spaces and long hours. Drug and alcohol abuse in the restaurant industry is legendary, and Blasberg suspects that Vermont’s seasonal
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A diploma from a culinary school doesn’t mean a life sentence behind the line. Some of Vermont’s most talented chefs have moved from restaurant to restaurant and found happiness at other jobs.
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Others are hoping to hone their skills in a new kitchen. Either way, when you see one of these chefs’ names attached to a restaurant, take note. They’re the ones to watch.
Jeff Egan
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Current position: salesman for North Springfield-based food distributor Black River Produce, advocate for local growers, columnist for the Stowe Reporter. Will he stay? “I’m really comfortable with what I’m doing now. I do miss cooking, but we’re really enjoying being a family.”
Career highlights: chef-partner, the Bee’s Knees, Morrisville; chef, Vermont Discovery Cruises, Cliff House at Stowe Mountain Lodge. Current position: kitchen manager, Hunger Mountain Co-op, Montpelier. Will he stay? “I’m not the kind of guy who stays somewhere 20 years, but there are still so many exciting opportunities for me to learn here.”
Career highlights: sous-chef, the Inn at Shelburne Farms, the Waiting Room, Burlington; executive chef, Bluebird Tavern, Burlington; seasonal chef, Topnotch Resort and Spa, Stowe. Current position: looking for the next big thing.
MO
business exacerbates the problem. “It’s the slow times that are the worst for them,” he says of kitchen staff. “They love it when the adrenaline is going and they’re just jamming. The trouble is when it slows down and they have to look for something else to create that feeling.” Even for relatively clean-living cooks, the physical and emotional stresses of the job can lead to burnout. Since few restaurants in Vermont can afford big-city-sized staffs, chefs can wind up doing more jobs than they bargained for. As Buchanan puts it, “You’re not just a chef, you’re a manager, accountant, line cook, purchaser…” For a young chef, the 80- to 100hour weeks these tasks often entail are part of the learning experience. But when chefs start to think about raising a family, the demands become less appealing. “The industry isn’t designed to give chefs a regular lifestyle,” says Buchanan, who heads outside of his home for our phone interview so as not to disturb his two small children as they nap. “Talk to chefs out there — how many of you get two days off a week? How many get a set schedule?”
NT
Bivins says many of his students regard seeking a stable work environment as “settling.” But he believes there comes a time when we all start to want health insurance and time off. “They’ll get there,” he says with a chuckle. For many chefs, their thirties and forties are put-up-or-shut-up time, when they start a restaurant of their own — where they can call the shots and make their own hours — or get out of the kitchen, at least for a while (see sidebar). In Bivins’ case, that turning point led to a new career as an educator — to his complete surprise. “I thought this was a transitional job,” he admits. “That’s my true confession. I never thought NECI was what I would end up loving and wanting to do. I think some chefs do that and say, ‘Wow, I don’t want to get out of this thing. I really like this.’” Other chefs will keep playing musical chairs, trying their skills in kitchen after kitchen. And local observers of the dining scene are unlikely to get bored any time soon.
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FEATURE 35
Will he stay? “I want to die behind this counter.”
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SEVEN DAYS
Career highlights: line cook, Aqua, Alain Rondelli, San Francisco; chef de cuisine, Carnelian Room, San Francisco; executive chef, Smokejacks, Burlington.
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Menu Mavens Vermont’s food and restaurant scene is breeding a cottage industry: consultants B Y KEN PicArD
execute that, it’s going to be a very long and shaky road.” A solid menu is crucial in any market, but perhaps doubly so in Vermont, Bogart suggests, where only a small percentage of the populace can be counted on to dine out on a regular basis. (Chittenden County is the exception, he notes.) Another common mistake Bogart sees in aspiring restaurateurs is wanting to serve a specialized cuisine, such as Mexican or barbecue, without understanding the typical eating habits and economics of the location. For example, in a small, rural community, fewer than half the residents may dine out on a regular basis. Of those, Bogart asks, “How many times a month do you think they’ll go out to eat ribs or Mongolian beef?” Food and restaurant consultancy involves more than helping someone build a kitchen or develop a creative menu. Consider the work of Brian Norder of Vermont Food Consulting Services in Morrisville. Like most local
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Called New Territories, it’s a restaurant consulting firm for people who are looking to break into the business, buy an existing establishment or just spice up an out-of-date menu. Bogart says he gets calls about once a week from someone who’s seeking a restaurant to buy or looking for advice regarding the culinary biz. As tends to be the case with Bogart’s line of work, his business is virtually all word of mouth. New Territories is among a growing number of individuals and firms in Vermont that provide expert consultation to the restaurant, retail food and specialty-item industries. These consultants, many of whom are former chefs, food writers, cookbook authors or restaurateurs, provide a wide range of services, including concept development; advice on dining room, kitchen and bar layouts; vendor and equipment recommendations; and even help with food science and regulatory issues concerning packaged and frozen foods. At a time when opening a new eatery can cost a quarter-million dollars or more, it’s critical for restaurateurs to hit the ground running without stumbling over the same hurdles that have tripped countless others. Bogart says he’s always astounded to see an employment ad for the chef position at a new restaurant due to open soon. Finding the right chef “should be the first step, not the last,” he cautions. “The whole blueprint for the entire operation is the menu. If you don’t have a chef to
36 FEATURE
a samPling of the oPPortunities:
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hen veteran chef Steve Bogart founded A Single Pebble Restaurant in Plainfield back in 1995, his goal was to introduce Vermonters to delicious Szechuan cuisine that transcended the bland, starchy fare often found in Chinese take-out joints in the U.S. Bogart, a Chinese-food historian who says he’s been obsessed with Asian cuisine since age 10, knew that authentic Szechuan dishes rarely feature beef. In China, he notes, cows are uncommon, and much of the population is lactose intolerant — the Chinese word for “meat” literally translates as “pig” or “pork.” Nevertheless, just a short time after A Single Pebble opened, Bogart revised his menu to better reflect the eating habits of his patrons. Like most Americans, Vermonters consume a lot more beef than the Chinese do. “So, I put beef on our menu,” he recalls, “and we sold tons of it.” A Single Pebble, now located on Bank Street in downtown Burlington, became one of the most successful restaurants in Vermont. Bogart sold his interest in the place in August 2009, but he still references that beef experience whenever new or veteran restaurateurs seek his advice. For an establishment to succeed, he emphasizes, it must serve its patrons what they want to eat, not what the chef or owner wants to serve them. Today, the man who introduced Vermonters to mock eel has a new food business, but it doesn’t keep Bogart in the kitchen all weekend or late at night.
food consultants, he spent years in the restaurant industry, including several as food and beverage director at Smugglers’ Notch. From 1997 to 2010, Norder was the project director at the Vermont Food Venture Center in Fairfax. There, he helped dozens of people start up their specialty- and processed-food enterprises. Today, Norder continues to educate local businesses, such as the Maplefields chain of convenience-store delis, about such issues as food safety, inspections and regulations. He works with chefs who are getting into charcuterie, or meat curing, to address the inevitable safety concerns. And Norder helps independent
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Sale restaurants bring their most popular food items to the retail market, such as the signature marinara sauce from Mimmo’s Pizzeria Restaurant in St. Albans and Essex. Norder specializes in food science, an expertise that many chefs and restaurateurs lack. For example, one of his recent clients asked for advice about bringing a cream soup to the frozen-food market. The problem: In the restaurant, the soup is made using a butter-and-flour roux, which breaks down and loses its original character when frozen and reheated. To make the product palatable to the grocery-store customer, Norder had to find an organic starch that would keep the soup shelf stable, appeal to the savvy, high-end consumer and still taste good. Such value-added products can help Vermont restaurants find new revenue streams, and that’s particularly important in a down economy when most Vermonters are eating out less often. But Norder warns that even the state’s specialty-food market has gotten soft in recent years. Certain niche items, such as homemade jams and jellies, are, as he puts it, “saturated.”
“So, they’d talk about the viscosity of the food, the safety of the food, the pliability of the food and the salt in the food,” she remembers. “But no one put it in their mouth. How about the taste of the food?” Over the years, Schempp’s clients have included some of the food industry’s most recognized names: Unilever, Kraft Foods and Nestlé, to name a few. Many of her early Vermont clients have grown up right along with her business, including Ben & Jerry’s, Cabot Creamery and Green Mountain Coffee Roasters. Schempp says she was instrumental in assisting those companies with developing their products and in-house food labs. Today, most of her clients are outside the state, and many are overseas. For example, Schempp is currently helping a French company bring a line of natural and organic meat and vegetable stocks and purées to the American retail market. Another client is a Sicilian firm that wants to ship heritage cookies to the United States. A third is a group of Dubai businessmen looking to import a restaurant concept to this country. Schempp’s services run the gamut.
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FEATURE 37
One day she’s helping a farmer turn some newfangled grains into a packaged side dish. Another day, she’s helping a bar owner develop a tiki cocktail menu. Like Norder, she tends to discourage clients from trying to sell the stereotypical specialty-food items that are “tapped out” in Vermont, including homemade jams, jellies and salad dressings. With such a diverse clientele, it’s hard for Schempp to generalize about the most common mistakes she sees. Her favorite type of client, though, is a person who comes in with a clear food or restaurant concept but stays open to suggestions. “Sometimes I have to start by first teaching someone how to use a consultant,” she says with a laugh. “If they come in with too many rigid ideas, it’s like that old adage: They want us to borrow their watch to tell them the time.” Bogart, of A Single Pebble fame, heartily agrees that practical adaptability is key to success in the food business. There’s one piece of advice he offers, free of charge, to anyone looking to open or buy their own restaurant for the first time: If you never have, work in one first. More times than not, Bogart insists, the long hours and grueling physical demands of the job are enough to dissuade would-be restaurateurs. As he puts it, “That really opens people’s eyes.” m
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“Salsas are almost cliché,” he says, “but there are still some salsa niches out there that people are tapping into.” On the flip side, Norder sees growth opportunities in the cured-meat line, as well as in cooked and ready-to-eat dinners. He notes that uncertain times can bring opportunities for small-scale food producers, such as those in Vermont. After 9/11, he says, “Anything with security sold. That hominess, that madein-Vermont [label], gave people a warm, fuzzy-blanket security.” Food consultancy is itself a growth area, and virtually no one in Vermont has been doing it as long or as successfully as Robin Schempp. She owns Right Stuff Enterprises, a Waterbury-based firm that provides a wide range of food expertise to a national and international clientele. Schempp, who describes herself as a “serial restaurant opener,” has worked in food consultancy for about 18 years. When she started in 1993, maybe three companies in the country were doing such work, she estimates. Today, there are hundreds of firms and thousands of individual food consultants, which have their own professional trade organization. The business has changed considerably since the early 1990s, Schempp says. Years ago, many large food companies had dieticians and food scientists on staff, but not necessarily someone with a serious culinary background.
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Go Fish
When it comes to seafood, “local” means new England B Y L Au rEN oBEr
A
What’s a
Fish-lOving localvore to do?
FOOD region was known — fish that feed close to the ocean floor, such as sole, flounder, haddock, cod, halibut, pollock and hake — collapsed. In the years since, the industry has weathered much debate on its future. Today, some see farmed product as the best alternative to resource-intensive fishing; others see a sustainable wildcaught industry as the way to repair ocean fisheries. Still others believe it’s possible to source both wild and farmraised fish responsibly. But there’s one thing everyone interviewed for this article agrees on: There are great fish coming from the Atlantic waters off the shores of New England. And, increasingly, consumers want to know about them. Fishmonger Ethan Wood of Wood Mountain Fish has been involved in the seafood industry for as long as he can
remember. Having grown up in Boston, Wood, 31, was exposed early to the bounty swimming just offshore. He developed a taste for local razor clams, Taylor Bay scallops and Wellfleet oysters, and later went to work for Legal Sea Foods. About six years ago, Wood struck out on his own and quickly developed a reputation for procuring some of the best fish that New England fishermen had to offer. Today, he provides seafood for many restaurants in Vermont, including the Farmhouse Tap & Grill, L’Amante and Bluebird Tavern in Burlington, and the Kitchen Table Bistro in Richmond. But Wood doesn’t just sell fish; he sells the whole story of the New England fisheries’ rebirth and the small-scale fishermen responsible for it. For the past decade, consumers have heard that groundfish such as cod are so overharvested it’s irresponsible to eat
» p.41
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FEATURE 39
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them. This notion has been bolstered by well-meaning sustainable-seafood guides, like the Seafood Watch produced by Monterey Bay Aquarium in California, which tend to portray the fishing industry with broad strokes. Until recently, Seafood Watch maintained that all Atlantic cod should be avoided, regardless of catch method. Now it uses a more specific index. Atlantic cod caught in the Gulf of Maine by hook-and-line is OK; the same fish caught by a trawl line in the Canadian Atlantic is not. Wood doesn’t believe that all cod fishing is unsustainable, pointing to the example of line-caught cod harvested in state waters. But, because dragger-boat fishing with trawl nets still occurs, Wood and his customers want to know how their fish got from ocean to plate.
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committed localvore living in Vermont will find no shortage of lovingly grown produce and humanely raised meat, as a trip to any farmers market demonstrates. There are delicate fingerling potatoes, juicy heirloom tomatoes, dozens of cheeses, and pasture-raised pork and chicken, among many other local offerings. But one thing you won’t find at any Vermont farmers market is seafood. The reason is obvious. While we’re not exactly a landlocked state, thanks to the far-reaching Lake Champlain, Vermonters are still a couple of hundred miles, at least, from the closest seashore. So, what’s a fish-loving localvore to do? You can turn to freshwater fish such as perch, trout and crappie, which are plentiful in Vermont’s rivers and lakes but uncommon in grocery-store coolers or on restaurant menus. Or you can broaden your definition of “local.” Where seafood is concerned, New England is as local as it gets. Talk about seafood with any restaurateur, chef or fish buyer, and you’ll get a host of opinions on the subject. That’s because the seafood industry, especially in New England, is freighted with baggage from years of corporate overfishing and mismanagement. By the early 1980s, commercial fishing had become so unsustainable in New England that most of the groundfish population for which the
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Go Fish « p.39 “When it comes to local, those are the elements we try to promote — where the fish came from and who the fisherman was,” Wood says. “We try to provide as much information as possible.” The education aspect was apparent when Wood was honored at a recent dinner at the Farmhouse. Chef Phillip Clayton prepared Maine lobster salad, razor-clam gratin and New England dayboat-cod cakes, among other regional seafood dishes. The menu highlighted that nearly all the seafood specials came from New England waters, in keeping with the restaurant’s decidedly local bent. (All area producers are celebrated on the menu.)
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regionally, says Clem Nilan, general manager of City Market/Onion River Co-op in Burlington. Roughly 80 percent of seafood caught in New England leaves the area, which in turn ends up importing a large amount of seafood from elsewhere. Nilan believes that if consumers were reassured their choices were sustainable, and if New England fish were marketed as local produce and meat are, more New England fish would stay here. City Market is working toward that goal, he says. Today, the groundfish sold at City Market comes from small-scale fishing operations that Nilan says make for more personal transactions: He knows the name of the boat that took in the haul, plus the method of catch. Customers still want nonregional fish
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such as tilapia, yellowfin tuna and sockeye salmon, and City Market carries those varieties. But letting people know there’s a regional, if not local, option goes a long way. “I think what people want is trust,” Nilan says. “People don’t want anonymity in food anymore. They don’t want an anonymous pantry anymore. They want a name to it.” At the Kitchen Table Bistro, chef Steve Atkins is trying to get the word out about New England seafood. But, rather than just pushing its safety and sustainability, Atkins is keen to teach diners about the great variety of seafood in the region’s waters. The industry isn’t just cod, mussels and lobster, he says. Occasionally, Atkins puts lesserknown New England fish such as scup on the menu. Also called porgy, scup is served whole and has been a bit of a tough sell, despite being a “really tasty fish,” the chef says. Some diner education has been necessary, but Atkins believes it’s worth it to promote New England fisheries. “If we know where it’s from and who we’re getting it from,” he says, “we can have a little more confidence with that.”m
4/18/11 3:49 PM
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“People want to know where their food comes from,” and that includes seafood, says Clayton. Farmhouse co-owner Jed Davis thinks the new menu trend of specifying seafood’s provenance comes in part from oysters. Bivalve names have always reflected where they originated, and those names have some cachet — Thatch Island, Ninigret Cup, Pemaquid, to name a few. As the “buy local” trend helps sell more produce, meat and value-added food products, it makes sense for restaurants and markets to extend their source labeling to seafood. At Healthy Living Natural Foods Market in South Burlington, provenance is on display in the fish case. There’s haddock and day-boat cod that came from Point Judith, R.I., according to the label on the package, as well as shrimp from Maine. The New England seafood season is just getting going, and soon the whole case will be filled with regionally and sustainably caught mackerel, swordfish, flounder and lobster, says meat and seafood manager Frank Pace. “Region is very important. That’s the whole way food is going,” Pace explains. “People want it as close as possible.” But many consumers don’t know New England fish is a safe and responsible choice. The Northeast needs to do a better job of marketing its own seafood
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TOM MCNEILL
Invisible Web
Provisions International brings the world to the Green Mountains, and vice versa B Y CORI N HI RSCH
42 FOOD
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S
ometimes the streets of White River Junction can seem forgotten in time. The town is far quieter than it was a century ago, when dozens of trains rumbled through every day carrying people and goods across New England. But on the two converging interstates that carry most of the town’s modern-day traffic, locals may notice six black trucks with a logo whose style harks back to the days of carriages and freight trains. This is the fleet of Provisions International. Inside each truck might be a tub of Spanish olives, jars of quince paste or wheels of Vermont blue cheese, destined for Vermont’s mountain-bound chefs or urban markets hungry for the state’s cheese, jam and flour. The international web of food distributors is unseen to the average diner — especially today, when foodies like to imagine their local farmers trekking in to meet with their favorite chefs, dropping off fresh cheese, baby lettuces and free-range meat. While such exchanges
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do, in fact, happen, distributors play a key role in helping producers reach a broader market. Provisions is even less conspicuous than most, but it fills a distinct niche: supplying hard-to-find and exotic edibles as well as Vermont cheeses.
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A ND R E W K ANNL E R , PROVIS IO NS INTE R NATIO NAL
“Distributors are sort of an invisible presence in this chain of food,” says Christopher Emily Coutant, Provisions International’s marketing director. “Lately we’ve seen moves toward local sourcing that has made the distributor more invisible.” LISTEN IN ON LOCAL FOODIES...
On the outskirts of town, along the White River, Provisions maintains a cavernous, climate-controlled warehouse filled with thousands of cheeses, vinegars, flours, chutneys and cured meats. It’s a wonderland of exotic food items — jars of vanilla, truffle oils and Spanish chocolate, and shelves of foreign and domestic cheeses, many of which are made in Vermont. While wholesale distributors such as North Springfield’s Black River Produce offer some of the same specialty items, Provisions has its loyal customers in the restaurant world. “We keep a very low profile, for a good reason,” says Provisions’ founder and owner Wendy Hallgren. She says the company has reached a size, in terms of clientele and employees, that suits its hands-on style. Provisions employees, who tend to stay a decade or longer, seem quite protective of their firm. In a world of food distributors jockeying for territory, they like to think they stand out by the service and education they offer both their
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food producers and the chefs and grocers they supply. Those clients include many of Vermont’s artisan cheese makers: Cheeses make up more than a third of Provisions’ business. Each week, the company’s trucks load up with cheeses and drive them to markets in New York, Boston and elsewhere. “A lot of chefs and stores want to have a personal connection with the cheese maker, but sometimes a cheese maker wants to make cheese,” says Coutant. “Individual cheese makers are not necessarily interested or skilled at marketing. And they don’t want to drive around the state delivering their cheese.” Cheese has been important to Provisions’ business since Hallgren founded the company in 1986 after a move to the Upper Valley from Princeton, N.J., where she had owned a catering business. Working in rural Vermont’s food industry, she found it difficult to find gourmet items. “There was a real need for high-end, restaurantquality food. I was shocked there was no purveyor doing it,” she recalls. “I guess I was at the right time and the right place.” Hallgren initially worked with a company that sold lamb to New York City. Those trucks, she noted, were coming back empty. So she tapped her contacts in the food and freight worlds and began carting up specialty items such as European cheeses. “We started out really small, with a pickup truck with a refrigerator in the back,” she says. Hallgren soon began working with some of Vermont’s earliest cheese makers, such as Bob Reese and Allison Hooper of Vermont Butter & Cheese Creamery. “[Provisions was] really on a mission to build awareness about the great local cheese companies that we have in Vermont,” says Reese. “They kind of pioneered helping out and teaching producers what to expect. When you’re a small company, you don’t have an R&D department.” Gradually, Hallgren grew her business, by 10 percent each year. She
Continued after the classified section. PAGE 44
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CONDOS 2-BR, 1-BA, beautiful lake views, W/D hookups, walking distance to downtown. NS/pets. Gas heat & electricity not incl. Avail. June 1. $1225/ mo. + dep. 864-5200 ext. 225. BURLINGTON DOWNTOWN On park, unique, sunny 1- & 2-BR apts. Some w/ magnificent lake view. Mostly HDWD. Some w/ DR. Storage. Off-street parking or garages. Furnishings avail. NS/ pets. Lease req. $10751295/mo. Call 9 a.m -6 p.m. 476-4071. COZY APARTMENT IN JEFF. $600/mo. incl. utils. 6-mo. lease. 1st mo. & sec. dep. Garden space avail. Pet negotiable. View. 338-8947. ESSEX FORT ETHAN ALLEN Lg. 1-BR, HDWD floors, porch, storage, parking. $725/mo. + utils. Avail. May 1. NS/pets. 658-2376.
HOUSE W/ GARAGE FOR LEASE 2 BR, 200 Dorset St., next to Healthy Living Market. Backyard w/ storage shed. $1300/ mo. + utils. Good refs./ dep. required. patrick@ together.net. LUXURY 1- & 2-BR IN WINOOSKI! Seconds to Burlington! Now avail.! Heat, HW, snow removal incl. Enjoy central A/C, fullyapplianced kitchens, key-card entry, W/D facilities, garage parking, fi tness center, pet friendly, on-site management & 24-hr. emergency maintenance. Steps to Fletcher Allen, restaurants, shops, UVM, Champlain College & more. Prices starting at $1250/ mo. & only a $500 sec. dep. Call or email today for a personal tour: 655-1810, info@ keenscrossing.com. Or visit keenscrossing. com! 65 Winooski Falls Way, Winooski. MONKTON 1-BR APT. 975 sq.ft. open living, views, HDWD & tile. Incl. plowing & mowing.
Great family home for sale. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room with wood stove, 3 season porch, 2nd story deck, detached heated 2-car garage and sheds, all on 1 private acres with seasonal Camels Hump views for $259,900. Contact richmond4sale@yahoo.com or call 802-434-4400.
119 Patricia Place, 3-BR, 1-BA. Home in very good condition. All new carpets and vinyl flooring. New tub and shower. W/D. Home is white w/ black shutters. $34,000. 1-315-412-4560, 802-734-4716.
LincoLn ViLLage Home FSBO-ChadSmith042011.indd 1
Richmond
Comfortable, sunny in home, spacious Independent elderly woman Burlington seeks responsible person to share her home in 863-5625 yard for gardening. EHO. exchange for assisting with occasional errands Half of storage bldg. www.HomeShareVermont.org and companionship. W/D hookup. No dogs.
LAND
Privacy, within 4/4/11 2:20 PM minutes of Shopping, Schools & Downtown Burlington. Large sunroom. Fencedin yard. Dead-end street. Splendid southern exposure. Enjoy direct access to woods, trails, parks & beaches. $299,500. 802-864-0482. http:// www.101killarney.com
visibility, busiest corridor in Essex. 598-6435.
SUBLETS/ TEMPORARY
MAIN STREET LANDING On Burlington’s waterfront has affordable office & retail space. Dynamic environment w/ progressive & forwardthinking businesses. Mainstreetlanding.com, click on space avail.
BIG SUMMER ROOM AVAIL. In 2-BR condo. June 10-Labor Day. Near 127 Beltway, New North End. W/D, balcony, parking, 5 mins. to town. Recycling/composting req’d. $525/mo. Gary, 508-237-4012.
conversion & expansion
4/11/11 FSBO-RickCarlson032311.indd 3:27 PM 1 opportunities. Amazing
BIG BEAUTIFUL AZ LAND $99/mo., $0-down, $0-interest. Golf course, nat’l parks. 1 hour from Tucson Int’l Airport. Guaranteed financing. No credit check! Pre-recorded msg. 800-631-8164 Code 4057. sunsiteslandrush. com. (AAN CAN) OWN 20 ACRES Only $129/mo. $13,900 near growing El Paso, Texas (2nd safest U.S. city) Low down, no credit checks, owner financing. Free map/ pictures. 800-755-8953 www.sunsetranches. com (AAN CAN)
3/21/11 3:24 PM
OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE 1-yr. lease. $850/mo. 41 Main St., Burlington. Call HomeShare Vermont 989-6408. Approx. 600 sq.ft. 3 at (802) 863-0274 or visit rooms, could be shared. N. STARKSBORO www.HomeShareVermont.org 2 separate entrances, 3-BR, private setting full BA. Excellent parkformerly Project Home EHO on 50 acres. 25 min. to ing, close to waterfront. Burlington, I-89, Bolton $750/mo. + utils. ski area. 8x10 storage 793-0179, patrick@ WILLISTON AVAIL. NOW shed, garden space together.net. 16t-homeshare042011.indd 1 4/18/11 2:30 PM Taft Farm Senior Living Room for rent: Monkton avail. Possible horse Community. 1-BR farmhouse on 20 boarding. Lawn care, SPACE AVAIL. 35 KING avail. May 1. $935/mo. acres, in-ground pool, snow plowing, rubbish ST., BURLINGTON Utils. incl. elevator, cathedral ceilings, all removal incl. $1075/mo. 690 sq.ft. Parking, EARN $75-$200 HOUR secure entrance. Age amenities incl., pets + utils., dep. 434-4721. heating, air, utils. incl. Media makeup artist restriction 55+. Great OK, garden space, 19 $800/mo. 425-3258. ESSEX RTE 15/CIRC training. Ads, TV, film, location in Taft Corners. miles to Kennedy Dr. NEW APTS. HIGHWAY fashion. One-week NS/pets. 879-3333. Starting at $375/mo. Brand new studios Formerly Ehler’s RV. class. Stable job in 802-453-3457. & 2-BRs for rent in Up to 11,000 sq.ft. weak economy. Info: WINOOSKI Winooski. $625-925/ Offices, showroom, high 310-364-0665, www. Nice, clean 1-BR apt. ROOM IN FAB JERICHO mo. incl. heat, service bays. Unlimited HOUSE Private, closed-in water/sewer & trash 2 friends of Dorothy entrance way. removal. Parking & looking for 3rd roomie. Conveniently located, coin-op W/D. Alliance W/D, D/W, pool, W/B w/ off-street parking Property Management, EQUAL HOUSING law. Our readers are hereby informed for 1 car. No dogs. $850/ fireplace, more. $575/ 899-3400, for an OPPORTUNITY that all dwellings, advertised in this mo. + 1/3 utils. See mo. incl. heat/HW. application. Equal All real estate advertising in this newsnewspaper are available on an equal online ad for more info. 355-2219, 355-2218. Opportunity/Fair paper is subject to the Federal Fair opportunity basis. Any home seeker 238-7634. Housing. Housing Act of 1968 and similar Verwho feels her or she has encountered 2/21/11 3:09 PM
OFFICE/ COMMERCIAL
WESTFORD Lg. 4-BR, lots light, 2-BA, views, W/D, DW, 1/2 hr. to Burlington. Avail. May 1. 1st, last, dep. $1500/mo. incl. parking, water/ sewer, rubbish/snow. 522-3826.
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WINOOSKI AVAIL. MAY 1 Perfect for student or professional. $510/mo. incl. utils. Must love pets. Avail. May 1. PJ, 578-8393.
mont statutes which make it illegal to advertise any preference, limitations, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, sexual orientation, age, marital status, handicap, presence of minor children in the family or receipt of public assistance, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or a discrimination. The newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate, which is in violation of the
services
BIZ OPPS
discrimination should contact: HUD Office of Fair Housing 10 Causeway St., Boston, MA 02222-1092 (617) 565-5309 — OR — Vermont Human Rights Commission 135 State St., Drawer 33 Montpelier, VT 05633-6301 800-416-2010 Fax: 802-828-2480
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home/garden » answers on p.C-8
» SEVENDAYSvt.com 04.20.11-04.27.11 SEVEN DAYS classifieds C-5
CLOTHING/ JEWELRY services
HOME/GARDEN [CONT.] including: mowing, trimming; weeding, edging; planting, brush removal; mulching, seasonal cleanup. Free estimates. 734-3674, lmland.com. LAWN & GARDEN, ROTOTILLING Experienced but affordable help for your lawn & garden. Mowing, weeding, pruning, planting, rototilling. Walks, decks, fences, house painting. Burlington area. Gordon, 497-1780.
Valley Painting Interior/exterior Painting Pressure Washing Gutter Cleaning Deck Staining Any Size Job Free Estimates Fully Insured
Call TJ NOW!
355-0392
CASH BATTERY STREET JEANS Buying upper-end clothing, cool stuff, Frye, cowboy boots, leather & consignment. Tues.Sun., noon-6 p.m. 7 Marble Ave., Burlington. 865-6223.
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GAS AND OIL DVD 10 songs, 30 min., b/w, reviewed by Seven Days. $10 to: GAO DVD, #3497, Theo. Roos. Hwy. Bolton, VT 05676. myspace.com/ gasandoil1. Support local bands.
FURNITURE
INSTRUCTION
2 ARMOIRES/ ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS 1st, 8’x3’x2’, 5 yrs. old, excellent condition. $500. 2nd, 8’x3’x2’, 2 yrs. old, like new. Orig. $10,000, asking $1000. 310-4611.
ANDY’S MOUNTAIN MUSIC Affordable, accessible instruction in guitar, mandolin, banjo, more. All ages/skill levels/ interests welcome! Supportive, professional teacher offering references, results, convenience. Andy Greene, 658-2462, guitboy75@hotmail. com, andysmountainmusic.com.
SPORTS EQUIPMENT SUSSEX CRICKET (WWS404190) Further to the consultation during the spring, the 3-yr. plan for Sussex Cricket has now been finalized. sussexcricket. co.uk.
WANT TO BUY
SEVENDAYSVT.COM 04.20.11-04.27.11 SEVEN DAYS C-6 CLASSIFIEDS
ANTIQUES/ COLLECTIBLES CASH FOR RECORDS LPs, 45 RPMs, stereos, concert posters, music memorabilia, instruments. Convenient drop-off in Burlington (corner of Church & Bank). Buy/sell/trade. Burlington Records, 802-881-0303.
DO YOU READTOM. COM? First you become a reader, soon you’ll become a believer, then we all get together, try to make this world better, my music unites the world: Seeking sponsorship, 978-317-8769.
ENTERTAINMENT/ TICKETS FOR SALE
MAKE YOUR HOME A ANTIQUES SANCTUARY Furniture, postcards, Is your mess10/3/09 making lg-valleypainting100709indd 1 11:15:17 AM pottery, cameras, toys, you crazy? Let us medical tools, lab glass, declutter, organize, photographs, slide & clean for you. DOC: rules, license plates, 382-8848, 912-257silver. Anything unusual 5610, DOCwithjenny@ or unique. Cash paid. gmail.com. Info: 802-859-8966.
buy this stuff
Johnny Azer, myspace. com/johnnyscottazer. Videos on YouTube, Jimmy Kimmel. johnny_azer@yahoo. com.
music
BANDS/ MUSICIANS CHECK OUT 4 HOT NEW LOCAL ARTISTS/ BANDS (1) Adam Wright, taxi.com/awright. (2) Jason Hanerfeld, reverbnation.com/ jasonhanerfeld, CD for sale. (3) Mojos Playground, reverbnation.com/ mojosplayground. (4)
BASS LESSONS For all levels/styles, beginners welcome! Learn technique, theory, songs & more in fun, professional setting. Years of teaching/ playing experience. Convenient Pine St. location w/ parking. Aram Bedrosian, 598-8861. GUITAR INSTRUCTION Berklee grad. w/ 30 yrs. teaching experience offers lessons in guitar, music theory & ear training. Individualized, step-by-step approach. All ages/styles/levels. www.rickbelford.com, 802-864-7195. GUITAR INSTRUCTION All styles/levels. Emphasis on developing strong technique, thorough musicianship, personal style. Paul Asbell (Unknown Blues Band, Kilimanjaro, UVM & Middlebury College faculty). Info: 802-862-7696, www. paulasbell.com. LEARN GUITAR FROM A PRO Active, experienced music professional accepting students of all ages. $20 for 1/2 hr. 951-1966.
art
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ACT 250 NOTICE MINOR APPLICATION 10 V.S.A., SECTIONS 6001 - 6092 On April 15, 2011, DELCO Properties, LLC filed application # 4C1245 for a project generally described as The construction of 750 linear feet of river bank stabilization involving placement of rip-rap stone along an eroding embankment of the Winooski River. This permit does not address the proposed future housing project or any criteria as they relate to this future project. The property is off of Windemere Way in the Town of Colchester, Vermont. The District 4 Environmental Commission will review this application under Act 250 Rule 51 — Minor Applications. Copies of the application and proposed permit are available for review at the Colchester Town Office, Chittenden County Regional Planning Commission located at 110 West Canal Street, Suite 202, Winooski, and the office listed below. The application and proposed permit may also be viewed on the Natural Resources Board’s web site (www.nrb.state. vt.us/lup) by clicking on “Act 250 Database” and entering the case number above. No hearing will be held unless, on or before Friday, May 13, 2011, a party notifies the District Commission of an issue or issues requiring the presentation of evidence at a hearing or the commission sets the matter for hearing on
its own motion. Any hearing request shall be in writing to the address below, shall state the criteria or subcriteria at issue, why a hearing is required and what additional evidence will be presented at the hearing. Any hearing request by an adjoining property owner or other interested person must include a petition for party status. Prior to submitting a request for a hearing, please contact the district coordinator at the telephone number listed below for more information. Prior to convening a hearing, the District Commission must determine that substantive issues requiring a hearing have been raised. Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law will not be prepared unless the Commission holds a public hearing. Should a hearing be held on this project and you have a disability for which you are going to need accommodation, please notify us by Friday, May 13, 2011. Parties entitled to participate are the Municipality, the Municipal Planning Commission, the Regional Planning Commission, affected state agencies, and adjoining property owners and other persons to the extent they have a particularized interest that may be affected by the proposed project under the 10 criteria. Non-party participants may also be allowed under 10 V.S.A. Section 6085(c)(5). Dated at Essex Junction, Vermont this 19th day of April, 2011. By /s/ Stephanie H. Monaghan Stephanie H. Monaghan Natural Resources Board District #4 Coordinator 111 West Street Essex Junction, VT 05452 T/ 802-879-5662 E/ stephanie. monaghan@state.vt.us ACT 250 NOTICE MINOR APPLICATION 10 V.S.A., SECTIONS 6001 - 6092 On April 7, 2011, Homestead Design, Inc. filed application # 4C1014-7 for a project generally described as The demolition of the Molloy-Delano house and the return of the area to a grassed state. The project is located at the VT Route 15 / Old Stage Road / Commonwealth Avenue intersection in the Town of Essex, VT. The District 4 Environmental
Commission will review this application under Act 250 Rule 51 — Minor Applications. Copies of the application and proposed permit are available for review at the Essex Town Office, Chittenden County Regional Planning Commission located at 110 West Canal Street, Suite 202, Winooski, and the office listed below. The application and proposed permit may also be viewed on the Natural Resources Board’s web site (www. nrb.state.vt.us/lup) by clicking on “Act 250 Database” and entering the case number above. No hearing will be held unless, on or before Friday, May 6, 2011, a party notifies the District Commission of an issue or issues requiring the presentation of evidence at a hearing or the commission sets the matter for hearing on its own motion. Any hearing request shall be in writing to the address below, shall state the criteria or subcriteria at issue, why a hearing is required and what additional evidence will be presented at the hearing. Any hearing request by an adjoining property owner or other interested person must include a petition for party status. Prior to submitting a request for a hearing, please contact the district coordinator at the telephone number listed below for more information. Prior to convening a hearing, the District Commission must determine that substantive issues requiring a hearing have been raised. Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law will not be prepared unless the Commission holds a public hearing. Should a hearing be held on this project and you have a disability for which you are going to need accommodation, please notify us by Friday, May 6, 2011. Parties entitled to participate are the Municipality, the Municipal Planning Commission, the Regional Planning Commission, affected state agencies, and adjoining property owners and other persons to the extent they have a particularized interest that may be affected by the proposed project under the 10 criteria. Non-party participants may also be allowed under 10 V.S.A. Section 6085(c)(5). Dated at Essex Junction, Vermont this 13th day of April, 2011. By /s/ Stephanie H. Monaghan
Stephanie H. Monaghan Natural Resources Board District #4 Coordinator 111 West Street Essex Junction, VT 05452 T/ 802-879-5662 E/ stephanie. monaghan@state.vt.us NOTICE OF SALE According to the terms and conditions of a Judgment and Decree of Foreclosure by Judicial Sale in the matter of Vermont Housing Finance Agency v. James R. Sheeran, et al., Vermont Superior Court, Chittenden Unit, Civil Division, Docket No. S1056-10 Cnc, foreclosing a mortgage given by James R. Sheeran and Rebecca Sheeran to North Country Federal Credit Union dated November 22, 2004 and recorded in Volume 896, Page 603 of the Burlington land records (the Mortgage) presently held Plaintiff Vermont Housing Finance Agency, for the purpose of foreclosing the Mortgage for breach of the conditions of the Mortgage, the real estate with an E-911 address of 180 Woodbury Road, Burlington, Vermont (the Property) will be sold at public auction at 8:30 a.m. on May 20, 2011 at the location of the Property. The Property to be sold is all and the same land and premises described in the Mortgage, and further described as follows: All and the same lands and premises conveyed to James R. Sheeran and Rebecca Sheeran by warranty deed of Alberta K. Sarabia dated November 22, 2004 and of record in Volume 896, Page 601 of the Burlington land records. The Property may be subject to easements, rights-of-way of record and other interests of record Terms of Sale: The Property will be sold to the highest bidder, who will pay $10,000.00 at sale in cash, certified, treasurer’s or cashier’s check made payable to Kohn Rath Blackwood & Danon, LLP Client Trustee Account (or by wire transfer, if arrangements for wire transfer are made in advance, confirmation of wire transfer is available before commencement of sale and bidder pays additional fees required for wire transfer) and will pay the balance of the highest bid price within thirty (30) days of the issuance of an Order of Confirmation by the Vermont Superior Court. The successful bidder
will be required to sign a Purchase Agreement and attached Vermont Lead Law Real Estate Transaction Disclosures. Copies of the Agreement and Disclosures are available by calling the telephone number below. If the successful bidder fails to complete the purchase of the Property as required by the Purchase Agreement, the $10,000.00 deposit will be forfeited to Plaintiff. The Property is sold “AS IS” and the successful bidder is required to purchase the Property whether or not the Property is in compliance with local, state or federal land use laws, regulations or permits. Title to the Property will be conveyed without warranties by Order of Confirmation. This sale is exempt from federal lead based hazards disclosure. 24 CFR Section 35.82. The mortgagor is entitled to redeem the Property at any time prior to the sale by paying the full amount due under the Mortgage, including the costs and expenses of sale. Other terms to be announced at the sale or inquire at Kohn Rath Blackwood & Danon, LLP 802-482-2905. Dated: March 11, 2011 David Rath, Esq. Attorney for Plaintiff NOTICE OF SALE According to the terms and conditions of a Judgment Order, Decree of Foreclosure and Order of Public Sale in the matter of New England Federal Credit Union v. Nancy M. Aucoin and Any Tenants Residing at 507 Cilley Hill Road, Underhill, VT, Vermont Superior Court, Chittenden Unit, Civil Division, Docket No. S1437-10 Cnc, foreclosing a mortgage given by Nancy M. Aucoin to New England Federal Credit Union dated August 22, 2006 and recorded in Volume 155, Page 1 of the Underhill Land Records (the Mortgage), the real estate with an E-911 address of 507 Cilley Hill Road, Underhill, Vermont (the Property) will be sold at public auction at 10:00 a.m. on May 9, 2011 at the location of the Property. The Property to be sold is all and the same land and premises described in the Mortgage, and further described as follows: All and the same lands and premises conveyed by warranty deed of Fernand G. Comtois and Marie-Paule Comtois
sevendaysvt.com/classifieds to Nancy M. Aucoin dated June 29, 2001 and recorded in Volume 105, Page 477 of the Underhill land records. The Property may be subject to easements, rights-of-way of record and other interests of record.
Property as required by the Purchase Agreement, the $10,000.00 deposit will be forfeited to Plaintiff. The Property is sold “AS IS” and the successful bidder is required to purchase the Property whether or not the Property is in compliance with local, state or federal land use laws, regulations or permits. Title to the Property will be conveyed without warranties by Order of Confirmation. This sale is exempt from federal lead based hazards disclosure. 24 CFR Section 35.82.
ZA-11-08 – Highway Sign Exemptions PROPOSED ZA-11-09 – Shared-Use Parking District Expansion Pursuant to 24 V.S.A. §4441 and §4444, notice is hereby given of a public hearing by the Burlington Planning Commission to hear comments on the following proposed amendment to the City of Burlington’s Comprehensive Development Ordinance. The public hearing will take place on Tuesday, May 10, 2011 beginning at 7:00pm in room #12, on the ground floor of Burlington City Hall, 149 Church Street, Burlington VT.
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(approved in ZA-11-06) in the Shared Use Parking District.
be advised that some of the information contained in this file may be needed later on for other purposes such as eligibility for Social Security Disability benefits.
The full text of the Burlington Comprehensive Development Ordinance and the proposed amendments are available for review at the Department of Planning and Zoning, City Hall, 149 Church Street, Burlington Monday through Friday 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. or on the department’s website at www.ci.burlington.vt.us/ planning.
Open 24/7/365. Post & browse ads at your convenience. 2011, at H.C.R. Box 323, Huntington, Vermont all and singular the premises described in said mortgage: To Wit: Being two contiguous parcels of land more particularly described as follows:
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No. 164
Difficulty - Medium
SUDOKU
BY JOSH REYNOLDS
Difficulty: Hard
BY JOSH REYNOLDS
DIFFICULTY THIS WEEK: HHH
Fill the grid using the numbers 1-6, only once in each row and column. The numbers in each heavily outlined “cage” must combine to produce the target number in the top corner, using the mathematical operation indicated. A one-box cage should be filled in with the target number in the top corner. A number can be repeated within a cage as long as it is not the same row or column.
Place a number in the empty boxes in such a way that each row acrosss, each column down and each 9-box square contains all of the numbers one to nine. The same numbers cannot be repeated in a row or column.
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H = moderate HH= challenging HHH= hoo, boy! —
8 3 4 9 6 2 5 7 1 6 9 5 7 4 1 2 8 3 1 7 2 3 8 5 4 9 6 9 2 6 5 1 4 8 3 7 FIND ANSWERS & crossword in the classifieds section 7 4 1 8 3 6 9 2 5 3 5 8 2 9 7 6 1 4
Wendover Financial Services Corporation By: Joshua B. Lobe, Esq. Lobe & Fortin, PLC 30 Kimball Ave., Ste. 306 South Burlington, VT 05403 STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT Chittenden Unit CIVIL DIVISION Docket No. S 0485-10 Cnc PHH Mortgage Corporation, Plaintiff v. Luke A. Wells , Nicole A. Delibac and Occupants
Terms of Sale: $10,000.00 to be paid in cash or cashier’s check by purchaser at the time of sale, with the balance due at closing. The sale is subject to taxes due and owing to the Town of Colchester. The mortgagor is entitled to redeem the premises at any time prior to the sale by paying the full amount due under the mortgage, including the costs and expenses of the sale. Other terms to be announced at the sale or inquire at Lobe & Fortin, 30 Kimball Ave., Ste. 306, South Burlington, VT 05403, 802 660-9000. DATED at South Burlington, Vermont this 11th day of April, 2011. PHH Mortgage Corporation By: Joshua B. Lobe, Esq. Lobe & Fortin, PLC 30 Kimball Ave., Ste. 306 South Burlington, VT 05403
NOTICE OF SALE By virtue and in execution of the Power of Sale contained in a certain mortgage given by Central Mortgage Company to Bradley S. Miller dated March 11, 2008 and recorded in Volume 608, Page 7 of the Land Records of the Town of Colchester, of which mortgage the undersigned is the present holder, for breach of the conditions of said mortgage and for the purposes of foreclosing the same will be sold at Public Auction at 9:00 A.M. on May 10, 2011, at 1185 Porters Point Road, Colchester, Vermont all and singular the premises described in said mortgage: To Wit: Being all and the same lands and premises conveyed to Bradley S. Miller and Hillary Boucher dated March 14, 2008, and recorded in Volume 608, Page 5 of the Town of Colchester Land Records. Terms of Sale: $10,000.00 to be paid in cash or cashier’s check by purchaser at the time of sale, with the balance due at closing. The sale is subject to taxes due and owing to the Town of Colchester. The mortgagor is entitled to redeem the premises at any time prior to the sale by paying the full amount due under the mortgage, including the costs and expenses of the sale. Other terms to be announced at the sale or inquire at Lobe & Fortin, 30 Kimball Ave., Ste. 306, South Burlington, VT 05403, 802 660-9000. DATED at South Burlington, Vermont this 11th day of April, 2011.
legals »
classifieds C-7
DIFFICULTY THIS WEEK: HHH
DATED at South Burlington, Vermont this 11th day of April, 2011.
To Wit: Being all and the same lands and premises conveyed to Larry Joseph Bushey and Jessica Hill Bushey by Warranty Deed from Samuel R. Pierce, Jr., as Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, for Commissioner of the Federal Housing Development dated June 12, 1985 and recorded in Volume 102, Page 216 of the Town of Colchester Land Records.
Central Mortgage Company, Plaintiff v. Bradley S. Miller, Hillary Boucher, Applied Bankand Occupants residing at 1185 Porters Point Road, Colchester, Vermont, Defendants
SEVEN DAYS
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Other terms to be announced at the sale or inquire at Lobe & Fortin, 30 Kimball Ave., Ste. 306, South Burlington, VT 05403, 802 660-9000.
By virtue and in execution of the Power of Sale contained in a certain mortgage given by PHH Mortgage Corporation to Luke A. Wells dated December 20, 2005 and recorded in Volume 517, Page 534 of the Land Records of the Town of Colchester, of which mortgage the undersigned is the present holder, for breach of the conditions of said mortgage and for the purposes of foreclosing the same will be sold at Public Auction at 9:30 A.M. on May 10, 2011, at 142 Bonanza Park, Colchester, Vermont all and singular the premises described in said mortgage:
STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT Chittenden Unit CIVIL DIVISION Docket No. S0653-10 Cnc
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NOTICE OF SALE
There’s no limit to ad length online.
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STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT Chittenden Unit Terms of Sale: The Parcel One CIVIL DIVISION Property will be sold to Being all and the same Docket No. S0098-10 the highest bidder, who land and premises Cnc will pay $10,000.00 at conveyed to Roy C. Blair sale in cash, certified, (now deceased) and Wendover Financial treasurer’s or cashier’s Marion T. Blair by Services Corporation, check made payable to Warranty Deed of Robert Plaintiff Kohn Rath Blackwood A. Lavallee and Gail P. v. & Danon, LLP Client Lavallee dated June 6, Marion T. Blair and Trustee Account (or 1978 and recorded in SPECIAL EDUCATION RECORDS Occupants residing by wire transfer, if Volume 28 at Page 440 DESTRUCTION NOTICE at H.C.R. Box 323, The mortgagor is arrangements for wire of the Land Records of Huntington, Vermont, entitled to redeem the transfer are made in the Town of Huntington. The Grand Isle Defendants advance, confirmation of Property at any time Supervisory Union is prior to the sale by wire transfer is available Parcel Two about to destroy special NOTICE OF SALE paying the full amount before commencement Pursuant to the requireBeing all and the same education records of due under the Mortgage, ments of 24 V.S.A. § of sale and bidder pays lands and premises students who have By virtue and in including the costs and additional fees required 4444(b): conveyed to Roy C. Blair moved or graduated. execution of the Power for wire transfer) and will expenses of sale. (now deceased) and If you received special of Sale contained in pay the balance of the (1) ZA-11-08 – Highway Marion T. Blair by education in the Grand a certain mortgage highest bid price within Other terms to be Sign Exemptions - The Warranty Deed of James Isle Supervisory Union given by Wendover announced at the sale thirty (30) days of the purpose of the proposed J. Rozon and Laura L. prior to July 1, 2003 Financial Services or inquire at Kohn Rath issuance of an Order amendment is to Rozon dated May 26, and wish to obtain Corporation to Marion of Confirmation by the Blackwood & Danon, LLP expand the exemption 1983 and recorded in your records, you must T. Blair dated April 14, Vermont Superior Court. 802-482-2905. regarding highway signs Volume 31 at Page 161 of do so prior to May 1, 1993 and recorded in The successful bidder and other traffic control the Land Records of the 2011. After that date Volume 46, Page 465 will be required to sign Dated: March 2, 2011 devices to apply to any Town of Huntington. the remaining records of the Land Records of a Purchase Agreement public right-of-way or will be destroyed. For the Town of Huntington, and attached Vermont thoroughfare. (Section David Rath, Esq. Terms of Sale: further information call of which mortgage Lead Law Real Estate 7.1.3 – Exemptions) Attorney for Plaintiff $10,000.00 to be paid in Gwyn Winchell, Grand the undersigned is Transaction Disclosures. cash or cashier’s check Isle Supervisory Union the present holder, for Copies of the Agreement PUBLIC HEARING (2) ZA-11-09 – by purchaser at the time at 802-372-6921. Please breach of the conditions and Disclosures are Shared-use parking of sale, with the balance NOTICE call Gwyn prior to pick of said mortgage and available by calling district expansion - The due at closing. The sale up since the files are in for the purposes of the telephone number proposed amendment is subject to taxes due Burlington storage. foreclosing the same will and owing to the Town below. If the successful is a modification to Map Comprehensive be sold at Public Auction of Huntington. bidder fails to complete 8.1.3-1 to include the Development Ordinance IMPORTANT: Please at 10:45 A.M. on May 10, the purchase of the E-LM district expansion PROPOSED The mortgagor is entitled to redeem the premises at any time Using the enclosed math operations as a guide, fill the grid Complete the following puzzle by using the prior to the sale by paying the full amount answers on p.C-8 using the numbers 1 - 6 only once in each row and numbers 1-9 only once in each row, column due under the mortgage, column. and 3 x 3 box. including the costs and expenses of the sale. 10+ 4 40x 2
residing at 142 Bonanza Park, Colchester, Vermont, Defendants
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will receive a response. Responses to submitted comments will be available to the public, by request, after the final permit is issued. A public hearing may be requested through the State Contact during the public comment period. The draft permit and public notice may be viewed and/or downloaded from our website: http://www. anr.state.vt.us/dec/ww/ Drafts.htm. STATE PERMITTING PROGRAM & CONTACT: UIC Program Coordinator, ATTN: Ernest Christianson, Wastewater Management Division, 103 South Main Street, Sewing Building, Waterbury VT 056710405. Phone: (802) 241-3027. FURTHER INFORMATION
4t-buyahouse-cmyk.indd 1 2004 and recorded in
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SEVENDAYSVT.COM
Central Mortgage Company By: Joshua B. Lobe, Esq. Lobe & Fortin, PLC 30 Kimball Ave., Ste. 306 South Burlington, VT 05403 STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT Chittenden Unit CIVIL DIVISION Docket No. S848-09 Cnc Universal Mortgage Corporation, Plaintiff v. Benjamin Scribner, Chittenden Trust Company d/b/a Chittenden Bank and Occupants residing at 26 Main Street, Milton, Vermont, Defendants
C-8 CLASSIFIEDS
NOTICE OF SALE By virtue and in execution of the Power of Sale contained in a certain mortgage given by Universal Mortgage Corporation to Benjamin Scribner dated April 23,
Volume 294, Page 462 of the Land Records of the Town of Milton, of which mortgage the undersigned is the present holder, for breach of the conditions of said mortgage and for the purposes of foreclosing the same will be sold at Public Auction at 10:00 A.M. on May 17, 2011, at 26 Main Street, Milton, Vermont all and singular the premises described in said mortgage: To Wit: Being all and the same land and premises conveyed to Milton Family Community Center, Inc. by Warranty Deed of George P. Stokes dated July 1, 1987 and of record in Volume 105, Page 558 of the Milton Land Records. Terms of Sale: $10,000.00 to be paid in cash or cashier’s check by purchaser at the time of sale, with the balance due at closing. Proof of financing for the balance of the purchase to be provided at the time of sale. The sale is subject to taxes due and owing to the Town of Milton. The mortgagor is entitled to redeem the premises at any time prior to the sale by paying the full amount due under the mortgage,
including the costs and expenses of the sale. Other terms to be announced at the sale or inquire at Lobe & Fortin, 30 Kimball Ave., Ste. 306, South Burlington, VT 05403, 802 660-9000. DATED at South Burlington, Vermont this 18th day of April, 2011. Universal Mortgage Corporation By: Joshua B. Lobe, Esq. Lobe & Fortin, PLC 30 Kimball Ave., Ste. 306 South Burlington, VT 0540 STATE OF VERMONT AGENCY OF NATURAL RESOURCES DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION WASTEWATER MANAGEMENT DIVISION 103 SOUTH MAIN STREET, SEWING BUILDING WATERBURY, VT 05671-0405 PUBLIC NOTICE Notice: A draft Underground Injection Control (UIC) permit has been prepared for disposal of stormwater under the provisions of the Underground Injection Control Rule, Chapter
11 of the12/10/10 Environmental 3:51 PM Protection Regulations of the Department of Environmental Conservation. Public Comment Period: April 20, 2011 to May 20, 2011 Permittee Information: Applicant: City of Burlington Department of Public Works Attention: Steve Roy, P.E. 53 LaValley Lane Burlington, VT 05401
The complete application, proposed permit, and other information are on file and may be inspected at the VANR, Waterbury Office. The draft permit, public notice and fact sheet, if applicable, may be viewed and downloaded from our website at http://www.anr.state. vt.us/dec/ww/Drafts. htm. Copies, obtained by calling (802) 241-3822, will be made at a cost based upon the current Secretary of State, Official Fee Schedule for Copying Public Records, from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. FINAL/ACTION APPEAL At the conclusion of the public notice period and after consideration of additional information received during the public notice period, the VANR will make a final
determination to issue or to deny the permit. Pursuant to 10 V.S.A. Chapter 220, any appeal of this decision must be filed with the clerk of the Environmental Court within 30 days of the date of the decision. The appellant must attach to the Notice of Appeal the entry fee of $225.00, payable to the state of Vermont. The Notice of Appeal must specify the parties taking the appeal and the statutory provision under which each party claims party status; must designate the act or decision appealed from; must name the Environmental Court; and must be signed by the appellant or their attorney. In addition, the appeal must give the address or location and description of the property, project or facility with which the appeal is concerned and the name of the applicant or any permit involved in the appeal. The appellant must also serve a copy of the Notice of Appeal in accordance with Rule 5(b) (4)(B) of the Vermont Rules for Environmental Court Proceedings. For further information, see the Vermont Rules for Environmental Court Proceedings, available on line at www.vermontjudiciary. org. The address for the Environmental Court is 2418 Airport Rd # 1, Barre, VT - (802) 828-1660 Commissioner Department of Environmental Conservation
PUZZLE ANSWERS: FROM P.C-5
CIVIL DIVISION Docket No. S 1015-08 Cnc EverHome Mortgage Company, Plaintiff v. Gerald A. Bruno, Jr., E*Trade Bank, First Horizon Home Loan Corporation and Occupants residing at 76 Leeway Circle, St. George, Vermont, Defendants
By virtue and in execution of the Power of Sale contained in a certain mortgage given by EverHome Mortgage Company to Gerald A. Bruno, Jr. dated July 9, 2003 and recorded in Volume 25, Page 387 of the Land Records of the Town of St. George, of which mortgage the undersigned is the present holder, for breach of the conditions of said mortgage and for the purposes of foreclosing the same will be sold at Public Auction at 8:00 A.M. on May 10, 2011, at 76 Leeway Circle, St. George, Vermont all and singular the premises described in said mortgage:
Comments regarding the draft UIC permit #6-0110 must be made in writing and received by 4:30 p.m. on May 20, 2011. Written comments should be submitted to the listed State Contact. All comments will be considered in making the final decision and
Other terms to be announced at the sale or inquire at Lobe & Fortin, 30 Kimball Ave., Ste. 306, South Burlington, VT 05403, 802 660-9000. DATED at South Burlington, Vermont this 11th day of April, 2011. EverHome Mortgage Company By: Joshua B. Lobe, Esq. Lobe & Fortin, PLC 30 Kimball Ave., Ste. 306 South Burlington, VT 05403
The contents of storage unit(s) 01-03511 located at 28 Adams Dr, Williston, VT 05495, will be sold on the 28th of the month of April, 2011 to satisfy the debt of Graham Brinson. Any person claiming a right to the goods may pay To Wit: the amount claimed Calcoku Being all and Using the the same enclosed math operations as a guide, fill the grid due and reasonable using the numbers 1 - 6 only once in each row and land and premise expenses before the column. conveyed to Gerald A. sale, in which 10+ 4 40x 2÷ case the Bruno, Jr., by Warranty sale may not occur. Deed of Anne M. Felber 52÷ and Michael A. Felber dated February 29, 2003 1- Book 24, 2 ÷ 11+ and of record at page 440 of the Town of Sudoku St. George Complete Land the following puzzle by using the 2 ÷ Records. 12numbers 1-9 only once in each row, column and180x 3 x 32xbox. 24x
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Difficulty - Medium
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No. 164
Discharge: Stormwater PUBLIC COMMENTS:
The mortgagor is entitled to redeem the premises at any time prior to the sale by paying the full amount due under the mortgage, including the costs and expenses of the sale.
