Monday, July 27, 2015

Page 1

MONDAY Â Â EDITION

ADDISON COUNTY

INDEPENDENT

Vol. 27 No. 19

Middlebury, Vermont

X

Monday, July 27, 2015

X

32 Pages

75¢

Court  buries  proposed  Bristol  pit Environmental  court  voids  prior  permits

Celebrating open space ‡ 6WDWH RIÀFLDOV DH FRPLQJ WR D SDUW\ IRU WKH H[SDQGHG /HPRQ )DLU :LOGOLIH 0DQDJHPHQW $UHD LQ &RUQZDOO DQG %ULGSRUW 6HH 3DJH

By  GAEN  MURPHREE %5,672/ ² $ \HDU ORQJ FRQĂ€LFW RYHU D SURSRVHG JUDYHO SLW QHDU GRZQWRZQ %ULVWRO LV OLNHO\ DW DQ HQG -XGJH 7KRPDV 'XUNLQ RI WKH 9HU PRQW 6XSHULRU &RXUWÂśV (QYLURQ PHQWDO 'LYLVLRQ ODVW ZHHN LVVXHG DQ RUGHU QXOOLI\LQJ DOO SUHYLRXV SHUPLWV DQG ]RQLQJ GHFLVLRQV FRQ FHUQLQJ WKH DFUH JUDYHO SLW QHDU

Rounds  Road  and  South  Street  in  %ULVWRO ¿UVW SURSRVHG E\ /DWKURS /LPLWHG 3DUWQHUVKLS LQ 'XUNLQœV -XO\ RUGHU IXUWKHU VWLSXODWHV WKDW DQ\ QHZ SURMHFW SUR SRVDO ZRXOG EH VXEMHFW WR FXUUHQW UHJXODWLRQ :KLOH WKH MXGJHœV RUGHU OHDYHV RSHQ WKH SRVVLELOLW\ WKDW VXFK D SURSRVDO FRXOG EH PDGH WKH PRVW UHFHQW %ULVWRO 7RZQ 3ODQ DS

SURYHG E\ YRWHUV LQ H[SUHVV O\ SURKLELWV H[WUDFWLRQ ZLWKLQ WKH GHVLJQDWHG 9LOODJH 3ODQQLQJ $UHD ZKLFK VWUHWFKHV ZHOO SDVW WKH FRQ WHVWHG VLWH LQ DOO GLUHFWLRQV ³7KH SHRSOH RI %ULVWRO VKRXOG UHFRJQL]H DQG EH SURXG WKDW WKLV RXWFRPH LV JRRG IRU WKH WRZQ DQG LV WKH UHVXOW RI D KXJH DPRXQW RI KDUG ZRUN E\ PDQ\ PDQ\ SHRSOH $ ORW RI SHRSOH ZRUNHG UHDOO\ KDUG WR JHW KHUH ´ VDLG DWWRUQH\ -DPHV 'XPRQW ZKR KDV UHSUHVHQWHG FLWL

]HQV RSSRVHG WR WKH SURSRVHG JUDY HO H[WUDFWLRQ RSHUDWLRQ ³3HRSOH ZRUNHG UHDOO\ KDUG WR JHW WKH WRZQ SODQ ZKHUH LW LV ULJKW QRZ ´ 'XPRQW FRQWLQXHG ³3HRSOH ZRUNHG UHDOO\ KDUG RQ WKH ]RQLQJ ERDUG LQ œ DQG œ WR FRPH XS ZLWK WKH RULJLQDO ]RQLQJ GHFLVLRQ 7KH\ ZDQWHG D ]RQLQJ GHFLVLRQ WKDW ZRXOG EH IDLU WR HYHU\ERG\ VR WKH\ LPSRVHG FRQGLWLRQV WKDW ZHUH LQWHQGHG WR SURWHFW WKH FRP (See  Bristol  pit,  Page  21)

Science writers & communication ‡ $ +DPLOWRQ &ROOHJH VWXGHQW DQG )HUULVEXUJK UHVLGHQW LQYHVWLJDWHV KRZ WKH SXEOLF OHDUQV DERXW VFLHQFH 6HH 3DJH

Sox history digs deep into detail ‡ ´5HG 6R[ 1DWLRQÂľ UHOLHV RQ LQWHUYLHZV WR WHOO WHDP¡V VWRU\ JRRG DQG EDG RYHU WKH GHFDGHV 6HH 6SRUWV 3DJH

“PREPARING  FOR  THE  Zombie  Apocalypseâ€?  campers  Jordan  Norris,  left,  Jonathan  Lapell,  Zeke  Clark  and  Kimberley  Jerome  work  on  getting  a  FDPSÂżUH JRLQJ GXULQJ WKH 9HUJHQQHV 8QLRQ +LJK 6FKRRO 6XPPHU )XVLRQ 3URJUDP RXWGRRU VXUYLYDO VNLOOV FRXUVH ODVW ZHHN Independent  photo/Trent  Campbell

Quintet swings at the vineyard ‡ $EE\ -HQQH MRLQV WKH %HVVHWWH 4XDUWHW IRU DQ RXWGRRU SHUIRUPDQFH WKLV )ULGD\ 5HDG $UWV %HDW RQ 3DJH

Students learn outdoor skills as they prep for ‘zombie apocalypse’ By  ANDY  KIRKALDY VERGENNES  â€”  Vergennes  Union  Middle  School  language  arts  teacher  Meghan  McGrath  on  Thursday  morning  gave  10  incoming  middle  VFKRRO VWXGHQWV WKHLU ÂżQDO LQVWUXFWLRQV EHIRUH WKH\ OHIW D 9HUJHQQHV 8QLRQ +LJK 6FKRRO FODVVURRP WR SUHSDUH IRU D ]RPELH DSRFDO\SVH Âł*UDE D VQDFN *UDE D WRRO ´ 0F*UDWK VDLG 1R 0F*UDWK DQG PLGGOH VFKRRO VFLHQFH WHDFKHU &KULVWRSKHU 2[OH\ ZKR FR WHDFK WKLV -XO\ÂśV Âł3UH SDULQJ IRU WKH =RPELH $SRFDO\SVH´ VXPPHU FRXUVH

DW 98+6 GRQÂśW UHDOO\ H[SHFW D ZRUOGZLGH ZDONLQJ GHDG LQIHFWLRQ WR EHJLQ LQ WKH 2XWGRRU &ODVVURRP WKDW OLHV KLGGHQ LQ WKH ZRRGV VRXWK RI 9HUJHQQHV 8QLRQ (OHPHQWDU\ 6FKRRO %XW 2[OH\ ZKR VWDUWHG WKH FRXUVH ² RQH RI PDQ\ RIIHUHG E\ WKH 98+6 DQG 98(6 6XPPHU Fusion  program  (see  related  story)  â€”  in  2014  XQGHU WKH QDPH Âł6ZDPS 0RQVWHUV ´ WKRXJKW WKH QDPH FKDQJH PLJKW OXUH PRUH VWXGHQWV WR ZKDW UH DOO\ LV D IRXU ZHHN XQLW IRFXVLQJ RQ RXWGRRU VXU (See  Zombie,  Page  13)

Federal grant helps city schools run summer and afterschool programs By  ANDY  KIRKALDY 9(5*(11(6 ² 7KH VHFRQG \HDU RI 9HU JHQQHV 8QLRQ +LJK 6FKRRO DQG 9HUJHQQHV Union  Elementary  School  summer  programs  IXQGHG E\ DQ VW &HQWXU\ /HDUQLQJ &HQWHUV & *UDQW LV MXVW QRZ ZLQGLQJ GRZQ DQG LQFOXGHV D ZLGH YDULHW\ RI RIIHULQJV 98+6 KDV EHHQ UXQQLQJ VXPPHU DQG DIWHUVFKRRO SURJUDPV ZLWK KHOS IURP & (See  Grant,  Page  7)


PAGE 2 — Addison Independent, Monday, July 27, 2015

85 years and counting THE MONUMENT FARMS Dairy in Weybridge celebrated its 85th anniversary on Saturday, July 18, by throwing a big party complete with a tractor parade, games, free food, music, pet-­ ting zoo, tours and, of course, plenty of free milk. More than 2,000 attended and more than 3,000 hot dogs were handed out. The dairy began as a home delivery operation in 1930 run by Richard and Marjory James. Today the business is still in the family with Richard and Marjory’s grandchildren, Jon Rooney, Bob James and Peter James, running the show. Independent photos/Trent Campbell


Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015  â€”  PAGE  3

Conservation  area  gets  major  addition CORNWALL  â€”  More  land  in  western  Addison  County  will  soon  be  available  to  the  public,  and  pro-­ tected  for  wildlife.  The  public  is  in-­ vited  to  attend  a  celebration  of  the  Lemon  Fair  Wildlife  Management  Area,  and  the  330  acres  being  add-­ ed  to  it,  on  Tuesday,  July  28,  from  10  a.m.  to  12:30  p.m. The  celebration  will  include  a  reception  with  refreshments  and  speakers,  followed  by  a  short  tour  of  the  lands.  Speakers  include  Agency  of  Natural  Resources  Sec-­ retary  Deb  Markowitz  and  Fish  &  Wildlife  Department  Commission-­ er  Louis  Porter,  among  others.  The  Lemon  Fair  Wildlife  Man-­ agement  Area  contains  a  slow-­mov-­ ing  stream  that  meanders  through  ZHWODQGV IDUP ÂżHOGV DQG VRPH RI the  most  productive  wildlife  habi-­ tat  in  this  region  of  Vermont.  The  $325,000  addition  will  bring  the  wildlife  management  area  to  a  total  of  744  acres. “These  lands  provide  rich  habitat  for  a  variety  of  species,  including  deer,  waterfowl,  grassland  birds,  and  the  federally  endangered  Indi-­ ana  bat,â€?  said  Commissioner  Por-­ ter.  â€œThese  additional  parcels  will  provide  new  roadside  access  to  this  wildlife  management  area  to  allow  bird-­watchers,  hunters  and  anglers  the  opportunity  to  get  out  and  enjoy  the  outdoors.â€? The  lands  were  purchased  in  part-­ nership  with  the  U.S.D.A.  Natural  Resource  Conservation  Service,  the  U.S.  Fish  &  Wildlife  Service,  and  the  Vermont  Land  Trust.  This  ac-­

quisition  also  represents  one  of  the  largest  investments  of  funds  from  the  Vermont  Duck  Stamp  Program  on  a  single  project.  In  Vermont,  waterfowl  hunters  are  required  to  purchase  a  federal  migratory  wa-­ terfowl  stamp  and  a  Vermont  duck  stamp,  but  many  non-­hunters  also  choose  to  purchase  a  duck  stamp  in  order  to  contribute  to  wildlife  and  wetland  conservation. Part  of  the  funding  for  the  pur-­ chase  of  these  conserved  lands  came  from  sales  of  the  new  Ver-­ mont  Habitat  Stamp.   Modeled  af-­ ter  the  success  of  the  federal  duck  stamp,  the  Vermont  Habitat  Stamp  is  a  voluntary  purchase  that  raises  funds  for  the  conservation  and  management  of  lands  throughout  Vermont.  It  is  available  with  the  SXUFKDVH RI D KXQWLQJ RU ÂżVKLQJ OL-­ cense,  or  directly  on  the  Vermont  Fish  &  Wildlife  Department’s  ZHEVLWH DW ZZZ YWÂżVKDQGZLOGOLIH com. “This  major  expansion  of  the  Lemon  Fair  Wildlife  Management  Area  would  not  have  been  possible  without  the  help  of  our  many  part-­ ners  in  conservation,â€?  said  Porter.  â€œWe’d  especially  like  to  thank  all  of  those  Vermonters  who  pitched  in  to  help  contribute  to  our  state’s  conservation  legacy.â€? This  event  is  free  and  open  to  the  public,  and  will  be  held  at  1683  West  Street  in  Cornwall.  For  more  information,  contact  Jane  Lazor-­ chak  with  the  Vermont  Fish  &  Wildlife  Department  at  802-­505-­ 0561. Â

For  the  record CORRECTION:  A  story  in  Thursday’s  edition  of  the  Indepen-­ dent  on  the  death  of  local  restau-­ rateur  Michel  MahĂŠ  incorrectly  reported  that  MahĂŠ  died  on  Wednes-­

day,  but  we  should  have  said  that  the  Vergennes  Area  Rescue  Squad  responded  to  MahÊ’s  Ferrisburgh  at  around  5:30  p.m.  on  Tuesday.  We  re-­ gret  the  error.

FISH  &  WILDLIFE  Department  Commissioner  Louis  Porter  surveys  the  Lemon  Fair  Wildlife  Management  Area  in  Cornwall  and  Bridport.  Recent  acquisitions  have  increased  the  area  of  the  conserved  land  to  744  acres.

you  can  W IN  one Ƥ Â?† —• ƒ– Field  Days  August  4-­â€?8  ÂˆÂ‘” ›‘—” …ŠƒÂ?…‡ –‘ ™‹Â? ƒÂ? ‹ Ġ ‹Â?‹ Í› ‹nj ‹ ͙͞

ADDISON COUNTY

INDEPENDENT Serving Addison County, Vt., Since 1946

New  Haven,  VT  Homeowner  Recommends  Bristol  Electronics “We  looked  into  installing  a  solar  system  ten  to  twelve  years  ago.  I  wish  we  had  done  it  back  then.  The  payback  has  been  amazing.  Bristol  Electronics  is  such  a  friendly  company.  The  guys  are  great,  everyone  is  easy  to  work  with  and  so  professional.  :KHQ , EXLOG D QHZ KRPH LQ WKH IXWXUH , ZLOO GHÂżQLWHO\ SODQ RQ incorporating  solar  and  using  Bristol  Electronics.â€?                          Karen  â€“  New  Haven,  VT

FREE Â SITE Â EVALUATIONS

AN EVENT?

Email it to: news@addisonindependent.com


PAGE  4  â€”  Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015

A D D IS ON Â Â INDE P E NDEN T

Guest  Editorial Vermont’s  economy  needs  more  investment,  innovation Moving  Vermont’s  economy  forward  requires  investments  in  both  innovation  and  infrastructure.  There’s  no  shortage  of  innovation  in  Vermont  â€”  we’re  fortunate  to  have  legacy  industries  and  cutting-­edge  entrepreneurs  eager  to  con-­ tribute  to  our  economy  and  provide  good  jobs.  It’s  not  easy  for  them,  however.  Costs  are  higher  here  than  in  many  other  places.  And  too  many  areas  of  our  state  lack  critical  energy  and  telecommunications  infrastructure  necessary  to  compete  in  the  21st-­century  economy.  Many  of  the  challenges  our  employers  face  also  exacerbate  the  tri-­ als  of  working  families.  As  the  cost  of  living  in  Vermont  continues  to  rise,  Vermonters  in  the  middle  struggle  to  keep  pace. It’s  a  policy-­driven  economic  cycle  â€”  not  a  temporary  trend  â€”  that  we  must  break.  You  can  see  its  impacts  in  anemic  state  tax  revenue,  employment  and  income  data,  the  decline  in  our  student  population  and  the  growing  number  of  working-­age  Vermonters  leaving  our  beautiful,  peaceful  state  to  pursue  opportunities  elsewhere.  Thankfully,  though  the  hurdles  are  high,  the  solutions  are  well  within  our  reach.  As  I’ve  frequently  noted,  there  is  no  challenge  we  cannot  meet  if  we  work  together.  We  should  start  by  focusing  on  the  fundamentals  of  economic  growth  like  infrastructure.  And  we  must  insist  that  the  voice  of  the  majority  is  heard,  and  not  drowned  out  by  a  small  faction  willing  to  yell  louder,  or  behave  poorly,  just  to  make  their  point.  The  proposed  expansion  of  natural  gas  service  is  a  good  example.  This  project  will  bring  new  infrastructure  to  communities  in  Addison  &RXQW\ DORQJ ZLWK WKH EHQHÂżWV RI QDWXUDO JDV ZKLFK LV VXEVWDQWLDOO\ cleaner  than  heating  oil  or  propane.  Reducing  emissions  from  heating  homes  and  businesses  will  make  our  air  cleaner.  It  also  moves  us  closer  to  realizing  our  carbon  reduc-­ tion  goals  set  when,  during  my  administration,  Vermont  became  the  ¿UVW VWDWH WR MRLQ WKH 5HJLRQDO *UHHQKRXVH *DV ,QLWLDWLYH DQG VXEVH-­ quently  enhanced  in  the  state’s  comprehensive  energy  plan.  Speaking  of  being  green,  natural  gas  is  more  affordable  than  alter-­ natives.  Bringing  natural  gas  to  more  communities  will  allow  them  to  save  money.  For  families,  those  savings  can  be  as  much  as  $2,000  per  year  or  more  depending  on  the  type  of  fuel  they  are  using  today.  Businesses,  municipalities,  hospitals  and  colleges  all  save  too.  The  farmers  of  Agri-­Mark,  for  example,  expect  to  save  more  than  $1  mil-­ lion  a  year  when  they  have  access  to  the  pipeline.  $QG WKHVH DUH RQO\ VRPH RI WKH EHQHÂżWV 7HVWLPRQ\ IURP RQH RI Vermont’s  most  respected  economists  indicates  that  extending  the  choice  of  natural  gas  to  communities  between  Chittenden  County’s  existing  system  and  Middlebury  will  generate  more  than  $70  million  LQ HFRQRPLF EHQHÂżW RYHU WKH QH[W \HDUV 7KLV LV PLOOLRQV RI GROODUV in  energy  savings,  property  taxes  and  construction  employment.  The  VDPH DQDO\VLV VKRZV WKH EHQHÂżWV JURZLQJ WR PLOOLRQ RYHU years.  It’s  a  smart  investment.  The  appeal  of  a  cleaner,  more  affordable  heating  source  for  businesses  looking  to  grow  and  relocate  and  the  appeal  to  families  looking  for  a  place  to  live,  work  and  raise  their  children  are  important  considerations.  Put  another  way,  the  range  of  energy  choices  in  Chittenden  and  Franklin  counties  â€”  where  they’ve  been  expanding  the  natural  gas  V\VWHP IRU QHDUO\ \HDUV ² LV RQH UHDVRQ WKDW DUHD HQMR\V PRUH economic  stability  and  growth  than  other  parts  of  Vermont.  Expand-­ ing  proven  economic  infrastructure  to  other  areas  of  Vermont  helps  to  equalize  economic  opportunity.  The  northwest  part  of  our  state  enjoys  a  substantial  competitive  advantage  â€”  and  it  shows.  9HUPRQW *DV KDV UHVHW LWV DSSURDFK WR WKH PDQDJHPHQW RI WKLV important  project.  Let’s  not  forget  this  is  a  Vermont-­run  company  that  employs  many  hardworking  Vermonters  in  good-­paying  jobs  and  has  provided  decades  of  great  service  to  dozens  of  communities.  Though  the  company  has  made  mistakes,  they’ve  owned  up  to  them  and  made  changes  to  ensure  they  don’t  happen  again. Vermont  needs  to  make  a  similar  change.  As  a  state  we  should  focus  more  on  the  merits  of  a  project  than  its  politics.  While  every  proposal  requires  rigorous  review,  we  need  to  get  serious  about  improving  our  economy. Economic  infrastructure  is  essential  to  a  thriving,  innovative  economy  that  moves  Vermont  forward.  And  moving  forward  is  the  only  alternative  to  continuing  to  fall  behind.  â€”  Former  Vermont  Gov.  Jim  Douglas Â

Checking  under  the  hood A  GOOSE  DOES  some  deep  cleaning  while  wading  in  Otter  Creek  in  Vergennes  last  Thursday  morning.

Independent  photo/Trent  Campbell

Letters to the Editor Many  students  disagree  with  college’s  pipeline  stand I  am  a  Middlebury  College  senior  strongly  opposed  to  the  college’s  position  in  favor  of  a  proposed  41-­mile  pipeline  siphon-­ ing  natural  gas  from  Colchester  to  0LGGOHEXU\ 7KH IXOO XQĂ€LQFKLQJ support  for  this  proposal  among  Middlebury  faculty,  administrators  and  board  members  is  deplorable  and  misguided.  I  commend  Bristol  lawyer  Jim  Dumont’s  stance  that  this  project,  with  a  price  tag  surg-­ LQJ DERYH PLOOLRQ LV D KXJH mistake  for  Vermont. Economics  were  a  keystone  in Â

WKH FROOHJHÂśV HQGRUVHPHQW RI WKH SLSHOLQHÂśV &HUWLÂżFDWH RI 3XEOLF *RRG WRGD\ KRZHYHU WKH numbers  aren’t  so  academic.  When  SURMHFW GHVLJQV ZHUH ÂżUVW GUDZQ XS E\ 9HUPRQW *DV \HDUV DJR FRPSUHVVHG QDWXUDO JDV &1* ZDV marginally  available  for  delivery. 7RGD\ &1* LV D IDVW JURZLQJ LQGXVWU\ 1* $GYDQWDJH IRU instance,  now  delivers  to  a  num-­ ber  of  businesses  in  Middlebury,  including  the  college.  Our  region’s  businesses,  which  claim  they  ZRXOG EH VLJQLÂżFDQWO\ VHUYLFHG E\

a  new  pipeline,  seem  blind  to  this  trucked-­gas  reality,  let  alone  the  money  and  disruption  to  landown-­ ers  a  pipeline  portends.  Increasing  emissions  from  trucking  fracked  gas  to  Vermont’s  larger  corpora-­ tions  is  eons  better  in  my  book  than  generations  of  infrastructure  DQG LQYHVWLWXUH LQ D IDLOLQJ Ă€DLOLQJ energy  model,  wherein  hydraulic  fracturing  is  its  bottom  line. There  are  heated  months  ahead  LQ WKLV ÂżJKW DV D GHFLVLRQ FRXOG EH reached  by  the  end  of  the  summer.  (See  Letter,  Page  5)


Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015  â€”  PAGE  5

Iran  deal  better  than  alternatives Two  years  of  arduous  negotia-­ letting  Iran  resume  its  program,  tions  now  have  produced  an  agree-­ and  imposing  new  sanctions,  but  ment  to  seal  off  Iran’s  path  to  pro-­ without  our  allies. We  know  that  this  agreement  ducing  a  nuclear  weapon. I  will  have  questions  in  the  would  buy  more  time  and  open  GHWDLOHG EULHÂżQJV DQG KHDULQJV new  opportunities  to  solve  this  ahead,  as  I’m  sure  others  will.  But  and  other  threats  that  we  face  from  Iran’s  activities  in  the  we  already  know  region,  including  the  quite  a  bit.  wrongful  imprison-­ We  know  that  this  ment  of  U.S.  citizens,  process  already  had  Iran’s  support  for  succeeded  in  freez-­ Hamas  and  other  ter-­ ing  Iran’s  nuclear  rorist  organizations,  development  in  and  Iran’s  abysmal  hu-­ place.  Now  we  have  man  rights  record  and  an  agreement  to  also  practices. roll  back  Iran’s  pro-­ 6RPH KDYH UHĂ€H[-­ gram. ively  denounced  the  We  know  this  is  the  agreement  before  even  most  rigorous  moni-­ reading  it.  Many  are  toring  and  inspec-­ the  same  people  who  tion  regimen  ever  UHĂ€H[LYHO\ VXSSRUWHG included  in  a  nonpro-­ liferation  agreement,  This  week’s  writer  going  to  war  in  Iraq.  more  rigorous  than  is  U.S.  Sen.  Patrick  I  voted  against  that  observers  had  pre-­ Leahy  of  Vermont,  war,  after  reading  the  dicted.  We  know  that  ranking  member  of  LQWHOOLJHQFH ÂżOHV DQG ÂżQGLQJ QR FUHGLEOH without  a  deal,  the  the  Senate’s  Sub-­ constant  monitoring  committee  on  the  evidence  that  Iraq  had  and  on-­site  inspec-­ State  Department  weapons  of  mass  de-­ struction.  That  colos-­ tions  would  go  away,  and  Foreign  Opera-­ sal  mistake  killed  or  and  so  would  support  tions. maimed  thousands  for  the  wide-­ranging  and  by  now  has  cost  international  sanc-­ more  than  $2  trillion,  with  the  me-­ tions  that  we  painstakingly  built. We  know  that  the  sanctions  re-­ ter  still  running. It’s  not  easy  to  stick  with  the  prieve  in  this  agreement  is  tem-­ porary,  limited  and  reversible.  It’s  long  slog  of  tough  negotiations  structured  so  that  most  of  it  â€”  in-­ when  others  are  clamoring  for  FOXGLQJ WKH NH\ EDQNLQJ ÂżQDQFLDO military  solutions.  I  know  from  and  oil  sanctions  â€”  remains  in  conversations  with  the  president  place.  If  Iran  fails  to  meet  its  com-­ and  with  Secretary  Kerry  and  Sec-­ mitments,  we  and  our  partners  will  UHWDU\ 0RQL] KRZ GLIÂżFXOW WKLV ZDV revoke  the  limited  relief  and  im-­ and  that  we  were  prepared  to  walk  pose  added  sanctions. away  rather  than  settle  for  a  bad  And  most  importantly,  we  know  deal.  But  they  stuck  with  it. that  a  peaceful  solution  to  the  During  the  1962  Cuban  Missile  threat  of  a  nuclear  Iran  is  far  bet-­ Crisis,  some  of  President  Kenne-­ ter  than  the  alternative  of  another  dy’s  top  advisers  pushed  for  a  mili-­ major  war  in  the  Middle  East.  Or  tary  attack.  A  war  between  the  two  of  pulling  out  of  the  agreement,  nuclear  superpowers  would  have Â

Community

Forum

risked  the  annihilation  of  both  countries,  and  probably  the  rest  of  the  world.  We  can  be  grateful  that  President  Kennedy  stuck  with  di-­ plomacy  and  peacefully  ended  the  crisis  without  taking  us  into  war. A  workable  agreement  would  not  just  buy  more  time;Íž  it  can  also  buy  new  opportunities.  In  Iran,  the  impetus  for  reforming  its  hostile  and  destabilizing  foreign  policy  comes  from  the  Iranian  people.  Ordinary  Iranians  overwhelming-­ ly  do  not  want  empire;Íž  they  want  economic  reform  and  to  re-­en-­ gage  with  the  world.  For  decades  the  Iranian  middle  class  has  been  VPRWKHUHG ² ÂżUVW E\ D UHYROXWLRQ that  abandoned  their  dreams,  and  then  by  a  regime  that  imposed  the  consequences  of  its  own  bad  be-­ havior  on  their  own  people.  With  this  agreement,  the  Iranian  middle  class  can  continue  to  be  a  factor  in  future  negotiations. If  this  agreement  can  also  bring  even  a  small  measure  of  stability  to  a  long-­troubled  region,  all  the  better. The  instant  critics  of  this  agree-­ ment  are  long  on  scorn  but  short  on  alternatives.  For  the  sake  of  our  national  interests  and  those  of  our  allies,  it  only  makes  sense  that  ZH VKRXOG ÂżUVW VWULYH WR PDNH WKLV work,  instead  of  impulsively  try-­ ing  to  thwart  this  chance. The  president  has  been  unwav-­ ering  in  his  insistence  that  the  goal  of  this  agreement  is  to  prevent  Iran  from  obtaining  a  nuclear  weapon,  and  I  commend  him  for  his  re-­ solve.  It  is  now  up  to  Congress  to  carry  out  its  oversight  responsibil-­ ity  with  hearings  and  a  full  debate,  before  reaching  premature  conclu-­ sions.  We  should  keep  a  clear-­eyed  focus  on  the  real  national  security  interests  at  stake  for  our  country,  and  for  our  allies. Â

Early  dementia  make’s  friend’s  birthday  bittersweet On  July  23  my  best  friend  Maria  will  turn  73.  She  won’t  know  it’s  her  birthday  as  she  suffers  from  early  onset  dementia. In  the  summer  of  2005  as  I  was  preparing  to  move  to  Vermont,  I  was  diagnosed  for  the  second  time  with  breast  cancer.  I  had  already  sold  my  house  and  had  to  be  out  in  six  weeks,  the  surgery  was  in  three  weeks  and  I  had  barely  begun  to  pack. Maria  was  a  trooper.  She  came  every  day  and  we  worked  through Â

labeling  â€”  Vermont  apartment,  Vermont  storage,  Julian,  selling  and  donating.  Since  I  had  sold  my  home  for  an  unbelievable  amount  I  asked  her  what  she  wanted  to  do.  She  said  she  had  always  wanted  to  go  to  the  Westminster  Dog  Show.  And  so  we  did.  Three  days  in  New  York,  a  Broadway  show,  Westminster  DQG WKHQ Ă€HZ XS KHUH IRU D ZHHN so  she  could  see  my  home  here  in  Vermont. She  was  supposed  to  come  back  in  September  2007  but  when  I Â

ADDISON COUNTY

INDEPENDENT Periodicals  Postage  Paid  at  Middlebury,  Vt.  05753

Postmaster,  send  address  change  to  Addison  Independent, 0DSOH 6WUHHW 0LGGOHEXU\ 9HUPRQW ‡ ‡ )D[ ‡ :HE ZZZ DGGLVRQLQGHSHQGHQW FRP ( 0DLO QHZV#DGGLVRQLQGHSHQGHQW FRP ‡ ( 0DLO $GYHUWLVLQJ DGV#DGGLVRQLQGHSHQGHQW FRP 3XEOLVKHG HYHU\ 0RQGD\ 7KXUVGD\ E\ WKH $GGLVRQ 3UHVV ,QF 0HPEHU 9HUPRQW 3UHVV $VVRFLDWLRQ 1HZ (QJODQG 3UHVV $V VRFLDWLRQ 1DWLRQDO 1HZVSDSHU $VVRFLDWLRQ 68%6&5,37,21 5$7(6 9HUPRQWÂą 0RQWKV 0RQWKV 0RQWKV 0RQWKV 2XW RI 6WDWH Âą 0RQWKV 0RQWKV 0RQWKV 0RQWKV 'LVFRXQWHG UDWH IRU 6HQLRU &LWL]HQV FDOO IRU GHWDLOV 7KH ,QGHSHQGHQW DVVXPHV QR ÂżQDQFLDO UHVSRQVLELOLW\ IRU W\SRJUDSKLFDO HUURUV LQ DGYHUWLVHPHQWV EXW ZLOO UHSULQW WKDW SDUW RI DQ DGYHUWLVHPHQW LQ ZKLFK WKH W\SRJUDSKLFDO HUURU RFFXUUHG $GYHUWLVHU ZLOO SOHDVH QRWLI\ WKH PDQDJHPHQW LPPHGLDWHO\ RI DQ\ HUURUV ZKLFK PD\ RFFXU 7KH $GGLVRQ ,QGHSHQGHQW 8636

called  her  in  late  August,  she  didn’t  remember  she  was  coming.  In  the  early  years  we  could  catch  up  on  the  phone  but  that  too  has  been  gone  for  many  years. Happy  birthday,  Maria. Diana  Cotter Middlebury

Foundation  gives  Vermont  high  marks  for  start-­ups By  SAM  HELLER VTDigger.org VERMONT  â€”  The  Kauffman  Foundation  ranked  Vermont  as  the  ¿IWK EHVW VWDWH LQ WKH FRXQWU\ IRU business  startups,  according  to  a  news  release  issued  by  the  Vermont  Department  of  Economic  Develop-­ ment. The  Kauffman  Foundation  is  a  QRQSURÂżW SULYDWH IRXQGDWLRQ IR-­ cused  on  education  and  entrepre-­ neurship.  Their  report,  the  Kauff-­ man  Index  of  Startup  Activity,  evaluated  states  based  three  crite-­ ria:  the  rate  of  new  entrepreneurs  in  the  state;Íž  the  number  of  startup  ¿UPV SHU FDSLWD DQG WKH RSSRUWX-­ nity  share  of  new  entrepreneurs,  or  the  percentage  of  people  who  be-­ came  entrepreneurs  to  take  advan-­

tage  of  an  opportunity,  rather  than  out  of  necessity. According  to  the  report,  Vermont  has  the  third  highest  rate  of  new  entrepreneurs  in  the  country.  Four-­ tenths  of  a  percent  of  Vermont’s  adult  population  on  average  be-­ come  entrepreneurs  over  the  course  of  a  given  month,  the  report  said. The  report  determined  that  79  percent  of  the  state’s  new  business  founders  were  inspired  by  oppor-­ tunity  rather  than  necessity,  plac-­ ing  Vermont  â€œaround  the  midpoint  among  the  states,â€?  according  to  the  press  release. Lastly,  at  157.4  startups  per  100,000  residents,  Vermont  has  the  eighth  highest  startup  density  in  the  nation,  the  report  found.