NOTICE OF SALE
Facility Type: Infiltration of Stormwater Facility Location: Champlain Housing Trust Riverside Avenue and North Winooski Avenue Burlington, VT
Terms of Sale: $10,000.00 to be paid in cash or cashier’s check by purchaser at the time of sale, with the balance due at closing. The sale is subject to taxes due and owing to the Town of St. George.
STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT Chittenden Unit
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C-9 04.20.11-04.27.11
ATTENTION RECRUITERS: POST YOUR JOBS AT: PRINT DEADLINE: FOR RATES & INFO:
SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POSTMYJOB NOON ON MONDAYS (INCLUDING HOLIDAYS) MICHELLE BROWN, 802-865-1020 X21, MICHELLE@SEVENDAYSVT.COM
YOUR TRUSTED LOCAL SOURCE. SEVENDAYSVT.COM/JOBS Front Desk Agents
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Quality Inn in Shelburne is hiring. Competitive pay, experience required.
PT for CARQUEST of South Burlington. Drive store vehicle. Knowledge of area helpful. Drug test, good driving record required. Apply at 1725 Williston Road, South Burlington, or call Taylor at 802-658-3292.
1-CarQuest-042011.indd 1
4/18/11 2:44:05 1-Goldfield-042011.indd PM 1
Please apply in person at Quality Inn, 2572 Shelburne Rd., Shelburne, and bring references.
4/15/11 2:42:54 1-place042011.indd PM 1 the well-being 4/18/11 1-qualityinn081810.indd 10:57 AM Howardcenter improves of children, adults, families and communities.
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NOTICE Tax OF Auditor Unemployment Make more than a living. PUBLIC SERVICE BOARD VermontMake Department a difference.of Labor VACANCY
developmental ServiceS
Unemployment Tax Au Make more than a livin VermontMake Department a difference.of
IntensIve CommunIty support Worker (2 posItIons) 23-year-old dedicated equestrian needs 25 hours of support in northern Chittenden County. Ideal candidate must have experience supporting individuals with PDD & MH co-occurring issues. Near-peer-age or young at heart female needed to be integral part of a multidisciplinary team providing innovate self-care and independent living skills. Benefits eligible.
The term ofcan Chair of the Vermont Public Service Board has The right open opportunities foropportunity you to grow, excel, and reach your full There’s an job exciting and challenging within our Employer Serexpired. interested applying position potential.Persons Working for the State ofin Vermont allows youthis the freedom andmust creativity vices/Unemployment Insurance Division forfor an accounting/auditing prosubmit anDuties application to the Nominating Board. to use your skills and enthusiasm inJudicial an array of disciplines to keep this fessional. include, but are notenormous limited to,living. obtaining wage records, Make more than a Applications may be obtained by contacting Brenda Chamberlin one of theaudits, best states in the country to live andreports/monies, work. employer collecting delinquent fraud investigavia phone at 802-828-1152, via email at Make aordifference. tions, reportis not writing and verifying health-care reporting perlevels statutes, The work only challenging and fulfilling, it’s rewarding onasmany — brenda.chamberlin@state.vt.us. Completed applications bothThe professionally and socially. And with our outstanding benefits package, regulations and policies. In addition to general knowledge regarding ac- within (including an original and 11 copies) must be delivered before The right job can open opportunities for you to grow, excel, and reach your full can open you to grow, excel, There’sright an job exciting andopportunities challengingforopportunity designed to meet health and financial needs, you’ll the flexibility tothorbe 12:00 noon on your May 18 to: counting, payroll systems and returns, candidates must possess potential. Working for the State of tax Vermont allows you thehave freedom and creativity potential. Working for the State oftimeofVermont allows youaccou the fre vices/Unemployment Division for an able toyour manage your work/life balance, leaving you toWorking enjoy allto that comes to use skills andthat enthusiasm inMicrosoft an Insurance enormous array disciplines keep this ough computer skills include and Excel. experience John Kellner, Chair with living in Vermont. Bring us your drive, ambition, and and we’ll put one of the best states inskills the country toenthusiasm live and work. with the public, time management skills and theare ability toenormous work indepento use your and ininitiative, an array of di Judicial Nominating fessional. Duties include, butBoard not limited to, obtain them to work for you. dently are essential to success and in the position. Candidates mustlevels be able O’Neill Kellner & Green The one work is not only challenging fulfilling, it’s rewarding on many — of theaudits, best states in the country to live andreports/monie work. th employer collecting delinquent Floor 84 Pine Street, 4Tax read interpret complex policies, case law, statutes and provide clear, Unemployment Auditor both professionally and socially. And with our outstanding benefits package, Theand State of Vermont is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Make more than aOnly living. PO Box 5359 accurate to employers and claimants. applicants who apply designedanswers to meet your health and financial needs, you’ll have the flexibility to be tions, reportisMake writing and verifying health-care reporti The work not only challenging and fulfilling, it’s rewardin Vermont Department of Labor Burlington, VT 05402 a difference. able to manage your work/life balance, leaving you time to enjoy all that comes on-line at www.vtstatejobs.info will be considered.
This dedicated fisherman is looking for up to 32 hours of support in the S. Burlington area. This 53-year-old man enjoys grabbing a cup of coffee, attending sporting events and visiting a local horse farm. Ideal candidate has considerable experience supporting individuals with challenging behaviors and is able to set and maintain solid boundaries ...and loves fishing! Clear communication and consistent motivational skills required. Hours can be between 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and/ or 4 – 7 p.m., weekdays. speCIalIzed CommunIty support Worker (2 posItIons) 20-year-old woman who enjoys movies, Zumba, art classes and animals needs 20 afternoon hours of support in the Essex/Burlington areas. Ideal candidate is a near-peer-age female who enjoys being active and has considerable clinical experience. Crisis support experience and an unflappable attitude strongly desired. Benefits eligible.
Make more than a livin Make a difference.
50-year-old man passionate about fishing, hiking, photography and is planning a Caribbean vacation, needs 25 flexible hours of weekday support. This guy does best with someone who has clear communication and boundaries, is creative and light hearted, and is willing to drop a line in or hike up Camels Hump. Providing transportation required. Benefits eligible.
www.vtstatejobs.info both socially. our outstandin regulations and policies. Into grow, addition to general knowl with livingright inprofessionally Vermont. Bring usopen yourand drive, ambition, andAnd initiative, and we’ll put job can forwith you tofull grow, This isan a six-year appointment. While are no express statutory The The right job can open foropportunities youthere excel, and reach your There’s exciting andopportunities challenging opportunity within our Employer Ser- excel, Reference job posting #25002. Burlington Full-time. them to work for you. education or jobpayroll experience requirements, an applicant must designed to meet health and financial needs, you’ll potential. Working for the Stateyour of Vermont allows you the freedom andallows creativity vices/Unemployment Insurance Division forand an accounting/auditing procounting, systems tax returns, candidates potential. Working for the State of Vermont you thehav fre Application deadline: 10/15/08 demonstrate the ability to assimilate and understand a large to your skills and enthusiasm in an enormous array of disciplines tovolume keep this fessional. Duties include, but are not limited to, obtaining wage records, Theuse State of Vermont is an Equal Opportunity Employer. able to manage your work/life balance, leaving you time toW Make more than alegal living. ofone highly technical including principles, and and totheuse skills and enthusiasm in an enormous array of di ough computer skills include Microsoft Excel. of bestyour states ininformation, the country tothat live and work. employer audits, collecting delinquent reports/monies, fraud investigaaccounting, financial and engineering data.us The applicant should with in Vermont. Bring your ambition, and ini Make ain difference. one ofliving the best states the country to drive, live and work. tions, report writing and verifying health-care reporting asmany per statutes, The work is not only challenging and fulfilling, it’s rewarding on levels —the abilit with the public, time management skills and also possess the ability to write clearly on complicated subjects, to www.vtstatejobs.info boththem professionally andopportunities socially. Andforwith our outstanding benefits package, regulations and Ininaddition toyou general regarding conduct himself/herself a judicial manner, toknowledge manage complex to work for you. The right job canpolicies. open to grow, excel, and reach your fullacdently are essential to success infreedom the position. Candi The work isa the notState only challenging and fulfilling, designed to meet your health and financial needs, you’ll have the toit’s be rewardin utility litigation in quasi-judicial hearing process, and toflexibility manage the counting, payroll systems and returns, candidates must possess thorpotential. Working for of tax Vermont allows you the and creativity personnel, budget and caseload of enormous the Public Service Board. While able toyour manage your work/life balance, leaving you time toWorking enjoy allto that comes to use skills and enthusiasm inMicrosoft an array ofAnd disciplines keep thisoutstandin ough computer skills that include and Excel. experience read and interpret complex policies, case law, statutes both professionally socially. our The State of inBoard Vermont istoand an Equal Opportunity Employer. the Public Service Chair has traditionally been anwith attorney, with living in Vermont. Bring us your drive, ambition, and initiative, and we’ll put one of the best states the country live and work. with the public, time management skills and the ability to work indepenadmission tofor the Barmeet is not your required. them to work you. accurate answers toand and claimants. Onlyhav ap designed to health and financial needs, you’ll dently are essential success inemployers the position. Candidates must be able The work is not only to challenging fulfilling, it’s rewarding on many levels — Applicants who are found qualified by the Judicial Nominating read and interpret complex policies, case law,outstanding statutes provide clear, able to your work/life balance, leaving you time to both professionally socially. And with our benefits package, The State of Vermont isand an Equal Opportunity Employer. on-line atmanage www.vtstatejobs.info will and be considered. Board will have their names submitted to the Governor, who has the accurate answers to employers and claimants. Only applicants who apply designed to meet your health and financial needs, you’ll have the flexibility to www.vtstatejobs.info power of appointment. An appointment made by the Governor is be and ini with living in Vermont. Bring us time your drive, ambition, able to manage your work/life balance, leaving you to enjoy all that comes on-line be considered. subjectattowww.vtstatejobs.info confirmation by thewill Vermont Senate. www.vtstatejobs.info withthem living into Vermont. Bring us your drive, ambition, initiative, and we’ll put Reference job and posting #25002. Bu work for you. The State of Vermont offers an excellent total compensation package.
mental HealtH and SubStance abuSe employment Counselor Full-time position working in an evidence-based supported employment program assisting individuals recovering from mental illness with their employment and educational goals. Responsibilities include community-based assessment, skill developing a wide range of jobs in the community and a desire to work on a multidisciplinary team. Bachelor’s in human services, two years human service work experience, valid Vermont driver’s license, registered vehicle and knowledge of community resources required. Knowledge of the Burlington business community preferred. laboratory teChnICIan — ChIttenden ClInIC The Chittenden Clinic methadone program is seeking one female and one male lab technician. Primary responsibilities include collecting samples for drug testing, analyzing and reporting data, ordering supplies and other administrative duties as needed. Candidate must be a reliable team player. Part-time afternoon positions. High school diploma required. supervIsory ClInICIan substanCe abuse — ChIttenden ClInIC Full-time position providing clinical services to clients with a substance abuse diagnosis, as well as to clients with co-occurring disorders. Individual will provide clinical evaluations and make referrals for clients to appropriate services; develop and review individualized treatment plans; provide clinical supervision to one or more colleagues; and perform clinical and/or administrative tasks, including completion of clinical records and follow-up on authorization of treatment services from managed care companies. Afternoon or evening coverage may be required. Master’s degree required. LADC required, LCMHC preferred.
Reference job posting #25002. Burlington - Full-time. them to work for you. job application To apply, use the online at www.careers.vermont.gov, or contact the
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Department of human resources, recruitment Services at (800) 640-1657 (voice) Application deadline: 10/15/08
TheofState is an(TTy/relay Equal Opportunity Employer. (800) Opportunity 253-0191 Service). The State VermontofisVermont anorEqual Employer.
Please visit our website at www.howardcentercareers.org for more details or to apply online. Applicants must apply for positions electronically. Paper applications are not accepted. Job positions are updated daily. HowardCenter is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Minorities, people of color and persons with disabilities encouraged to apply. EOE/TTY. We offer competitive pay and a comprehensive benefits package to qualified employees. 9T-howard-fullagency042011.indd 1
1
GALLERY DIRECTOR
The STaTe of VermonT iS an equal www.vtstatejobs.info opporTuniT y employer.
4/18/11 5:33:29 PM
www.vtstatejobs.info
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attention recruiters:
C-10
post your jobs at sevendaysvt.com/jobs for fast results. or, contact michelle brown: michelle@sevendaysvt.com
04.20.11-04.27.11
Established women’s clothing store on Church Street looking for creative person with great sense of style and ability to build client relationships. Become part of our management team, enjoying friendly environment, flexible scheduling and generous clothing discounts. Contact Lorre at Expressions, expressionsvt@yahoo.com or 802-864-0414.
2h-Expressions-041311.indd 1
Job Developer
4/11/11 3:04:42 PM
Way2Work, a leading supported employment program for individuals with developmental disabilities, is seeking a dynamic, creative and outgoing individual to join their team as a job developer. The successful candidate will be responsible for supporting individuals in developing career goals and job-seeking skills, securing employment, and on-the-job training. In addition, candidate will collaborate with businesses to build partnerships for long-term, community-based employment. Must demonstrate reliability, strong communication skills, and the ability to solve problems professionally and effectively. Great work environment, fully benefited 40-hour position. Submit resume and cover letter to Michelle Paya, mpaya@ccs-vt.org. Champlain Community Services 512 Troy Ave, Colchester, VT 05446 (802) 655-0511 Fax: (802) 655-5207 EO E
Champlain Community Services
Lamoille Community Connections is a designated provider of developmental and mental health services, now celebrating 40+ years of services to the Lamoille County community. We currently have the following opportunities available:
ASAP
Are you looking for a rewarding career? Lamoille Community Connections is seeking local residents to join our team as members of our new and exciting program, the Public Inebriate Program of Lamoille County, known as ASAP (Alcohol Substance Abuse Program), which has a variety of immediate openings available. We will train qualified candidates for these positions. LCC will be collaborating with community partners to provide substance abuse/mental health services for individuals and their families. The positions available are Recovery Care Coordinator, which is a part-time position (25 hours per week) that will refer program participants to the appropriate community providers ensuring continuity of care. The Recovery Care Coordinator will contact participants following release to coordinate services to ensure positive outcomes. The Public Inebriate Screeners are on-call, stipend positions and in addition to the stipend will receive an hourly rate for actual hours worked. These positions require flexibility in scheduling. The program will provide screenings, assessments and referrals for public inebriates. A minimum of three years of related experience such as law enforcement, corrections, military or substance abuse counseling is preferred.
Adult Outpatient Therapist
Lamoille Community Connections has an immediate opening for a full-time licensed Therapist to work in our Adult Outpatient Program (AOP), combined with our Community Rehabilitation and Treatment (CRT) Program, which serves adults with severe and persistent mental health and/or co-occurring substance abuse issues. The Therapist will work with a team of Case Managers, Crisis Intervention/Prevention Specialists and a Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner during weekly case review meetings. Responsibilities include intakes, assessments and diagnostics, in addition to managing a caseload of approximately 20 to 25 individuals.
Case Management Position
Lamoille Community Connections has an immediate opening for a case management position in our residential program. The job duties will include assistance with transitioning adult consumers into the community. The ideal candidate will have the ability to provide counseling and support services, which include case management, outreach and supported employment. Working as a team member with residential staff, as well as flexibility in scheduling, is required. A bachelor’s degree in psychology or a related field is required.
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Skilled Maintenance Technician
Burlington College, a private liberal arts college on Lake Champlain, seeks a professional to join our facilities team. Duties include performing a wide variety of building maintenance and repair tasks such as plumbing, mechanical and electrical work; HVAC repair and installation tasks; and assisting with mechanical systems. The ideal candidate will have excellent communication skills, attention to detail and exceptional follow through. The ability to maintain a high level of confidentiality, a valid driver’s license, clean driving record and clear background check are required.
Lamoille Community Connections has several openings for the position of Behavior Interventionist. These positions are full time and year round and offer an excellent benefit package. The Behavior Interventionist is responsible for 1:1 therapeutic intervention with school-age children who have developmental disabilities and/or emotional/behavioral disorders in school and community settings. A bachelor’s degree is required with a minimum of two years’ related experience.
Community Integrationist Specialists
Lamoille Community Connections Developmental Services Program is currently recruiting individuals to work as Community Integration Specialists in our Developmental Services program. Community Integration Specialists provide services and supports to persons with developmental disabilities. Community Integration Specialists help promote development and growth of practical life skills including self-help, socialization and the adaptive skills necessary to reside successfully in community-based settings. Transportation of consumers to various community locations is a necessary component of the CIS work. These positions are substitute positions that may lead to part-time positions.
Substitute Residential Position
For a full job description, please visit www.burlington.edu.
Lamoille Community Connections has an immediate opening for an on-call substitute position in our Group Home, which is located in Johnson, Vt. This position works as part of our team to maintain a caring and therapeutic environment for our residents. Responsibilities include implementation of treatment plans and documentation to meet standards for licensing and funding. Flexibility in scheduling is required.
Application deadline is Friday, April 22, 2011.
Copley House Care Worker
Lamoille Community Connections’ residential home Copley House, located in Morrisville, has an opening for a full-time, 40-hourper-week position. This person will work as a member of the Copley House Team to ensure safety for all residents. Responsibilities include establishing/maintaining a caring, respectful therapeutic atmosphere, implementing treatment plans and maintaining books/charts, and building to meet standards for licensing and funding. This position requires the ability to work a flexible schedule that includes overnights and weekends.
To apply, send a cover letter and resume to hr@burlington.edu, or Burlington College Human Resources 351 North Ave., 2nd Floor, Burlington, VT 05401 Burlington College is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
To apply for any of these positions, send your resume to Director of Human Resources, LCC, 72 Harrel St., Morrisville, VT 05661, or email janem@lamoille.org. An Equal Opportunity Employer
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new jobs posted daily! CAPTIVE INSURANCE ACCOUNTANT/ ACCOUNT MANAGER
TOWN O F E SSE X
Community Development Secretary THE TOWN OF ESSEX is accepting applications/resumes for a full-time position in the Community Development Department. The ideal candidate will have knowledge of Microsoft Word, Excel, Outlook and the Internet. Duties include the review of applications for accuracy and completeness, including zoning permits, septic permits, Zoning Board of Adjustment applications and planning commission applications; calculates and collects fees for same. Enters application progress data for zoning and subdivision approvals in computer; enters and maintains building permit data in computer. The position requires an individual willing to work in a fast-paced environment and who possesses a strong attention to detail. Hours: M-F 8 - 4:30. Union position. Send letters of interest to Patrick Scheidel, Town Manager, 81 Main St., Essex Jct., VT 05452 or email amyers@essex.org. Position open until filled. EOE.
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USA Risk Group of Vermont Inc., a leading captive insurance management company, is seeking an account manager for its Burlington or Montpelier, Vt., location. The successful applicant will be responsible for financial statement preparation and the daily administration of a portfolio of captive insurance clients. Ideal candidates should possess some or all of the following qualifications: • BA/BS in accounting • Certified public accountant with at least two years of financial statement preparation or comparable experience • A sound knowledge of GAAP and insurance accounting principles • Statutory or alternative market insurance accounting experience Interested applicants should forward a copy of their resume, professional qualifications and salary history to advert@vim.usarisk.com.
SHARE OUR PAIN
04.20.11-04.27.11
Roofers & Laborers Year-round, full-time positions. Good wages and benefits. Pay negotiable with experience. Women and minorities encouraged to apply. Apply in person: A.C. Hathorne Co. 252 Ave. C, Williston, VT 802-862-6473
Executive Assistant 4/4/11 11:42:28 AM
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Seeking an executive assistant for the Editor of a bimonthly scholarly journal for a medical society with an international membership. Offices located in downtown Burlington, VT. Full-time position requires at least 2-3 years experience as an executive assistant, high proficiency with Microsoft Office Suite (including Access) and database management, and familiarity with medical terminology. Bachelor’s degree preferred. Candidate must be a professional, detail-oriented, self-starter, possessing excellent oral and written communication, interpersonal, and organizational skills, as well as a strong team player, able to work in tandem with the Editor and colleagues in Oak Brook, IL headquarters. Send cover letter and resume to Jessica Porter at jporter@rsna.org.
Copywriter wanted Spike advertising is experiencing growing pains and we’re looking for an accomplished copywriter to help us work through it.
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You work equally well in print, online and broadcast/video, and have the portfolio to prove it. You play well with others. And you’re: • Prolific at developing concepts that are on strategy, and writing copy that connects with people • Experienced or very interested in broadcast production • Equally excited about writing a small-space ad, an Adwords campaign or Super Bowl commercial • Capable of taking a good idea and making it great
HOSPICE RN/FULL TIME: This is a tough job. It is also a rewarding job like no other. This is your opportunity to enhance, uphold and bear witness to a life; your patient’s life. It is an opportunity to assist your patient with the transition from life to death. It is an important job, important to your patient and your patient’s family members. Are you ready?
We are a compact and powerful ad company. We are dog friendly. And we offer a: • • • • •
Competitive salary Health and dental plan Flexible combined time-off program 401(k) Pension Plan All the coffee you can handle without convulsing
COMMUNITY HEALTH NURSES: These full-time nursing positions are additionally rewarding jobs awaiting the right candidate allowing for your keen patient assessment, the desire to focus on your patient and the independence your experience has prepared you for. Two years’ medical-surgical experience strongly desired.
PHYSICAL THERAPIST:
If you think beyond the given task and embrace a “be different or don’t bother” mantra, please shoot your résumé, best work samples and salary requirements to copy@spikeadvertising.com Please note that we will only be contacting qualified individuals, so we are taking this opportunity to thank all who apply. Thanks.
SpIke Advertising 27 Kilburn Street Burlington, VT 05401 spikeadvertising.com
$2500 SIGN ON BONUS! Are you ready to give your patient your undivided attention? Are you ready to assist your patient in becoming successful and independent after surgery or injury? Are you ready to work one-on-one with individuals in their homes? Prior PT experience in adult OP/IP rehabilitation. FOR YOUR IMMEDIATE CONSIDERATION, PLEASE SEND RESUME TO cpaquette@achhh.org OR DIRECTLY TO ACHHH, P.O. BOX 754, MIDDLEBURY, VT 05753 (802) 388-7259. VISIT US AT www.achhh.org. 7-AddCtyHospice-040611.indd 1
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attention recruiters:
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post your jobs at sevendaysvt.com/jobs for fast results. or, contact michelle brown: michelle@sevendaysvt.com
04.20.11-04.27.11
Web Developer
Private Duty
LPNs
CALLING ALL NIGHT OWLS!
EnErgy AnAlyst
Democracy for America is a grassroots powerhouse working to change our country and the Democratic Party from the bottomup, and we are seeking a creative web programmer to join our small but growing Technology Department.
LPNs CALLING ALLThe Tech Department at DFA develops and maintains our primary creates organizing tools for our members and staff, and NIGHT OWLS!website, integrates third-party tools such as our email platform and financial
Seeking a reliable, professional LPN to provide skilled nursing for a sweet 19-year-old girl. Private home is 25 minutes north of Burlington. Immediate opening
forsupport database with the rest of our web systems. Although we are
Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays, private duty nighta small team, we utilize interesting and scalable tools to do our work: Ruby on Rails, a workflow strongly dependent on version control (Git/ 9:30 p.m. to 8:30 a.m. shift 25 minutes north Github), a well-organized work tracking/ticketing system and cloud $27/hr. (Thurs./Fri.) of Burlington. Wecomputing (Heroku and Amazon Web Services). You won’t find the $30/hr. (Sat.)
are seeking Call 893-6368, or email one orcrusty code or headache-inducing legacy applications so common at many smaller organizations. Nursingad38@aol.com. two reliable nurses
to provide care for This a is the ideal position for a talented programmer who is an inventive self-starter with a passion for using technology for social good. sweet 15-year-old girl. 2v-Blanchard-042011.indd 1 4/18/11 10:41:03 AMCompetitive salary is commensurate with experience. Benefits include Thursday, 100% personal health insurance coverage, paid vacation and holidays, Friday & Saturday, employer contribution to retirement plan, a fun and dynamic work and the chance to make real change happen. For more 9:30pm to 8:30am environment, information, please visit DemocracyForAmerica.com/jobs.
Marketing t istan(Thurs./Fri.) Ass$27.86/hr. $30.65/hr. (Sat.)
Ensave, Inc., a richmond, Vermont-based agricultural energy efficiency consulting firm, is looking for an Energy Analyst for agricultural energy efficiency and pollution prevention projects. the Energy Analyst works closely with our program development and program operations teams. this position requires the ability to accommodate a fluctuating workload that is heavy at times, and to adjust one’s schedule accordingly in order to reach goals. this position reports primarily to the lead Energy Engineer. For a full job description, please visit www.ensave.com/job-opportunities.html.
Position requirements include a bachelor’s degree in mechanical, electrical, or agricultural engineering; experience will be considered in lieu of educational requirements. Effective analytical and problemsolving skills; Expertise with Ms Excel; some travel may be required. salary commensurate with experience. Benefits include health, dental, life insurance, paid vacation and holidays, simple IrA.
To apply, please email a resume and cover letter to careers@democracyforamerica.com.
send resume and cover letter to garyg@ensave.com.
DFA is an equal-opportunity employer. This position begins immediately and applications will be accepted until the position is filled.
Call 893-6368 or nursingad38@aol.com
PT Marketing Assistant needed at the Coaching Center of 5v-democracyAmerica-042011.indd I m m e d I a t e O p e n I n1g s 4/18/11 Vermont in Winooski. 15 hours a week, on site. Must have an entrepreneurial mindset Burlington School District and be willing to learn. MAC proficiency, graphics and HTML Would you like to decide where and when you work? Would you like the coding experience a plus. opportunity to make a difference in education while earning competitive
substitute teachers
Send resumes to lea@coachingcenterofvt.com.
LNA
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Full- and part-time positions Days or evenings. Come work with a great team. Wages based on experience. Differentials: $2 for evenings. Come in for a tour! Or send resume to Sue.Fortin@kindredhealthcare. com. Birchwood Terrace Healthcare 43 Starr Farm Rd. Burlington, Vt 05408 802-863-6384 EOE
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pay? If you have a minimum of a high school diploma, then you may already be qualified to be a substitute teacher! Kelly educational staffing (Kes) is excited to partner with Burlington school district to supply and manage a qualified substitute teacher workforce. Right now, Kes is hiring substitute teachers and substitute paraeducators to work in the Burlington school district. since 1997, Kelly services has been providing qualified, trained and background-screened substitute teachers to K-12 schools in the United states and the United Kingdom through its Kes service line. We have filled nearly 3 million classrooms in 45 states, with 18,000 substitutes in more than 2900 schools. Here are just a few of the terrific advantages of working with Kes: Weekly pay — stability of regular, frequent paychecks • direct deposit — a time-saving convenience • 401(k) plan — saving for your future • Flexible work schedule — work when you want • preference of schools — work where you want • schedule your assignments — online or over the phone • Vacation/holiday bonus pay — the bonus increases the more you work • myKelly.com — online access to information and applications specifically for you • substitute teacher training and handbook — at no cost to you minimum requirements include high school diploma • Fingerprinting and Criminal Background screen, including the national sex Offender Registry. If you are interested in this opportunity, email 6014@kellyservices.com. Kelly services Inc. is a Fortune 500 company headquartered in troy, mich., providing employment to more than 700,000 employees annually, with skills including office services, accounting, engineering, information technology, law, science, marketing, light industrial, education and health care. Kelly services is an equal Opportunity employer supporting diversity in the workplace. never an applicant fee.
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PART-TIME CALENDAR WRITER
4/11/11 3:18:52 PM
Do you like being in the know? Do you have what it takes to help Vermonters find family-friendly fun? Kids VT, a monthly parenting publication owned by Seven Days, is looking for a Calendar Writer to compile our comprehensive event listings. Ideal candidate has: • obsessive attention to detail • skills to transform wordy press releases into zippy listings • respect for the facts, with a sense of humor • familiarity with online social media tools • pleasant phone manners • patience and a positive attitude • ability to meet tight deadlines • self-motivation and willingness to take direction • working knowledge of U.S. culture and Vermont geography This is a part-time, hourly position. Can work from home. Please submit cover letter and resume to jobs@kidsvt.com, or Attn: Calendar Writer, Kids VT, P.O. Box 1184, Burlington, VT 05402. No phone calls, please.
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new jobs posted daily!
We seek a highly motivated individual to fulfill the duties of an Engineering Manager supervising a staff of four employees. This important member of the Edlund management team will be responsible for managing all new product development projects and existing product support. Responsibilities include the planning, directing, resource management and control of all phases of design engineering and product life cycle management in the organization. A master’s degree in engineering and a minimum of five years engineering management and supervisory experience in a manufacturing environment are required. The Edlund Company offers a competitive salary and full benefits package, including profit sharing and 401(k) plans, in a pleasant and challenging working environment. Please submit cover letter with resume and salary history to Human Resources Manager, Edlund Company, P.O. Box 929, Burlington, VT 05402-0929. Email: hr@edlundco.com. Fax: (802) 304-1038.
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is currently seeking high-energy
Route Sales/ Route Relief People
Regional Resource Specialist Manager Vermont 2-1-1, a statewide telephone Information and referral program of the United Ways of Vermont, is seeking a full-time Regional Resource Specialist Manager. The 2-1-1 Regional Resource Manager is responsible for training, supervising, and supporting Regional Resource Specialists, who have the primary role of database development. Responsibilities include but are not limited to the following: implementation of a resource database development plan, maintenance of the Vermont 2-1-1 database in accordance with national standards, management of website content, and production and distribution of call center monthly statistical reports. The Regional Resource Manager will also be trained as an Information & Referral Specialist, with the necessary attitudes, skills, and knowledge to answer calls when needed.
in our Burlington and Barre divisions. Early morning hours and a clean driving record are required. You will be serving our customers with high-quality baked goods on established routes in established territory. We offer competive wages and benefits. No phone calls, please. Send resume to mwhitehead@ koffeekupbakery.biz.
The ideal candidate will have an associate’s or bachelor’s degree in human services OR an associate's degree plus a minimum of one 2v-KoffeeKup-041311.indd year of experience working in health, human or community services. Interested persons should send a cover letter and resume by April 29 to Cathy Nellis, Vermont 2-1-1, PO Box 111, Essex Junction, VT 05453, or cathy@unitedwaysvt.org. United Ways of Vermont is an equal opportunity employer. Candidates from diverse backgrounds are encouraged to apply.
New England Federal Credit Union, Vermont’s largest credit union with 7 branch locations, is a growing organization committed to excellence in price, convenience, service, simplicity, and to sharing success. NEFCU offers a stable, supportive, high-standards work environment, where employees are treated as key stakeholders. Please visit our website, www.nefcu.com, to learn more about the great opportunities and benefits that exist at NEFCU. 5v-UnitedWay-042011.indd
Accounting Supervisor
04.20.11-04.27.11
Koffee Kup Bakery
EnginEEring ManagEr Edlund Company is an 85-year-old midsized manufacturer located in Burlington, Vt. We are a leading brand in the commercial food service equipment market with worldwide distribution. Our company is known for outstanding quality, innovation and customer service.
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Hiring for all positions, including directors.
Leaps & Bounds is
looking for motivated, flexible team players to join our growing
1
childcare team
4/18/11 2:44:47 PM
PUBLIC HEALTH SPECIALIST Unemployment Tax Auditor Make more than a living. MINORITY HEALTH COORDINATOR VermontMake Department a difference.of Labor
in Essex, Williston, Milton and soon-to-be South Burlington locations. Must have experience, education and a sense of humor! Pay based on education and experience. Contact Krista at krista@leapsvt.com.
Department of Health This newly created, full-time position reporting to the Controller supervises the payables, payroll, general ledger, and operational expense budgeting functions. The Accounting Supervisor will be The right can open you to grow,within excel, and your full There’s an job exciting andopportunities challengingforopportunity ourreach Employer Serresponsible for providing leadership and oversight of accounting procedures, internal controls, The Department of Health is than seeking aliving. dynamic individual potential. Working for the State of Vermont allows you the freedom and creativity Make more a vices/Unemployment Insurance Division for an accounting/auditing proMake more Make than Make more a living. more than a than living. a living. and for developing new controls as may be required to ensure compliance and effectiveness for the position of Public Health Specialist - Minority to use yourDuties skills and enthusiasm in an enormous array of disciplines to keep this fessional. include, but are limiteda to,living. obtaining wage records, of internal controls. This position supervises the month-end and year-end closing process and Make more than Health Coordinator. Make atonot difference. Make a Make difference. Make a difference. a difference. one of the best states in the country live and work. employer audits, collecting delinquent reports/monies, fraud investigaprepares internal financial statements, regulatory reports, and GAAP financial statements. Make atoyour difference. The right job can open opportunities for you to it’s grow, excel, and reach full There’s an exciting and challenging opportunity within our Employer SerThe Minority Health Coordinator will be responsible for The Accounting Supervisor prepares and reviews general ledger reconciliations necessary, not The right can Theopen right opportunities job The can right job for opportunities can you open to grow, opportunities for excel, you to and for grow, reach you excel, grow, and full excel, reach and your reach full full There’s anasjob exciting There’s and an There’s exciting challenging anopen and exciting opportunity challenging and challenging within opportunity our opportunity Employer within our Serwithin Employer our Employer Ser-your Sertions, report writing and verifying health-care reporting peryour statutes, The work is not only challenging and fulfilling, rewarding onas many levels — 2v-LeapsBounds-021611.indd 1 2/14/11 11:11:42 AM less than monthly. The preferred candidate must have strong supervisory and analytical skills with potential. Working for the State of Vermont allows you the freedom and creativity leading the department’s efforts to address health disparities, potential. Working potential. for vices/Unemployment the Working potential. State of vices/Unemployment for Working the State for ofand the State Vermont allows Vermont you theofand freedom allows Vermont you and allows the creativity freedom you the and freedom creativity and Insurance Division for an accounting/auditing provices/Unemployment vices/Unemployment Insurance Division Insurance for Insurance an Division accounting/auditing Division forsocially. accounting/auditing for an proaccounting/auditing pro-creativity pro- your both professionally And with our outstanding benefits package, regulations policies. Inan addition toyou general knowledge regarding The right job can open opportunities for to grow, excel, and reach fullacdemonstrated prior experience analyzing and improving procedures. toA use highyour levelskills of proficiency particularly those affecting minority populations in to Vermont. to use your skills and enthusiasm an enormous array of disciplines keep to and use your enthusiasm toskills use your and in an skills enthusiasm enormous and enthusiasm inarray an enormous oflimited disciplines in an enormous array toin ofkeep disciplines array this of disciplines to keep this to keep this fessional. Duties include, but not limited to, obtaining wage records, designed to meet your health and financial needs, you’ll have the flexibility tothis be fessional. Duties fessional. include, fessional. Duties but are include, Duties not limited but include, are to, not but obtaining not to, wage limited obtaining records, to, obtaining wage records, wage records, counting, payroll systems and tax returns, candidates must possess thorpotential. Working forare the State ofare Vermont allows you the freedom and creativity Make more than a living. Make more Make than Make more a living. more than a than living. a living. with spreadsheet applications and Microsoft Office is essential. A minimum of an Associate’ s The Coordinator will engage effectively with community one of the best states in the country to live and work. one of theaudits, best states onecollecting ofinthe the one best country of states theemployer best to in live the states and country in work. thetocountry live and towork. live and work. audits, collecting delinquent reports/monies, fraud investigaable to manage your work/life balance, leaving you time to enjoy all that comes employer employer employer audits, delinquent collecting audits, collecting reports/monies, delinquent delinquent reports/monies, fraud reports/monies, investigafraud investigafraud investigato use your skills andthat enthusiasm an enormous array of disciplines toexperience keep this ough computer skills includeinin andincrease Excel. Working Degree in Accounting is required. Applications must include a cover letter explaining reasons for LEGAL ADVOCATE leaders and organizations order to awareness and Make aMicrosoft difference. Make aischallenging Make difference. Make aVermont. difference. athe difference. with living init’s Bring us your drive, ambition, and initiative, and put tions, report writing and verifying health-care reporting perwe’ll statutes, The work is not only challenging and fulfilling, it’sthe rewarding onaswork many levels — tions, reportis not tions, writing report and tions, verifying writing report and writing health-care verifying and reporting verifying health-care health-care as reporting per statutes, reporting per statutes, as per statutes, The work The onlywork challenging The is not work only and not fulfilling, only challenging and rewarding fulfilling, and on fulfilling, it’s many rewarding levels it’s rewarding on —as many levels on many — levels — one of the best states in country to live and work. interest in the position and a salary history by position. with the public, time management skills and ability to understanding about health disparities and how theyindepenaffect them togeneral work for you. both professionally and socially. And with our outstanding benefits package, regulations and policies. Ingrow, addition to general knowledge regarding acbothright professionally both professionally and both socially. professionally And and with socially. our and And outstanding socially. with And our benefits outstanding with our package, outstanding benefits package, benefits package, Full-time, direct-service regulations and regulations policies. regulations and Incan addition policies. and to policies. In addition Inonly knowledge addition toyou general to regarding knowledge general knowledge acregarding regarding acThe right job can open opportunities for you to it’s grow, excel, and your full dently are essential to success in the position. Candidates must be able The job can The open right opportunities job The right open job for opportunities can you open to opportunities for excel, to and for reach you excel, toyour grow, and full excel, reach and your reach fullac-your full Vermont’s diverse populations. The Coordinator will work The work is grow, not challenging and fulfilling, rewarding onreach many levels — designed to meet your health and financial needs, you’ll have the flexibility to be position to provide support designedpayroll to meet designed your health to designed meet and financial to meet health your needs, and health financial you’ll and have needs, financial the you’ll flexibility needs, have you’ll tocase the be flexibility have the flexibility toand be tothorbe counting, payroll systems and tax returns, candidates must possess thorpotential. Working for the State of Vermont allows you the freedom and creativity counting, counting, systems payroll and systems tax payroll returns, and systems candidates tax and returns, tax must candidates returns, possess candidates must thorpossess must thorpossess potential. Working potential. for counting, the Working potential. State ofyour for Working the State for of the State of Vermont allows Vermont you the freedom allows Vermont you and allows the creativity freedom you the and freedom creativity creativity with partners to take action to change health outcomes for read and interpret complex policies, law, statutes and provide clear, both professionally socially. And with our outstanding benefits package, The State of Vermont isand an Equal Opportunity Employer. Please note: Applications must be complete with cover letter andable salary history to receive in the civil and criminal legal able to manage your work/life balance, leaving you time to enjoy all that comes toyour manage able your tothat work/life manage able to your balance, manage work/life leaving your work/life balance, you time to enjoy you leaving all time that to you comes enjoy time toto that enjoy comes all that comes to use your skills and enthusiasm in an enormous array of disciplines keepto this ough computer skills that include and Excel. Working Vermont’s racial, ethnic and linguistic minorities. to use skills to and use your enthusiasm to skills use your and in an skills enthusiasm enormous and enthusiasm in array an enormous ofbalance, disciplines in an enormous array to ofMicrosoft keep disciplines array this ofall disciplines keep this to keep thistoexperience ough computer ough skills computer ough include computer skills Microsoft that skills include that and Microsoft include Excel. Working Microsoft and Excel. experience and Working Excel. Working experience experience accurate answers toleaving employers and claimants. Only applicants who apply designed to meet your health and financial needs, you’ll have the flexibility be consideration. system. Strong advocacy with living in Vermont. Bring us your drive, ambition, and initiative, and we’ll put with inwith Vermont. with Bring with in Vermont. us living your inmanagement drive, Bring Vermont. ambition, us your Bring drive, and us your initiative, ambition, drive, and and ambition, we’ll initiative, put and and initiative, we’ll put and we’ll put indepenone of best in the country to live and work. one ofliving the best states one ofliving inthe the one best country of states the best to in live the states and country in work. the tostates country live and towork. live and work. with the public, time management skills and the ability to work with the public, time the management with public, the time public, skills time and management the skills ability and to skills the work ability and indepenthe to ability work indepentotime work indepenable to manage your work/life balance, leaving you to enjoy all that comes on-line atthe www.vtstatejobs.info will be considered. and communication skills This position is funded through a three-year federal grant. them to work for you. them to work for them you.to work them fortoyou. work forare you.essential to success in the position. Candidates must be able www.vtstatejobs.info dently with living Bring your drive, and initiative, and we’ll put dently are10%. essential dently are to dently success essential are inessential the success position. to inVermont. success the Candidates position. in the position. must Candidates be able Candidates must be must able be able The work isinit’s not only challenging and fulfilling, it’slevels rewarding on many levels — NEFCU enjoys an employer of choice distinction with turnover averaging less work than More than The is not The onlywork challenging The is notwork only and isto challenging not fulfilling, only challenging and rewarding fulfilling, and on fulfilling, it’sus many rewarding levels it’s rewarding on —ambition, many on many — levels — required. Knowledge of legal Preference will be given to candidates with knowledge and Reference job posting #25002. Burlington - package, Full-time. them to work for you. read and interpret complex policies, case law,outstanding statutes and provide clear, 96% of our 165 staff say NEFCU is a great place to work. (2010 Annualread Staff believe you both professionally socially. And with our benefits and interpret read complex read interpret and policies, interpret complex case complex law, statutes policies, case and law, case provide statutes law, and clear, statutes provide and clear, provide clear, system preferred. both professionally both and both socially. professionally And with socially. our and And outstanding socially. with our benefits outstanding with our package, outstanding benefits package, benefits package, The State of Vermont isand anAnd Equal Opportunity Employer. experience relevant to cultural competence, community TheSurvey) State ofIf you Vermont Theand State isprofessionally an of Equal The Vermont State Opportunity of isand Vermont an Equal Employer. ispolicies, Opportunity an Equal Opportunity Employer. Employer. have the qualifications to contribute to this environment, please sendaccurate your resume cover accurate answers to employers and claimants. Only applicants who to apply designed to meet your health and financial you’ll have theto flexibility be Application deadline: answers accurate toletter employers accurate answers answers to and claimants. to employers and Only claimants. applicants and Only who applicants apply Only applicants who apply who apply designed toand meet designed your health to designed meet andyour financial toemployers meet health your needs, and health financial you’ll and have needs, financial theclaimants. you’ll flexibility needs, have you’ll to the beneeds, flexibility have the flexibility to be be10/15/08 organizing and diverse populations. The State of Vermont Send letter of interest and The State of Vermont is an Equal Opportunity Employer. and salary history to: HR@nefcu.com able toat manage work/life balance, leaving time enjoy all that comes able toatmanage able yourtoat work/life manage able toat your balance, manage work/life your work/life balance, you time leaving balance, to enjoy you leaving all time that comes enjoy time alltoyou that enjoy comes allto that comes encourages applications from people representing on-line www.vtstatejobs.info willtoyou be considered. on-line www.vtstatejobs.info on-line on-line www.vtstatejobs.info will www.vtstatejobs.info beleaving considered. willyour be considered. will be considered. qualifications to: www.vtstatejobs.info www.vtstatejobs.info www.vtstatejobs.info with living inBring Vermont. Bring usand your drive, ambition, and initiative, and we’ll put Vermont's diversity. The State of Vermont offers excellent with living www.vtstatejobs.info in Vermont. with living Bring with in Vermont. us living your indrive, Bring Vermont. ambition, us your drive, and us your initiative, ambition, drive, and ambition, we’ll initiative, put and and initiative, we’ll put and we’llan put EOE/AA Hiring Committee, Reference job#25002. posting #25002. Burlington - Full-time. them to work for you.Burlington total compensation package. To apply, please search by Reference job Reference posting Reference job #25002. posting job posting #25002. - Burlington Full-time. Burlington - Full-time. - Full-time. them to work for them you.to work them for toyou. work for you. www.vtstatejobs.info WomenSafe reference #28279 and use the online job application at Application deadline: 10/15/08 Application Application deadline: Application 10/15/08 deadline: deadline: 10/15/08 10/15/08 PO Box 67 The State ofan Vermont isEmployer. an Equal Opportunity The State of Vermont The State is an of Equal The Vermont State Opportunity ofisVermont an Equal Employer. isOpportunity Equal Opportunity Employer. Employer. www.careers.vermont.gov. Middlebury, VT 05753
Unemployment Tax Auditor Unemployment Unemployment Unemployment Tax Auditor Tax Auditor Tax Auditor Vermont of Labor Vermont Vermont Department Vermont Department Department of Department Labor of Labor of Labor
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www.vtstatejobs.info www.vtstatejobs.info www.vtstatejobs.info www.vtstatejobs.info opporTuniT y employer. 6-nefcu-acct-042011.indd 1
4/18/11 2:49:45 PM 5v-VTDeptHealth-042011.indd 1
4/18/11 6:29:40 PM
attention recruiters:
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post your jobs at sevendaysvt.com/jobs for fast results. or, contact michelle brown: michelle@sevendaysvt.com
04.20.11-04.27.11
Connecting Youth Mentoring Coordinator
Administrative Assistant
Charlotte Central School This part-time position of up to 400 hours per year involves coordinating a school-based mentoring program that matches fifth through eigth graders with caring adults in the community. Must have knowledge of resiliency and developmental assets theory, strong organizational and communication skills, an ability to meet a flexible schedule and experience in managing volunteers. Please contact Christine Lloyd-Newberry with questions at 383-1230, or apply at www.schoolspring.com. www.schoolspring.co 3h-ChitSouth-042011.indd 1
2h-AllSouls-041311.indd 1
Do you live in Chittenden County and want to make a difference in someone’s life?
Couple neeDeD to provide a home for an engaging, empathetic 15-year-old girl with an autism spectrum disorder. Patience, structure, good boundaries and perseverance needed to provide healthy choices. Knowledge and experience working with children with ASD helpful. She loves horseback riding, animals and helpful activities. Generous stipend/living allowance provided, along with a cohesive schedule including school and staff workers. Lisa Peterson, 488-6550.
10997 Rte. 116, Hinesburg 2/14/11 11:18:31 AM
New, local, scamfree jobs posted every day! sevendaysvt. com/classifieds 1x3-postings-cmyk.indd 1
Shared Living Provider Opportunities
HowardCenter’s Shared Living Provider program matches people with developmental disabilities with individuals, couples or families to provide a home, day-to-day assistance and individualized support needs.
Papa Nick’s
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asig@allsoulsinterfaith.org
4/18/11 3:44:51 PM
LineCook Good pay. Good benefits. Apply in person. Ask for Nick.
needed for front desk. Needs excellent computer & organization skills, extensive office experience and a warm, outgoing personality. May be required to assist with events and weddings. Send resume to email address:
ShareD living proviDer sought for active 23-year-old woman with PDD and co-occurring mental illness. This dedicated equestrian requires a couple or single person without children living at home who is looking for a professional stay-athome career. Provider will be an integral part of a multidisciplinary team providing innovate self-care and independent living skills. Ideal home is located in rural Chittenden County (Jericho/Underhill) and will welcome her yellow Lab-mix therapy dog. Very generous stipend coupled with room and board and respite budget make this an exciting professional opportunity. Anne Vernon, 488-6309. Single female or Couple sought to provide home for 20-year-old woman with an active social network. This high school student enjoys animals and making art, and is working on building independent living skills. Providers must set and maintain clear boundaries, and have no children or other clients living in the home. Experience supporting individuals with challenging behaviors required. Comprehensive team support and after school staff included. Ideal home is in suburban neighborhood or rural setting within 20 minutes of Burlington or Essex. Generous tax-free stipend and room and board payment included. Margot Smithson, 488-6326. a female or a Couple sought to share their home with a 44-year-old male. This family man is very independent, needs light assistance with meal preparation and minimal prompting with personal care. Ideal home is in the Burlington area. He does best with flexible and lighthearted providers. Generous stipend and room and board payment. Marisa Hamilton, 488-6571. home sought for 20-year-old man who enjoys staying active by shooting hoops, swimming at the Y and walking. Ideal home is in the Essex Junction school district with no small children. Complete personal care is required for this nonverbal guy on the autism spectrum who enjoys pets, both large and small. He has day and after school support staff, a generous respite budget and a tax-free annual stipend. Athena Westin, 488-6322. Please visit our website at www.howardcentercareers.org for more details or to apply online. Applicants must apply for positions electronically. Paper applications are not accepted. Job positions are updated daily. HowardCenter is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Minorities, people of color and persons with disabilities encouraged to apply. EOE/TTY. We offer competitive pay and a comprehensive benefits package to qualified employees.