Letter (Continued  from  Page  4) So  I  hope,  now,  to  call  attention  to  the  many  Middlebury  students  like  me  who  stand  against  the  pro-­pipeline  Middlebury  College  faculty  and  administrators.  While  February  brought  positive  news  that  Vermont  Gas  would  be  scrap-­ ping  plans  for  construction  under  Lake  Champlain  to  Ticonderoga,  N.Y.  (garnering  capital  savings  ex-­ ceeding  $135  million),  Middlebury  &ROOHJH RIÂżFLDOV FRQWLQXH WR SUHDFK a  pro-­pipeline  agenda. They  remain  at  the  fringes  of  the  debate,  remarkably,  all  the  while,  managing  to  greenwash  its  campus  marketing  and  broadcast  a  global  brand  characterized  by  leadership  in  sustainability.  On  wobbly  knees,  Middlebury  has  succeeded  in  this  effort,  but  now  it  seems  the  institu-­ tion  knows  it’s  not  always  easy  moving  from  intention  to  action.  Is  reaching  2016  neutrality  worth  the  professed  marketing  boost? The  college’s  support  of  Docket  7970  is  an  abject  failure,  a  shame  to  the  Middlebury  name.  I  urge  the  Public  Service  Board  to  squash  Vermont  Gas’s  overwrought  energy  vision  for  our  region,  for  good.  This  is  a  precedent-­setting  mo-­ ment  for  our  county,  our  state  and  all  of  New  England.  Giving  in  to Â

Addison County Fair & Field Days

GREEN MOUNTAIN PASSPORT HOLDERS Will be admitted FREE on Tuesday August 4, 2015

big-­energy  corporate  behemoths  OLNH 9HUPRQW *DV ZLOO RQO\ LQĂ€LFW social  and  economic  pains  to  com-­ munities  we  hold  dear.  They  won’t  relieve  them. Zane  H.  Anthony Middlebury  College Class  of  2016 Annapolis,  Md.

Super Summer Savings

Nursery Specials

NEW  9â€?  POTS  just  $9.99

or  2  for  $16.99

1

$

25% OFF Select

TREES, SHRUBS & PERENNIALS Offer  valid  on  in-­stock  items  only  â€“  while  supplies  last.  Now  thru  7/31/15.

NEW Â SHIPMENT Â OF Â HOUSE Â PLANTS!

MIDDLEBURY AGWAY 388 Exchange Street Open

388-4937

7 days

Mon. - Fri. 8-6, Sat. 8-5, Sun. 9-4 www.MiddleburyAgway.com


PAGE  6  â€”  Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015

ADDISON COUNTY

Obituaries

Marie Counter, 64, Panton PANTON  â€”  Marie  Counter,  64,  passed  away  Tuesday,  July  21,  2015,  at  the  Paquins’  home  in  Panton. She  was  born  May  27,  1951,  in  Burlington,  the  daughter  of  Richard  and  Geneva  (Marble)  Counter. She  loved  purses  and  her  posses-­ sions,  getting  out  in  the  community,  eating  out,  car  rides,  gifts  and  cards. Marie  is  survived  by  her  brother,  Dale  Counter  of  Leicester,  and  her  special  aunt,  Eleanor  Counter  of  Winooski. Predeceased  by  a  brother,  David  Counter. Friends  and  family  are  welcome  to  attend  a  celebration  of  life  on  Friday,  Aug.  7,  from  1  to  3  p.m.  at  Community  Associates,  109  Catamount  Park,  0LGGOHEXU\ 97 ¸

MARIE Â COUNTER KAPPA Â DELTA Â RHO Â SOCIAL Â HOUSE Â AT Â 48 Â SOUTH Â ST. Â MIDDLEBURY

Vt. turkey brood survey College  bans  social  house  for  hazing underway -­ with your help MONTPELIER  â€”  Wild  turkeys  are  found  throughout  most  of  Vermont,  but  their  reproductive  success  is  monitored  annually  by  the  Vermont  Fish  &  Wildlife  Department  with  a  little  help  from  â€œcitizen  scien-­ tistsâ€?  who  report  the  number  and  size  of  turkey  families  they  see  during  August. Fish  &  Wildlife  is  again  asking  the  public  for  help.  Anyone  who  sees  a  group  of  young  turkeys  in  Vermont  during  August  is  asked  to  go  to  the  turkey  brood  survey  on  its  website  ZZZ YHUPRQWÂż VKDQGZLOGOLIH FRP to  record  where  and  when  they  observed  the  number  of  adult  and  young  turkeys,  or  poults. “Data  gathered  from  the  survey  will  help  establish  long-­term  trends  in  Vermont’s  turkey  population,â€?  says  Vermont  Fish  &  Wildlife’s  wild  WXUNH\ ELRORJLVW $P\ $OÂż HUL Âł,W will  also  answer  questions  about  the  impacts  of  spring  and  winter  weather  on  the  survival  of  poults  and  adult  turkeys,  which  helps  in  setting  turkey Â

seasons  and  harvest  limits.â€? Over-­abundant  turkey  populations  can  damage  crops  and  food  stored  for  livestock  in  bunker  silos. “We  monitor  Vermont  wild  turkey  numbers  annually  in  order  to  maxi-­ PL]H WKH EHQHÂż WV RI KDYLQJ WXUNH\V while  minimizing  the  liabilities,â€?  says  $OÂż HUL Âł7XUNH\ KXQWLQJ LV D PHFKD nism  for  managing  Vermont’s  turkey  population  within  these  limits.â€? Nearly  5,000  wild  turkeys  were  taken  by  hunters  in  Vermont’s  VSULQJ KXQW $OÂż HUL VD\V WKLV is  slightly  less  than  average,  likely  due  to  the  harsh  winter  conditions  in  many  areas  of  the  state  in  2014. $OÂż HUL VD\V WKLV \HDUÂśV RQOLQH turkey  brood  survey  will  be  espe-­ cially  important  in  determining  the  overall  impacts  of  a  harsh  winter  followed  by  a  wet  spring  on  the  state’s  turkey  reproduction. Âł3OHDVH KHOS XV VFLHQWLÂż FDOO\ manage  the  turkey  population  by  reporting  your  Vermont  turkey  sight-­ LQJV GXULQJ $XJXVW ´ DGGHG $OÂż HUL

Memorials by

To Celebrate and Remember the Life of your loved one. We  offer on-­site engraving  &  cleaning

802-­453-­2226

ZZZ OLYLQJVWRQIDUPODQGVFDSH FR

VISIT US ON FACEBOOK

Credit  Cards  Accepted

$W WKH FRUQHU RI 5WV LQ %ULVWRO ‡ 2SHQ 0 ) 6DW

MIDDLEBURY  â€”  Middlebury  College  has  terminated  the  Kappa  Delta  Rho  (KDR)  coeducational  social  house  following  an  investiga-­ tion  that  uncovered  multiple  viola-­ tions  of  the  college’s  hazing  and  general  conduct  policies. Vice  President  for  Student  Affairs  and  Dean  of  the  College  Katy  Smith  Abbott  informed  the  leadership  and  members  of  the  house  of  the  deci-­ sion  in  a  letter  on  June  25. Middlebury  had  suspended  the  house  on  March  24  following  an  initial  investigation  and  determi-­ nation  that  KDR  members  had  violated  the  college’s  hazing  policy  in  November  2014.  The  violations  reported  then  included  verbal  abuse  and  blindfolding  of  new  members,  and  encouraging  the  use  of  alcohol.  As  part  of  the  suspension,  residential  members  were  required  to  vacate  the  house  and  were  reassigned  to  other  on-­campus  housing. In  April,  subsequent  to  the  suspension,  new  evidence  came  to  light  that  triggered  a  second  formal  investigation.  After  review-­ ing  the  results  of  that  investigation,  and  consulting  with  the  college’s Â

The family of Richard & Simone Lussier would like to extend our gratitude to Addison County Home Health & Hospice, and At Home Senior Care for the gentle and caring services they provided to Simone Lussier during her final days.

Community  Council  organization,  Smith  Abbott  recommended  â€”  and  Middlebury  President  Ronald  Liebowitz  concurred  â€”  that  KDR  be  terminated. The  second  investigation  uncov-­ ered  new  evidence  showing  that  house  members  had  engaged  in  a  pattern  of  behavior  that  violated  the  college’s  hazing  policy  on  multiple  occasions  going  back  to  2013.  It  also  established  that  members  had  engaged  in  an  orchestrated  and  coer-­ cive  effort  to  mislead  Public  Safety  RIÂż FHUV DQG FROOHJH DSSRLQWHG LQYHV tigators  and  to  obstruct  their  work.  Those  actions  were  a  clear  violation  of  Middlebury  College  Student  Life  policies  governing  Respect  for  the  $XWKRULW\ RI 2IÂż FLDOV 6HFWLRQ and  Communicating  with  Honesty  and  Integrity  (Section  6). Information  about  Middlebury’s  general  conduct  and  hazing  policies  is  available  online. In  her  letter,  Smith  Abbott  said:  â€œThe  activities  of  KDR  constitute  extraordinary  and  repeated  violations  of  Middlebury’s  policies.  Regrettably,  we  no  longer  believe  that  it  is  possi-­ ble  for  KDR  to  successfully  reform  New Obituary Guidelines The  Independent  will  publish  paid  obitu-­ aries  and  free  notices  of  passing.  Paid  obituaries  cost  25  cents  per  word  and  will  be  published,  as  submitted,  on  the  date  of  the  family’s  choosing. The  Independent  offers  a  free  notice  of  passing  up  to  100  words,  subject  to  editing  by  our  news  department.  Photos  with  either  paid  obituaries  or  free  notices  cost  $10  per  photo.  Obituaries  may  be  emailed  to  obits@addisonindependent.com,  or  call  802-­388-­4944  for  more  information.

and  to  create  a  positive  impact  on  our  community.â€?  The  KDR  house  at  48  South  St.,  which  is  owned  by  the  college,  will  be  used  for  general  student  housing  starting  in  the  fall  of  2015.  With  its  termination,  Kappa  Delta  Rho  will  no  longer  be  a  recognized  student  organization,  and  no  events,  gatherings  or  functions  related  to  the  organization,  formal  or  informal,  may  take  place  on  or  off  campus. The  termination  of  KDR  brings  to  an  end  a  long  history  for  the  organi-­ zation  at  Middlebury  College.  Kappa  Delta  Rho  was  founded  as  a  frater-­ nity  at  Middlebury  in  1905  in  Painter  Hall.  A  historical  plaque  on  the  build-­ ing  commemorates  the  event.  In  1990,  when  Middlebury  required  that  all  fraternities  become  coeducational,  KDR  was  the  only  one  of  more  than  a  dozen  on  campus  at  the  time  to  do  VR WKRXJK LW ORVW WKH RIÂż FLDO UHFRJQL tion  of  the  national  organization  for  nearly  a  decade.  In  2000,  the  national  organization  again  recognized  the  Middlebury  KDR  social  house  as  its  â€œalphaâ€?  chapter,  albeit  as  the  sole  chapter  of  the  Kappa  Delta  Rho  Society  (as  opposed  to  fraternity).

Funeral, Cremation & Memorial Services, Pre-Planning Services

BROWN-McCLAY FUNERAL HOMES

Bristol 453-2301

Vergennes 877-3321

TRADITION

Where our Roots Are Planted. From humble beginnings based on affordable, trustworthy services, we have grown into a reliable resource your family can depend on. Rooted in our traditions, we stay firmly con nected to the families we serve and the care we provide. We continue serving all faiths and all families in the only way we know how – by staying true to our heritage.

Sanderson-Ducharme Funeral Home 6RXWK 0DLQ 6W 0LGGOHEXU\ 97 ‡ sandersonfuneralservice.com


Addison Independent, Monday, July 27, 2015 — PAGE 7

Dragon Boat Festival is Aug 1-­2 %85/,1*721 ² 7KH 3RUWHU 0HGLFDO &HQWHU 3DGGOHUV 8QLWHG 7HFKQRORJLHV 7HDP 87$6 DQG WKH :RRGFKXFN &LGHU 3LQN 3DGGOHUV DUH UDFLQJ IRU IXQ DQG IXQGUDLVLQJ DW WKH WK DQQXDO /DNH &KDPSODLQ 'UDJRQ %RDW )HVWLYDO DQG 5DFHV 6DWXUGD\ DQG 6XQGD\ $XJ DW %XUOLQJWRQ¶V :DWHUIURQW 3DUN (DFK WHDP LV FRPSRVHG RI SDGGOHUV DQG D GUXP PHU 7HDPV UDFH LQ D IXOO VSULQW KHDG WR KHDG LQ IRRW ORQJ GUDJRQ ERDWV RYHU D PHWHU FRXUVH 2Q 6XQGD\ WKHUH ZLOO EH FRPPXQLW\ DQG EUHDVW FDQFHU VXUYL YRU WHDPV FRPSHWLQJ ² RYHU SDGGOHUV 6XQGD\¶V UDFHV VWDUW DW D P DQG FRQFOXGH DW DURXQG S P ZLWK WKH SUHVHQWDWLRQ RI WKH &KDPS &XS FURZQLQJ WKH FKDPSLRQV 7KH HYHQW LV IUHH DQG RSHQ WR WKH SXEOLF ZLWK HQWHUWDLQ PHQW JUHDW IRRG SUL]H GUDZLQJV DQG UDIÀ HV 6DWXUGD\ DIWHUQRRQ IHDWXUHV EUHDVW FDQFHU VXUYLYRU WHDPV IURP DOO RYHU WKH 8 6 DQG &DQDGD

SOXV 9HUPRQW¶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

Grant (Continued from Page 1) grants since 2009, when the school ZDV ¿ UVW DZDUGHG WR support programming. ,Q 98+6 ZDV DZDUGHG D JUDQW WKDW ZDV H[SDQGHG LQ ZKHQ 98(6 FDPH DERDUG WR RIIHU its own summer programming to 9HUJHQQHV DQG )HUULVEXUJK \RXQJ sters;; that grant now totals the 98+6 UHFHLYHG IRU WKH VFKRRO \HDU DQG WKH WZR VFKRROV DUH VKDULQJ LQ HDFK RI WKH QH[W WZR VFKRRO \HDUV EHJLQ ning this summer. 7KDW QXPEHU ZLOO JUDGXDOO\ GURS XQWLO WKH JUDQW FRQFOXGHV LQ WKH VFKRRO \HDU ZLWK D

EHTXHVW ,Q WKH VFKRROV ZLOO VKDUH The summer programming is QRZ FDOOHG ³6XPPHU )XVLRQ´ DQG LV FRRUGLQDWHG DW 98+6 E\ -LOO 6WUXEH DOVR WKH RYHUDOO SURJUDP GLUHFWRU 7DUD %URRNV LV KDQGOLQJ WKDW WDVN DW 98(6 6WUXEH VDLG WKH VFKRROV DUH ZHOFRPH WR UH DSSO\ IRU IXQGLQJ IRU EXW WKH PD[LPXP DZDUG SHU \HDU ZLOO EH SHUFHQW RI WKH RU /RFDO IXQGLQJ ZLOO KDYH WR PDNH XS WKH GLIIHUHQFH LI $GGLVRQ 1RUWKZHVW 6XSHUYLVRU\ 8QLRQ DQG VFKRRO RI¿ FLDOV ZLVK WR UHWDLQ WKH programming. 6WUXEH VDLG VWXGLHV UHJXODUO\ VKRZ

RXU FRPPXQLW\ WKURXJK 'UDJRQKHDUW 9HUPRQW DQG 6XUYLYRUVKLS 12:¶V cancer wellness programs. 7KH FRUH RI 'UDJRQKHDUW 9HUPRQW¶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health care institutions in our area. 9LVLW ZZZ VXUYLYRUVKLSQRZ97 RUJ IRU FRPSOHWH SURJUDP LQIRUPDWLRQ

BUSINESSBRIEFS

ADDISON COUNTY

Jon Ashley hired as senior engineer at DuBois & King

5$1'2/3+ ² 'X%RLV VLWH UHPHGLDWLRQ SHUPLWWLQJ DQG .LQJ FRQVXOWLQJ HQJLQHHUV HQJLQHHULQJ VHUYLFHV IRU URDG DQQRXQFH WKDW -RQ $VKOH\ KDV ZD\V VORSH VWDELOLW\ VWRUPZDWHU MRLQHG WKH ILUP DV D VHQLRU FLYLO DQG ZDWHU VHZHU SURMHFWV WKURXJK HQYLURQPHQWDO HQJLQHHU $VKOH\ RXW 9HUPRQW DQG 1HZ <RUN KDV \HDUV RI SURIHVVLRQDO H[SH $VKOH\ D UHVLGHQW RI :KLWLQJ VWXGHQWV ZKR SDUWLFLSDWH LQ DIWHU ULHQFH LQFOXGLQJ VLWH GHYHORS ZRUNV RXW RI WKH ILUP¶V 5DQGROSK VFKRRO SURJUDPV WHQG WR LPSURYH PHQW EURZQILHOG DQG KD]DUGRXV RIILFH WKHLU DFDGHPLF DFKLHYHPHQW DQG DWWHQGDQFH UDWHV 7KLV VXPPHU WKH 6XPPHU )XVLRQ SURJUDP LV VHUYLQJ VWXGHQWV DW 98+6 DQG DW 98(6 6WUXEH VDLG 7KH FRXUVH OLVW DW 98+6 4BUVSEBZ "VHVTU ſ Ŷ QN ſ 3"*/ 03 4)*/& LQFOXGHV ³3UHSDULQJ IRU WKH =RPELH Cornwall Town Green & Congregational Church $SRFDO\SVH´ VHH VWRU\ RQ 3DJH ³6FLHQFH RI )OLJKW ´ ³'LJLWDO #MVFCFSSZ $PCCMFS XJUI *DF $SFBN ſ #MVFCFSSZ 4VOEBFT ſ ,JETŹ 'VO 3KRWRJUDSK\ ´ ³0DG 6FLHQWLVW ´ (PPET 4FSWJDFT 3BƐFT ſ #BLFE (PPET 5BCMF ſ -JWF .VTJD ³'ROODUV DQG 6HQVH ´ ³.¶1H[ WKH 'RWV ´ ³6XPPHU 'HVLJQ &KDOOHQJH ´ 2VFTUJPOT $BMM ³%XLOG DQG 'HVLJQ ´ DQG ³&DSWXULQJ 6WRULHV $ 9LGHR 3URMHFW´ IRU PLGGOH VFKRRO VWXGHQWV DQG IRU KLJK VFKRRO VWXGHQWV WZR 6$7 SUHS RIIHULQJV DQG WZR FUHGLW UHFRYHU\ FODVVHV *DPHV

Blueberry Festival & Family Day

)RRG RXVH %RXQF\ + 5DIIOHV

Free Community Event Sunday, August 2nd 4pm - 7pm 2nd Annual Summer Cook-out! Hot Dogs, Burgers, Side Dishes and Drinks! See you then! Follow us on facebook or our website at www.videoqueen14.com

5W 6RXWK 0LGGOHEXU\

Music Lessons Guitar, Electric Bass, Drums Beginner Piano (adults) All Ages Welcome 25 years of experience Skill + Theory = Fun! Check out my website at boblevinson.com

802-877-2649


PAGE  8  â€”  Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015

communityc a l e n d a r

Jul

27

Exhibit  opening  reception  in  Middlebury.  Monday,  July  27,  5-­7  p.m.,  Jackson  Gallery  at  Town  Hall  Theater.  Celebrating  the  â€œDinerâ€?  series  oil  paint-­ ings  of  Constance  â€œTancyâ€?  Holden.  The  annual  Constance  Holden  Memorial  Concert  takes  place  upstairs  in  the  THT  at  7:30  p.m.  Exhibit  runs  through  Aug.  6.  Info:  802-­382-­9222. Band  concert  in  Brandon.  Monday,  July  27,  6:30  p.m.,  Central  Park  bandstand.  Rain  loca-­ tion:  Brandon  Town  Hall.  To  join  the  band,  call  247-­4559. Band  concert  in  Vergennes.  Monday,  July  27,  7  p.m.,  Vergennes  City  Park.  Weekly  summer  band  concert  by  the  Vergennes  City  Band. Point  CounterPoint  faculty  concert  in  Middlebury.  Monday,  July  27,  7:30  p.m.,  Town  Hall  Theater.  The  Aeolus  Quartet  plays  at  the  annual  Constance  Holden  Memorial  Concert,  performing  Haydn’s  Quartet  No.  55  in  D  Major,  Turina’s  Piano  Trio  No.  2  in  B  minor,  Opus  76,  and  Bartok’s  String  Quartet  No.  2.

Jul

28

TUESDAY

Pre-­K/kindergarten  story  time  in  East  Middlebury.  Tuesday,  July  28,  10:30-­11:15  a.m.,  Sarah  Partridge  Library,  431  East  Main  St.  Weekly  summer  story  and  take-­home  craft  time  for  young  children.  Info:  388-­7588. Ukulele  lessons  for  kids  in  Middlebury.  Tuesday,  July  28,  10:30  a.m.,  Ilsley  Library.  Dayve  Huckett  of  the  Middlebury  Community  Music  Center  will  teach  kids  in  grades  K-­2,  accompanied  by  an  adult,  to  play  ukulele.  Advance  registration  required:  388-­4097. Marble  run  workshop  for  kids  in  Middlebury.  Tuesday,  July  28,  1:30-­3  p.m.,  Ilsley  Library.  Kids  9  and  older  are  invited  to  build  a  marble  run  out  of  cardboard  and  tubes.  Info:  388-­4097. Movie  matinee  build-­along  in  Orwell.  Tuesday,  July  28,  2  p.m.,  Orwell  Free  Library.  Children  are  invited  to  bring  Legos  and  a  friend  and  build  creations  while  watching  a  movie.  Info:  948-­2041. South  Royalton  Band  in  concert  in  Hancock.  Tuesday,  July  28,  6:30  p.m.,  Hancock  bandstand.  All  are  invited.  Bring  a  picnic  dinner.  No  alcohol.  Ukulele  lessons  for  tweens  in  Middlebury.  Tuesday,  July  28,  7  p.m.,  Ilsley  Library.  Kids  9  or  older  (9-­13  accompanied  by  an  adult)  are  invited  to  learn  to  play  ukulele  with  Lloyd  H.  Miller.  Advance  registration  required  at  the  Adult  Circulation  desk.  Info:  388-­4097.  The  Bread  Loaf  Acting  Ensemble  on  stage  in  Ripton.  Tuesday,  July  28,  8  p.m.,  Middlebury  College  Bread  Loaf  Campus,  Burgess  Meredith  Little  Theater.  The  ensemble  presents  Harper  Lee’s  â€œTo  Kill  a  Mockingbird,â€?  adapted  by  Christopher  Sergel.  Brief  discussion  follows.  Tickets  available  at  802-­443-­2771.  Info:  www. middlebury.edu/blse/theater.  Runs  through  Aug.  2. “Cast  Partyâ€?  variety  show  broadcast  in  Middlebury.  Tuesday,  July  28,  8  p.m.,  Town  Hall  Theater.  Live  broadcast  of  the  â€œLollapalooza  of  podcasts,â€?  celebrating  the  emergence  of  podcast-­ ing  as  a  powerhouse  medium  with  millions  of  obsessed  fans.  Includes  stories  and  perfor-­ mances  from  â€œRadiolab,â€?  â€œInvisibilia,â€?  â€œReply  All,â€?  and  more.  Tickets  $15,  available  at  the  THT  box  RIÂż FH RU ZZZ WRZQKDOOWKHDWHU RUJ

Jul

29

Info:  www.middlebury.edu/blse/theater.  Runs  through  Aug.  2. Middlebury. Friday,  â€œGreater  Tunaâ€?  on  stage  in  Middlebury.  July  31,  8  p.m.,  A.R.T.  Black  Box  Theater,  Hannaford  Career  Center.  Hilarious  two-­man  off-­Broadway  hit,  starring  Steve  Small  and  Harry  McEnerney,  about  Tuna,  the  third-­smallest  town  in  Texas.  Tickets  $22,  available  at  802-­382-­9222  or  www.townhalltheater.org.  Runs  through  Aug.  2.

MONDAY

WEDNESDAY

Live  animal  presentation  for  kids  in  Middlebury.  Wednesday,  July  29,  10:30  a.m.,  Ilsley  Library.  The  Southern  Vermont  Natural  History  Museum  presents  â€œSuper  Animals.â€?  Tickets  available  two  weeks  in  advance  at  the  Youth  Services  desk.  Info:  388-­4097. Recreation  activities  for  kids  in  Bristol.  Wednesday,  July  29,  12:30-­3:30  p.m.,  Bristol  town  park,  near  the  playground.  Join  the  Bristol  Rec  Department  and  members  of  the  Vermont  Fish  and  Wildlife  Department  to  learn  about  ecology,  FDVWLQJ Âż VKLQJ NQRW W\LQJ DQG OXUHV )UHH OXQFK included.  Weather  permitting.  Info:  453-­5885.   Wednesday  Workshop  for  kids  in  Bristol. Â

Aug

1

Young  talent

 Gonzalez  are  Shad-­  Cacciatore  and  Matias  Van  Order livia O ,  EFT L ,  CKE ROU B ON  SIM iddlebury  on  Thurs-­ riginal  indie  rock  at  51  Main  in  M ed  Gray.  The  band  will  play  its  o day,  July  30,  from  8-­10  p.m.

Wednesday,  July  29,  2-­4:30  p.m.,  Lawrence  Memorial  Library.  Kids  8  and  older  are  invited  to  take  part  in  a  storytelling  workshop.  Create  your  own  hero  story  with  a  story  pocket.  Snack  provided.  Sign  up  required  at  453-­2366  or  lmlkids009@gmail.com. Band  concert  in  Bristol.  Wednesday,  July  29,  7  p.m.,  Bristol  town  green.  Weekly  summer  band  concert  on  the  gazebo.  Bring  a  lawn  chair  or  blan-­ ket,  and  a  picnic  dinner. “Middlebury’s  Got  Talentâ€?  auditions  in  Middlebury.  Wednesday,  July  29,  7-­10  p.m.,  Town  Hall  Theater.  All  ages  and  talents  welcome  to  audition  for  this  annual  talent  show.  Email  Doug  Anderson  at  executivedirector@townhalltheater. org  for  an  audition  time.  Performance  dates:  Aug.  22  and  23. The  Bread  Loaf  Acting  Ensemble  on  stage  in  Ripton.  Wednesday,  July  29,  8  p.m.,  Middlebury  College  Bread  Loaf  Campus,  Burgess  Meredith  Little  Theater.  The  ensemble  presents  Harper  Lee’s  â€œTo  Kill  a  Mockingbird,â€?  adapted  by  Christopher  Sergel.  Brief  discussion  follows.  Tickets  available  at  802-­443-­2771.  Info:  www. middlebury.edu/blse/theater.  Runs  through  Aug.  2. Family  Movie  Night  in  Vergennes.  Wednesday,  July  29,  8  p.m.,  behind  Bixby  Library,  258  Main  St.  Bring  a  chair  to  sit  outside  and  enjoy  â€œThe  Painted  Hills,â€?  a  1951  Lassie  MGM  classic.  Snacks  avail-­ able.  Info:  802-­877-­2211.

Jul

30

THURSDAY

Itsy  Bitsy  Yoga  drop-­in  program  for  kids  in  Middlebury.  Thursday,  July  30,  10:30  a.m.,  Ilsley  Library.  Kids  from  birth  to  4  years  are  invited  to  participate.  Info:  388-­4097. Kids’  craft  and  â€œbook  bitesâ€?  drop-­in  time  in  East  Middlebury.  Thursday,  July  30,  3:30-­5  p.m.,  Sarah  Partridge  Library,  431  East  Main  St.  Elementary-­age  children  are  invited  for  craft  time,  while  tweens  and  teens  are  invited  for  â€œbook  bites.â€?  Info:  388-­7588.  The  Bread  Loaf  Acting  Ensemble  on  stage  in  Ripton.  Thursday,  July  30,  8  p.m.,  Middlebury  College  Bread  Loaf  Campus,  Burgess  Meredith  Little  Theater.  The  ensemble  presents  â€œBlues  for  Mister  Charlieâ€?  by  James  Baldwin.  Brief  discus-­ sion  follows.  Tickets  available  at  802-­443-­2771.  Info:  www.middlebury.edu/blse/theater.  Runs  through  Aug.  2. “Greater  Tunaâ€?  on  stage  in  Middlebury.  Thursday,  July  30,  8  p.m.,  A.R.T.  Black  Box  Theater,  Hannaford  Career  Center.  Hilarious  two-­man  off-­Broadway  hit,  starring  Steve  Small  and  Harry  McEnerney,  about  Tuna,  the  third-­smallest  town  in  Texas.  Tickets  $22,  available  at  802-­382-­9222  or  www.townhalltheater.org.  Runs  through  Aug.  2. “Despicable  Meâ€?  on  screen  outdoors  in  Bristol.  Thursday,  July  30,  starting  at  dark,  Bristol  town  park.  The  Bristol  Rec  Department  brings  another Â

VXPPHU RI 0RYLHV LQ WKH 3DUN Âż OP FODVVLFV shown  outside  on  a  theater-­sized  screen.  Free.  Bring  a  blanket  and  bug  spray. Â

Jul

31

FRIDAY

“Family  Fridaysâ€?  craft  activity  in  Ferrisburgh.  Friday,  July  31,  10  a.m.-­ noon,  Rokeby  Museum.  â€œWeekly  summer  make-­and-­take  craft  program.  Cost  $3  per  participant  or  free  with  museum  admission.  Info:  802-­877-­3406  or  rokeby@comcast.net.  Kids’  drop-­in  story  time  in  Middlebury.  Friday,  July  31,  10:30  a.m.,  Ilsley  Library  garden.  Kids  from  birth  to  age  4  are  invited  to  enjoy  a  story  in  the  library’s  beautiful  garden.  Info:  388-­4097. Senior  luncheon  in  Middlebury.  Friday,  July  31,  11:30  a.m.,  Rosie’s  Restaurant.  CVAA  and  Rosie’s  partner  to  offer  a  hearty  noon  meal  of  tuna  salad  cold  plate  with  assorted  salads,  fresh  fruit  and  a  cookie.  Suggested  donation  $5.  Reservations  required:  1-­800-­642-­5119,  ext.  615.  Carillon  concert  at  Middlebury  College.  Friday,  July  31,  5  p.m.,  Mead  Chapel  and  surround-­ ing  grounds.  Elena  Sadina,  instructor  at  the  Middlebury  College  Language  Schools  and  the  Royal  Carillon  School  in  Mechelen,  Belgium,  performs.  Info:  443-­3168  or  www.middlebury.edu/ arts.  StoryMatters  gathering  in  Middlebury.  Friday,  July  31,  5:30-­6:30  p.m.,  Ilsley  Library.  Storytellers  and  listeners  are  invited  to  this  gathering,  with  the  theme  â€œAh,  Yes.  Every  Hero  Has  a  Story.â€?  â€œAn  Evening  to  Rememberâ€?  social  in  Addison.  Friday,  July  31,  6-­8  p.m.,  Chimney  Point  State  Historic  Site,  Addison.  Thirteenth  annual  evening  social.  Spend  a  relaxing  summer  evening  in  an  old  resort  on  Lake  Champlain.  Museum,  music,  children’s  activities,  historic  re-­enactors  from  Chimney  Point’s  past.  Info:  759-­2412.  Summer  concert  series  in  Brandon.  Friday,  July  31,  6  p.m.,  Central  Park  bandstand.  The  Brandon  Chamber  of  Commerce  presents  Shellhouse  playing  a  concert  of  current  and  classic  rock.  Free.  Rain  location:  Center  Street  Bar  dining  room.  Family-­friendly  movie  night  in  Middlebury.  Friday,  July  31,  6:30  p.m.,  Ilsley  Library.  Movies  selected  by  patrons;Íž  stop  by  the  children’s  room  to  vote  for  your  pick.  Info:  388-­4097. Summer  Performance  Series  in  Salisbury.  Friday,  July  31,  7:30  p.m.,  Salisbury  Congregational  Church.  Presenting  â€œA  Jazz  Conversation.â€?  Dick  Forman  on  piano  and  Mark  Harding  on  guitar  and  bass  play  jazz  standards  and  selections  from  the  Great  American  Songbook.  Free.  Free-­will  dona-­ tions  appreciated.  The  Bread  Loaf  Acting  Ensemble  on  stage  in  Ripton.  Friday,  July  31,  8  p.m.,  Middlebury  College  Bread  Loaf  Campus,  Burgess  Meredith  Little  Theater.  The  ensemble  presents  â€œBlues  for  Mister  Charlieâ€?  by  James  Baldwin.  Brief  discus-­ sion  follows.  Tickets  available  at  802-­443-­2771. Â

SATURDAY

Green  Mountain  Club  hike  in  Lincoln.  Saturday,  Aug.  1,  time  TBA,  Mount  Abraham.  The  GMC  Bread  Loaf  Section  hosts  a  strenuous  hike  up  Mount  Abe.  Elevation  gain  2,500  feet  leading  to  360-­degree  views.  Contact  Mike  Greenwood  for  info:  mike802vt@comcast.net  or  802-­989-­7434.  More  at  www.gmcbreadloaf.org. Town-­wide  yard  sale  in  Brandon.  Town-­wide  yard  sale  in  Brandon.  Saturday,  Aug.  1,  9  a.m.,  throughout  Brandon.  Sidewalk  sales  and  town-­wide  yard  sales.  Rain  or  shine.  Map  available  Aug.  1  at  the  Brandon  Museum  and  Visitor  Center,  4  Grove  St.  Info:  247-­6401. Superhero  Training  Day  and  library  celebration  in  Orwell.  Saturday,  Aug.  1,  11  a.m.,  Orwell  Free  Library.  Children  of  all  ages  can  show  off  their  superhero  skills  at  this  mini-­Spartan  race,  and  stay  for  lunch.  Free.  Info:  948-­2041. Summer  reading  program  celebration  in  Shoreham.  Saturday,  Aug.  1,  1-­3  p.m.,  Platt  Memorial  Library.  Wrapping  up  the  program  with  Superhero  Training  School,  for  kids  ages  3-­18  ZKR FRPSOHWH WKH SURJUDP DQG UHDG DW OHDVW Âż YH books.  Lunch  served.  Info:  www.plattlib.org  or  802-­897-­2647. Blueberry  festival  in  Cornwall.  Saturday,  Aug.  1,  1-­4  p.m.,  Cornwall  town  center.  Third  annual  event  featuring  homemade  blueberry  cobbler  with  ice  cream,  as  well  as  blueberry  sundaes.  Both  %OXHEHUU\ WKHPHG EDNH VDOH WDEOH SOXV UDIĂ€ H music  and  activities,  including  face  painting  and  balloon  toss.  Free.  Rain  or  shine.  Info:  betsys-­ tine@gmail.com  or  802-­349-­3878. The  Bread  Loaf  Acting  Ensemble  on  stage  in  Ripton.  Saturday,  Aug.  1,  2  p.m.,  Middlebury  College  Bread  Loaf  Campus,  Burgess  Meredith  Little  Theater.  The  ensemble  presents  Harper  Lee’s  â€œTo  Kill  a  Mockingbird,â€?  adapted  by  Christopher  Sergel.  Brief  discussion  follows. Â

Sis-­boom-­bah! HARRY  MCENERNY  TURNS  Texas  cheerleader  in  one  of  10  roles  he  plays  in  the  Middlebury  Actors  Workshop  produc-­ tion  of  â€œGreater  Tunaâ€?  at  A.R.T.’s  black  box  theater  at  the  Hannaford  Career  Cen-­ ter  in  Middlebury.  The  hilarious  two-­man  show,  in  which  co-­star  Steve  Small  also  plays  10  characters,  opened  Thursday,  July  23,  and  runs  through  Aug.  2. Independent  photo/Trent  Campbell


Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015  â€”  PAGE  9

communityc a l e n d a r

Bluegrass  bonanza THE  CONNOR  SISTERS  and  Snake  Mountain  Bluegrass  perform  at  Brandon  Music  on  Saturday,  Aug.  1,  at  7:30  p.m.

Tickets  available  at  802-­443-­2771.  Info:  www. middlebury.edu/blse/theater.  Runs  through  Aug.  2. Sweet  Briar  College  victory  party  in   Middlebury.  Saturday,  Aug.  1,  5-­9  p.m.,  Two  Brothers  Tavern.  Live  entertainment  by  the  Diamond  Blues  Band,  SOXV GRRU SUL]HV DQG UDIĂ€ H )UHH DGPLVVLRQ ,QIR www.savingsweetbriar.com.  Addison  County  Gospel  Choir  concert  in  Bristol.  6DWXUGD\ $XJ S P %ULVWRO )HGHUDWHG Church.  â€œGreatest  Hits!â€?  is  a  selection  of  popular  songs  from  past  concerts.  Choir  features  over  30  singers  and  a  traditional  gospel  band  of  piano,  guitar,  drums  and  bass,  with  talented  soloists. Snake  Mountain  Bluegrass  &  The  Connor  Sisters  in  concert  in  Brandon.  Saturday,  Aug.  1,  7:30  p.m.,  Brandon  Music.  The  best  of  modern  and  traditional  bluegrass.  Tickets  $20.  Reservations  recommended  at  802-­247-­4295  or  info@brandon-­music.net.  â€œGreater  Tunaâ€?  on  stage  in  Middlebury.  Saturday,  Aug.  1,  8  p.m.,  A.R.T.  Black  Box  Theater,  Hannaford  Career  Center.  Hilarious  two-­man  off-­Broadway  hit,  starring  Steve  Small  and  Harry  McEnerney,  about  Tuna,  the  third-­smallest  town  in  Texas.  Tickets  $22,  available  at  802-­382-­9222  or  www.townhalltheater.org.  Runs  through  Aug.  2. The  Bread  Loaf  Acting  Ensemble  on  stage  in  Ripton.  Saturday,  Aug.  1,  8  p.m.,  Middlebury  College  Bread  Loaf  Campus,  Burgess  Meredith  Little  Theater.  The  ensemble  presents  â€œBlues  for  Mister  Charlieâ€?  by  James  Baldwin.  Brief  discus-­ sion  follows.  Tickets  available  at  802-­443-­2771.  Info:  www.middlebury.edu/blse/theater.  Runs  through  Aug.  2.

Aug

2

SUNDAY

The  Bread  Loaf  Acting  Ensemble  on  stage  in  Ripton.  Sunday,  Aug.  2,  2  p.m.,  Middlebury  College  Bread  Loaf  Campus,  Burgess  Meredith  Little  Theater.  The  ensemble  presents  Harper  Lee’s  â€œTo  Kill  a  Mockingbird,â€?  adapted  by  Christopher  Sergel.  Brief  discussion  follows.  Tickets  available  at  802-­443-­2771.  Info:  www.middlebury.edu/blse/ theater.  Runs  through  Aug.  2. “Greater  Tunaâ€?  on  stage  in  Middlebury.  Sunday,  Aug.  2,  2  p.m.,  A.R.T.  Black  Box  Theater,  Hannaford  Career  Center.  Hilarious  two-­man  off-­Broadway  hit,  starring  Steve  Small  and  Harry  McEnerney,  about  Tuna,  the  third-­smallest  town  in  Texas.  Tickets  $22,  available  at  802-­382-­9222 Â

or  www.townhalltheater.org.  Runs  through  Aug.  2. Addison  County  Gospel  Choir  concert  in  Vergennes.  Sunday,  Aug.  2,  6-­7:30  p.m.,  Victory  Baptist  Church.  â€œGreatest  Hits!â€?  is  a  selection  of  popular  songs  from  past  concerts.  Choir  features  over  30  singers  and  a  traditional  gospel  band  of  piano,  guitar,  drums  and  bass,  with  talented  soloists. The  Bread  Loaf  Acting  Ensemble  on  stage  in  Ripton.  Sunday,  Aug.  2,  8  p.m.,  Middlebury  College  Bread  Loaf  Campus,  Burgess  Meredith  Little  Theater.  The  ensemble  presents  â€œBlues  for  Mister  Charlieâ€?  by  James  Baldwin.  Brief  discus-­ sion  follows.  Tickets  available  at  802-­443-­2771.  Info:  www.middlebury.edu/blse/theater.  Runs  through  Aug.  2.

Aug

3

MONDAY

Band  concert  in  Brandon.  Monday,  Aug.  3,  6:30  p.m.,  Central  Park  band-­ stand.  Rain  location:  Brandon  Town  Hall.  To  join  the  band,  call  247-­4559. Very  Merry  Theatre  teen  production  in  Bristol.  Monday,  Aug.  3,  6:30  p.m.,  Bristol  village  green.  Presenting  â€œThe  Sound  of  Music,â€?  performed  on  WKH FRPSDQ\ÂśV WUDYHOLQJ ZDJRQ VWDJH )UHH 5DLQ location  Holley  Hall.  Band  concert  in  Vergennes.  Monday,  Aug.  3,  7  p.m.,  Vergennes  City  Park.  Weekly  summer  band  concert  by  the  Vergennes  City  Band.

Aug

4

TUESDAY

Addison  County  Fair  and  Field  Days  in  New  Haven.  Tuesday,  Aug.  4,  DOO GD\ )LHOG 'D\V IDLUJURXQGV 9HUPRQWÂśV largest  agricultural  fair.  Runs  Aug.  4-­8.  Info:  www. DGGLVRQFRXQW\Âż HOGGD\V FRP 5XQV $XJ Ukulele  lessons  for  kids  in  Middlebury.  Tuesday,  Aug.  4,  10:30  a.m.,  Ilsley  Library.  Dayve  Huckett  of  the  Middlebury  Community  Music  Center  will  teach  kids  in  grades  K-­2,  accompanied  by  an  adult,  to  play  ukulele.  Advance  registration  required:  388-­4097. Clay  charm-­making  workshop  for  kids  in  Middlebury.  Tuesday,  Aug.  4,  1:30-­3  p.m.,  Ilsley  Library.  Kids  9  and  older  are  invited  to  squish,  roll,  stretch  clay  to  make  miniature  clay  charms  with  the  library’s  own  Kathryn.  Info:  388-­4095. Ukulele  lessons  for  tweens  in  Middlebury. Â

Tuesday,  Aug.  4,  7  p.m.,  Ilsley  Library.  Kids  9  or  older  (9-­13  accompanied  by  an  adult)  are  invited  to  learn  to  play  ukulele  with  Lloyd  H.  Miller.  Advance  registration  required  at  the  Adult  Circulation  desk.  Info:  388-­4097. Â

Aug

5

WEDNESDAY

Addison  County  Fair  and  Field  Days  in  New  Haven.  Wednesday,  $XJ DOO GD\ )LHOG 'D\V IDLUJURXQGV Vermont’s  largest  agricultural  fair.  Runs  Aug.  4-­8.  ,QIR ZZZ DGGLVRQFRXQW\Âż HOGGD\V FRP 5XQV Aug.  4-­8. Recreation  activities  for  kids  in  Bristol.  Wednesday,  Aug.  5,  12:30-­1:30  p.m.,  Bristol  town  park,  near  the  playground.  Join  the  Bristol  Rec  'HSDUWPHQW IRU Âł,WÂśV D :(7 (YHQW ´ )UHH OXQFK included.  Weather  permitting.  Info:  453-­5885.   Wednesday  Workshop  for  kids  in  Bristol.  Wednesday,  July  1,  2-­4:30  p.m.,  Lawrence  Memorial  Library.  Kids  8  and  older  are  invited  to  take  part  in  â€œPod  Casts:  The  Platypus  Police  Academy.â€?  Strong  characters,  sound  effects  and  drama  all  included.  Snack  provided.  Sign  up  required  at  453-­2366  or  lmlkids009@gmail.com. Band  concert  in  Bristol.  Wednesday,  Aug.  5,  7  p.m.,  Bristol  town  green.  Weekly  summer  band  concert  on  the  gazebo.  Bring  a  lawn  chair  or  blan-­ ket,  and  a  picnic  dinner. Historical  society  program  on  Newton  Academy  in  Shoreham.  Wednesday,  Aug.  5,  7  p.m.,  Platt  Memorial  Library.  The  library  and  the  Shoreham  Historical  Society  welcome  E.L.  Barnard,  who  will  discuss  his  book,  a  history  and  memoir  of  Newton  Academy.  Info:  www.plattlib.org  or  802-­897-­2647.

Aug

6

THURSDAY

Addison  County  Fair  and  Field  Days  in  New  Haven.  Thursday,  Aug.  6,  DOO GD\ )LHOG 'D\V IDLUJURXQGV 9HUPRQWÂśV largest  agricultural  fair.  Runs  Aug.  4-­8.  Info:  www. DGGLVRQFRXQW\Âż HOGGD\V FRP 5XQV $XJ Itsy  Bitsy  Yoga  drop-­in  program  for  kids  in  Middlebury.  Thursday,  Aug.  6,  10:30  a.m.,  Ilsley  Library.  Kids  from  birth  to  4  years  are  invited  to  participate.  Info:  388-­4097. Senior  meal  in  Bristol.  Thursday,  Aug.  6,  noon,  )LUVW %DSWLVW &KXUFK RI %ULVWRO 7KLV PRQWKÂśV menu:  baked  beans,  potato  salad,  coleslaw, Â

cottage  cheese,  homemade  rolls  and  ice  cream  with  maple  drizzle.  Suggested  donation  $4.  Sign  up:  453-­5276. Pete  Seeger  memorial  concert  in  Hancock.  Thursday,  Aug.  6,  6:30  p.m.,  Hancock  town  JUHHQ )RON PXVLF IURP &DPS .LOORROHHW DQG ORFDO musicians.

LIVEMUSIC Abby  Jenne  &  the  Bessette  Quartet  in  New  Haven. )ULGD\ -XO\ S P /LQFROQ 3HDN Vineyard.  Shaded  Gray  in  Middlebury.  Thursday,  July  30,  8-­10  p.m.,  51  Main. The  Eskimo  Brothers. )ULGD\ -XO\ S P Two  Brothers  Tavern. David  Bain  and  Mimi  Bain:  Roots,  Family  Style  in  Middlebury.  )ULGD\ -XO\ S P Main. Binger  in  Middlebury.  Saturday,  Aug.  1,  9  p.m.,  Two  Brothers  Tavern. The  Horse  Traders  in  New  Haven. )ULGD\ $XJ 7,  6-­8  p.m.,  Lincoln  Peak  Vineyard. Cooper  &  LaVoie  in  Middlebury. )ULGD\ $XJ 6  p.m.,  Two  Brothers  Tavern. Oak  Totem  Trio  in  Middlebury.  Saturday,  Aug.  8,  6  p.m.,  Two  Brothers  Tavern. The  Starline  Rhythm  Boys  in  Middlebury.  )ULGD\ $XJ S P 7ZR %URWKHUV 7DYHUQ Driftwood  in  Middlebury.  Saturday,  Aug.  15,  6  p.m.,  Two  Brothers  Tavern. Joe  Moore  Band  in  Middlebury.  Saturday,  Aug.  15,  9  p.m.,  Two  Brothers  Tavern.  Dale  Cavanaugh  in  Middlebury.  Tuesday,  Aug.  18,  6  p.m.,  Two  Brothers  Tavern. BandAnna  in  New  Haven. )ULGD\ $XJ p.m.,  Lincoln  Peak  Vineyard. Under  the  Willow  in  Middlebury. )ULGD\ $XJ 21,  9  p.m.,  Two  Brothers  Tavern.  Starline  Rhythm  Boys  in  New  Haven. )ULGD\ Aug.  28,  6-­8  p.m.,  Lincoln  Peak  Vineyard. Mellow  Yellow  in  New  Haven. )ULGD\ 6HSW 6-­8  p.m.,  Lincoln  Peak  Vineyard. See  a  full  listing  of Â

ONG OING EV EN T S in  the  Thursday  edition  of  the

Addison Independent and  on  the  Web  at

www.addisonindependent.com


PAGE  10  â€”  Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015

‘Wine Down’ with sweet vocals and tight grooves Abby  Jenne  and  the  Bessette  a  festive,  rousing  original  variety  Quartet  will  perform  at  Lincoln  Peak  show  beamed  live  via  satellite  into  Vineyard  on  Friday  from  6  to  8  p.m.  Middlebury’s  Town  Hall  Theater  at  The  group  performs  jazz  clas-­ 8  p.m. sics  and  swing  favorites,  with  some  â€œCast  Partyâ€?  will  feature  brand  rock  and  blues.  With  songs  ranging  new  stories  and  performances  by  from  Cole  Porter  to  Adele,  Jenne’s  WNYC’s  dynamo  â€œRadiolabâ€?;Íž  strong  and  sweet  vocals  are  comple-­ NPR’s  newest  mega-­hit,  â€œInvisibil-­ mented  by  the  tight  grooves  of  Bes-­ iaâ€?;Íž  Gimlet  Media’s  deep  dive  into  sette  Quartet.  The  group  comprises  the  Internet,  â€œReply  Allâ€?;Íž  Earwolf’s  Jenne  on  guitar  and  vocals,  Doug  improv  comedy  show  â€œWith  Special  Perkins  on  guitar,  Matt  Davis  on  Guest  Lauren  Lapkusâ€?;Íž  and  PRX’s  drums,  Andy  Smith  on  bass  and  Eric  bold  (and  often  hilarious)  radio  Bessette  on  tenor  sax.  They  explore  drama,  â€œThe  Truth.â€?  Also  featuring  VZLQJ LQĂ€XHQFHG PXVLF surprise  guests,  music  of  the  mid-­20th  century,  and  dance  performances,  and  mix  in  a  few  pop  original  videos  and  more. tunes  from  decades  pres-­ “We  envision  this  as  ent  and  past. the  â€˜Lollapalooza’  of  Admission  is  free.  As  podcasts,â€?  says  â€œCast  with  all  Wine  Down  Fri-­ Partyâ€?  co-­creator  and  day  shows,  the  â€œdoorsâ€?  by  Greg  Pahl producer  Seth  Lind.  open  at  5:30  p.m.  for  pic-­ Once  a  niche  medium,  nicking.  Food  will  be  for  podcasts  have  explod-­ sale  by  Almost  Home,  ed  in  popularity,  with  and  wine  by  the  glass.  Bring  lawn  iTunes  podcast  subscribers  surging  chairs  or  a  picnic  blanket.  The  Wine  to  77  million,  up  from  25  million  just  Down  Friday  series  happens  rain  or  ¿YH \HDUV DJR shine—  there’s  room  on  the  winery  Tickets  are  $15,  available  at  town-­ porch  in  the  case  of  rain.  No  alcohol  halltheater.org,  382-­9222  or  the  box  may  be  brought  onto  the  grounds,  RIÂżFH 0RQGD\ 6DWXUGD\ QRRQ WR and  please  leave  your  pets  at  home.  p.m.  This  particular  event  may  not  Lincoln  Peak  Vineyard  is  located  at  be  suitable  for  those  under  15;Íž  dis-­ 142  River  Road  in  New  Haven.  More  cretion  is  advised. information  is  at  lincolnpeakvine-­ BLUEGRASS  IN  BRANDON yard.com. Snake  Mountain  Bluegrass  and  â€˜CAST  PARTY’ the  Connor  Sisters  return  to  Brandon  On  Tuesday  â€”  live  from  New  Music  on  Saturday  at  7:30  p.m. York  City  â€”  hosts  of  several  of  Gregg  Humphrey  and  Mike  Con-­ the  biggest  and  best  podcasts  in  the  nor  formed  Snake  Mountain  Blue-­ world  will  convene  for  â€œCast  Party,â€?  grass  about  25  years  ago.  At  the  time,  both  Humphrey  (guitar)  and  Con-­ nor  (banjo)  were  living  near  Snake  Super Summer Mountain  and  someone  asked  them  Savings what  style  of  bluegrass  they  played.  â€œSnake  Mountain  Bluegrass,â€?  was  GARDEN & their  immediate  response  and  the  name  has  been  theirs  ever  since. PATIO DÉCOR The  Connor  Sisters  are  Katie  (gui-­ % WDU 0RQLFD ÂżGGOH DQG 0HDJKDQ (mandolin).  They  have  been  singing  together  for  years,  throughout  their  Select Patio & homeschooling,  resulting  in  â€œsister  Outdoor Pottery harmoniesâ€?  that  are  tight  and  ef-­

arts beat

30 OFF

ABBY  JENNE  AND  THE  BESSETTE  QUARTET fervescent.  Younger  brother  Joseph  Connor  often  shares  his  impressive  vocal  abilities  and  unique  style  by  joining  in  as  a  special  guest. Tickets  are  $20.  A  pre-­concert  dinner  is  also  available  for  $20.  Reservations  are  recommended  for  the  show  and  required  for  dinner.  Venue  is  BYOB.  Call  247-­4295  or  e-­mail  info@brandon-­music.net  for  reservations  or  for  more  informa-­ tion.  Brandon  Music  is  located  at  62  Country  Club  Road  in  Brandon. JAZZ  IN  SALISBURY  On  Friday  at  7:30  p.m.,  the  Salis-­ bury  Congregational  Church  will  host  a  toe-­tapping  â€œjazz  conversa-­ tionâ€?  with  Dick  Forman  and  Mark  Harding  performing  jazz  standards  and  tunes  from  the  Great  American  Songbook. A  longtime  favorite  of  Vermont  audiences,  pianist  Forman  is  a  Salis-­ bury  resident  and  director  of  jazz  activities  at  Middlebury  College.  His  jazz  groups  have  played  on  public  radio  and  at  regional  jazz  festivals.  Harding  plays  and  teaches  both  gui-­ tar  and  bass,  in  a  variety  of  styles.  Now  based  in  the  Rutland  area,  he  has  been  part  of  the  Vermont  music  scene  for  decades.  The  duo’s  perfor-­

mance  just  might  lead  to  dancing  in  the  aisles  (permitted). 7KLV ZLOO EH WKH ÂżIWK HYHQW LQ 6DOLV-­ bury’s  36th  annual  Summer  Perfor-­ mance  Series  that  will  continue  on  Friday  evenings  through  Aug.  7  at  the  historic,  but  handicap-­accessible,  1838  church  in  Salisbury  village.  Al-­ though  the  church  tower  will  be  scaf-­ folded  for  repairs  during  this  season,  the  sanctuary  will  still  be  readily  en-­ tered  through  the  front  doors  and  the  on-­grade  rear  entrance. Although  admission  is  free,  a  do-­ nation  in  support  of  the  series  will  be  appreciated. TWO  BROTHERS  TAVERN There  will  be  three  live  musi-­ cal  performances  this  week  at  Two  Brothers  Tavern  in  Middlebury.  Join  Two  Brothers  every  Wednes-­ day  at  9  p.m.,  for  the  Open  Mic,  an  evening  of  music,  comedy,  or  anything  else,  alternately  hosted  by  Mark  Sikora  and  Kai  Stanley.  Come  cheer  on  your  friends  or  let  loose  on  the  stage.  It’s  free  to  enter,  and  there  is  no  cover  charge.  Then  at  6  p.m.  on  Friday,  Two Â

Brothers  presents  an  early  show  with  the  Eskimo  Brothers.  Mike  and  Mo-­ ses  hail  from  Poultney,  where  they  have  been  playing  rock  music  to-­ gether  for  12  years  in  various  proj-­ ects.  There  is  no  cover. Finally,  at  9  p.m.  on  Saturday,  Binger  return  to  the  Tavern’s  stage.  Couch-­surf  prog,  post-­genre,  experi-­ mental  hip-­hop,  jam  and  anything  else  you  can  think  of  snakes  its  way  into  their  intricate  and  mind  bending  live  shows.  There  is  a  $3  cover.  For  more  information,  call  388-­0002. ‘GREATER  TUNA’  Middlebury  Actors  Workshop  con-­ tinues  its  15th  anniversary  summer  production  of  â€œGreater  Tuna,â€?  star-­ ring  founding  members  Steve  Small  and  Harry  McEnerny,  on  Thursday  at  8  p.m.  in  A.R.T.’s  black  box  the-­ ater  at  the  Patricia  Hannaford  Career  Center,  51  Charles  Ave.  in  Middle-­ bury.  Performances  will  repeat  on  Friday  and  Saturday  at  8  p.m.  and  on  Sunday  at  2  p.m. A  two-­man,  20-­character,  quick-­ change  tour  de  force,  â€œGreater  Tunaâ€?  (See  Arts  Beat,  Page  11)

 Briar Sweet ge Colle

30%OFF

Garden Decorations Including: Decorative Stakes, Stepping Stones, Statuary, Figurines, Rain Gauges, and Fairy Garden Accessories Offer  valid  on  in-­stock  items  only  â€“  while  supplies  last.  Now  thru  7/31/15.

to

Vic 11.99

$

! ! y t r ry Pa

te elebra C  e m Co s!! With  U

Sat, August 1st

KogĂ›9jgl`]jkĂ›KYn]jfĂ›Ă?ۂhe¤Â†he

MIDDLEBURY AGWAY 388 Exchange Street Open

Live  Entertainment  by  the  Diamond  Blues  Band.  Â‘‘” ’”‹œ‡• ƒÂ?† ƒ Â”ÂƒĆŤÂ‡Ǩ ”‡‡ †Â?‹••‹‘Â?Ǩ Presented  By:  J9:Ă›8dmefY]Ă›g^Ă›MK

Mon. - Fri. 8-6, Sat. 8-5, Sun. 9-4

For  more  information  on  Sweet  Briar’s  Victory: www.savingsweetbriar.com

388-4937

7 days

www.MiddleburyAgway.com

JAZZ Â IN Â SALISBURY


Addison Independent, Monday, July 27, 2015 — PAGE 11

Cosmic Forecast For the week of July 27

BINGER AT TWO BROTHERS

Arts Beat

(Continued from Page 10) LV D KLODULRXV VHQG XS RI VPDOO WRZQ PRUDOV DQG PRUHV LQ 7XQD WKH WKLUG VPDOOHVW WRZQ LQ 7H[DV ZKHUH WKH /LRQ¶V &OXE LV WRR OLEHUDO DQG 3DWV\ &OLQH QHYHU GLHV $UWLVWLF 'LUHFWRU 0HOLVVD /RXULH GLUHFWV WKLV ORQJ UXQQLQJ RII %URDG-­ ZD\ KLW 7LFNHWV DUH DYDLODEOH DW WKH 7RZQ +DOO 7KHDWHU ER[ RI¿FH RU WRZQKDOOWKHDWHU RUJ DQG DOVR DW WKH GRRU RI WKH $ 5 7 EODFN ER[ WKHDWHU RQ SHUIRUPDQFH GD\V MICHELE FAY BAND $V SDUW RI 5RFKHVWHU¶V 6XP-­ PHU 3DUN &RQFHUW 6HULHV WKH 0LFKHOH )D\ %DQG ZLOO EH SHUIRUPLQJ RQ WKH YLOODJH JUHHQ RQ 6XQGD\ DW S P 7KH EDQG IHDWXUHV RULJLQDO DQG $PHULFDQD PXVLF WKDW EULQJV IRUWK D FRPIRUWDEOH JURRYH RI IRON VZLQJ DQG EOXHJUDVV LQÀXHQFHG VRQJV WKDW DUH ZRYHQ VHDPOHVVO\ WRJHWKHU )D\¶V KHDUWIHOW O\ULFV DUH FHQWUDO WR WKH HQ-­ VHPEOH DV VKH VLQJV ZLWK D FOHDU DX-­ WKHQWLF YRLFH DFFRPSDQLHG E\ JXLWDU DQG EDQMR 7LP 3ULFH DGGV PHORGLF LQVWUXPHQWDOV RQ PDQGROLQ DQG JXL-­ WDU ZKLOH .DOHY )UHHPDQ ZRUNV KLV ³OLOWLQJ´ ¿GGOH 0LFKDHO 6DQWRVXVVR SURYLGHV WHQRU KDUPRQLHV DQG GULYHV D G\QDPLF EHDW ZLWK XSULJKW EDVV 7KH EDQG¶V QHZ &' ³%HOLHYH ´ UHFHLYHG UDYH UHYLHZV IURP Seven Days. 7KH SHUIRUPDQFH LV IUHH CARILLON SERIES 7KH 0LGGOHEXU\ &ROOHJH 6XPPHU &DULOORQ 6HULHV FRQWLQXHV LWV WK \HDU RI FRQFHUWV ZLWK D S P SHUIRU-­

PDQFH RQ )ULGD\ LQ 0HDG &KDSHO E\ (OHQD 6DGLQD LQVWUXFWRU DW WKH 0LG-­ GOHEXU\ &ROOHJH 5XVVLDQ 6FKRRO DQG 5R\DO &DULOORQ 6FKRRO LQ 0HFKHOHQ %HOJLXP (QMR\ WKH VRXQGV RI WKH FDULO-­ ORQ EHOOV IURP WKH FKDSHO VWHSV RU ZHDWKHU SHUPLWWLQJ RQ WKH VXUURXQG-­ LQJ ODZQV 7KH IUHH VHULHV FRQWLQXHV HYHU\ )ULGD\ WKURXJK $XJXVW ZLWK D GLIIHUHQW SHUIRUPHU 0HDG 0HPRULDO &KDSHO LV ORFDWHG RQ WKH FDPSXV RI 0LGGOHEXU\ &ROOHJH DW +HSEXUQ 5RDG )UHH SDUNLQJ LV DYDLODEOH RQ 5RXWH &ROOHJH 6WUHHW DQG RQ 2OG &KDSHO 5RDG )RU IXUWKHU LQIRUPDWLRQ FDOO RU YLVLW PLGGOHEXU\ HGX DUWV LIVE MUSIC AT 51 MAIN 7KHUH ZLOO EH WZR OLYH PXVLFDO HYHQWV WKLV ZHHN DW 0LGGOHEXU\¶V 0DLQ $W S P RQ 7KXUVGD\ 0DLQ ZLOO SUHVHQW 6KDGHG *UD\ D 0LGGOHEXU\ LQGLH URFN EDQG ZLWK 2OLYLD &DFFLDWRUH GUXPV DQG OHDG YRFDOV 6LPRQ %URXFNH NH\V EDVV UK\WKP JXLWDU DQG FHOOR DQG 0DWLDV 9DQ 2UGHU *RQ]DOH] OHDG JXLWDU EDVV 7KHQ DW S P RQ )ULGD\ 'D-­ YLG %DLQ DQG 0LPL %DLQ WDNH WR WKH VWDJH 7KLV IDWKHU GDXJKWHU GXR GUDZ IURP DQ HFOHFWLF $PHULFDQ URRWV PX-­ VLFDO FDWDORJ RI EHOWLQJ EOXHV URFN VRXO YLQWDJH MD]] 1HZ 2UOHDQV URFNDELOO\ DQG HYHQ VRPH IURP 7LQ 3DQ $OOH\ $OO DJHV QR FRYHU )RU DGGLWLRQDO LQIRUPDWLRQ YLVLW ZZZ JR PDLQ FRP RU SKRQH

/(2 -8/< $8*867 /HR \RX ¿QG \RXU-­ \RX¶UH PRUH LQFOLQHG WR UHDFK RXW DQG FRPPXQLFDWH VHOI LQ D SRVLWLRQ WR OHDG WKLV ZHHN DQG WKDW LV D ORW RI ZLWK SHRSOH \RX KDYH QRW VHHQ LQ VRPH WLPH 5H-­ UHVSRQVLELOLW\ 'RQ¶W ZRU-­ FRQQHFW ZLWK RWKHUV U\ WRR PXFK DV \RX ZHUH ARIES: MARCH ERUQ WR OHDG DQG ¿QG \RXU $35,/ <RX DUH QHZ UROH VXLWV \RX ¿QH UHDG\ WR WDNH FKDUJH RI VIRGO: AUGUST \RXU ¿QDQFHV $ULHV 9LVLW 24-­SEPTEMBER 22 ZLWK D ¿QDQFLDO FRQVXOWDQW 9LUJR VRPH QHZ IULHQGV RU H[SORUH YDULRXV LQYHVW-­ EULQJ D ORW WR \RXU OLIH LQ PHQW RSSRUWXQLWLHV WR VWDUW WKH ZHHNV DKHDG (QMR\ JURZLQJ \RXU QHVW HJJ WKHLU FRPSDQ\ DQG HP-­ TAURUS: APRIL 21-­ EUDFH WKHLU FDQ GR DWWLWXGH 0$< 1RZ PD\ EH WKH <RX ZLOO EH JODG \RX GLG SHUIHFW WLPH WR VWDUW DQHZ 388-2800 LIBRA: SEPTEMBER 7DXUXV (PEUDFH WKH H[-­ 2&72%(5 )RFXV FLWHPHQW WKDW FRPHV ZLWK Beautiful Local Flowers! RQ ZKDW LV EHQHDWK WKH FKDQJH DQG GRQ¶W EH DIUDLG Mon. -­ Fri. 9 -­ 5:30, Sat. 9-­2 VXUIDFH /LEUD 0DWHULDO WR H[SUHVV \RXU QHZIRXQG Rt. 7 South, Middlebury WKLQJV RU DSSHDUDQFHV DUH FRQ¿GHQFH ZZZ PLGGOHEXU\À RUDODQGJLIWV FRP RI OLWWOH FRQFHUQ WR \RX GEMINI: MAY 22-­ )LQG ZD\V WR NQRZ RWKHUV -81( ([SHFW VRPH PRUH GHHSO\ SUHWW\ LQWHUHVWLQJ FRQ-­ SCORPIO: OCTOBER YHUVDWLRQV DQG LGHDV WKLV 129(0%(5 .HHS ZHHN *HPLQL (QMR\ WKLV WKLQJV VLPSOH WKLV ZHHN QHZ ZD\ RI ORRNLQJ DW 6FRUSLR )ULHQGV DQG ORYHG WKLQJV DQG FRQVLGHU LI LW LV RQHV GR QRW QHHG D ELJ ZKDW¶V EHVW IRU \RX JRLQJ EXLOGXS DQG H[SODQDWLRQ IRUZDUG WR JHW RQ ERDUG ZLWK \RXU CANCER: JUNE 22-­ LGHDV 6LPSOLFLW\ LV EHVW -8/< &DQFHU H[SORUH SAGITTARIUS: NO-­ DOO RI \RXU RSSRUWXQL-­ 9(0%(5 '(&(0-­ WLHV IRU QHWZRUNLQJ <RX %(5 6DJLWWDULXV VRPH GR QRW ZDQW WR RYHUORRN VXVSLFLRXV WKRXJKWV SURYH VRPHRQH ZKR FDQ SXVK WR EH XQIRXQGHG ,W¶V JRRG \RXU FDUHHU DKHDG VR EH WR H[DPLQH WKLQJV PRUH %XCHANGE 3T s -IDDLEBURY 64 RQ WKH ORRNRXW FORVHO\ EXW WKLV ZHHN \RXU 388-2221 s CACKLINHENS COM LQVWLQFWV ZLOO SURYH RQ FAMOUS BIRTH-­ SRLQW '$<6 &$35,&251 '(-­ JULY 26 CEMBER 22-­JANUARY 6DQGUD %XOORFN $FWUHVV We’ve Got You Covered! <RXU QHUYHV PD\ EH (51) WHVWHG RQ VRPH OHYHO &DS-­ JULY 27 ULFRUQ 5HPDLQ FDOP DQG $OH[ 5RGULJXH] $WKOHWH GR \RXU EHVW WR EH FRRO (40) XQGHU SUHVVXUH 7DNH D IHZ JULY 28 GHHS EUHDWKV DQG \RX ZLOO &KHU /OR\G 6LQJHU

JHW WKURXJK LW JULY 29 AQUARIUS: JANU-­ -RVK 5DGQRU $FWRU

ARY 21-­FEBRUARY 18 JULY 30 )RFXV RQ PDNLQJ \RXU-­ /LVD .XGURZ $FWUHVV 16 Creek Rd, Middlebury (52) VHOI IHHO PRUH VHFXUH DQG 388-6054 FRPIRUWDEOH $TXDULXV JULY 31 Mon. - Fri. 7:30 - 5:30, Sat. 8:00 - 3:00 7DNH SULGH LQ \RXU KRPH =DF %URZQ 6LQJHU

www.countrysidecarpetandpaint.com DQG IDPLO\ DQG ZRUU\ OHVV AUGUST 1 DERXW RWKHU DVSHFWV RI \RXU %DVWLDQ 6FKZHLQVWHLJHU OLIH IRU WKH WLPH EHLQJ $WKOHWH

3,6&(6 )(%58$5< 0$5&+ 3LVFHV

A day without Knitting is like a day without Sunshine.