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4/8/11 4:22:58 PM
Unilever works to create a better future every day. We help people feel good, look good and get more out of life with brands and services that are good for them and good for others. We are currently seeking the following position to work at our Ben & Jerry’s offices located in S. Burlington, Vt.
Product Developer The Product Developer is responsible for transitioning new and existing products within Unilever and co-pack facilities, working with Unilever technical project leaders globally ensuring that products meet all design standards. The incumbent will also lead coordination of legal, cultural, quality and regulatory issues as it pertains to Ben & Jerry’s global expansion and existing global markets. This is a unique opportunity to make a substantial contribution to the continued growth of a world-class brand in a fun industry and with a special company. Equally important, this challenging role provides the opportunity to demonstrate that values-led business can be a transformative factor in the world. Qualifications/requirements: • BS degree in dairy science, food science/chemistry or related field with emphasis in food technology, quality control, global regulatory compliance and food process manufacturing. • A minimum of three years of food industry experience required; two years’ frozen dessert industry preferred. • Excellent working knowledge of global legal and regulatory requirements as it pertains to food products and package labeling requirements. • Computer proficiency; Excel, Word, Windows NT. Interspec, Provision or equivalent nutritional labeling software preferred. • Travel is required to support project initiatives (approx. 20%, domestic and global). Please apply online at www.unileverusa-careers.com or call 1-888-775-0389 and reference requisition #31793. Employment is subject to verification of pre-employment drug-screening results and background investigation.
4/18/11 4:13:02 8t-benjerryfound-042011.indd PM 1
EEO/AA
4/18/11 3:34:42 PM
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Controller / Office Manager This position requires a candidate with a wide range of accounting experience including job costing, budgetary control, variance analysis, payroll, and preparing financial statements for internal and external sources. All successful applicants must be able to multitask proficiently, be well organized and have excellent communication skills. Experience with a multi-entity organization is a requirement. Please do not call. Thanks!
Senior Information Systems Operations Coordinator
Email: Tao@pshift.com
Reporting to the Assistant Vice President for Information Technology & Security, the Sr. Coordinator will be responsible for all office operations of the Information Systems (IS) department. Maintain and process all technology orders, licenses, maintenance and business contracts. Assist with institutional IS budgeting and projections. Be primary contact for telecommunication and general technology vendors for the department. Write, publish and research newsworthy information for the IS newsletter. Attend department director meetings.
www.Gristmillbuilders.com
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4/18/11 3:37:01 PM
Client ServiCeS repreSentative Fast-paced local web design firm is seeking a talented, energetic professional to provide exceptional customer service to our clients. In this role, you will work independently and as part of a team to ensure our clients are satisfied. Each day will be different and provide you with the opportunity to make decisions that ensure successful client experiences. You will take the initiative to identify and resolve client issues; schedule and coordinate work requests and troubleshoot minor technical issues. Attention to detail and a commitment to timely follow-through with our customers are required. We’re looking for someone who can perform these functions courteously and communicate with clarity to our customers via phone and email. This full-time position offers a competitive salary and benefits. Come help Vermont Design Works continue its exceptional level of customer service. To request an interview, please submit a cover letter, resume, and three references to jobs@vtdesignworks.com.
The successful candidate must be proficient with MS Office products (including Word, Excel, Outlook and PowerPoint), have strong organization and communication skills. A bachelor’s degree and two years’ experience are preferred, however candidates possessing the equivalent combination of education and experience will be considered. Submit cover letter and resume online at www.champlain.edu/hr by April 29, 2011. The successful completion of a criminal background check is required as a condition of employment. Champlain College values, supports and encourages diversity of backgrounds, cultures and perspectives of students, faculty, and staff. We are an Equal Opportunity Employer.
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THE CONVERSE HOME
4/18/11 4:01:16 PM
2/7/11 4:35:51 PM
Wanted:
Insulation Manager
A community of caring for elders
Job Opportunities in a
A supportive gracious work environment along with work environment: competitive salaries and shift differentials make the Converse • RN or LPN - Full and part-time, day and evening shiftsfor available Home a great place nurses. Our staff work together to create • LNA or RCA - Part-time evening and night shifts a quality of life available for our residents that respects the individual and supports their care needs. We are looking for the following We offer competitive salaries, benefits, and shift differentials qualified individuals to anjoin ourplease team: For more information or to schedule interview, call Donna at 802.862.0401 or e-mail donna@conversehome.com
Full time
LPN
40 hrs. evening shift in our 16 resident special care community. Prior experience with those with memory loss preferred. 272 Church Street, Burlington,Vermont 05401 Everyemail: other weekend required. info@conversehome.com
Building Energy conducts in-depth energy audits and thermal building retrofits; installs cellulose and foam insulation; builds custom solar systems; sells wood boilers, heat recovery ventilators; and works in tandem with Efficiency Vermont to provide cost effective energy saving strategies for both commercial and residential clients.
We are looking for a team leader to manage our insulation crews and retrofit projects. Experience in Sales, Scheduling and bidding required. Competitive salary, benefits, and profit sharing.
www.conversehome.com
Respond with resume to info@buildingenergyus.com E.O.E.
Part time, Weekends
Care Assistants All shifts available.
For more information or to schedule an interview, please contact Donna@conversehome.com.
272 Church St., Burlington, VT 05401 / www.conversehome.com
5v-ConverseHome-042011.indd 1
4/18/11 3:53:08 5v-BuildingEnergy042011.indd PM 1
1570 South Brownell Rd. Williston, VT 05495 802-859-3384 x16 www.BuildingEnergyVT.com
Part–Time Chiropractic Assistant Wanted
Our busy chiropractic office is seeking a new team member! We are looking for someone who exudes a positive presence. Are you trustworthy, hardworking, punctual, organized, familiar with computers and insurance billing, intelligent, efficient, confident, able to follow instructions with a willingness to take on all other duties needed to ensure the smooth operation of our office? If yes, then please email your cover letter, resume and references to: erica@reachthemark.com. Applicants must have prior training or experience working in a medical setting. Only candidates with at least a 2-year college degree and an established record of performing well at work will be considered.
4/18/11 3v-MiltonChiro-042011.indd 11:41 AM 1
4/18/11 2:41:48 PM
attention recruiters:
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post your jobs at sevendaysvt.com/jobs for fast results. or, contact michelle brown: michelle@sevendaysvt.com
04.20.11-04.27.11
Shared Living Provider oPPortunity CCS is looking for two individuals to share 24-hour home supports for an especially warm charming and fun man in his downtown Burlington home. Shifts/overnights can be worked every other week, or on a rotating three- and four-day work week (other work schedules are possible upon agreement of all parties). The ideal candidates will have experience working with individuals with developmental and physical disabilities and be energetic and team oriented. VNA and accessible van support provided along with all needed trainings. This is a rare opportunity to do important work with a flexible schedule.
We are a high-volume, fast-paced, community-oriented restaurant searching for an energetic, upbeat, detail-oriented and experienced Chef. A candidate for this job must be able to lead, motivate and communicate firmly and fairly with our staff. Ability to maintain high standards and even temperament under pressure is a must. A positive attitude, sense of humor and solid work ethic must be part of your makeup. Local and organic food is our passion. Experience working with, and sourcing new, local food purveyors is a must. Taking this food and turning it in to a unique and savory dining experience for our customers through specials formulations is critical. Responsibilities will include food ordering and inventory control, hiring, scheduling and training. Maintaining targeted food and labor costs is a strict requirement.
Contact Elizabeth Sightler at 802-655-0511 ext. 120 or esightler@ccs-vt.org for more information.
Chef
Champlain Community Services
The position is full time and requires a minimum of six years of experience. Benefits include health insurance and paid vacation time. If you have relevant restaurant experience and the personality traits listed above, please forward your resume and references to: American Flatbread Burlington Hearth, 115 St. Paul Street, Burlington, VT 05401, or via email to tracy@flatbreadhearth.com. No phone calls, please.
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Child Care Resource
4t-ChampCommServ2-042011.indd 1
4/18/11 5:25:58 PM
CHITTENDEN EAST SUPERV ISORY U N ION #12
Custodian
Early Childhood Outreach Co-Coordinator Child Care Resource is seeking a personable, curious, creative and organized early childhood professional to develop relationships and implement projects that will improve the lives of young children in the South Burlington community. This individual will have primary responsibility for staffing the South Burlington bookmobile in collaboration with the South Burlington Library, will coordinate mentor support for early care and education programs serving South Burlington children, and will participate in a range of additional outreach activities.
Mt. Mansfield Union High School prides itself on having a clean and wellmaintained school environment. We are looking for a daytime custodian during the summer, and evening custodian during the school year. Approximately 40 hours per week. Hours may vary. Summer and vacations: daytime between 6 a.m and 6 p.m. During the school year: night shift, 3 p.m. to 11 p.m., 8-hour day and set schedule. The qualified maintenance person would ideally have knowledge and work experience in cleaning and buffing, and some experience in general school maintenance such as electrical, plumbing and carpentry, but mostly a willingness to perform custodial work.
Our ideal candidate will be an experienced teacher/mentor, hold a minimum of a bachelor’s degree in early childhood education or a related field, have comprehensive knowledge of early care and education, and will have the ability to work effectively with a wide variety of people.
Please apply online at Schoolspring.com, Job # 48737, or call 434-2128 for an application. Online application must include profile, letter, resume and references. Hard copies of three written reference letters will be required for verification at the interview level. Visit our website, www.cesu.k12.vt.us, for information about our schools.
Thirty hours per week, flexible schedule, generous vacation. Friendly, casual yet fast-paced environment. Email cover letter, resume by May 2 to emeyer@childcareresource.org. For more information, visit our website at www.childcareresource.org.
EOE M/F
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4/18/11 3:55:31 PM
Engaging minds that change the world Seeking a position with a quality employer? Consider The University of Vermont, a stimulating and diverse workplace. We offer a comprehensive benefit package including tuition remission for on-going, full-time positions. This opening and others are updated daily. Information Technology (IT) Assistant, Extension - UVM Extension is seeking an enthusiastic information technology professional to help support our IT infrastructure in our 11 offices. Your job will be to provide UVM Extension employees with computer support and troubleshooting. Working under the guidance of the UVM Extension IT Specialist, you will be based in Burlington at our Spear Street Office. Your work will be focused in our Burlington, Colchester, St. Albans, and Middlebury offices, although occasional travel to our other offices will be expected and telephone support for all employees will be par for the course. You will provide "check-plus" service by responding to and resolving requests for assistance in a friendly, timely and efficient manner using, as is possible, non-technical language. Education and experience equivalent to Associate's degree in a related field and one to two years' experience is required. Oral communications skills are essential, as is a thorough knowledge of the PC/Windows operating environment. Commitment to diversity and inclusion is required! For further information on this position or to apply with electronic application, resume, cover letter, and a list of references with contact information, visit our website at: www.uvmjobs.com The University of Vermont is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications from women and people from diverse racial, ethnic, and cultural backgrounds are encouraged.
Case Management Supervisor YOU may be the perfect fit to join the Central Vermont Council on Aging Team! We currently have a rare opening for a Case Management Supervisor, based out of our Barre office, to fill the vital role of guiding Case Management staff as they support elders and family caregivers in leading healthy, meaningful and dignified lives in their homes and communities. Do you have a bachelor’s or master’s degree AND a minimum of three years of supervisory experience in the human services or aging fields? Have you done fieldwork with elders, people with disabilities or low–income individuals? Paper: Seven Days Do you have a proven job coaching and quality management track record? • Are your Microsoft-based computer Issue: 4/20 skills fine tuned, and are you interested in learning new database programs specific to the aging community? Due: 4/18 • Are you interested in travelling frequently within Washington, Lamoille and Orange counties? • Do you have Size: 3.83working x 3.46with grants management, budgets and government entities? • Are you interested in a experience competitive benefits Cost: $320.00 package that includes health care coverage, paid time off and retirement contributions? If these criteria fit your experience, please send cover letter and resume to Central Vermont Council on Aging/Attn: Betsy Erwin, Human Resources, 30 Washington St., Suite 1, Barre, VT 05641 or email to berwin@cvcoa.org. No resumes accepted after April 22, 2011. No walk-ins, please. ADA/EOE. 5h-cvcoa-041311.indd 1
4/11/11 2:43:40 PM
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new jobs posted daily!
C-17
sevendaysvt.com/clasSifieds
04.20.11-04.27.11
Seeking Experienced, Part-Time Care Providers
Lean Coordinator
ble for me position is responsi The person in this full-ti process n ing the company’s Lea facilitating and manag er oth and g including trainin improvement program, and ncy cie effi al ion e organizat duties that will enhanc and ent em rov imp us uo tin support a culture of con n. ctio isfa sat er tom cus an action plan for the Develop and implement but ent program, including Lean process improvem for ble nsi spo Re . nts Eve 5S not limited to kaizen and g fyin nti ent managers in ide working with depar tm ing lish ab est , ement events areas for process improv t, and selecting crossjec pro h eac objectives for the ers and leaders. Act in functional team memb for each event. capacity of the facilitator ontgage.com. rm ve hr@ Send resume to
Silver Leaf In-Home Care is a rapidly growing, professional, nonmedical care service. We have been providing support and care to seniors in their homes throughout Chittenden County, VT, for over 10 years.
University of Vermont Adventure Ropes Course Looking for adventuresome educators! Facilitator Training Saturday, May 14, and Sunday, May 15 9:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
If you are experienced, dependable and truly enjoy working with the elderly, please contact Patty at 802-355-3790.
Facilitation skills and basic technical skills are covered, as well as experiencing a full progression at UVM ARC. Outdoor and/ or education experience preferred but not necessary. Part-time work opportunities through October, upon completion of entire training program. Cost $150.00 ($100.00 for UVM affiliates).
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We offer flexible hours and competitive wages.
Email Heidi Weston at ropes@uvm.edu to register. Space is limited.
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Andforwith our outstanding benefits package, regulations and In addition toyou general knowledge regarding The right job canpolicies. open to grow, excel, and reach your fullacvises include businessbudget officedevelopment, and administrative staff inand Waterbury ge toatyour manage able work/life balance, to your manage able work/life to balance, leaving to manage your manage you work/life leaving balance, your time your work/life you leaving to work/life balance, enjoy time you all to balance, leaving balance, enjoy that time comes all to leaving you leaving enjoy that time comes you allto you that enjoy time time comes toalltoenjoy that enjoy comes allallthat thatcomes comes aable permanent classified employee. Training and career advancement ework/life ejobs.info w.vtstatejobs.info on-line www.vtstatejobs.info on-line at will on-line www.vtstatejobs.info be atconsidered. will at www.vtstatejobs.info www.vtstatejobs.info be considered. will be considered. will be will considered. will be be considered. considered. vises business office administrative staff in benefits, Waterbury office. Housekeepers designed to meet your health and financial needs, you’ll have must the flexibility be This full timeand position offers excellent including counting, payroll systems and tax returns, candidates possesstothor-
DIRECTOR DIRECTOR OF OF FINANCE FINANCE
potential. Working forSalary: the State$14.89/hour, of Vermont allows you the freedom and creativity opportunity exists. second and third shift atejobs.info www.vtstatejobs.info www.vtstatejobs.info www.vtstatejobs.info nh.vtstatejobs.info t.s.info Vermont. living Bring with in usVermont. Bring your living with with drive, us inliving your Bring Vermont. living ambition, drive, in usin Vermont. your Bring Vermont. ambition, and drive, us initiative, Bring your Bring ambition, anddrive, usinitiative, us your and your ambition, and we’ll drive, drive, initiative, and put ambition, we’ll ambition, and initiative, and putand we’ll and initiative, put and initiative, we’lland put and we’ll we’ll put put
able toyour manage your work/life balance, leaving you time toWorking enjoy allto that comes available with shift differential. to use skills andthat enthusiasm inMicrosoft an enormous array of disciplines this ough computer skills include and experience ence Reference jobforReference posting job posting Reference #25002. job Reference posting #25002. Reference job Burlington posting #25002. job job Burlington posting -posting #25002. Full-time. Burlington #25002. - #25002. Full-time. Burlington - Excel. Full-time. Burlington Burlington - Full-time. - Full-time. - keep Full-time. m for to you. work them toyou. them work them to for to work you. work for for you. you. with living in Vermont. Bring us your drive, ambition, and initiative, and we’ll put For more information, call (802) 241-3122, Waterbury. Applications one of the best states in the country to live and work. with the public, time management skills and the ability to work indepenApplication Application deadline: Application deadline: Application 10/15/08 deadline: Application Application 10/15/08 deadline: 10/15/08 deadline: deadline: 10/15/08 10/15/08 10/15/08 accepted online only through State of Vermont website. them to work for you. an State rmont Equal ofThe isVermont Opportunity anState Equal The ofis The Vermont Opportunity an State State Equal Employer. of of Vermont isessential Opportunity Vermont an Employer. Equal is is an Opportunity an Equal Employer. Equal Opportunity Opportunity Employer. Employer. Employer. dently are to success in the position. Candidates mustlevels be able The work is not only challenging and fulfilling, it’s rewarding on many — ApplicATiON DeADliNe: Open until filled. read and interpret complex policies, case law, statutes and provide clear, both professionally and socially. And with our outstanding benefits package, The State of Vermont is an Equal Opportunity Employer. The STaTe VermonT iS and an and equal accurate answers to employers claimants. Onlyhave applicants who to apply designed to of meet your health financial needs, you’ll the flexibility be atejobs.info .vtstatejobs.info s.info www.vtstatejobs.info www.vtstatejobs.info www.vtstatejobs.info opporTuniT y employer. able to manage your work/life balance, leaving you time to enjoy all that comes on-line at www.vtstatejobs.info will be considered. www.vtstatejobs.info with living in Vermont. Bring us your drive, ambition, and initiative, and we’ll put Reference job posting #25002. Burlington - Full-time. them to work for you. 4t-VTStateHosp-033011.indd 1
Visit our web site: www.vtadultlearning.org for more information. Visit our Deadline: web site: www.vtadultlearning.org for more information. Resume May 2, 2011 Equal Opportunity Employer Resume Deadline: May 2, 2011 Equal Opportunity Employer
Senior Energy Analyst/Consultant
4/18/11 6:27:36 4t-VtAdultLearning-041311.indd PM 1
Application deadline: 10/15/08
The State of Vermont is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
www.vtstatejobs.info
VYOA Office Manager VT Youth Orchestra Association has full-time opening for highly motivated individual with excellent communication & computer skills. General office duties, database management, facility oversight, as well as box office duties at occasional weekend concerts. Previous experience with QuickBooks is desired, but not required.This person is the glue that holds our office together! Compensation commensurate with skill and experience. Competitive benefits package. Email cover letter and resume to randy@vyo.org. Please, no telephone calls. For more information, visit www.vyo.org.
This full timespending, position offers excellent benefits, includinglife medical, dental, flexible retirement, long-term disability, medical, dental, flexible long-term disability, life insurance andspending, generous,retirement, flexible paid-time-off. insurance and generous, flexible paid-time-off.
Energy Futures Group (EFG) of Hinesburg is seeking a senior analyst or consultant to join our thriving consulting practice. EFG works for environmental organizations, consumer advocates, government agencies and progressive utilities on the development of cutting-edge policies and programs to advance investments in energy efficiency. Our ideal candidate will have at least three years’ experience in the energy industry, preferably with energy efficiency policies and programs. We are most interested in individuals who are comfortable with technical issues; can persuasively communicate ideas; and are creative and bring a personal passion and commitment to their work. EFG pays competitive salaries and offers excellent benefits. Send resume and cover letter to info@energyfuturesgroup.com.
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Front Desk Agent
If you have exceptional customer service, please apply in person at 42 Lower Mountain View Drive, Colchester, 05446.
Conservation ProjeCt Manager
4/11/11 1:21:27 2v-Hampton-041311.indd PM 1
4/8/11 3:49:21 PM
the Winooski natural resources Conservation District is seeking a part-time Project Manager to assist with watershed stewardship and agricultural assistance initiatives in Chittenden and Washington Counties. Position is primarily based in Williston, vt. For a complete job description and submission information, visit www.vacd.org/winooski. Cover letter, resume and three references due May 2.
4/11/11 2:47:47 PM
attention recruiters:
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post your jobs at sevendaysvt.com/jobs for fast results. or, contact michelle brown: michelle@sevendaysvt.com
04.20.11-04.27.11
Summer Camp Counselors
Spirit Delivery is looking for
Drivers
with a clean driving record to drive nonCDL 26' straight trucks. Pay ranges between $110$125 per day. Must be able to pass drug and background check. Call 802-338-9048.
Ken’s Golf Shop is now hiring a full-time
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2/21/11 2:58:59 PM
• Pro shop experience preferred. Knowledge of golf equipment required. • Only qualified applicants, please. Email to Kgolfshop@aol.com.
on the
Perform semiroutine and repetitive tasks in a high-volume, fast-paced work environment, associated with cash deposit processing for Corporate clients. This position requires the ability to work with currency sorting and counting equipment. Prepare daily reconciliation of physical currency and PC entries using a variety of software applications. Position requires the ability to work extended hours if necessary and specialist must have the ability to effectively complete assigned duties in a timely manner and perform a variety of reconciliation functions and subsequent research to resolve out-of-balance conditions.
ESSEntial FunCtionS:
REquiREd qualiFiCationS: High school diploma or GED equivalent,
proven accuracy and organizational skills, demonstrated ability to work with deadlines, good interpersonal and communication skills. For more information about KeyBank and to complete an online application and submit your resume, go to www.key.com/careers and search “Specialist Cash Vault “ and locate job ID #99983031.
See our website for more information at www.essexchips.org, and email a resume and cover letter to mike@essexchips.org by April 23.
11 Center St., Burlington, VT 05401
New Restaurant 4/18/11
Part-time
Essex CHIPS and Teen Center, a community coalition of youth and adults that creates and runs programs to promote healthy youth, seeks two summer camp counselors to assist with implementation of our science, engineering and technology summer camp for middle schoolers, ages 11-14. A SCIENCE or ENGINEERING background and/or experience with Lego Robotics kits is preferred, though not required. 40 hours/week — $12/hour. Weeks of: June 13 (paid training); June 20 - July 1 (Session 1); July 11- July 22 (Session 2).
Assistant Manager
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KeyBank Cash Vault Specialist
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KeyCorp is an equal opportunity employer M/F/D/V. We’re proud to be one of DiversityInc magazine’s “Top 50 Companies for Diversity” in 2009.
4/4/11 5:18:13 PM 4t-KeyBank042011.indd 1
4/18/11 3:51:52 PM
Excellent Employment Opportunities
Burlington Waterfront
T
Hiring for all positions. Open House on Friday, April 22 , 7 a.m.- 11 p.m. 112 Lake St.
he Lodge at Shelburne Bay and The Lodge at Otter Creek are premier adult living communities located in Vermont. We are now hiring for a variety of positions at all levels. Both communities are owned and operated by Bullrock Corporation, an equal opportunity employer. We offer a range of benefits, opportunity for advancement and full and part time positions. Join our team today. Current positions available now:
Bring resume.
Health Services Director & LPN positions available. Full & Part Time Care Staff & Dining Services positions available evenings, days and nights.
4/18/11 3:24:37 PM Looking for CDA or qualified applicants for immediate employment.
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Please send resumes to: Rose Cleveland rcleveland@lodgeatottercreek.com The Lodge at Otter Creek • 350 Lodge Road • Middlebury, VT 05753 www.lodgeatottercreek.com
802-872-2772.
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4t-VtAdultLearningMGR-041311.indd 1 4/18/11 1:01:56 PM
Are you interested in expanding your horizons in the dentistry field? Are you a team player with a great attitude? Do you thrive in a diverse, fast paced environment with an emphasis on excellent patient care? Then our office is for you. We are seeking a highly motivated
dental assistant
to join our team. Current dental assisting license required. Competitive salary and excellent benefits. Please submit resumes to carolyn. efd70@yahoo.com.
Child Care Resource
4t-LodgeatOtterCreek042011.indd 1 4/11/11 1:25:53 PM
South Burlington School DiStrict
Accountant/ Full Charge Bookkeeper Child Care Resource is a local nonprofit organization seeking an energetic and focused accounting specialist to perform all financial accounting and related human resource tasks. Our staff comprises 30 dedicated employees. We have an annual budget of $1.7 million. We require an accounting degree and at least three years’ related experience and knowledge of accrual accounting, cost alloc. methods and accounting-related software. Nonprofit experience a plus. The ideal candidate will be an organized, analytical, independent worker and have excellent time-management and communication skills. Full-time, flexible schedule, generous vacation. Friendly, casual yet fast-paced environment. Email cover letter, resume and salary requirements by April 29 to emeyer@childcareresource.org.
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4/11/11 10:45 AM
4/18/11 1:59:26 PM
4/12/11 3:59 PM
District transportation Mechanic Qualified candidate must have two to five years’ experience in mechanical work. Candidate must have a license for certified mechanic, driver’s and CDL license. Ability to read and interpret documents such as safety rules, operating and maintenance instructions, and procedure manuals. Candidate must have the ability to write routine reports and correspondence. Must be able to establish and maintain effective working relationships with students, staff and the community. Demonstrate ability to work collaboratively in a team environment and effective organizational, interpersonal and communication skills. This position will remain open until filled. Candidates may forward their resume and three current references to: Diane Kinnon, Human Resource Department, S. Burlington School District, 550 Dorset St., S. Burlington, VT 05403 or apply at www.sbschools.net. E O E
follow us on twitter @sevendaysjobs, subscribe to rSS or check postings on your phone at m.sevendaysvt.com
sevendaysvt.com/clasSifieds
spruce Mountain inn is a small, nationally known residential treatment program in Plainfield, Vt. We are seeking an experienced and innovative Addictions counselor with demonstrated leadership skills to oversee the addictions component of our dual diagnosis treatment program. This individual needs to be a detail-oriented person with excellent communication, problem-solving and clinical skills. our Addictions counselor must function as a member of a multidisciplinary team and provide group and individual services to young adult clients within the context of a highly structured therapeutic community. Master’s degree is preferred. license is required. Send letter of interest and resume via email to info@sprucemountaininn.com. Grant Leibersberger, Assistant Director Spruce Mountain Inn PO Box 153, Plainfield, VT 05667-0153.
for family practice in Charlotte Village
Work 3 days/week as part of a busy medical team. 2h-Audobon042011.indd
4/18/11 5:12 PM
we’re
Experience with EMR preferred.
-ing JOBS!
Start in June.
follow us for the newest: twitter.com/SevenDaysJobs
Please send cover letter and resume to charlotte527@gmail.com. 2x1-twitterCMYK.indd 1
VERMONT TECHNICAL COLLEGE
1/10/11 9:13:15 PM
Chartered 1834
Part-time faculty
Adjunct Instructor
Charlotte Family Health Center 527 Ferry Road, PO Box 38 Charlotte, VT 05445
ELT-2060 Electronic Applications FALL 2011/ SPRING 2012 SEMESTERS (August 2011–May 2012)
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4/18/11
Vermont Technical College is seeking a part-time Adjunct Instructor ELT-2060 Electronic Applications faculty member for Fall 2011/Spring 2012 for the Randolph Center campus. The purpose of this course is to integrate material from several courses in order to achieve small working systems. In the process of achieving this integration, topics in the theory and application of operational amplifiers, the theory and applications of A/D and D/A systems, and the integration of instrumentation will be explored. Analysis in both time and frequency will be used. Additional topics will be added as seen appropriate. Analysis will often use MultiSim to assist with concepts; three hours of lecture, three hours of laboratory per week. Prerequisite: ELT 1032, concurrent enrollment in ELT 2050 and 2051. Master’s degree plus experience in these subject areas as well as experience teaching adults. To apply: Send Vermont Tech employment application, cover letter and resume to: Office of the Academic Dean Vermont Technical College PO Box 500 Randolph Center, VT 05061 Employment application is available on the Vermont Tech website, www.vtc.edu. Vermont Technical College is an Equal Opportunity Employer
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1
Excellent benefits.
4/18/11 3:48:06 PM
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Medical Assistant
Addictions counselor
4t-SpruceMtn-042011.indd 1
new jobs posted daily!
Become our next
TEACHER-DIRECTOR. Our nonprofit preschool is located on 15 acres with farm animals, gardens, ponds and woods. The building was specifically designed for young children. Future options may be available to buy the home of the current teacher/directors across the street, and to job share teaching, administrative and groundskeeping responsibilities. Read the details of this unique opportunity and apply on www.SchoolSpring.com by April 29. Learn more about us at www.Pokerhillschool.org.
4/18/11 3:46:41 3v-PokerHillSchl-042011.indd PM 1
ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR OF DEVELOPMENT & ALUMNI RELATIONS GMC seeks an entrepreneurial and ambitious Associate Director of Development and Alumni Relations to support the Director of Development in the strategic identification, cultivation, solicitation, and stewardship of major donors. Associate Director 3:24 PM works independently to: create new programs that foster a culture of philanthropy among college constituencies to increase annual giving; initiate a successful grants program; develop, manage, and effectively promote an engaging alumni program that bridges distinct eras of the College and fuels annual giving, major gifts, and planned giving; plan and manage exciting alumni and donor cultivation and stewardship events on and off campus; serve as College liaison to Alumni Association Board of Directors and primary contact for alumni communications; and, manage development department database. Qualifications: Bachelor’s degree; 3-5 years successful track record in fundraising; 3-5 years successful experience in grant research, writing, and management; 3-5 years experience in event planning and management; 3-5 years experience in creative program development and management; excellent writing and public speaking skills; highly organized and detail oriented; excellent computer skills and self-sufficient in office work; proficient in social media networking; creative, innovative, entrepreneurial; high energy with positive, enthusiastic outlook; sociable; willing to work evenings and weekends when required; willing to travel when required. GMC salaries are competitive with those of similar small private colleges and benefits are excellent. Please send cover letter, resume, and list of three professional references to: Janie Evans, Human Resource Director, Green Mountain College, 1 Brennan Circle, Poultney, VT 05764, or send attachments to an email to: employment@greenmtn.edu. Deadline for applications is May 13. Green Mountain College is committed to increasing diversity among campus employees and is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Qualified minority and female applicants are encouraged to respond.
4/18/11 2:39:26 6-GrnMtCollege042011.indd PM 1
4/18/11 5:07 PM
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SEVEN DAYS
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SEVENDAYSvt.com
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more food before the classifieds
« p.42
sIDEdishes by cOri n hi rsch & a l i ce l e v i t t
A Tower of Tapas
le belvéDère, 100 Main street, newpOrt, 487-9147. lebelveDere.cOMcastbiz.net
Chances are Newport has rarely seen the likes of pecan-crusted striped bass with an orange-tarragon butter, not to mention hamachi. But this spring, chef Jason Marcoux has been feeding Northeast Kingdom locals a creative roster of tapas, seafood plates and sushi.
chefing at resorts in Maine, Idaho, Alaska and Jay Peak, Vt. Initially, the group relied on old-fashioned channels to get the news out about their venture. “Word of mouth is really important up here,” says Rancourt. Now that the food is gaining a reputation, they’re getting busier each week. “A small town is always late to get the newest trends,” Rancourt says. “People are traveling an hour and a half to eat here.”
Le Belvédère
the state office building along Newport’s waterfront in mid-February. The new owner — DEna Gray of the East sIDE rEstaurant & PuB
new FOOD anD beverage DirectOr Makes big changes at the essex
Vermont has only one certified master chef — Arnd Sievers, who ran the kitchen for several years at the Sheraton Burlington Hotel & Conference Center. Last month, he joined executive chef Shawn Calley at the Essex Culinary Resort & Spa as the new director of food and beverage. Sievers holds the same position at the Ponds at Bolton Valley Resort, which is owned by the Essex. One of Sievers’ first orders of business was closing Butler’s Farm, the farm-to-table restaurant that opened at the Essex last September, to make room for a new concept. By Memorial Day, the popular tavErn at thE EssEx will reopen in the larger of two restaurant spaces, says Sievers. In the smaller area — which the Tavern will continue to occupy until the eve of its move — Sievers will open a yet-to-be-named fine-dining restaurant. At this new restaurant, an open kitchen will create a chef’s-table feel, allowing diners to interact directly with the chef as he prepares “eclectic farm-to-table” meals. Expect experiments, too. Sievers says the menu will feature sous-vide-prepared meats, foods frozen on an anti-griddle and foams associated with molecular gastronomy. Besides a much larger bar for locals to hang out in, the expanded Tavern will boast changes of its own. The resort’s kitchen garden will double in size, and seating will be added beside it. “We really want to put it to the next level as a culinary resort,” says Sievers. “Cooks [will] go out and pick the vegetables and explain to the customer what they’re doing with the vegetables.” The tavern menu will grow to include local, grass-fed steaks dry aged on site. Other additions that Sievers hopes will help establish the inn as a destination include daytime demonstration classes in the dinner-only fine-dining restaurant and a farmers market. Starting June 5, farmers will converge on the resort’s front lawn to sell their wares every Sunday. Look for tasty treats from the bakery at the Essex, too.
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than we thought,” says Rancourt. Come summer, Le Belvédère will set up several outdoor tables and offer lunch a few times a week. For now, it’s serving only dinner, Wednesday through Sunday.
Wasabi and Lemongrass willistOn tO gain asian-FusiOn eatery
hàna JaPanEsE hIBachI stEak housE & sushI Bar in Stowe.
Hàna fans will find a similar scene at Douzo, sans actual hibachi grills: nigiri sushi and maki rolls, Japanese-style marinated and grilled steaks and meats. But, unlike Hàna, the new restaurant will give Thai food a starring role on the menu. One room of the new eatery will be decorated siDe Dishes
» p.45
2nndual An a locally owned kitchen & gift market
www.KissTheCook.net 72 Church Street, Burlington, 863-4226 Mon–Thur 9:30–6 pm, Fri–Sat 9:30–9 pm CLOSED Sunday for Easter Wedding Registry • UPS Shipping FREE Gift Wrapping
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FOOD 43
A colossal Asian-fusion restaurant is slated to open next month in the Williston space that used to house East Orchid.
Douzo, at 2033 Essex Road, will be a Japanese steakhouse, Thai eatery, martini bar and sushi bar rolled into one, according to owner saMMy choMPuPonG, who also owns
SEVEN DAYS
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— purchased the defunct Boathouse Grill this winter and tapped her stepdaughter, véronIquE rancourt, as manager. The pair hired Newport native Marcoux as chef, and then the fun began: The trio remade the space with antiques, new hardwood floors, and a lounge with leather chairs and views of Lake Memphremagog. Marcoux’s talent extends beyond using a hammer and paintbrush. At age 16, he was the youngest-ever applicant accepted into the nEw EnGLanD cuLInary InstItutE. After graduation, he interned in the kitchen of the Breakers in West Palm Beach, Fla., and spent more than a decade
Dinner entrées include seafood and meat plates, such as diver scallops served with maple crème fraiche; a ginger-crusted, pan-seared ahi tuna with a wakame salad and wasabi cream; and a veal chop with rosemary mushroom demi-glace. Beef carpaccio, smoked-char bruschetta and duck-confit-and-goatcheese spanakopita animate the tapas menu. Chef Marcoux’s recent specials have included seared sea scallops with a maple bacon bourbon sauce, and avocado, pink grapefruit and honey mascarpone salad. Thursday nights at Le Belvédère fill a yawning local culinary gap by showcasing sushi. Once a week, the chef rolls nigiri and at least 10 different maki rolls. “It’s definitely labor intensive, but they’re more popular
Master of His Domain
SEVENDAYSVt.com
LE BELvéDèrE opened in
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4/18/11 11:23 AM
food Invisible Web « p.42
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boxes of Comté, chunks of Bulgarian feta. “I’d been a chef all my life and never knew there was so much cheese,” says general manager Andrew Kannler, who has been with the company nine years, making him one of the newest of Provisions’ 20 employees. Like most of his colleagues, he spent much of his professional life in food service. “We call it chef rehab. It’s like being a kid in a candy store,” he says of Provisions. “You’re surrounded by products you love without the hours of the kitchen.” Provisions’ entire staff of foodies has its feelers out for new products — whether they appear in the press or on a table. They also regularly sample new items. “You’re a better salesman because
That online catalog can set the imagination of a chef alight. “I just pore over the catalog. I look at every single item and try to think of a way that I need it,” says Suzanne Podhaizer, co-owner of Salt Café in Montpelier. “It’s definitely a little bit of feeling like a kid at Christmas. I get to a place where I want to buy everything.” All that booty is tucked into the White River warehouse: boxes of organic Italian pastas such as Kamut fusilli (marked “alto/Fragile”); bottles of extra-virgin olive oil; bags of Arborio rice; bricks of chocolate; jars of chile sauce and Tunisian artichoke spead; bottles of Saba dressing and aged balsamic vinegar. Central to the operation is the cheese cooler, kept at a constant 40 degrees with 70 percent humidity. The room is filled with wheels of cheddar, blocks of Parmigiano-Reggiano,
you eat, and you know what you’re talking about,” says Kannler. “For instance, a chef will say, ‘This cheese doesn’t look like it did the last time,’” says Coutant. “We’ll be the person who explains that’s because it’s a different season, or slightly older or younger.” Orders pour in early each week and are assembled on pallets for delivery. The five trucks that have delivered Vermont cheeses to points south return with goods from New Jersey’s docks or New York’s markets, then fan out again to Provisions’ rural New England clientele. Besides enlivening the local palate, some of those products connect Provisions, and by extension Vermont diners, to other parts of the world in poignant ways. For instance, one of the Japanese towns where Provisions
tOm mcneill
attracted employees from other pockets of the food business, such as chefs. Cheese — especially Vermont cheese — became Provisions’ cornerstone; Grafton Village Cheese Company was another early client. Twenty-five years later, Provisions offers dozens of Vermont cheeses, from Jasper Hill Farm’s Constant Bliss to Tarentaise from Spring Brook Farm. The company’s catalog grew, and grew some more. Once upon a time, it was produced in a handsome, spiralbound book. Now, clients browse online, choosing from 150 kinds of oil, 177 kinds of chocolate, 130 vinegars, and 100 kinds of beans and legumes, including heirloom soldier beans from Maine and crimson lentils.
May 1st:
$3 Dos Equis Drafts 1/2 price wings
DE
May 2nd , rm&ay 3rd: Milagro Silve Cointreau Shorty's Shaker included!!! (One per customer, While supplies
last)
MAYO
May 4th:
$2.50 Corona & Corona Light Bottles
May 5th:
$5 Margarita's $4 Dos Equis Drafts $3 Corona & Corona Light Bottles
44 FOOD
SEVEN DAYS
04.20.11-04.27.11
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CINCO
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sIDEdishes cOnt i nueD FrOm PAGe 4 3
in Thai style, while an adjacent space will emulate a Japanese steakhouse, complete with a sushi bar along one side, says Chompupong. On a recent afternoon, the inside of the restaurant looked as if it was being gutted. Workers were busy framing and hammering away at the sushi bar; nearby, another put the finishing touches on a black wooden sign. “We hope to open by the 10th or 15th of May,” says Chompupong. — c .H .
A Taste of Home
A tAste OF eurOPe, 566 Hercules Drive, cOlcHester, 655-6880
cITy MarkET/onIon rIVEr co-op
and sHElburnE supErMarkET.
They can be filled with Eastern European meats and cheeses and American favorites such as BLTs and ham and cheese. Chef anEla nurkanoVIc, a Healthy Living alum, fills a hot bar with “healthy international food” such as stuffed cabbage and grape leaves. On opening day, fare ranged from chicken in paprika-tinged tomato sauce to American chop suey and Middle Eastern chickpeas. According to Vujanovic, the prepared grub will change daily, and so will the food on the shelves. “I’ve had a lot of customers requesting new things,” he says. “I’m getting Scandinavian, British and Dutch food soon. Whatever people ask for, I’ll probably get.” — A.L.
Hole-in-One
tHe clubHOuse restAurAnt & tHe 19tH HOle lOunGe, cHAmPlAin cOuntry club, 581 st. AlbAns rOAD, swAntOn, 527-1187
One Federal in St. Albans had a desirable problem last summer. According to chef-owner Marcus HaMblETT, the restaurant was simply too full on weekend nights,
gift ES cErtificatlE! availaB
especially during its 15-weeklong concert series. The solution: Get a second place. On Monday, Hamblett and his wife, ErIka, opened the clubHousE rEsTauranT & THE 19TH HolE loungE at the Champlain Country Club in Swanton. The new eatery will bring Hamblett’s gardenfresh food to a new audience of members and nonmembers alike. His six-acre farm april 24: Brunch & Dinner will soon provide all the vegetables at the Clubhouse, romantic Dining casual atmosphere which the Hambletts are currently renting just for the 27 Bridge St, Richmond season. The chef and some Tues-Sun • 434-3148 of his kitchen staff will split their time between the two locations. 4/11/11 Hamblett describes the 12v-toscano041311.indd 1 menu as “Chef Marcus’ fun food,” though the only item it shares with One Federal’s is the signature “frickles,” or fried pickles. New offerings include breakfast served all day, starting at 7 a.m., and Local, Organic, Ethically-Raised Meats entrées such as chicken Order your Summer CSA Cordon Bleu, steak frites by May 1st and get $10–$25 OFF and onion rings with lime Delivering weekly to: dipping sauce. Burlington & Montpelier! Diners can enjoy the fare Healthy & Nutritious Eggs, inside or out, with a view Beef, Pork, Chicken, Duck, Rabbit, Lamb, of all 18 holes, or get sandPheasant, Guinea Hen, wiches (or pasta) delivered Turkey and Goose anywhere on the links. SOLD BY THE POUND
Now Booking Easter Sunday! q
— A.L.
OR BY THE PACKAGE
802-229-4776 tangletownfarm.com
Follow us on twitter for the latest food gossip! corin Hirsch: @latesupper Alice Levitt: @aliceeats
Brunch with the
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clients, points out Podhaizer, who knew of Provisions from her years as a food editor at Seven Days. “It’s wonderful [for farmers] to have that one-on-one connection [with restaurants], but at the same time, it may limit your growth.” As for Provisions itself, Hallgren has no plans to expand, beyond bringing on new products. She calls her customer base “exciting” and deeply values her staff and smooth production. “I have very little interest in that much more growth,” she says. “Never say never, but small is beautiful.” m
at the Holiday Inn
Sunday April 24th, 2011 9:00 am – 3:00 pm Reservations Recommended
$19.95 Per Person $9.95 For Children under 12
Harper’s Restaurant
1068 Williston Rd, S. Burlington Reservations recommended: (802) 419-6200
FOOD 45
Provisions international ltd., 42 north main street, white river Junction, 291-6100. provisionsintl.com.
Easter Bunny
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City Market/Onion River Co-op, Healthy Living Natural Foods Market, Hen of the Wood at the Grist Mill, the Essex Culinary Resort & Spa, Bluebird Tavern and American Flatbread. At Salt, Podhaizer and her husband and the restaurant’s chef, Dan Green, order from Provisions every three weeks or so: cheese, butter and crème fraiche; baking supplies such as King Arthur Flour and Callebaut chocolate; kosher salt, spices, beans and dried fruit. A recent order for their rotating menu included Medjool dates, preserved lemons, rose jam, mulberry syrup and vanilla. “It’s a crucial piece. As Vermont gains more mid-scale farms and food producers, those producers and farmers can’t drive around” to see all their
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sources seaweed was wiped out by the tsunami that followed the recent earthquake. “They lost everybody,” says Kannler quietly. That seaweed will come off Provisions’ list. Provisions’ offices are about two miles from the warehouse, up a wide staircase in a former Masonic temple. Entering can feel like walking through a looking glass: One minute you’re in a slightly worn old railroad town, and the next you’re in a gorgeously restored arts and crafts-y space. The suite includes an elegant tasting kitchen where staff cook meals and try out new products, and a huge, empty room adorned with stainedglass windows where Provisions holds occasional tastings for customers. Those customers read like a who’s who of Vermont’s fine restaurants and markets:
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During his phone conversation with Seven Days this Monday, DalIbor VujanoVIc took breaks to speak to customers asking for foods from Germany, Russia and Greece. He promised them that the cake mixes, sausages and cheeses would arrive soon. Such is life at the new a TasTE of EuropE, which closed in Winooski and reopened in a larger space in Colchester on April 15. Vujanovic says that his
new store, across from Costco, is already “much busier than it used to be” in its old location. Though the 3200-square-foot store has room for far more merchandise than the old one, including Bosnian smoked meats, German spaetzle and candies from around the world, part of its appeal may be the prepared food. Vujanovic and his family owned Euro Corner, a café on Burlington’s Main Street that closed last year. Much of its menu has migrated to Colchester. Sandwiches are made on the fluffy Bosnian lepinja bread that the family also sells at HEalTHy lIVIng,
Got A fooD tip? food@sevendaysvt.com
Tipping Points Gratuity etiquette for confused consumers BY L Au r E N o BE r
E
SEVEN DAYS
04.20.11-04.27.11
SEVENDAYSVt.com
very time my family goes out to dinner, the same scenario plays out in the restaurant. After we’ve finished our meal and the bill arrives, my father reaches for his 16t-LakeViewHouse032311.indd 1 3/21/11 3:32 PMmoney clip. (Yes, he uses a money clip. He’s fancy like that.) If the meal isn’t, Channel 15 say, $300 or more, my brother or I will LOCAL ART, MUSIC, offer to pay the tip. FASHION & FILM! www.vermontCam.org Having long ago realized that our father would never allow us to foot the Channel 16 dinner bill ourselves, we no longer even CENTER FOR offer to split the cost. But paying the tip, RESEARCH ON VT thursdays > 8 pm we reason, is a sensible compromise. We’re both adults and we should pay our share, or at least part of it. Channel 17 BURLINGTON Typically, though, my father will hear WALK/BIKE COUNCIL none of it, as if somehow our contribuwww.Channel17.org tion would amount to an indictment of GET MORE INFO OR WATCH ONLINE AT his financial fitness. So he thanks us for vermont cam.org • retn.org offering and then says he’s happy to pay. CHANNEL17.ORG He shuffles around some bills while my brother and I quickly tally the tip in our MAIN STREET LANDING PRESENTS 16t-retnWEEKLY.indd 1 4/14/11 11:54 AMheads. This last maneuver is essential because, you see, my father isn’t a great tipper. He is many things, including highly entertaining, intellectually curious and generous to a fault. But when it comes to tipping, he’s strictly a 15 percent kind of guy. And this makes my brother and me bristle. TUES., APR. 26, 6-8PM There’s nothing inherently wrong THE MAIN STREET LANDING PERFORMING ARTS CENTER AT LAKE & COLLEGE, with tipping at the low end of the acTHE LAKE LOBBY AT SIXTY LAKE STREET cepted scale. It just gives the impresON BURLINGTON’S WATERFRONT Every last Tuesday of the month, sion that you’re cheap. Or that you environmental fans and professionals don’t really understand how hard it is meet up for a beer, networking and to make a living in the service industry, discussion at Green Drinks. especially for tipped wageworkers like This informal crowd is a lively mixture of folks from NGOs, waitstaff. academia, government and My brother and I are especially senbusiness. Find employment, sitive to this. While my waitress days friends and new ideas! were numbered after one long, miserTHIS MONTH’S PRESENTER: able summer spent schlepping pasta and pizza to tables of entitled suburbanites, my brother works at an upscale beer bar in Washington, D.C. He relies almost exclusively on tips for his rent, utilities and other expenses. So we both get how important it is to SPONSORED BY: tip at the top of the scale. And that’s why we have to supplement my father’s offering. After he puts the money on the table 46 FOOD
hosted by:
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Got a comment? Contact Lauren Ober at lauren@sevendaysvt.com.
4/14/11 12:49 PM
A tip thAt’s less thAn 20 percent sends A messAge to servers,
but it might not be the one the customer intended to convey. and we all stand up to go, through some sort of sibling telekinesis my brother and I determine who is going to beef up the tip. If it’s me, I’ll walk out with the family, then duck back in, claiming I forgot something. Then I’ll throw a few more dollars in the pile — enough to bring the tip total to 20 percent, and sometimes more, depending on whether I know people who work at the restaurant, or if the server acted charmed by my dad’s jokes. This secret tip-enhancement operation underscores one undeniable fact about gratuity giving in our society: It’s hard to do it right. How many times have you stood before a tip jar at the counter of a coffee shop, buffet or even a dry cleaner and wondered what you were supposed to do? How often have you picked up take-out food and puzzled over appropriate tipping etiquette? What about
when an attendant hands you a towel in a ritzy bistro bathroom, or a hotel doorman hails you a cab in the rain? Those of us who want to do the right thing can be grateful that the Emily Post Institute — based in Burlington, Vt. — offers a raft of advice on the topic of tipping. I put my familial quandary to Daniel Post Senning, the great-greatgrandson of etiquette maven Emily Post and spokesperson for the nation’s foremost authority on manners. He had much to say on the subject. “When you tip at the absolute minimum, you’re communicating that the person has met their minimum requirement. But it doesn’t communicate a generosity of spirit,” Senning says. “It just says you’ve upheld your end of the social contract.” He goes on to suggest that, rather than thinking about tipping as an obligation, we should consider it an opportunity to express gratitude. A tip, Senning says, is really about thanking people for the service they’re providing, be it shining your shoes or vacuuming your hotel room every day. As a rule, when Senning is out to dinner, he calculates the tip thusly: He looks at the bill and moves the decimal point over one place to the left, doubles the amount and then rounds up. That’s typically on the posttax total, which means that servers must love Senning. The only time you would tip on the pretax amount rather than the total, he says, is when you’re using the corporate credit card and the bill is hovering in the $1000 range. Then the tax makes a difference — especially to the company footing the bill. A tip that’s less than 20 percent sends a message to servers, but it might not be the one the customer intended to convey, Senning notes. It says, “I’m cheap,” rather than “I had OK service this evening, but it wasn’t great.” Most restaurant servers interviewed for this story said the same thing: If they get a bad tip — and most consider a bad tip anything less than 18 percent — it’s clearly because the diner was stingy (or older), and not necessarily because they received bad service. Much low-end tipping is generational and not a reflection of the service
food provided, servers say. That’s the case with my father. At least anecdotally, younger people tend to tip better, especially those who have worked in restaurants or have friends who do. But how do you send a message that the server was inattentive, clumsy or even rude if not through your tip? Senning advises that if the service is so bad you feel the need to undertip or even leave no tip at all, you should talk to the manager. Perhaps your issues with the service were beyond the server’s control. The front of the house could be short staffed or the kitchen could have a new cook; the manager would be able to explain that to you. Restaurants are not the only places where tipping can pose an etiquette challenge. What about all those tip jars with the clever signs attached — “Alms for the Pour,” “Support Counter Intelligence,” etc.? If you’re buying a $2 coffee, do you need to put money in the jar? If so, how much? Senning says that, while a tip jar is
a nice modern tradition, there is no obligation to contribute to it. If the person behind the counter goes above and beyond for you — by giving you an extra scoop of ice cream on your cone, say — then go ahead and toss in a dollar or two. Or, if the person remembers that every other Tuesday morning you want a double red eye with soymilk, maybe a little thanks in the form of legal tender is in order. As the service sector of our economy grows, tipping culture will likely change with it, Senning predicts. He sees the U.S. moving to a more western-European style of tipping, where the gratuity is never more than 10 percent and often not expected. That’s assuming states continue to move in the direction of mandating a minimum wage for all employees, including restaurant workers. That shift would be welcome news to my brother and me. Then my father’s 15 percent gratuity would make him the biggest tipper in the joint.
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The Emily Post Institute’s Tipping Guidelines RESTAURANTS
SEVENDAYSVT.COM
WAIT SERVICE (SIT DOWN) — 15-20 percent, pretax. WAIT SERVICE (BUFFET) — 10 percent, pretax. HOST OR MAITRE D’ — No obligation for greeting you and showing you to your table. $10-$20 for going above and beyond to find you a table on a busy night or on occasion, if you are a regular patron. TAKEOUT — No obligation. 10 percent for extra service (curb delivery) or a large, complicated order. BARTENDER — $1-$2 per drink, or 15-20 percent of the tab. TIPPING JARS — No obligation. Tip occasionally if your server or barista provides a little something extra, or if you’re a regular customer. RESTROOM ATTENDANT — 50¢-$3, depending on the level of service. VALET — $2-$5. Tip when the car is returned to you.