GET READY! The Addison County (09 (5+ 0,3+ (@: - *0(3 96.9(4 0: *6405. <3@ ÑÎth

MICHELE FAY BAND

Look in the Addison Independent for complete Fair and Field Days news and photos!

ADDISON COUNTY

INDEPENDENT

VERMONT’S TWICE-­WEEKLY NEWSPAPER 0LGGOHEXU\ 97 ZZZ $GGLVRQ,QGHSHQGHQW FRP


PAGE 12 — Addison Independent, Monday, July 27, 2015

PUZZLES

Sponsored by:

help keep the mind independent and active throughout life.

This week’s puzzle is rated

Easy

1

Across

60. Units

1. Recipe direction

61. Garden equipment

4. Shoot the breeze

62. Garden invader

7. Play parts

63. Card game for two

38. Controversial research items 40. Cherry

11. Remarked

64. Right this minute

41. Hosts

11

23

15. Spark

1. Area of huge economic growth

48. Fine dinnerware

30

2. June honorees

50. Test choice

3. Cubes

51. Deplore

39

4. Ichiro’s country

52. Daw

5. Honor ___ thieves

43

6. Departed

53. “The dark side of the ___” Pink Floyd classic

7. Seeming

54. Further

8. People of a Broadway show

55. Brood

21. Swindled 22. Tavern 23. Cast member 26. )LJKWHU RI ÀDPHV 30. Sharer’s word 31. Sanction 34. Indication 35. Experiences 37. Mr. Potato Head piece 38. Neckwear 39. Leisure 40. Echo 42. Lamentable 43. Envisioned 45. Break 47. Joke 48. Pause 50. Start of a conclusion 52. Time for carols 56. Davit 57. Carnival attraction 58. 45 59. External

5

6

49. Take away list

7

13

14

16

17

19

24

26 31

32

36

33

37 41

28

29

45

47

48

54

55

42 46

49

52

53

56

57

58

9. Maple, for one

59

60

61

10. Establish, policy for example

62

63

56. Subdue

27

38

44

51

10

34

40

50

9

22

25

35

8

20

21

46. Apprehend

20. Out of the ___

12

18

Down

18. Helper

4

15

14. Tire type

17. Surprise in sports

3

44. Ore searcher

13. Notoriety

16. Over and above

2

64

12. Part of a simple bouquet 13. Verb tense 14. Hon 19. Method 22. Smidgen 23. Jabbed 24. Of the earth’s satellite 25. Left one’s seat

8

28. Travel guide

33. Globe

2 7

1 2

9 3

2

9

8

29. Has to have 32. Musical pipe

4

2

26. Camp heater 27. Big deer

6

This week’s puzzle solutions can be found on Page 31.

1 6

9

4

8

7

5 1

2

2

36. Countermined

4

9

8

3

4 6 2

3

6

7 9

Sudoku SUDOKU by Myles Mellor and Susan Flanagan Each Sudoku puzzle consists of a 9X9 grid that has been subdivided into nine smaller grids of 3X3 squares. To solve the puzzle each row, column and box must contain each of the numbers 1 to 9. Puzzles come in three grades: easy, medium and difficult. Level: Medium


Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015  â€”  PAGE  13

Super Summer Savings

Summer Clothing Clearance Sale

30% Men’s OFF Graphic T’s Tanks and Shorts

30% Women’s T’s, Tanks OFF & Shorts 30%OFF Select Girls Toddler & Infant Summer Styles

1

$

PLUS %

40 OFF

Summer Styles Offer  valid  on  in-­stock  items  only  â€“  while  supplies  last.  Now  thru  7/31/15. Can  not  be  combined  with  any  other  offer  or  coupon.

MIDDLEBURY AGWAY 388 Exchange Street Open

388-4937

7 days

Mon. - Fri. 8-6, Sat. 8-5, Sun. 9-4 www.MiddleburyAgway.com

PREPARING  FOR  THE  Zombie  Apocalypse  campers  hike  into  the  wooded  outdoor  classroom  near  Vergennes  Union  High  School  and  Vergennes  Union  Elementary  School  last  Thursday  morning.

Zombie (Continued  from  Page  1) vival  skills  and  nature  appreciation.  â€œWe  thought  it  would  build  in-­ trigue,â€?  said  Oxley,  who  watched  FRXUVH HQUROOPHQW MXPS IURP ÂżYH LQ 2014  to  18  this  summer. ‘I  LIKE  BEING  OUTSIDE’ Mitchell  Clark  of  Addison,  an  in-­ coming  8th-­grader,  said  he  did  notice  the  title  and  does  watch  the  TV  show  â€œiZombieâ€?  once  in  a  while,  but  the  zombie  angle  wasn’t  the  big  attrac-­ tion.  â€œI  mean,  it  has  one  or  two  things  to  do  with  it,  but  mainly  it  was  just  fun  outside,â€?  Clark  said. Clark  also  admitted  that  whittling,  WU\LQJ WR VWDUW ÂżUHV ZLWKRXW DUWLÂżFLDO help,  and  catching  frogs  in  the  beaver Â

TALON  TANNER,  11,  of  Addison  harvests  cattail  roots  from  a  Ver-­ gennes  swamp  during  a  Vergennes  Union  Middle  School  Summer  Fusion  pond  near  the  Outdoor  Classroom’s  Program  camp  last  Thursday  morning  that  taught  outdoor  survival  skills  base  camp  sounded  better  than  just  to  middle-­schoolers.  The  cattail  roots  can  be  prepared  like  potatoes.

working  on  his  folks’  dairy  farm.  â€œI  thought  it  would  be  fun  because  I  could  get  out  of  chores  and  see  friends  I  haven’t  seen  for  a  while,â€?  said  Clark,  adding  that  his  favorite  activities  are,  â€œprobably  trying  to  PDNH ÂżUHV RU VSHDU PDNLQJ 7KH\ÂśUH both  fun.  Searching  for  frogs  is  pretty  fun.  You  get  waist-­deep  in  the  water.â€? Incoming  7th-­grader  Kimberley  Jerome,  a  Vergennes  resident,  signed  up,  â€œbecause  I  like  being  outside.â€?  Jerome  said  she  has  enjoyed  learn-­ ing  to  whittle  the  most,  while  trying  WR ÂżJXUH RXW ÂłKRZ WR VWDUW D ÂżUH ZLWK one  matchâ€?  has  been  the  hardest  task.  (See  Outside,  Page  18)

Over 31 years of personalized, comfortable care in a high-tech dental office! office!

Independent  photo/Trent  Campbell

HAVING AN EVENT? Get the word out, email it to: news@addisonindependent.com

MIDDLEBURY, VT

BEER DINNER

"6(645 t 1. $0634&4 '03 1-64 5"9 (3"56*5:

+0*/ 64 '03 " 41&$*"- &7&/*/(

FEATURING MATT WILSON '30. ;&30 ("7*5: #3&8&3:

$)&' 45"33*/ 8*-- #& 1"*3*/( )*4 -0$"--: 4063$&% */(3&%*&/54 8*5) 6/*26& #&&34 '30. ;&30 (3"7*5: $)&&34

1FUFS + )PQQFS % % 4 t "EBN & 'BTPMJ % . % #SJBO % $PMMJOT % % 4 t .PTU *OTVSBODF 8FMDPNF t &NFSHFODJFT 8FMDPNF t /FX 1BUJFOUT 8FMDPNF 133 &YDIBOHF 4USFFU 4VJUF t .JEEMFCVSZ (802) 388-3553

www.middleburydentalvt.com

1ST COURSE Chilled Soup a la Biere (beer soup)

3RD COURSE *NQD@M 1N@RSDC "@SĹ°RG NUDQ

– Potato & Leek based with Orb Weaver Cheese Pairing: Bob White

"@TKHĹąNVDQ *HLBGH %QHDC 1HBD V -NQH 2B@KKHNMR Pairing: T.L.A. I.P.A.

2ND COURSE Peperonata – Spicy Italian stewed

4TH COURSE Blueberry Upside-down Sweet

Sweet Peppers & Onions served with Fresh Mozzarella on a Fried Baguette Pairing: New World Vienna (Amber Lager)

Corn Cake with Beer Cream Pairing: Keeper (blond lager)

5*$,&54 Call or www.go.middlebury.edu/boxoffice


PAGE  14  â€”  Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015

Spotlight on Vergennes Bixby to host outdoor movie VERGENNES  â€”  Bixby  Library  in  Vergennes  presents  an  outdoor  Family  Movie  Night  on  Wednesday,  July  29,  at  8  p.m.  in  the  parking  lot  behind  the  library. The  public  is  invited  to  bring  a  chair  and  come  out  to  watch  â€œThe  Painted  Hills,â€?  a  1951  MGM  Lassie Â

movie  classic.  The  show  starts  at  8  but  people  are  encouraged  to  show  XS HDUO\ WR ¿QG D VSRW 6QDFNV ZLOO be  available  from  Hog  &  Harvest. The  Bixby  is  located  at  258  Main  St.  For  more  information,  call  877-­ 2211.

City  council  to  make  appointments VERGENNES  â€”  The  Vergennes  City  Council  has  several  typical  housekeeping  items  on  the  agenda  for  this  week.  Aldermen  and  alder-­ women  will  meet  on  Tuesday,  July  EHJLQQLQJ DW S P DW WKH ÂżUH station  meeting  room. After  the  Pledge  of  Allegiance  and  citizens’  comments,  council  mem-­ bers  will  make  appointments  to  the Â

inc.

HJL

CONTRACTERS & BUILDERS

Vergennes  Planning  Commission,  Development  Review  Board  and  Transportation  Advisory  Commit-­ tee. City  Manager  Mel  Hawley  then  will  report  on  the  city  budget  â€”  ret-­ rospectively  and  prospectively  â€”  the  Water  Tower  Fund  allocations,  and  the  education  tax  rates  and  local  tax  rate  calculation.

H.J. LeBoeuf & Son, Inc. Established 1888

802.877.3098

www.hjleboeuf.com

Serving the Champlain Valley for 125 years and counting. We specialize in designing, building and renovating both new & existing homes in a sustainable and energy efficient way.

7E HAVE DISCOUNTS TO HELP YOU DRIVE DOWN THE COST OF CAR INSURANCE )F THE COST OF YOUR CAR INSURANCE SEEMS TO BE HEADING IN THE WRONG DIRECTION SEE IF !LLSTATE CAN HELP 7E HAVE DISCOUNTS THAT CAN HELP YOU SAVE MONEY 4O lND OUT WHICH DISCOUNTS YOU QUALIFY FOR JUST GIVE US A CALL

&OOTE S )NSURANCE !GENCY 3IX 'REEN 3TREET s 6ERGENNES

Allstate Insurance Company, Northbrook, Illinois

Subject to qualifications and local availablity.

Cast  away A  FISHERMAN  CASTS  his  line  into  Otter  Creek  below  the  falls  in  downtown  Vergennes  last  Thursday.

Independent  photo/Trent  Campbell

Book explores Japanese boatbuilding Local author offers a comprehensive study 9(5*(11(6 ² 7KH ÂżUVW ERRN of  its  kind  to  offer  a  comprehen-­ sive  study  of  the  secrets,  traditions  and  techniques  of  Japanese  wooden  boatbuilding  is  now  available  for  purchase.  â€œJapanese  Wooden  Boat-­ building,â€?  written  by  Vergennes-­ based  boatbuilder  and  writer  Douglas  Brooks  and  published  by Â

Floating  World  Editions,  is  a  fas-­ FLQDWLQJ ERRN WKDW ÂżOOV D ODUJH DQG long-­standing  gap  in  the  literature  on  Japanese  crafts.  â€œWith  more  than  300  color  photos  and  36  detailed  technical  drawings,  this  promises  to  be  of  great  interest  to  boatbuilders,  woodworkers,  and  all  those  impressed  with  the  marvels Â

of  Japanese  design  and  workman-­ ship,â€?  Floating  World’s  Ray  Furse  said. With  Japan’s  unprecedented  mod-­ ernization  over  the  last  century,  the  demand  for  traditional  boats  (wasen)  faded,  leaving  the  last  generation  of  boatbuilders  with  no  one  to  teach.  â€œJapanese  Wooden  Boatbuildingâ€?  is  part  ethnography,  part  instruc-­ (See  Boatbuilding,  Page  15)


Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015  â€”  PAGE  15

Boatbuilding (Continued  from  Page  14) tion,  and  part  the  personal  story  of  a  wooden  boatbuilder  fueled  by  a  pas-­ sion  to  preserve  a  craft  tradition  on  the  brink  of  extinction. Over  the  course  of  17  trips  to  Japan,  Brooks  traveled  more  than  30,000  miles  to  seek  out  and  interview  Ja-­ pan’s  elderly  master  boatbuilders.  +H EXLOW ERDWV ZLWK ÂżYH PHQ DOO LQ their  70s  and  80s,  between  1996  and  2010,  from  Tohoku  in  the  far  north  to  southernmost  islands  of  Okinawa.  He  was  the  sole  apprentice  for  each  and  worked  under  a  time-­honored  sys-­ WHP LQ ZKLFK DSSUHQWLFHV ÂżUVW VZHSW Ă€RRUV DQG VKDUSHQHG WRROV OHDUQ-­ LQJ FKLHĂ€\ E\ REVHUYDWLRQ ZLWK RQO\

limited  direct  instruction.  Eventually,  Brooks  managed  to  win  the  trust  of  these  extraordinary  craftsmen,  who  realized  that  sharing  their  secrets  and  techniques  with  this  eager  American  would  mean  their  heritage  might  be  saved.  In  â€œJapanese  Wooden  Boatbuild-­ ing,â€?  Brooks  tells  the  story  of  these  apprenticeships,  and  the  techniques  and  secrets  they  revealed.  In  Part  , UHDGHUV ZLOO GLVFRYHU VLJQLÂżFDQW aspects  of  traditional  Japanese  boat-­ building,  including  design,  tools,  materials,  joinery,  fastenings,  pro-­ pulsion,  ceremonies  and  the  appren-­ ticeship  system.  Part  II  details  each  RI KLV ÂżYH DSSUHQWLFHVKLSV ZLWK LQ-­

Addison County FRESH! EVERY THURSDAY 3PM - 6:30PM at the Town Green WFHFUBCMFT Ĺż NFBUT Ĺż FHHT CSFBET Ĺż QJDOJD GPPET Ĺż EFTTFSUT IBOE DSBGUFE KFXFMSZ

FA R M E R ’ S M A R K E T

Find  us  on  Facebook  Â

sights  into  the  complex  culture  sur-­ rounding  the  demise  â€”  and  poten-­ tial  rebirth  â€”  of  this  centuries-­old  craft.  Signed  and  inscribed  copies  are  available  only  from  the  author.  To  purchase  a  copy,  visit  www.doug-­ lasbrooksboatbuilding.com.  Buyers  who  purchase  from  this  site  are  also  directly  supporting  his  ongoing  re-­ search. ABOUT  BROOKS Douglas  Brooks  is  a  boatbuilder,  writer  and  researcher  specializing  in  the  construction  of  traditional  wooden  boats  for  museums  and  private  clients.  Since  1990,  he  has  been  researching  traditional  Japa-­ nese  boatbuilding,  focusing  on  the  techniques  and  design  secrets  of  the  craft.  The  boats  he  and  his  teach-­ ers  built  have  been  exhibited  at  the  Urayasu  Folk  History  Museum,  the  Niigata  Prefectural  Museum  of  History,  the  Michinoku  Traditional  Wooden  Boat  Museum,  the  Museum  of  Maritime  Science,  and  elsewhere.  Brooks  is  the  sole  non-­Japanese  listed  in  a  2003  Nippon  Founda-­ tion  survey  of  craftsmen  capable  of  building  traditional  Japanese  boats.  In  2014,  Brooks  received  the  Rare  Craft  Fellowship  Award  from  the  American  Craft  Council.  In  2015  he  was  named  an  Arts  in  Action-­Japan  Fellow  by  the  Asian  Cultural  Coun-­ cil.  He  lives  with  his  wife  Catherine  in  Vergennes.

In  â€œJAPANESE  WOODEN  Boatbuilding,â€?  a  new  book  by  Vergennes  boatbuilder  Douglas  Brooks,  the  author  explores  the  history  of  the  cen-­ turies-­old  but  rapidly  disappearing  Japanese  boatbuilding  tradition,  and  shares  his  experiences  learning  the  craft  through  apprenticeships  ZLWK ÂżYH PDVWHU ERDWEXLOGHUV LQ -DSDQ

VERGENNES Service

Serving  Vergennes  Since  1945

‡ IXHO RLO ‡ /3 JDV ‡ . NHURVHQH

0DLQ 6W 9HUJHQQHV

Laundry

in

JACKMAN FUELS, INC.

Lawn & Garden D Ve oin rm g b on us t s in inc es e1 s 92 4

Fuels

Directory

YANDOW SALES & SERVICE

CLOVER STATE Window & Siding Co., Inc. 2EPLACEMENT 7INDOWS s 6INYL SIDING s 'ARAGES s 2OOFS s !DDITIONS

5RXWH ‡ 1 )HUULVEXUJK 0RQGD\ )ULGD\ 6DWXUGD\ FORVLQJ

0HONE s 4OLL &REE

Plumbing & Heating

Siding

VERGENNES CAR WASH & LAUNDROMAT

Serving the Champlain Valley Since 1887

OPEN DAILY 7am - 9pm

877-3118

16 New Haven Road, Vergennes

877-2212 (bet ween Rt.7 and 22A, next to Bub’s Barn and A&D Auto)

Siding

Timothy C. Ryan P.E.

Main St., Vergennes

Marcel Brunet & Sons, Inc.

7INDOWS 3IDING s Vergennes, VT 3IDING s 2EPLACEMENT 7INDOWS $OORS s 2OOFS s 'ARAGES s $ECKS

800-439-2644 Free Estimates

To advertise in the Vergennes Service Directory Call Kim 388-4944 today!

877-2640


PAGE  16  â€”  Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015

MONDAY

SPORTS

Town  ball CHARLIE  HODSON,  FAR  left,  Anthony  Garner,  left,  and  Colby  Hammond,  above,  put  up  shots  in  the  Middlebury  municipal  gym  last  Thursday  during  the  town’s  parks  and  recreation  department  Middlebury  Mayhem  Youth  Bas-­ ketball  Camp. Independent  photos/Trent  Campbell

Author  tells  storied  history  of  the  Red  Sox,  warts  and  all By  ANDY  KIRKALDY Peter  Golenbock’s  â€œRed  Sox  Nationâ€?  (Tri-­ umph  Books,  updated  in  2015  to  include  the  2013  season)  probably  is  not  a  book  for  every-­ one,  not  even  all  Sox  fans. Despite  the  book’s  wealth  of  fascinating  de-­ tails,  it  might  take  a  touch  of  masochism  for  Sox  fans  to  revisit  the  team’s  many  decades  of  failure  between  1918  and  1967,  mostly  due  to  management  decisions  based  on  poor  talent  evaluation,  petty  biases,  alcoholism  and  rac-­ ism.  Then  again,  Sox  fans  of  a  certain  age  have  had  a  fair  dose  of  masochism  instilled  in  them  â€”  those  who  can  remember  losing  seven-­ game  World  Series  in  1967,  1975  and  1986,  all  in  painful  fashion,  and  can  recall  at  least  some  of  the  lean  years  between  1918  and  1967  that Â

produced  just  one  pennant  and  another  agoniz-­ For  example,  Golenbock  records  this  1903  ing  Series  loss,  in  1946. conversation  between  Sox  owners  Henry  Kill-­ In  contrast,  those  born  in  the  1990s  might  ilea  and  Ban  Johnson,  in  which  Sox  manager  view  the  Sox  as  a  dominant  franchise,  blessed  and  third  baseman  Jimmy  Collins  and  pitchers  by  the  baseball  gods  Cy  Young  and  Bill  with  good  fortune  Golenbock illustrates well how Dinneen  are  name-­ and  wonderful  play-­ Yawkey proved willing to spend checked.  ers  like  Pedro,  Papi  They  are  discuss-­ and  Pedroia.  And  money, but at the same time did ing  whether  to  play  Golenbock’s  book  not place his loyalty in the right WKH ÂżUVW 6HULHV YV concludes  with  those  people to run his franchise. the  National  League  recent  wonder  years. champion  Pittsburgh  â€œRed  Sox  Nationâ€?  Pirates: —  largely  an  oral  history  told  in  quotes  from  â€œâ€˜What  do  you  think  of  the  idea,  Ban?’  Kill-­ ballplayers,  managers,  media  members  and  ilea  asked. fans  â€”  also  opens  in  happier  times,  when  the  â€˜Do  you  think  you  can  beat  them?’ 6R[ ZRQ ÂżYH :RUOG 6HULHV EHIRUH LQ-­ ‘They’ve  got  Honus  Wagner,  Clarke  and  FOXGLQJ WKH ÂżUVW HYHU FRQWHVWHG LQ VRPH RWKHU ÂżQH KLWWHUV EXW &ROOLQV WKLQNV KH

can  stop  them  with  Young  and  Dinneen,’  said  Killilea. ‘Then  play  them,’  Johnson  said.  â€˜By  all  means,  play  them.’â€? The  Sox  would  go  on  to  add  players  like  Tris  Speaker,  Smoky  Joe  Wood  and  Babe  Ruth  on  the  way  to  four  more  Series  victories  through  1918.  But  reviewing  the  next  86  years  may  require  tolerance  for  pain  as  well  as  serious  interest  in  Sox  history. After  those  glory  years  came  the  debt-­rid-­ den  ownership  of  Harry  Frazee  and  the  sale  of  Ruth  to  the  Yankees.  Golenbock  provides  telling  details  about  this  era,  but  does  miss  a  key  one:  A  feud  existed  between  two  fac-­ tions  in  the  American  League,  and  one  rea-­ (See  Red  Sox,  Page  17)


Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015  â€”  PAGE  17

Red  Sox  (Continued  from  Page  16) son  Frazee  sold  Ruth  to  the  Yankees  was  that  half  the  league  would  not  do  business  with  the  Sox.  But  Golenbock  properly  notes  that  Ruth  was  only  one  of  several  all-­stars  Boston  shipped  to  New  York,  thus  triggering  the  Yankee  dynasty  that  lasted  until  the  early  1960s.  YAWKEY  YEARS The  Sox  sputtered  until  rich  dilettante  Tom  Yawkey  bought  the  team  in  the  early  1930s,  and  they  stayed  on  the  fringe  of  contention  through  the  late  1940s.  Golenbock  illustrates  well  how  Yawkey  proved  willing  to  spend  money,  but  at  the  same  time  did  not  place  his  loyalty  in  the  right  people  to  run  his  franchise.  Joe  Cronin  in  particular  proved  to  be  both  a  mediocre  manager  and  general  manager.  And  his  long  tenure  is  not  followed  by  much  better  until  general  manager  Dick  O’Connell’s  arriv-­ al  in  the  mid-­1960s  brings  both  a  dedication  to  nurturing  young  talent  and  a  knack  for  trading  for  the  right  pieces.  Golenbock  highlights  well  both  the  racism  and  alcoholism  that  pervaded  the  Sox  front  of-­ ÂżFH EHIRUH 2Âś&RQQHOOÂśV DUULYDO 1R LQYHVWPHQW is  made  in  player  development  or  in  pitching  depth,  and  personnel  decisions  are  often  made  based  on  personality. For  example,  in  1948,  manager  Joe  McCar-­ WK\ DW ÂżUVW VLPSO\ UHIXVHG WR SLWFK 7H[ +XJK-­ son  â€”  who,  Golenbock  notes,  â€œhas  the  lowest  lifetime  earned-­run  average  of  any  post-­dead-­ ball  era  Red  Sox  pitcher,  at  2.94â€?  â€”  when  +XJKVRQ UHWXUQHG IURP LQMXU\ DQG WKHQ RYHU

used  him  against  medical  advice.  Golenbock  quotes  +XJKVRQ ZKR ÂżQDOO\ retired  because  of  the  way  McCarthy  treat-­ ed  him:  â€œWhen  I  got  back  to  Boston  from  pitching  in  Austin,  in  1948,  McCarthy  didn’t  hardly  know  PH ´ /DWHU +XJK-­ son  concludes,  after  sharing  an-­ ecdotes  about  Mc-­ Carthy’s  drinking,  â€œJoe  McCarthy  is  the  only  man  I’ve  ever  known  in  my  life,  and  I’ll  be  seventy-­ ÂżYH P\ QH[W birthday,  who  I  couldn’t  get  along  with.â€? Golenbock  also  provides  insight  into  many  colorful  charac-­ WHUV ZKR KDYH ZRUQ WKH 6R[ XQLIRUP +DOO RI Famer  Lefty  Grove  is  an  ornery  presence.  One  person  Golenbock  quotes  about  Grove  is  for-­ mer  Middlebury  and  Dartmouth  college  coach  Tony  Lupien.  Lupien  recalls  Grove  offering  him  a  ride  back  to  the  hotel: Âł, WKRXJKW Âľ,ÂśG EHWWHU VD\ \HV +HÂśV OLDEOH

MCTV  SCHEDULE  Channels  15  &  16 7XHVGD\ -XO\ 4 a.m. Public Affairs 7:44 a.m. Boot Camp with Ginger Lambert 8 a.m. Congregational Church Service 10 a.m. Selectboard 12:05 p.m. Development Review Board (DRB) 3:30 p.m. Growing Brighter Futures 4 p.m. What Keeps You Awake at Night? 5:14 p.m. Boot Camp with Ginger Lambert 5:30 p.m. Las Promesas de Dios 6 p.m. Community Bulletin Board 6:30 p.m. Faces of Farming 7 p.m. Selectboard (LIVE) 11:10 p.m. DRB :HGQHVGD\ -XO\ 4 a.m. DRB 6:14 a.m. Boot Camp with Ginger Lambert 6:30 a.m. Growing Brighter Futures 7:30 a.m. Memorial Baptist Church Service 9 a.m. Lifelines 9:30 a.m. Eckankar 10 a.m. Selectboard/DRB/Public Affairs 4:45 p.m. Boot Camp with Ginger Lambert 5 p.m. Community Bulletin Board 5:30 p.m. Las Promesas de Dios 6 p.m Faces of Farming 6:30 p.m. DRB 9:30 p.m. Eckankar 10 p.m. Selectboard 7KXUVGD\ -XO\ 4 a.m. Public Affairs 8:44 a.m. Boot Camp with Ginger Lambert 9 a.m. Las Promesas de Dios 9:30 a.m. DRB/Public Affiars 11:30 a.m. Faces of Farming Noon Selectboard/Public Affairs 5 p.m. Eckankar 5:30 p.m. Community Bulletin Board 7:30 p.m. Selectboard 11 p.m. What Keeps You Awake at Night? )ULGD\ -XO\ 4 a.m. A Revolutionary Exploration of Gender 5:14 a.m. Boot Camp with Ginger Lambert 5:30 a.m. Faces of Farming 6 a.m. DRB/Public Affairs 10 a.m. Selectboard/Public Affairs 3:30 p.m. Growing Brighter Futures 4 p.m. Memorial Baptist Church Service 5:30 p.m. Community Bulletin Board 5:45 p.m. Public Affairs from the VMX

8:30 p.m. Faces of Farming 9 p.m. Las Promesas de Dios 10 p.m. Rep. Betty Nuovo 10:30 p.m. A Revolutionary Exploration of Gender 6DWXUGD\ $XJ 4 a.m. Public Affairs from the VMX 8 a.m. Boot Camp with Ginger Lambert 8:30 a.m. Eckankar 9 a.m. Las Promesas de Dios 9:30 a.m. Rep. Betty Nuovo 10 a.m. Selectboard/DRB 4 p.m. Memorial Baptist Church Service 5:30 p.m. Community Bulletin Board 5:44 p.m. Boot Camp with Ginger Lambert 6 p.m. Faces of Farming 6:30 p.m. Selectboard/Public Affairs 10 p.m. Green Mountain Veterans for Peace 6XQGD\ $XJ 4 a.m. DRB 6:45 a.m. Boot Camp with Ginger Lambert 7 a.m. Green Mountain Veterans for Peace 8 a.m. Las Promesas de Dios 9 a.m. Catholic Mass 11 a.m. Memorial Baptist Church Service 12:30 p.m. Selectboard 3:30 p.m. Rep. Betty Nuovo 4 p.m. Congregational Church Service 5:30 p.m. Eckankar 6 p.m. Boot Camp with Ginger Lambert 6:15 p.m. Community Bulletin Board 7 p.m. Catholic Mass 7:30 p.m. Growing Brighter Futures 8 p.m. Las Promesas de Dios 8:30 p.m. Faces of Farming 0RQGD\ $XJ 4 a.m. Public Affairs from VMX 8:45 a.m. Boot Camp with Ginger Lambert 9 a.m. Lifelines 9:30 a.m. Faces of Farming 10 a.m. Selectboard/DRB/Public Affairs 4 p.m. Congregational Church Service 5:30 p.m. Las Promesas de Dios 6 p.m. Boot Camp with Ginger Lambert 7 p.m. Green Mountain Veterans for Peace 8 p.m. What Keeps You Awake at Night? 11:30 p.m. Selectboard 0(79 &KDQQHO 7XHVGD\ -XO\ 4 a.m. Festival on-­the-­Green (FOTG): Darlingside

to  kill  m e . ’  I  said,  â€˜ Ye s , ’  and  we  w a l k e d  out  of  the  club-­ h o u s e ,  and  he  had  a  St.  Louis  P o s t -­ D i s -­ patch  all  rolled  up.  A  little  kid  came  up  and  asked  Grove  for  an  auto-­ graph,  and  he  hit  that  kid  across  the  puss  with  that  paper,  and  the  kid  went  Ă€\LQJ ´ On  the  other  hand,  everybody  liked  Johnny  Pesky.  Golenbock  quotes  former  Sox  pitcher  Dave  More-­ head  about  Pesky’s  successful  minor  league  managing  stint:  â€œPlaying  for  Johnny  Pesky  in  Seattle  was  a  great  experi-­ HQFH +H ZDV DOPRVW OLNH D IDWKHU WR DOO RI XV +H ZDV DOZD\V VXSSRUWLYH FRQVLVWHQW IDLU EXW he  was  very  tough.â€? Golenbock  recounts  well  both  the  ultimate Â

triumph  of  Ted  Williams,  and  the  shame  of  the  Sox  in  failing  to  sign  Willie  Mays  and  Jackie  Robinson,  part  of  the  racism  that  lingered  for  decades  in  the  organization. It  was  ultimately  Cronin  who  refused  to  sign  Robinson,  and  Robinson  never  forgave  him.  Cronin,  later  the  American  League  President,  remained  bitter  about  remarks  Robinson  made  after  that  snub,  and  in  1972  Cronin  refused  to  JR RXW RQ WKH ÂżHOG ZKHQ 5RELQVRQ VSRNH SXE-­ licly  for  one  of  the  last  times,  during  the  World  Series  in  Cincinnati. Golenbock  quotes  Negro  League  All-­Star  DQG +DOO RI )DPHU 0RQWH ,UYLQ ZKRP &RP-­ missioner  Bowie  Kuhn  asked  to  bring  Cronin  WR WKH ÂżHOG Âł:KDW , ÂżJXUHG LI \RX UHPHP-­ ber  Jackie  had  a  tryout  in  Boston,  and  Jackie  had  said  some  things  about  him,  and  this  was  a  holdover  from  that.  Joe  didn’t  want  to  have  any  part  of  that  ceremony.â€? Golenbock  takes  a  couple  miss-­steps,  such  DV UHIHUULQJ WR 6R[ ÂżUVW EDVHPDQ DQG '+ Kevin  Millar  as  a  lefty  hitter.  And  no  one  who  writes  about  the  1975  World  Series  should  fail  to  mention  the  Sox  played  without  their  best  KLWWHU WKH LQMXUHG -LP 5LFH But  given  all  that  â€œRed  Sox  Nationâ€?  does  get  right,  those  are  quibbles.  When  the  2004  team  reverses  the  curse,  stuns  the  Yankees,  and  then  wins  the  World  6HULHV *ROHQERFN TXRWHV ÂżOP FULWLF DQG 6R[ fan  Jeffrey  Lyons. “I  don’t  care  how  cold  it  gets  this  winter,  I  hope  it  never  ends.  I  want  the  feeling  to  last  a  long  time,â€?  Lyons  said.  â€œI  will  never  hear  those  taunts  of  â€˜1918’  or  â€˜Bucky  Dent’  or  â€˜Bill  Buckner’  again.â€? Andy  Kirkaldy  may  be  reached  at  andyk@ addisonindependent.com.

MIDDLEBURY COMMUNITY TELEVISION: P.O. Box 785, Middlebury, Vt. 05753

Please see the MCTV website, www.middleburycommunitytv.org, for changes in the schedule; MCTV events, classes and news; and to view many programs online. Submit listings to the above address, or call 388-­3062.

5:30 a.m. Yoga 5:50 a.m. FOTG: Bluegrass Gospel Project 9 a.m. Chronique Francophone 9:30 a.m. FOTG: Mike and Ruthy 11:05 a.m. FOTG: Caitlin Canty 1 p.m. Vermont Board of Education 3 p.m. StoryMatters: Bryan Alexander 4 p.m. FOTG: Darlingside 7 p.m. FOTG: 10 Strings and a Goatskin 9 p.m. StoryMatters: Bryan Alexander 9:30 p.m. Chronique Francophone 10 p.m. FOTG: 24th Street Wailers :HGQHVGD\ -XO\ 4:30 a.m. StoryMatters 5:15 a.m. FOTG: Bluegrass Gospel Project 6:30 a.m. Yoga 7 a.m. Boot Camp 9:43 a.m. Authors at the Aldrich: Rosemary Gladstar 11 a.m. Chronique Francophone 11:29 a.m. FOTG: Caroline Rose Noon FOTG: Vance Gilbert 4 p.m. FOTG: Heather Maloney 5:30 p.m. Chronique Francophone 6 p.m. FOTG: Mike and Ruthy 8 p.m. Vermont Board of Education 10 p.m. FOTG: Ray Vega 7KXUVGD\ -XO\ 4 a.m. FOTG: Heather Maloney 5:30 a.m. Yoga 5:52 a.m. FOTG: Miles Donahue 7 a.m. Chronique Francophone 7:30 a.m. UD-­3 Board 9 a.m. FOTG: 10 Strings and a Goatskin 1 p.m. FOTG: 24th Street Wailers 5 p.m. Chronique Francophone 5:30 p.m. Lights, Camera, Action 6 p.m. FOTG: Ray Vega 8 p.m. Vermont Board of Education 10 p.m. FOTG: Caitlin Canty 11:10 p.m. FOTG: Caroline Rose )ULGD\ -XO\ 4 a.m. FOTG: 10 Strings and a Goatskin 7:40 a.m. Yoga 8 a.m. Community Bulletin Board 8:30 a.m. Chronique Francophone 9 a.m. Vermont Board of Education 5 p.m. FOTG: Mike and Ruthy 7 p.m. FOTG: Miles Donahue 8:15 p.m. FOTG: Ray Vega 10 p.m. FOTG: 10 Strings and a Goatskin

11:30 p.m. FOTG: Vance Gilbert 6DWXUGD\ $XJ 1 a.m. FOTG: Heather Maloney 2:30 a.m. FOTG: Caroline Rose 4 a.m. FOTG: Caitlin Canty 5:05 a.m. StoryMatters: Bryan Alexander 5:40 a.m. Yoga 6 a.m. Yoga 6:30 a.m. Middlebury Five-­0 7 a.m. Lights, Camera, Action 7:30 a.m. FOTG: 24th Street Wailers 9 a.m. Lights, Camera, Action 10 a.m. Chronique Francophone 10:30 a.m. Vermont Board of Education 12:30 p.m. FOTG: Darlingside 1:55 p.m. Poets and Authors from VMX 5:30 p.m. FOTG: Heather Maloney 7 p.m. FOTG: Bluegrass Gospel Project 8:30 p.m. FOTG: Caroline Rose 9:30 p.m. FOTG: 24th Street Wailers 11 p.m. FOTG: Mike and Ruthy 6XQGD\ $XJ 4 a.m. FOTG: Ray Vega 5:45 a.m. FOTG: Miles Donahue 7 a.m. Yoga 7:30 a.m. Chronique Francophone 8 a.m. FOTG: Caitlin Canty 10 a.m. FOTG: Bluegrass Gospel Project 11:15 a.m. FOTG: Caroline Rose 12:30 p.m. Poets and Authors from VMX 2:30 p.m. Lights, Camera, Action 4:30 p.m. FOTG: Miles Donahue 6 p.m. Lights, Camera, Action 6:30 p.m. Chronique Francophone 7 p.m. FOTG: Caitlin Canty 8:30 p.m. Middlebury Five-­0 9:30 p.m. FOTG: Vance Gilbert 0RQGD\ $XJ 4:30 a.m. FOTG: Darlingside 6:10 a.m. Yoga 6:30 a.m. Poets and Authors from VMX 12:30 p.m. Vermont Board of Education 4:30 p.m. Middlebury Five-­0 5 p.m. Chronique Francophone 5:30 p.m. FOTG: Vance Gilbert 7 p.m. ID-­4 Board 10 p.m. FOTG: Bluegrass Gospel Project


PAGE  18  â€”  Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015

Outside (Continued  from  Page  13) Oxley  said. Addison’s  Zeke  Clark,  an  incom-­ 6SHFLÂżFV WDXJKW LQFOXGH NQRW W\-­ ing  8th-­grader  who  is  Mitchell’s  twin  ing,  a  key  component  in  making  shel-­ brother,  also  said  the  outdoor  angle  ters  from  natural  elements  and  tarps;Íž  drew  him  to  the  course  more  than  the  ¿UH PDNLQJ E\ XVLQJ Ă€LQWV ERZ GULOOV zombie  title.  that  can  heat  â€œIt  seemed  like  wood,  or  just  one  a  fun  thing  to  match;Íž  learning  do  because  it’s  to  boil  water  over  outside  instead  DQ RSHQ ÂżUH XV-­ of  being  penned  ing  a  grocery  bag  up  inside.  It  just  to  hold  the  liquid;Íž  seemed  like  more  ¿QGLQJ HGLEOH fun  than  a  lot  of  wild  food,  such  other  activities  as  cattail  roots;Íž  that  we  do  and  and  making  more  fun  than  wooden  spears  staying  at  home  that  can  harvest  during  the  sum-­ frogs. mer  and  not  do-­ Knife  safety  ing  much,â€?  he  must  be  taught  said. IRU WKDW ÂżQDO VNLOO Zeke  Clark  including  indi-­ said  he  has  not  vidual  habits  and  been  disappoint-­ group  respect  for  ed.  individual  space.  â€œI  think  it’s  Emphasis  on  pretty  cool,  be-­ those  points  is  CAMPER  JORDAN  NORRIS,  12,  cause  we’re  whittles  a  four-­pronged  frog  catch-­ an  apparent  con-­ always  doing  er  during  Preparing  for  the  Zombie  stant. hands-­on  activi-­ Apocalypse  camp  last  Thursday.  â€œ Ye s t e r d a y  Independent  photo/Trent  Campbell was  a  two-­Band-­ ties,â€?  Clark  said,  adding  he  has  Aid  day.  Just  a  most  enjoyed  making  small  â€œlook-­ reminder  about  knife  safety.  We  are  outâ€?  shelters.  making  spears  today,â€?  McGrath  said.  All  those  activities  are  central  to  â€œLet’s  have  a  no-­Band-­Aid  day.â€? the  course  focus.  LARGER  LESSONS Âł6KHOWHU ÂżUH ZDWHU IRRG DUH WKH $V ZHOO DV VSHFLÂżF VNLOOV 2[OH\ four  main  things  we’re  aiming  for,â€?  and  McGrath  hope  the  students  come Â

TALON  TANNER,  11,  of  Addison,  right,  watches  as  Zeke  Clark,  13,  of  Addison  cuts  the  roots  off  Queen  Anne’s  lace  plants  during  an  outdoor  survival  camp  last  week.  The  roots  taste  similar  to  carrots. Independent  photo/Trent  Campbell

away  with  some  larger  lessons.  Resil-­ iency  is  one,  McGrath  said.  â€œWhat  do  you  do  when  you’re  frustrated?â€?  she  said.  â€œLike  the  past  couple  days  we’ve  been  trying  to  OLJKW QR PDWFK ÂżUHV DQG ZH KDYHQÂśW had  much  success  with  that  yet,  but  we’re  trying  to  help  them  see,  â€˜Look,  you’ve  worked  really  hard  on  this,  and  how  can  you  keep  problem-­solv-­ ing  and  keep  trying  instead  of  giving  up?’  Which  isn’t  maybe  a  Common  &RUH VWDQGDUG EXW LWÂśV GHÂżQLWHO\ D OLIH

skill  that  will  help  them.â€? Appreciation  for  nature  and  life  without  handheld  devices  or  elec-­ tronic  entertainment  is  another  goal,  Oxley  said.  â€œThey  get  so  much  screen  time,  whether  it’s  a  TV  or  an  electronic  de-­ vice.  We  make  sure  to  build  15  min-­ utes  of  free  time  into  the  session,  and  they’re  never  bored,â€?  Oxley  said.  â€œI  hope  it’s  something  they  are  starting  to  realize,  that  there’s  a  lot  they  can  do  without  electronics.â€?

Oxley  also  said  positive  â€œunpre-­ dictable  thingsâ€?  happen  in  the  woods  away  from  a  classroom  setting.  One  day  last  week  he  heard  a  group  of  boys  being  noisy  in  the  woods  dur-­ ing  free  time  and  began  to  worry  â€”  needlessly,  he  learned. “I  just  assumed  they  were  fooling  around.  I  heard  grunting  and  scream-­ LQJ ,W ZDV OLNH IRXU RU ÂżYH ER\V , was  like,  â€˜Oh  man,  what  are  they  do-­ ing  back  there,’â€?  Oxley  said.  â€œAnd  (See  Lessons,  Page  19)


Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015  â€”  PAGE  19

SKYELYNNE  THAYER,  11,  of  Vergennes  watches  as  Barret  Barrows,  12,  of  Vergennes  and  Mitch  Clark,  13,  of  Addison  use  a  bow  frill  to  try  to  JHQHUDWH KHDW WR VSDUN D FDPS¿UH

ELH œ´ 0F*UDWK VDLG They  might  also  surprise  the  stu-­ dents  at  the  end  of  the  course  this  ZHHN ³:H PLJKW JHW D WHDFKHU RU WZR WR GUHVV XS DV ]RPELHV WKH ODVW GD\ DQG FUHHS WKURXJK WKH ZRRGV DQG VHH ZKDW KDSSHQV ´ 0F*UDWK VDLG But  being  outdoors  and  learning  DERXW QDWXUH DQG SLFNLQJ XS QHZ VNLOOV ZLOO UHPDLQ WKH PDLQ DWWUDFWLRQ =HNH &ODUN VDLG KH ZLOO EH UHFRP-­ mending  the  course  to  his  younger  IULHQGV ³,œYH WROG D IHZ WKDW LW ZRXOG EH IXQ ´ KH VDLG Andy  Kirkaldy  may  be  reached  at  andyk@addisonindependent.com.

Independent  photo/Trent  Campbell

Lessons

(Continued  from  Page  18) they  started  pulling  out  logs  for  us  all  WR VLW RQ DURXQG WKH FDPSÂżUH ,W ZDV WKHLU FRQWULEXWLRQ WR WKH FRPPXQLW\ ´ $QRWKHU WLPH D ER\ ZKR 0F*UDWK VDLG KDG QRW EHHQ ÂłVXSHU LQYROYHG´ WR WKDW SRLQW FDPH XS ZLWK WKH LGHD for  the  lookout  shelters  and  ended  up  leading  one  of  the  groups  making  the  ORRNRXWV 0F*UDWK VDLG WKDW VWXGHQWÂśV JURXS made  the  best  shelter  out  of  the  three  JURXSV “He  jumped  right  in  there  and  got  LQYROYHG ´ 0F*UDWK VDLG Âł$QG VLQFH WKHP KHÂśV EHHQ PXFK PRUH LQYROYHG LQ WKH GD\ WR GD\ VWXII ´ ZOMBIES? At  the  end  of  each  day  the  students  and  teacher  form  a  circle  of  â€œappreci-­ DWLRQ DQG DSRORJLHV´ WR LQ 0F*UDWKÂśV ZRUGV ÂłJHW WKH NLGV WR QRWLFH HDFK RWKHU ´ Âł,I WKHUH UHDOO\ ZDV D ]RPELH DSRF-­ DO\SVH ZHÂśG KDYH WR EDQG WRJHWKHU DQG VXUYLYH DV D JURXS ´ 0F*UDWK VDLG And  they  do  at  times  joke  about  ]RPELHV Âł2FFDVLRQDOO\ ,ÂśOO EH JRRI\ DQG VD\ Âľ'LG \RX KHDU WKDW"ϫ 2[OH\ VDLG 0F*UDWK VDLG VKH UHFHQWO\ EURXJKW KHU GRJ “He  started  barking  at  something  WKDW ZH FRXOGQÂśW VHH RU KHDU DQG , VDLG Âľ2K PDQ KH QRWLFHV WKH ]RP-­

Super Summer Savings

Summer Clothing Clearance Sale

30% Men’s OFF Graphic T’s Tanks and Shorts

30% Women’s T’s, Tanks OFF & Shorts 30%OFF Select Girls Toddler & Infant Summer Styles

11.99

$

PLUS %

40 OFF

Summer Styles Offer  valid  on  in-­stock  items  only  â€“  while  supplies  last.  Now  thru  7/31/15. Can  not  be  combined  with  any  other  offer  or  coupon.

MIDDLEBURY AGWAY 388 Exchange Street Open

388-4937

7 days

Mon. - Fri. 8-6, Sat. 8-5, Sun. 9-4 www.MiddleburyAgway.com

Ƥ Â?† —• ƒ– ‹‡Ž† ƒ›• —‰—•– ÍœÇŚÍ

ADDISON COUNTY

INDEPENDENT Serving Addison County, Vt., Since 1946

ADDISON COUNTY

Student News Briefs

752< 1 < ² 7KH IROORZLQJ OR-­ cal  students  graduated  from  Rensse-­ ODHU 3RO\WHFKQLF ,QVWLWXWH RQ 0D\ Christine  Artim RI 0LGGOHEXU\ summa  cum  laude, ZLWK D %6 LQ Chemical  Engineering;͞  Madison  Kincaid RI &RUQZDOO cum  laude,  ZLWK D %6 LQ 0HFKDQLFDO (QJLQHHU-­ ing;͞  Adam  Peterson RI 0LGGOH-­ bury,  magna  cum  laude, ZLWK D %6 in  Electrical  Engineering;͞  and  An-­ drew  Schumer RI 0LGGOHEXU\ ZLWK

D %6 LQ 0DWKHPDWLFV

*  *  *  *  * Sarah  C.  Stanley  of  Brandon  re-­ ceived  a  degree  from  Clark  Univer-­ VLW\ RQ 0D\ 6WDQOH\ JUDGXDWHG ZLWK D PDVWHU RI VFLHQFH LQ HQYLURQ-­ PHQWDO VFLHQFH DQG SROLF\

*  *  *  *  * Shannon  K.  Gillen  RI 6WDUNVERUR has  graduated  from  the  University  RI 1HZ (QJODQG magna  cum  laude, Â


PAGE  20  â€”  Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015

PETS IN NEED HOMEWARD BOUND

Addison County’s Humane Society Meet %XGG\! Buddy’s a young, rambunctious beagle who’s always ready to go! He arrived at Homeward Bound as a stray and the staff has come to know him as a goofball. He loves to be outside, whether he’s on a walk or running around in the yards. He gets along great with other dogs and loves meeting new people! If you think this goofy boy would be the perfect addition to your family, come meet him today!

I’m )LUHIO\ If you enjoy hugs as much as I do, we may be the perfect match! I’m a very active, curious girl who craves attention! I’ll do whatever I can to get some snuggle time; talk, rub up against your legs, and even tap your shoulder with my paws! And if you pick me up, you’ll get a great big hug! If a love bug is what you’re looking for, stop by and meet me today!

I’m *DEE\ I am a pretty independent girl and like to do my own thing. Don’t think I won’t come around for attention though, I’d never turn down a good brushing and do enjoy attention when I’m in the mood! I also get along with other cats and just like having someone to hangout with next to me, relaxing outside in the sun or inside on a nice, comfy cat bed!

Meet .LHUD Kiera’s an adorable Lionhead Lop ready to break out of her shell. She can be a bit shy when meeting new people, but with some one on one time is sure to open up! She’s a very curious girl and loves to have time out of her cage to hop around, explore, and stretch her little bunny legs. Stop by and meet this sweet girl today; she may just hop her way into your heart! Meet 0D[ Max is a handsome, young Chesapeake Bay Retriever mix. Max has very good manners and listens when asked to. He seems happiest when he’s with people and other dogs. It’s important that Max be given toys & activities to keep his puppy mind active and busy and that he gets enough exercise to exhaust his energetic self. He also loves to play with toys and loves belly rubs!

Meet 0LQQLH I am pretty new here at the shelter but am adjusting well. I came from a home with many other cats so am living in a Cat Community Room here at the shelter and love being able to make some new feline friends! While I enjoy being with other cats, I really enjoy being around people. I am a champion snuggler and love being able to be picked up and loved!

Pet Pages

How  to  litter  box  train  your  bunny (MS)  â€”  Rabbits  can  make  often  be  litter  box  trained  and  wonderful  pets.  If  you  want  VHOGRP KDYH DFFLGHQWV RXWVLGH a  pet  but  cats  and  dogs  aren’t  RI WKH ER[ 5DEELWV SUHIHU IRU \RX D UDEELW FDQ Âż OO WKH RQH RU WZR SODFHV WR SXW WKHLU YRLG $OWKRXJK UDEELWV PD\ ZDVWH 7R VWDUW WKH SURFHVV \RX QHHG OHVV LQWHUDFWLRQ WKDQ D will  need  patience. GRJ WKH\ VWLOO UHTXLUH D ORW RI ‡ %X\ D OLWWHU ER[ responsibility  and  commit-­ WKDW WKH UDEELW FDQ HDVLO\ PHQW 7KH WDVN RI FDULQJ IRU access.  Standard  cat  litter  a  rabbit  is  made  easier  by  boxes  often  work  well. training  your  rabbit  to  use  a  Â‡ &RQÂż QH WKH UDEELW litter  box. WR RQH URRP DQG SODFH WKH 0DQ\ SHRSOH KDYH SHW OLWWHU ER[ LQ WKH FDJH ZLWK WKH rabbits,  and  after  a  little  rabbit. WUDLQLQJ WKHVH DQLPDOV FDQ ‡ 2EVHUYH ZKHUH WKH URDP WKH KRXVH MXVW OLNH rabbit  likes  to  relieve  itself.  If  RWKHU SHWV &RQWUDU\ WR LWÂśV LQ WKH OLWWHU ER[ WKLV LV D popular  belief,  rabbits  aren’t  JUHDW Âż UVW VWHS ,I QRW VLPSO\ GLUW\ ,Q IDFW WKLV UHSXWDWLRQ RABBITS  CAN  BE  trained  to  use  a  litter  box,  PRYH WKH OLWWHU ER[ ZKHUH WKH often  stems  from  inatten-­ making  it  easier  to  care  for  this  cuddly  pet. rabbit  is  doing  its  business. tiveness  and  lack  of  cleaning  Â‡ 2QFH VXFFHVV RQ WKH SDUW RI WKH SHW SDUHQW IXO JLYH WKH UDEELW D OLWWOH In  reality,  rabbits  are  â€œpreyâ€?  DQLPDOV WKDW OLNH WR LQWHUDFW ZLWK bit  of  freedom  at  a  time.  Try  DQLPDOV ZKR ZLOO LQVWLQFWLYHO\ NHHS D KXPDQ KDQGOHUV :KHWKHU D UDEELW LV OHWWLQJ WKH UDEELW RXW RI WKH FDJH LQ FOHDQ KRPH WR SUHYHQW WKH EXLOG XS RI VRFLDEOH LV QRW EUHHG VSHFLÂż F 7KLV WKH FRQÂż QHG URRP ZLWK WKH OLWWHU ER[ RGRU WKDW ZRXOG UHYHDO WKH ORFDWLRQ LV ODUJHO\ GHSHQGHQW RQ WKH FDUH DQG nearby. RI WKHLU GHQV WR SRWHQWLDO SUHGDWRUV KDQGOLQJ IURP WKH RZQHU 5DLVHG ‡ *UDGXDOO\ JLYH WKH UDEELW PRUH Rabbits  can  be  raised  as  social  from  a  kit,  rabbits  can  be  accus-­ IUHHGRP OXULQJ LW WR WKH ER[ ZLWK WRPHG WR KDQGOLQJ DQ\ KXPDQ LQWHU WUHDWV DQG SUDLVH 0DNH VXUH WKH SHW action  and  be  very  companionable  LV DZDUH RI WKH OLWWHU ER[ÂśV ORFDWLRQ SHWV :KDW GHWHUV PDQ\ SHRSOH IURP ‡ ,I WKH EXQQ\ FRQWLQXDOO\ PDNHV UDEELWV LV XQIDPLOLDULW\ ZLWK RQH DV D PLVWDNHV LW FRXOG EH D VLJQDO WKDW LW SHW DQG WKH SURVSHFW RI PDQ\ GURS ZRXOG OLNH WKH OLWWHU ER[ PRYHG WR SLQJV EHLQJ OHIW DURXQG WKH KRXVH D GLIIHUHQW VSRW FORVHU WR ZKHUH WKH 8QOLNH RWKHU PDPPDOV UDEELWV accidents  are  occurring. DQG RWKHU ODJRPRUSKV SURGXFH WZR ‡ ,W PD\ WDNH ORFDWLQJ D IHZ ER[HV types  of  droppings.  Fecal  pellets  are  around  a  large  space  before  a  rabbit  WKH FRPPRQO\ IRXQG RQHV WKDW DUH JURZV DFFOLPDWHG WR XVLQJ WKH OLWWHU URXQG DQG GU\ 7KHVH FDQ EH VHHQ LQ ER[ 7KHQ \RX FDQ JUDGXDOO\ UHGXFH SLOHV DQG FDQ QXPEHU LQ WKH GR]HQV WKH QXPEHU RI ER[HV Rabbits  will  also  produce  ceco-­ 5DEELWV FDQ WDNH WLPH WR FDWFK RQ WURSHV ZKLFK DUH IRUPHG LQ D UHJLRQ WR OLWWHU ER[ WUDLQLQJ DQG HYHQ ZKHQ RI WKH UDEELWÂśV GLJHVWLYH WUDFW 7KHVH \RXÂśUH IDLUO\ FHUWDLQ WKH WUDLQLQJ LV cecotropes  contain  important  nutri-­ FRPSOHWH \RX PD\ VWLOO Âż QG D IHZ HQWV DQG KHDOWK\ EDFWHULD DQG IXQJL SHOOHWV OHIW QHDU WKH ER[ ZKLFK DUH HVVHQWLDO WR WKH KHDOWK RI Some  people  overlook  rabbits  as  D UDEELW 5DEELWV ZLOO HDW WKH FHFR SHWV EHFDXVH RI IHDU RI WKH XQNQRZQ WURSHV DV WKH\ H[LW WKH ERG\ )HFDO DQG WKH LGHD RI GURSSLQJV DOO RYHU WKH pellets  are  not  usually  eaten  and  are  KRPH +RZHYHU UDEELWV FDQ PDNH WKH GURSSLQJV WKDW ZLOO QHHG WR EH affectionate  and  agreeable  pets  for  contained. IDPLOLHV WKDW KDYH WKH WLPH WR GHYRWH ,W KDV EHHQ VDLG WKDW UDEELWV FDQ to  training.  PROFESSIONAL DOG GROOMING OVER 16 YEARS EXPERIENCE

BOARDING & TRAINING CENTER

Call or check our website. We may have a pet for you ... ‡ ZZZ KRPHZDUGERXQGDQLPDOV RUJ %RDUGPDQ 6WUHHW 0LGGOHEXU\

All the comforts of home WYTIVZMWIH TPE]XMQI ˆ GPMQEXI GSRXVSPPIH VYFFIV ž SSVMRK ˆ RS GSRGVIXI

7UDLQLQJ ‡ %RDUGLQJ Daycare

802-349-3370 Addison, Vermont

877-3371

Serving the Community Since 1940 “Cats are connoisseurs of comfort!� – James Herriot

Specialty Breed Clips & Hand Scissoring!

Call now for an appointment!

802-388-2879

Located in the Marble Works Middlebury, VT Like us on facebook


Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015  â€”  PAGE  21

Bristol  pit (Continued  from  Page  1) that  Lathrop  Forest  Products  had  ³:H QHHGHG WR EDODQFH WKH QHHG munity.  And  it  turned  out  that  Lath-­ WR OD\ RII D QXPEHU RI ZRUNHUV IRU MREV DQG IRU JUDYHO DQG GLUW ZLWK rop  wanted  to  pull  out  the  gravel  /DWHU LQ WKH %ULVWRO =RQ-­ WKH LQWHUHVW LQ KRZ EHVW WR GHYHORS without  complying  with  those  23  ing  Board  of  Adjustment  issued  a  our  immediate  downtown  and  resi-­ conditions,  and  that’s  why  we’re  permit  for  the  proposed  project,  dential  areas,â€?  said  Planning  Com-­ where  we  are  right  now.â€? stipulating  23  conditions,  and  the  mission  Chair  Sue  Kavanagh  in  Lathrop’s  attorney,  Mark  Hall,  SURWHVWV EHJDQ an  interview  this  week.  â€œThe  vot-­ did  not  return  calls  or  emails  to  ,Q /DWKURS VXEPLWWHG D ers  approved  the  new  town  plan  in  give  the  family’s  perspective  on  UHYLVHG SURSRVDO EXW WKLV WLPH WKH 1RYHPEHU EXW ZH VWUXJJOHG the  Environmental  Court’s  most  town  said  no,  as  did  the  District  DQG GHOLEHUDWHG YHU\ FDUHIXOO\ DQG recent  decision.  A  9  Environmental  very  thoughtfully  to  come  up  with  spokesperson  for  Commission,  which  that  plan. the  Lathrop  fam-­ “Nobody’s saying LVVXHV $FW SHU-­ Âł7KH WKLQJV WKDW ZH KDG WR EDO-­ ily  voiced  only,  â€œno  that we’re against mits.  The  landmark  DQFH ZHUH DQ LQWHUHVW LQ MREV DQG comment.â€? $FW ODZ HQDFW-­ an  interest  in  taking  advantage  gravel ‌ It’s this The  proposed  one (proposed HG LQ VHHNV WR RI QDWXUDO UHVRXUFHV DYDLODEOH LQ gravel  pit  ignited  EDODQFH WKH RQJRLQJ %ULVWRO ZKLOH UHFRJQL]LQJ WKDW over  a  decade  of  pit), which would demand  for  growth  the  counterpoint  is  what  that  kind  FRQĂ€LFW EHFDXVH RI have been a with  the  desire  to  RI UHVRXUFH H[WUDFWLRQ PHDQV ELJ its  proximity  to  the  heap bigger than EHVW SUHVHUYH WKH WUXFNV ELJ HTXLSPHQW QHJDWLYH village  center.  Pro-­ any of the other state’s  unique  scenic  effects  on  noise  levels,  air  qual-­ ponents  argued  that  ones and so near EHDXW\ DQG QDWXUDO ity,  land  and  property  values,  pe-­ LW ZRXOG EULQJ QHHG-­ resources.  Without  destrian  safety,  driver  safety;Íž  the  the downtown, HG MREV DQG UHYHQXH WKH UHTXLUHG $FW need  for  housing.  Those  elements  to  the  community,  with trucks permit,  the  gravel  FDXVHG XV WR JR EDFN DQG IRUWK RQ EDVHG RQ D YDOX-­ going through a SLW FRXOG QRW EH this  topic,â€?  she  added. DEOH ORFDO UHVRXUFH residential area. EXLOW QUALITY  OF  LIFE Gravel  is  important  That’s why people 7KHQ LQ Also  driving  the  crafting  and  to  roads  and  con-­ have said that this the  Environmental  DGRSWLRQ RI WKH %ULVWRO 7RZQ struction,  among  Court  issued  Lath-­ Plan  was  a  desire  to  preserve  liv-­ other  uses,  and  is  one is wrong.â€? URS DQ $FW SHU-­ DELOLW\ LQ WKH FHQWUDO GRZQWRZQ — attorney PLW EXW IRU D YHUVLRQ and  village  area  and  encourage  part  of  Vermont’s  James Dumont of  the  proposed  proj-­ residential  use  and  light  industry,  glacial  heritage,  as  are  its  remaining  ect  that  had  not  gone  OLJKW LQGXVWU\ LQ WKLV FDVH EHLQJ GH-­ JUDQLWH PDUEOH DQG EHIRUH WKH WRZQ ]RQ-­ ÂżQHG DV ÂłZRUN WKDWÂśV GRQH LQVLGH D slate  quarries.  But  unlike  gran-­ LQJ ERDUG RU WKH 'LVWULFW (QYL-­ EXLOGLQJ WKDW KDV IHZ H[WHULRU HI-­ LWH RU PDUEOH TXDUU\LQJ ZKLFK ronmental  Commission.  A  group  fects,  such  as  noise  or  pollution.â€?  WHQGV WR EH RZQHG DQG RSHUDWHG E\ RI %ULVWRO FLWL]HQV DSSHDOHG WKH $ QXPEHU RI JUDYHO SLWV DOUHDG\ large  corporations  (Rock  of  Ages,  Environmental  Court’s  decision  RSHUDWH LQ WKH %ULVWRO DUHD EXW 2P\D JUDYHO RSHUDWLRQV FDQ EH to  the  Vermont  Supreme  Court,  QRQH RI WKH VL]H SURSRVHG E\ /DWK-­ run  on  a  smaller  scale. which  this  past  March  struck  down  rop  and  none  that  would  similarly  Opponents  argued  that  with  the  Environmental  Court’s  ear-­ affect  the  downtown  and  residen-­ WKH DQWLFLSDWHG KHDY\ WUDIÂżF SUR-­ lier  ruling  and  tasked  Durkin  with  tial  areas.  Ultimately,  the  location  SRVHG WR EH IURP WR PRUH WKDQ VHQGLQJ D UHYLVHG SURSRVDO EDFN of  the  proposed  pit  emerged  as  the  WUXFNV D GD\ WKH JUDYHO SLW through  the  proper  GHÂżQLQJ LVVXH ZRXOG EULQJ LQGXVWULDO OHYHO QRLVH channels  to  the  town  ³1RERG\ÂśV VD\LQJ to  downtown  and  have  a  negative  ]RQLQJ ERDUG DQG WKH The most recent that  we’re  against  impact  on  air  quality,  driver  and  District  9  Environ-­ Bristol Town gravel,â€?  said  attor-­ pedestrian  safety,  property  values,  mental  Commission.  ney  Dumont.  â€œNo-­ Plan expressly DQG WKH RYHUDOO OLYDELOLW\ RI WKH Last  week’s  de-­ ERG\ KDV UDLVHG FRP-­ area  in  and  around  the  downtown  cision,  which  the  prohibits SODLQWV DERXW DQ\ and  village  center.  court  formally  re-­ extraction within of  Bristol’s  existing  The  struggle  over  the  pit  also  OHDVHG WR WKH SXEOLF the designated gravel  pits.  It’s  this  highlighted  divisions  within  the  on  Thursday,  comes  Village Planning one,  which  would  FRPPXQLW\ RYHU WKH EHVW XVH RI out  of  protracted  and  Area, which KDYH EHHQ D KHDS natural  resources,  property  own-­ ongoing  settlement  ELJJHU WKDQ DQ\ RI ers’  rights  vs.  the  rights  of  the  GLVFXVVLRQV EHWZHHQ stretches well past the  other  ones  and  so  community  as  interpreted  through  DWWRUQH\V IRU ERWK the contested site near  the  downtown,  $FW WKH DSSURSULDWH OHJDO SUR-­ Lathrop  Limited  in all directions. with  trucks  going  FHVVHV DQG SXEOLF IRUXPV IRU UH-­ Partnership  and  the  through  a  residen-­ solving  controversial  land-­use  is-­ FLWL]HQV ZKR DS-­ tial  area.  That’s  why  sues,  and  the  community’s  vision  pealed  the  Environmental  Court’s  people  have  said  that  this  one  is  RI LWVHOI DQG RI ZKR EHORQJV WKHUH GHFLVLRQ wrong,  and  that’s  why  this  is  the  The  Lathrop  family,  for  example,  $W WKLV SRLQW DQ\ SRVVLELOLW\ right  outcome.â€? KDV EHHQ LQ %ULVWRO VLQFH DQFHVWRU of  the  gravel  extraction  project’s  Local  entrepreneur  Kevin  1RDK /DWKURS ÂżUVW RSHUDWHG D VDZ-­ moving  forward  would  depend  on  Harper,  who  was  among  the  nine  PLOO LQ WKH V $QG WKHUH KDV WKH H[LVWLQJ GLVFUHSDQF\ EHWZHHQ FLWL]HQV ZKR DSSHDOHG WKH (QYL-­ EHHQ D VLPPHULQJ VHQVH RI ROG WLP-­ WKH WRZQ RI %ULVWROÂśV FXUUHQW ]RQ-­ URQPHQWDO &RXUWÂśV GHFLVLRQ HUV YV RXWVLGHUV EOXH FROODU ZRUN-­ ing  map  and  the  town  plan  ap-­ welcomed  last  week’s  decision. ers  vs.  a  community  that  increas-­ SURYHG E\ YRWHUV LQ WKDW H[-­ “We  all  love  this  community,  the  LQJO\ GHÂżQHV LWVHOI WKURXJK ZKLWH SUHVVO\ SURKLELWV JUDYHO H[WUDFWLRQ Lathrops  love  this  community,  and  FROODU MREV DQG VHUYLFHV within  a  designated  Village  Plan-­ LWÂśV DERXW WU\LQJ WR ÂżQG D EDODQFH ´ CASE  BACKGROUND ning  Area  that  stretches  north  of  +DUSHU VDLG Âł,WÂśV EHHQ D ORQJ KDXO 7KH OHJDO EDWWOH VXUURXQGLQJ Plank  Road  and  almost  as  far  south  IRU D ORW RI SHRSOH RQ ERWK VLGHV this  proposed  gravel  pit  has,  in  the  as  where  Hewitt  Road  joins  Route  DQG ,ÂśP MXVW KDSS\ WR EH IRFXV-­ words  of  Vermont  Supreme  Court  LQJ RQ PRUH SRVLWLYH REMHFWLYHV Justice  John  A.  Dooley’s  March  )RU PHPEHUV RI WKH %ULVWRO 3ODQ-­ ,W IHHOV ZD\ EHWWHU WR EH EXLOGLQJ PDMRULW\ RSLQLRQ ÂłFDUYHG D ning  Commission,  the  struggle  D QHZ ÂżUHKRXVH RU GHYHORSLQJ DI-­ very  long  and  circuitous  path.â€?  RYHU KRZ WR GHÂżQH WKH QHZ 9LOODJH IRUGDEOH KRXVLQJ WKDQ SURWHVWLQJ D /DWKURS ÂżUVW DSSOLHG WR EXLOG WKH Planning  Area  and  whether  to  al-­ pit.  JUDYHO SLW LQ DV D QHZ YHQWXUH low  or  disallow  gravel  extraction  â€œI  hope  we  can  all  move  forward  DIWHU D ÂżUH GDPDJHG RQH RI within  that  area  was  not  an  easy  together  and  focus  on  things  that  WKH FRPSDQ\ÂśV VDZPLOOV VR EDGO\ one. ZLOO EXLOG RXU FRPPXQLW\ ´