TRAVEL
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SKYCAP — $2 first bag, $1 per additional bag. DOORMAN — A smile and a “thanks” when he opens the door. $1-$4 for carrying luggage. $1-$2 for hailing a cab (add an extra $1 if it’s raining). $1-$4 beyond the call of duty. BELLHOP — $2 first bag, $1 per additional bag. $2-$3 for each additional service, such as room delivery. HOUSEKEEPER — $2-$5 per day, left daily with a note marked “Housekeeping — Thank you.” CONCIERGE — No obligation for answering questions. $5-$10 for tickets or restaurant reservations. $15 for hard-to-get tickets or reservations, or 10-20 percent of the ticket price. TAXI DRIVER — 15-20 percent of the fare, but minimally $1. $2 for the first bag. $1 for the second.
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SALON/SPA
HAIR SALON — 15-20 percent; ask to split it among those who served you. MANICURIST — 15-20 percent. FACIAL, WAXING, MASSAGE — 15-20 percent.
NOW IN sevendaysvt.com
3D!
FOOD 47
Source: emilypost.com
Say you saw it in...
calendar A P R I L
2 0 - 2 7 ,
WED.20 agriculture
LUNCH & LEARN: Speaker Charlie Nardozzi speaks about horticultural landscaping in “Pruning Basics.” Gardener’s Supply, Williston, noon-12:45 p.m. Free. Info, 658-2433.
business
KELLEY MARKETING MEETING: Marketing, advertising, communications, social-media and design professionals brainstorm help for local nonprofits over breakfast. Nonprofits seeking help apply online. Room 217, Ireland Building, Champlain College, Burlington, 7:45-9 a.m. Free. Info, 865-6495.
etc.
RAPTOR ENCOUNTER: Visitors get a glimpse into the fascinating lives of flying hunters in this intimate meet-up. Vermont Institute of Natural Science, Quechee, 11 a.m. Regular admission, $8.5010.50; free for kids 3 and under. Info, 359-5000. TALK TO THE TRAINER: Wild-bird handlers share tricks of the trade. Vermont Institute of Natural Science, Quechee, 2 p.m. Regular admission, $8.5010.50; free for kids 3 and under. Info, 359-5000.
‘CEDAR RAPIDS’: A small-town insurance salesman who’s hit a dead end gets a kick start when he has to save his company in Miguel Arteta’s 2011 comedy. Catamount Arts Center, St. Johnsbury, 1:30 p.m., 4 p.m., 7 p.m. $4-7. Info, 748-2600. ‘HARVEST’: Three generations of one family grow closer during the course of one summer spent at a picturesque shoreline town in Marc Meyers’s 2010 drama. Catamount Arts Center, St. Johnsbury, 1:30 p.m., 4 p.m., 7 p.m. $4-7. Info, 748-2600. ‘THE GRATEFUL DEAD MOVIE’: Deadheads screen a never-before-seen interview with Jerry Garcia and archival concert footage in this flashback “rockumentary.” Palace Cinema 9, South Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $12.50. Info, 660-9300.
food & drink
CHOCOLATE-DIPPING DEMO: Fans of cocoa-covered confectionery experience the tempering and dipping process. Laughing Moon Chocolates, Stowe, 2 p.m. Free. Info, 253-9591.
SEVEN DAYS
04.20.11-04.27.11
games
SCRABBLE CLUB: Adults spell it out while raking in the points for clever combinations. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 1-3 p.m. Free. Info, 878-4918.
2 0 1 1
health & fitness
AUTISM AWARENESS MONTH VIDEO PRESENTATION: Parents and professionals tune in as Maple Leaf Clinic’s Dean Mooney hosts a screening of Michelle Garcia Winner’s Social Thinking Across the Home and School Day. Wallingford Elementary School, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 446-3577. GENTLE YOGA: Participants increase flexibility, lubricate joints and massage organs with this exercise. Champlain Senior Center, McClure MultiGenerational Center, Burlington, 9 a.m. $5 suggested donation. Info, 658-3585.
kids
BABYTIME: Crawling tots and their parents convene for playtime and sharing. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 10:30 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 658-3659. CHILDREN’S CRAFT PROGRAMS: Youngsters ages 3 to 12 get friendly with art supplies. Call for project details. Aldrich Public Library, Barre, 1-3 p.m. Free. Info, 476-7550, ext. 308. CHILDREN’S STORY TIME: Budding bookworms pore over pages. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 223-4665. ECHO EARTH WEEKS’ MUDFEST: Families meet salamanders and spring peepers, listen to local musicians, gobble up free scoops of ice cream, and, yes, fling fistfuls of mud at this annual event. ECHO Lake Aquarium and Science Center/Leahy Center for Lake Champlain, Burlington, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Regular admission, $8.50-10.50; free for kids 2 and under. Info, 864-1848. HIGH SCHOOL BOOK GROUP: Bookworms crack open all manner of tomes, from plays to graphic novels to short stories. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 5-6 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7216. ICE SKATING FOR HOMESCHOOLERS: Independent learners hit the ice. Ice Barn, Milton, noon -2 p.m. $3 includes skating and rentals; $10 for skating lessons. Info, 893-4237. MASK-MAKING WORKSHOP: Kids ages 9 and up become masters of disguise as they draw on circus history and Vermont’s wildlife in “Hiding in Plain Sight.” Preregister. Fleming Museum, UVM, Burlington, 10 a.m.-noon. $15-20. Info, 656-2090. MIDDLE SCHOOL BOOK GROUP: Young people dish about their current reads. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 4-5 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7216. MONTGOMERY STORY HOUR: Little lit lovers flip pages before snacking. Montgomery Town Library, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 527-5426.
language
HABLEMOS ESPAÑOL: Fluent or just learning, folks say hola. Phoenix Books, Essex, 6-7 p.m. Free. Info, 872-7111.
WED.20
» P.50
LIST YOUR UPCOMING EVENT HERE FOR FREE!
ALL SUBMISSIONS ARE DUE IN WRITING AT NOON ON THE THURSDAY BEFORE PUBLICATION. FIND OUR CONVENIENT FORM AT: SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POSTEVENT. YOU CAN ALSO EMAIL US AT CALENDAR@SEVENDAYSVT.COM. TO BE LISTED, YOU MUST INCLUDE: THE NAME OF EVENT, A BRIEF DESCRIPTION, SPECIFIC LOCATION, TIME, COST AND CONTACT PHONE NUMBER. 48 CALENDAR
Chicago alt-country pioneers Wilco can attract a crowd any night of the week, but the band’s percussionist, Glenn Kotche, and lead guitarist, Nels Cline (pictured), drop the band name this Thursday to venture into vastly different territory that’s no less of a draw. The pair wrap up a Dartmouth residency with “Sonic/Vision: An Evening of Music, Art, Animation and Improvisation.” Kotche — “a composer who also happens to be a brilliant drummer,” writes the New York Times — starts the set with solo works ranging from “Monkey Chant,” inspired by the Ramayana, to kalimba melodies in “Mobile Parts 1, 2 and 3.” After the intermission, Cline joins artist Norton Wisdom in “Stained Radiance,” an off-the-cuff blend of sonic soundscapes and continuous live painting on a backlit sheet of Plexiglas. Don’t worry; you don’t have to watch the paint dry.
CALENDAR EVENTS IN SEVEN DAYS:
LISTINGS AND SPOTLIGHTS ARE WRITTEN BY CAROLYN FOX. SEVEN DAYS EDITS FOR SPACE AND STYLE. DEPENDING ON COST AND OTHER FACTORS, CLASSES AND WORKSHOPS MAY BE LISTED IN EITHER THE CALENDAR OR THE CLASSES SECTION. WHEN APPROPRIATE, CLASS ORGANIZERS MAY BE ASKED TO PURCHASE A CLASS LISTING.
‘SONIC/VISION: AN EVENING OF MUSIC, ART, ANIMATION AND IMPROVISATION’ Thursday, April 21, 7 p.m., at Spaulding Auditorium, Hopkins Center, Dartmouth College, in Hanover, N.H. Discussion follows the show. $10-27. Info, 603-646-2422. hop.dartmouth.edu
APR. 20-23 | THEATER Bite Me
Weekly World News’ “Bat Boy” became a tabloid classic the instant his grotesque face hit newsstands. The shrieking, pointy-eared half human, half bat was “discovered” deep in a West Virginia cave in 1992 and, over the years, the rag regaled readers with terrifying tales of the creature, from bat attacks to its endorsement of political candidates. Need we say the whole thing was a hoax? But the fabricated fluff attracted its share of fans and led to a new sensation in 1997: Bat Boy: The Musical. The campy romp catches up with our unlikely hero onstage, where he deals with first love, family life and fitting in — understandably challenging for one who reportedly sheds his wings every three years. Johnson State College’s performing-arts department presents the cult hit, fortified with a gothic, pop-rock score by a student band.
‘BAT BOY: THE MUSICAL’ Wednesday, April 20, 10 a.m., and Thursday, April 21, through Saturday, April 23, 7 p.m., at Dibden Center for the Arts, Johnson State College. $5; free for the JSC community. Info, 635-147, jscdibden.boxoffice@jsc.edu. jsc.edu/ dibdencenterforthearts
COURTESY OF JOHNSON STATE COLLEGE
SEVENDAYSVT.COM
film
Different Strokes
COURTESY OF THE ARTIST
APR. 21 | MUSIC
COURTESY OF THE FLEMING MUSEUM
APR. 23 | THEATER Step Right Up The circus paintings, prints, drawings and masks currently on display in a trio of exhibits at UVM’s Fleming Museum of Art speak “to a different era of American history,” says curator of education and public programs Christina Fearon: “One hundred years ago, when the circus came to town ... everything shut down.” That’s not the case today, but Saturday’s Circus Extravaganza sheds light on Vermont’s current, and surprisingly vibrant, circus scene. Troy Wunderle — founder of Saxtons River’s Wunderle Big Top Adventures and artistic director of Greensboro’s Circus Smirkus — shocks and awes with juggling, unicycling, and plate-spinning and ladder-balancing antics. Cirque du Soleil veterans Serenity Smith Forchion and Bill Forchion — currently with Brattleboro’s trapeze and circus school Nimble Arts — continue the trend with partner head balancing and acrobatics.
Troy Wunderle
CIRCUS EXTRAVAGANZA Saturday, April 23, 2 p.m., at Ira Allen Chapel, UVM, in Burlington. $7-8; advance tickets required. Info, 656-0750. flemingmuseum.org
APR. 20-23, 26 & 27 | THEATER
COURTESY OF OSCAR BLUSTIN
CALENDAR 49
Wednesday, April 20, 7:30 p.m.; Thursday, April 21, 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.; Friday, April 22, 7:30 p.m.; Saturday, April 23, 2:00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.; Tuesday, April 26, and Wednesday, April 27, 7:30 p.m., at Briggs Opera House in White River Junction. View website for future dates through May 8. $3063. Info, 291-9009, ext. 10. northernstage.org
SEVEN DAYS
‘EVITA’
04.20.11-04.27.11
While its soaring songs and inventive choreography capture the eyes and ears, Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice’s Evita ultimately engages the mind with one question: What shapes a leader? The Tony-winning, pop-opera smash, which first hit the stage in 1978 and went on to have more than 1500 Broadway shows, looks at the life and times of Eva Perón. The model-turnedactress climbed — or, as some accounts have it, slept — her way up the ladder, quickly stealing the heart of Argentina’s most powerful man, Juan Perón, and of the country itself as its young and short-lived first lady. White River Junction’s regional, professional theater Northern Stage takes “Don’t Cry for Me, Argentina” and the musical’s other hit songs for a spin through May 8.
SEVENDAYSVT.COM
Take the Lead
Meridith Kaye Clark as Evita
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music
Bassnectar with EOTO & Eliot Lipp: DJ and producer Lorin Ashton heads up this genre-jumping, open-sourced musical project following two opening acts. Memorial Auditorium, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $32.2535.50; sold out. Info, 888-512-7469. Lenten Organ Recital: Arthur Zorn takes listeners on a spiritual journey in sound through improvisations and works by Bach, Pachelbel, Rinck and Hesse. Bethany Church, Montpelier, 7 p.m. Donations accepted. Info, 223-2424, ext. 224. Music Recital: Liam Gluck, ’12, and Katie Dunleavy, ’12, interweave melodies with words in a piano and vocal collaboration. Concert Hall, Mahaney Center for the Arts, Middlebury College, 8 p.m. Free. Info, 443-6433. Valley Night: Local trio 440hz — composed of Serena Fox, Michael Hock and Bruce Jones — grace the lounge with humming folk, rock and blues. Big Picture Theater & Café, Waitsfield, 7:30 p.m. $5 suggested cover. Info, 496-8994.
seminars
‘Keys to Credit’: A seminar clears up the confusing world of credit. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 10 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 860-1417, ext. 104.
50 CALENDAR
SEVEN DAYS
04.20.11-04.27.11
SEVENDAYSvt.com
talks
Benson Lecture: Rick Bass: The speaker has published and edited more than 25 books and spent the last two decades working to protect the Montana wilderness from development and logging. Green Mountain College, Poultney, 7-8 p.m. Free. Info, 287-8926. Jeffrey Amestoy: In “The Supreme Court Argument That Saved the Union,” the former Vermont Chief Justice details the thrilling tale of Richard Henry Dana Jr.’s oral argument before the Court in the Prize Cases. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 223-3338. John Cramer: The former physics professor and part-time Westport resident discusses his theories of quantum physics, which inspired Penny Penniston’s play now then again. Whallonsburg Grange Hall, N.Y., 7:30-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 518-962-4449. Linda Peavy & Ursula Smith: Two speakers quote historical letters in “Ma’s Vermont or Pa’s Montana? The Shipman Family Dilemma of 1881.” Gilbert Hart Library, Wallingford, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 446-3366. Panel Discussion: T.J. Donovan, state’s attorney for Chittenden County, and Armina Medic and Steve Howard, victim advocates for Chittenden County, spark a community conversation in “Victims’ Rights in Violent Crimes.” Community Room, Burlington College, 6:15 p.m. Free. Info, 862-9616. Robert St. John: The American Legion commander and post historian shares his research on the mutual-aid veterans organization and its local members. American Legion Post 912, Rouses Point, N.Y., 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 297-2064. Sam Hemingway: As part of the “Story Crafters” lecture series, this Burlington Free Press reporter details the challenges of news writing. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-4918.
theater
‘Bat Boy: The Musical’: Johnson State College’s theater department presents this wild musical based on Weekly World News’ fabricated 1992 tabloid story about a creature who is “half human and half bat.” See calendar spotlight. Dibden Center for the Arts, Johnson State College, 10 a.m. $5; free for the JSC community. Info, 635-1476, jscdibden. boxoffice@jsc.edu.
‘Evita’: Northern Stage revisits Andrew Lloyd Webber’s rock opera about the life and times of Eva Perón. See calendar spotlight. Briggs Opera House, White River Junction, 7:30 p.m. $30-63. Info, 291-9009, ext. 10. ‘Hairspray’ Kickoff Meeting: In anticipation of the fall show, Lyric Theatre Company’s artistic and production teams look for singers, dancers and crew members who aren’t afraid of a little aerosol. Auditorium, South Burlington High School, 7-8 p.m. Free. Info, 658-1484. ‘Sylvia’: Actress Kathryn Blume takes a turn on all fours in A.R. Gurney’s play about a man in the throes of a midlife crisis who takes home a stray dog — much to the dismay of his wife. Presented by Vermont Stage Company. FlynnSpace, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $24.30-32.50. Info, 863-5966.
words
Book Discussion Series: ‘Orchestrated Stories’: Bookworms pore over Tananarive Due’s Joplin’s Ghost, which offers a fictional interpretation of the famous composer. Hartland Public Library, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 436-2473. Cynthia Gabriel: The mother, doula and medical anthropologist introduces her new book, Natural Hospital Birth: The Best of Both Worlds, based on her experiences assisting in childbirth in the U.S. and Russia. Located above Splash Naturals. 68 Main St., Montpelier, 4-6 p.m. Free. Info, 498-7100. Natasha Trethewey: The Pulitzer Prize-winning poet explores such topics as biracial identity, Southern literature, Hurricane Katrina, African American history and more. John Dewey Lounge, Old Mill Building, UVM, Burlington, 5:30 p.m. Free. Info, 656-5665. Poetry Alive! 2011 Poetry Display: Montpelier celebrates National Poetry Month with a text exhibit through downtown that lovers of lit can wander for a taste of contemporary Vermont poetry. Various downtown locations, Montpelier, all day. Free. Info, 223-3338, rysenechal@kellogghubbard.org. ‘The Big Read’ Book Discussion: As part of a nationwide reading program, associate professor of English at Norwich University Lea Williams leads a chat about Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried. Brown Public Library, Northfield, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 485-4621.
THU.21 business
Vermont Businesses for Social Responsibility Sole Circle: Single-person and micro businesses identify industry trends and issues after an overview of “Using Your VBSR Membership.” Space is limited; preregister. Bluebird Tavern, Burlington, meeting, 5-6 p.m.; drinks and networking, 6-6:30 p.m.; optional dining, 6:30 p.m. Cost of food and drink. Info, 862-8347, ext. 22, owenm@vbsr.org.
etc.
Celebrate the Arts: From hip-hop instruction to poetry readings, folks convene for workshops and performances that explore a hodgepodge of creative endeavors. Community College of Vermont, Winooski, 11 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 654-0513. Home-Buying Seminar: Property virgin? Prospective buyers learn the ins and outs of the process from mortgage and real-estate professionals. Check-in and light dinner (provided) at 5:30 p.m. ECHO Lake Aquarium and Science Center/ Leahy Center for Lake Champlain, Burlington, 6-8 p.m. Free; RSVP required. Info, 864-5684. Raptor Encounter: See WED.20, 11 a.m. Talk to the Trainer: See WED.20, 2 p.m.
film
‘Cedar Rapids’: See WED.20, 7 p.m. ‘Harvest’: See WED.20, 7 p.m.
‘Juliette of the Herbs’: This biopic of Juliette de Bairacli Levy, considered the pioneer of holistic veterinary medicine, chronicles the life of the herbalist and author. Preregister. City Market, Burlington, 5:30-7 p.m. Free. Info, 861-9700. Video-Competition Winners’ Premiere & Awards: Chittenden Solid Waste District honors the top entrants of the “Why I {heart} Composting” video competition and screens Dirt! The Movie. Refreshments served. BCA Center, Burlington, 6:30-9 p.m. Free. Info, 8728100, ext. 234.
food & drink
Chocolate-Dipping Demo: See WED.20, 2 p.m. Farm & Food Tour: A caravan-style expedition to Hardwick-area farms and food businesses introduces visitors to a bustling agricultural community. Preregister. Center for Agricultural Economy, Hardwick, 10 a.m. $50; free for children 10 and under. Info, 472-5840.
games
Chess Club: Checkmate! Board-game players try to attack the king with sly strategies. Faith United Methodist Church, South Burlington, 7 p.m. $2-3. Info, 363-5803.
health & fitness
Armchair Aerobics: Seniors boost their circulation, stamina and muscle strength without leaving their chairs. Champlain Senior Center, McClure MultiGenerational Center, Burlington, 11:30 a.m.noon. Free. Info, 658-3585. Strong Living Exercise: Fitness enthusiasts undergo strength training for good health. Aldrich Public Library, Barre, 8 a.m. Free. Info, 443-1654. Women’s Zumba Class: Fast-paced rhythms fuel a Latin-inspired dance-fitness party led by Casey Clark. Chabad of Vermont, Burlington, 7-8 p.m. $5. Info, 658-5770. Yoga Class: Instructor Deb Malgeri leads yogis in pranayama breathing techniques and a variety of postures. Essex Teen Center, 9-10:15 a.m. Donations accepted. Info, 878-6982, debmalgeri@aol.com.
kids
After School Programs: Craft, film, puzzle and gaming activities keep youngsters on the go. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, 3:30 p.m. Free. Info, 223-3338. Children’s Craft Programs: See WED.20, 1-3 p.m. ECHO Earth Weeks’ MudFest: See WED.20, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Georgia Playgroup: Provided snacks offer an intermission to free play. Georgia Youth Center, 9:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 527-5426. Kids Story Time: Snacks and activities chase an hour of tales. LACE, Barre, 3:30-4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 476-4276. Music With Raphael: Preschoolers up to age 5 bust out song and dance moves. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 878-4918. Open Computer Time: Teens play games and surf the web on library laptops. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 3-4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 863-3403. Treasure Tales: Older children collect trinkets for each yarn they hear. Preregister. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 223-4665.
music
Orgelgebet: Organ players perform music of the Holy Week, with compositions from Bach to Richard Arnell. First United Methodist Church, Burlington, 12:15 p.m. Free. Info, 862-1151.
Robert Pinsky, Bob Moses & Robert Douglas Gay: As part of the UVM Department of English’s Music and Literature Series, the U.S. poet laureate from 1997 to 2000 collaborates with a drummer and saxophonist on poetry and jazz. See music section, this issue. Unitarian Church, Burlington, 7:3010 p.m. Free. Info, 656-3056. ‘Sonic/Vision: An Evening of Music, Art, Animation and Improvisation’: Guitarist Nels Cline and percussionist Glenn Kotche — both of Wilco — bridge the gap between music and the visual arts. Special guest is Norton Wisdom. See calendar spotlight. Spaulding Auditorium, Hopkins Center, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H., 7 p.m. $10-27. Info, 603-646-2422. University Jazz Ensemble: Students play smooth sounds in a spring program. UVM Recital Hall, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 656-7776.
seminars
‘Spend Smart’: Vermonters learn savvy skills for stretching bucks and managing money. Preregister. 294 N. Winooski Ave., Burlington, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 860-1417, ext. 104.
talks
Booked for Lunch: Longtime journalist for the Burlington Free Press and Vermont Public Television Candace Page regales listeners with tales of “Reporting Vermont.” Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, noon-1 p.m. Free. Info, 863-3403. Deborah Thomas: The program coordinator for the National Digital Newspaper Program at the Library of Congress speaks about “Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers.” Staff from the Vermont Digital Newspaper Project talk about their efforts following her lecture. Special Collections Reading Room, Bailey/Howe Library, UVM, Burlington, 5 p.m. Free. Info, 656-1493, uvmsc@uvm.edu. Robert Braun: NASA’s chief technologist gives an overview of “Investments in Our Future: Exploring Space Through Innovations and Technology.” Campus Center Theatre. University of Vermont, Burlington, 11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 656-8748, densmore@cems.uvm.edu. Polly Mahoney: The speaker from Maine’s Mahoosuc Guide Service captivates listeners with true tales of hunting, gardening and dog sledding in “Life in the Yukon.” Northwoods Stewardship Center, East Charleston, 7 p.m. $5. Info, 723-6551. Transition Town Third Thursday Series: In “Complex Simplicity: Off-Grid, Mortgage-Free Living in Vermont,” listeners hear one family’s dream of a sustainable home and meet a handful of volunteers who made it happen. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 223-3338.
theater
‘Bat Boy: The Musical’: See WED.20, 7 p.m. ‘Blood Brothers’: Twin boys, separated at birth, grow up as friends ... until they fall for the same girl in Willy Russell’s musical, presented by Lyndon State College’s Twilight Players. Alexander Twilight Theatre, Lyndon State College, Lyndonville, 7 p.m. Donations accepted. Info, 626-3663. ‘Evita’: See WED.20, 2 p.m. & 7:30 p.m. ‘Laverne DeVoe — Isn’t She Dead?’: Pianist Fred Barnes plays a long-suffering accompanist to Sarah Stone, who belts out jazz, blues and show-tune favorites in the guise of a has-been songstress. Part of THT’s Cabaret Series. Byers Studio, Town Hall Theater, Middlebury, 7 p.m. $10; cash bar. Info, 382-9222. ‘Sylvia’: See WED.20, 7:30 p.m.
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liSt Your EVENt for frEE At SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POSTEVENT Hopkins Center for tHe arts presents ‘The GreaTesT sTory ever Told’: Shown through the eyes of a Roman centurion, this retelling of the Easter story is a collaborative effort of local churches and community members, and features more than 75 chorus members. Enosburg Falls Junior/Senior High School, 7 p.m. $5. Info, 848-3635.
words
Five Corners Farmers markeT WinTer susTainabiliTy series: As part of a sequence for folks interested in local edibles, Vermont author Ben Hewitt discusses his book The Town That Food Saved. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6955, 5cornersfarmersmarket@ gmail.com. PoeTry alive! 2011 PoeTry disPlay: See WED.20, all day. sPrinG auThors series: Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Natasha Trethewey reads from her collections. Stearns Performance Space, Johnson State College, 5:30 p.m. Free. Info, 635-1343, jacob.white@jsc.edu. sTory Time: Lit lovers of all ages take in fanciful tales. Bud & Bella’s Bookshop, Randolph, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 728-5509. Thomas PoWers: A Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist based in Vermont talks about his new book The Killing of Crazy Horse. Multipurpose Room, Kreitzberg Library, Norwich University, Northfield, 12-1 p.m. Free. Info, 485-2886.
film
‘ask us Who We are’: Bess O’Brien’s documentary puts a face to the foster care system, focusing on those young Vermonters’ search for family and a sense of belonging. Rutland High School, 7 p.m. $510. Info, 592-3190. ‘The ComPany men’: A ladder-climbing sales exec finds himself a victim of corporate downsizing in John Wells’ 2010 drama starring Ben Affleck, Chris Cooper and Tommy Lee Jones. Catamount Arts Center, St. Johnsbury, 7 p.m. $4-7. Info, 748-2600. ‘The lasT lions’: Dereck Joubert’s 2011 cri de coeur raises the red flag about the sharply decreasing number of big cats in Africa. Catamount Arts Center, St. Johnsbury, 7 p.m. $4-7. Info, 748-2600.
ChoColaTe-diPPinG demo: See WED.20, 2 p.m. ‘Women drink Wine’: Ladies raise a glass of organic Earth 3.0 at this tasting and sew-in hosted by certified wine specialist Nina Koch. Attendees learn to handcraft their own bags. Block Gallery & Coffeehouse, Winooski, 5-8 p.m. $25; ticket must be paid for in advance; $5 for fabric, or bring your own. Info, 373-5150.
health & fitness
CraFT hour: Seniors sew and knit crafty creations for the home. Champlain Senior Center, McClure MultiGenerational Center, Burlington, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 658-3585.
dance
kids
crafts
environment
AprIl 21 7 pm
hop.dartmouth.edu • 603.646.2422 • Dartmouth College • Hanover, nH 6h-Hopkins041311.indd 1
4/12/11 8:02 AM
3v-RSEP040611.indd 1
3/31/11 3:34 PM
aFTer sChool ProGrams: See THU.21, 3:30 p.m. Children’s CraFT ProGrams: See WED.20, 1-3 p.m. Children’s sTory Time: See WED.20, 10:30 a.m. ‘draW ComiCs!’: Teens sketch and share illustrated narratives. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 3-4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7216. eCho earTh Weeks’ mudFesT: See WED.20, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. easT monTPelier sTory Time: Lively narratives, rhymes, finger plays, crafts and games transfix tots. Four Corners Schoolhouse, East Montpelier, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 223-4665. monTGomery PlayGrouP: Little ones exercise their bodies and their minds in the company of adult caregivers. Montgomery Town Library, 1011:30 a.m. Free. Info, 527-5426. sWanTon PlayGrouP: Kids and caregivers squeeze in quality time over imaginative play and snacks. Holy Trinity Episcopal Church, Swanton, 1011:30 a.m. Free. Info, 527-5426. vaCaTion Week movie: When a charming bandit springs a teen with 70-foot-long hair from her tower, they embark on a fantastic adventure in this 2010 Disney flick. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 3 p.m. Free. Info, 878-4918.
language
TerTulia laTina: Latino Americanos and other fluent Spanish speakers converse en español. Radio Bean, Burlington, 5:30-7 p.m. Free. Info, 863-3440.
music
CenTer FesT: This youth-driven, substance-free concert offers music by Unknown Impurity and Jaded, as well as an art show, food and drinks, and a raffle. Knights of Columbus, Rutland, 6-10 p.m. $5; $3 with canned-food donation. Info, 747-4944, ext. 16, bnuckles@rutlandbgclub.org. leT’s WhisPer lisTeninG ParTy: Shortly after releasing their debut album, this Burlington indie-pop duo (Colin Clary and Dana Kaplan) host a shoeless fête complete with 14 iPod-listening stations — one for each album track. Rose Street Artists’ Co-op, Burlington, 8-10 p.m. Free. Info, band@letswhisper. com. FRI.22
CALENDAR 51
FlaT Fix & TroubleshooTinG: Serial cyclists get to know their rides in a clinic covering deflated tires and other basic bike maladies. Onion River Sports, Montpelier, 6-7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 229-9409. raPTor enCounTer: See WED.20, 11 a.m. Talk To The Trainer: See WED.20, 2 p.m.
thursday
SEVEN DAYS
etc.
special guest visual artist norton WisDoM
04.20.11-04.27.11
earTh day CelebraTion: Eco-friendly folks gain insight on reducing their environmental impact, participate in a book swap, recycle cellphones and rechargeable batteries, snag a bike-powered smoothie, plant seedlings, and more. Hunger Mountain Co-op, Montpelier, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Free. Info, 223-8004, ext. 202, info@hungermountain. com. earTh day FesTival: The Peace & Justice Center organizes an Earth-friendly afternoon including a film screening, a guest speaker, live music, games and giveaways. Main Street Landing Performing Arts Center, Burlington, 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Free. Info, 863-2345. river bank CleanuP: As part of Earth Day, eco-friendly volunteers spruce up a waterway. Preregister. Meet in the parking lot. Enosburg Falls Junior/Senior High School, noon. Free. Info, 326-2021.
with WIlCO’s Glenn Kotche & Nels Cline
SEVENDAYSVt.com
arGenTinean TanGo: Shoulders back, chin up! With or without partners, dancers of all abilities strut to bandoneón riffs in a self-guided practice session. Salsalina Studio, Burlington, 7:30-10 p.m. $5. Info, 598-1077. ballroom lesson & danCe soCial: Singles and couples of all levels of experience take a twirl. Jazzercize Studio, Williston, lesson, 7-8 p.m.; open dancing, 8-10 p.m. $14. Info, 862-2269. mad robin ConTra danCe: Forks of Nature dole out tunes for clean-soled folks taking organized steps. Beginner’s lesson, 7:45 p.m. Shelburne Town Hall, 8-11 p.m. $8; bring a dessert to share. Info, 735-2257. WesT CoasT sWinG danCe ParTy: An hourlong lesson precedes open shimmying. The Art House, Middlebury, 6:30-10 p.m. $20 for class and dance; $10 for dance only. Info, 458-0464.
an eVeninG of MUsiC, art, aniMation anD iMproVisation
food & drink
armChair aerobiCs: See THU.21, 11:30 a.m.-noon. ‘GenTle, buT noT Too GenTle’ haTha yoGa: Fitness professional and motivator Nancy Somers instructs yogis in slow-paced stretches and simple breathing exercises. Preregister. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 878-4918. Tai Chi Class: Simple techniques enhance practitioners’ physical and emotional well being. Champlain Senior Center, McClure MultiGenerational Center, Burlington, 10:30 a.m. $5 suggested donation. Info, 658-3585.
Fri.22
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Middlebury College Orchestra: Andrew Massey conducts students in the world premiere of Piano Concert no. 1 by Nicholas Tkach, ’11; Manitou Rising by Peter Hamlin, ’73; Fantasia in G Major by Bach; and Schubert’s unfinished te sy Symphony no. 8 in B Minor. of br et t Concert Hall, Mahaney Center si m is on for the Arts, Middlebury College, 8 p.m. Free. Info, 443-6433. Scrag Mountain Music: Violinist Owen Dalby and violist Meena Bhasin join this innovative chamber ensemble in diverse works from the baroque period to the 20th century. Green Mountain Girls’ Farm, Northfield, 7 p.m. Donations accepted. Info, 734904-5401 . ur
theater
‘Bat Boy: The Musical’: See WED.20, 7 p.m. ‘Blood Brothers’: See THU.21, 7 p.m. ‘Evita’: See WED.20, 7:30 p.m. ‘Plaza Suite’: Three separate acts, each taking place in suite 719, capture a variety of characters in different stages of love in this Neil Simon comedy, produced by the St. Johnsbury Players. Auditorium, St. Johnsbury School, 7:30 p.m. $7-9. Info, 626-3047. ‘Sylvia’: See WED.20, 7:30 p.m. ‘The Greatest Story Ever Told’: See THU.21, 7 p.m.
52 CALENDAR
SEVEN DAYS
04.20.11-04.27.11
SEVENDAYSvt.com
words
All-Ages Poetry Slam: Wordsmiths spar in a friendly competition of five-minute recitations, hosted by Geof Hewitt. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 223-3338. Diane Imrie: The coauthor of Cooking Close to Home: A Year of Seasonal Recipes addresses the culinary challenge of eating locally at a book signing. Complimentary refreshments provided. Brown Dog Books & Gifts, Hinesburg, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 482-5189. Group Poetry Reading: Established writers and VCFA students recite lines during the Montpelier Art Walk. Readings take place in the chapel; reception follows in the T. W. Wood Art Gallery. Vermont College of Fine Arts, Montpelier, 4-6 p.m. Free. Info, 223-3338, rysenechal@kellogghubbard.org. Poetry Alive! 2011 Poetry Display: See WED.20, all day. Poetry Reading: A multimedia presentation of slides and music accompanies delivery by Jesse LoVasco and Lisa Mase. Red Hen Bakery & Café, Middlesex, 7 p.m. Info, 229-1453, lisamase@ gmail.com.
SAT.23 art
Saturday Art Sampler: Instructor Kaitlyn Barr demonstrates the tools and techniques involved in creating decorative and beautifully detailed Ukrainian pysanky. Preregister. Davis Studio Gallery, Burlington, 10 a.m.-noon. $24. Info, 425-2700.
dance
Ballroom Lesson & Dance Social: See FRI.22, 7-10 p.m. Contra Dance: Folk dancers bust a traditional move to music by Matching Orange and Pete Sutherland. Holley Hall, Bristol, 8-11 p.m. Donations accepted. Info, 893-4082. ‘Homegrown in the Tradition’: A house band provides classic tunes for traditional-dance favorites, called by Mary Stilley-Wesley. Wear soft-soled shoes and bring a dish for the dessert potluck. Capital City Grange, Montpelier, instruction, 7:30 p.m.; dance, 8-11 p.m. $8. Info, 225-8921.
Norwich Contra Dance: Peter Johnson calls the steps for soft-soled moves to fiddle tunes by Forks of Nature. Tracy Hall, Norwich, 8 p.m. $8; free for under 16; donations accepted for seniors. Info, 7854607, rbarrows@cs.dartmouth. edu.
environment
Youth Leader Workshop: In “iCare, iOrganize, iMatter,” 350 Vermont helps give middle and high schoolers from across the state the tools and support network they need to be effective and inspiring climate champions, as well as organizes a successful climate rally for iMatter March. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Free. Info, 603-496-0755.
etc.
‘Easter Egg Sniff Fundraiser’: Why let humans have all the fun? Canine noses scout out plastic eggs filled with dog treats at this event hosted by Therapy Dogs of Vermont. Hard’ack, St. Albans, 1-4 p.m. $10 per dog; $5 for therapy dog pretesting; dogs must be leashed. Info, 777-7000, tamara@ therapydogs.org. Five Colleges Book Sale: Volumes of bound material make up this large New England used-book sale and scholarship benefit. Lebanon High School, N.H., 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Free. Info, 295-0906. Military Appreciation Day: The American Military Retirees Association and the Clinton County VSO host a day honoring North Country military folks. Crete Memorial Civic Center, Plattsburgh, N.Y., 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Free. Info, 518-563-9479 or 518-565-4720. Raptor Encounter: See WED.20, 11 a.m. Talk to the Trainer: See WED.20, 2 p.m. Volunteer Work Day: Good Samaritans clean the windows, clear the trails, enter bird sightings into an online database and perform other helpful tasks. Preregister; lunch is provided. Birds of Vermont Museum, Huntington, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Free. Info, 434-2167, museum@birdsofvermont.org.
film
‘The Company Men’: See FRI.22, 7 p.m. & 9 p.m. ‘The Last Lions’: See FRI.22, 7 p.m. & 9 p.m. ‘Vanishing of the Bees’: Refreshments sweetened with local honey augment a screening of George Langworthy and Maryam Henein’s 2009 documentary about colony collapse disorder and the relationship between humankind and Mother Earth. Bradford Public Library, 1 p.m. Free. Info, 2224536, bradfordpubliclibrary@gmail.com.
food & drink
Burlington Winter Farmers Market: Vendors sell ethnic cuisine, pottery, artisan cheese and anything else they can produce in the cold. Memorial Auditorium, Burlington, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. Info, 310-5172, info@burlingtonfarmersmarket.org. Chocolate-Dipping Demo: See WED.20, 2 p.m. Middlebury Winter Farmers Market: Area growers, cheese makers, bakers and craftspeople collaborate to offer year-round “eat local” options. American Flatbread, Middlebury, 9:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. Info, 388-0178. Sugar-on-Snow Party: Vermonters indulge in a little liquid gold — with the requisite pickles, hard-boiled eggs and doughnuts, of course. Masonic Lodge, Waitsfield, noon-4 p.m. $5; $20 per family of five. Info, 496-4880.
health & fitness
Pilates & Yoga for Runners: Arica Bronz of All Wellness Physical Therapy and Pilates introduces exercises that balance the physical and energetic demands of running. Preregister. City Market, Burlington, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 861-9700.
kids
Children’s Story Time: Young ones hop over to the story stage for bunny tails ... er, tales. Barnes & Noble, South Burlington, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 864-8001. ECHO Earth Weeks’ MudFest: See WED.20, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Jim Arnosky: The naturalist and author of children’s books such as Slither and Crawl: Eye to Eye With Reptiles invites kids into the world of bugs, birds, plants and other wild things. Rochester Public Library, 1 p.m. Free. Info, 767-4258. Read to a Dog: Stories form a bond between young readers and Therapy Dogs of Vermont. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 863-3403.
music
Connie Dover & Skip Gorman: Two distinctive voices bring alive the traditions and history of Scotland, Ireland, Appalachia and the American Old West. Chandler Gallery, Randolph, 7:30 p.m. $17-20. Info, 728-6464, tickets@chandler-arts.org. Mellow Yellow’s Hit Parade Live: A peaceand-love-era tribute band plays tunes from the golden era of Top 40 radio in a staged 1960s-style TV show. Vergennes Opera House, 7:30 p.m. $8-18. Info, 399-2589. Patti Casey & Friends: Local foods and brews from Three Penny Taproom, Red Hen Bakery, Vermont Artisan Coffee & Tea, and Screaming Ridge Soups augment a folk-music celebration of the release of The Heart of a Waiting Boy. Vermont College of Fine Arts, Montpelier, 7:30 p.m. $15 plus cost of food and drink. Info, 598-4819. Scrag Mountain Music: See FRI.22, United Church, Warren, 2 p.m. The DavydovFanning Duo: Cellist Dieuwke Davydov and pianist Diana Fanning perform Bach, Barber, Shostakovich and Debussy works from their 2011 European tour program. Concert Hall, Mahaney Center for the Arts, Middlebury College, 8 p.m. Free. Info, 443-3168.
outdoors
‘Blood Brothers’: See THU.21, 2 p.m. & 7 p.m. Circus Extravaganza: Aerial acts, acrobatics, juggling, unicycling and other antics seek to dazzle in this hourlong show featuring talents from Ringling Brothers Circus and Cirque du Soleil. See calendar spotlight. Ira Allen Chapel, UVM, Burlington, 2 p.m. $7-8; advance tickets required; see flemingmuseum.org for details. Info, 656-0750. ‘Evita’: See WED.20, 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. ‘Plaza Suite’: See FRI.22, 7:30 p.m. ‘Sylvia’: See WED.20, 2 p.m. & 7:30 p.m. ‘The Greatest Story Ever Told’: See THU.21, 7 p.m. The Met: Live in HD: Catamount Arts Center: Renée Fleming stars in a broadcast of Strauss’ final opera, Capriccio. Catamount Arts Center, St. Johnsbury, 1 p.m. $16-23. Info, 748-2600. The Met: Live in HD: Lake Placid Center for the Arts: See above listing. Lake Placid Center for the Arts, N.Y., 1 p.m. $12-18. Info, 518-523-2512. The Met: Live in HD: Loew Auditorium: See above listing. Loew Auditorium, Hopkins Center, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H., 1 p.m. $10-27.50. Info, 603-646-2422. The Met: Live in HD: Town Hall Theater: See above listing. Town Hall Theater, Middlebury, 1 p.m. $22. Info, 382-9222.
words
Poetry Alive! 2011 Poetry Display: See WED.20, all day. Poetry Readings: Wanda and Ben Waterman, along with the participants of a writing workshop, read polished lines at 4 p.m. Linda Gionti, Sharyl Green, Jim Hulfish, Bonnie Morrissey, Holly Wilkinson and Marian Willmott do the same at 8 p.m. The Art House, Middlebury, 4 p.m. & 8 p.m. Free. Info, 382-1513. Poetry-Writing Workshop: Nova Scotia poet, spokenword artist and playwright Wanda Waterman focuses on “The Care and Feeding of a Hungry Poet,” addressing how to fuel the poetic imagination. The Art House, Middlebury, 2-4 p.m. $15 or pay what you can. Info, 382-1513. Story Time: See THU.21, 11 a.m.
SUN.24
Family Day at the Farm: Folks flock to the operating Jersey dairy farm for wagon rides, heirloom garden activities and programs with baby farm animals. Billings Farm & Museum, Woodstock, 10 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Regular admission, $3-12; free for kids 2 and under. Info, 457-2355. Guided Birding: Ken Copenhaver and members of the Green Mountain Audubon Society lead the way to birding hot spots. Preregister. Meet at the refuge headquarters on Tabor Road, off Route 78. Missisquoi National Wildlife Refuge, Swanton, 8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 863-2436, gmas@greenmountainaudubon.org.
Contact Improvisation & Movement Exploration Jam: Attendees practice spurof-the-moment movements after a half hour of skill building. Musicians are welcome to chime in. Contemporary Dance & Fitness Studio, Montpelier, 10 a.m.-noon. $3-5. Info, 778-0300 or 318-3927. English Dance Series: Trip to Norwich serenade soft-soled dancers moving under the direction of caller Chris Levey. Tracy Hall, Norwich, 3-6 p.m. $4-7. Info, 785-4121.
theater
etc.
‘Bat Boy: The Musical’: See WED.20, 7 p.m.
dance
Five Colleges Book Sale: See SAT.23, 12-4:30 p.m.
BROWSE LOCAL EVENTS on your phone!
Connect to m.sevendaysvt.com on any web-enabled cellphone for free, up-to-the-minute CALENDAR EVENTS, plus other nearby restaurants, club dates, MOVIE THEATERS and more.
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Raptor Encounter: See WED.20, 11 a.m. Talk to the Trainer: See WED.20, 2 p.m.
film
‘The Company Men’: See FRI.22, 1:30 p.m. & 7 p.m. ‘The Last Lions’: See FRI.22, 1:30 p.m. & 7 p.m.
food & drink
Chocolate-Dipping Demo: See WED.20, 2 p.m. Sunday Dinner: Members of Food Salvage, a University of Vermont-sponsored club, prepare and serve a hot meal for the community. Chittenden Emergency Food Shelf, Burlington, 5:30 p.m. Free. Info, foodsalvage@gmail.com.
games
Burlington-Area Scrabble Club: Tripleletter-square seekers spell out winning words. New players welcome. McClure MultiGenerational Center, Burlington, 12:30-5 p.m. Free. Info, 862-7558.
health & fitness
Open Meditation Classes: Harness your emotions and cultivate inner peace through the Tibetan Buddhist tradition. Laughing River Yoga, Burlington, 1-3 p.m. $5-25 suggested donation. Info, 684-0452, vermont@rsl-ne.com.
kids
ECHO Earth Weeks’ MudFest: See WED.20, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Read to a Dog: See SAT.23, 1-2 p.m.
language
French-English Conversation Group: Novice and fluent French speakers brush up on their linguistics — en français. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 4-5:30 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7211.
sport
Women’s Drop-In Soccer: Ladies — and sometimes gents — break a sweat while passing around the spherical polyhedron at this coed-friendly gathering. Beginners are welcome. Miller Community and Recreation Center, Burlington, 6-8 p.m. $3. Info, 862-5091.
theater
words
Poetry Alive! 2011 Poetry Display: See WED.20, all day.
art
Art Class: Would-be photographers learn about framing the world. Champlain Senior Center, McClure MultiGenerational Center, Burlington, 1011:45 a.m. Free. Info, 658-3585.
etc.
film
kids
After School Programs: See THU.21, 3:30 p.m. Infant Story Hour: Kiddos up to age 2 absorb spoken-word yarns. Aldrich Public Library, Barre, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 476-7550, aldrichlibrary@ charter.net. Music With Raphael: See THU.21, 10:45 a.m. Puzzles & Board Games: Youngsters put the pieces together in entertaining undertakings. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7216. Stories With Megan: Preschoolers ages 2 to 5 expand their imaginations through storytelling, songs and rhymes. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 11-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 865-7216. Swanton Playgroup: Kids and caregivers squeeze in quality time over imaginative play and snacks. Mary Babcock Elementary School, Swanton, 9:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 527-5426. Teen Advisory Board: Middle and high schoolers have a say in program planning and the teen collection. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 4-5 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7216.
music
Mad River Chorale Rehearsals: No auditions are necessary to join this community choir, which meets weekly to give voice to song selections from America’s greatest composers. Harwood Union High School, South Duxbury, 6:45-8:45 p.m. Free. Info, 496-4781. ‘One Night of Queen’: Gary Mullen & the Works impersonate the British rockers, tight pants, old Adidas and all. Spruce Peak Performing Arts Center, Stowe Mountain Resort, 8 p.m. $60-75. Info, 760-4634. University Concert Band: Students jam out under the direction of Alan Parshley. UVM Recital Hall, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 656-7776.
talks
Michael Atkinson: University of Cincinnati’s professor emeritus of English and comparative literature looks into “Taoism: The Life of Balance and Mystery.” Faith United Methodist Church, South Burlington, 2 p.m. $5. Info, 864-3516.
theater
Auditions for ‘Hairspray’: In anticipation of the fall show, Lyric Theatre Company seeks cast members who aren’t afraid of a little aerosol. The Schoolhouse, South Burlington, 5:45-10 p.m. Free. Info, 658-1484.
words
Book Discussion Series: ‘Earth Tones’: T.C. Boyle’s A Friend of the Earth explores how to live in harmony with nature. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 223-3338. Helen Benedict: The award-winning author of five novels and five nonfiction books examines gender justice within the military in a discussion of The Lonely Soldier. Dole Auditorium, Norwich University, Northfield, 5-6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 485-2886. Marjorie Cady Memorial Writers Group: Budding wordsmiths improve their craft through “homework” assignments, creative exercises and sharing. Ilsley Public Library, Middlebury, 10 a.m.noon. Free. Info, 388-2926, cpotter935@comcast. net. Poetry Alive! 2011 Poetry Display: See WED.20, all day.
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agriculture
‘A Bountiful Garden Starts With Garden Planning’: Red Wagon Plants’ Julie Rubaud helps kitchen gardeners strategize their harvest to avoid the dreaded zucchini explosion. Preregister. Carpenter-Carse Library, Hinesburg, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 482-2878.
art
‘Art in Bloom’: Flower-show judge Elain Dates and other members of the Burlington Garden Club create floral designs that complement or interpret works of art. Faith United Methodist Church, South Burlington, 1 p.m. Free. Info, 863-6764.
business
‘One Woman Show’: Meet-Up for SelfEmployed Women: Freelancers and small-business owners make connections and bounce ideas over coffee. August First, Burlington, 7:30 a.m.-9:30 p.m. Free. Info, 863-4099.
community
ECHO Expansion Breakfast: A casual meal accompanies a guided tour, short video and discussion about the science center’s expansion plans. ECHO Lake Aquarium and Science Center/Leahy Center for Lake Champlain, Burlington, 8:30-9:30 a.m. Free. Info, 864-1848.
dance
Ballroom & Latin Dance: Dance-floor disciplines — including swing and rumba — keep feet on the move. Union Elementary School, Montpelier, 5:307:30 p.m. $12-14. Info, 225-8699, elabd@comcast. net. Ballroom Dance Class: Folks take instruction in swing from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. and rumba from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Gymnasium, Union Elementary School, Montpelier. $14 to drop in. Info, 225-8699.
environment
A Walk for Water: Vermonters pound a four-mile trail to North Beach in honor of Earth Month and in support of regional and global organizations working to preserve clean-water access. Hosted by the Vermont network of Aveda Salons. Lake Champlain Committee, Burlington, 5:30 p.m. $20 donation supports LCC’s clean-water programs. Info, 658-1414 or 212-680-5849. Green Drinks: Activists and professionals for a cleaner environment raise a glass over networking and discussion. Lake Lobby, Main Street Landing Performing Arts Center, Burlington, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 864-7999.
etc.
Manicures: Natural nails receive some pampering. Champlain Senior Center, McClure MultiGenerational Center, Burlington, 10-11:45 a.m. Free. Raptor Encounter: See WED.20, 11 a.m. Talk to the Trainer: See WED.20, 2 p.m. Vermont Solidarity/Support Vigil for the People of Japan: On the 25th anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, folks show their compassion for those affected by Japan’s current crisis by bringing or making paper cranes, signing a banner to be sent abroad, and sharing stories from Fukushima. Vermont Statehouse, Montpelier, 4:30-6 p.m. Donations accepted. Info, 476-3154.
film
‘The Company Men’: See FRI.22, 7 p.m. ‘The Last Lions’: See FRI.22, 7 p.m. ‘The Story of Stuff’: Annie Leonard’s animation project catapults viewers into a discussion about the costs of consumption. Bring a dish and reusable tableware for a zero-waste potluck dinner. Cafeteria, Essex High School, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 872-8111.
food & drink
Barbecue Lunch: Chef David fires up the grill for the first cookout of the season. Champlain Senior Center, McClure MultiGenerational Center, Burlington, noon. $3 suggested donation; call for tickets. Info, 658-3585. Chocolate-Dipping Demo: See WED.20, 2 p.m. Dinner Frittata & Salad With In-Season Wild Edibles: Ramps, fiddleheads and mushrooms make their way into an easy evening meal. Preregister. Integrated Arts Academy, H.O. Wheeler Elementary School, Burlington, 5:30-7 p.m. Free. Info, 861-9700.
games
Intergenerational Game Day: Preschoolers from the Burlington Children Space get together with seniors for puzzles and board and card games. Champlain Senior Center, McClure MultiGenerational Center, Burlington, 9:30-10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 658-3585.
health & fitness
Laughter Yoga: What’s so funny? Giggles burst out as gentle aerobic exercise and yogic breathing meet unconditional laughter to enhance physical, emotional and spiritual health and well-being. Miller Community and Recreation Center, Burlington, 5 p.m. Free. Info, 355-5129. ‘Understanding Your Medicare Choices’: Champlain Valley Agency on Aging’s Patricia Allen Selsky helps folks navigate the intricacies of the health-insurance program. Richmond Free Library, 6:30-7:45 p.m. $5-10. Info, 434-3979, members@ richmondvermont.com.
kids
After School Programs: See THU.21, 3:30 p.m. Alburgh Playgroup: Tots form friendships over stories, songs and crafts. Alburgh Elementary School, 12:15-1 p.m. Free. Info, 527-5426. Children’s Story Hour: Two- to 5-year-olds tune in for audible prose. Aldrich Public Library, Barre, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 476-7550, aldrichlibrary@ charter.net. Children’s Story Time: See WED.20, 10:30 a.m. Creative Tuesdays: Artists engage their imaginations with recycled crafts. Kids under 10 must be accompanied by an adult. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 3-5 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7216. Fairfax Story Hour: Songs, tales and crafts captivate kiddos. Fairfax Community Library, 9:30-10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 527-5426. Kids Story Hour: Literature hounds show up for tall tales. East Barre Branch Library, kids under 3 meet at 10 a.m.; ages 3 to 5 meet at 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 476-5118. Lego Club: Kids ages 5 and up fashion astonishing creations out of plastic bricks and building supplies. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 10:30 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 865-7216. Open Computer Time: See THU.21, 3-4:30 p.m. Puzzles & Board Games: See MON.25, 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m. South Hero Playgroup: Free play, crafting and snacks entertain children and their grown-up companions. South Hero Congregational Church, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 527-5426. St. Albans Playgroup: Creative activities and storytelling engage the mind. St. Luke’s Church, St. Albans, 9:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 527-5426. Story Hour: Tales and picture books catch the attention of little tykes. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 878-4918. Story Time for Tots: Three- to 5-year-olds savor stories, songs, crafts and company. CarpenterCarse Library, Hinesburg, 11 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 482-2878.
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CALENDAR 53
Ciné Salon: Acclaimed Hollywood film editor Billy Weber — who recently wrapped up Terrence Malick’s The Tree of Life, starring Brad Pitt and Sean Penn — discusses his illustrious career in a live phone interview. Howe Library, Hanover, N.H., 7-9:45 p.m. Free. Info, 603-252-6786, posn@emlot.com. ‘The Company Men’: See FRI.22, 7 p.m. ‘The Last Lions’: See FRI.22, 7 p.m.