3  Squares  recipients  get  double  value  at  some  farmers’  markets SOUTH  BURLINGTON  â€”  There  DUH FXUUHQWO\ RYHU 9HUPRQW-­ HUV ZKR UHFHLYH 6TXDUHV97 EHQ-­ HÂżWV WR KHOS WKHP EX\ PRUH IRRG IRU their  families.  Now  when  Vermont-­ HUV XVH WKHLU 6TXDUHV97 EHQHÂżWV DW WKH IDUPHUVÂś PDUNHW WKH\ FDQ GRXEOH their  money  with  â€œCrop  Cash,â€?  which  DOORZV WKHP WR EX\ PRUH IUHVK IUXLWV DQG YHJHWDEOHV IURP ORFDO IDUPHUV 7KH SURJUDP EHJDQ -XQH The  system  works  like  this:  At  the  farmers’  market,  Vermonters  go  to  WKH ERRWK GLVSOD\LQJ WKH Âł(%7 DQG 'HELW $FFHSWHG +HUH´ VLJQ WR VZLSH their  EBT  card.  They  say  how  much  RI WKHLU EHQHÂżWV WKH\ ZRXOG OLNH WR spend  and  then  swipe  their  card.  They  receive  wooden  tokens  worth  HDFK WR XVH DW DQ\ YHQGRU WKDW VHOOV 6TXDUHV97 HOLJLEOH IRRGV $V D ERQXV IRU VKRSSLQJ DW WKH PDUNHW they  also  receive  Crop  Cash,  an  or-­ DQJH ELOO LQ LQFUHPHQWV WR PDWFK WKHLU (%7 SXUFKDVHV XS WR SHU PDUNHW GD\ &URS &DVK FDQ WKHQ EH

used  to  purchase  fresh  fruits  and  YHJHWDEOHV DW WKH PDUNHW The  Crop  Cash  Incentive  Program  is  a  win-­win  for  3SquaresVT  users,  ZKR DUH DEOH WR SXUFKDVH PRUH IDUP fresh  fruits  and  veggies,  as  well  as  IRU ORFDO IDUPHUV ZKR DUH DEOH WR market  their  products  to  more  Ver-­ monters.  There  are  now  over  45  farmers’  markets  in  Vermont  that  al-­ low  shoppers  to  use  their  3Squares-­ 97 EHQHÂżWV DQG GRXEOH WKHVH EHQ-­ HÂżWV ZLWK &URS &DVK )RU D OLVW RI EBT  markets,  visit  www.vermont-­ foodhelp.com RU GLDO The  Crop  Cash  Incentive  Program  LV FRRUGLQDWHG E\ WKH Northeast  Or-­ ganic  Farming  Association  of  Ver-­ mont  (NOFA-­VT),  with  funding  from  the  USDA  Food  Insecurity  Nu-­ trition  Incentive  Grant  Program  and  Wholesome  Wave.  Hunger  Free  Ver-­ mont  does  outreach  to  3SquaresVT  participants  so  they  know  they  can  XVH WKHLU EHQHÂżWV DW PDUNHWV DQG DF-­ cess  Crop  Cash.

Think of Agway when you think of your pets! Proud  to  help  you  provide  quality  care  for  all  of  your  pets, we  know  your  animal  companions  are  a  central  part  of  your  life! Â

PET FOOD

Quality  Brands  Including:

ASK Â ABOUT Â OUR

Pet Food Club

Earn  rewards  for  your  purchases!

Everything  you  need  for  pet  support! TOYS & TREATS Accessories & Grooming Supplies

SELF SERVE

/HDVKHV ‡ +DUQHVVHV &ROODUV ‡ &ORWKLQJ Food  Dishes  Storage  Bins   Beds  &  Baskets Brushes,  shampoos,  skin  treatment,  ointments  to  keep  your  pets’  coats  healthy  and  problem  free!

Kennels, Dog Houses & Carrying Cases Come  in  and  check  the  variety  we  have  in  stock!

Wild  Bird  Large & Small Animal Products Supplies

    Â‡ )HHG ‡ 6XSSOHPHQWV ‡ 7UDLQLQJ *URRPLQJ 6XSSOLHV

‡ &DJHV )RRGV 7UHDWV %HGGLQJ ‡ %LUG IRRG WR\V DQG FDJHV ‡ %DVLFV IRU ¿ VK WRR

Feeders,  Seed  &  Suet,  +RXVHV Accessories.

MIDDLEBURY AGWAY Join  our  email  list  for  preferred customer  savings!

Open   7  days

338  Exchange  Street,  Middlebury ‡ ZZZ 0LGGOHEXU\$JZD\ FRP 0RQ )UL ‡ 6DW ‡ 6XQGD\V

YOUR  YARD,  GARDEN  AND  PET  PLACE™  ‡ ZZZ PLGGOHEXU\DJZD\ FRP


PAGE  22  â€”  Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015

&ROOHJH VWXGHQW LQYHVWLJDWHV HIÂż FDF\ RI VFLHQFH ZULWLQJ FERRISBURGH  â€”  Mary  Langworthy,  the  daughter  of  Charles  and  Margaret  â€œMegâ€?  Langworthy  of  Ferrisburgh,  and  a  rising  junior  at  Hamilton  College,  is  spending  her  summer  analyzing  how  science  writing  informs  or  fails  to  inform  the  public. :KLOH WKRXVDQGV RI VFLHQWLÂż F DUWLFOHV are  published  annually,  relatively  few  attract  the  attention  of  the  general  public.  The  gap  between  what  is  under-­ stood  by  scientists  and  what  is  common  knowledge  to  the  public  is  the  focus  of  a  research  project  Langworthy  is  under-­ taking,  under  the  advisement  of  the  director  of  Hamilton’s  new  Academic  Program  in  the  Adirondacks,  Janelle  Schwartz.

Langworthy’s  project,  titled  â€œWhere  Geology  Meets  Literature:  A  Spatiotemporal  Analysis  of  Science  Writing,â€?  is  funded  through  the  Emerson  Summer  Collaborative  Research  program,  which  provides  grants  primarily  to  student  pursuing  â€œresearch  or  other  scholarly  or  creative  FROODERUDWLRQ RXWVLGH WKH FRQÂż QHV RI WKH FODVVURRP´ LQ Âż HOGV DQG GHSDUWPHQWV with  limited  available  summer  funding. “This  summer,  I’m  exploring  science  writing:  what  makes  it  success-­ ful  at  informing  the  public,  and  how  and  why  shortfalls  occur,â€?  explained  Langworthy.  She  will  be  researching  ERWK SULPDU\ VFLHQWLÂż F OLWHUDWXUH DQG popular  science  writing  relevant  to  a Â

presents the

2015 Garden Game We had our very first Garden Game entry of the summer! 0AM 4HOMAS stopped in last week to show us two radishes she grew in her garden in Whiting. We don’t have a specific category for radishes but we were excited to see the early results of some hard work. She says that her gardens are well fertilized with rabbit manure.

We’d like to see the vegetables that are growing in your garden! Right now we have lots of string beans, broccoli, and some green tomatoes waiting to ripen. What are you growing? Share your photos and stories with us and you may see them online at WWW ADDISONINDEPENDENT COM.

CATEGORIES s "EETS (circumference) s "ROCCOLI (diameter) s #ABBAGE (circumference) s #ANTALOUPE (circumference) s #ARROT (length x circumference) s #AULImOWER (diameter) s #UCUMBER (length x circumference) s %GGPLANT (circumference x circumference) s 'REEN "EAN (length) s /NION (circumference) s 0OTATO (length x circumference) s 0EPPER (circumference x circumference) s 0UMPKIN (circumference x circumference) s 2UTABAGA (circumference) s 3UMMER 3QUASH (length x circumference) s 3UNmOWER (diameter) s 4OMATO (circumference) s 4URNIP (circumference) s :UCCHINI (length x circumference)

GARDEN GAME RULES Entries must be home grown in the greater !DDISON #OUNTY AREA s /NLY PRODUCE BROUGHT TO THE !DDISON )NDEPENDENT OFlCE BETWEEN -ON &RI AM PM WILL BE ELIGIBLE s 7EEKLY FRONT RUNNERS WILL BE LISTED IN THE h'ARDEN 'AMEv COLUMN UNTIL ANOTHER CONTESTANT PROVIDES A LARGER SAMPLE OF THAT PRODUCE CATEGORY 4HE LARGEST ENTRIES AS OF 4HURSDAY NOON DEADLINE WILL BE THE FRONT RUNNERS LISTED IN THAT -ONDAY S EDITION s /NE WINNER PER CATEGORY s *UDGE HAS lNAL WORD s &IRST PLACE WINNERS WILL BE ANNOUNCED AT SIGN OF lRST FROST

VSHFLÂż F FOLPDWH LVVXH LQ HDFK RI WKUHH locations:  the  Adirondack  Park,  Iceland  and  California.  Iceland,  in  particular  was  selected  due  to  Langworthy’s  upcoming  involvement  with  Professor  of  Geosciences  Barbara  Tewksbury’s  July  geology  trip  to  the  volcanically  and  geologically  active  island  nation. In  a  time  when  environmental  VFLHQFH LQ SDUWLFXODU Âż QGV LWVHOI LQ WKH news  as  the  perpetual  subject  of  political  debate,  the  clear  and  accurate  relaying  of  VFLHQWLÂż F LQIRUPDWLRQ WR WKH SXEOLF LV RI vital  importance.  Langworthy  said  she  expects  that  in  each  of  her  three  areas  of  VWXG\ VKH ZRXOG Âż QG VRPH GLVFUHSDQF\ EHWZHHQ WKH VFLHQWLÂż F FRPPXQLW\ÂśV understanding  of  the  given  issue  and  the Â

Super Summer Savings

GARDEN & PATIO DÉCOR %

30 OFF

Select Patio & Outdoor Pottery

general  public’s. However,  she  claims  that  different  factors  likely  contribute  to  said  discrep-­ ancy  across  the  three  different  locations.  By  â€œidentifying  and  addressing  the  factors  that  limit  or  impede  the  public’s  VFLHQWLÂż F OLWHUDF\ ´ /DQJZRUWK\ KRSHV to  develop  accessible  new  methods  of  ZULWLQJ DERXW VFLHQWLÂż F LVVXHV WKDW FDQ effectively  communicate  new  ideas  to  the  public,  potentially  tailored  to  each  geographic  location. Langworthy’s  literary  research  has  covered  numerous  disciplines,  rang-­ ing  from  fairly  standard  sources  such  as  census  data  and  government  docu-­ ments,  to  relatively  obscure  editorials  dating  back  as  far  as  the  1800s,  and  millennium-­old  Icelandic  sagas.  â€œI  have  always  been  interested  in  writing,â€?  she  said,  â€œand  this  project  seemed  like  a  perfect  way  to  integrate  my  newfound  passion  for  geology  with  my  lifelong  fascination  with  writing.â€? Langworthy  likens  the  public  to  the  last  member  of  a  group  playing  the  game  â€œtelephone,â€?  with  regard  to  VFLHQWLÂż F LVVXHV FODLPLQJ WKDW PXFK RI the  information  that  reaches  the  masses  suffers  from  distillation,  lack  of  context  and  overall  poor  delivery.

MARY  LANGWORTHY She  concluded,  â€œI  think  that  we  become  accustomed  to  taking  things  at  face  value,  and  this  project  has  been  an  exciting  opportunity  to  snoop  around  LQ WKH VFLHQWLÂż F OLWHUDWXUH P\VHOI DQG propose  how  science  writing  can  be  made  more  effective.â€? A  geosciences  major  at  Hamilton,  Langworthy  is  a  graduate  of  Vergennes  Union  High  School.

Now on Wednesdays too!

30%OFF

Garden Decorations Including: Decorative Stakes, Stepping Stones, Statuary, Figurines, Rain Gauges, and Fairy Garden Accessories

Come to the

Middlebury 11.99 Market Farmers’ $

)N THE -ARBLE 7ORKS n .ORTH 0ARKING ,OT

$EBIT %"4 ACCEPTED

Offer  valid  on  in-­stock  items  only  â€“  while  supplies  last.  Now  thru  7/31/15.

MIDDLEBURY AGWAY 388 Exchange Street Open

388-4937

0RODUCE s -EAT s #HEESE s 7INE "READ s -APLE 3YRUP s #RAFTS s 0LANTS -ORE

7 days

Mon. - Fri. 8-6, Sat. 8-5, Sun. 9-4 www.MiddleburyAgway.com

3ATURDAY 7EDNESDAY AM n PM s 2AIN OR 3HINE WWW MIDDLEBURYFARMERSMARKET ORG

Got Firewood? We Do! Call to Schedule Delivery

Green or Dry (Kiln Processed)*

&HUWLÂżHG IRU 9HUPRQW +HDW 7UHDWPHQW

*Dry  Wood  is  heated  in  our  Kilns  at  200º  until  the  average  moisture  is  down  to 20-­25%

ADDISON COUNTY

INDEPENDENT

VERMONT’S TWICE-­WEEKLY NEWSPAPER 0LGGOHEXU\ 97 ‡ ‡ ZZZ $GGLVRQ,QGHSHQGHQW FRP

(802) 453-4884 THE A. JOHNSON CO., LLC BRISTOL, VT 05443


Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015  â€”  PAGE  23

SERVICES DIRECTORY DENTISTRY

APPLIANCE REPAIR

PAINTING

Alexander Appliance Repair Inc. t!

6HUYLQJ $GGLVRQ &KLWWHQGHQ &RXQWLHV 6LQFH

v

us

r

GAS OR ELECTRIC

Washers Refrigerators Dishwashers Disposals

Se r

ice

you

t n a c

Tony Leavitt

Dryers Ranges Microwaves Air Conditioners

Interior & Exterior, Residential & Commercial

$FMM t 0Gm DF

5HIHUHQFHV ‡ )XOO\ ,QVXUHG ‡ /HDG &HUWLÀ HG

Jack Alexander

For )UHH (VWLPDWHV Call

‡

#SJHHT )JMM r #SJTUPM 75

BOARDING DOG OBEDIENCE & AGILITY

PHOTOGRAPHY

EQUIPMENT RENTALS

Cjh[dj YWcfX[bb

40 Â TYPES Â OF Â RENTAL Â EQUIPMENT Â TO Â CHOOSE Â FROM

‡ PDWHULDO IRUNOLIWV ‡ H[FDYDWRUV ‡ EXOOGR]HUV ‡ PLQL H[FDYDWRUV ‡ VNLGVWHHUV

We can train a good dog to become a great dog! Call Peg for our schedule!

apture those

special times photography

‡ 0DQ OLIWV XS WR œ ‡ PDQ EDVNHW Z FUDQH XS WR

with images from

‡ FRQFUHWH FRPSDFWRUV ‡ EDFNKRHV

award-winning I\Zfi[ pfli jg\Z`Xc [Xp

n`k_ d\dfiXYc\ `dX^\j photographer

]ifd XnXi[$n`ee`e^ g_fkf^iXg_\i

Ki\ek :XdgY\cc% Trent Campbell.

Going Out of Town?

Board your dog in our radiant heated, 10 run kennel. Large windows & plenty of room to run – makes it feel more like home!

Hand-in-Paw Training & Boarding Kennel

=fi Yffb`e^j# ZXcc 0/0$/*-0%

275 South 116 Bristol, VT116 05443 275 South 116 275 South Bristol,VT VT05443 05443 Bristol,

5RXWH &RUQZDOO ‡

BUSINESS CARDS rds a C s s e n i s Bu rder Made to O

www.brownswelding.com OVER 40 LIFTS 275 South 116, Bristol, Vermont 05443 OVER 40 LIFTS LIFTS OVER 40 ‡ &HOO

Please give us a call. Please give us a call. LOCKSMITH We have the lift for you! We have the lift for you! 40’ to 80’ manlifts Scissor Lifts up to 32’ Mini Excavator

LOCK-­N-­GLASS CRAFTERS

40’ to 80’ manlifts manlifts 40’ 80’ 42’to material forklifts 42’ material forklifts 42’ material forklifts Fork lifts up to 15,000 lbs.

Scissor Lifts up up to to 32’ 32’ Scissor Lifts Excavator Excavator Excavator Skid Steer

Mini Excavator Mini Excavator Air Compressor Air Compressor Compressor Air

Labels & Fork lifts lifts up up to to 15,000 15,000 lbs. lbs. Skid Skid Steer Steer Letterhead Fork 19 %#44;+0) # 8#4+'6; 1( too! SERVING VERMONT & NEW YORK FOR OVER 30 YEARS!

/RDER YOUR  Custom  Business  Cards  HERE AT  THE  Addison  Independent. Call  Vicki  at  388-­4944  or  stop  by  our  RI¿FH LQ WKH 0DUEOH :RUNV EHWZHHQ DP SP 0RQGD\ WKURXJK )ULGD\

CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION Sargent Concrete Construction

Nothing is too big or too small!

1-­800-­880-­6030 Fax:1-­800-­880-­6030 (802) 453-­2730 1-­800-­880-­6030 Fax:(802) (802)453-­2730 453-­2730 Fax:

%POOJF 4BSHFOU t -JODPMO 75

Residential/Commercial Foundations . Retaining Walls Slabs . Foundation Repair Quality work and fully insured

802-453-6426 . donniesargent@gmail.com

SERVING VERMONT & NEW YORK FOR 30 YEARS! SERVING '.( '('05' 6'/5 g +0%.7&+0) VERMONT & NEW YORK FOR 30 YEARS! Wildfire Pepper Spray ˜ (#56 #%6+0) ˜ 010 *#4/(7.

Dennis Cassidy 388-­7633 63 Maple Street, Middlebury in the Marble Works

www.middleburysafeandlock.com

MASONRY F��� D�� S���� M������ J���� M�������� C�������� �� ��� D�� S���� W������ A���������� �� G���� B������

trent campbell

989-8369

PROPERTY MAINTENANCE Dave Ringer

Property Maintenance

LLC

)XOO\ ,QVXUHG ‡ 6HUYLQJ $GGLVRQ &RXQW\ IRU \HDUV

Mowing & Trimming Tractor & Backhoe Services Trucking Landscape Materials Yard Work

(802) 877-3879 17 South Middlebrook Rd. Vergennes, VT 05491

RENEWABLE ENERGY Soak  Up  The  Sun! Don’t  spend  your  hard-­earned  money  making  the  hot  water  or  electricity  that  you  use  today– SOLAR  IS  MORE  AFFORDABLE  THAN  EVER! We’ve  been  here  for  you  for  43  years  â€“  Let  us  help  you  with  your  solar  projects  today. Â

802-233-4670

jmasefield@gmavt.net www.jamiemasefield.com

photography

Go  Green  with  us. Call  for  a  FREE  on-­site  evaluation


PAGE  24  â€”  Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015

Middlebury  Union  High  School  honor  roll MIDDLEBURY  â€”  The  following  Middlebury  Union  High  School  students  have  been  recognized  for  their  academic  achievement  during  the  fourth  quarter  of  the  2014-­2015  academic  year. Grade  9 High  honors:  Lydia  Alberts,  Benjamin  Balparda,  Janet  Barkdoll,  Sierra  Barnicle,  Ella  Beattie,  Jordan  Betourney,  Andrea  Boe,  Tre  Bonavita,  Jacob  Brookman,  Anna  Browdy,  Anna  Buteau,  Jack  Deppman,  Keagan  Dunbar,  Ciara  Eagan,  Fyn  Fernandez,  Tyler  Giorgio,  Krystian  Gombosi,  Colin  Grier,  Lucy  Groves,  Margreta  Hardy-­Mittell,  Polly  Heminway,  Tulley  Hescock,  Samuel  Hodges,  Anna  Hodson,  Jane  Holmes,  Justin  Holmes,  Jake  Ingenthron,  Brynn  Kent,  Brian  Kiernan,  Katherine  Koehler,  Sophie  Lefkoe,  Cassidy  Lucia,  Ezra  Marks,  Sophia  Marks,  Jacob  Martin,  Satchel  McLaughlin,  Archie  Milligan,  Ella  Nagy-­Benson,  Bethany  Palmer,  Addy  Parsons,  Raven  Payne,  Jaro  Perera,  Bastiaan  Phair,  Isabel  Rosenberg,  Meilena  Sanchez,  Julian  Schmitt,  Gaia  Sheridan,  Oziah  Wales,  Jack  Waterman,  Laura  Whitley  and  Alexander  Yurista. Honors:  Josephine  Abbott,  Helen  Anderson,  Bridget  Audet,  Julia  Baslow,  Olivia  Beauchamp,  Brennan  Bordonaro,  Sarah  Broughton,  Arden  Carling,  Rebekah  Chamberlain,  Alyson  Chione,  Brianna  Cotroneo,  Hunter  Cummings-­Washburn,  Skyeler  Devlin,  Santiago  Fernandez,  Ella  Fitzcharles,  Brian  Foote,  Mercedes  Forbes,  Ashlynn  Foster,  Abigail  Gleason,  John  David  Goettelmann,  Lauren  Greig, Â

Tyler  Hotte,  Jesslyn  Hounchell,  William  Huntington,  Alexandria  Johnson,  Chloe  Kane,  Nikolaus  Kaufmann,  Brynna  Kearns,  R.  Willem  Landis,  Waseya  Lawton,  Mary  Lynch,  Brooks  Maerder,  Joseph  Miller,  Matthew  Ouellette,  Nicole  Palmer,  Robert  Pike,  Jared  Schauer,  Justine  Smith,  Spencer  Smith,  Cassidy  Sorrell-­Cushman,  William  Stanley,  Blair  Stone,  Michael  Stone,  Katalin  Tolgyesi,  Matthew  Townsend,  Megan  Townsend,  Garrett  Troumbley,  Lucy  Ursitti,  Brendan  Wagner,  Daniel  Wisell  and  Samuel  Young. Honorable  mention:  Duncan  Crogan,  Jackson  Donahue,  John  Eagan,  Wyatt  Galipeau,  Marina  Lafountain,  Kayli  Manning,  Elizabeth  Marini,  Nicholas  Scott,  Anthony  Shores,  Jay  Smits,  Keira  Thorpe,  Andre  Trudeau,  Rosie  Vanacore  and  Joseph  Whitley. Grade  10 High  honors:  Owain  Alexander,  Brittany  Baker,  Abigail  Benz,  Leigh  Boglioli,  Tobias  Broucke,  Patricia  Burkins,  Payton  Buxton,  Spencer  Carpenter,  Allison  Cherrier,  Meigan  Clark,  Kyra  Diehl,  Dace  Eaton,  Hadley  Evans  Nash,  Riley  Fenster,  Anne  Garner,  Joshua  Girard,  Amalia  Herren-­Lage,  Tasha  Hescock,  Ronan  Howlett,  Karl  Kaufmann,  Charlotte  Keathley,  Bryce  Kowalczyk,  Jakub  Kraus,  Ally  Larocque,  Hattie  Lindert,  Zara  London-­Southern,  Duncan  McCabe,  Eli  Miller,  Katherine  Moulton,  Lucas  Pyle,  Micah  Rubin,  Brooke  Rubright,  Douglas  Sandler,  Lilia  Smith,  Darcy  Staats,  Lauren  Turner,  Nicholas  Wilkerson,  Indigo  Woods Â

and  Claire  Wulfman. Honors:  Asaiah  Anderson,  Joanna  Barrett,  Nicholas  Beattie,  Ryan  Cook,  Monroe  Cromis,  Ross  Crowne,  Ida  Mae  Danforth,  Tamika  Davis,  Erin  Gebo,  Tiffany  Gile,  Andrew  Gleason,  Owen  Hammel,  Briana  Hanley,  Rowan  Hendy,  Aaliyah  Hutchinson,  Amelia  Ingersoll,  Trey  Kaufmann,  Jacob  King,  Josef  Langevin,  Katelyn  Larocque,  Alexander  Marohnic,  Lauren  Martin,  George  McKeever-­Parkes,  Niquita  McNeal,  Shelby  Monica,  Travis  Norris,  Katherine  Oster,  McKenna  Poppenga,  Harlow  Punderson,  Garrett  Pyfrom,  Leah  Raymond,  Jessica  Rich,  Mikayla  Robinson,  Hannah  Roque,  Erin  Stocker,  Sullivan  Swearingen,  Michaela  Sylvain,  Zoey  Thebodo,  Andrew  Trombley,  Nathan  Warren,  Molly  Wetmore  and  Maria  Wiles. Honorable  mention:  Alura  Bacon,  Charles  Barber,  Pierson  Beatty,  Samuel  Chamberlain,  Douglas  DeLorenzo,  Henry  Ganey,  Nicolas  Koontz,  Patrick  Messenger,  Molly  Taylor,  Malcolm  Thompson,  Brett  Viens  and  Taylor  Wisnowski. GRADE  11 High  honors:  Claire  Armstrong,  Nicholas  Beauchamp,  Courtney  Bronson,  Hannah  Buttolph,  Alyssa  Crogan,  Emma  Donahue,  Mikayla  Farnsworth,  Madelyn  Gardner,  Cole  Gregory,  Gretchen  Groves,  Annina  Hare,  Nicholas  Holmes,  Cassie  Kehoe,  Cassondra  Laroche,  Breanna  Lepri,  Brittani  Lepri,  Harriet  Milligan,  Kyle  Pecsok,  Wilder  Perera,  Sophie  Saunders,  Kelsey  Smith,  Meaghan  Stanley,  Haven Â

Tate,  Scott  Vincent,  Alexandra  Whipple,  James  Whitley,  Tyler  Woods  and  Bruce  Wright. Honors:  Sophie  Andrews,  Carolyn  Balparda,  Drew  Barnicle,  Lauren  Bartlett,  Felicia  Baslow,  Emma  Best,  Katina  Boise,  Jordan  Broughton,  Molly  Campbell,  Sophia  Chicoine,  Mara  Dowd,  David  Dregallo,  Matthew  Ferguson,  Timothy  Ferguson,  Emily  Fleming,  Alexandra  Forbes,  MaKayla  Foster,  Christopher  Grier,  Adrianna  Guyette,  Joshua  Hotte,  Mikayla  Humiston,  Faith  Isham,  Nora  Keathley,  Jacob  Klemmer,  Brady  Larocque,  Signi  Livingstone-­Peters,  Maxim  Mayone,  Ian  McKay,  Danielle  Morris,  Wyatt  Norris,  Maia  Parsons,  River  Payne,  Sawyer  Ryan,  Kylie  Scheck,  Justin  Seguin,  Benjamin  Silver,  Jennie  Staret,  Grey  Sutor,  Jesse  Trudeau,  Jordyn  Walker,  Burke  Weekes,  Isis  Wyatt  and  Elias  Wyncoop. Honorable  mention:  Ember  Benatti,  Keith  Charbonneau,  Alya  Christensen,  Christopher  Garner,  Harlee  Gero,  Parker  Gross,  Alexa  Herrera,  Massimiliano  Hurley,  Wyatt  Laberge,  Tajah  Marsden,  Udai  Sharma,  Lewis  Short,  Joseph  Vanacore,  Julia  Vorsteveld  and  Destinnie  Wilke.  Grade  12  High  honors:  Matthew  Becker,  Luke  Benz,  Ryan  Biette,  Riker  Billings,  Simon-­ Jimmy  Broucke,  Eliza  Broughton,  Bryce  Burrell,  Caileigh  Bushey,  Sara  Byers,  Douglas  Campbell,  Nathan  Cobb,  John  Eastman,  Kaitlyn  Gaboriault,  Katherine Â

Holmes,  Joseph  Hounchell,  Kaitlin  Huber,  Adam  Joselson,  Aidan  Kirby,  Janelle  Mandigo,  Ahleiyah  Mason-­ Rivera,  Michelle  Peterson,  Eric  Podraza,  Krisandra  Provencher,  Deanetta  Putnam,  Baily  Ryan,  Evan  Ryan,  Mary  Shackett-­ Brouillard,  Harper  Smith,  Emma  Snyder-­ White,  Justin  Stone,  Bo  Linh  Tran,  Isabel  Velez  and  Jesse  Wulfman. Honors:  Robert  Avery,  Ashton  Bates,  Zachary  Bechhoefer,  Calder  Birdsey,  Paul  Bougor,  Alayne  Campbell,  Oliver  Clark,  Jessica  Cyr,  Alexander  Dalton,  Haley  Davis,  Calvin  Desforges,  Todd  Dorr,  Samantha  Duncanson,  Grant  Durham,  Burke  Farrell,  Brooke  Gaboriault,  Hunter  Gallipo,  Madeline  Ganey,  Ian  Gill,  Andie  Guran,  Patrick  Hanley,  Cullen  Hathaway,  Eva  hirsch,  JoAnna  Hitchcock,  CareyAnne  Howlett,  Kristina  Howlett,  Isabella  Jackson,  Emily  Kiernan,  Hailey  LaBounty,  Nathan  Lalonde,  Autumn  LaPlant,  Jacob  Lawson,  Anne  Lindholm,  Lejla  Mahmuljin,  Carly  McGrath-­ Turnbull,  Maegan  Mitchell,  Alyzza  Odell,  Nathaniel  Orvis,  Alexis  Ouellette,  Lauren  Poppenga,  Victoria  Provost,  Connor  Quinn,  Keri  Richmond,  Robert  Ritter,  Austin  Robinson,  Julia  Rosenberg,  Jerald  Staret,  Hannah  Stoll,  Katherine  Townsend,  Isiah  Treadway,  Jack  Weaver,  Tom  Weaver  and  Allison  White. Honorable  Mention:  Marvella  Avery,  Logan  Boyer,  Kade  Brilmayer,  Jazmin  Burlett,  Aaron  Gerow,  Christopher  Gobbi,  Benn  Lussier,  Paige  Stocker  and  Samantha  Wells.

SERVICES DIRECTORY SEPTIC

RENT-A-SPOUSE

Serving  Vermont  &  New  York  for  over  30  years!

The Pampered Home

BROWN’S TREE & CRANE SERVICE

Rent-­a-­Spouse/Home  Economist

6WUHVVHG IRU WLPH" ‡ &KRUHV SLOHG XS" I  will... Grocery  Shop Run  Errands Drive  to  appointments Light  Housekeeping Do  Laundry Mend  &  Sew Gift  Wrap Clean  your  fridge  &     freezer

& Â more!

Home economist WR WKH UHVFXH Call Katie

802-388-1254 or

kbs10@comcast.net Let  me  make  your  house  tidy  &  cheerful  for  you  to  come home  to!

TANK Â & Â CESSPOOL Â PUMPING ELECTRONIC Â TANK Â LOCATING TANK Â & Â LEACH Â FIELD Â INSPECTIONS CAMERA Â INSPECTIONS NEW Â SYSTEMS Â INSTALLED ALL Â SEPTIC Â SYSTEM Â REPAIRS DRAIN Â & Â PIPE Â CLEANING

roofing Michael Doran

Dangerous Trees Cut & Removed Stumps Removed Trusses Set

Phone (802) 537-3555

Trees Trimmed Crane Service Grain Bins Set

5HDVRQDEOH 5DWHV ‡ <HDU URXQG 6HUYLFH ‡ )XOO\ ,QVXUHG

Middlebury, Â VT

+RXU (PHUJHQF\ 6HUYLFH

‡ &HOO %URZQVZHOGLQJ FRP

STORAGE

TREE SERVICE Dave’s Tree Removal 6WXPS *ULQGLQJ 7ULPPLQJ 7UHH (YDOXDWLRQ 6WRUP 'DPDJH )LUHZRRG /RW &OHDULQJ 6HUYLQJ $GGLVRQ &RXQW\ $UHD /DNHV

As  seen  at  Addison  County  Field  Days!

‡ 6WDQGLQJ VHDP ‡ $VSKDOW VKLQJOHV ‡ 6ODWH )UHH HVWLPDWHV ‡ )XOO\ ,QVXUHG

FREE Â ESTIMATES Â FOR Â TREE Â SERVICES

Full  Excavation Service

%6 LQ +RPH (FRQRPLFV (GXFDWLRQ ‡ 5HIHUHQFHV $YDLODEOH

ROOFING

TREE SERVICE

Dangerous trees our specialty!!

802-282-9110 )UHH (VWLPDWHV ‡ )XOO\ ,QVXUHG


Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015  â€”  PAGE  25

Addison Independent

CLASSIFIEDS

Public  Meetings

Public  Meetings

ADULT  ALL-­RECOVERY  Group  Meeting  for  anyone  over  18  who  is  struggling  with  addiction  disorders.  Fridays,  3-­4  p.m.  at  the  Turning  Point  Center.  A  great  place  to  meet  with  your  peers  who  are  in  re-­ covery.  Bring  a  friend  in  recov-­ ery.  For  info  call  802-­388-­4249  or  802-­683-­5569  or  visit  www. turningpointaddisonvt.org.

ALCOHOLICS  ANONYMOUS  MIDDLEBURY  MEETINGS  SATURDAY:  Discussion  Meeting  9:00-­10:00  AM  at  the  Middlebury  United  Methodist  Church.  Discussion  Meeting  10:00-­11:00  AM.  Women’s  Meeting  Noon-­1:00  PM.  Be-­ ginners’  Meeting  6:30-­7:30  PM.  These  three  meetings  are  held  at  The  Turning  Point  A L -­ A N O N  F A M I L Y  Center  in  The  Marbleworks,  GROUP-­For  families  and  Middlebury. friends  of  problem  drinkers.  ALCOHOLICS  ANONYMOUS  Anonymous,  confidential  and  NORTH  FERRISBURGH  free.  At  the  Turning  Point  MEETINGS:  Sunday,  Daily  Center  in  the  Marbleworks,  Reflections  Meeting  6:00-­7:00  Middlebury.  7:30-­8:30  Friday  PM,  at  the  United  Methodist  evenings. Church,  Old  Hollow  Rd. AL-­ANON:  FOR  FAMILIES  and  friends  affected  by  some-­ one’s  drinking.  Members  share  experience,  strength  and  hope  to  solve  common  problems.  Newcomers  wel-­ come.  Confidential.  St.  Ste-­ phens  Church  (use  front  side  door  and  go  to  basement)  in  Middlebury,  Sunday  nights  7:15-­8:15  pm.

ALCOHOLICS  ANONYMOUS  MIDDLEBURY  MEETINGS  FRIDAY:  Discussion  Meeting  Noon-­1:00  PM  at  The  Turning  Point  in  The  Marbleworks,  Middlebury.

Services

Services

Public  Meetings

Public  Meetings

Public  Meetings

ALCOHOLICS  ANONYMOUS  MIDDLEBURY  MEETINGS  THURSDAY:  Big  Book  Meet-­ ing  Noon-­1:00  PM  at  The  Turning  Point  Center  in  the  Marbleworks,  Middlebury.  Speaker  Meeting  7:30-­8:30  PM  at  St.  Stephen’s  Church,  Main  St.  (On  the  Green).

ALCOHOLICS  ANONYMOUS  MIDDLEBURY  MEETINGS  SUNDAY:  12  Step  Meeting  9:00-­10:00  AM  held  at  the  Middlebury  United  Methodist  Church  on  N.  Pleasant  Street.  Discussion  Meeting  1:00-­2:00  PM  held  at  The  Turning  Point  Center  in  The  Marbleworks,  Middlebury.

ALCOHOLICS  ANONYMOUS  BRISTOL  MEETINGS:  Sun-­ day,  Discussion  Meeting  4:00-­5:00  PM.  Wednesday,  12  Step  Meeting  7:00-­8:00  PM.  Friday,  Big  Book  Meeting,  6:00-­7:00  PM.  All  held  at  the  Howden  Hall,  19  West  Street.

ALCOHOLICS  ANONYMOUS  MIDDLEBURY  MEETINGS  WEDNESDAY:  Big  Book  Meeting  7:15-­8:15  AM  is  held  at  the  Middlebury  Unit-­ ed  Methodist  Church  on  N.  Pleasant  Street.  Discussion  Meeting  Noon-­1:00  PM  at  The  Turning  Point  Center.  Women’s  Meeting  5:30-­6:30  PM,  St.  Stephen’s  Church.

ALCOHOLICS  ANONYMOUS  NEW  HAVEN  MEETINGS:  Monday,  Big  Book  Meeting  7:30-­8:30  PM  at  the  Congre-­ gational  Church,  New  Haven  Village  Green.

ALCOHOLICS  ANONYMOUS  RIPTON  MEETINGS:  Mon-­ day,  As  Bill  Sees  It  Meet-­ ing  7:15-­8:15  AM.  Thursday,  ALCOHOLICS  ANONYMOUS  Grapevine  Meeting  6:00-­7:00  MIDDLEBURY  MEETINGS  PM.  Both  held  at  Ripton  Fire-­ TUESDAYS:  12  Step  Meet-­ house,  Dugway  Rd. ings;͞  Noon-­1:00  PM.  AND  7:30-­8:30  PM.  Both  held  at  ALCOHOLICS  ANONYMOUS  The  Turning  Point  Center  in  BRANDON  MEETINGS:  The  Marbleworks,  Middlebury. Monday,  Discussion  Meeting  7:30-­8:30  PM.  Wednesday,  12  Step  Meeting  7:00-­8:00  PM.  Friday,  12  Step  Meeting  7:00-­8:00  PM.  All  held  at  the  St.  Thomas  Episcopal  Church,  RT  7  South.

Services

Public  Meetings

ARE  YOU  BOTHERED  BY  SOMEONE’S  DRINKING?  Opening  Our  Hearts  Al-­Anon  Group  meets  each  Wednes-­ day  at  7:30pm  at  the  Turning  Point  Center  in  the  Marble-­ works  in  Middlebury.  Anony-­ mous  and  confidential,  we  share  our  experience,  strength  ALCOHOLICS  ANONYMOUS  and  hope  to  solve  our  com-­ VERGENNES  MEETINGS:  mon  problems. Sunday,  12  Step  Meeting  7:00-­8:00  PM.  Friday,  Dis-­ MAKING  RECOVERY  EAS-­ cussion  Meeting  8:00-­9:00  IER  (MRE).  Wednesdays,  PM.  Both  held  at  St.  Paul’s  5:30-­7:00  PM  at  The  Turn-­ Church,  Park  St.  Tuesday,  ing  Point  Center.  This  will  be  Discussion  Meeting  7:00-­8:00  a  facilitated  group  meeting  PM,  at  the  Congregational  for  those  struggling  with  the  Church,  Water  St. decision  to  attend  12-­step  programs.  It  will  be  limited  ALCOHOLICS  ANONYMOUS  to  explaining  and  discussing  MIDDLEBURY  MEETINGS  our  feelings  about  the  12-­step  MONDAY:  As  Bill  Sees  It  programs  to  create  a  better  Meeting  Noon-­1:00  PM.  Big  understanding  of  how  they  Book  Meeting  7:30-­8:30  PM.  can  help  a  person  in  recovery  Both  held  at  The  Turning  Point  on  his  /  her  life’s  journey.  A  Center  in  The  Marbleworks,  certificate  will  be  issued  at  the  Middlebury. end  of  all  the  sessions.  Please  bring  a  friend  in  recovery  who  is  also  contemplating  12-­step  programs.

Services

Services

Services

Flower Garden Enthusiasts! HOPE is looking for someone to tend their daylily Z]\k Yf\ h]j`Yhk Y\\ kge] gl`]j nYja]lq g^ Ă› go% ]jk Yf\ 'gj hdYflk& Al ogmd\ af[dm\] kge] afalaYd [d]Yfmh Yf\ hdYflaf_$ Zml l`]f bmkl j]imaj] h]ja% g\a[ l]f\af_& 9fqgf] afl]j]kl]\7 ;Ydd +00%/(,,& Th e Vo l u n te e r C e n te r i s a c o l l a b o rat i o n b e t we e n RSV P a n d t h e Un i te d Way o f Addi s o n C o u n t y. P le a s e c a l l 388-7044 t o f i n d o u t mo re a b o u t t h e doze n s o f v o l u n te e r o pp o r t u n i t ie s t h at a re c u r re n t l y av a i l a ble .

Ann  Keogh,  of  Waltham,  has  been  volunteering  for  Everybody  Wins!  for  the  past  four  years  and  loves  EVERYTHING  about  being  a  Reading  Mentor!   â€œI’m  really  just  delighted  to  see  the  expressions  on  my  students’  faces.   I  love  being  responsive  and  in  the  moment.   It’s  also  great  seeing  everyone  involved  in  the  program.â€?   EW!  administra-­ tors  marvel  at  Ann’s  enthusiasm:   â€œShe  is  so  dedicated  to  our  program  that  she  mentors  TWO  students  -­  one  on  Tuesday  and  another  on  Wednesday.   Ann’s  energy,  smile  and  caring  ways  make  her  students  jump  with  joy  when  they  see  her  walk  through  the  school  doors!â€?   Thank  you,  Ann.

RATES

Name: Address: Phone: Email:

D E A D L I N E S Thurs. noon for Mon. paper Mon. 5 p.m. for Thurs. paper

CATEGORIES Notices Card of Thanks Personals Services Free** Lost & Found** Garage Sales Lawn & Garden Opportunities

Work Wanted Public Meetings** For Sale Help Wanted For Rent Want to Rent Real Estate Real Estate Wanted Vacation Rentals

Spotlight with large $2

** No charge for these ads

NA  MEETINGS  MIDDLE-­ BURY:  Mondays,  6pm,  held  at  The  Turning  Point  Center  located  in  The  Marble  Works. NA  MEETINGS  MIDDLE-­ BURY:  Fridays,  7:30pm,  held  at  The  Turning  Point  Center  located  in  the  Marble  Works. NA  MEETINGS  MIDDLE-­ BURY:  Sundays,  3:00  pm,  held  at  The  Turning  Point  Center  located  in  the  Marble  Works. NAR-­ANON-­If  there  is  a  drug  problem  in  your  home  the  Nar-­Anon  Family  Group  may  be  able  to  help  you  solve  it.  Nar-­Anon  helps  the  family  of  the  user  attain  serenity  and  a  more  normal  home  life,  regardless  of  whether  or  not  he  /  she  has  stopped  using.  Anonymous  and  confidential.  THURSDAYS,  6-­7pm  at  The  Turning  Point  Center-­Marble  Works,  Middlebury,  VT. OA  (OVEREATERS  ANONY-­ MOUS)  MEETS  on  Thursdays  at  6  PM.  Located  at  the  Turn-­ ing  Point  Center  of  Addison  County,  228  Maple  St.  Middle-­ bury,  VT  (In  the  Marble  Works  Complex). OPIATE  OVERDOSE  RES-­ CUE  KITS  are  distributed  on  Wednesdays  from  9am  until  12  pm  at  the  Turning  Point  Center  of  Addison  County,  Middlebury,  VT.  A  short  training  is  required.  For  info  call  802-­388-­4249  or  802-­683-­5569  or  visit  www. turningpointaddisonvt.org. TEEN  ALL-­RECOVERY  Group  Meeting  for  anyone  15-­18  years  old  who  is  strug-­ gling  with  addiction  disor-­ ders.  Tuesdays,  6-­7  p.m.  at  The  Turning  Point  Center.  A  great  place  to  meet  with  your  peers  who  are  in  recovery.  Bring  a  friend  in  recovery.  For  info  call  802-­388-­4249  or  802-­683-­5569  or  visit  www. turningpointaddisonvt.org.

CLASSIFIED ORDER FORM ‡ „ SHU ZRUG ‡ PLQLPXP SHU DG ‡ LQWHUQHW OLVWLQJ IRU XS WR LVVXHV ‡ PLQLPXP LQVHUWLRQV &DVK LQ RQ RXU IRU UDWHV 3D\ IRU LVVXHV JHW WK LVVXH IUHH ([DPSOH $ ZRUG DG LV MXVW $Q DG SODFHG IRU FRQVHFXWLYH LVVXHV 0RQGD\V 7KXUV GD\V LV UXQ WK WLPH IUHH &RVW LV IRU LVVXHV LQFOXGHV LQWHUQHW FKDUJH 6SHFLDO IRU UDWHV QRW YDOLG IRU WKH IROORZLQJ FDWHJRULHV +HOS :DQWHG 6HUYLFHV 2SSRUWXQLWLHV 5HDO (VWDWH :RRG KHDW $WWQ )DUPHUV )RU 5HQW

Public  Meetings

Wood Heat Animals Att. Farmers Motorcycles Cars Trucks SUVs Snowmobiles Boats Wanted Adoption

ADDISON INDEPENDENT 58 Maple St., Middlebury, VT 05753 802-388-4944

email: classifieds@addisonindependent.com

PLEASE PRINT YOUR AD HERE

The Independent assumes no À QDQFLDO UHVSRQVLELOLW\ IRU HUURUV LQ DGV EXW ZLOO UHUXQ WKH DG LQ ZKLFK WKH HUURU RFFXUHG DW QR FKDUJH 1R UHIXQGV ZLOO EH PDGH $GYHUWLVHUV ZLOO SOHDVH QRWLI\ XV RI DQ\ HUURUV QRWHG

1XPEHU RI ZRUGV &RVW RI UXQV 6SRWOLJKW &KDUJH ,QWHUQHW /LVWLQJ 727$/


PAGE 26 — Addison Independent, Monday, July 27, 2015

Addison Independent

Help Wanted

CLASSIFIEDS

Public Meetings

Services

Help Wanted

UNIFORMED SERVICES ALL RECOVERY Support Group will be starting at the Turn-­ ing Point Center of Addison County, located in the Marble Works complex. The group is directed toward those that have or are currently involved in the uniformed services such as Fire, Police, Veterans, EMS, Rescue, ER and DOC. This is a facilitated Peer to Peer group gathering to support our brothers and sisters with their struggles. Tuesdays at 6 pm. Contact Bill Brim 802-­683-­5569 or the center at 802-­388-­4249.

DUMP TRUCK DRIVER wanted-­1 driver needed. Class B CDL required. Minimum 5 years’ experience required. Up to date medical card and drug test required. Contact Gene 802-­373-­8053.FARM HAND NEEDED. Full or part time, with prior experience. References required. Starksboro Village. 802-­453-­2054, leave message.

PROFESSIONAL PAINTING;; interior / exterior, residential / commercial, pressure washing. 20 years’ experience. Best pric-­ es. References. 802-­989-­5803. R O T O T I L L I N G & BRUSH-­HOGGING. Ron Ste-­ vens 802-­462-­3784.

CONSTRUCTION: ADDI-­ TIONS, RENOVATIONS, new construction, drywall, carpentry, painting, flooring, roofing, pres-­ sure washing, driveway sealing. All aspects of construction, also property maintenance. Steven Fifield 802-­989-­0009. PARTY RENTALS;; CHINA, flatware, glassware, linens. De-­ livery available. 802-­388-­4831.

$

Have an opinion? Email your letters to:

After School Program Director Ripton Elementary School is seeking an After School Program Director/Teacher for approximately 9 hours a week beginning in the 2015-2016 school year. Applicants should have experience working with children, strong organizational and leadership skills. Being passionate about working with children is a must, as is working collaboratively with colleagues.

Committing to a KonMari Clean up?

Apply by sending a letter of interest, resume, three current reference letters and complete transcripts to: Dr. Peter Burrows, Superintendent Addison Central Supervisory Union 49 Charles Avenue Middlebury, VT 05753 Applications will be accepted until the TSWMXMSR LEW FIIR ½PPIH ) 3 )

Sell those valuables in the Addy Indy FODVVL¿HGV

It’s GARAGE

7

Busy retail store on Main Street in Middlebury seeking part-time sales help approximately 4 days a week. Must be available weekend day and holidays. Lots of standing. Experience preferred. Please send resume including previous employment references to: 42 Main Street, Middlebury Or drop off in person.

RIPTON ELEMENTARY SCHOOL

YARD SALE-­FRIDAY, JULY 31, Saturday and Sunday Aug. 1 and 2. 9 am-­2 pm. Antiques, retro;; furniture, books, LPs, depression glass, luster ware, Services Avon bottles. Ladies clothing;; C&I DRYWALL. Hanging, tap-­ Alfred Dunner. Yarn, crafts, fab-­ ing and skim coat plastering. ric. Kitchen, household items. Also tile. Call Joe 802-­234-­5545 Much more. Rt 7 Leicester, North of 4 corners. or Justin 802-­234-­2190.

SALE Season...

Let us get the word out for you!

ONLY $7 PER RUN (up to 30 words) – includes a FREE internet listing. Additional words are 25¢ per word / per run.

YOUR AD INFORMATION

TOWN:

$

7

CLASSIFIED ORDER FORM

DATES & TIMES: STREET ADDRESS: DESCRIPTION:

Deadlines: Thursday Noon for Monday papers Monday 5pm for Thursday papers Mail in your classified ad with payment to : 58 Maple Street, Middlebury VT 05753 OR Email your ad to: classifieds @addisonindependent.com OR stop in and drop it off to Tricia at our office in the Marble Works, Middlebury

YOUR CONTACT INFORMATION NAME:

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

PART-TIME SALES HELP WANTED

news@addisonindependent.com

Garage Sales

Help Wanted

7

$

802-­388-­7555

Porter Medical Center is Hiring! WŽƌƚĞƌ DĞĚŝĐĂů ĞŶƚĞƌ ŽīĞƌƐ ĐŽŵƉĞƟƟǀĞ ƉĂLJ͕ Ă ĐŽŵƉƌĞŚĞŶƐŝǀĞ ďĞŶĞĮƚƐ ƉĂĐŬĂŐĞ͕ ĂŶĚ Ă ŐĞŶĞƌŽƵƐ ϰϬϯ;ďͿ ƉůĂŶ͘ tĞ ĂůƐŽ ŽīĞƌ ƉĂŝĚ ǀĂĐĂƟŽŶ͕ ƚƵŝƟŽŶ ƌĞŝŵďƵƌƐĞŵĞŶƚ ĂŶĚ ƚŚĞ ŽƉƉŽƌƚƵŶŝƚLJ ƚŽ ǁŽƌŬ ǁŝƚŚ ĚĞĚŝĐĂƚĞĚ ƉƌŽĨĞƐƐŝŽŶĂůƐ ŝŶ Ă ĚLJŶĂŵŝĐ ŽƌŐĂŶŝnjĂƟŽŶ͊

Helen Porter Healthcare and ZĞŚĂďŝůŝƚĂƟŽŶ ĞŶƚĞƌ ͻ >WE Žƌ ZE ϴϬ ŚŽƵƌƐͬƉƉƉ͕ ĞǀĞŶŝŶŐ ƐŚŝŌ͘ sd ůŝĐĞŶƐƵƌĞ ƌĞƋƵŝƌĞĚ͘ >d Žƌ D ĞdžƉĞƌŝĞŶĐĞ ƉƌĞĨĞƌƌĞĚ͘ DƵƐƚ ƉŽƐƐĞƐƐ Ă ŚŝŐŚ ĂƉƟƚƵĚĞ ĨŽƌ ůĞĂƌŶŝŶŐ͕ ƐƚƌŽŶŐ ĐƵƐƚŽŵĞƌ ƐĞƌǀŝĐĞ ĂŶĚ ƚĞĂŵ ǁŽƌŬ ƐŬŝůůƐ͘ ͻ >E ΎΨϭϬϬϬ ƐŝŐŶ ŽŶ ďŽŶƵƐΎ ĨŽƌ ŵŽƐƚ >E ƉŽƐŝƟŽŶƐ ŝŶ ŽƵƌ ůŽŶŐ ƚĞƌŵ ĐĂƌĞ ĞŶǀŝƌŽŶŵĞŶƚ͊ Ăůů ĨŽƌ ĚĞƚĂŝůƐ͊ WŽƐŝƟŽŶƐ ƌĂŶŐŝŶŐ ĨƌŽŵ Ϯϰ ŚŽƵƌƐ ƉĂLJ ƉĞƌŝŽĚ ƚŽ ĨƵůů ƟŵĞ͘ sĂƌŝŽƵƐ ƐŚŝŌƐ ĂƌĞ ŽƉĞŶ͘ ĞŶĞĮƚƐ ůŝŐŝďůĞ͊ ͻ ^ƚĂī ŚĂƌŐĞ ZE ŝŶ ƉŽƐƚͲĂĐƵƚĞ ƵŶŝƚ͗ ϴϬ ŚŽƵƌƐͬƉƉƉ͕ ĚĂLJ ƐŚŝŌ͕ DŽŶĚĂLJ ƚŚƌŽƵŐŚ &ƌŝĚĂLJ͘ ZE >ŝĐĞŶƐĞ ƌĞƋƵŝƌĞĚ͘ >d ĞdžƉĞƌŝĞŶĐĞ ƉƌĞĨĞƌƌĞĚ͘ DƵƐƚ ƉŽƐƐĞƐƐ Ă ŚŝŐŚ ĂƉƟƚƵĚĞ ĨŽƌ ůĞĂƌŶŝŶŐ͕ ƐƚƌŽŶŐ ĐƵƐƚŽŵĞƌ ƐĞƌǀŝĐĞ ƐŬŝůůƐ͕ ĂŶĚ ƚĞĂŵǁŽƌŬ ƐŬŝůůƐ͘

WŽƌƚĞƌ ,ŽƐƉŝƚĂů ͻ hůƚƌĂƐŽƵŶĚ ^ŽŶŽŐƌĂƉŚĞƌ͕ ZĂĚŝŽůŽŐLJ &Ƶůů Žƌ ƉĂƌƚ ƟŵĞ ŽƉƉŽƌƚƵŶŝƚLJ ĨŽƌ ĂŶ hůƚƌĂƐŽƵŶĚ ^ŽŶŽŐƌĂƉŚĞƌ͘ ZĞƐƉŽŶƐŝďůĞ ĨŽƌ ƉĞƌĨŽƌŵŝŶŐ Ăůů ĞdžĂŵƐ ƌĞůĂƟŶŐ ƚŽ hůƚƌĂƐŽƵŶĚ͘ DƵƐƚ ŚŽůĚ ĐƵƌƌĞŶƚ Z D^ ĂŶĚ ŵĂŝŶƚĂŝŶ Ăůů sd ůŝĐĞŶƐŝŶŐ ĂŶĚ ĐĞƌƟĮĐĂƟŽŶ ƌĞƋƵŝƌĞŵĞŶƚƐ͘ ͻ ^ƵƌŐŝĐĂů dĞĐŚŶŽůŽŐŝƐƚ &Ƶůů ƟŵĞ ĚĂLJƐ ǁŝƚŚ ƌŽƚĂƟŶŐ ĞǀĞŶŝŶŐͬŶŝŐŚƚ ĂŶĚ ǁĞĞŬĞŶĚ ĐĂůů͘ WƌŽǀŝĚĞ ƚĞĐŚŶŝĐĂů ƐŬŝůů ŝŶ ƉƌĞƉĂƌĂƟŽŶ ĨŽƌ͕ ĂŶĚ ĂƐƐŝƐƚ ĚƵƌŝŶŐ͕ ƐƵƌŐŝĐĂů ƉƌŽĐĞĚƵƌĞƐ ŝŶ ƚŚĞ ŽƉĞƌĂƟŶŐ ƌŽŽŵ͘ YƵĂůŝĮĐĂƟŽŶƐ͗ ĞƌƟĮĐĂƟŽŶ ĂƐ ƐƵƌŐŝĐĂů dĞĐŚŶŽůŽŐŝƐƚ Žƌ ĂďůĞ ƚŽ Ɛŝƚ ĨŽƌ ĐĞƌƟĮĐĂƟŽŶ Žƌ ŐƌĂĚƵĂƟŽŶ ĨƌŽŵ ĂŶ ĂĐĐƌĞĚŝƚĞĚ ƐĐŚŽŽů ŽĨ EƵƌƐŝŶŐ Žƌ ^ƵƌŐŝĐĂů dĞĐŚŶŽůŽŐLJ ƉƌŽŐƌĂŵ͘ ͻ ,ŽƐƉŝƚĂůŝƐƚ͕ W Žƌ EW WŽƌƚĞƌ DĞĚŝĐĂů ĞŶƚĞƌ ŝƐ ƐĞĞŬŝŶŐ Ă ŵŝĚͲ ůĞǀĞů ,ŽƐƉŝƚĂůŝƐƚ ƚŽ ũŽŝŶ ŽƵƌ ŐƌŽǁŝŶŐ ƚĞĂŵ͘ dŚŝƐ ŝƐ Ă ĨƵůůͲƟŵĞ ŶŝŐŚƚ ƉŽƐŝƟŽŶ͕ ǁŝƚŚ ϲ ŶŝŐŚƚƐ ŽŶ ĂŶĚ ϴ ŶŝŐŚƚƐ Žī͘ ϭϮ ŚŽƵƌ ƐŚŝŌƐ͘ >ŝĐĞŶƐĞĚ ĂƐ Ă ŽĂƌĚ ĞƌƟĮĞĚ EƵƌƐĞ WƌĂĐƟƟŽŶĞƌ Žƌ WŚLJƐŝĐŝĂŶ ƐƐŝƐƚĂŶƚ͘ KŶĞ LJĞĂƌ ŽĨ ,ŽƐƉŝƚĂůŝƐƚ ĞdžƉĞƌŝĞŶĐĞ͕ Žƌ ϱ LJĞĂƌƐ ŽĨ ďƌŽĂĚ ƉƌŝŵĂƌLJ Žƌ ĂĐƵƚĞ ĐĂƌĞ ĞdžƉĞƌŝĞŶĐĞ͘

PHONE:

MAILING ADDRESS: E-MAIL:

7

$

x ___ # of runs

# of additional words x 25¢ x # of runs Total Payment Enclosed $

&Žƌ /ŶĨŽƌŵĂƟŽŶ͕ ĐŽŶƚĂĐƚ ,ƵŵĂŶ ZĞƐŽƵƌĐĞƐ Ăƚ ϴϬϮͲϯϴϴͲϰϳϴϬ Žƌ ĨĂdž ϴϬϮͲϯϴϴͲϴϴϵϵ͘ dŽ ĂƉƉůLJ͕ ƉůĞĂƐĞ ƐĞŶĚ ĂƉƉůŝĐĂƟŽŶ ŵĂƚĞƌŝĂůƐ ƚŽ͗ ĂƉƉůLJΛƉŽƌƚĞƌŵĞĚŝĐĂů͘ŽƌŐ͘ sŝƐŝƚ ŽƵƌ ǁĞďƐŝƚĞ Ăƚ͗ ǁǁǁ͘ƉŽƌƚĞƌŵĞĚŝĐĂů͘ŽƌŐ Equal Opportunity Employer

Make room for bicycles Sell your unneeded car in the Addison Independent FODVVL¿HGV


Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015  â€”  PAGE  27

Addison Independent

Help  Wanted

CLASSIFIEDS

Help  Wanted

Help  Wanted

Help  Wanted

STORE MANAGER AND CASHIERS

Help  Wanted

BRIDPORT CENTRAL SCHOOL School Guidance Counselor - .40 FTE

Bridport Central School is now accepting applications for the position of Guidance Counselor. Candidates must hold the appropriate Vermont licensure. Position includes: elementary school classroom guidance, behavior support, individual/small KVSYT GSYRWIPMRK ERH GSRžMGX VIWSPYXMSR This is a .40 FTE position. Apply by sending a letter of interest, resume and three current reference letters, complete transcripts and evidence of licensure to: Dr. Peter Burrows, Superintendent Addison Central Supervisory Union 49 Charles Avenue Middlebury,VT 05753

Help  Wanted

Help  Wanted

ADDISON CENTRAL SUPERVISORY UNION Technology Support Specialist Addison Central Supervisory Union has an opening for Technology Support Specialist to provide support to users in our schools. Ideal candidates will have experience diagnosing and troubleshooting hardware, network, and software problems in an OSX environment. Experience with imaging products and current Mac and PC operating systems is essential. Helpdesk and +SSKPI (SQEMR I\TIVMIRGI FIRI½GMEP Interested candidates should possess a minimum of an AS degree or equivalent, or at least two years of experience in XLI -8 ½IPH )\GIPPIRX GYWXSQIV WYTTSVX Interpersonal, and organizational skills along with a proven ability to support end users are essential candidate traits.