Armchair Aerobics: See THU.21, 11:30 a.m.-noon. Menstrual Health: That time of the month? Puppets and faux uteri teach women about alternative products, self-care techniques and herbal remedies. Preregister. Hunger Mountain Co-op, Montpelier, 6-7:30 p.m. $10-12. Info, 223-8004, ext. 202, info@hungermountain.com. Strong Living Exercise: See THU.21, 8 a.m.
Tuesday Night at the Movies: Film-club members screen Casablanca and Play It Again, Sam at this throwback double feature. Open discussion follows. Big Picture Theater & Café, Waitsfield, 7 p.m. $10. Info, 496-8994, ken@crmvt.com.
SEVEN DAYS
Raptor Encounter: See WED.20, 11 a.m. Talk to the Trainer: See WED.20, 2 p.m.
health & fitness
Shape & Share Life Stories: Prompts trigger true tales, which are crafted into compelling narratives and read aloud. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 12:30-2:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-4918.
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Chocolate-Dipping Demo: See WED.20, 2 p.m.
SEVENDAYSvt.com
‘Blood Brothers’: See THU.21, 7 p.m. ‘Sylvia’: See WED.20, 2 p.m. The Met: Live in HD: Catamount Arts Center: See SAT.23, 1 p.m. The Met: Live in HD: Spaulding Auditorium: See SAT.23, Spaulding Auditorium, Hopkins Center, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H., 1 p.m. $10-27.50. Info, 603-646-2422.
food & drink
calendar
jamie rainbow yarn. local. naturally dyed. super soft.
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language
Pause Café: French speakers of all levels converse en français. Borders Books & Music, Burlington, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 864-5088.
music
Green Mountain Chorus: Men who like to sing learn four-part harmonies at an open meeting of this all-guy barbershop group. St. Francis Xavier School, Winooski, 7-9:30 p.m. Free. Info, 505-9595. student PerforManCe reCital & awards CereMony: Music scholars perform on their various instruments. UVM Recital Hall, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 656-7776.
talks
ann PeterMann & orin lanGelle: The founders
the Global Justice Ecology Project stress the CHAFFEE CENTER CHAFFEEARTART CENTERofimportance of taking a holistic approach to environ-
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RUTLAND AREA ARTART ASSOCIATION RUTLAND AREA ASSOCIATIONmental and economic issues. Stearns Performance
Space, Johnson State College, 4 p.m. Free. Info, 6351348, jerry.anderson@jsc.edu. Behind-the-sCenes lunCh & disCussion: RUTLAND AREA ART ASSOCIATION ‘ViCtory’: The cast and crew join director Richard RUTLAND AREA ART ASSOCIATION RUTLAND AREA ART ASSOCIATION RUTLAND AREA ART ASSOCIATION Romagnoli in a chat about the upcoming production over a provided lunch. Seeler Studio Theatre, Mahaney Center for the Arts, Middlebury College, RUTLAND AREA ART ASSOCIATION 12:30 p.m. Donations accepted. Info, 443-6433. CoMMunity MediCal sChool: Fletcher Allen director of cardiac rehabilitation Philip Ades details how to keep that ticker beating in “Cardiac Makeovers: Rehab and Prehab for a Healthy Heart.” RUTLAND AREA ART ASSOCIATION A Q&A session follows the lecture. Carpenter Auditorium, Given Medical Building, UVM, Burlington, 6:30-8 p.m. Free. Info, 847-2886. sPrinG sCienCe series: Cascade Sorte, of the University of Massachusetts Boston’s environmenAESTHETICS OF A CARBON-CONSTRAINED FUTURE tal, Earth and ocean sciences department, delivers a lecture on “Does Climate Change Favor Invasive APRIL 22 — JUNE 18, 2011 Species?” Room 334, Ackley Hall, Green Mountain OPENING: FRIDAY APRIL 22, 5-8 PM AESTHETICS OF A CARBON-CONSTRAINED FUTURE AESTHETICS OF A CARBON-CONSTRAINED FUTURE College, Poultney, 4 p.m. Free. Info, 287-8926. First 50 guests to arrive at the reception will receive a special Earth Day inspired gift!
CHAFFEE ART CENTER CHAFFEE ART CHAFFEEART ART CENTER CENTER CHAFFEE CHAFFEE ART CENTER CHAFFEE ART CENTER
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MAYreception 13,FUTURE 5-8 PM auditions for ‘hairsPray’: See MON.25, 5:45-10 First 50Aguests to FRIDAY arrive at the will AESTHETICS OF CARBON-CONSTRAINED AESTHETICS OF A First CARBON-CONSTRAINED FUTURE p.m. 50 aguests to arrive at the reception will receive specialFor Earth Day inspired gift! more information visit: receive a special Earth Day inspired gift! ‘eVita’: See WED.20, 7:30 p.m. FRIDAY MAYsponsored 13, 5-8 PM Exhibit by:
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SEVENDAYSVt.com
First 50 guests to arrive at the reception will Vermont Electric Company (VELCO), Casella For more information visit: receivePower a special Earth Day inspired gift! Waste Systems, Inc PublicFUTURE Service First 50 guests to Central arrive Vermont at the reception will Book disCussion: Jim Schley leads bibliophiles AESTHETICS OF A and CARBON-CONSTRAINED First receive 50 guests to arrive at the reception will (CVPS), in collaboration with the BCA Center. a special Earth Day inspired gift! ART HOP RECEPTION: For more information visit: in an analysis of Ernest Hemingway’s For Whom the Firstreceive 50 guests to arrive at the reception will Image: Megan Bisbee-Durlam, Optimistic Landscape a special Earth Day inspired FRIDAY MAY 13, 5-8gift! PM Exhibit sponsored by: Bell Tolls. Kimball Public Library, Randolph, 7 p.m. receiveElectric a special Day(VELCO), inspired gift! Vermont PowerEarth Company Casella Free. Info, 728-5073. For more information visit: OPENING: FRIDAY APRIL 22, 5-8 PM Waste Systems, Inc and Central Vermont Public Service FRIDAY MAY 13, 5-8 PM Exhibit sponsored by: First 50 guests to arrive at thethe reception will www.chaffeeartcenter.org (CVPS), in FRIDAY collaboration with BCA Center. CreatiVe writinG GrouP: Wordsmiths of all MAY 13, 5-8 PM Vermont Electric PowerEarth Company (VELCO), receive a special Day inspired gift! Casella Image: Megan Bisbee-Durlam, Optimistic Landscape levels share their penned expressions. Champlain FRIDAY MAY 13, 5-8 PM For more information visit: Exhibit sponsored by: Waste Systems, Inc and Central Vermont Public Service For more information visit: Senior Center, McClure MultiGenerational Center, ART HOP RECEPTION: Vermont Electric Power Company (VELCO), Casella (CVPS), in collaboration with the BCA Center. For more information visit: Burlington, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 658-3585. FRIDAY MAY 13, 5-8 PM Waste Systems, Inc and Central Vermont Public Service Image: Megan Bisbee-Durlam, Optimistic Landscape (CVPS), in collaboration with the BCA Center. Exhibit sponsored by: niGht of Poetry: As part of National Poetry For more information visit: Image: Megan Bisbee-Durlam, Optimistic Landscape Exhibit sponsored by: Vermont Electric Powerwww.chaffeeartcenter.org Company (VELCO), Casella Month, neighbors share lines and stanzas about Exhibit sponsored by: Vermont Electric Power Company (VELCO), Casella Central Vermont Public Service Waste Systems, Inc and Wallingford or Vermont. Town Hall, Wallingford, 7-8 Exhibit sponsored by: Vermont Electric Power Company (VELCO), Casella Waste Systems, Inc and Vermont Public Service (CVPS), in Central collaboration with the BCA Center. p.m. Free. Info, 446-3560. Vermont Electric Power Company (VELCO), Casella in collaboration with the BCA Center. Image:(CVPS), Megan Bisbee-Durlam, Optimistic Landscape Waste Systems, Inc and Central Vermont Public Service Poetry aliVe! 2011 Poetry disPlay: See WED.20, Waste Systems, Inc and Central Vermont Public Service Image:(CVPS), Megan Bisbee-Durlam, Optimistic Landscape in collaboration with with the the BCA Center. (CVPS), in collaboration BCA Center. all day. Image: Megan Optimistic Landscape Image:Bisbee-Durlam, Megan Bisbee-Durlam, Optimistic Landscape
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agriculture
SEVEN DAYS
lunCh & learn: Flora fans prepare for planting season as speaker Denyse Butler-Ayres unearths “What’s New for 2011 in Annuals, Perennials, Trees and Shrubs.” Gardener’s Supply, Williston, noon12:45 p.m. Free. Info, 658-2433.
business
54 CALENDAR
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networkinG Get-toGether: Chef Donald Billings discusses the local, affordable and environmental ethics of Rutland’s newest eatery at a Vermont Businesses for Social Responsibility function. Jim Sabataso of Sustainable Rutland also discusses the town’s ongoing community revitalization. Roots the Restaurant, Rutland, 8-10 a.m. Free. Info, 862-8347, ritab@vbsr.org.
comedy
Brian reGan: This funnyman, known for his comedy specials on Comedy Central and appearances
10/1/09 1:32:25 PM
on “The Late Show With David Letterman,” cracks top-notch jokes. Paramount Theatre, Rutland, 8 p.m. $39.50-59.50. Info, 775-0903.
etc.
raPtor enCounter: See WED.20, 11 a.m. talk to the trainer: See WED.20, 2 p.m.
film
‘the CoMPany Men’: See FRI.22, 1:30 p.m., 4 p.m., 7 p.m. ‘the last lions’: See FRI.22, 1:30 p.m., 4 p.m., 7 p.m.
food & drink
ChoColate-diPPinG deMo: See WED.20, 2 p.m. CoMMunity niGht: Diners down gastropub fare, with 10 percent of proceeds benefiting the Women’s Rape Crisis Center. Bluebird Tavern, Burlington, 5-10 p.m. Cost of food and drink. Info, 864-0555, ext. 13.
health & fitness
arMChair aeroBiCs: See THU.21, 11:30 a.m.-noon. autisM awareness Month Video Presentation: Parents and professionals tune in as Maple Leaf Clinic’s Dean Mooney hosts a screening of Dr. Tony Attwood Presents Asperger’s Syndrome, Volume 2: Anger Management, Teaching Teachers and Teenage Issues. Wallingford Elementary School, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 446-3577. Chair MassaGe: Kneading addresses key tension areas in the upper body. Call to sign up. Champlain Senior Center, McClure MultiGenerational Center, Burlington, 9 a.m. $5. Info, 658-3585. enerGy taPPinG: Eliminate anxiety and depression through acupressure techniques. Champlain Senior Center, McClure MultiGenerational Center, Burlington, 10:30-11 a.m. $5 suggested donation. Info, 658-3585. yoGa Class: Gentle stretches improve core strength and flexibility. Champlain Senior Center, McClure MultiGenerational Center, Burlington, 9 a.m. $5 donation. Info, 658-3585.
kids
BaBytiMe: See WED.20, 10:30 a.m.-noon. Children’s story tiMe: See WED.20, 10:30 a.m. enosBurG PlayGrouP: Children and their adult caregivers immerse themselves in singing activities and more. American Legion, Enosburg Falls, 9-11 a.m. Free. Info, 527-5426. fairfax PlayGrouP: Multicultural stories and activities accent child’s play. Health Room, Bellows Free Academy, Fairfax, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 527-5426. hiGh sChool Book GrouP: See WED.20, 5-6 p.m. hiGhGate story hour: Good listeners soak up classic fairy tales. Highgate Public Library, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 527-5426. kids danCe for sPrinG: Young ones cut the rug to swingin’ sounds by DJ Christine. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 11-11:45 a.m. Free. Info, 865-7216. Middle sChool Book GrouP: See WED.20, 4-5 p.m. MontGoMery story hour: See WED.20, 10-11 a.m. Puzzles & Board GaMes: See MON.25, 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.
Valley niGht: The Upper Valley’s Don & Jenn grace the lounge with jazz- and folk-inspired originals, and cover songs with an indie twist. Big Picture Theater & Café, Waitsfield, 7:30 p.m. $5 suggested cover. Info, 496-8994.
talks
‘aquarius and the deVeloPMent of the new ConsCiousness’: A PowerPoint presentation illuminates the Gnostic point of view on the renewing and purifying forces at work in a dawning Aquarian Era. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 524-9706, vermont@goldenrosycross.org. howard Coffin: As part of a series about Louisa May Alcott, this Vermont historian discusses the state’s Civil War hospitals and how they relate to the author’s Hospital Sketches and other writings. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6955. sCienCe on taP: Montshire after hours: Dartmouth Medical School researcher Meghan Longacre sparks a casual conversation about contemporary topics in science in “From Happy Meals to Urban Sprawl: Gaining Insight Into the Nation’s Childhood Obesity Epidemic.” Montshire Museum of Science, Norwich, 5:30-8 p.m. $10 includes one drink for ages 21 and up; cash bar. Info, 649-2200, montshire@montshire.org. ‘the Monetary systeM and you!’: Spenders and savers get acquainted with currency basics by screening and discussing Paul Grignon’s Money as Debt in order to understand the current financial crisis. Jaquith Public Library, Marshfield, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 426-3581, jaquithpubliclibrary@hotmail.com.
theater
auditions for ‘hairsPray’: See MON.25, 5:45-10 p.m. CoMMedia dell’arte PerforManCe: Commedia VT draws on a unique form of 16th- and 17th-century Italian theater in a short, original and humorous work. Fleming Museum, UVM, Burlington, 6 p.m. Regular admission, $3-5; $10 per family; free for children 6 and under. Info, 656-2090. ‘eVita’: See WED.20, 7:30 p.m. ‘sylVia’: See WED.20, 7:30 p.m.
words
Book disCussion series: ‘a Mysterious lens on aMeriCan Culture’: A thought-provoking cultural backdrop makes Barbara Neely’s Blanche Cleans Up more than a simple whodunit. South Hero Community Library, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 372-6209. dr. wolfGanG Mieder: A professor of German and folklore at UVM presents his new book on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Making a Way Out of No Way. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 1 p.m. Free. Info, 878-4918. GrouP sestina workshoP: Experienced wordsmiths explore complex forms of poetry with Roger Weingarten, forming six six-line stanzas followed by a tercet. Space is limited; preregister. KelloggHubbard Library, Montpelier, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 223-3338. hartford Book disCussion: Schoolteacher Denise Warren guides a group gab about Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried. Cornerstone Community Center, Hartford, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 296-2568. Poetry aliVe! 2011 Poetry disPlay: See WED.20, all day. m
language
italian ConVersation GrouP: Parla Italiano? A native speaker leads a language practice for all ages and abilities. Call for cancellations in inclement weather. Room 101, St. Edmund’s Hall, St. Michael’s College, Colchester, 7-9 p.m. Free. Info, 899-3869.
music
Jazz VoCal enseMBle & CoMBo ConCert: Smooth tunes fill an end-of-semester program. UVM Recital Hall, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 656-7776.
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ConneCt to m.SEVENDAYSVt.com on any web-enabled Cellphone for free, up-to-the-minute Calendar eVentS, pluS other nearby reStaurantS, Club dateS, moVie theaterS and more.
CLASS PHOTOS + MORE INFO ONLINE SEVENDAYSVT.COM/CLASSES
classes THE FOLLOWING CLASS LISTINGS ARE PAID ADVERTISEMENTS. ANNOUNCE YOUR CLASS FOR AS LITTLE AS $13.75/WEEK (INCLUDES SIX PHOTOS AND UNLIMITED DESCRIPTION ONLINE). SUBMIT YOUR CLASS AD AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POSTCLASS.
ayurveda
BCA offers dozens of weeklong summer art camps for ages 3-14 in downtown Burlington from June to August – the largest selection of art camps in the region! Choose full- or halfday camps – scholarships are available. See all the camps and details at burlingtoncityarts.com.
dance BURLINGTON’S BEST SALSA: DAVID LARSON & SOUTH END STUDIO: Burlington’s newest (& nicest) place to dance. Yes! Now there are 2 salsa dance studios in Burlington. Ongoing classes continuing Thu., 7-8 p.m., Beginning Salsa. A great way to get started & make some new friends. Then,
davis studio
davisstudiovt.com 425-2700 davisstudiovt.com/ adult_springclasses2011
STREET ART/GRAFFITI: Jun. 20-24, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Reception: Fri., 3:30 p.m. Cost: $400/course. Location: Davis Studio, 4 Howard St., Burlington. Try out various materials and techniques such as spray painting, stenciling, stickers, wood block printing, marker pens, fine brush detailing and more. Experiment with lettering styles. Work on both small- and large-scale pieces on plywood. Guest artists will guide us in unique art activities and exercises. Ages 12-17. Limit: 8. FASHION DESIGN INTENSIVE, LEVEL III: Jul. 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Fashion Show: Fri., 3:30 p.m. Cost: $400/5-day option, Mon.-Fri. $350/4-day option, Tue.-Fri. Location: Davis Studio, 4 Howard St., Burlington. We’ll start out with sketches and illustrations. Learn specialty hand stitches, advanced sewing
techniques and characteristics of various fabrics. Whether you decide to create designer pants, shorts, skirts, shirts or dresses, you will have the stage to show off your work at the Friday fashion show! Ages 13-17. Limit: 8. ADVANCED DRAWING TECHNIQUES: Jul. 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Reception: Fri., 3:30 p.m. Cost: $400/course. Location: Davis Studio, 4 Howard St., Burlington. Focus on perspective, composition and shading techniques. Work with a variety of subjects (still life, nature, cartoons, human form, animals, architecture, etc.). Students will be encouraged to take risks and stretch their abilities while developing their own individual style and creative approach. Ages 12-17. Limit: 8.
empowerment MAKING YOUR KIT BAG WORKSHOP: Apr. 23, 10 a.m.1 p.m. Cost: $15/workshop. Location: 55 Clover Lane, Waterbury. Info: Sue, 2447909. A one-day experiential workshop that helps students identify those items, ideas and pieces of information that can support them in times of spiritual crisis. An invaluable adjunct to the spiritual journey and helpful for anyone who works with his or her dreams. Led by Sue Mehrtens, teacher and author. MIDLIFE TRANSITIONS: LETTING GO & MOVING FORWARD: May 3-17, Tue., 6:30-8:30 p.m. Cost: $99/ series. Location: Coaching Center of Vermont, 1 Main St., suite 3, Winooski. Info: Marty Garrett Coaching, 8653213, coachmarty45@yahoo. com, martygarrett.com. This experiential workshop will create a safe space for you to explore the three phases of transition: letting go, being in the void and discovering possibilities. In the company of other women you will find momentum to move forward and clarify new direction.
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FIVE SPICE COOKING LESSONS: Call to schedule lesson time. Location: Burlington, Vermont. Info: Jerry, 864-4175, wjerry412@ comcast.net. Learn dim sum and Asian cooking from the former owner of Five Spice Cafe in Burlington.
THE ART & SCIENCE OF SOAP MAKING: May 25, 6-8:30 p.m. Cost: $35/person; senior discount 65+. Limit: 10. Location: CVU High School, 10 min. from exit 12, Hinesburg. Info: 482-7194, access@cvuhs.org, cvuhs.org/access. Join Kelley Robie, of Horsetail Herbs, using herbs, spices, essential oils, plant-based oils, and other natural and nourishing ingredients. Go home with soap to cut and age, plus detailed handout. Bring a quart paperboard milk or soy container as soap mold and old towel to wrap your fresh soap in. Materials included.
intermediate classes vary from month to month. As with all of our programs, everyone is encouraged to attend, and no partner is necessary. Three locations to choose from! SHAPES OF MODERN DANCE: Techniques & Practices: Mon., 6:45-8:15 p.m. Cost: $15/$14 w/ class card. Location: Burlington Dances (Chace Mill, top floor), 1 Mill St., 372, Burlington. Info: Burlington Dances, Lucille Dyer, 8633369, Info@BurlingtonDances. com, BurlingtonDances.com. Taught by a series of guest movement artists, this class includes modern, improvisation and choreographic forms, ballet (barre and center adagio), emerging and synthesis forms, the question of multimedia, site specifics, Pilates, somatic awareness, dance notation, and traditional Eastern martial arts. Get experience, come to class at Burlington Dances.
SEVEN DAYS
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craft
8-9 p.m., very cool Ladies Styling with Shannon & some incredible turning combinations (Condado, Cop & Flair turns!). Location: South End Studio, 696 Pine St., near Lake Champlain Chocolates, just behind New World Tortilla, Burlington. Info: Sabrina, 5400044, southendstudiovt.com. With all the dance classes offered in Burlington why take lessons from us? “We had a lot of fun learning how to salsa dance at South End Studio. Shannon and David are such beautiful dancers. They really made it easy to learn. Their classes are just great. It’s like a night out, meeting new people, great music, and you realize you’ve learned how to salsa dance, too. Shannon and David are Burlington’s best teachers. Thanks, guys.” Lorraine, salsa lover. DANCE STUDIO SALSALINA Cost: $13/class. Location: 266 Pine St., Burlington. Info: Victoria, 598-1077, info@ salsalina.com. Salsa classes, nightclub-style. One-onone, group and private, four levels. Beginner walk-in classes, Wednesdays, 6 p.m. Argentinean Tango class and social, Fridays, 7:30 p.m., walkins welcome. No dance experience, partner or preregistration required, just the desire to have fun! Drop in any time and prepare for an enjoyable workout! LEARN TO SWING DANCE Cost: $60/6-week series ($50 for students/seniors). Location: Champlain Club, 20 Crowley St., Burlington. Info: lindyvermont.com, 860-7501. Great fun, exercise and socializing, with fabulous music. Learn in a welcoming and lighthearted environment. Classes start every six weeks: Tuesdays for beginners; Wednesdays for upper levels. Instructors: Shirley McAdam and Chris Nickl. LEARN TO DANCE W/ A PARTNER! Cost: $50/4week class. Location: The Champlain Club, 20 Crowley St., Burlington, St. Albans, Colchester. Info: First Step Dance, 598-6757, kevin@firststepdance.com, FirstStepDance.com. Come alone, or come with friends, but come out and learn to dance! Beginning classes repeat each month, but
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JEWELRY: PENDANTS & EARRINGS: May 3-24, 6-8:30 p.m., Weekly on Tue. Cost: $120/nonmembers, $108/ BCA members. Location: BCA Clay Studio, 250 Main St., Burlington. Design and create your own jewelry to wear. In this four-week class, learn to make a set of earrings and a pendant using different silversmith techniques like etching and enameling. Take with Handmade Necklace Chains to make a full eight-week class! Material fees are not included. Limit: 12. PAINTING: PLEIN-AIR: May 11-Jun. 1, 5:30-7:30 p.m. Cost: $90/nonmembers, $81/BCA members. Location: Firehouse Center, Burlington. Info: burlingtoncityarts.com. Come paint outdoors and explore Vermont’s best lake and mountain views! Students will work with composition, color, shadow and lights, and rendering techniques at a new site each week. Some instruction in watercolor painting will be provided. Open to all levels. Please bring your paint/medium of choice. Limit: 12.
INTRODUCTION TO RAW FOODS: May 18, 6-8:30 p.m. Cost: $35/person; senior discount 65+. Limit: 16. Location: CVU High School, 10 min. from exit 12, Hinesburg. Info: 482-7194, access@cvuhs. org, cvuhs.org/access. Learn basic principles and practices of a raw and living food diet, including nutritional foundations, basic tools and techniques, simple sprouting, and additional resources. A savory meal of spring spinach soup, zucchini pasta with marinara sauce, a Mediterranean kale salad, and a fabulous chocolate cake, which is likely the quickest cake you’ll ever make. All raw and delicious!
SEVENDAYSVT.COM
AYURVEDIC CLEANSE & REJUVENATION WORKSHOP: May 4-18, 5:30-7 p.m., Weekly on Wed. Cost: $125/workshop. Location: Vermont Center for Yoga & Therapy, 364 Dorset St., suite 204, S. Burlington. Info: 658-9440, vtcyt.com. During this three-week workshop, you will be supported through a seven-day Ayurvedic cleanse. Workshops will explore the fundamentals of Ayurveda, examine how Ayurveda supports optimum health, and help you understand how this medical system applies to you. FUNDAMENTALS OF AYURVEDIC MEDICINE: Apr. 30-May 1, 9 a.m.- 5 p.m. Cost: $75/incl. lunch & snacks. Location: 55 Clover Ln., Waterbury. Info: Sue, 244-7909. Learn the basic principles of the healing science of ancient India, pulse diagnosis and how to treat some common conditions using the healing science of ancient India. Led by Dr. Paul Bacon, DC, director of the Advanced Spine Health and Wellness Center, Portsmouth, N.H. Suitable for CEUs. MINDFUL EATING W/ LISA MASE: Apr. 28, 5:30-7 p.m. Cost: $30/workshop. Location: The Ayurvedic Center of Vermont, 34 Oak Hill Rd., Williston Village. Info: 872-8898, AyurvedaVermont. com/classes. Harmonized Cookery: In this hands-on workshop you will gain strategies to make time in your life for cooking and savoring meals, learn to hear your body’s signals for nourishment, and explore ways to eat more nutritious, whole foods. Taste creative samples and leave with recipes. Please preregister, 872-8898.
burlington city arts
classes THE FOLLOWING CLASS LISTINGS ARE PAID ADVERTISEMENTS. ANNOUNCE YOUR CLASS FOR AS LITTLE AS $13.75/WEEK (INCLUDES SIX PHOTOS AND UNLIMITED DESCRIPTION ONLINE). SUBMIT YOUR CLASS AD AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POSTCLASS. EMPOWERMENT
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CONTAINER HERB GARDEN: May 5, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Cost: $35/person; senior discount WOMEN BEGINNER WALK/ 65+. Limit: 12. Location: CVU RUN CLASS: Apr. 27-Jul. 13, High School, 10 min. from exit 5:45-7 p.m., Weekly on Wed. 12, Hinesburg. Info: 482-7194, Cost: $45/series until Apr. 20; access@cvuhs.org, cvuhs.org/ $50 Apr. 21-May 4. Location: access. Create your own beauWilliston Central School 652-4548 tiful and edible container herb recreation path, 195 Central flynnarts@flynncenter.org garden starting from seed. School Dr., Williston. Info: a favorite container, Michele Morris, 598-5625, 1x1-FlynnPerfArts093009.indd 1 9/28/09 3:32:51 Bring PM we will supply soil and seeds, michele@firststridesvermont. SUMMER CAMPS ENROLLING expertise, and fun. Container com, firststridesvermont.com. NOW: Over 30 full-day performsize: window box size, alFirst Strides is a proven, fun, ing arts camps with after though any shape, or even a 12-week program that uses care until 5 p.m. for ages 4-18. handful of smaller containers encouragement and training Location: Flynn Center for the to arrange in your garden. It to improve the fitness, selfPerforming Arts, Burlington. will be filled with soil and waesteem and support network of Drama, moviemaking, radio, tered when you get home. women of all ages and abilities. comedy, hip-hop and jazz Walkers and beginning runners DESIGNING W/ STONE, dance, puppetry, slam poetry, welcome. Registration forms STATUARY & WATER: Apr. musical theater, voice, and available online, at Women’s 23, 9:30-11 a.m. Cost: $10/ historic improvisation. Themes Source for Sports and Fleet class. Location: Gardener’s for younger kids include spies, Feet. Registration closes May 4. Supply Burlington Store, 128 pirates, royalty, fairy tales, Intervale Rd., Burlington. Info: animals, Dr. Seuss, Mo Willems 660-3505, gardenerssup(Pigeon/Knuffle Bunny) books, plystore.com. Learn how to sea monsters (Champ), ballet, WILDERNESS FIRST use these elements effectively world cultures, costumes and RESPONDER: May 25-Jun. to add artistry, create focal history. 3, 9 a.m.- 5 p.m. Cost: points, and set a style or mood. $800/course. Location: AUDITION WORKSHOP W/ Presenter: Charlotte Albers. The Flashbulb Institute, THEATRICAL DREAM TEAM: Preregistration required. Burlington. Info: The MARK NASH, KATHRYN BLUME WHAT’S NEW FOR 2011 IN Flashbulb Institute, 881-0419, & BILL REED: Ages 11-18; ANNUALS, PERENNIALS, info@theflashbulb.org, theAug. 8-12; noon-4 p.m. Cost: TREES & SHRUBS: Apr. 27, flashbulb.org. The Flashbulb $265/limited scholarships 12-12:45 p.m. Location: Institute is hosting SOLO avail. Location: Flynn Center, Gardener’s Supply Williston Wilderness Medical School Burlington. Spend a week Store, 472 Marshall Ave., to conduct this course. The learning how to nail cold readWilliston. Info: 658-2433. Wilderness First Responder ings, monologues and songs (if Lunch & Learn Educational (WFR) course is the recognized you choose a musical theater Series. Instructed by Denyse industry standard for those track), and how to manage Butler-Ayres. Registration not who work as backcountry trip anxiety and rejection in the therequired. Free. leaders, conservation team atrical world. Good for seniors leaders, camp counselors and embarking on college auditions, outdoor guides. and for anyone planning to audition for a school show. HONORING HERBAL TRADITION 2011 Cost: $850/9 THEATRICAL SCENE a.m.-5 p.m. 1 Sat./mo. for TECHNIQUE W/ BROADWAY SAMURAI SWORD WORKOUT: 8 mos. Location: Horsetail SCENIC ARTIST DANA Apr. 28-Jun. 16, 4-5 p.m., Herbs, 134 Manley Rd., Milton. HEFFERN: Adults & older Weekly on Thu. Cost: $80/8 Info: Horsetail Herbs, Kelley teens: Sun., May 1, 8, 15, & 1-hr. classes. Location: Perkins Robie, 893-0521, htherbs@ 22, 12-3 p.m. Cost: $175/incl. Fitness Consulting & Personal comcast.net, Horsetailherbs. materials. Location: Lyric Training, 3060 Williston org. Herbal apprenticeship Warehouse, Burlington. Dana Rd., South Burlington. Info: program held on a horse farm. Heffern painted the scenery Stephanie Shohet, 578-9243, Covers herbal therapies; nuyou saw on the Flynn stage this steph@forzavt.com, forzavt. tritional support; diet; detox; year in Spring Awakening and com. Forza is a unique, embody systems; medicine makSpamalot, as well as countless powering, full-body workout, ing; plant identification; tea other Broadway shows. Learn allowing you to burn lots of tasting; plant spirit medicine as she shares techniques and calories, build lean muscles, and animal communication; photos (process shots and and cultivate inner focus wild foods; field trips; iridolfinished products) from these and self-esteem. No martial ogy; women’s, children’s, men’s shows and more. You’ll practice arts experience necessary; and animal health! Textbook wood graining, stone, brick, tile, Forza is safe for any fitness and United Plant Saver memtexture (crackle, gilding) and level. Several class times bership included. VSAC grants adding tone or age to make available in Burlington and S. available. scenery look so bad that it’s Burlington. See website for good! more information.
exercise
SEVENDAYSVT.COM
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56 CLASSES
SEVEN DAYS
04.20.11-04.27.11
herbs
fitness
WISDOM OF THE HERBS SCHOOL: Wisdom of the Herbs Certification Program begins Apr. 23-24 & runs 1 weekend/ mo. through Nov. We are currently interviewing for this program. Wild Edibles spring/summer term will be held May 8, Jun. 5 & Jul. 10, & summer/fall term will be held Aug. 21, Sep. 18 & Oct. 16. Plan ahead & apply now for VSAC nondegree grant for 2011 programs while funds are plentiful. Location: Wisdom of the Herbs School, Woodbury. Info: 456-8122, annie@wisdomoftheherbsschool.com, wisdomoftheherbsschool. com. Earth skills for changing times. Experiential programs embracing local, wild, edible and medicinal plants, food as first medicine, sustainable living skills, and the inner journey. Annie McCleary, director, and George Lisi, naturalist.
language ANNOUNCING NEW SPANISH CLASSES: Beginning week of Apr. 18 for 10 weeks. Cost: $160/10 1-hr. classes. Location: Spanish in Waterbury Center, Waterbury Center. Info: Spanish in Waterbury Center, 585-1025, spanishparavos@gmail.com, spanishwaterburycenter. com. New spring Spanishclass offerings. Learn from a native speaker in a small-class environment. You’ll always be participating and speaking. Also private instruction and tutoring. We specialize in lessons for young children; they love it! Convenient scheduling. See our website for complete information or contact us for details.
martial arts AIKIDO: Adult introductory classes begin on Tue., May 3, at 6:45 p.m. Join now & receive a 3-mo. membership (unlimited classes) & uniform for $175. Location: Aikido of Champlain Valley, 257 Pine St. (across from Conant Metal and Light), Burlington. Info: 951-8900, burlingtonaikido.org. Aikido is a dynamic Japanese martial art that promotes physical and mental harmony through the use of breathing exercises, aerobic conditioning, circular movements, and pinning and
throwing techniques. We also teach sword/staff arts and knife defense. The Samurai Youth Program provides scholarships for children and teenagers, ages 7-17. AIKIDO: Tue.-Fri., 6-7:30 p.m.; Sat., 9-10 a.m.; & Sun., 1011:30 a.m. Visitors are always welcome. Location: Vermont Aikido, 274 N. Winooski Ave. (2nd floor), Burlington. Info: Vermont Aikido, 862-9785, vermontaikido.org. Aikido trains body and spirit together, promoting physical flexibility with flowing movement, martial awareness with compassionate connection, respect for others and confidence in oneself. LGBTQ Intro: Wednesday evenings April 20May 11, 5:45-6:45 p.m. $65 fee includes practice uniform. For more info or to register: lgbtqclass@gmail.com. Beginners Intro: Tuesday evenings April 28-May 19, 6-7:30 pm. $65 fee includes practice uniform. VERMONT BRAZILIAN JIUJITSU: Mon.-Fri., 6-9 p.m., & Sat., 10 a.m. 1st class is free. Location: Vermont Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, 55 Leroy Rd., Williston. Info: 660-4072, Julio@bjjusa.com, vermontbjj.com. Classes for men, women and children. Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu enhances strength, flexibility, balance, coordination and cardio-respiratory fitness. Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu training builds and helps to instill courage and self-confidence. We offer a legitimate Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu martial arts program in a friendly, safe and positive environment. Accept no imitations. Learn from one of the world’s best, Julio “Foca” Fernandez, CBJJ and IBJJF certified 6th Degree Black Belt, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu instructor under Carlson Gracie Sr., teaching in Vermont, born and raised in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil! A 5-time Brazilian JiuJitsu National Featherweight Champion and 3-time Rio de Janeiro State Champion, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
massage INTRO TO MASSAGE SCHOOL: Apr. 2, 9:30 a.m.- 12:30 p.m. Cost: $25/3-hr. class. Location: Touchstone Healing Arts School of Massage, 187 St. Paul St., Burlington. Info: Touchstone Healing
Arts, Mark Adams, 6587715, touchvt@gmail.com, touchstonehealingarts.com. Our nine-month training fully prepares individuals for a rewarding career. You can expect personal and professional growth, detailed body sciences, exceptional massage technique and practice. Thirteen years of excellence!
meditation LEARN TO MEDITATE: Meditation instruction available Sunday mornings, 9 a.m.- 12 p.m., or by appointment. The Shambhala Cafe meets the first Saturday of each month for meditation and discussions, 9 a.m.- 12 p.m. An Open House occurs every third Wednesday evening of each month, 7-9 p.m., which includes an intro to the center, a short dharma talk and socializing. Location: Burlington Shambhala Center, 187 So. Winooski Ave., Burlington. Info: 658-6795, burlingtonshambhalactr. org. Through the practice of sitting still and following your breath as it goes out and dissolves, you are connecting with your heart. By simply letting yourself be, as you are, you develop genuine sympathy toward yourself. The Burlington Shambhala Center offers meditation as a path to discovering gentleness and wisdom.
movement ZUMBA & BELLY DANCE: Mon. & Fri., 5:45. Location: Burlington Dances, Chace Mill, top floor, 1 Mill St., suite 372, Burlington. Info: Burlington Dances, Lucille Dyer, 8633369, info@burlingtondances. com, BurlingtonDances.com. Zumba Fitness Mondays and Belly Dance Fridays with Gail McKenzie Hall! Have some fun! Bring your water bottle for these energetic, rejuvenating dance moves and music from around the world. Let us know you are coming, or simply drop in for a class. Call for details! Upstairs in Chace Mill!
class photos + more info online SEVENDAYSVT.COM/CLASSES
painting
paranormal
Silkscreen Printing w/ Natasha Bogar: May 4-25, 6-9 p.m., Weekly on Wed. Cost: $225/course. Location: Helen Day Art Center, 5 School St., Stowe. Info: 253-8358, helenday.com. Students will construct their own silkscreens and design prints using pencil and paper or computers in the HDAC computer lab. Several methods of transferring your design onto the screens will be covered, as well as color mixing and heat setting. The class will work collectively to print the designs.
Usui Reiki: 1st Degree: May 15, 10 a.m.- 5 p.m. Cost: $175/6-hr. class. Location: Vermont Center for Energy Medicine, Hinesburg. Info: Vermont Center for Energy Medicine, Cindy Carse, 985-9580, cindy@energymedicinevt.com, energymedicinevt.com. Learn Reiki, a traditional Japanese healing art that facilitates health and transformation on all levels (body, mind and spirit). Reiki can be supportive of any life path or career. In this class, you will be attuned to Reiki and trained to practice Reiki for yourself, loved ones, plants and animals.
science Jung and the New Science: Apr. 27-May 18, 7-9 p.m., Weekly on Wednesday. Cost: $60. Location: 55 Clover Ln., Waterbury. Info: Sue, 2447909. Enjoy an intellectual challenge in this course that compares the old and emerging paradigms of science in light of Carl Jung’s theories of the psyche. Led by Sue Mehrtens, teacher and author.
support groups A Mindful Journey through Grief w/ Tisha Shull: Apr. 21-May 12, 6-7:30 p.m., Weekly on Thu. Cost: $100/series, self-pay or Medicaid accepted. Location: Vermont Center for Yoga & Therapy, 364 Dorset St., suite 204, S. Burlington. Info: Tisha Shull, 658-9440. “Grieving allows us to heal.” Bereavement groups provide members the opportunity to share their feelings of grief while learning about the mourning process through hearing the
Snake-Style Tai Chi Chuan: Beginner classes Sat. mornings & Wed. evenings. Call to view a class. Location: Bao Tak Fai Tai Chi Institute, 100 Church St., Burlington. Info: 864-7902, iptaichi.org. The Yang Snake Style is a dynamic tai chi method that mobilizes the spine while stretching and strengthening the core body muscles. Practicing this ancient martial art increases strength, flexibility, vitality, peace of mind and martial skill. Yang-Style Tai Chi: Beginner’s class, Wed., 5:306:50 p.m. All levels classes on Sat., 8:30 a.m. & 10:30 a.m. Cost: $16/class. Location: Vermont Tai Chi Academy & Healing Center, 180 Flynn Ave., Burlington. Turn right into driveway immediately after the railroad tracks. Located in the old Magic Hat Brewery building. Info: 3186238. Tai Chi is a slow-moving martial art that combines deep breathing and graceful movements to produce the valuable effects of relaxation, improved concentration, improved balance, a decrease in blood pressure and ease in the symptoms of fibromyalgia. Janet Makaris, instructor.
Classes, Fine Art, Faux Finishes, Murals Maggie Standley 233.7676 wingspanpaintingstudio.com Arts infused, interdisciplinary, inspiring classes, camps and workshops for kids, teens and adults. Visit the classes section at wingspanpaintingstudio.com for more details. Sliding scale available, all abilities welcome. Let your imagination soar!
Summer Camp at wingspan Studio: Jun. 20-Jul. 25, 8:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m., Weekly on Sun. Cost: $300/1 week, incl. all materials. Location: wingspan Studio, 4A Howard St., Burlington. Info: wingspan Studio, Maggie Standley. Summer: The University of Possibilities Series. Ages: Session I, III, IV, V, 6-13 years. Session II, Teen Week, 13-18 years. I: Creative Adventure, Jun. 20-24. II: Teen Art Exploration, Jun. 27-Jul. 1. III: Art & French, Jul. 11-15. IV: Art & Science, Jul. 18-22. V: Art & Nature Week, Jul. 25-29.
women Women, Food & Spirituality: May 8-Jun. 12, 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m., Weekly on Sun. Cost: $120/incl. book. Location: Vermont Center for Yoga & Therapy, 364 Dorset St., suite 204, S. Burlington. Info: 658-9440, vtcyt.com. We will use the book by Geneen Roth, “Women, Food, and God,” along with yoga, journaling and group therapy to develop a deeper understanding of how the way we eat and think about food relates to all that we do. Learn to be more present and aware.
EVOLUTION YOGA: Daily yoga classes for all levels from $5-$14, conveniently located in Burlington. 10-class cards and unlimited memberships available for discounted rates. Mon.-Fri. @ 4:30 p.m., class is only $5!. Location: Evolution Yoga, Burlington. Info: 8649642, yoga@evolutionvt.com, evolutionvt.com. Evolution’s certified teachers are skilled with students ranging from beginner-advanced. We offer classes in Vinyasa, Anusarainspired, Kripalu, and Iyengar yoga. Babies/kids classes also available! Prepare for birth and strengthen postpartum with pre/postnatal yoga, and check out our thriving massage practice. Participate in our community blog: evolutionvt. com/evoblog. Old School Ashtanga Workshop!: Fri. 6-8 p.m.; Sat. & Sun., 9 a.m.5:30 p.m. Cost: $250/16hr. workshop. Location: Yoga Vermont, Contois Auditorium, Burlington City Hall, Burlington. Info: Yoga Vermont, Kathy McNames York, 238-0594, kathy@ yogavermont.com, yogavermont.com. David Swenson and Shelley Washington will be back in Burlington leading an ashtanga yoga extended weekend workshop. 16 hours over three days. CEUs available. Guaranteed to be fun and educational for all. No previous ashtanga experience necessary. Renew your practice, increase your understanding and maybe learn to jump through. Yoga at the Ayurvedic Center: Mon., Tue. & Wed. evenings beginning in Apr. Cost: $14/class drop-in rate, discounted if purchased as a series. Location: The Ayurvedic Center of Vermont, Williston Village. Info: 8728898, ayurvedavermont. com. The Ayurvedic Center of Vermont is offering three yoga class series this Spring. Kundalini Yoga with Sarab Kaur, Beginner Hatha Yoga with Allison Morse and Ayuryoga (Ayurveda and Yoga) with Scott Marion. See AyurvedaVermont.com/classes for dates, times and more information. Please preregister by calling 872-8898. m
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ALL Wellness Location: 208 Flynn Ave., Studio 3A (across from the antique shops, before Oakledge Park), Burlington. Info: 863-9900, allwellnessvt.com. We encourage all ages, all bodies and all abilities to discover greater ease and enjoyment in life by integrating Pilates, physical
printmaking
reiki
tai chi
wingspan studio yoga
SEVEN DAYS
pilates
Clay Classes: May 9-Jun. 25, Weekly on Mon., Tue., Wed., Thu., Sat. Cost: $195/3hr. adult class. Location: Montpelier Mud, 961 Route 2, Middlesex. Info: Montpelier Mud, 224-7000, info@montpeliermud.com, montpeliermud. com. April showers bring May flowerpots! All levels of experience are welcome with a variety of classes for adults, teens and kids. Try your hand at throwing clay on the wheel, or build by hand for a less speedy pace. Please note our new Saturday time slot!
Introduction to Alchemy: Apr. 28-May 19, 7-9 p.m., Weekly on Thu. Cost: $60/ class. Location: 55 Clover Lane, Waterbury. Info: Sue, 244-7909. Learn how you are living alchemy and discover what transformations lie ahead for you in this experiential workshop derived from Carl Jung’s insights and theories. Led by Sue Mehrtens, teacher and author.
experiences of others. This group will provide education, support, hope and healing for those who are working through feelings of loss and grief. Prescreening required.
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Be Very, Very, Afraid: Apr. 22-24. Location: Back Inn Time, St. Albans. Info: 881-1171, vermontspirits@gmail.com, vtspirits.com. Ever want to spend the night in or investigate a real haunted house? Here’s your chance. Stay overnight or just join the Vermont Spirit Detective Agency’s investigation of its favorite haunted inn, where we’ve had many personal experiences and caught evidence on our digital recorders.
pottery
psychology
SEVENDAYSvt.com
Oil Painting w/ Val Hird: May 14-15, 10 a.m.- 4 p.m. Cost: $250/course. Location: Helen Day Art Center, 5 School St., Stowe. Info: 253-8358, helenday.com. Do you have nagging questions about oil painting? This workshop will address strategies for color application, color mixing, application techniques, including under-painting, painting in layers, glazing and using oil stick. This will be a practical workshop with lots of information for students at all levels. Demos along with visual aids will clarify the key elements discussed. Please bring your own materials.
therapy, yoga and nutrition. Come experience our welcoming atmosphere, skillful, caring instructors and light-filled studio. Join us for a free introduction to the reformer, every Saturday at 10:30 a.m. and the first Tuesday of every month at 7 p.m.: Just call and reserve your spot! Natural Bodies Pilates: For a whole new body. Daily classes & private sessions Location: Natural Bodies Pilates, Chace Mill, top floor, 1 Mill St., suite 372, Burlington. Info: 863-3369, lucille@ naturalbodiespilates.com, NaturalBodiesPilates.com. For a whole new body: daily classes and private sessions. Bring a friend, join the group! Get that fantastic feeling of deep internal strength while feeling relaxed and flexible. Reform your body, move and dance with confidence. Join classes at Natural Bodies Pilates and Burlington Dances, upstairs at Chace Mill.
music
Quiet Riot
A famed drummer and a former poet laureate find common ground B Y M AT T BUSHL OW
T
SEVEN DAYS 58 MUSIC
“I prefer to think of music more as an ‘incital,’” he says. “Like, maybe you have an insight, or perhaps incite someone to riot or burn the place down.” It’s doubtful that Moses, Pinsky and saxophonist Robert Douglas Gay will incite folks to torch Burlington’s First Unitarian Universalist Society Church when they perform there this Thursday, but there’s a distinct possibility the collaboration will provide listeners with insight about the kinship between poetry and music. Pinsky will read from his new book, Selected Poems, while his partners will improvise an accompaniment. According to Moses, they plan nothing ahead of time. They simply play off each other and see what happens. “The central idea is listening,” writes Pinsky in a recent email. “Good musicians listen to one another, intently. I try to listen to what each musician does, and to the ensemble, and they listen to me. You try to make what you do responsive to what you hear.” “It’s funny even calling this thing a poetry-and-jazz performance,” says Sean
Witters over a cup of hot cider at Mud“Pinsky’s really committed to this dy Waters. Witters is a musician and a idea that poetry is supposed to be heard,” professor of English at the University of Witters says. “Poetry read on the page itVermont. He echoes Moses’ thought as self is radically different from that which he holds forth on what he perceives jazz we experience when we’re in a room and poetry to signify to those who don’t with someone reading it dynamically, follow them regularly. inflecting it, transforming it, stretching “Both jazz and poetry have all these out the lines, compressing the lines. You clichés associated with them as sepa- just feel the poem in a different way.” rate entities,” Witters explains. “That Moses agrees. “To hear the person poetry is an effete and inward-turning who wrote the poem speak it to you is discipline that’s utterly very different than readremoved from the world, ing it from a book,” he says. and that jazz is this very “It’s like a good friend insular, intellectual form talking to you intimately, of music that’s, again, isoexcept they’re incredibly lated from the world.” eloquent. The music just He suggests that comenhances that, I think.” bining the idioms, as PinPinsky and Moses met sky and Moses have, afseveral years ago when fords listeners a chance to Pauline Bilsky, executive see beyond those misperdirector of JazzBoston, RAKALAM BOB MOSES ceptions. asked them to play a benWitters aims to help efit for the organization. audiences do just that, if only for an “Bob and I hit it off at once,” Pinsky evening. He arranged the upcoming gig recalls. “I remember we started trying with the help of Tom Simone, a fellow poems and music together right away.” UVM professor who has nurtured the Moses agrees that the collaboration English department’s Music and Litera- worked from the start. But he observes ture performance series. that Pinsky has grown “more musical” as Witters was researching possible ad- they’ve worked together, that the poet’s ditions to the series and called his old rhythm has become “sympathetic with friend Moses. When he learned Moses the musical content. had been working with Pinsky, he knew “If you didn’t understand a word or it was a perfect match. didn’t speak English, you would like the sound of it,” says Moses of Pinsky’s lyrical cadence. “It almost sounds like a horn player riffing over what we’re doing.” Pinsky actually played sax as a young man. Though he hasn’t performed in front of a crowd for decades, he clearly revels in the interplay onstage with Moses and Gay. “The surprises, the illuminations, the music of it, the feeling of a joy I had in my teens and twenties, the joy of making music with other musicians,” Pinsky says. “That significant pleasure of my youth, something I thought was done with and over, has returned in an unanticipated way. I love that.”
IF YOU DIDN’T UNDERSTAND A WORD OR DIDN’T SPEAK ENGLISH,
YOU WOULD LIKE THE SOUND OF IT.
COURTESY OF VERNON DOUCETTE
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SEVENDAYSVT.COM
hough it is tempting to refer to drummer Rakalam Bob Moses’ collaborations with former United States poet laureate Robert Pinsky as “jazz,” Moses would prefer you didn’t. “I don’t call what we’re doing jazz,” Moses says during a recent phone call. “The truth is, most of the jazz I hear now is hardly improvised at all. It’s really more another form of classical music. It’s stuff that’s been learned, memorized and recited.” So how does Moses — whose work with the likes of vibraphonist Gary Burton, guitarist Pat Metheny and vocalist Sheila Jordan could certainly qualify as jazz — define his latest endeavor? He invents his own term.
Left to right: Robert Pinsky, Rakalam Bob Moses and Robert Douglas Gay
Robert Pinsky, Rakalam Bob Moses and Robert Douglas Gay appear at the First Unitarian Universalist Society Church in Burlington as part of UVM’s Music and Literature Series on Thursday, April 21, at 8 p.m. Free.
s
undbites b y Da n bo ll e S
(Insert Jazz Pun Here)
Sorry about that headline. But with the Burlington Discover Jazz Festival still more than a month away, I’m not quite in mid-season form when it comes to whipping up snappy jazz musings. Though reviewing saxophonist Brian Mccarthy’s nifty new record (see page 63) certainly helped get my jazz juices flowing.
year’s roster. Honestly, it’s hard not to be taken by his enthusiasm, even when — like roughly 95 percent of the people in the room — you are not familiar with half of the artists he’s raving about. Malina’s excitement is infectious. In the coming weeks we’ll dig a little deeper into many of those artists, but, to whet your appetite, here are a few of the acts that immediately stood out for me — beyond
Got muSic NEwS? dan@sevendaysvt.com
excellent trio yousay Placate. Always cool to see the locals get some love on the big stage. Tuesday, June 7, will be ladies’ night at the BDJF as two legendary female jazz vocalists, Jay clayton and sheila Jordan, perform a double bill in the intimate environs of the FlynnSpace. Actually, women are exceptionally well represented this year. Other top female acts include vocalist catherine russell — whom the Boston Globe claims “could melt the ice in a bourbon on the rocks,” whatever that means — the
get the idea. ViperHouse gets the band back together at the Waterfront Park Groove Tent on Thursday, June 9. BoneraMa — oh, grow up — and the Joshua Panda Band open. To check out the full slate of shows, and for updates on newly added performers, check out discoverjazz.com.
Future Review: Colin Stetson
CoUrTeSy oF bITCheS brew revISTeD
and Grammy-nominated vocalist roBerta GaMBarini, who’s on a double bill with the roy harGrove Quintet. But for me, the big news in this year’s fest is the return of local legends viPerhouse. Following BelizBeha’s lead from 2009’s Jazz Fest, the mid-1990s acid-jazz dynamos are reuniting after a decade apart. During that time, the band’s alums have all gone on to impressive careers. For example, bandleader Michael chorney is now Michael fucking Chorney, while vocalist heloise williaMs is now Heloise fucking Williams and keyboardist ray Paczkowski is now … well, you
SoUnDbITeS
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WED, 4/20 | $15 aDv / $20 DOS | DOORS 10:30, SHOW 11Pm 1 TIckET GETS yOU INTO BOTH ROOmS!
eoto & eliot lipp dj treatz
the new mastersounds morsoul THU, 4/21 | $12 aDv / $15 DOS | DOORS 8:30, SHOW 9Pm
chamberlin FRI, 4/22 | $10 aDv / $12 DOS | DOORS 7:30, SHOW 8Pm
maryse smith, aunt martha
ryan montbleau band dwight & nicole SaT, 4/23 | $14 aDv / $16 DOS | DOORS 8, SHOW 8:30Pm
sam adams SaT, 4/23 | $20 aDv / $23 DOS | DOORS 8, SHOW 8:30Pm
jeremy green, vonnegutt
zach deputy joshua panda band SUN, 4/24 | $10 aDv / $12 DOS | DOORS 7:30, SHOW 8Pm
easy star all-stars cas haley, the move it move it TUE, 4/26 | $15 aDv / $17 DOS | DOORS 8, SHOW 8:30Pm
greensky bluegrass beats antique marley carroll, the orator WED, 4/27 | $10 aDv / $12 DOS | DOORS 7, SHOW 7:30Pm
WED, 4/27 | $13 aDv / $15 DOS | DOORS 8, SHOW 8:30Pm
rubblebucket millionyoung FRI, 4/29 | $12 aDv / $15 DOS | DOORS 8, SHOW 8:30Pm
secondhand serenade plug in stereo SaT, 4/30 | $15 aDv / $17 DOS | DOORS 6:30, SHOW 7Pm
dead sessions cunninlynguists homeboy sandmand SaT, 4/30 | $7 aDv / $10 DOS | DOORS 8:30, SHOW 9Pm
mON, 5/2 | $15 aDv / $15 DOS | DOORS 8, SHOW 8:30Pm
jukebox the ghost wakey wakey pretty & nice TUE, 5/3 | $10 aDv / $12 DOS | DOORS 7, SHOW 7:30Pm
WED 5/4 WED 5/4 THU 5/5
INFamOUS STRINGDUSTERS jULIa NUNES & IaN axLE HaDESTOWN WORkS FOR WOmEN
TICKETS ALSO AVAILABLE AT HG BOX OFFICE (M-F 11a-6p) or GROWING VERMONT (UVM DAVIS CENTER). ALL SHOWS ALL AGES UNLESS NOTED.
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MUSIC 59
Follow @DanBolles on Twitter for more music news and @7Daysclubs for daily show recommendations. Dan blogs on Solid State at sevendaysvt.com/blogs.
Myra MelFord Be Bread sextet,
zion i & the grouch one be low, the shotgun wedding quintet
SEVEN DAYS
the obvious marquee names herBie hancock and Béla Fleck. The fest kicks off on Friday, June 3, on the Flynn MainStage with an all-star revisiting of Miles davis’ seminal 1970 album Bitches Brew called, um, Bitches Brew revisited. The band features ace cornetist GrahaM haynes, livinG colour’s vernon reid on guitar, keyboardist Marco Benevento and dJ loGic, among several other heavy hitters. Opening the show is Montpelier/Montréal-based keyboardist Parker shPer’s
WED, 4/20 | $15 aDv / $17 DOS | DOORS 6:30, SHOW 7Pm EaRLy SHOW!
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Anyway, last week the fine folks at the BDJF held their annual press conference/ice cream social/I-Spy speeddating mixer to announce the bulk of the lineup for this year’s fest. And also to thank an ever-expanding list of sponsors, which, let me tell ya, is gripping entertainment … but I digress. As usual, BDJF honcho and Flynn Center artistic director arnie Malina was practically giddy as he gave the assembled local media the lowdown on this
INFO & TIX: WWW.HIGHERGROUNDMUSIC.COM
SEVENDAYSVt.com
Bitches Brew Revisted
Last week, I made you promise to take me at my word and plan to attend colin stetson’s performance at the BCA Center on Wednesday, April 20 — aka the day this paper hit newsstands, aka “Duuuuuude!” For those of you who either forgot, had your fingers crossed when you made the promise or didn’t pick up this week’s issue until Thursday, here’s a brief review of that show. Keep in mind, I write this column on Monday, so I haven’t actually seen Stetson play yet and won’t for two more days. This is supremely advanced rock journalism, people. Don’t try this at home. I’ve never seen anything like Colin Stetson (Technically, that’s true.) I admit being somewhat dubious after spending time with his latest solo record, New History Warfare Vol. 2: Judges. While technically impressive and ultimately fascinating, it’s not exactly an easy listen. On that record, you have to work to appreciate the saxophonist’s often harsh, ambient soundscapes. Not so live. Throughout his incomparable set, my thoroughly blown mind revisited all of the glowing reviews I’d read or heard about his recent South by Southwest performances. For example, NPR’s Bob Boilen, who had this to say: “It took all of about 60 seconds for him to appear possessed by some otherworldly force, complete with bulging veins and the sort of overwhelming sonic
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1/2 LoungE: steve Hartmann (singer-songwriter), 7 p.m., Free. DJ Kanga presents: The Lounge Lizard (hip-hop), 9 p.m.
Volcano,
CLub MEtronoME: 4/20 After Party with the Edd, DJ Helixx and monikkor (jam), 10 p.m., $5.
Silver
Franny o's: Karaoke, 9:30 p.m., Free.
Surfer, & Other Vaporizers
HigHEr grounD baLLrooM: Eoto, Eliot Lipp (live electronica), 11 p.m., $15/20. AA. HigHEr grounD sHoWCasE LoungE: Zion i and the Grouch, One Be Low, the shotgun Wedding Quintet, 7 p.m., $15/17. AA. LEunig's bistro & CaFé: Paul Asbell & clyde stats (jazz), 7 p.m., Free. LiFt: DJs P-Wyld & Jazzy Janet (hip-hop), 9 p.m., Free/$5. 18+. ManHattan Pizza & Pub: Open mic with Andy Lugo, 10 p.m., Free.
EXCULUSIVE DEALER OF
MonkEy HousE: Beat Vision with DJ Disco Phantom (eclectic DJ), 9 p.m., $1. Fossil Eyes, Persian claws (rock), 9 p.m., $5. 18+.
Illadelph Toro
nECtar's: Funkwagon, Lynguistic civilians (funk), 9 p.m., $5. 18+.
Delta 9
on taP bar & griLL: Leno & Young (rock), 7 p.m., Free.
PHX
PariMa Main stagE: The Newest secret with DJ Gunner & DJ siduktiv (hip-hop), 9 p.m., $5.
Pure
raDio bEan: Ensemble V (jazz), 7:30 p.m., Free. irish sessions, 9 p.m., Free.
75 Main St., Burlington,VT • 802.864.6555 M-Th 10-9; F-Sa 10-10; Su 12-7 facebook.com/VTNorthernLights Must be 18 to purchase tobacco products, ID required
Are you a
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rED squarE: The Amida Bourbon Project (folk rock), 7 p.m., Free. craig mitchell's 40th Birthday Bash (house), 10 p.m., Free. DJ cre8 (hip-hop), 11 p.m., Free. sHELburnE stEakHousE & saLoon: carol Ann Jones (country), 8 p.m., Free.
central
SEVENDAYSVt.com 04.20.11-04.27.11 SEVEN DAYS 60 music
folk, improvisational jazz and chamber music, to name a few — producing an elegant sound that both dazzles and disarms. Catch them this Friday, April 22, at Montpelier’s Langdon Street Café, and Saturday, April 23, at the Parima Main Stage in Burlington. LiFt: Get LiFTed with DJs Nastee & Dakota (hip-hop), 9 p.m., Free.
on tHE risE bakEry: Gabe Jarrett & Friends (jazz), 8 p.m., Free.
MonkEy HousE: Glass Lamborghini, champagne sequins, Wave of the Future, Kairos (rock), 9 p.m., $5.
tWo brotHErs tavErn: DJ Jam man (Top 40), 10 p.m., Free.
nECtar's: Trivia mania with Top Hat Entertainment, 7 p.m., Free. string Fingers (Americana), 9 p.m., Free/$5. 18+.
northern
bEE's knEEs: Katie Trautz & the Tall Boys (folk), 7:30 p.m., Donations.
PariMa Main stagE: Burgundy Thursdays with Joe Adler, Tommy Alexander, James mcsheffrey, mike Venman, Jodi Oullette (singer-songwriters), 8:30 p.m., $3.
ParkEr PiE Co.: cumbiagra (cumbia), 7:30 p.m., Free.
LoCaLFoLk sMokEHousE: Tokehouse 420 Party with tha Professor (hip-hop), 9:30 p.m., Free.
STUDY #30: For ages 18-45
northern
8v-uvmPsych030310.indd 1
Similarly, the trio bends an unusual assortment of musical influences to its will —
Moog's: Jeremy sicily and Friends (acoustic), 8 p.m., Free.
City LiMits: Karaoke with Let it Rock Entertainment, 9 p.m., Free. on tHE risE bakEry: matt schrag and Friends (acoustic), 7:30 p.m., Donations. tWo brotHErs tavErn: Open mic, 8 p.m., Free.
For more information or to set up an appointment, please call Teresa at 656-3831
generating unpredictable and beautiful patterns where you might least expect them.
on taP bar & griLL: Jenni Johnson & Friends (jazz), 7 p.m., Free.
You may be able to participate in a research program at the University of Vermont!
This study involves 2 visits, a total of approximately 4 hours. If eligible you may be asked to quit for 12 hours. Participants in the study may be paid $40 in cash
prism, which refracts the original source into a brilliant array of multicolored beams,
LangDon strEEt CaFé: Village of spaces (folk), 7 p.m., Donations. Barn Owl collective (poetry), 8 p.m., Donations.
51 Main: Blues Jam, 8 p.m., Free.
STUDY #33: For ages 18-65
bLuE Hit approach music as rays of light strike a
CLairE's rEstaurant & bar: Honest Thieves (bluegrass), 7:30 p.m., Free.
champlain valley
For more information or to set up an appointment, please call 656-0655
Kind of Blue Austin’s the
o'briEn's irisH Pub: DJ Dominic (hip-hop), 9:30 p.m., Free.
PurPLE Moon Pub: Phineas Gage (folk), 7 p.m., Free.
• You will learn strategies to decrease your anxiety and quit smoking! • The study involves a total of 12 visits • Free Nicotine Replacement Patches are included in the brief 4-session intervention • Also earn monetary compensation for most visits, totaling up to $142.50 in cash
Fri.22, sat.23 // tHE bLuE Hit [avant garDE, ECLECtiC & Jazz]
CHarLiE o's: Rudy Dauth (solo acoustic), 8 p.m., Free.
10/22/10 3:52:20 PM
smoker?
cOuRTEsY OF THE BLuE HiLL
Northern Lights
cLUB DAtES
raDio bEan: Jazz sessions, 6 p.m., Free. shane Hardiman Trio (jazz), 8 p.m., Free. Jazz Rehab (jazz), 9 p.m., Free. The unbearable Light cabaret (eclectic), 10 p.m., $3. Kat Wright & the indomitable soul Band (soul), 11 p.m., $3. rasPutin's: 101 Thursdays with Pres & DJ Dan (hip-hop), 10 p.m., Free/$5. 18+. rED squarE: selector Dubee (reggae), 6 p.m., Free. A-Dog Presents (hip-hop), 10 p.m., Free. rED squarE bLuE rooM: DJ cre8 (house), 9 p.m., Free.
bEE's knEEs: Fiske & Herrera (folk), 7:30 p.m., Donations.
rí rá irisH Pub: Longford Row (irish), 8 p.m., Free. Extra stout (irish), 9 p.m., Free.
Moog's: The Ramblers (acoustic), 8 p.m., Free.
tHE skinny PanCakE: Fiske & Herrera (folk), 8 p.m., $5-10 donation.
regional
MonoPoLE: Open mic, 8 p.m., Free.
tHu.21
burlington area
1/2 LoungE: Brett Hughes (cosmo-rural), 7 p.m., Free. Harder They come with DJs Darcie and chris Pattison (dubstep), 10 p.m., Free. CLub MEtronoME: mighty mystic, Pulse Prophets, soul Rebel Project (reggae), 9 p.m., $7/10. 18+.
vEnuE: Karaoke with steve Leclair, 7 p.m., Free.
central
grEEn Mountain tavErn: Thirsty Thursday Karaoke, 9 p.m., Free. LangDon strEEt CaFé: Heather maloney cD release (indie folk), 9 p.m., Donations. nutty stEPH's: Bacon Thursdays with Noble savage (electro), 10 p.m., Free. PurPLE Moon Pub: The Gulch (acoustic), 8 p.m., Free.
Franny o's: Karaoke, 9 p.m., Free.
sLiDE brook LoDgE & tavErn: Open mic, 7 p.m., Free. DJ Dakota (hip-hop), 10 p.m., Free.
tHE grEEn rooM: DJ Oh-J Freshhh (hip-hop), 10 p.m., Free.
champlain valley
HigHEr grounD sHoWCasE LoungE: The New mastersounds, morsoul (funk-rock), 9 p.m., $12/15. AA. LEunig's bistro & CaFé: Ellen Powell & ira Friedman (jazz), 7 p.m., Free.
2/24/10 1:22:07 PM
51 Main: Jazz Jam, 6 p.m., Free. Verbal Onslaught: Peace & conflict (spoken word), 9 p.m., Free.
riMroCks Mountain tavErn: DJ Two Rivers (hip-hop), 10 p.m., Free.
regional
MonoPoLE: Peacock Tunes & Trivia, 5 p.m., Free. sinecure (rock), 10 p.m., Free. MonoPoLE DoWnstairs: Gary Peacock (singersongwriter), 10 p.m., Free. oLivE riDLEy's: Karaoke with Benjamin Bright and Ashley Kollar, 6 p.m., Free. Therapy Thursdays with DJ NYcE (Top 40), 10:30 p.m., Free. tabu CaFé & nigHtCLub: Karaoke Night with sassy Entertainment, 5 p.m., Free.
Fri.22
burlington area
1/2 LoungE: craig mitchell's craigland (house), 10 p.m., Free. baCkstagE Pub: Karaoke with steve, 9 p.m., Free. banana WinDs CaFé & Pub: Eli (acoustic), 7:30 p.m., Free. CLub MEtronoME: No Diggity: Return to the ’90s (’90s dance party), 9 p.m., $5. tHE grEEn rooM: DJ Hedfonz (hip-hop), 10 p.m., Free. HigHEr grounD baLLrooM: Atmosphere, Blueprint, Grieves featuring Budos, musab, DJ Abilities (hip-hop), 8 p.m., $22/25. AA. HigHEr grounD sHoWCasE LoungE: chamberlin (rock), 8 p.m., $10/12. AA. FRi.22
» P.64
UNDbites
presence that prompts a thousand whispered queries of, ‘How does he do that?’” Good question. I’m stumped too. But then, even the Boilen couldn’t figure it out: “It’s always amazing to hear a musician do something nearly impossible, but there was Colin Stetson with a huge bass sax, the ability to circularly breath [sic], and his immense sound: No electronics. No effects pedals. Just a man, a reed, and a huge hunk of metal.” True. But his performance was so much more than that. It’s no wonder artists such as BON IVER and TOM WAITS are in love with the guy. He is transcendent. I think I speak for everyone who was there when I say we left changed by the experience. Oh, and SWALE rocked the house, too.
BiteTorrent
Band Name of the Week:
BOIL THE WHORE. Have I
Metal Mondays series at Nectar’s, hosted by NEFARIOUS FRENZY and WRUV’s METAL MATT LONGO. I happened to catch a recent edition of the residency, and I gotta say, it’s the most fun I’ve had on a Monday night in a long, long time. Tuesday morning, on the other hand… WAYLON SPEED have a big
summer lined up. In addition to appearing at Gathering of the Vibes and FloydFest, the speedwestern progenitors have just announced they’ll be joining songwriter JACKIE GREENE on tour to support their rockin’ new double album, Horseshoes and Hand Grenades. Catch them at the Monkey House with Bostonbased arena rockers TOWNSHIP this Saturday. While he’s dusting off some old tunes in preparation for the viperHouse reunion, Michael Chorney does have some new material to share via a new combo featuring bassist ROB MORSE and drummer GEZA CARR called CHORNEY, MORSE AND — wait for it — CARR. Chorney, Morse and Carr make up the core of the Hadestown band and will perform tunes Chorney wrote over the winter this Friday at Langdon Street Café. Incidentally, they’ll be opening for Austin’s the BLUE HIT, which features cellist DAVID MOSS, a member of the touring Hadestown band.
A S L G E N I ! S O L C 50%
12v-Nectars042011.indd 1
Colin Stetson
4/18/11 3:15 PM
OFF
Most CDs, DVDs, Vinyl LPs, Video Games, Posters & other selected items!
performance that night was any indication, she alone is worth the price of admission.
Last but not least, filling the void left by the now-defunct Black Door Bar and Bistro, Montpeculiar nightspot KISMET has recently started hosting live entertainment on a regular basis. Wednesday, April 27, finds a welcome return of standup comedy to the state capital as KATHLEEN KANZ hosts an evening with UMBERTO GAROFANO, PAT LYNCH and CARMEN LAGALA. If that last surname sounds familiar, it could be because Lagala was the surprise discovery of this year’s Higher Ground Comedy Battle. If her
DOWNTOWN DISCS 198 COLLEGE STREET • BURLINGTON 660-8150
12v-downtowndiscs042011.indd 1
4/18/11 1:31 PM
12v-3Penny022311.indd 1
2/21/11 1:57 PM
Listening In Once again, this week’s totally self-indulgent column segment, in which I share a random sampling of what was on my iPod, turntable, CD player, 8-track player, etc., this week.
SEVEN DAYS
COURTESY OF BRIAN JENKINS
04.20.11-04.27.11
mentioned how much I love hardcore and heavy metal band names? This Burlington outfit joins the fun this week at the ongoing
C O NT I NU E D F RO M PA G E 5 9
SEVENDAYSVT.COM
A hearty welcome home to HENRY JAMISON who returns to Vermont from college in Maine with his band, the MILKMAN’S UNION, to open for Brooklyn’s MILAGRES this Friday. (See the spotlight on page 65.)
COURTESY OF COLIN STETSON
S
GOT MUSIC NEWS? DAN@SEVENDAYSVT.COM
Foo Fighters, Wasting Light Karl Blau, Max Cameron McGill & What Army, Is a Beast Brontosaurus, Cold Comes to Claim TV on the Radio, Nine Types of Light
MUSIC 61
Waylon Speed
SEVENDAYSvt.com 04.20.11-04.27.11 SEVEN DAYS 62 1t-VtCollegeFineArts042011.indd 1
4/18/11 1:44 PM
REVIEW this
Brian McCarthy Quartet, Brian McCarthy Quartet (SELF-RELEASED, CD)
DAN BOLLES
— Phish, the Dead, etc. But they also showcase enough charm and ingenuity to suggest that, with a little more seasoning, they might one day offer a fresh take on the waning jam idiom. Now The album gets off to a suspicious serving whole wheat start with “Kings.” Bassist Braden crust “Gunthro” Lalancette lays down a solid groove, but his bandmates initially struggle to lock in. Nick “Red Beard” Ledak’s rhythm guitar is never quite in 1 Large 1-Topping Pizza, sync as he manically strums a jaunty, 1 Dozen Wings jam-pop progression. Making matters 2 Liter Coke Product worse, drummer Griffin “Otis-Lance” Brady’s youthful exuberance appears Plus tax. Delivery & take out only. Expires 4/30/11 to get the better of him. His fluttering intro is noticeably rushed, and it takes 973 Roosevelt Highway him a few measures to lay back and find Colchester • 655-5550 his footing. www.threebrotherspizzavt.com Eventually the guys do settle in. And when they do, the results are usually 3/23/11 10:21 AM impressive, especially given their tender12v-ThreeBros033011.indd 1 years. The Haps most often come together behind multi-instrumentalist Wil Yandell — the only member, apparently, without a nickname. Given LARGE VARIETY OF GENUINE how they finally rally around his MOTOR SCOOTERS IN STOCK pleasing sax melody on “Kings,” I might • 100-150 miles suggest “the Glue.” per gallon Keyboardist Greg “Donald” Meyer • Two year handles the bulk of front-man duties warranty on all new and proves a capable vocalist. He’s scooters never flashy, and his delivery suits the band’s pop-informed material nicely. He holds court over the eight-and-ahalf-minute epic “Merlin’s Beard” with cool confidence, providing welcome Roughhouse Around Town relief between the song’s extended jam breaks. “Good Sir Porcupine” takes heavy 777 PINE STREET cues from local jam gods Phish. BURLINGTON, VT Irreverent and fun, the song recalls the THEDAILYRIDER.COM leaner moments on the Phab Four’s A Picture of Nectar. “Lemonade” is a nifty little threePositive Pie Montpelier 12v-dailyrider-roughhouse.indd 1 4/1/11 11:54 AM minute jam-pop charmer. The band presents likely won’t blow anyone away with lyrical profundities — at least not yet. But the Haps can find their way around a pop song as well as most of their older jam contemporaries. Hanon Drive Heroes closes on a high note with the reggae-tinged “2 of 2.” It’s the record’s strongest cut because the band largely lays back and avoids the temptation to overplay, allowing the song room to breathe. It’s a lesson many far more established jam bands have never learned, but one the Haps appear to be on their way to mastering. Be sure to call us when school’s out, boys. w/ Patti Casey For more info on the Haps, visit Sat 4/30/11 Matinee 1:30pm sonicbids.com/thehapsvt. Evening 9:30pm
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SEVENDAYSVT.COM 04.20.11-04.27.11
The Haps, Hanon Drive Heroes (MOUNTAIN FISH RECORDS, CD)
Kids these days. Composed of five high school juniors from Williston, the Haps recently unveiled their debut EP, Hanon Drive Heroes. A mishmash of rock, funk and reggae, the jam band ably mimics a cavalcade of predictable influences
SEVEN DAYS
DAN BOLLES
AN INDEPENDENT ARTIST OR BAND MAKING MUSIC IN VT, SEND YOUR CD TO US! GET YOUR MUSIC REVIEWED: IFDANYOU’RE BOLLES C/O SEVEN DAYS, 255 SO. CHAMPLAIN ST. STE 5, BURLINGTON, VT 05401
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MUSIC 63
Saxophonist Brian McCarthy is a staple of the Burlington jazz scene. He’s been heard lending his considerable chops to myriad local ensembles, including the Ray Vega Quintet and the Grippo Funk Band, as well as holding down the horn section on Phish bassist Mike Gordon’s last solo record, Moss. McCarthy, who teaches at the University of Vermont and Johnson State College, is a highly regarded player, composer and arranger — he’s penned works for jazz titans Kenny Garrett and Mulgrew Miller, among others. But until recently, he’s long been relegated to the smoky shadows of our collective local jazz cabaret. On his quartet’s self-titled, debut full-length, McCarthy snags the spotlight for himself, delivering a sparkling album of original compositions — and one cover — that deserves a prominent place in the record stacks of local jazz aficionados. “Flood Gates” is aptly named, as pianist Tom Cleary opens the record with a torrent of churning chords, accented by drummer Jeff Salisbury’s blooming cymbal splashes. As if caught in the current, McCarthy’s sax winds aimlessly before breaking free from the eddy and skimming atop the band’s swiftly moving surface with graceful, fluttering tones. But Cleary will not be denied. Midway through, the keyboardist takes command and unleashes a raging swell that threatens to swallow the entire composition. Eventually, the waters recede as McCarthy leads the quartet to a peaceful resolution — though not without one last breaking splash from Cleary, who punctuates the tune with a sneaky staccato hit at the finish.
“Unexpected” is a sinewy ballad, framed by Cleary’s smooth, syncopated keystrokes. McCarthy’s cool tenor yawns with steamy, late-night ease, swelling in concert with Cleary. Meanwhile, John Rivers delivers a sly acoustic bass groove that fills the fleeting pauses in Cleary and McCarthy’s bleary-eyed conversation before riffing on his own for a bit at the close. The album’s lone cover is a reworking of Don Raye’s “You Don’t Know What Love Is.” McCarthy’s arrangement is sensitive to the source material but not enslaved to it. Both he and Cleary take playful liberties with the familiar melody in various turns but never completely abandon the song’s lovelorn feel. “Pondering” is a bouncy meditation. The tune breezes along pleasantly enough, but it lacks punch. Despite a mildly compelling flurry near the finish, it feels safe and unrequited. “Undecided” is more adventurous and truly showcases McCarthy’s talents. As a player, his tone is alternately pure and rough hewn, altering the mood at will. As a composer, McCarthy’s sparse, open arrangement leaves room for his talented bandmates to stretch out, while offering just enough of a framework to build upon. It is another highlight in an album full of them. The Brian McCarthy Quartet celebrate their album release this Friday, April 22, at the Marriott Harbor Lounge in Burlington.
4/15/11 4:08 PM
music FRi.22
CLUB DATES na: not availABLE. AA: All ages. NC: no cover.
« p.60
JP's Pub: Dave Harrison's Starstruck Karaoke, 10 p.m., Free. Lift: Salsa Friday with DJ Hector Cobeo (salsa), 9 p.m., Free. Manhattan Pizza & Pub: Spit Jack, Skulls, Wave of the Future (punk), 9 p.m., Free. Monkey House: AM Presents: Milagres, the Milkman's Union (rock), 9 p.m., $5. Nectar's: Seth Yacovone (solo acoustic blues), 7 p.m., Free. Dub is a Weapon, Sister Sparrow and the Dirty Birds (reggae), 9 p.m., $5. On Tap Bar & Grill: Mitch & Friends (acoustic), 5 p.m., Free. Raptor (rock), 9 p.m., Free. Parima Acoustic Lounge: Aaron Flinn (singersongwriter), 8:30 p.m., $5. Parima Main Stage: Seny Daffe & Wontanara (West African groove), 7 p.m., $3. Cumbiagra (cumbia), 10:30 p.m., $5. Park Place Tavern: Big Boots Deville (rock), 9:30 p.m., Free. Radio Bean: Dar Stellabotta (singer-songwriter), 8 p.m., Free. Megan Jean & the KFB (Americana), 10 p.m., Free. Rasputin's: DJ ZJ (hip-hop), 10 p.m., $3. Red Square: Kyle the Rider (country), 6 p.m., Free. Lovewhip (funk), 9 p.m., $5. Nastee (hip-hop), 11:30 p.m., $5. Red Square Blue Room: DJ Stavros (house), 10 p.m., $5. Ruben James: DJ Cre8 (hip-hop), 10:30 p.m., Free. Rí Rá Irish Pub: Supersounds DJ (Top 40), 10 p.m., Free. The Skinny Pancake: Katie Trautz & the Tall Boys, Jackson Emmer (folk), 8 p.m., $5-10 donation.
central
Charlie O's: Amadis (metal), 10 p.m., Free. Green Mountain Tavern: DJ Jonny P (Top 40), 9 p.m., $2. Langdon Street Café: Chorney, Morse & Carr (jazz), 8 p.m., Donations. The Blue Hit (folk, avant garde), 9 p.m., Donations. Purple Moon Pub: James McSheffrey (singersongwriter), 8 p.m., Free.
Tupelo Music Hall: Bow Thayer & Holy Plow with jamie masefield, Doug Perkins and Tyler Bolles (Americana), 8 p.m., $20.
51 Main: Two-Tone Deceiver (rock), 9 p.m., Free. City Limits: Top Hat Entertainment Dance Party (Top 40), 9 p.m., Free. The Hitmen (rock), 9 p.m., Free. On the Rise Bakery: Patti Casey and Susannah Blachly (folk), 8 p.m., Donations. Two Brothers Tavern: 3 Sheets 2 the Wind (rock), 10 p.m., $3.
northern
Bee's Knees: Freddy & the Weeds (newgrass), 7:30 p.m., Donations. The Hub Pizzeria & Pub: Conscious Roots (reggae), 9:30 p.m., Free. Moog's: Sam Solo (acoustic), 8 p.m., Free. Rimrocks Mountain Tavern: Friday Night Frequencies with DJ Rekkon (hip-hop), 10 p.m., Free.
regional
Monopole: Shameless Strangers (rock), 10 p.m., Free. Olive Ridley's: Benjamin Bright (singersongwriter), 6 p.m., Free. Ten Year Vamp (rock), 10 p.m., NA.
SAT.23
burlington area
1/2 Lounge: Tiffany Pfeiffer (neo-soul), 7 p.m., Free. SinOrgy DJs: T-Watt, R2 & QDO (house), 10 p.m., Free. American Legion: Open Mic, 6 p.m., Free.
Parima Main Stage: Flat Top Trio (bluegrass), 7:30 p.m., $3. The Blue Hit, Greg Alexander (folk, avant garde), 9:30 p.m., $5.
Red Square: DJ Raul (salsa), 5 p.m., Free. Myra Flynn's Guest List (neo-soul), 6 p.m., Free. Musaic (rock), 9 p.m., $5. DJ A-Dog (hip-hop), 11:30 p.m., $5.
1/2 Lounge: Funhouse with DJs Rob Douglas, Moonflower & Friends (house), 7 p.m., Free. Club Metronome: Black to the Future (urban jamz), 10 p.m., Free.
Rí Rá Irish Pub: The X-Rays (rock), 10 p.m., Free. The Skinny Pancake: Project Organ Trio (jazz), 8 p.m., $5-10 donation.
Higher Ground Ballroom: Sam Adams, Jeremy Greene, Vonnegutt (hip-hop), 8:30 p.m., $20/23. AA.
Venue: Goldrush (country), 8:30 p.m., $3.
Higher Ground Showcase Lounge: Zach Deputy (singer-songwriter), 8 p.m., $10/12. AA.
central
Monkey House: AM Presents: Porches, Rival Tribes (indie), 9 p.m., $5. 18+.
Charlie O's: Megan Jean & the KFB (rock), 10 p.m., Free.
Nectar's: Mi Yard Reggae Night with Big Dog & Demus, 9 p.m., Free.
Langdon Street Café: Scrag Mountain Music (classical), 7 p.m., Donations. Stephanie Nilles with Sara Grace (singer-songwriters), 8 p.m., Donations. Cumbiagra (cumbia), 10 p.m., Donations.
Radio Bean: Old Time Sessions (old-time), 1 p.m., Free. Trio Gusto (gypsy jazz), 5 p.m., Free. Randal Pants (jazz), 5 p.m., Free.
Positive Pie 2: Mr. Yee, Tank (hip-hop), 10:30 p.m., $4. 18+.
northern
Purple Moon Pub: McBride Lussen (acoustic), 8 p.m., Free.
Ye Olde England Inne: Corey Beard, Dan Liptak and Dan Haley (jazz), 11:30 a.m., Free.
The Reservoir Restaurant & Tap Room: One Way Out (rock), 10 p.m., Free.
MON.25
Tupelo Music Hall: Colin Hay (pop), 8 p.m., $35.
burlington area
champlain valley
1/2 Lounge: Half-FRO Beat Mondays with DJ Brian-eye (world music), 9 p.m., Free.
51 Main: Charter House Fundraiser, 6 p.m., Free. Bar Antidote: Hot Neon Magic (’80s New Wave), 9:30 p.m., $3.
Club Metronome: Retronome (’80s dance party), 10 p.m., $5.
On the Rise Bakery: The Real Deal (r&b), 8 p.m., Donations.
Franny O's: Karaoke, 9 p.m., Free.
Two Brothers Tavern: The Horse Traders (rock), 9 p.m., $3.
Higher Ground Showcase Lounge: Ryan Montbleau Band, Dwight & Nicole (soul), 8:30 p.m., $14/16. AA.
burlington area
Rasputin's: Nastee (hip-hop), 10 p.m., Free.
Backstage Pub: Groove Thing (rock), 9 p.m., Free.
Higher Ground Ballroom: Sam Adams, Jeremy Greene, Vonnegutt (hip-hop), 8:30 p.m., $20/23. AA.
SUN.24
Radio Bean: Dev Jana (singer-songwriter), 8 p.m., Free. The Midway (rock), 10 p.m., Free.
City Limits: Dance Party with DJ Earl (Top 40), 9 p.m., Free.
The Green Room: Bonjour-Hi! presents 2K Deep (house), 10 p.m., Free.
Tabu Café & Nightclub: All Night Dance Party with DJ Toxic (Top 40), 5 p.m., Free.
Monkey House: Lord Silky, Vaporizer, Let the Night Roar, Death Beds (hardcore), 9 p.m., $5. Nectar's: Metal Mondays with Nefarious Frenzy, Musical Manslaughter, Boil the Whore (metal), 9 p.m., Free/$5. 18+. On Tap Bar & Grill: Comedy Open Mic, 5:30 p.m., Free. Open Mic with Wylie, 7 p.m., Free. Radio Bean: Open Mic, 8 p.m., Free.
northern
Red Square: Industry Night with Robbie J (hiphop), 8 p.m., Free. Hype ’Em (hip-hop), 11 p.m., Free.
Bee's Knees: Steve Hartmann (singer-songwriter), 7:30 p.m., Donations.
Rozzi's Lakeshore Tavern: Trivia Night, 8 p.m., Free.
The Hub Pizzeria & Pub: Karaoke, 9 p.m., Free.
Ruben James: Why Not Monday? with Dakota (hip-hop), 10 p.m., Free.
Moog's: Big John (acoustic), 8 p.m., Free.
JP's Pub: Dave Harrison's Starstruck Karaoke, 10 p.m., Free.
Parker Pie Co.: Session Americana with Kris Delmhorst (Americana), 8 p.m., Free.
Monkey House: Waylon Speed, Township (speedwestern, rock), 9 p.m., $7.
Rimrocks Mountain Tavern: DJ Two Rivers (hip-hop), 10 p.m., Free.
Nectar's: Justin Levinson Songwriters Circle (singer-songwriters), 7 p.m., Free. Dopapod, Cyborg Trio, DJ Oh-J Freshhh (groove), 9 p.m., $7/10.
regional
TUE.26
burlington area
1/2 Lounge: Corey Gottfried (spoken word), 7 p.m., Free. Rewind with DJ Craig Mitchell (house), 10 p.m., Free.
Monopole: House on a Spring (rock), 10 p.m., Free.
On Tap Bar & Grill: Agent 99 (rock), 9 p.m., Free.
04.20.11-04.27.11
courtesy of Brent Harrewyn
SEVENDAYSvt.com
The Reservoir Restaurant & Tap Room: DJ Slim Pknz All Request Dance Party (Top 40), 10 p.m., Free.
champlain valley
The Who? Who the hell are
Chamberlin? In short, they’re the biggest
local band no one in Vermont has ever heard of. Following a stint opening for VT’s resident rock stars Grace Potter and the Nocturnals last fall, they released a
SEVEN DAYS
well-received debut album, Bitter Blood, then hit the road with up-and-coming indie-darlings Or, the Whale. This summer, Chamberlin will rock big-deal events such as the Wakarusa Festival in Arkansas with My Morning Jacket and Sharon Jones. So much for paying your dues, eh? The band 64 music
plays a rare hometown show at the Higher fri.22 // Chamberlin [rock]
Ground Showcase Lounge this Friday, April 22, with Maryse Smith and Aunt Martha.
VENUES.411 MILAGRES as little more than
the latest group of scruffy, synth-playin’ Brooklynites to catch the fickle fancy of the hipster set. Don’t. On their new album, Seven Summits, the recent Kill Rock Stars signees further their new label’s legacy for unearthing artistically progressive bands, delivering smartly crafted, hyperliterate — and yeah, a little synthy — pop tunes that are simultaneously soothing and challenging. They’ll play the Monkey House in Winooski this Friday, April 22, with VT expats the MILKMAN’S UNION.
FRI.22 // MILAGRES [INDIE ROCK]
CLUB METRONOME: Bass Culture with DJs Jahson & Nickel B (electronica), 9 p.m., Free. HIGHER GROUND BALLROOM: Easy Star All-Stars, Cas Haley, the Move It Move It (reggae), 8:30 p.m., $15/17. AA.
HIGHER GROUND BALLROOM: Beats Antique, Marley Carroll, the Orator (live electronica), 8:30 p.m., $13/15. AA. HIGHER GROUND SHOWCASE LOUNGE: Greensky Bluegrass (bluegrass), 7:30 p.m., $10/12. AA.
LEUNIG'S BISTRO & CAFÉ: Juliet McVicker (jazz), 7 p.m., Free.
LEUNIG'S BISTRO & CAFÉ: Cody Sargent Trio (jazz), 7 p.m., Free.
MONKEY HOUSE: Speakin' Easy (spoken word), 7 p.m., Free. The Cheddar Band, Phineas Gage (acoustic), 9 p.m., $5. 18+.
LIFT: DJs P-Wyld & Jazzy Janet (hip-hop), 9 p.m., Free/$5. 18+.
MONTY'S OLD BRICK TAVERN: Open Mic, 6 p.m., Free. NECTAR'S: Mike Wheeler and Andrew Stearns Duo (acoustic), 7 p.m., Free. The Amida Bourbon Project, Phil Yates and the Affiliates (rock), 9 p.m., Free/$5. 18+. ON TAP BAR & GRILL: Trivia with Top Hat Entertainment, 7 p.m., Free.
RED SQUARE: Upsetta International with Super K (reggae), 8 p.m., Free.
central
CHARLIE O'S: Karaoke, 10 p.m., Free. LANGDON STREET CAFÉ: Geek Week: Rory Raven (mentalist), 8 p.m., Donations.
MONKEY HOUSE: Beat Vision with DJ Disco Phantom (eclectic DJ), 9 p.m., $1. NECTAR'S: Funkwagon, Lynguistic Civilians (funk), 9 p.m., $5. 18+. ON TAP BAR & GRILL: Pine Street Jazz, 7 p.m., Free. PARIMA ACOUSTIC LOUNGE: The Newest Secret with DJ Gunner & DJ Siduktiv (eclectic DJs), 9 p.m., $5. RADIO BEAN: Ensemble V (jazz), 7:30 p.m., Free. Irish Sessions, 9 p.m., Free. RED SQUARE: DJ Cre8 (hip-hop), 11 p.m., Free. SHELBURNE STEAKHOUSE & SALOON: Carol Ann Jones (country), 8 p.m., Free.
central
KISMET: Comedy Night: Kathleen Kanz, Umberto Garofano, Carmen Lagala, Pat Lynch (standup), 7:30 p.m., $5.
TUPELO MUSIC HALL: Wishbone Ash (rock), 8 p.m., $30.
LANGDON STREET CAFÉ: Geek Week: Game Night, 7 p.m., Free.
champlain valley
champlain valley
51 MAIN: The One Eyed Jacks (rock), 6 p.m., Free. Quizz Night (trivia), 7 p.m., Free. TWO BROTHERS TAVERN: Monster Hits Karaoke, 9 p.m., Free.
BEE'S KNEES: James McSheffrey (singersongwriter), 7:30 p.m., Donations.
WED.27
burlington area
FRANNY O'S: Karaoke, 9:30 p.m., Free.
TWO BROTHERS TAVERN: Open Mic, 8 p.m., Free.
northern
BEE'S KNEES: Faerie God Brothers (dream folk), 7:30 p.m., Donations. MOOG'S: The Ramblers (acoustic), 8 p.m., Free.
regional
MONOPOLE: Open Mic, 8 p.m., Free.
CENTRAL
ARVAD’S GRILL & PUB, 3 S. Main St., Waterbury, 244-8973. BIG PICTURE THEATER & CAFÉ, 48 Carroll Rd., Waitsfield, 496-8994. THE CENTER BAKERY & CAFE, 2007 Guptil Rd., Waterbury Center, 244-7500. CHARLIE O’S, 70 Main St., Montpelier, 223-6820. CJ’S AT THAN WHEELERS, 6 S. Main St., White River Jct., 280-1810. GREEN MOUNTAIN TAVERN, 10 Keith Ave., Barre, 522-2935. GUSTO’S, 28 Prospect St., Barre, 476-7919. HEN OF THE WOOD AT THE GRIST MILL, 92 Stowe St., Waterbury, 244-7300. HOSTEL TEVERE, 203 Powderhound Rd., Warren, 496-9222. KISMET, 52 State St. 223-8646.
NORTHERN
BEE’S KNEES, 82 Lower Main St., Morrisville, 888-7889. THE BLUE ACORN, 84 N. Main St., St. Albans, 527-0699. THE BREWSKI, Rt. 108, Jeffersonville, 644-6366. CHOW! BELLA, 28 N. Main St., St. Albans, 524-1405. CLAIRE’S RESTAURANT & BAR, 41 Main St., Hardwick, 472-7053. THE HUB PIZZERIA & PUB, 21 Lower Main St., Johnson, 635-7626. THE LITTLE CABARET, 34 Main St., Derby, 293-9000. MATTERHORN, 4969 Mountain Rd., Stowe, 253-8198. MUSIC BOX, 147 Creek Rd., Craftsbury, 586-7533. OVERTIME SALOON, 38 S. Main St., St. Albans, 524-0357. PARKER PIE CO., 161 County Rd., West Glover, 525-3366. PHAT KATS TAVERN, 101 Depot St., Lyndonville, 626-3064. PIECASSO, 899 Mountain Rd., Stowe, 253-4411. RIMROCKS MOUNTAIN TAVERN, 394 Mountain Rd., Stowe, 253-9593. ROADSIDE TAVERN, 216 Rt. 7, Milton, 660-8274. RUSTY NAIL BAR & GRILLE, 1190 Mountain Rd., Stowe, 253-6245. THE SHED RESTAURANT & BREWERY, 1859 Mountain Rd., Stowe, 253-4765. SHOOTERS SALOON, 30 Kingman St., St. Albans, 527-3777. SNOW SHOE LODGE & PUB, 13 Main St., Montgomery Center, 326-4456. SWEET CRUNCH BAKESHOP, 246 Main St., Hyde Park, 888-4887. TAMARACK GRILL AT BURKE MOUNTAIN, 223 Shelburne Lodge Rd., E. Burke, 626-7394. WATERSHED TAVERN, 31 Center St., Brandon, 247-0100. YE OLDE ENGLAND INNE, 443 Mountain Rd., Stowe, 253-5320.
REGIONAL
GILLIGAN’S GETAWAY, 7160 State Rt. 9, Plattsburgh, N.Y., 518-566-8050. MONOPOLE, 7 Protection Ave., Plattsburgh, N.Y., 518-563-2222. NAKED TURTLE, 1 Dock St., Plattsburgh, N.Y., 518-566-6200. OLIVE RIDLEY’S, 37 Court St., Plattsburgh, N.Y., 518-324-2200. TABU CAFÉ & NIGHTCLUB, 14 Margaret St., Plattsburgh, N.Y., 518-566-0666.
MUSIC 65
1/2 LOUNGE: Steve Hartmann (singer-songwriter), 7 p.m., Free. DJ Kanga presents: The Lounge Lizard (hip-hop), 9 p.m.
ON THE RISE BAKERY: Open Bluegrass Session, 8 p.m., Free.
51 MAIN, 51 Main St., Middlebury, 388-8209. BAR ANTIDOTE, 35C Green St., Vergennes, 877-2555. BRICK BOX, 30 Center St., Rutland, 775-0570. THE BRISTOL BAKERY, 16 Main St., Bristol, 453-3280. CAROL’S HUNGRY MIND CAFÉ, 24 Merchant’s Row, Middlebury, 388-0101. CITY LIMITS, 14 Greene St., Vergennes, 877-6919. CLEM’S CAFÉ 101 Merchant’s Row, Rutland, 775-3337. DAN’S PLACE, 31 Main St., Bristol, 453-2774. THE FARMERS DINER, 99 Maple St., Middlebury, 458-0455. GOOD TIMES CAFÉ, Rt. 116, Hinesburg, 482-4444. ON THE RISE BAKERY, 44 Bridge St., Richmond, 434-7787. SOUTH STATION RESAURANT, 170 S. Main St., Rutland, 775-1730. STARRY NIGHT CAFÉ, 5371 Rt. 7, Ferrisburgh, 877-6316. TWO BROTHERS TAVERN, 86 Main St., Middlebury, 388-0002.
SEVEN DAYS
northern
CITY LIMITS: Karaoke with Let It Rock Entertainment, 9 p.m., Free.
CHAMPLAIN VALLEY
04.20.11-04.27.11
SLIDE BROOK LODGE & TAVERN: Tattoo Tuesdays with Andrea (jam), 5 p.m., Free.
1/2 LOUNGE, 136 1/2 Church St., Burlington, 865-0012. 242 MAIN St., Burlington, 862-2244. AMERICAN FLATBREAD, 115 St. Paul St., Burlington, 861-2999. AUGUST FIRST, 149 S. Champlain St., Burlington, 540-0060. BACKSTAGE PUB, 60 Pearl St., Essex Jct., 878-5494. BANANA WINDS CAFÉ & PUB, 1 Market Pl., Essex Jct., 879-0752. THE BLOCK GALLERY, 1 E. Allen St., Winooski, 373-5150. BLUEBIRD TAVERN, 317 Riverside Ave., Burlington, 428-4696. BREAKWATER CAFÉ, 1 King St., Burlington, 658-6276. BRENNAN’S PUB & BISTRO, UVM Davis Center, 590 Main St., Burlington, 656-1204. CITY SPORTS GRILLE, 215 Lower Mountain View Dr., Colchester, 655-2720. CLUB METRONOME, 188 Main St., Burlington, 865-4563. FRANNY O’S, 733 Queen City Park Rd., Burlington, 863-2909. THE GREEN ROOM, 86 St. Paul St., Burlington, 651-9669. HALVORSON’S UPSTREET CAFÉ, 16 Church St., Burlington, 658-0278. HARBOR LOUNGE AT COURTYARD MARRIOTT, 25 Cherry St., Burlington, 864-4700. HIGHER GROUND, 1214 Williston Rd., S. Burlington, 652-0777. JP’S PUB, 139 Main St., Burlington, 658-6389. LEUNIG’S BISTRO & CAFÉ, 115 Church St., Burlington, 863-3759. LIFT, 165 Church St., Burlington, 660-2088. THE LIVING ROOM, 794 W. Lakeshore Dr., Colchester. MANHATTAN PIZZA & PUB, 167 Main St., Burlington, 864-6776. MARRIOTT HARBOR LOUNGE, 25 Cherry St., Burlington, 854-4700. MIGUEL’S ON MAIN, 30 Main St., Burlington, 658-9000. MONKEY HOUSE, 30 Main St., Winooski, 655-4563. MONTY’S OLD BRICK TAVERN, 7921 Williston Rd., Williston, 316-4262. MUDDY WATERS, 184 Main St., Burlington, 658-0466. NECTAR’S, 188 Main St., Burlington, 658-4771. NEW MOON CAFÉ, 150 Cherry St., Burlington, 383-1505. O’BRIEN’S IRISH PUB, 348 Main St., Winooski, 338-4678. ODD FELLOWS HALL, 1416 North Ave., Burlington, 862-3209. ON TAP BAR & GRILL, 4 Park St., Essex Jct., 878-3309. PARIMA, 185 Pearl St., Burlington, 864-7917. PARK PLACE TAVERN, 38 Park St., Essex Jct. 878-3015. RADIO BEAN, 8 N. Winooski Ave., Burlington, 660-9346. RASPUTIN’S, 163 Church St., Burlington, 864-9324. RED SQUARE, 136 Church St., Burlington, 859-8909. REGULAR VETERANS ASSOCIATION, 84 Weaver St., Winooski, 655-9899. RÍ RÁ IRISH PUB, 123 Church St., Burlington, 860-9401. ROZZI’S LAKESHORE TAVERN, 1022 W. Lakeshore Dr., Colchester, 863-2342. RUBEN JAMES, 159 Main St., Burlington, 864-0744. THE SCUFFER STEAK & ALE HOUSE, 148 Church St., Burlington, 864-9451. SHELBURNE STEAKHOUSE & SALOON, 2545 Shelburne Rd., Shelburne, 985-5009. THE SKINNY PANCAKE, 60 Lake St., Burlington, 540-0188. VENUE, 127 Porters Point Rd., Colchester, 310-4067. THE VERMONT PUB & BREWERY, 144 College St., Burlington, 865-0500.
L.A.C.E., 159 N. Main St., Barre, 476-4276. LANGDON STREET CAFÉ, 4 Langdon St., Montpelier, 223-8667. LOCAL FOLK SMOKEHOUSE, 9 Rt. 7, Waitsfield, 4965623. MAIN STREET GRILL & BAR, 118 Main St., Montpelier, 223-3188. MULLIGAN'S IRISH PUB, 9 Maple Ave., Barre, 479-5545. NUTTY STEPH’S, 961C Rt. 2, Middlesex, 229-2090. PICKLE BARREL NIGHTCLUB, Killington Rd., Killington, 422-3035. POSITIVE PIE 2, 20 State St., Montpelier, 229-0453. PURPLE MOON PUB, Rt. 100, Waitsfield, 496-3422. THE RESERVOIR RESTAURANT & TAP ROOM, 1 S. Main St., Waterbury, 244-7827. SLIDE BROOK LODGE & TAVERN, 3180 German Flats Rd., Warren, 583-2202. SOUTH STATION RESTAURANT, 170 S. Main St., Rutland, 775-1736. TUPELO MUSIC HALL, 188 S. Main St., White River Jct., 698-8341.
SEVENDAYSVT.COM
RADIO BEAN: Gua Gua (psychotropical), 6 p.m., Free. Honky-Tonk Sessions (honky-tonk), 10 p.m., $3.
MANHATTAN PIZZA & PUB: Open Mic with Andy Lugo, 10 p.m., Free.
COURTESY OF MILAGRES
Peak-a-Boo You might be inclined to dismiss
BURLINGTON AREA
“Drew”
“Claudia”
Red, Not Dead Julia Baum, Green + Blue Gallery
66 ART
SEVEN DAYS
04.20.11-04.27.11
SEVENDAYSVT.COM
I
n 2007, media outlets the world over reported that redheads were going extinct, stating that by 2060, the flame-haired among us could cease to exist. While this theory was later debunked for its bad science and questionable research ethics, the claim sparked the interest of photographer Julia Baum. The only red-haired person in her family, Baum set out to capture this tiny population (less than 2 percent of the world’s people) and create an archive of sorts for future generations on the off chance that those spurious predictions were right. The result is an ongoing photographic project called “A Rare Breed.” Selected images are currently on display at Green + Blue Gallery in Stowe. Baum, 28, began her redhead portrait series two-and-a-half years ago. Since then, the Brooklyn-based photographer has made close to 40 portraits of this “special breed.” The project started as an examination of the hair itself, but has since evolved into something much deeper, she explains. “Being a redhead affects who you are and where you see yourself in the world. Maybe it pushes people to be more extraordinary,” Baum suggests. Red hair, a recessive trait, is a genetic mutation of the MC1R protein. Accordingly, having red hair makes you a curiosity, by turns an object of ridicule and desire.
It also means you will be stereotyped — redheaded women are seen as vixenish or witchlike; redheaded men are considered weak. Marion Roach writes in her book The Roots of Desire: The Myth, Meaning and Sexual Power of Red Hair, “That redheads are untrustworthy, fiery, unstable, hottempered, highly sexed, rare creatures is what passes for common knowledge today.”
THE PROJECT STARTED AS AN EXAMINATION OF THE HAIR ITSELF, BUT HAS SINCE EVOLVED INTO SOMETHING MUCH DEEPER.
At Seven Days, three staff members can boast (natural) red hair. Another was born a redhead, and though his hair is dusty auburn now, his beard remains a deep russet. We thought it appropriate to send two of those carrot-tops — music editor Dan Bolles and myself — to see Baum’s exhibit and examine it from a redhead’s perspective. While the reviews that follow are subjective, we promise them to be neither untrustworthy reportage nor highly sexed opinion.
art
“Bianca”
I
have always considered it a special thing to have red hair. Until my brother came along eight years after me, I was the sole redhead in my family. When I was a child, adults would fawn over me and ask where my hair came from. During my primary-school years, I endured some teasing about my fiery locks, but the barbs hardly made an impact. I loved being a redhead. Pippi Longstocking and Anne of Green Gables were my red-haired heroes. They were whip-smart, obstinate girls who could always talk their way out of trouble. I strived to emulate them. The older I got, the more I realized how differently redheads are often treated. No one would deign to ask anyone but a redhead such a prurient and tacky question as “Does the carpet match the drapes?” (The answer is always “yes,” so stop asking.) Still, that is part of the redhead identity — being an anomaly, both genetically and aesthetically. It is through that prism that I viewed Baum’s exhibit. A small, corridor-like room at the newly renovated gallery holds 11 photo portraits of redheads in white frames. Most subjects are your standard ginger — pale skin, light eyes, freckles. All are set against a white background, though none is lit from the same angle. Baum explains in a telephone interview that she shot all her subjects outside in natural light, then inserted the neutral background in postproduction. The reason for the effect is obvious: The hair color pops against the white. There are doe-eyed Bianca, elfin January, frizz-haired Colby and rumpled Kevin, all staring out at us, asking us to take in more than what’s atop their heads. And I do. I see how
much makeup the women wear to avoid looking spectral. I see the attitude that having red hair has allowed, or even forced, some of the subjects to adopt. And I see the quirkiness that is bred from difference. I may even smell some SPF 50. In truth, the exhibit makes me feel jealous. I don’t have many freckles, and my hair, once a brilliant ruby hue, is now somewhere between golden red and strawberry blonde. Each of Baum’s subjects seems more authentically redheaded than I. Indeed, the portraits make me feel a bit wistful, especially that of young Claire, who, but for the freckle clusters littering her face, could have been me 25 years ago. For non-redheads, Baum’s project is likely to be intriguing, if not slightly unsettling, given society’s often complicated relationship with red hair. For redheads, or rather for myself, her work celebrates how diverse and beautiful I know our tribe of gingers to be. And it reminds me just how much I want to remain a part of it. L AU R EN O B ER
G
rowing up, being a redhead was simply something I tolerated. I learned to brush off the occasional schoolyard taunt. I would humor little old ladies who fawned over my ruddy tresses at church, while I, in turn, morbidly marveled at their azure coifs. In high school, I’d allow my pretty friend Emily to compare her dye job to my natural locks. (OK, I kinda enjoyed that last one.) I never considered the color of my hair to be a defining quality, even though most people around me did. If only Robert Redford’s rubicund mop hadn’t faded to a sandy auburn by the time he filmed The Natural, perhaps I’d have found the strong, red-haired role model I needed. (My other options: Archie, Ron Howard and the Hamburglar. Ginga, please.) As I’ve grown older, I’ve embraced the aesthetic quality that sets me apart from 99 percent of the world’s population. I don’t mind that strangers address me as “Red.” I get a kick out of being stopped on the street by someone taken with my color. And, yes, that happens. I even helped found
art shows
review
CALL TO LOCAL ARTISTS: The Firefly Collective, a new art space, is currently seeking Vermont artists’ works to feature in our downtown Burlington gallery. Info, thefireflycollective@gmail. com, 660-0754. Champlain Valley PhotoSlam: If you live in the Lake Champlain Valley and love making photos, this is the event for you. Submission deadline: May 2. Info, darkroomgallery.com/ex15/?sid=4. FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS: A fine-art festival that caters to Vermont artists! Jeffersonville, Saturday, August 13. Deadline: May 31. Info, artsfestvt.com. HERITAGE SHOW: Bring us your artwork April 25 through May 7 to be included in our Heritage Show during the months of May, June and July. Info, info@ artistsmediums.com. MONTPELIER CITY HALL PLAZA: Montpelier Alive seeks proposals for works of art for the front of Montpelier City Hall this summer. $800 honorarium awarded. Info, montpelieralive.org. Open Studio Weekend space: Show your artwork at the River Arts Center in Morrisville on May 28 and 29 for Open Studio Weekend. Info, riverartsvt.org, 888-1261. PHONE-O-GRAPHIC ARTS: You’ve got your phone with you always, while you may forget your camera at home. Show us the photos you make with your phone. Info, darkroomgallery.com/ex16. STUDIO PLACE ARTS: Hit the road for two summer art exhibits at SPA: “Lost in Traffic” (Main Floor Gallery) and “Postcards & Memories” (upstairs). Exhibit dates: June 14 through July 30.
Deadline for entries: May 6. Info, studioplacearts.com or 479-7069.
receptions
TASTE OF STOWE ARTS FESTIVAL: Sell your artwork at our summer festival, the Taste of Stowe, July 29, 30 and 31. Get on board! You will contact fans, create new collectors and connections, and increase your artist links. Deadline for applications: May 20. Info, helenday.com.
Senior Seminar Exhibit: Part 1: “Prologue,” student work by Lynne Bond, Maggie Craig, Jessa Gilbert, Brittany Hall-Potvin, Jasmine Parsia, Ben Weis, Kate Worley and Ashley Anne Veselis. Through April 22 at Colburn Gallery in Burlington. Reception: Wednesday, April 20, 5:30-7:30 p.m. Info, 656-2014.
talks & events Carol Boucher: The artist talks about her work and gives an oil pastel demonstration, in the Kolvoord Community Room. Wednesday, April 20, 7-9 p.m., Brownell Library, Essex Junction. Info, 878-6955. Craig Colorusso: “Sun Boxes,” a solar-powered sound installation that comprises 20 independently operating speakers, on the Davis Center Oval, the UVM Green and the Bailey-Howe Quad, weather permitting. Wednesday through Friday, April 20-22, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., UVM, Burlington. Info, 656-2060. 'Montpelier Art Walk: POETRY Alive!': A self-guided tour of downtown shops, galleries and other venues displaying artwork, hosting receptions and featuring poetry events. Friday, April 22, 4-8 p.m. Various downtown locations, Montpelier. Info, 223-9604. Art History Symposium: Students present their research on topics such as "The Origin and Development of the Mughal Floral Motif" and "Mending the Strife Between Earth and World: A Heideggerian Reading of Central Indian Painting." Monday, April 25, 5:30-7 p.m., Williams Hall, UVM, Burlington. Info, 656-2014.
ongoing burlington area
'A True Story': Documentary photography by local and international artists. Through April 29 at Vermont Photo Space Gallery in Essex Junction. Info, 777-3686. Alison Goodwin: "Returning Home," charcoal drawings and paintings. Through May 30 at SEABA Center in Burlington. Info, 859-9222.
Ashleigh LaRose: "Four Days in Texas," photographs by the LeZot Camera and Designhaus intern. Through April 30 at Designhaus in Burlington. Info, 310-5019.
‘April Artists’: Paintings and poems by Cora Brooks, and pastels by Cindy Griffith, Anne Unangst and Marcia Hill. Through April 30 at The Drawing Board in Montpelier. Reception: Friday, April 22, 4-6 p.m. Info, 223-2902. Eve Jacobs-Carnahan: Knitted sculpture by the Vermont fiber artist. Through May 7 at The Knitting Studio in Montpelier. Reception: Friday, April 22, 4-7 p.m. Info, 229-2444. Glen Hutcheson: “Other Hand Drawings, With Color,” figure studies the artist did with his left hand. Through May 31 at The Shoe Horn at Onion River in Montpelier. Reception: Friday, April 22, 5-7 p.m. Info, artwhirled23@yahoo. com. ‘Human = Landscape: Aesthetics of a CarbonConstrained Future’: A selection from the 2009 exhibit created by Burlington City Arts, including Nancy Dwyer and Caroline Byrne’s furniture made from Styrofoam packing materials, and R. Elliot Katz’s cast plaster oil industry portraits. April 22 through June 18 at Chaffee Art Center in Rutland.
Ava & Zoe Bishop: ".Scrap.," reassimilated fabric scraps from sewing projects past, by Ava; "The Silent Canoe," oil paintings by Zoe. Through April 28 at Flynndog in Burlington. Info, 363-4746. 'Beyond the Text: Artists' Books From the Collection of Robert J. Ruben': A decades-long collection of accordion, box, pop-up and tunnel books, as well as scrolls. They're made of paper, wood, plastic, and even lead and glass. Through May 31 at Bailey/Howe Library, UVM, in Burlington. Info, 656-1493. Bill McDowell: "Ashes in the Night Sky," black-and-white images reminiscent of stars, which are actually photographs of the artist's father's cremated ashes. Through June 18 at BCA Center in Burlington. Info, 865-7166. Bruce Pendelton: "Positive Images," photographs that demonstrate things that we may take for granted. Curated by SEABA.
Lienne Bick: “Colorful Reflections,” paintings. 5-7 p.m. at Capitol Grounds in Montpelier. Reception: Friday, April 22, 5-7 p.m. Lois Eby: “Momentary Dance,” paintings by the Vermont artist. 4-7 p.m. at Vermont Arts Council Spotlight Gallery in Montpelier. Reception: Friday, April 22, 4-7 p.m. Rachel Laundon: Threedimensional artwork made from wood, metal, paint and found objects. Through April 30 at The Cheshire Cat in Montpelier. Reception: Friday, April 22, 4-6 p.m. Info, 223-1981. 'The Second to Last Supper Exhibition': Work by a variety of artists interpreting a paint-bynumber version of "The Last Supper" by Leonardo da Vinci. Through April 30 at Red Square and 1/2 Lounge in Burlington. The opening features live music, food and a variety of Last Supper-oriented performances and activities. Friday, April 22, 7 p.m.-midnight, 1/2 Lounge, Burlington. Info, 310-3211. 'Earth Clay: Potters' Ode to Spring': A multigenerational pottery show. April 23 through 30 at Block Gallery in Winooski. Reception: Saturday, April 23, 2-4 p.m. Info, 373-5150. Angela Talbert & Justine Waggett: The artists’ BFA exhibit. April 25 through 30 at Julian Scott Memorial Gallery, Johnson State College. Reception: Sunday, April 24, 3-5 p.m. Info, 635-1469.
Through May 30 at Speeder & Earl's (Pine Street) in Burlington. Info, 793-8482. Carol MacDonald & Erik Rehman: "Transcendence: Mooring the Storm," artwork inspired by interviews with survivors of sexual violence created publicly in the front window of the gallery throughout the month. Through April 29 at Frog Hollow in Burlington. Info, 863-6458. 'Dreams': Paintings, drawings, sculpture and photography by more than 25 local artists. Through April 27 at Artists' Mediums in Williston. Info, 879-1236. Early Spring Show: Hand-painted floorcloths by Alyson Chase; "om-inducing" paintings by Lauren Brownell; photographs by Heidi Pfau; and photographs from Tibet by Sharie Elrich. Through April 30 at Candles & Creations in Burlington. Info, 660-8021. burlington-area art shows
visual art in seven days:
art listings and spotlights are written by megan james. Listings are restricted to art shows in truly public places; exceptions may be made at the discretion of the editor.
get your art show listed here!
» p.69
If you’re promoting an art exhibit, let us know by posting info and images by thursdays at noon on our form at sevendaysvt.com/postevent or galleries@sevendaysvt.com
ART 67
“A Rare Breed,” photographic portraits of redheads by Julia Baum. Green + Blue Gallery, Stowe. Through May 8.
SEVEN DAYS
Amy Cloud: Chicken-themed folk art by the Vermont artist. Through April 30 at August First in Burlington. Info, 442-9248.
Catherine Altice: “Threadbare,” the artist’s MFA exhibit. Through April 23 at Julian Scott Memorial Gallery, Johnson State College. Reception: Thursday, April 21, 3-5 p.m. Info, 635-1469.
Reception: Live music by Mihali Savoulidis. Friday, April 22, 5-8 p.m. Info, 775-0356.
04.20.11-04.27.11
D an B oll es
call to artists
SEVENDAYSvt.com
a rock band, the Ginger Snaps, whose sole requirement for membership was to carry the MC1R gene. By the way, wouldn’t MC One-R be a great name for a redheaded rapper? What is striking about Baum’s project, and even more pronounced in the additional portraits on her blog, is that you can see a similar evolution of ginger identity in the faces of her subjects. Cherub-like infant Erin projects wideeyed innocence — perhaps because she has no idea what she’s in for. Claudia exudes impish, preteen charm, while the precocious Johanna glowers with steely but inquisitive “tween” ’tude. Ben boasts a mischievous snarl below his schoolboy crew cut. Teenaged Joseph defiantly stares down the camera. Granted, those qualities are not unique to ginger kids. Most teens are defiant, right? But among Baum’s older subjects, the effects of growing up red come more clearly into focus and, in many cases, hold true to stereotypes — for example, about our fiery temperament. I wouldn’t cross a testy Leslie, the sassy iO, or the severe, inked-up Marisa. That goes double for the last, given redheads’ notoriously low tolerance for pain. Clearly, Marisa is a badass. Several of Baum’s female subjects radiate a steamy, raw sensuality that lends some credence to Marion Roach’s thesis regarding the visceral allure of red hair — at least where women are concerned. A few of Baum’s male subjects fortify the notion of the redheaded man as a nebbish milquetoast, perhaps battered into submission by a lifetime of teasing — or avoiding sunlight. Others, thankfully, boast a more robust, Redford-esque appeal. Still others legitimize the lighter, devilish perception of redheads. Nick could be Conan O’Brien’s mustachioed cousin, while Drew’s spherical ’fro rivals that of the Roots’ ?uestlove. Baum’s project is more than an exposition of pale skin, freckles and wild hair. For redheads, the singularity that sets us apart also binds us together, not merely in appearance but in shared life experiences. As Baum shows us, that makes redheads a very rare breed, indeed.
eyewitness taking note of visual vermont
art
Toy Story B y Me ga n Ja me s
04.20.11-04.27.11 SEVEN DAYS 68 ART
tom mcneill
SEVENDAYSvt.com
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eter Thomashow fishes through a box of Styrofoam peanuts for the various components of his “Origin of Life” sculpture. One by one, he pulls out glass beakers and test tubes, filled with “molecules” constructed of brightly colored wooden balls, and lays them on the carpet. He pauses for a second, and a smile spreads over his face. “This is good,” he says, “because we’re sitting on the floor on a Saturday morning.” Most of a recent visit to Thomashow’s central Vermont studio is spent this way: sitting cross-legged on the floor, playing with toys. Around lunchtime, he offers homebaked English-muffin pizzas, and he sends his visitor home with her very own batteryoperated, blinking-light art toy. It’s not your typical visit with a psychiatrist. Thomashow, 57, is an artist, too — and a musician (he plays guitar and sings in a band); a collector (everything from magnets to turn-of-the-century factory workers’ badges); and a teacher (he’s on the faculty at Dartmouth Medical School). His art is a convergence of all these things. “Art and science,” he says. “I see them as identical modes of inquiry.” For the last six years, Thomashow has been collecting antique toys, which he arranges in shadow boxes and cabinets and assembles to make what he calls “Toys From a Parallel Universe.” Earlier this month at the Main Street Museum in White River Junction, he unveiled his “Rotating Optical Toy Experiment,” a series of deconstructed tops, wagon wheels and pull toys rigged up on chemistry stands and powered with electricity. When he hits a button on a toy, its colorful discs begin to spin, each at a different speed. The viewer’s role is to stare at any one of them and “lose yourself,” Thomashow writes in the accompanying text. “Float, flicker, concentrate and maybe find yourself in that moment of the half-awake, halfasleep; that primary process of discovery.” Thomashow’s work is deeply personal. He calls his collective artistic endeavors the Wolfson Memorial Laboratory of Colour after his grandmother, who immigrated to the U.S. from Russia before the Bolshevik Revolution. The “Origin of Life” piece, which he exhibited last year at a Brooklyn gallery, was inspired by a well-known experiment in 1953 — the year Thomashow was born — in which an electrical charge was passed through an array of tubes filled with what scientists believed to be the components of the Earth’s early atmosphere. The purpose was to demonstrate how life began. Thomashow re-
It’s about
creating a world and stopping time. Peter Thomashow created the experiment as an undergrad at Hampshire College. As a boy, he collected magnets, then fluorescent and phosphorescent rocks. Later, he hunted down antique radios, which he fixed up and painted. Thomashow spent 10 years collecting valuable antique scientific instruments and then sold them, all at once, several years ago. “I thought I’d take that collection to the grave with me,” he says, but he had to put three kids through college somehow. When it comes to his toys, though, Thomashow isn’t concerned with the rarity or value of the objects. He’s interested in their color and how they can be arranged to evoke a feeling of discovery. “It’s about creating a world and stopping time,” he says. In his studio, he picks up a miniature bowling pin from one of his cabinets and rolls it around in the palm of his hand, admiring the bright-red patina as if for the first time. He opens the door to another cabinet to reveal a tray containing hundreds of rainbow-colored wooden pegs slightly bigger than toothpicks. They look edible. “Exactly,” says Thomashow. “The candy store.” When Thomashow was growing up in Long Island, his grandfather owned a candy store in Brooklyn. “The toy area wasn’t well lit, and there were lots of shelves that went
straight up to the ceiling,” he writes in text accompanying his work, “so you needed a rolling ladder to see what was up there; candy, toys and the endless tunnel leading up to more discoveries.” Thomashow knows when a piece is finished because it makes him feel the way he did at the candy store, peering over the ladder into treasure unknown. “This is not a cabinet of curiosites ... It’s not just a place to put stuff, and it’s not for posterity. It’s an experiment,” he says. “This is my life’s work. This is who I am.” The visit wraps up on the floor again. This time in the bathroom, the only place dark enough for Thomashow’s final showand-tell. He has lugged in two heavy boxes of fluorescent and phosphorescent rocks from a zinc mine in New Jersey he used to visit with his father. He plans someday to incorporate these rocks into a cabinet. Thomashow offers a pair of safety glasses and closes the
door before flipping on a UV light. Under it, the rocks look like a disco from outer space. Each has a different mineral pattern — some camouflage-like, some with bold stripes and shapes — that glows in red, yellow, green and blue, just like the toys in Thomashow’s cabinets. It’s a moment of discovery, even for Thomashow, who has seen them glow before. When he flashes that UV light — as when he switches on the rotating toy or slides open a cabinet drawer he’s forgotten — he seems to gaze into a sliver of childhood. “The challenge is to keep it alive,” he says. m
“Rotating Optical Toy Experiment” by Peter Thomashow, Main Street Museum, White River Junction. Through April 30. mainstreetmuseum.org
Art ShowS
BURLINGTON-AREA ART SHOWS
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'Facebook First 50': Work by the first 50 artists to respond to the gallery's live call on the social networking site. Through April 30 at Art's Alive Gallery in Burlington. Info, 864-1557. 'Furry, Finned and Feathered: eight artists, numerous creatures': Paintings and photographs inspired by the animal world by Annelein Beukenkamp, Richard Brown, Janet Fredericks, Lynn Rupe, Josie Furchgott Sourdiffe, Sarah-Lee Terrat, Polly Thompson and Adelaide Tyrol. Through April 26 at Furchgott Sourdiffe Gallery in Shelburne. Info, 985-3848. grace Weaver: "Thin-Skinned," paintings, drawings and objects examining the surfaces that separate the body from the external world, such as a straw, binoculars or a sock. Through April 30 at S.P.A.C.E. Gallery in Burlington. Info, 578-2512. harry summerField: "The Birds of Spring," photographs of birds, from the exotic vermillion flycatcher to the familiar American turkey. Through May 6 at Village Wine & Coffee in Shelburne. Info, 985-8922. Jason PaPPas: Recent work by the employee and member artist. Through April 30 at City Market in Burlington. Info, 861-9700. June camPbell: "Two Bodies of Work," one series of acrylic paintings that riffs on the tax maps used by local governments and another that is more unplanned. Curated by SEABA. Through May 30 at Pine Street Deli in Burlington. Info, 793-8482. karen daWson: Drawings and paintings, in the First Floor Gallery (through May 1); dana heFFernan: "Unicorn Wars," paintings examining the U.S. involvement in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, in the Second Floor Gallery (through April 29). At Community College of Vermont in Winooski. Info, 654-0513. kate donnelly: "The Yardage Project: Material in the Making," newspaper, cereal boxes and plastic bags woven and sewn into material. April 22 through May 22 at 215 College Gallery in Burlington. Info, 863-3662. kyle 'Fattie b.' thomPson: "Salute the Masses," acrylics on canvas by the Burlington DJ. Through April 30 at The Green Room in Burlington. Info, 651-9669.
lois Jackson: Watercolors of spring ephemerals and other wildflowers. Through April 30 at Block Gallery in Winooski. Info, 373-5150.
marni mckitrick & laurel Fulton: "Spring Impressions," flowers and landscapes in acrylic, oil and pastel. Through May 31 at Shelburne Vineyard. Info, 985-8222.
michael nye: "About Hunger and Resilience," photographic portraits, each accompanied by an audio story, of Americans coping without enough food. Through April 24 at Livak Room, Davis Center, UVM, in Burlington. Info, 865-0255. nicole kircher: Paintings by the Vermont artist. Through April 30 at Uncommon Grounds in Burlington. Info, 865-6227.
scott lenhardt: "Good House," drawings, paintings and illuminated, multilayered paint-on-glass light boxes by the artist well known for his Burton snowboard designs. Through May 28 at BCA Center in Burlington. Info, 865-7166. shelburne art center member shoW: Work by Ira Flateman, Carol Hanley, Sage TuckerKetcham, Sarah Grillo and more. Through May 1 at Shelburne Art Center. Info, 985-3648.
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skiP schiel: "Eyewitness Gaza," photographs from the artist's recent trip to Israel and Palestine. Through April 25 at St. Paul's Cathedral in Burlington. Info, 324-9864. sPring exhibition: Seasonal work by Essex Art League members. Also, work by Poker Hill School students (through May 15). Through May 30 at Phoenix Books in Essex. Info, 872-7111. steWart mchenry: "Late Winter & Early Spring," photographic collages of the natural world. Through April 30 at Barnes & Noble in South Burlington. Info, 864-8001. susan noel: Acrylic and watercolor paintings by the Essex Art League member. Through April 30 at Essex Town Offices. Info, 879-3942. 'the golden cage: mexican migrant Workers and vermont dairy Farmers': Photographs, text and audio exploring the relationship between these two groups of workers at Addison County farms, by photographer Caleb Kenna and the Addison County Farm Worker Coalition's Cheryl Connor and Cheryl Mitchell. Through June 11 at Amy E. Tarrant Gallery, Flynn Center in Burlington. Info, 652-4505. tom cullins: "Photophoto +," advertising photographs distorted by reflection or shadow. Through June 15 at Artspace 106 at The Men's Room in Burlington. Info, 864-2088. 'under the big toP: the Fine art oF the circus in america': Work by modern and contemporary American artists fascinated by the circus and its performers' bohemian lives outside the ring (through May 22); PiPPo lionni: Animations and a print, in the New Media Niche and the European and American Gallery (through May 22); 'masked sPectacle: commedia dell'arte and bread & PuPPet theater': Prints by Hungarian-American artist Giuseppe Pecsenke and masks and puppets from Vermont's radical theater troupe, in the Wilbur Room (through May 8); 'georges rouault: cirque de l'Étoile Filante': Color etchings and wood engravings of clowns, in the East Gallery (Through May 22); and 'shadoWs oF the samurai': Armor, swords, prints, masks and other artifacts representing Japanese warrior traditions, in the Wolcott Gallery (through May 11). At Fleming Museum, UVM, in Burlington. Info, 656-0750. W. david PoWell: "Everything Must Go 2.0," a retrospective of paintings, drawings, prints, collages and computer-generated work by the artist responsible for the iconic Allman Brothers logo "Eat a Peach." Curated by SEABA. Through May 31 at VCAM Studio in Burlington. Info, 793-8482.
CENTRAL VT ART SHOWS
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Patrick & markus Weise: "Road Trip," photographs from a three-month bicycle trip from the Maine coast to the Puget Sound. Through April 30 at Fletcher Free Library in Burlington. Info, 865-7211.
scott einsig: Acrylic portraits, in the Bar; barbara hauzinger: Color photographs of Panama, in the Dining Room; Jane ann kantor: Acrylic paintings, in the Greenhouse. Through April 30 at The Daily Planet in Burlington. Info, 862-9647.
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michael leW-smith: Abstract photographs exploring the weathered paint on old cars, trucks and tractors. Curated by Kasini House. Through June 30 at Opportunities Credit Union in Burlington. Info, 264-4839.
ron hernandez: Works on canvas from the Burlington artist's early years. Through April 30 at The Skinny Pancake in Burlington. Info, 540-0188.
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lydia littWin: "Seasonal Palette," oil paintings by the Vermont artist. Through April 30 at Davis Studio Gallery in Burlington. Info, 425-2700.
richard a. clark: "Stations of the Cross," charcoal drawings that play with perspective. Through April 22 at St. Paul's Cathedral in Burlington. Info, 864-0471.
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lois Foley: "Democracy Project," abstract oils on linen. Also, new works by Anne Cady, Sean Dye, Kevin Fahey, Woody Jackson, Sara Katz, Blake Larsen, Meryl Lebowitz, Kate Longmaid, Toni-Lee Sangastiano, Rai del Noce Senior and Stu Williams. Through April 30 at Burlington Furniture Company. Info, 860-4972.
Peter Fried: Oil and encaustic landscape paintings of pastoral subjects and manufactured forms, mostly in Chittenden County. Through May 2 at Muddy Waters in Burlington. Info, 355-1447.
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BURLINGTON AREA ART SHOWS
Angélique Kidjo Friday, April 29 at 8 pm
Media
Annie Tiberio CAmeron: "In the Abstract," photographs that combine keen observation with a strong emotional connection to the natural world. Photo ID required for admission. Through May 31 at Governor's Office Gallery in Montpelier. Info, 828-0749.
DAisy roCkwell: "Political Animal," acrylic and tempera paintings by the granddaughter of Norman Rockwell. Through July 1 at Main Street Museum in White River Junction. Info, 295-6370. GAbrielA bulisovA: "Chernobyl: Life on the Edge," a photographic exposé of life in the Russian region 25 years after the nuclear disaster. Through April 22 at Montpelier City Hall. Info, 476-3154. GeorGe AnDerson: "Wings of Stone," photographs of Vermont granite monuments and historical architecture. Through April 28 at Kellogg-Hubbard Library in Montpelier. Info, 223-3338. JeAnne evAns: "Art and Soul," mixed-media work by the Montpelier artist. Through April 28 at Kellogg-Hubbard Library in Montpelier. Info, 223-3338. Jennifer Perellie: Floral works made with watercolors, pastels and tissue paper. Through May 31 at Big Picture Theater & Café in Waitsfield. Info, 496-8994.
An Evening with
Garrison Keillor Tuesday, May 3 at 7:30 pm
Sponsor
Media
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70 ART
kATe emlen & frAnCes wells: "Maine Coast to Hudson River," landscape paintings. Through May 1 at BigTown Gallery in Rochester. Info, 767-9670. lAurie sverDlove GolDmAn: "Battlefields: WWI," oil paintings inspired by photographs of battlefields in France and Germany. Through April 25 at Korongo Gallery in Randolph. Info, 236-9854. PeTer hunToon & heATher Corey: Watercolors by Huntoon and stained glass by Corey. Through June 30 at Collective-the Art of Craft in Woodstock. Info, 457-1298.
robin lAhue: Oils, watercolors and collage by the Northfield artist. Through May 25 at Gifford Medical Center in Randolph. Info, 485-7770. 'someThinG's brewinG': Students and members of the pottery studio present teapots, teacups, saucers, creamers, sugar bowls, serving platters and more. Through April 29 at Montpelier Mud in Middlesex. Info, 224-7000. 'Twinviews': Photography by kids and their mentors in the Twinfield Together student-community mentoring program. Through April 30 at Blinking Light Gallery in Plainfield. Info, 454-0141. uPPer vAlley PhoToslAm 2011: More than 100 photographers contributed to this annual show. Through April 22 at PHOTOSTOP in White River Junction. Info, 698-0320.
champlain valley
'ArCADiA now: ConTemPorAry ArT in CounTry': Work by 15 artists exploring the pastoral ideal. Through May 15 at Christine Price Gallery, Castleton State College. Info, 468-1394. CArolyn leTvin: Paintings of the ancient, biblical breed of Jacob's sheep. Through April 30 at Edgewater Gallery in Middlebury. Info, 458-0098. 'CelebrATinG ArT wiTh muhs': Paintings and drawings by Middlebury Union High School students. April 21 through May 8 at Jackson Gallery, Town Hall Theater in Middlebury. Info, 382-9222. 'fourTh AnnuAl CommuniTy ArT show': Work by local artists of all ages. Through May 14 at Art on Main in Bristol. Info, 453-4032. 'Journeys & JournAls': Travel-inspired artwork including photographs of Japan by Douglas and Catherine Brooks, who spent two years in the coastal villages recently obliterated by the tsunami. Through April 30 at Creative Space Gallery in Vergennes. Info, 877-3850. kATherine GeorGe: Work by the Vermont Pastel Society member. Through April 30 at Charlotte Senior Center. Info, 425-6345. lowell snowDon kloCk: "Manipulations," Polaroid photographs that the artist has given a surreal look by tampering with the emulsion before it sets. Through April 30 at Brandon Artists' Guild. Info, 247-4956. 'TexTures of us': Prints by Liz Gribin and paintings by Gloria Gaddis, Mary B. Harrington, Rebecca Kinkead, Cynthia Kirkwood, Lisa Noonis and Cameron Schmitz. Through May 9 at Edgewater Gallery in Middlebury. Info, 458-0098. 'The liPPiTT morGAn': A photographic exhibit of early Vermont breeders and the old-fashioned Morgans so dear to them. Through July 31 at The National Museum of the Morgan Horse in Middlebury. Info, 388-1639.
northern
'biG iDeAs, smAll books': The Book Arts Guild of Vermont presents artists' books and bindings no bigger than 5-by-5 inches. Through May 22 at Emile A. Gruppe Gallery in Jericho. Info, 899-3211. 'feAThers AnD fur, birDs AnD beAsTs': Photographs of birds by Elinor Osborn, photographic portraits of farm animals by Valeria Sarephina Elliott and ceramic birdhouses by Abby Dreyer. Through April 23 at Northeast Kingdom Artisans Guild Backroom Gallery in St. Johnsbury. Info, 748-0158. GeorGe PeArlmAn & kAThryn liPke viGesAA: Pearlman's abstract paintings create illusionist space and tension, in Gallery I; Vigesaa presents "Molas in Transition: Textile Art of Kuna Women," in Gallery II. Through April 25 at River Arts Center in Morrisville. Info, 888-1261. mArC AwoDey: Paintings by the Vermont artist, in the Wings Gallery. Through August 8 at Dibden Center for the Arts, Johnson State College. Info, 635-1469. merrill Densmore: Colorful paintings of Vermont homes, landscapes, moose and deer by the GRACE artist. Through May 2 at Claire's Restaurant & Bar in Hardwick. Info, 472-7053. PhiliP inwooD & heiDi sPeCTor: Inwood's abstract oils have broad, gestural brushstrokes; Spector uses geometric forms to convey space and color. Also, JuliA bAum: "A Rare Breed," photographic portraits of redheads. Through April 30 at Green + Blue Gallery in Stowe. Info, 730-5331. susAn wAhlrAb & mAriellA bisson: "Outside: New Visions of Nature," watercolor landscapes by Wahlrab and oil paintings that incorporate collage techniques by Bisson. Through May 8 at West Branch Gallery & Sculpture Park in Stowe. Info, 253-8943.
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Jill mADDen & rebeCCA kinkeAD: Madden's landscape paintings are full of motion and light; Kinkead makes her figurative works by layering paint and wax. Through April 29 at Vermont Supreme Court Lobby in Montpelier. Info, 828-0749.
'refuGe': Sanctuary-themed work in a variety of media, in the Main Floor Gallery; susAn m. russell: A retrospective of the late artist's work, in the Second and Third Floor Galleries. April 26 through June 4 at Studio Place Arts in Barre. Info, 479-7069.
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ArThur Zorn: "Blooms Into Spring," acrylic representational abstract impressions. Through May 30 at The Skinny Pancake in Montpelier. Info, 229-4431.
Sponsor
Presented in association with the Office of the Chief Diversity Officer and Special Assistant to the President for Multicultural Initiatives through the UVM President’s Initiative for Diversity
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Art ShowS
Need Summer Credits? Online Summer Seminars Start May 2 or June 25 68 weeks, 6 credits $2,754 per seminar ‘The Second to Last Supper Exhibition’ Diane Sullivan couldn’t believe her eyes when she spotted a paint-by-number
version of Leonardo da Vinci’s “The Last Supper” at a Burlington gallery five years ago — just like the one her mother did in the 1950s. Sullivan bought the piece as a gift and started hunting for more until she tracked down an original blank one on eBay. Sullivan and co-curator Alex Dostie invited local artists to interpret the piece and hang the results at Red Square and 1/2 Lounge in Burlington. The reception on Good Friday, April 22, a benefit for the Green Candle Theatre Company and the Bubba Foundation, features a live re-creation of “The Last Supper.” Dress up as your favorite apostle, Jesus or the Easter Bunny. Through April 30. Pictured: “Jesus Fish’s Last Supper” by Steve Hogan.
southern
regional
amParo Carvajal-huFSChmid & eriCk huFSChmid: Recent work by the artist couple; aYa itagaki & ann mallorY: "Brush & Clay: Innovative Translations"; Paulette werger: "Shadow and Line." Through May 7 at AVA Gallery and Arts Center in Lebanon, N.H. Info, 603-448-3117.
• Being on Earth • Buddhism and Psychology • Diseases and World History • Light and Dark: Gothic Literature
eSmé thomPSon: "The Alchemy of Design," paintings, collage, ceramics and installation by the Dartmouth College professor of studio art. Through May 29 at Hood Museum, Dartmouth College in Hanover, N.H. Info, 603-646-2808.
• Sex, Gender and Love: A Biological View • The Psychology of Food
'FluxuS and the eSSential QueStionS oF liFe': Work by the international network of artists, composers and designers, led by George Maciunas, who blurred the boundaries between art and life and became the 1960s cultural phenomenon known as Fluxus. Through August 7 at Hood Museum, Dartmouth College in Hanover, N.H. Info, 603-646-2808. 'middle SChool/high SChool juried art exhibition': Work in a variety of media by area seventh through 12th graders. Through April 29 at North Country Cultural Center for the Arts in Plattsburgh, N.Y. Info, 518-563-1604. StraFFord artworkS Show: Recent works in a variety of media by member artists Jennifer Brown, Marcia Bushnell, Micki Colbeck, Andrea Doughtie, Nancy Gerlach, Tracy Gillespie, Janet Farley, Cecily Herzig, Kate More, Mary Louise Pierson, Anni Praetorius and Deborah Frankel Reese. Through April 27 at Howe Library in Hanover, N.H. Info, 765-4679. m
www.myunion.edu/ba Academic Centers in Brattleboro and Montpelier, VT Call or email today for more information 802-828-8500 • 888-828-8575 ext. 8513 admissions@myunion.edu
SEVEN DAYS
women’S Show: Portraits of women activists by Denise Beaudet; sculptures by Sara Pogue; ink on paper by Samantha Crawford; painted shadow pictures and portrait sculpture by Gwen Murphy; mixed-media work by Alicia Hunsicker; black-and-white paintings by Nayana Glazier; and paintings by Delia Robinson. Through May 3 at Gallery in the Woods in Brattleboro. Info, 257-4777.
• Alternative Healing Systems
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SPring Feature Show: Paintings by Richard Heller, ink drawings by Leonard Ragouzeos and fiber wall hangings by Karen Kamenetzky. Through May 1 at Gallery in the Woods in Brattleboro. Info, 257-4777.
• Alcohol and Drug Abuse Counseling
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'Sweeten Your Palette: a SaPPY art Show': Maple-themed artwork by New England artists. Through May 10 at Village Frame Shoppe & Gallery in St. Albans. Info, 524-3699.
More than 35 seminars, including:
Non-profit, private, accredited by the North Central Association/ Higher Learning Commission (www.ncahlc.org) UI&U does not discriminate in its policies or procedures and conforms with federal non-discriminatory regulations.
ART 71
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movies Win Win ★★★★
W
72 MOVIES
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SEVENDAYSVT.COM
hen you think of Paul Giamatti, what sort of character comes to mind? Probably a well-meaning schlub for whom life has not quite worked out; someone who vacillates between exasperation and self-deprecating humor; a person capable of exercising a certain degree of ethical flexibility. The actor pretty much has a monopoly on this type because he’s played it so often and so well. With his latest performance, he adds yet another to this list of endearing losers. Win Win offers the story of small-time New Jersey lawyer Mike Flaherty. The film begins with a scene in which he’s jogging in the woods. Back at home, his young daughter asks where he is. Informed that her father is out running, she replies, “From what?” The little girl’s question is right on the money. Or, rather, the shortage of it. What Mike hasn’t told his wife — a funny and formidable Amy Ryan — and two kids is that his practice is perilously close to going under. He’s down to a handful of clients and spends more time in the office bathroom plunging the toilet than he does arguing cases in court. Here’s where that ethical flexibility comes in: Mike is called on to handle the case of an elderly man, Leo (Burt Young), who’s in the early stages of dementia. Leo’s daughter
hasn’t been heard from in 20 years; because he has no guardian, the state wants to place him in an elder-care facility. Giamatti’s character knows the old guy wants to stay where he is and learns the guardian gig would pay a much-needed $1500 a month. Assuring the judge that he’ll look after Leo at home, he secures the guardianship for himself. And then deposits his disoriented ward in the facility after all. Does this make the attorney a schmuck? Of course. Does it make him a less sympathetic character? Not for a minute. On the one hand, we know Mike is looking out for his family. On the other, there’s the chance he believes Leo will be best cared for this way. Does it complicate matters when Leo’s 16-year-old grandson, Kyle, unexpectedly shows up on Mike’s doorstep, fleeing from his home in Ohio and hoping to move in with his grandad? Big time. Mike and his wife take in the boy, figuring his mother will be in touch shortly. The lawyer tells the sullen stranger the court ordered his grandfather’s institutionalization — so, as the two develop an unlikely bond, we know it’s tenuous, premised on a lie. Mike picks up a few extra dollars coaching the high school’s laughable wrestling team, along with his law partner (an amusingly dour Jeffrey Tambor). One day the kid asks
Jane Eyre ★★★★
J
ane Eyre was the Twilight of its day. Now, don’t get angry. I’ve read both books (well, skimmed, in the case of Twilight), and I know Stephenie Meyer is no Charlotte Brontë. Both, however, crafted highly marketable tales based on an enduring female fantasy: meeting a desirable man who’s more interested in you than in anything else. And not just sexually. From the time wealthy landowner Mr. Rochester meets the book’s teenage heroine — whom he’s hired as his ward’s governess — he’s fascinated by the combination of smarts and stubbornness in her slight, socially negligible frame. For her part, downtrodden orphan Jane mistakes her employer’s constant needling attention for dislike (Bella does the same with Edward’s glares), but the reader knows the truth. The rich dude is smitten. Too bad he has a secret in his attic — and it doesn’t involve craving blood. Unlike Meyer, Brontë didn’t live to see her book make bank and become a cultural icon. (Early reviewers found it highly inappropriate reading for young girls.) But in her posthumous existence, she’s made up for lost time: Director Cary Joji Fukunaga’s new ad-
to take part in after school practice. Played by real-life high school wrestling champion Alex Shaffer, in his first film appearance, Kyle blows everyone away with his skills, and Mike can’t get him into a uniform fast enough. The newcomer gives an uncanny performance. Many a writerdirector would cave to the temptation to make the movie’s third act all about the rag-tag team’s out-of-nowhere run for the state title. But Tom McCarthy is too fine a filmmaker for that. As he demonstrated in both The Station Agent and The Visitor, what interests him is the way human beings respond to unplanned intersections in their life paths. McCarthy’s third feature is filled wall to wall with well-drawn characters, and its script is as warm hearted as it is consistently witty. He takes an unhurried pleasure
PIN PIN Giamatti plays a high school coach who befriends a troubled wrestling prodigy in the latest from writerdirector Tom McCarthy.
in exploring these people’s psychological nooks and crannies, and it’s a pleasure to watch as they reorder their lives to make room for one another. If you like thoughtful comedy and storylines that lead to places and predicaments you haven’t encountered countless times before, you simply must check out Win Win. There’s no way you can lose. RICK KISONAK
REVIEWS
aptation of Jane Eyre is the ninth to hit the screen. It’s a good one, for one simple reason: chemistry. Mia Wasikowska (Alice in Wonderland), who’s not far from her teens and can pass for mousy, plays Jane. Irish actor Michael Fassbender (Inglourious Basterds, the acclaimed Hunger) is Rochester. From their first fireside conversation, it’s clear he’s not going to be an aloof presence like William Hurt was in the tepid 1996 version. When Rochester teases Jane with talk of local folklore, she responds in kind, showing her sophistication — and perplexing the housekeeper (Judi Dench), who expects the young governess to act like a servant. The screenplay, by British playwright Moira Buffini, cuts most of Brontë’s verbiage but captures the essence of this scene. It’s basically a successful speed-dating session: two like minds clicking together. Fassbender’s sparkling attentiveness and Wasikowska’s sly reciprocation do the rest, and their convincing connection carries the film. For a Victorian tale, this Jane Eyre is pretty sexy — purists may say too sexy, considering the dearth of premarital kissing and nuzzling in the book. The filmmakers
don’t go too far with these liberties, however. They do tone down the novel’s gothic elements — a somewhat disappointing choice, but an understandable one. Rather than creeping us out with the mystery of screams from the attic, this Jane Eyre focuses on the real-life conflicts that make those howls seem like manifestations of Jane’s own buried passions. With a restrained palette, Fukunaga (who made the more colorful Sin Nombre) conveys the climate of religious self-denial that surrounds the heroine almost everywhere, from her childhood at Lowood School to her later experience with the missionary St. John Rivers (Jamie Bell). When Jane gets close to Rochester, the camera becomes more mobile, and nature — blowing trees, clouds bursting over the moors — conveys the emotions she can’t express. Love offers the only escape from deathly self-constraint, but at a price.
LOVE IN A COLD CLIMATE Fassbender and Wasikowska get awfully close in Fukunaga’s new adaptation of the classic.
Young viewers unfamiliar with Victorian mores may not understand what a steep price that was, or why Brontë needed a deus ex machina ending. Then again, Twilight has some of its readers yelling at the virginal vampire, “Just do it, already!” So maybe some things — such as the power of repression to render a romance unforgettable — never change. M A R G O T HA R R I S O N
moViE clipS
oF GoDS AND mEN: The Grand Prix at last year’s Cannes film festival went to this fact-based drama from French director Xavier Beauvois about a handful of Trappist monks who lived and worshipped peacefully in Muslim Algeria, until they didn’t. With Lambert Wilson and Michael Lonsdale. (120 min, PG-13. Roxy) tYlER pERRY’S mADEA’S BiG HAppY FAmilY: The big lady with bad fashion sense dispenses more scolding, slapstick, smacks and homilies in the latest installment of the popular dramedy series. This time around, Madea (writer-director Perry in drag) must reunite her unruly family in the face of illness. With Cassi Davis, Loretta Devine and Shad “Bow Wow” Moss. (105 min, PG-13. Essex, Majestic) WAtER FoR ElEpHANtS: A veterinary student joins the Depression-era circus and falls in love with one of its stars in this adaptation of Sara Gruen’s bestselling novel from director Francis (I Am Legend) Lawrence. Reese Witherspoon, Robert Pattinson and Christoph Waltz star. (122 min, PG-13. Capitol, Essex, Majestic, Palace, Roxy)
now playing
ANotHER YEARHHHHH Mike (Happy-Go-Lucky) Leigh directed this slice-of-life tale of a happily married London couple and the distressed souls they draw into their orbit. With Jim Broadbent, Lesley Manville and Ruth Sheen. (129 min, PG-13. Savoy; ends 4/21) ARtHURHHH Russell Brand steps into Dudley Moore’s (small) shoes in this remake of the 1981 comedy hit about a lovable lush with a trust fund astray in New York. With Helen Mirren as his nanny, Greta Gerwig and Jennifer Garner as the women in his life, and Vermont’s own Luis Guzman. Jason (“Modern Family”) Winer directs. (110 min, PG-13. Bijou, Capitol, Essex, Majestic, Palace, Roxy, Stowe, Sunset, Welden)
cEDAR RApiDSHHH1/2 Ed Helms plays a timid Wisconsin insurance agent who must represent his firm at a conference in the scary, decadent metropolis of ... the title. It’s a comedy. With John C. Reilly, Anne Heche and Isiah Whitlock Jr. Miguel (Chuck & Buck) Arteta directs. (96 min, R. Roxy)
ratings
H = refund, please HH = could’ve been worse, but not a lot HHH = has its moments; so-so HHHH = smarter than the average bear HHHHH = as good as it gets
HopHH The Easter Bunny’s bratty teenage son finds his way to Hollywood and crashes with a human slacker (James Marsden) in this animation/ live-action hybrid from Tim Hill, director of Alvin and the Chipmunks. Russell Brand voices the rabbit. With Kaley Cuoco and Elizabeth Perkins. (90 min, PG. Bijou, Essex, Majestic, Marquis, Palace, Paramount, Welden)
Lunch • Dinner Sunday Brunch Parties • Special Events
iNSiDioUSHH1/2 Director James Wan and writer Leigh Whannell, the team behind the original Saw, bring us a less grody haunted-house flick. Rose Byrne and Patrick Wilson are parents whose son encounters demon energy in their new domicile. With Lin Shaye and Barbara Hershey. (102 min, PG-13. Essex, Majestic, Sunset) JANE EYREHHHH Mia Wasikowska plays the strong-willed Victorian governess who falls for her mysterious employer in yet another adaptation of Charlotte Brontë’s classic. Michael Fassbender is Rochester; Cary (Sin Nombre) Fukunaga directed. (121 min, PG-13. Essex, Roxy, Savoy) tHE KiNG’S SpEEcHHHHHH Many Oscars went to this period piece about how England’s George VI (Colin Firth) found a strong voice with the help of an oddball speech therapist (Geoffrey Rush). With Helena Bonham Carter, Guy Pearce and Derek Jacobi. Tom (The Damned United) Hooper directs. (118 min, PG-13. Roxy; ends 4/21)
18 Severance Green, Colchester
878-6100
Call to make resevervations for Easter Brunch! 6h-sophies042011.indd 1
4/13/11 3:18 PM
limitlESSHHH In this thriller, Bradley Cooper plays an unpublished writer who takes an experimental drug and becomes a bestselling, sexually irresistible superbrain. So basically, every writer’s fantasy. With Robert De Niro, Abbie Cornish and Anna Friel. Neil (The Lucky Ones) Burger directs. (105 min, PG-13. Bijou, Essex, Majestic, Marquis, Palace, Roxy)
CHANGE.
NEW SPRING MENU STARTING APRIL 20TH
tHE liNcolN lAWYERHHH A fly-by-night criminal defense attorney (Matthew McConaughey) gets a high-profile case that could turn his life into an action thriller. With Marisa Tomei, Ryan Philippe and William H. Macy. Based on the Michael Connelly novel. Brad (The Take) Furman directs. (119 min, R. Big Picture, Palace, Stowe) RANGoHHHH Johnny Depp voices a mild-mannered chameleon who has to learn to survive in his new role as sheriff of a wild frontier town in this animated adventure from Gore (all three Pirates of the Caribbean films) Verbinski. With the voices of Isla Fisher, Abigail Breslin, Bill Nighy and Stephen Root. (107 min, PG. Capitol) RED RiDiNG HooDH1/2 This week in teen paranormal romance, Amanda Seyfried plays a maiden torn between two suitors while her village is terrorized by a mysterious wolf. With Shiloh Fernandez, Billy Burke and Gary Oldman as the wolf hunter. Catherine (Twilight) Hardwicke directed. (120 min, PG-13. Sunset) RioHHH1/2 A pampered pet macaw heads to Brazil in search of his lady macaw counterpart in this comic family animation from director Carlos (Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs) Saldanha. With the voices of will.i.am, Jesse Eisenberg, George Lopez and Leslie Mann. (96 min, G. Bijou, Capitol, Essex [3-D], Majestic [3-D], Marquis [3-D], Palace, Sunset, Welden) tHE RoommAtEH1/2 A college freshman finds her roommate is getting a bit too obsessed with her in this thriller. Sounds like Single White Female, undergrad edition. With Leighton Meester, Minka Kelly and Cam Gigandet. Christian E. Christiansen directs. (93 min, PG-13. Sunset; ends 4/21) ScREAm 4HH1/2 Director Wes Craven, writer Kevin Williamson, and Scream stars Neve Campbell, David Arquette and Courteney Cox return for another (belated) chapter in the tongue-in-cheek saga of a serial killer who preys on teens with an encyclopedic knowledge of the clichés of slasher films. With Emma Roberts and Mary McDonnell. (103 min, R. Bijou, Essex, Majestic, Marquis, Palace, Paramount, Sunset, Welden)
NOW PLAYING
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sophiesamericanbistro.com
15 Center St., Burlington (just off Church Street)
dailyplanet15.com • 862-9647 reservations online or by phone
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Big Night is Back! SUNDAY, MAY 1, PALACE 9 CINEMAS Cocktail hour 4:30 p.m., showtime 5:30 p.m.
Stanley Tucci’s cult foodie flick Big Night (1996) returns to the big screen for a special Vermont Restaurant Week presentation. This comedy is a bittersweet story of two brothers in search of the American dream. Primo (Tony Shaloub) and Secondo Pilaggi (Stanley Tucci) are Italian immigrants who settle on the New Jersey shore and open a restaurant, the Paradise, hoping to strike it rich. Arrive early to enjoy samples from Vermont Butter & Cheese Creamery and a free taste of “timpano” — the infamous pasta pie from the movie — prepared by Shawn Lipenski of Velvet Catering and Events. The cash bar features Root: 1 wines and Long Trail Ale. And, yes, you can bring your drinks into the theater! All guests will be entered into a drawing for a huge, timpanoinspired prize package from Kiss the Cook worth more than $300! APRIL 29-MAY 5 6h-rw11-bignight.indd 1
events + menus: vermontrestaurantweek.com 4/19/11 2:31 PM
MOVIES 73
RATINGS ASSIGNED TO MOVIES NOT REVIEWED BY RicK KiSoNAK OR mARGot HARRiSoN ARE COuRTESY OF METACRITIC.COM, WHICH AVERAGES SCORES GIVEN BY THE COuNTRY’S MOST WIDELY READ MOVIE REVIEWERS.
Experience comfortable yet sophisticated dining.
SEVEN DAYS
DiARY oF A WimpY KiD: RoDRicK RUlESHHH Parents try to force the titular put-upon middle schooler (Zachary Gordon) to bond with his bullying older brother in this comedy sequel based on the bestselling Jeff Kinney novel. David (Astro Boy) Bowers directs. With Devon Bostick and Rachael Harris. (96 min, PG. Big Picture, Bijou, Capitol, Essex, Majestic, Marquis, Sunset)
!
04.20.11-04.27.11
tHE coNSpiRAtoRHHH Robert Redford directed this historical drama about the trial of the one woman (Robin Wright Penn) charged with involvement in Abraham Lincoln’s assassination. James McAvoy is her lawyer. With Kevin Kline, Evan Rachel Wood and Norman Reedus. (122 min, PG-13. Palace)
Fridays
SEVENDAYSVt.com
BAttlE: loS ANGElESH1/2 Judging by the jittery trailer, this sci-fi action film aspires to be The Hurt Locker of extraterrestrial-invasion movies. With Aaron Eckhart as the Marine taking on aliens and Michelle Rodriguez, Ramon Rodriguez and Bridget Moynahan. Jonathan (The Killing Room) Liebesman directed. (116 min, PG-13. Sunset)
HANNAHHH1/2 Director Joe Wright, who introduced Americans to creepily mature young actress Saoirse Ronan in Atonement, showcases her in this action thriller about a teen whose father (Eric Bana) raised her in isolation to be the perfect assassin. With Cate Blanchett and Jason Flemyng. (111 min, PG-13. Bijou, Capitol, Essex, Majestic, Palace, Roxy)
e”
AFRicAN cAtS: Big kitties of the savanna take center stage in a Disney nature documentary narrated by Samuel L. Jackson, which claims to portray a real-life version of The Lion King. Alastair (Earth) Fothergill and Keith Scholey directed. (89 min, G. Majestic)
usic on
n
new in theaters
Live M
VIETNAM R E S TA U R A N T
Specializing in Vietnamese & Thai Cuisine
showtimes
(*) = new this week in vermont times subjeCt to Change without notiCe. for up-to-date times visit sevendaysvt.com/movies.
Lunch & Dinner Dine-in or carry-out
BIG PIctURE tHEAtER
48 Carroll Rd. (off Rte. 100), Waitsfield, 496-8994, www. bigpicturetheater.info
Full menu available online at www.7dvt.com Downtown Burlington Lower Church St • 859-9998 Essex Junction 137 Pearl Street • 872-9998
wednesday 20 — thursday 21 Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules 5. Source code 6. Sucker Punch 7. The Lincoln Lawyer 8. Full schedule not available at press time. Times change frequently; please check website.
friday 22 — thursday 28 *Water for Elephants 1:30 (Fri-Sun only), 6:30, 9. Rio 1:30 (Fri-Sun only), 6:30, 9. Hanna 9. Your Highness 9. Arthur 1:30 (Fri-Sun only), 6:30, 9. Rango 1:30 (FriSun only), 6:30. Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules 1:30 (Fri-Sun only), 6:30.
ESSEX cINEmA
Essex Shoppes & Cinema, Rte. 15 & 289, Essex, 879-6543, www.essexcinemas.com
wednesday 20 — thursday 21 Jane Eyre 10 a.m., 1, 3:45, BIJoU cINEPLEX 6:40, 9:30. Rio (3-D) 10 a.m., 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7, 1-2-3-4 9:20. Scream 4 12:10, 2:35, Rte. 100, Morrisville, 88812v-vietnamrestaurant111010-1.indd 1 11/4/10 11:02 AM 3293, www.bijou4.com 5, 7:25, 10. Arthur 1:15, 4, EMAILED ADVERTISEMENT 7:10, 9:40. Your Highness wednesday 20 — thursday 21 12:35, 2:50, 5:05, 7:25, ADVERTISING INSERTION ORDER Rio 1:10, 3:30, 6:40, 8:30. 9:55. Hanna 12:20, 2:45, Scream 4 1:30, 4, 7, 8:45. Thomas Hirchak Company5:10, 7:35, 10. Soul Surfer Hanna 3:50, 8:30.Crawford Arthur 1:10, 3:45, 6:45, 9:25. Hop FROM: Amy 6:50, 8:45. Hop 1, 6:30. 10 a.m., 12:10, 2:40, 5, 7:15, Phone: 800-634-7653 • Fax: 802-888-2211 Diary of a Wimpy Kid: 9:30. Insidious 2:50, 9:50. Wed. April 27 @ 10AM · Inspect from 8AM Rodrick Rules 1:20, 3:40. Source code 12:40, 3, 5:15, 2107 Cadys Falls Rd., Morrisville, VT TO: Allison Davis 7:30, 9:50. Diary of a Wimpy friday 22 — thursday 28 Kid: Rodrick Rules 10 a.m. COMPANY: Seven Daysclassified/display Limitless 1:30 & 3:50 (FriLimitless 12:30, 5:10, 7:30. More Info: PHONE: 802-865-1020 x22 Sun only), 6:50, 9 (Fri & Sat only). Rio 1:10 & 3:30 (Fri-Sun friday 22 — thursday 28 US MARSHALS SEIZED VEHICLES only), 6:40, 8:30 (Fri & Sat *tyler Perry’s madea’s Big TODAY’S DATE: 4/19/2011 only). Scream 4 7, 9 (Fri & Sat Happy Family 12:15, 2:35, NAME OF FILE: 04302011VEH7D only). Arthur 4 (Fri-Sun only), 4:55, 7:20, 9:40. *Water for DATE(S) TO RUN: 8:30 (Fri & Sat only). Hop4/20/2011 1 Elephants 10 a.m. (Fri & (Fri-Sun only), 6:30. Diary of Sat only), 12:50, 3:50, 6:50, SIZE OF AD: 2.3” x 3.67” (1/12 page vertical) a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules 9:25. Jane Eyre 10 a.m. (Fri EMAILED TO: allison@sevendaysvt.com 1:20 & 3:40 (Fri-Sun only). & Sat only), 1, 3:45, 6:40, Sat., April 30 @ 10AM · View from 8AM 9:30. Rio (3-D) 10 a.m. (Fri & Cost: $145 Sat only), 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7, 131 Dorset Lane, Williston, VT cAPItoL 9:20. Scream 4 12:10, 2:35, 5, Partial List: 06 Skidoo Snowmobile; 06 SHoWPLAcE 7:25, 10. Arthur 1:15, 4, 7:10, Yamaha Motorcycle; 04 Bicknell Race Car; 93 State St., Montpelier, 2299:40. Hanna 12:20, 2:45, 5:10, Northtrail 2 Place Snowmobile Trailer & more! 0343, www.fgbtheaters.com 7:35, 10. Soul Surfer 1:10, Updates: 3:45, 6:45, 9:25. Hop 10 a.m. wednesday 20 — thursday 21 (Fri & Sat only), 12:10, 2:40, THOMAS HIRCHAK CO · 800-634-7653 Rio 1:30, 6:30, 9. Hanna 9. 5, 7:15, 9:30. Source code Your Highness 1:30, 6:30, 12:40, 3, 5:15, 7:30, 9:50. 9. Arthur 1:30, 6:30, 9. 12v-Hirchak042011.indd 1 4/19/11 1:53 PMSource code 9. Rango 1:30, 6:30. Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules 1:30, 6:30.
CONTRACTORS’ EQUIPMENT
LIVE ONLINE BIDDING!
74 MOVIES
SEVEN DAYS
04.20.11-04.27.11
SEVENDAYSVt.com
THCAuction.com
THCAuction.com
FRIDAY, MAY 20TH
movies mAJEStIc 10
190 Boxwood St. (Maple Tree Place, Taft Corners), Williston, 878-2010, www.majestic10.com
wednesday 20 — thursday 21 Rio (3-D) 12, 1:20, 2:15, 3:40, 4:40, 6:10, 7:05, 8:40, 9:30. Scream 4 1:10, 4:20, 7:10, 9:45. Arthur 12:40, 3:50, 6:45, 9:25. Hanna 1, 4, 6:50, 9:35. Your Highness 1:15, 4:10, 7:15, 9:40. Soul Surfer 12:30, 3:30, 6:20, 9. Hop 12:10, 2:20, 4:30, 6:40, 8:50. Insidious 3:45, 9:10. Source code 4:45, 7, 9:20. Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules 12:20, 2:30. Limitless 12:50, 6:30. friday 22 — sunday 24 *African cats 12:10, 2:15, 4:20, 6:30, 8:40. *tyler Perry’s madea’s Big Happy Family 1:05, 4:15, 7:05, 9:40. *Water for Elephants 12:50, 3:40, 6:45, 9:30. Rio (3-D) 12, 1:20, 2:20, 3:50, 6:40, 9. Scream 4 1:15, 4:30, 7:15, 9:45. Arthur 12:40, 4, 6:50, 9:25. Hanna 1:10, 4:10, 7, 9:35. Your Highness 8:20. Soul Surfer 12:30, 3:30, 6:20, 8:50. Hop 1, 3:20, 6:10. Source code 4:35, 7:10, 9:20. monday 25 — thursday 28 *African cats 1:40, 4:20, 6:30, 8:40. *madea’s Big Happy Family 1:05, 4:15, 7:05, 9:40. *Water for Elephants 12:50, 3:40, 6:45, 9:30. Rio (3-D) 1:20, 3:50, 6:40, 9. Scream 4 1:15, 4:30, 7:15, 9:45. Arthur 1:25, 4, 6:50, 9:25. Hanna 1:10, 4:10, 7, 9:35. Your Highness 8:20. Soul Surfer 12:55, 3:30, 6:20, 8:50. Hop 1, 3:20, 6:10. Source code 1:30, 4:35, 7:10, 9:20.
mARQUIS tHEAtER Main St., Middlebury, 388-4841.
wednesday 20 — thursday 21 Rio (3-D) 2:30, 6:30, 9. Scream 4 3, 6:30, 9. Hop 2:30, 7. Limitless 9. Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules 5.
YOUR RIDE IS ON US! On May 20th, ditch your car. All rides on CCTA local routes will be free of charge!*
Scream 4
CCTA Free Ride Day as part of Way to Go! week, encourages Vermonters to park their car for a week, reducing transportation emissions and congestion. Way to Go! week is May 16 - 20. We’ll see you on the bus! * Excludes LINK Express and Milton Commuter routes, but we
haven’t forgotten you! CCTA staff members will be riding commuter routes all morning to pass out free passes and other goodies!
LooK UP SHoWtImES oN YoUR PHoNE!
CHITTENDEN COUNTY TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY
ConneCt to m.SEVENDAYSVt.com on any web-enabled Cellphone for free, up-to-the-minute movie showtimes, plus other nearby restaurants, Club dates, events and more.
864.CCTA | cctride.org
12v-CCTA041311.indd 1
4/11/11 2:54 PM
friday 22 — thursday 28 Rio (3-D) 2:30 (Fri-Sun only), 6:30, 9 (Fri & Sat only). Scream 4 3 (Fri-Sun only), 6:30, 9 (Fri & Sat only). Hop 2:30 (Fri-Sun only), 7 (Fri & Sat only). Limitless Fri & Sat: 9. Sun-Thu: 6:30. Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules Fri & Sat: 5.
PARAmoUNt tWIN cINEmA 241 North Main St., Barre, 4799621, www.fgbtheaters.com
wednesday 20 — thursday 28 Scream 4 1:30 (Wed-Sun only), 6:30, 8:45. Hop 1:30 (Wed-Sun only), 6:30, 8:30.
mERRILL’S RoXY cINEmA
tHE SAVoY tHEAtER
222 College St., Burlington, 8643456, www.merrilltheatres.net
26 Main St., Montpelier, 2290509, www.savoytheater.com
wednesday 20 — thursday 21 Jane Eyre 1, 3:30, 6:50, 9:10. Hanna 1:05, 4, 6:40, 9:30. Arthur 1:15, 3:45, 7, 9:20. Your Highness 1:25, 4:10, 7:10, 9:15. The King’s Speech [PG-13 version] 1:20, 6:30. cedar Rapids 1:10, 4:20, 7:20, 9:25. Limitless 4:05, 8:45.
wednesday 20 — thursday 21 Another Year 1 & 3:30 (Wed only), 6, 8:30.
friday 22 — thursday 28 *of Gods and men 1:10, 3:50, 6:30, 9:05. *Water for Elephants 1:05, 3:40, 6:40, 9:15. Wretches and Jabberers 1:15, 3:15, 5:15, 7:10, 9:20. Jane Eyre 1, 3:30, 6:50, 9:10. Hanna 1:20, 4, 7, 9:30. Your Highness 1:25, 8:10. cedar Rapids 4:10, 6:20.
***See website for details.
PALAcE cINEmA 9
10 Fayette Dr., South Burlington, 864-5610, www.palace9.com
wednesday 20 — thursday 21 ***The Grateful Dead movie Wed: 7:30. The conspirator 10:30 a.m. (Thu only), 12:45, 3:30, 6:35, 9:15. Rio 12:10, 2:25, 4:40, 6:55, 9:05. Scream 4 12:25, 2:40, 5, 7:20, 9:45. Win Win 12:20, 2:35, 4:55, 7:15, 9:35. Arthur 1, 3:55, 6:45, 9:20. Hanna 10:30 a.m. (Thu only), 1:05, 3:45, 6:50, 9:25. Your Highness 1:20, 4, 7, 9:30. Hop 12, 2:15, 4:30, 6:40, 8:45 (Thu only). Source code 9:10. Limitless 1:15. The Lincoln Lawyer 3:40, 6:30 (Thu only). friday 22 — thursday 28 ***The met: Live in HD: capriccio Sat: 1. ***The met: Live in HD: Le comte ory Wed: 6:30. ***memphis Thu: 7:30. *Water for Elephants 10:30 a.m. (Thu only), 1:05, 3:45, 6:30, 9:10. The conspirator 1, 3:40, 6:35, 9:15. Rio 10:30 a.m. (Thu only), 12:10 (Fri-Sun only), 2:25, 4:40, 6:55, 9. Scream 4 12:25 (Fri & Sun only), 2:40 (except Sat), 5, 7:20, 9:40. Win Win 12:20 (Fri-Sun only), 2:35, 4:55, 7:15, 9:35. Arthur 1:20, 6:20 (except Wed). Hanna 1:15, 3:50, 6:50, 9:25. Your Highness 9:20. Hop 12 (Fri-Sun only), 2:20, 4:30, 6:40 (except Thu). Source code 9:05 (except Thu). Limitless 3:55, 8:50 (except Wed). The Lincoln Lawyer 1:10, 4, 6:45. ***See website for details.
friday 22 — thursday 28 ***Joy and the Apocalypse Tue: 6:30. Jane Eyre 1 & 3:30 (Sat-Mon & Wed only), 6 (except Tue), 8:30.
StoWE cINEmA 3 PLEX
Mountain Rd., Stowe, 253-4678.
wednesday 20 — thursday 21 Your Highness 7. Arthur 7. Source code 7. friday 22 — thursday 28 The Lincoln Lawyer 2:30 & 4:40 (Sat & Sun only), 7, 9:10 (Fri & Sat only). Your Highness 4:30 (Sat & Sun only), 7 (Sun-Thu only), 9:10 (Fri & Sat only). Arthur 2:30 (Sat & Sun only), 7 (Fri & Sat only). Source code 2:30 & 4:30 (Sat & Sun only), 7, 9:10 (Fri & Sat only).
SUNSEt DRIVE-IN
155 Porters Point Road, just off Rte. 127, Colchester, 862-1800. www.sunsetdrivein.com
wednesday 20 — thursday 21 Rio 8 followed by Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules. Scream 4 8 followed by The Roommate. Source code 8 followed by Insidious. Battle: Los Angeles 8 followed by Sucker Punch. friday 22 — sunday 24 Rio 8 followed by Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules. Scream 4 7:55 followed by Battle: Los Angeles. Source code 8 followed by Insidious. Arthur 7:50 followed by Red Riding Hood.
WELDEN tHEAtER
104 No. Main St., St. Albans, 5277888, www.weldentheatre.com
wednesday 20 — thursday 21 Rio 2, 4, 7, 9. Scream 4 2, 7, 9. Arthur 4, 9. Hop 2, 4, 7. friday 22 — thursday 28 Rio 2 & 4 (Sat & Sun only), 7, 9. Scream 4 4 (Sat & Sun only), 7, 9. Arthur 2 (Sat & Sun only), 9. Hop 2 & 4 (Sat & Sun only), 7.
OPEN AUDITIONS .
moViE clipS
NOW PLAYING
« P.73
YoUR HiGHNESSH1/2 Also known as “recent Oscar nominees chilling in a stoner comedy.” Danny McBride and James Franco play princely brothers trying to save their kingdom from an evil wizard in this fantasy satire. Natalie Portman and Zooey Deschanel are comely damsels. David Gordon (Pineapple Express) Green directs. (102 min, R. Capitol, Essex, Majestic, Palace, Roxy, Stowe)
SoUl SURFERHH1/2 A teenager tries to summon the courage to return to the ocean after being maimed by a shark in this drama from director Sean (Bratz) McNamara, based on the true story of Bethany Hamilton. With AnnaSophia Robb, Dennis Quaid, Helen Hunt and, yes, Carrie Underwood. (105 min, PG. Essex, Majestic)
WE NEED
KICK‐OFF MEETING: APRIL 20TH AT 7PM at South Burlington High School
new on video
SoURcE coDEHH1/2 In this hybrid of sci fi and Groundhog Day, Jake Gyllenhaal plays a soldier tasked with learning who bombed a commuter train by experiencing the disaster firsthand, repeatedly. With Michelle Monaghan, Vera Farmiga and Jeffrey Wright. Duncan (Moon) Jones directed. (93 min, PG-13. Big Picture, Capitol, Essex, Majestic, Palace, Stowe, Sunset)
GUlliVER’S tRAVElSH1/2 Jonathan Swift gets only the third writing credit on this family comedy updating his classic, with Jack Black as the traveler who finds himself grappling with major culture shock. With Emily Blunt, Jason Segel and Amanda Peet. (85 min, PG)
AUDITIONS THE WEEK OF APRIL 25TH – 28TH at The Schoolhouse in South Burlington
MORE INFORMATION: WWW.LYRICTHEATREVT.ORG
PERFORMERS OF EVERY RACE, SHAPE
& SIZE.
tHE KiNG’S SpEEcHHHHHH See listing in “Now Playing.”
SUcKER pUNcHHHH1/2 In this hyperbolically colorful and violent original from writer-director Zack (300) Snyder, a girl confined to a mental institution imagines herself into an elaborate adventure fantasy. Local note: The fictional asylum resides in Brattleboro. With Emily Browning, Carla Gugino, Jena Malone, Abbie Cornish, Vanessa Hudgens and Jon Hamm. (120 min, PG-13. Big Picture, Sunset)
RABBit HolEHHHH Nicole Kidman was nominated for an Oscar for her role as a grieving mother in this drama from director John Cameron (Shortbus) Mitchell, based on the play by David Lindsay-Abaire. With Aaron Eckhart, Miles Teller and Sandra Oh. (92 min, PG-13) SomEWHEREHH1/2 You may never envy the life of a celebrity again after seeing the latest from director Sofia Coppola, in which a movie star (Stephen Dorff) drives his Ferrari and his life in circles. With Elle Fanning as his daughter, and brief appearances by Benicio del Toro and Michelle Monaghan. (97 min, R)
WiN WiNHHHH Paul Giamatti plays a small-time lawyer and wrestling coach who unexpectedly becomes the guardian of a troubled teen in this drama from Tom (The Visitor, The Station Agent) McCarthy. With Amy Ryan, Burt Young and Alex Shaffer. (106 min, R. Palace)
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tHE WAY BAcKHHH1/2 In 1941, a ragtag group escapes from a Siberian gulag and heads for freedom — even if it means walking across a continent — in this epic survival drama directed by Peter (The Truman Show) Weir. With Jim Sturgess, Ed Harris, Colin Farrell and Saoirse Ronan. (133 min, PG-13)
WREtcHES AND JABBERERSHHH1/2 Two Vermonters, Tracy Thresher and Larry Bissonnette, star in this documentary about autism from director Geraldine Wurzburg, in which they bring a message of disability advocacy to Sri Lanka, Japan and Finland. (90 min, NR. Roxy)
merrilltheatres.net
© 2010 RICK KISONAK
Moviequiz the roxy cinemas
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SEVEN DAYS
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Key art is another term for a movie poster or one-sheet. What we’ve got for you this week are six examples minus their most important part. These pictures may not all be worth a thousand words, but coming up with their missing titles may just be worth dinner and a movie for two...
REAL fRee will astRology by rob brezsny month apRil 21-27 XX-XX
evolves into the earthy foundation-building stage? Here’s a secret to succeeding at this test: you can’t just try to force yourself to “be good” and do the right thing. nor does it work to use shame or guilt to motivate yourself. somehow you’ve got to marshal pure, raw excitement for the gritty detail work to come. you’ve got to fall in love with the task of actually fleshing out your dreams.
Taurus (april 20-May 20):
aRies (March 21-april 19): now comes one of the supreme tests that most every aries must periodically face: Will you live up to your promises? Will you follow through on your rousing start? Will you continue to stay passionately committed once the fiery infatuation stage
canceR
(June 21-July 22): “sometimes nature seems more beautiful than strictly necessary,” said physicist steven Weinberg as he admired a hackberry tree stoked with blue jays, yellow-throated vireos, and a red cardinal. you may find yourself thinking similar thoughts in the coming week, Cancerian. From what i can tell, life is primed to flood you with simple glories and exotic revelations, with signs of eternal splendor and hints of sublime meaning, with natural wonders and civilization’s more interesting gifts.
leo (July 23-aug. 22): i became an ordained
minister in the Universal life Church when i was 19 years old. since then i have officiated at numerous baptisms, initiations, weddings (including marrying people to themselves), divorces, renamings, housewarmings, ghost banishings and the taking of primal vows. in all my years of facilitating these ceremonies, i’ve rarely seen a better time than right now for you leos to seek a cathartic rite of passage. you may even be tempted to try several. i recommend you do no more than two, however. are you ready to break a taboo or smash an addiction? renounce a delusion or pledge your devotion or leap to the next level?
(aug. 23-sept. 22): it would be an excellent time for you to acquire the zombie apocalypse Preparedness Kit, a package of goodies prepared by domestic expert Martha stewart. i say this not because a zombie apocalypse is looming, or any other kind of apocalypse for that matter. rather, the kit’s presence in your life might encourage you to make fun of your fears. and that would be a perfect way to cooperate with the current cosmic tendencies, which are conspiring to diminish the inhibitions that your anxieties hold in place. remember one of the key rules in the game of life: Humor dissipates worry.
liBRa (sept. 23-oct. 22): eighty years ago, an explorer who visited the Maori of new zealand found they had such good eyesight that many were able to detect Jupiter’s four largest moons with their naked eyes. That’s the kind of vision you could have in the coming days, libra — metaphorically speaking, at least. The astrological omens say you have the potential to see further and deeper into any part of reality you choose to focus on. inner truths that have been hidden from you are ready to be plucked by your penetrating probes. For best results, cleanse your thoughts of expectations. Perceive what’s actually there, not what you want or don’t want to be there. scoRpio
(oct. 23-nov. 21): you really should ventilate your house periodically, even when the weather’s cool. The air indoors gets stale; you need to flush it out and welcome in some fresh stuff. in my astrological opinion, it’s especially important for you to do this right now. so please consider opening all the windows for a while and inviting the breezes to blow through. in addition to its practical value for your respiratory system, it could serve as a ritual that gently blows the dusty crud out of your mind, thereby improving the circulation in your thoughts and emotions and fantasies.
sagittaRiUs (nov. 22-Dec. 21): What do you like most about work? What are the pleasurable experiences that happen for you when you’re engaged in demanding tasks that require you to be focused, competent and principled? i think it’s important for you to identify those hard-earned joys and then brainstorm about what you can do to expand
and intensify them. you’re in a phase of your long-term cycle when you can make a lot of headway toward transforming your job situation so it serves you better.
capRicoRn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): The next phase of your life will be an excellent time to unbreak your heart. Here’s what i mean by that: you will have extra power to dissolve any pain that still lingers from the romantic disappointments of the past. you’ll be able to summon acute insights into how to dismantle the sodden and unnecessary defenses you built to protect yourself from loss and humiliation. you will find it easier than ever before to forgive and forget any close companion who hurt you. so get out there, Capricorn, and launch the joyful process of restoring your love muscles to their original potency. aQUaRiUs (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): “search For
self Called off after 38 years,” read the headline in the Onion. “i always thought that if i kept searching and exploring, i’d discover who i truly was,” the report began, quoting 38-yearold andrew speth. “Well, i looked deep into the innermost recesses of my soul, and you know what i found? an empty, windowless room the size of an aircraft hangar. From now on, if anybody needs me, i’ll be sprawled out on my couch drinking black-cherry soda and watching ‘law & order’ like everybody else.” i wonder if speth is an aquarius? Many of my aquarian acquaintances seem to have hit a dead end recently in their quest to fulfill the ancient maxim “Know thyself.” if you’re like that, please hang on. The floodgates of self-discovery will open soon.
pisces
(Feb. 19-March 20): odds are high that you know very little about africa. Can you name even 20 of its more than 50 countries? are you aware that its land mass is bigger than europe, China and the U.s. combined? Did you realize that about 2000 languages are spoken by the people living there? i bring this up, Pisces, because from an astrological perspective it’s an excellent time for you to fill the gaps in your education about africa — or any other subject about which you are deeply uninformed. Don’t get overwhelmed by this assignment, though. Choose maybe three areas of ignorance that you will concentrate on in the coming weeks. m
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76 Free Will astrology
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04.20.11-04.27.11
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In his book on intuition, psychologist David G. Myers defines it as “the capacity for direct knowledge and immediate insight, without any observation or reason.” Another expert on the subject, Malcolm Gladwell, describes intuition as the “power of thinking without thinking.” Both authors encourage us to cultivate this undersung way of grasping our raw experience. But Myers also warns us of the perils of intuition if it’s untempered by logic and analysis. It can lead us down rabbit holes where we lose track of the difference between our fantasies and the real world. It can cause us to mistake our fears for accurate ESP or get lost in a maze of self-fulfilling prophecies. I bring all of this to your attention, Taurus, because the coming weeks will be an excellent time for you to hone and purify your intuition.
gemini (May 21-June 20): one of the most impressive elements of the egyptian uprising in January and February came after it was all over. eighteen days of street protests created a huge mess in Cairo’s tahrir square and the surrounding area. When Hosni Mubarak finally resigned and reforms began percolating, thousands of demonstrators returned with brooms and rubber gloves and garbage bags to set the place back in order. i urge you to follow a similar sequence in the coming weeks, gemini. agitate for change; rebel against the stale status quo; fight corruption and ignorance; and once your work has led to at least a partial success, clean up after yourself.
ViRgo
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NEWS QUIRKS by roland sweet Curses, Foiled Again
A taxi driver in Springfield, Ill., picked up a fare who hadn’t even closed the door before he pulled a handgun and demanded money. The driver told police he noticed the car was still in gear, so he stepped on the gas and jerked the steering wheel back and forth, causing the gunman to fly out of the open passenger door and flee empty handed. (Springfield’s State Journal-Register) Two people in York, Pa., tried to sell stolen tools to Andrew Hamilton, who recognized the toolbox as his own. After verifying that his tools had been stolen, he notified police, who arrested Cody Lee Littrell, 34, and Rebecca Erinn Dice, 32. (The York Dispatch)
Other Than That, Mrs. Lincoln, How Was the Play? After its Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded in the Gulf of Mexico last year, killing 11 workers and causing the largest offshore spill in U.S. history, Transocean awarded bonuses to its executives for making 2010 the “best year in safety performance in our company’s history.” The payout contrasts with 2009, when the company withheld all executive bonuses after incurring four fatalities that year “to underscore the company’s commitment to safety.” In its filing on executive pay, Transocean declared, “Notwithstanding the tragic loss of life in the Gulf of Mexico, we achieved an exemplary statistical safety record.” (The Wall Street Journal)
Second-Amendment Follies
Burglars broke into a police station in Uddington, near Glasgow, Scotland, during the night when the office was closed and stole uniforms and radios. “At no time has the safety of the public or any officer been jeopardized as a result of this break-in,” insisted a Strathclyde Police official. (Reuters)
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Drinking-Class Heroes
Objecting to drunken-driving reform proposals, Montana lawmaker Alan Hale declared that tough DUI laws “are destroying a way of life that has been in Montana for years and years.” Referring to the long drives in rural areas to get to bars, which he called “the center of the communities,” Hale, who owns a bar in Basin, insisted, “These DUI laws are not doing our small businesses in our state any good at all. They are destroying them.” Another opponent of DUI reform, Sen. Jonathan Windy Boy, took issue with a proposal to revoke the licenses of teens caught drinking, even if they aren’t driving. He declared that DUI reform puts the legislature on “the path of criminalizing everyone in Montana.” (The Billings Gazette)
More Trouble for Richard Kimble
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news quirks 77
A new Maine law lets people with one arm carry switchblade knives, becoming the first state to make an exception to laws that ban the use of the spring-action knives. Backers of the measure declared the measure saves one-armed people having to force open folding knives with their teeth in emergencies. (Reuters)
Pictured (from left to right): Susan Carpentier (Express Appliance), Morgan Hood (Efficiency Vermont) and John Rock and Lynn LeBeau of Express Appliance.
SEVEN DAYS
Scientists said that a species of sea cucumber living off the British coast might have a future as haute cuisine. Holothuria forskali, which are animals, not plants, breathe through their anus, can liquefy their body and feed on waste from the sea bottom. A research team from Newcastle University is investigating the possibility of cultivating vast “herds” of sea cucumbers to consume waste from fish farms while allowing the harvest of commercial quantities of the earthworm-like species, which, at 10 inches, sea cucumber specialist Matt Slater noted “would fit on a plate.”
After budget cuts forced Chillicothe, Ohio, to close two of its three fire stations, the state cited the third station as a potential fire hazard and ordered the department to assign a firefighter to patrol the firehouse to make sure it isn’t on fire. The firefighter on patrol can perform no other duties, according to the state fire marshal’s office. Until a costly fire-detection and alarm system is installed and the existing sprinkler system passes inspection, the state said that whenever 10 or more firefighters are on duty, one must be assigned to stand “fire watch.” When only nine — the minimum required staffing — are on duty, the city will pay an additional firefighter overtime to repeatedly walk from the basement to the second floor and back. (The Columbus Dispatch)
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RadioShack and Dish Network partnered to offer free guns to first-time subscribers of satellite TV services in western Montana and southwest Idaho. “I might not even consider such a program if I were in Detroit city, but we have a different demographic out here,” said Steve Strand, owner of a RadioShack store in Montana’s Bitterroot Valley, who came up with the guns-for-subscriptions offer. “All I can tell you is, grandma is packing a gun in Montana.” (Reuters)
Although some cultures, notably the Chinese, consider sea cucumbers a delicacy and an aphrodisiac, one Western diner rated their flavor “slightly lower than phlegm, the texture of which it closely resembles.” (Britain’s Independent and the New Zealand Herald)
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Men seeking Women
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Women seeking Men country-rock girl I am a simple country girl looking for someone to chill with who gets “me.” justagurl83, 27,l, #120806
playful adventurous depth Hey, I seek someone to go see music with, discuss ideas and plans, talk about the experience and share new ones. Festival season is coming, and this means Montreal (and Vermont). Cycling and blading would be cool, also. We can see what happens. Aquitainetempo, 37, #120799 Dancing, Smiling, Snuggling I love traveling, and living in Vermont. I enjoy eating out, wine, good conversation, cooking with good friends, working as a nurse, raising my glorious daughter, sunshine, walks by the lake, hikes, gardening, cooking, camping, swimming, yoga and dancing, and I’ve started a love affair with Zumba. I’d love to meet someone to enjoy all life has to offer with me. HomebirthLovingMama, 34, u,l, #120797
i’m a country girl I’m looking for a guy who is going to treat me and my son well. And a guy who does not drink all the time. I don’t like guys who cheat on their girlfriends. I am looking for a long-term relationship. I want a guy who likes me for who I am. College to become a police officer. ryansmomma2008, 24, #120743 Seeking something special In the movie trailer for the biopic about my life, there would be salsa music and skydiving. That said, I don’t usually dance, and I’m afraid of heights. But I think it would help to drive attendance on opening weekend. Sunflowers, a bottle of wine, some candles. Cheers.
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As an arrow flies in windless skies. I have learned that the little things count just as much as the big ones. The perfect solution to most irritations in life is a long drive with the music turned up and the map, forgotten, on the backseat. I’m open to passengers. I’m open to being one. Bleu, 39,l, #120829 Sporty, Positive, Kind, Caring I’m looking for an honest woman with a good head on her shoulders, someone with a strong sense of self. I’m 5’5”, brown hair, blue eyes, athletic build. I’m a terrible dancer, but that’s never stopped me! I play softball and basketball, and enjoy being outdoors. Looking to date but also to meet new people. freetobeme23, 23, u,l, #120810 KIND-KILLA-CUTIE I work full-time days and have the weekends off to play! I like movies, shopping, dinning out, skiing both downhill and x-country. I’m fit and love to stay active, and want to try rock climbing in the near future. I am very down to earth, seeking the same in another woman. Sushigurly, 48, #115706
Find Your Grail I’m ever-changing, enjoying life one day after the next, discovering with a kid’s curiosity. I’m a good listener, but can talk your ear off. I enjoy a good horror movie, traveling, my motorcycle, hiking, snowshoeing, photography, reading and...ask more over coffee. Friends say I’m loyal, kind, warm: the glue to my friends and family. Looking for like-minded partner-incrime to see where adventures lead. ShepherdLover, 42,l, #113619 Introspective Affectionate Queer seeks Laughter Push the edges of thought and society. I’m looking for interesting conversation, new ideas, flirting, and laughter. I’m an active, quiet intellectual who enjoys nature and experiencing new things. Botrychium, 35,l, #120173 Must love dogs & music If I didn’t strive to be humble & useful in the world, my head could get quite big from all the love & praise bestowed upon me by my friends & family. Truly blessed to be told often that I’m one of the most loving, caring & patient people they know. I love animals, children & music. You, too? Interested? ladydj, 38,l, #120060 I could be your sunshine I start college in the spring. I just moved to Vermont. I’m looking for a girl who I can make smile every day. sunshinesunday, 20,l, #119811
fun-loving, hopeless romantic waiting Hey, I’m dedicated, extremely
In five words or less? Seeking friendship mostly. I ski as much as possible; lifelong avid Alpine skier but mostly Nordic lately. Also enjoy snowshoeing, hiking, mountain biking and sailing. Blue skies are my favorite days. I enjoy live acoustic music, good
PROFILE of the we ek: Men seeking Women
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I’m finding my path and making the best of it along the way. Only been in VT for a little more than a year, but I am a woodchuck at heart. I enjoy smiling and having great conversations with cool people. I’m looking for someone or someones to have fun and share beautiful experiences with. ZUnit, 26,l, #120819 FROM HIS ONLINE PROFILE: The last time I made an ass out of myself, I... probably agonized over it for several months. thoughtful, caring, honest, sincere, compassionate, unabashedly generous, attentive and loving. You’re saying to yourself, “Where has this man been hiding?” The answer: I’m right here. :). samson, 42,l, #117711 honest, genuine, sarcastic, funny, loving I am a chef here in Burlington, I love hiking and being outdoors. Enjoy a good movie. Sucker for cuddling. Love going on walks. I like to write and read poetry. I also love a good kisser. Good music is a necessity. Wish I could sleep more. And great-tasting food and Julia Child are great. Tylerb1286, 24,l, #120827 Enjoy simple things in life. Hi, I am an old-fashioned man with old-fashioned values. I love the simple things in life: long walk, nice sunset, garage sale, flea markets. A nice relaxation night at home, good movie. Shhhhh, I have a flower garden a take pride in also, LOL. daytoday, 49,l, #120821 Bad Guy Seeking Good Chick I am a gentle person by nature, a little crazy due to being a sensitive person, all round a nice guy. I like day hiking, going to Maine to see the coast, chatting, music. A simple person and enjoy lowkey activities. Wil4, 34,l, #120789 Funny, fit fellow, feeling full, focused for fun! I’m a laid-back dude with a wonderful sense of adventure. For me, life is an adventure to be lived, not a problem to be solved. I’m a crazy little bastard who doesn’t care about what other people think. I’m totally present in
food, and a little good wine or microbrew with that. The road less traveled with an occasional but brief plunge into the city. Ski802, 50, #120397 i’M DIffeReNt There are three things I love: Vermont, pancakes and men. I’m living in Maine, am out of batter and feeling alone: Care to help? I’m cute, cuddly, looking to relocate. Do you mind a long-distance courtship? Would you like to feel loved and important? You’re important to me ... let’s fall in love. I’ll grab the pancake mix on the way. him, 43, u,l, #120384 bi now gay later Bi married male seeking other gay or bi men for fun times andfriendship. biguy69, 33, u,l, #117616 Hey All Hi, guys. Looking for NSA winter buddies to play with; friends cool, too. I’m 40, 5’10, 170, dark hair & eyes, not bad looking with nice package. Looking for guys 18-48 who are height/weight prop. 6”+. Discretion assured - hope to hear from ya! Buster, 42, u, #111080 ACTION NOW Hi men, a 45-year-old guy is tired of waiting. I want some man-to-man and I want it now. If you don’t mind getting the room or if you live in Rutland, how about today? elvis1977, 49, u, #104119
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personals 81
Sincere, Warm, Engaged Abiding love for rural life having been raised on a horse farm. Fiercely independent. Sometimes seen as distant or aloof at first. Intensely dedicated to cultivating the self and the change I wish to see in the world. Challenging mix of willful and dubious. Relish theories bridging metaphysics and science. Working in Africa was one
Women seeking Women
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Sweep me off my feet I’m a single mother of four. I love my children more than anything. I work too much, play too little. I like long walks on the beach and midnight drives to anywhere. I love to shop, laugh and watch thunderstorms. I am always on the go. I love music. My house is covered in pictures of friends and family. erica1981, 30,l, #120779
Outgoing, Friendly, Compassionate and Fun I am an extremely fun, outgoing and friendly girl who is looking for someone interesting to talk and go on outdoor adventures with. I am tall and blond, very passionate about yoga, meditation and studying psychology. Love2smile, 21,l, #120754
fun seeker with nsa Good-looking guy seeking same for NSA fun/friendship. Discretion is a must. I love hairy men. I am friendly and a bit on the shy side until I get to know you. Would like to experiment with a three-way as well with some clean guys. Anyway, would like to hear from anybody interested, and we can go from there! 120044, 43, #120044
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3 a.m. is the new 6 If you want to figure me out quickly, go rent “Runaway Bride.” I’m passionate, playful, hardworking, creative. Apparently I’m funny. I dance and sing in public. I wake up to classical music and wish eating healthy wasn’t so expensive. I adore children, I never pay full price. Enjoy today, it’s all we’re promised! Thanks. Hopeseeker30, 30,l, #120786
And I’m willing to learn to dance. GenuineQuestions, 42,l, #120738
Let’s make new experiences together Not much for upselling myself. I am old fashioned, crave companionship and honest communication. I love animals and kids. Open to going out on the town or just snuggling up on the couch with a good movie. You will have to find out the rest on your own. Freeman, 50,l, #120580
Men seeking Men
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Guns up, let’s do this I suck at talking about myself. I much prefer to answer direct questions. So hit me with some. cairn, 20,l, #120798
of my most formative experiences. Michaelbluth, 27,l, #120764
Freewheelin’ Nocturnal Lover Qualities I value most are gentleness, sense of humor and humbleness. Looking for that likeminded person with a big heart and a bold sense of adventure. Terencetheowl, 20,l, #120760
everything I do. When I chill, I chill, when I eat, I eat; nothing in half measures. playgroundearth, 52,l, #120780
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just lookin’ I’m just lookin’ for a little fun! Haven’t had much in awhile. mrbigstick, 25, #120792
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Shy & Discreet I am a shy individual, in a committed relationship (he knows I’m Bi-sexual), that is looking into finding a lady to help me get to know how to be with another woman & send naughty e-mails, then possibly an encounter in the future. Politat2, 25,l, #119886
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Your sexy, sultry, flirty addiction Looking for M/F dom to show me the ropes ;) I’m interested in exploring my dominant side and need some instruction. Want sexy, eager subs to play with! Ages 26/34. InkedAngel, 29, u,l, #120649 Reality Conquers All I desire a discreet one-on-one relationship. I have much to give sexually and mentally. I love being satisfied, but I always derive pleasure from satisfying my partner. I am new to “online” social events, but intrigued. If you’re interested in what I’ve put out there, let me know. Need_A_Change, 43, #120590
hungry In a committed relationship with a much less hungry man. He knows I am looking around but, out of respect, discretion is a must. I am looking for a man who wants discreet encounters to leave us breathless and wet. Laughter, playfulness, mutual respect a must. Into light bondage, oral play, etc.; mostly I want to get laid. penobscot, 41, u, #119855 Bunny I like sex nothing wrong with that. My goal here is to make a few friends to have some steamy sexual conversations with. I want to be strictly online with e-mail only. Don’t be afraid I am they bunny let me be your prey. Bunnyofsnow, 19,l, #119307
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sweet, gentle hearted, funny Looking to make new friends and explore my options. TheGoddessFreya, 49,l, #120282 Skin-Deep Passion Freak Married to a man who is very supportive of my need for a woman; I’m dying to taste a woman. Have had innocent play with girlfriends but have never tasted or been tasted by a woman. I’m horny as hell for a hot femme but also need a connection and some emotional grounds to really let myself go. vtvegan, 32,l, #120509 Curious for a Woman
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04.20.11-04.27.11
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SEVEN DAYS
Looking for a little spice in my life, I want to experience being with a woman. Married 25 years with one 1x1c-mediaimpact030310.indd 1 3/1/10 1:15:57 PM child. I have always been interested in this but never knew how to go about it. Daisy66, 44,l, #120423 waiting for training I am looking for an experienced teacher to help me explore my submissive side. playful, 40, #110554 Big Beautiful Oral Sexpot I am a very big beautiful woman w/ a heart of gold. I am looking for someone who will take care of me but not boss me around. I am a Christian woman with a high school diploma & a college certificate. I have long brown hair & blue eyes. Let’s hook up! TooHot4u, 48,l, #120020
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seeking outdoor orgasm In 17th-century French literature moustaches were a symbol of sexual prowess. Seeking an impressively moustachioed manual laborer for back-door sexploration, public rooftop rendezvous, and/or general chainsaw play. Fatties need not respond. TrailWorkingFlooze, 22, #118971 real woman for grown-up play Happily married woman in an openminded relationship seeking a similar F friend w/ benefits for one-on-one play. btvplayer, 41,l, #118193 Need more fun I usually don’t do this, but I need a little spice in my life. Tired of the same old stuff every day! I am willing to try new things, so give me a shout! lookn4fun, 22, #118014 Looking For Penis Ill be honest: I am sick & tired of fooling around w/ “boys”. Looking for a man who knows how to treat a woman like the sex slave she really is. Need a long-lasting man to sate my desires. pixiestickz, 21,l, #110656
Men seeking?
YOUNG, HUNG, ORALLY GIFTED Young, mature man in my prime, I seek to please all types of women, MILFS especially. Well hung, 9”, down for whatever, can’t host but can travel (or car fun?). Who’s game? crotchrocket4u, 26, u, #120818 sexpot you’ll see I’m a real 40-year-old male in great shape looking for friends with benefits and more. I am also 420 friendly. Let’s play? admin1969, 41, #120814 fine, discreet gentleman and lover Interested in a lover for a fit, attractive gentleman. Enjoy the sexiness of a real woman while giving her the adoration of an sensual lover. Looking for mutually satisfying daytime fun with a fun and mature lady. 123loveit, 46, #120805 Mature male with boner Just looking for fun encounters. Age, race, weight not important to me. John. sirrogue, 52, #120802 Monday Funday Hey, looking for some fun in the Burlington area. Female sex only, no bi or super-creepy stuff. Send me a message and I’ll defiantly reply, and I’ll try to respond to a flirt. Slim, athletic, tall, smart. standup, 21,l, #120801 Work Hard, Play Hard! I’m looking for a playmate! Someone who is active, adventurous, healthy and hoping to be happier! I’m hoping to find someone who might be interested in doing some mountain biking or other “strenuous” activities in the afternoon or, if we’re lucky, into the evening! I’m fit, active and “young” for my age, let’s just say! ValleyBoy, 46, #120795
Adventure seeker, Loyal, Respectful, Playful Looking for mature woman for play and conversation. Email, phone, in person, fantasy, reality, etc., will let you know when we talk. greatrides, 55, #120774 Curious Seeker 28-year-old male; blue eyes; brown, chin-length hair. I think my crotch is glorious. LOL. Hell, I’m typing, you’re reading: Who are you, I wonder? Let’s share a meal and see what’s up. NorwayOrYours, 28,l, #120742
than-enthusiastic participants. Seeking more willing partner(s). Pleasing a couple would be ideal, a single would be next best. Average build, not hairy, cut, average size. Looking for about the same. I like petite to average-ish women. lordemsworth, 54, #120645 Master of Spanking Therapy Dominant male looking to meet with males and females who seek a dominant force in their lives to play out their fantasies/desires of being disciplined. Limits respected. Discretion assured. Spankhard, 50, #120642
Other seeking?
I’ll make you smile Looking for discreet FWB-type situation. Chemistry is the deciding factor. skijustice, 47, #120739
fun couple seeks party girl Professional, good-looking, late thirties couple looking for a cool, hot girl to have some fun at our private house in the woods. Must be dog- and 420-friendly. dawnmc, 36,l, #120773
Tall, Blond and Horny Looking for a little on the side, not getting what I need. Can you help? I am interested in finding a FWB or couple for erotic times. newbie7359, 40, #120725
Good Looking, Naughty, Fun Couple Good-looking, young, fun, mature, sexual, party couple looking for
Kink of the w eek: Men seeking?
fine, discreet gentleman and lover Interested in a lover for a fit, attractive gentleman. Enjoy the sexiness of a real woman while giving her the adoration of an sensual lover. Looking for mutually satisfying daytime fun with a fun and mature lady. 123loveit, 46, #120805 FROM HIS ONLINE PROFI LE: What’s underneath your bed? squeaky springs. good times Yes, I am looking for you so we can have some good old NSA sex. I do have a wife, but sex one or two times a month doesn’t work for me. I wanna meet someone who wants to have some hot NSA sex fun time during the week. If so, come on, let’s meet, it will be a good time. vtdave1234, 38, #109736 Fit and fun I am an attractive, fit, fun, busy guy looking for someone to hang out with. I teach martial arts, like to work out, eat healthy, and like to do fun things in and out of the bedroom. hardcorevt, 34,l, #120703 Stress Reliever I provide full-body stress relief with my hands. If you are in need of a totally satisfying experience, I am the one for you. I am 6’7”, 225, smooth former dude dorm model. Very discreet and nonjudgmental. I am available seven days a week, noon until 2 a.m. My name is CJ. Massageman11, 38, u,l, #120667 Try anything, open minded, sex crazed I am outgoing, very sexual, love naughty, but a little nice is fun, too. Looking for fun times, laughs and no strings if we agree, but may also decide to go long term, up to you. I’ll try anything once, love playing on webcam, taking pictures and videos. Let’s have some kinky, nasty fun! hrnyboyvt, 32, #103140 Enthusiasm wanted The enjoyment of my brief walks on the bi side (and too often my walks on the straight side) was lessened by less-
a bisexual girl for all-night fun. Looking for someone who’s clean and sexual. No BBW or butch girls. sexyburlingtoncouple, 23,l, #120729 free your mind Imaginative, open-minded couple looking for play dates with other open-minded couples who enjoy sex. Experience and age not as important as a sense of humour, wit and creative sexual ability!Will entertain endless combinations. open_up, 37,l, #120713 Explore the Possibilities Educated, attractive, Causasian, edgy couple looking for three- or four-way action with another couple, an active male to female transsexual, or a feminine man, including multiple oral play. Live your fantasy! STD free and expect same. funtimes, 50,l, #120682 2 Hotties and A doctor 25-year-old normal and attractive couple. I want to know what it’s like being with another girl, and he is all about it. Discreet, one-time thing, unless everyone is begging for more. Looking for an attractive 21-27-yearold clean girl. We want to talk via email and then buy you a drink. 2HottiesAndADoctor, 25,l, #120622
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‘90s night, I can’t dance! Thank you for attempting to dance with this crazy, dancing girl! I normally don’t approach people but loved your shyness and soft-spoken self. Let’s do something more on your turf next time! Yes, you, Chris, in the white/blue checked shirt whose friends whisked you away from me! When: Friday, April 15, 2011. Where: Club Metronome. You: Man. Me: Woman. #908880 two2tango (online) ChelseaAnn You’ve got the smile and the profile that sent my heart into a flutter. I’d love the chance to take you out for coffee and conversation. I’m free to be me, and I hope you’ve seen that. If you’re interested, I think we’d have a good time, so don’t hesitate; life’s too short. When: Saturday, April 16, 2011. Where: 7 Days Two2Tango. You: Woman. Me: Woman. #908879 Clive Barker and H.P. Lovecraft Me: a happy woman with a cenobite tattoo who was taken by your compliment and smile. You: a kind, handsome man who also enjoys tattoos and horror. Would you ever be up for continuing our conversation when neither of us is working? Perhaps out to dinner or over coffee, Mr. Small black regular? When: Friday, April 15, 2011. Where: University Mall. You: Man. Me: Woman. #908878
Starbucks at a glance We shared glances and I sat across from you. You were with a fellow and his laptop. We said, “Hi” as you passed to leave. Then somehow we were side by side at the light, I couldn’t stop smiling, and I did nothing as you waved while we pulled out in different directions. “I can’t stop thinking about you!” When: Wednesday, April 6, 2011. Where: Starbucks, Williston Rd., S. Burlington. You: Woman. Me: Man. #908873
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witness to each other’s lives and never taking trust for granted. I love you and will always cherish the love you give me. When: Sunday, August 14, 2011. Where: our Worcester home. You: Man. Me: Woman. #908867 I’M IN PARIS WITH YOU Saw you at 3 Needs, you are were the most beautiful girl there. Was that crepo-looking guy your brother? I hope so, ‘cause he just looked like a big scuzy weirdo. Overherd something about you being a baker. Lets just say that I’m great at “baking bread.” Lets turn my house into a trove of passion. Your loving admirer, Samsonitexxx. When: Sunday, March 27, 2011. Where: Burlington. You: Man. Me: Man. #908866 vegan cutie with bike cart I saw you on the corner of College and Church streets with a pink cart of vegan goodies. We made eye contact for just a second, but I was floored! You have the cutest smile I have ever seen! I wish I could ask you out on a coffee date. When: Thursday, April 14, 2011. Where: College st.. You: Woman. Me: Man. #908865 Morrisville Price Chopper You were a beautiful woman with long, dirty blond hair and slender, getting into your tan-/gold-colored Nissan Pathfinder SUV I think? I drove by while you were loading groceries, I walked by and we both turned our heads multiple times. Would love to see you. When: Wednesday, April 13, 2011. Where: Price Chopper, Morrisville. You: Woman. Me: Man. #908864 Fortuitous Eye Contact At Leunig’s? Me: tall male, brown hair, playing sax. You: female, sitting at the bar, long blond hair, very pretty. We caught each other’s eye repeatedly, but you left before I had a chance to talk with you. Meet sometime? When: Thursday, April 7, 2011. Where: Leunig’s Bistro. You: Woman. Me: Man. #908863
mistress maeve Dear Mistress Maeve,
My boyfriend and I have been together for nearly five years. When we met, we were just out of grad school, still went out on weeknights, and ate ramen noodles and drank Miller Lite to save cash. Back then, the only entertainment we could afford was getting it on. Now we’re both “young professionals” who work 60 hours per week and barely have the energy for happy hour on Fridays, let alone marathon weekend sex (which we used to have all the time). We are still partners in crime, and I love him madly, but I miss him. I cringe at the thought of instituting “date night” — seems like something couples do to rekindle their love lives when there’s nothing left. Yet, at the same time, I want more time with him. I’m sick of going to bed every night, him with his work papers and me with my Blackberry. Can we get the excitement back without becoming a cliché?
Signed,
Dear Deserter,
Date-Night Deserter
mm
SEVEN DAYS
xoxo,
04.20.11-04.27.11
Why on earth is your Blackberry going to bed with you? If you’re not using the phone’s vibrate setting for personal pleasure, that device shouldn’t be anywhere near your bed. If you are missing the intimacy that you and your “partner in crime” once shared, start by making your bed a no-work and notechnology zone — the time you spend under the sheets should be focused on each other. Unfortunately, Hollywood likes to portray “date night” as a chore that tired, lustless couples must perform on a weekly basis. But just because it gets a bad rap on television doesn’t mean there’s no merit to date night. The reality is, if you don’t carve out time for your relationship — and nobody else will do it for you — you’ll risk drifting further apart. My advice is to grab some ramen noodles and Miller Lite, toss your man’s briefcase and your Blackberry in a closet, and get back to your old selves — if only just for one date night. After you’ve reconnected, make some ground rules: No work in bed, at least one night a week to focus on each other and at least one weekend per month for marathon sex. It may be a little cheesy, but you have to remember — cheese is delicious.
SEVENDAYSvt.com
Need advice?
Email me at mistress@sevendaysvt.com or share your own advice on my blog at sevendaysvt.com/blogs
personals 83
Hey, Sexy Massage Girl Me: kinda funny and talkative, just together at the movies slightly naughty but a total gentleman. Mimmos then the movies. Things You: sexier than heck with an infectious Cutie Cashier at Healthy Living 1x3-cbhb-personals-alt.indd 1 6/14/10 2:39:13 PM went well but I goofed up. I know laugh and beautiful breasts. ;) I’d You closed the drawer to your register you read I Spy so am saying I’m truly like to massage you. When: Friday, before handing me another dollar sorry. Didn’t mean to be a jerk, and you April 1, 2011. Where: St. Albans. in change. You could have shorted had my attention all through. When: You: Woman. Me: Man. #908877 me $20 and I wouldn’t have noticed. Wednesday, April 6, 2011. Where: Essex. I was captivated by your bright, You: Woman. Me: Man. #908872 #121 Spring Singles Party beautiful smile. When: Tuesday, Hi, #121, this is #139 in the purple dress. April 12, 2011. Where: Healthy Living. Costco I liked your moves. :) But I was not You: Woman. Me: Man. #908862 You asked me if I was in line and you able to introduce myself because of flashed a winning smile. You: short, an awkward setup through my friend Cute Blonde @ Big Pic sexy, silver hair, vest and snug jeans. who was there with me. Any chance I think your name is Amy. You Me: dress shirt and tie with a blue you’d like to grab a coffee and chat? introduced yourself to me a couple coat. I think my green Subaru likes Hoping so. When: Friday, April 15, 2011. years ago in Waterbury, but I think your gold CrossOver. When: Thursday, Where: Seven Days April Singles Party. you had a boyfriend. I’ve seen you a April 14, 2011. Where: Costco. You: You: Man. Me: Woman. #908876 couple of times since, but didn’t have Man. Me: Man. U #908870 the stones to strike up a conversation Der in Derby with you. I think I might be a bit older Share The Road Empty nest, cat-loving Tim from than you, but I’ve caught you smiling You found me. I have a cat, Shelburne, met at Derby Game, you at me. So? When: Wednesday, April though. When: Thursday, April gave me a month to complete a special 6, 2011. Where: Big Picture Theatre. 14, 2011. Where: personals. You: task for you. I have a status report for You: Woman. Me: Man. #908861 Man. Me: Woman. #908869 you. I’d call you but one of my digits left out one of yours (der!). Contact Eye Candy at City Market Ramona me if still interested. When: Saturday, We exchanged multiple glances at You are what I am looking for, but I’m April 9, 2011. Where: Derby Games. the market, ~6 p.m. I couldnt help but too old fashioned to go full on and look You: Man. Me: Woman. #908875 stare, enjoying everything I saw: both for love in the personals. Look for me, pantlegs rolled up, beige messenger the GlassMan. I want to meet you, but Matt who stopped by Borders bag, dirty-blond hair and, most in a coffee shop not on a computer. You were looking for a book to help importantly, your piercing eyes. I was When: Thursday, April 14, 2011. Where: with your new Android phone. wearing a pink shirt, gray coverup, black T2T. You: Woman. Me: Man. #908868 Unfortunately, we did not have the rimmed glasses, dirty-blond hair, darkbook in stock, but nonetheless we green messenger bag w/ mountains. Eternally grateful for your love shared some conversation and I was You rode away on your bike in the Through your constant strength and hoping that you would like to get opposite direction; wishing you had commitment I know that love is about together for dinner so we could talk followed me. I’ll make sure to say hi next paying attention to and taking care some more. When: Monday, April time you are around. When: Monday, of each other in each moment. It is 11, 2011. Where: Borders downtown. April 11, 2011. Where: City Market. never squandering the gift of one You: Man. Me: Woman. #908874 You: Man. Me: Woman. #908860 another. Loving consists of bearing
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