A great company needs great people!

This position is for 200 days per year and will follow the school calendar. It has I\GIPPIRX FIRI½XW ERH E WEPEV] VERKI SJ $12-14 per hour, depending on experience.

Apply today for one of our current openings

Apply by sending a letter of interest, resume, three current reference letters, and complete transcripts to:

Applications will be accepted until the position LEW FIIR ½PPIH ˆ ) 3 )

Join the Mac’s Market Team! Manager and 1 cashier position are full time with benefits. Part time cashier positions are also available. Experience in the retail/food industry required; must be a multi-tasking wizard; and enjoy working in a busy, public environment with diverse customers and co-workers. Must be able to work weekends, holidays, and flexible hours. Send cover letter and resume to jobs@svallen.com Fax to (802) 786-1241 Mail to Sherman V. Allen, Inc. PO Box 609 Rutland, VT 05702 Or stop in at 3279 McConnell Road, Brandon, VT for an application.

Dr. Peter Burrows, Superintendent Addison Central Supervisory Union 49 Charles Avenue Middlebury, VT 05753 Applications will be accepted until the TSWMXMSR LEW FIIR ½PPIH E.O.E.

Subscribe!

to  the  Addison  Independent

Call 388-­4944 today!

CUSTOMER SERVICE PROFESSIONAL Middlebury Fence is looking for a smart, energetic, motivated individual to join our team. Seeking full-time customer service professional for our fast-paced seasonal business. Candidate must be customer focused, detail oriented, a hard worker that V>˜ Â?i>Ă€Â˜ ÂľĂ•ÂˆVÂŽÂ?Ăž° *Ă€ÂœwVˆiÂ˜ĂŒ ˆ˜ ÂŤĂ€ÂˆÂœĂ€ÂˆĂŒÂˆâˆ˜} and completing tasks in a timely manner, yet yiĂ?ˆLÂ?i ĂŒÂœ “ÕÂ?ĂŒÂˆĂŒ>ĂƒÂŽ ĂœÂ…i˜ ˜iViĂƒĂƒ>ÀÞ° Ă•ĂƒĂŒ Li VÂœÂ“ÂŤĂ•ĂŒiĂ€ ÂŤĂ€ÂœwVˆiÂ˜ĂŒ >˜` Â…>Ă›i iĂ?ViÂ?Â?iÂ˜ĂŒ written and verbal communication skills. The ideal candidate would be handling a wide range of VĂ•ĂƒĂŒÂœÂ“iĂ€ ĂƒiĂ€Ă›ÂˆVi >˜` ÂœvwVi ÂœÂŤiĂ€>ĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜>Â? ĂŒ>ĂƒÂŽĂƒ\

Searching for someone to complete your team? or

Are you searching for a job? Either way you are on the right track with the

U *Ă€ÂœĂ›Âˆ`i VĂ•ĂƒĂŒÂœÂ“iĂ€Ăƒ ĂœÂˆĂŒÂ… ˆ˜vÂœĂ€Â“>ĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜ Ă€i}>Ă€`ˆ˜} products and services of the company U ,iĂƒÂŤÂœÂ˜`ˆ˜} ĂŒÂœ VĂ•ĂƒĂŒÂœÂ“iĂ€ ÂˆÂ˜ÂľĂ•ÂˆĂ€ÂˆiĂƒ] ˜ii`Ăƒ] concerns, basic job cost estimating U "vwVi `Ă•ĂŒÂˆiĂƒ\ Ć‚Â˜ĂƒĂœiĂ€ÂˆÂ˜} ÂŤÂ…ÂœÂ˜iĂƒ] ÂœvwVi wÂ?ˆ˜}] scheduling appointments, walk-in support U Ć‚`Â“ÂˆÂ˜ÂˆĂƒĂŒĂ€>ĂŒÂˆĂ›i `Ă•ĂŒÂˆiĂƒ\ " Ăƒ] ÂœĂ€`iĂ€ÂˆÂ˜} ÂœvwVi supplies, arranging brochures/samples, etc U Ć‚ĂƒĂƒÂˆĂƒĂŒÂˆÂ˜} *Ă€iĂƒÂˆ`iÂ˜ĂŒ] *Ă€ÂœÂ?iVĂŒ >˜>}iĂ€ >˜` "ÂŤiĂ€>ĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜Ăƒ ˆ˜ `>ˆÂ?Ăž ĂŒ>ĂƒÂŽĂƒ U Ă•ÂˆÂ?`ˆ˜} E “>ÂˆÂ˜ĂŒ>ˆ˜ˆ˜} VĂ•ĂƒĂŒÂœÂ“iĂ€ `>ĂŒ>L>Ăƒi

58 Maple Street, Middlebury, VT 05753 DGGLVRQLQGHSHQGHQW FRP ‡

ÂœÂ“ÂŤiÂ˜Ăƒ>ĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜\ fÂŁĂ“Â‡ÂŁĂˆĂ‰Â…ÂœĂ•Ă€ `iÂŤi˜`ˆ˜} œ˜ iĂ?ÂŤiĂ€Âˆi˜Vi] ÂŤ>ˆ` Â…ÂœÂ?ˆ`>ĂžĂƒ E Ă›>V>ĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜] {ä£ÂŽ ĂœÂˆĂŒÂ… ĂŽÂŻ VÂœÂ“ÂŤ>Â˜Ăž “>ĂŒVÂ…] ÂŤĂ€ÂœwĂŒ ĂƒÂ…>Ă€ÂˆÂ˜}° Send resume to: hiring.mfc@gmail.com


PAGE  28  â€”  Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015

Addison Independent

Help  Wanted

CLASSIFIEDS

Help  Wanted

Help  Wanted

Help  Wanted

Help  Wanted

NEED  A  JOB?  APPLY  at  Mid-­ dlebury  Beef.  40  hours  a  week.  GREEN  PEPPERS  IS  NOW  Deli  help  and  all  around  store  hiring  kitchen  and  waitstaff.  A  work.  Nights  and  weekends  variety  of  positions  and  shifts  a  must.  Apply  in  person,  East  available.  Please  apply  in  per-­ Middlebury,  VT. son,  Middlebury,  VT.

SALES ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE

  MAINTENANCE  MECHANIC

OVERVIEW: This is a lead residential and commercial account sales position responsible for aligning customer needs with a Middlebury Fence solution. Would you like see all corners of Vermont and help prospective clients with their outdoor living project? Maybe they are looking for a fence to protect their dogs or young children. Or possibly they just installed a pool and want a nice decorative aluminum fence and a pool shed. Maybe they want an automated driveway gate with access control. We are seeking a highly motivated, organized and energetic salesperson to help us grow our company.

Middlebury, Â VT Â Â

&ƾůůͲĆ&#x; žĞ Ĺ?žžÄžÄšĹ?ĂƚĞ ŽƉĞŜĹ?ĹśĹ? ĨŽĆŒ Ä‚ DÄ‚Ĺ?ŜƚĞŜĂŜÄ?Äž DÄžÄ?ŚĂŜĹ?Ä? ƚŽ Ç Ĺ˝ĆŒĹŹ Ĺ?Ĺś ŽƾĆŒ DĹ?ĚĚůĞÄ?ĆľĆŒÇ‡Í• sd ĨÄ‚Ä?Ĺ?ĹŻĹ?ĆšÇ‡Í˜ dŚĞ Ä?ĆľĆŒĆŒÄžĹśĆš Ć?ĹšĹ?ĹŒ ĂǀĂĹ?ĹŻÄ‚Ä?ĹŻÄž Ĺ?Ć? Ĺ?Ĺ˝Ĺ?ĹśĹ? ƚŽ Ä?Äž ώŜĚ ^ĹšĹ?ĹŒ ͘ Ć?ĆľÄ?Ä?ÄžĆ?Ć?Ĩƾů Ä?ĂŜĚĹ?ĚĂƚĞ Ç Ĺ?ĹŻĹŻ ŚĂǀĞ Ä‚Ćš ůĞĂĆ?Ćš Ä‚ ŊŽƾĆŒĹśÄžÇ‡ĹľÄ‚ĹśÍ›Ć? ĞůĞÄ?ĆšĆŒĹ?Ä?Ä‚ĹŻ ĹŻĹ?Ä?ĞŜĆ?Ğ͘ dŚĞ Ä?ĂŜĚĹ?ĚĂƚĞ žƾĆ?Ćš ŚĂǀĞ ĞdžÄ?ĞůůĞŜƚ žĞÄ?ŚĂŜĹ?Ä?Ä‚ĹŻ Ä‚Ä?Ĺ?ĹŻĹ?ĆšÇ‡Í˜ Ç†Ć‰ÄžĆŒĹ?ĞŜÄ?Äž ĆšĆŒŽƾÄ?ĹŻÄžĆ?ĹšŽŽĆ&#x; ĹśĹ?Í• ĆŒÄžĆ‰Ä‚Ĺ?ĆŒĹ?ĹśĹ? ĂŜĚ žĂĹ?ŜƚĂĹ?ĹśĹ?ĹśĹ? žĂŜƾĨÄ‚Ä?ĆšĆľĆŒĹ?ĹśĹ? ƉůĂŜƚ ĞƋƾĹ?ƉžĞŜƚ Ĺ?Ĺś Ä‚ ĨŽŽÄš Ć‰ĆŒĹ˝ÄšĆľÄ?Ć&#x; ŽŜ ĞŜǀĹ?ĆŒŽŜžÄžĹśĆšÍ˜ WĹ˝Ć?Ĺ?Ć&#x; ŽŜ ĆŒÄžĆ‹ĆľĹ?ĆŒÄžĆ? Ä‚ ĹšĹ?Ĺ?Ĺš Ć?Ä?ĹšŽŽů ÄšĹ?ƉůŽžÄ‚ Ĺ˝ĆŒ ' Í– Ď°Đ˝ Ç‡ÄžÄ‚ĆŒĆ? ŽĨ ÄžÇ†Ć‰ÄžĆŒĹ?ĞŜÄ?Äž Ĺ?Ĺś Ä‚ ĆŒÄžĹŻÄ‚ĆšÄžÄš ÄŽ ÄžĹŻÄšÍ˜ Ĺ?ĆŒĹ?ͲDÄ‚ĆŒĹŹ Žč ÄžĆŒĆ? Ä‚ Ä?ŽžĆ‰ÄžĆ&#x; Ć&#x; ǀĞ Ć?ĆšÄ‚ĆŒĆ&#x; ĹśĹ? Ç Ä‚Ĺ?Äž ĂŜĚ Ä‚Ĺś ĞdžÄ?ĞůůĞŜƚ Ä?ĞŜĞĎ ĆšĆ? ƉĂÄ?ĹŹÄ‚Ĺ?Ğ͘ ƉƉůLJ Ĺ?Ĺś Ć‰ÄžĆŒĆ?ŽŜÍ• Ä?LJ ĞžĂĹ?ĹŻ ƚŽ Ä‚ĹŻÄžÄ?ĹŻÄ‚ĹśÄ?ΛĂĹ?ĆŒĹ?ĹľÄ‚ĆŒĹŹÍ˜ĹśÄžĆš Ĺ˝ĆŒ Ć?ĞŜĚ LJŽƾĆŒ ĆŒÄžĆ?ƾžÄž Ç Ĺ?ƚŚ Ä?Ĺ˝Ç€ÄžĆŒ ůĞƊ ÄžĆŒ ƚŽ͗

JOB RESPONSIBILITIES: U ,iĂƒÂŤÂœÂ˜`ˆ˜} ĂŒÂœ Ăƒ>Â?iĂƒ Â?i>`Ăƒ E ÂŤĂ€ÂœĂ›Âˆ`i ĂƒÂœÂ?Ă•ĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜Ăƒ E ÂľĂ•ÂœĂŒiĂƒ ĂŒÂœ VĂ•ĂƒĂŒÂœÂ“iĂ€Ăƒ U *Ă€ÂœĂƒÂŤiVĂŒÂˆÂ˜} vÂœĂ€ ˜iĂœ LĂ•ĂƒÂˆÂ˜iĂƒĂƒ >˜` LĂ•ÂˆÂ?` VĂ•ĂƒĂŒÂœÂ“iĂ€ L>Ăƒi U 7ÂœĂ€ÂŽ ĂœÂˆĂŒÂ… ÂœvwVi “>˜>}iĂ€ ˆ˜ ¾Õ>Â?ˆvĂžÂˆÂ˜} Â?i>`Ăƒ E ĂƒVÂ…i`Ă•Â?ˆ˜} >ÂŤÂŤÂœÂˆÂ˜ĂŒÂ“iÂ˜ĂŒĂƒ U iĂ›iÂ?ÂœÂŤÂˆÂ˜} E “>˜>}ˆ˜} Ă€iĂƒÂˆ`iÂ˜ĂŒÂˆ>Â? E Vœ““iĂ€Vˆ>Â? ˜iĂŒĂœÂœĂ€ÂŽ U "ĂœÂ˜iĂ€ĂƒÂ…ÂˆÂŤ Âœv Â?ÂœLĂƒ vĂ€ÂœÂ“ ÂľĂ•ÂœĂŒi ĂŒÂœ Â?ÂœL VÂœÂ“ÂŤÂ?iĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜ U >ÂŽi VÂœÂ˜ĂŒÂˆÂ˜Ă•ÂœĂ•Ăƒ ÂˆÂ“ÂŤĂ€ÂœĂ›i“iÂ˜ĂŒĂƒ ĂŒÂœ ÂœĂ•Ă€ Ăƒ>Â?iĂƒ ĂŒiVÂ…Â˜ÂˆÂľĂ•iĂƒ E ÂŤĂ€ÂœViĂƒĂƒ U Â˜ĂƒĂ•Ă€i VÂ?i>Ă€ VÂœÂ“Â“Ă•Â˜ÂˆV>ĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜ Âœv Â?ÂœL `iĂŒ>ˆÂ?Ăƒ ĂœÂˆĂŒÂ… ÂœÂŤiĂ€>ĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜Ăƒ ĂŒi>“ U >˜>}i E VÂœÂœĂ€`ˆ˜>ĂŒi ĂŒĂ€>`i ĂƒÂ…ÂœĂœĂƒ U -Ă•}}iĂƒĂŒ “>ÀŽiĂŒÂˆÂ˜} >VĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜Ăƒ ĂŒÂœ ˆ˜VĂ€i>Ăƒi Ăƒ>Â?iĂƒ

Ĺ?ĆŒĹ?ͲDÄ‚ĆŒĹŹ

ĆŠ Ŝ͗ Ć?ŚůĞLJ >Äž ĹŻÄ‚ĹśÄ? ϴϲϾ džÄ?ŚĂŜĹ?Äž ^ĆšĆŒÄžÄžĆš DĹ?ĚĚůĞÄ?ĆľĆŒÇ‡Í• sd ϏϹϳϹϯ

REQUIREMENTS: r ÂœÂ?Â?i}i `i}Ă€ii ÂŤĂ€iviÀÀi` LĂ•ĂŒ Â˜ÂœĂŒ Ă€iÂľĂ•ÂˆĂ€i` U x 9i>Ă€Ăƒ VÂœĂƒĂŒ iĂƒĂŒÂˆÂ“>ĂŒÂˆÂ˜} iĂ?ÂŤiĂ€Âˆi˜Vi U >Ă€`ĂƒV>ÂŤi `iĂƒÂˆ}˜ iĂ?ÂŤiĂ€Âˆi˜Vi U Ć‚LˆÂ?ÂˆĂŒĂž ĂŒÂœ Ă€i>` ÂŤĂ€ÂˆÂ˜ĂŒĂƒ] ĂƒÂŤiVĂƒ E `Âœ Vœ““iĂ€Vˆ>Â? ĂŒ>ÂŽi ÂœvvĂƒ U /iVÂ… Ăƒ>ÛÛÞ U *ÂœĂƒÂˆĂŒÂˆĂ›i >ĂŒĂŒÂˆĂŒĂ•`i U Ć‚LˆÂ?ÂˆĂŒĂž ĂŒÂœ Â…>˜`Â?i > v>ĂƒĂŒ ÂŤ>Vi` iÂ˜Ă›ÂˆĂ€ÂœÂ˜Â“iÂ˜ĂŒ U Ă?ViÂ?Â?iÂ˜ĂŒ Ă›iĂ€L>Â? E ĂœĂ€ÂˆĂŒĂŒi˜ VÂœÂ“Â“Ă•Â˜ÂˆV>ĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜ ĂƒÂŽÂˆÂ?Â?Ăƒ U 6>Â?ˆ` `Ă€ÂˆĂ›iĂ€½Ăƒ Â?ˆViÂ˜Ăƒi E VÂ?i>˜ `Ă€ÂˆĂ›ÂˆÂ˜} Ă€iVÂœĂ€` COMPENSATION: U >Ăƒi Ăƒ>Â?>ÀÞ ÂŤÂ?Ă•Ăƒ ÂŤĂ€ÂœwĂŒ `Ă€ÂˆĂ›i˜ VÂœÂ“Â“ÂˆĂƒĂƒÂˆÂœÂ˜ U {ä‡Çä L>Ăƒi` œ˜ iĂ?ÂŤiĂ€Âˆi˜Vi E Ăƒ>Â?iĂƒ ÂŤiĂ€vÂœĂ€Â“>˜Vi U {ä£ÂŽ ĂœÂˆĂŒÂ… ĂŽÂŻ VÂœÂ“ÂŤ>Â˜Ăž “>ĂŒVÂ… U *>ˆ` Ă›>V>ĂŒÂˆÂœÂ˜ E Â…ÂœÂ?ˆ`>ĂžĂƒ U ÂœÂ“ÂŤ>Â˜Ăž V>Ă€ E ViÂ?Â? ÂŤÂ…ÂœÂ˜i U *Ă€ÂœwĂŒ ĂƒÂ…>Ă€ÂˆÂ˜}

Check  the  &ODVVL¿ HGV WZLFH D ZHHN LQ WKH Addison  Independent.

REPLY TO: hiring.mfc@gmail.com

Do you have Food Service experience?

MIDDLEBURY UNION MIDDLE SCHOOL

Paraprofessional Anticipated

Now Hir ing:

Amato’s Manager E-mail resume to: willyp@rlvallee.com or mail to: Maplefields, PO Box 797 Middlebury, VT 05753 BENEFITS FOR OUR FULL TIME TEAM MEMBERS Opportunity for Advancement L 1MBO t 1BJE )PMJEBZT 1BJE 7BDBUJPO 1FSTPOBM %BZT .FEJDBM %FOUBM 1MBO (SFBU #POVT 1PUFOUJBM EOE

Middlebury Union Middle School is seeking a 4EVETVSJIWWMSREP 5YEPM½IH ETTPMGERXW WLSYPH LEZI I\TIVMIRGI [SVOMRK [MXL 1MHHPI 7GLSSP WXYHIRXW FI IRIVKIXMG TSWMXMZI QSXMZEXIH ERH TEXMIRX )\GIPPIRX GSQQYRMGEXMSR WOMPPW ERH E [MPPMRKRIWW XS [SVO EW TEVX SJ E XIEQ EVI WXVSRKP] HIWMVIH %TTP] F] WIRHMRK E PIXXIV SJ MRXIVIWX VIWYQI XLVII GYVVIRX VIJIVIRGI PIXXIVW ERH GSQTPIXI XVERWGVMTXW XS (V 4IXIV &YVVS[W 7YTIVMRXIRHIRX %HHMWSR 'IRXVEP 7YTIVZMWSV] 9RMSR 49 Charles Avenue 1MHHPIFYV] :8 %TTPMGEXMSRW [MPP FI EGGITXIH YRXMP XLI TSWMXMSR MW ½PPIH ) 3 ) $GG\ ,QG\ &ODVVLĂ€ HGV DUH RQOLQH DGGLVRQLQGHSHQGHQW FRP FODVVLĂ€ HGV

Help  Wanted

ADDISON-­RUTLAND SUPERVISORY  UNION 2015-­2016  SCHOOL  YEAR VACANCIES   Benson  Village  School Two  Full  time  instructional  assistants  needed  to  assist  students  with  diverse  abilities.  Associates  Degree  or  48  college  credits  required.  Contact  Kim  Doty,  Principal  at  802-­537-­2491  for  additional  information.  Fair  Haven  Grade  School  Grades  6-­7-­8 ‡ &URVV &RXQWU\ &RDFK )DOO ‡ 7UDFN DQG )LHOG &RDFK 6SULQJ Coaching  of  middle  school  athletes  from  IRXU $568 VFKRROV 3UDFWLFHV DQG KRPH PHHWV ZLOO EH KHOG DW )DLU +DYHQ 8QLRQ +LJK 6FKRRO )RU PRUH LQIRUPDWLRQ FRQWDFW John  Tester,  Athletic  Director  at  jtester@arsu.org.                                                                                   To  obtain  an  application,  please  contact  WKH 6XSHULQWHQGHQW RI 6FKRROVÂś 2IÂżFH DW 0DLO FRPSOHWHG DSSOLFDWLRQ with  cover  letter,  resume  and  three  current  letters  of  reference  to: $GGLVRQ 5XWODQG 6XSHUYLVRU\ 8QLRQ 0DLQ 6WUHHW Fair  Haven,  VT  05743 3RVLWLRQV ZLOO UHPDLQ RSHQ XQWLO ÂżOOHG (2(

%X\ 6HOO )LQG Check  the  &ODVVL¿ HGV WZLFH D ZHHN LQ WKH

K DÍŹ&ÍŹ ÍŹs

Our ClassLĂ€ HGV Work!

Help  Wanted  Â

Addison  Independent.

FULL-TIME & PART-TIME POSITIONS AVAILABLE

We are seeking people with winning personalities and great attitudes to join our team. Part-time positions (20-27 hours a week) are available with exible scheduling. Must be willing to work some nights and weekends. Full-time Deli Management positions also available. Great beneďŹ ts for our full-time team members include: Ĺż 1BJE 7BDBUJPO 5JNF

Ĺż %FOUBM 1MBOT "WBJMBCMF

Ĺż 1BJE 1FSTPOBM 5JNF

Ĺż )FBMUI *OTVSBODF 1MBOT Available to full & part-timers

Ĺż 1BJE )PMJEBZT Ĺż L 1MBO "WBJMBCMF

Ĺż 0QQPSUVOJUZ GPS Advancement

Ĺż 4IJGU %JĆŒ FSFOUJBM 5IJSE 4IJGU

Apply in person or pick up an application at: MapleďŹ elds – Shoreham Service Center Corner of Routes 22A and 74 Shoreham, Vermont EOE


Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015  â€”  PAGE  29

Addison Independent

CLASSIFIEDS Help  Wanted

Help  Wanted

Help  Wanted

AMERICAN  FLATBREAD  MIDDLEBURY  Hearth  is  now  hiring  a  variety  of  positions  for  our  growing  business.  We  are  interested  in  people  with  experi-­ ence  but  are  also  willing  to  train  the  right  hard-­working  person.  Kitchen  and  front  of  house  po-­ sitions  are  available.  Must  be  motivated,  have  a  positive  at-­ titude,  enjoy  good  food  and  be  available  to  work  nights  and  weekends.  Stop  by  and  pick  up  an  application  to  apply.  EOE.

FLOATER-­DIRECT  SUP-­ PORT:  Contracted  to  provide  1:1  support  to  a  variety  of  in-­ dividuals  with  developmental  disabilities.  Be  a  part  of  teams  helping  individuals  reach  per-­ sonal  goals  and  participate  in  community  life.  You  will  be  engaged  in  fun  activities  in  the  community,  and  every  day  would  be  different.  Must  be  flex-­ ible  and  adaptable  to  support  a  wide  array  of  needs.  Support  needed  includes,  personal  care,  communication,  and  social  skills.  Excellent  communica-­ tion  and  strong  boundaries  a  must.  Some  previous  experi-­ ence  necessary.  M-­F,  minimum  30  hrs  /  week.  Respond  to  CSAC  HR,  89  Main  Street,  Middlebury,  VT  05753,  802-­388-­6751,  ext.  415,  or  visit  www.csac-­vt.org.

TOWN  OF  SALISBURY  is  looking  for  a  person  familiar  with  all  aspects  of  road  main-­ tenance.  Must  have  class  B  CDL  and  experience  plowing  snow.  Mechanical  experience  is  preferred.  The  right  candi-­ date  will  be  required  to  have  a  pre-­employment  physical.  Pay  and  benefits  commensurate  with  skills,  experience  and  skill  level.  Please  submit  a  letter  of  interest  /  resume  to  the  Salisbury  Select  Board,  P.O.  Box  66,  Salisbury,  VT  05769.

BOOKKEEPER  NEEDED  in  small  but  busy  office  in  Bristol,  VT.  This  position  will  perform  daily  and  monthly  accounting  tasks  with  a  working  knowl-­ edge  of  accounting  software,  standard  office  technology  and  computers.  In  addition,  this  posi-­ tion  will  provide  general  office  support  including  answering  phones,  filing  and  greeting  cus-­ tomers.  Strong  math  skills  are  necessary.  Knowledge  of  inven-­ tory  costing  is  helpful.  A.S.  de-­ gree  with  relevant  experience  or  B.S.  degree  required.  Salary  is  commensurate  with  experience.  Health  insurance  and  401(K)  plan  offered.  Please  email  re-­ sume  to  lueajco@gmavt.net  or  mail  to  The  A.  Johnson  Co.  LLC,  995  South  116  Rd.,  Bristol,  VT  05443.

NEWSPAPER  READERS  WANTED  to  participate  in  an  in-­person  research  project.  Participants  will  receive  $100.  We  want  to  know  your  opin-­ ions  about  what  separates  the  great  newspapers  from  the  good  ones.  The  research  will  be  conducted  during  the  last  two  weeks  of  July  in  Dedham,  MA,  and  your  3-­hour  interview  can  be  scheduled  at  your  conve-­ nience.  If  you  are  an  avid  reader  of  daily  and  /  or  weekly  news-­ papers,  please  call  the  New  England  Newspaper  &  Press  Association  at  781-­320-­8042  CHAMPLAINSIDE  FARM  is  for  more  info,  or  go  to  www. looking  for  a  Young  Stock  Man-­ noy.nenpa.com. ager.  Successful  candidate  will  RESIDENTIAL  AND  COM-­ possess  skills  including  obser-­ MUNITY  SUPPORT:  To  as-­ vation  of  animal  health  issues,  sist  at  group  residences  and  organization  of  workload,  and  provide  home  based  supports  work  collaboratively  with  others.  for  people  coping  with  mental  Responsibilities  include  mater-­ health  conditions.  Opportunities  nity  and  newborn  care,  raising  for  part  time  shifts  or  full  time  and  monitoring  calves  within  a  positions  with  benefits.  We  offer  group  fed  system,  organizing  a  dynamic  and  evolving  work  and  maintaining  the  vaccination  environment  with  opportunities  and  reproductive  program,  and  for  training  and  professional  animal  movements  from  birth  growth.  Applicants  should  pos-­ to  freshening.  In  exchange  for  sess  excellent  communication  your  efforts,  we  provide  sal-­ skills,  patience,  insight,  com-­ ary  commensurate  with  expe-­ passion  and  an  ability  to  work  rience,  and  housing  may  be  well  in  a  team  environment.  available.  Submit  resume  to:  Apply  to  apply@csac-­vt.org,  twhowlett@yahoo.com  or  call  802-­388-­6751,  ext.  415. Tim  at  802-­349-­7546. SPECIALIZED  RESIDENTIAL  DEVELOPMENTAL  HOME  SUPPORT-­Join  a  team  of  sup-­ PROVIDER.  Woman  with  mild  port  for  a  woman  in  early  30’s  developmental  disability  seeks  with  developmental  disability  at  support  from  single  person  /  her  home  in  Middlebury.  Must  family  in  Addison  County.  She  be  able  to  set  clear  boundar-­ wants  to  be  a  part  of  your  life,  ies  and  implement  behavioral  yet  have  her  own  space.  An  support  plan.  Experience  with  attached  first  floor  apartment  crisis  prevention  and  interven-­ or  mother-­in-­law  suite  would  be  tion  a  plus.  Help  her  expand  ideal  but  not  necessary.  She  has  interests  and  friendships,  build  a  cat,  enjoys  sewing  and  cook-­ home  management  and  emo-­ ing.  Needs  support  with  meals  tional  self-­regulation  skills,  and  and  health  needs.  Tax-­free  sti-­ continue  to  achieve  her  per-­ pend  of  approximately  $23,000  sonal  goals.  Good  professional  plus  room  &  board  payment  growth  opportunity.  Full  time  of  $8,500  and  respite  budget.  with  2  overnights  and  almost  Please  call  Keiko  Kokobun  4  days  off  each  week.  Annual  at  Community  Associates  at  compensation  mid-­$20K’s  with  802-­388-­4021.. comprehensive  benefit  pack-­ EXPERIENCED  COOK .  age.  Respond  to  CSAC  HR,  FRIENDLY  fast-­paced  fam-­ 89  Main  Street,  Middlebury,  ily-­style  restaurant  seeks  VT  05753,  802-­388-­6751,  ext.  part-­time,  team-­oriented  per-­ 425,  or  visit  www.csac-­vt.org. son.  Noon    8:00  p.m.  shifts  to  include  one  weekend  night.  Apply  Halfway  House  Restau-­ rant,  Shoreham.

For  Sale

For  Rent

For  Rent

For  Rent

SAWMILLS  FROM  ONLY  $4,397.  Make  and  save  money  with  your  own  bandmill,  cut  lumber  any  dimension.  In  stock,  ready  to  ship.  Free  info  /  DVD:  www.NorwoodSawmills.com,  1-­800-­578-­1363,  ext.  300N.

5,000  SQ.  FT.  OFFICE  and  manufacturing  space  (food  pro-­ cessing  preferred),  with  load-­ ing  dock  and  drive-­in  door.  Exchange  Street,  Middlebury.  802-­349-­8544.

MIDDLEBURY,  1  BEDROOM,  near  Marble  Works.  Garage,  garden  space.  $825.  plus  utili-­ ties.  388-­6892.

WEST  ADDISON:  2  story,  furnished  house  on  lakefront.  Washer,  dryer.  No  smoking.  Available  September  through  May.  860-­878-­9580.

BRANDON  OFFICES  PRIME  DOWNTOWN.  One  small  ($325  /  month),  One  large  ($410  /  month)  above  bakery.  Use  of  SPECTACULAR  SIGNED  common  waiting  room,  kitch-­ ORIGINAL  Warren  Kimble  enette  and  bath  included.  Call  American  flag-­2  pieces,  8x6  802-­247-­9595. feet  each.  Made  as  a  gate  but  perfect  for  a  barn  exterior  or  for  BRANDON-­SUNNY  2  BED-­ an  interior  â€œgreat  room.â€?  Comes  ROOM,  1st  floor.  Pets  welcome.  with  certificate  of  authenticity.  $675  /  month.  203-­253-­4389. Info  at  treetops@gmavt.net. BRIDPORT  2  BEDROOM  apartment,  includes  all  utili-­ ties.  No  pets,  no  smoking.  Vacation  Rentals First  and  security.  Available  ADDISON:  LAKE  CHAM-­ now.  802-­758-­2361  (between  PLAIN  waterfront  camp.  Beauti-­ 10am-­6pm).

ful  views,  gorgeous  sunsets,  private  beach,  dock,  rowboat  2004  HOLIDAY  RAMBLER,  and  canoe  included.  $600.  class  A  motor  home.  2  weekly,  or  call  for  weekends.  slide-­outs,  30  foot,  9,000  miles,  802-­349-­4212. could  include  car  dolly.  $40,000.  Call  802-­453-­2317,  George.

For  Sale

2010  26  FT  CAMPER  with  sway  bar  hitch,  sleeps  6;͞  $8,000.  Aluminum  canoe;͞  $500.  Oak  entertainment  center  with  glass  doors;͞  $300  o.b.o.  Call  802-­870-­7125.

For  Rent

1,250  SQ.  FT.  LIGHT  indus-­ trial  space.  Exchange  Street,  Middlebury.  Call  802-­388-­4831.

1,800  SQ.  FT.  WAREHOUSE  as  is  or  renovate  to  suit.  CVA  INLINE  50  CALIBER  Creek  Road,  Middlebury.  MUZZLELOADER  w/3x9  802-­558-­6092. Bushnell  banner  scope.  Syn-­ thetic  camo  stock.  Asking  $350.  2  BEDROOM  FIRST  FLOOR  apartment  in  Middlebury  on  Firm.  802-­349-­5208. Court  Street.  Full  basement  LIVE  AUCTIONS-­STATE  OF  with  washer  /  dryer  hookup.  MA  Surplus.  Fri.,  Aug.  7;͞  31-­69  Off-­street  parking.  $1,000  /  Bishop  Rd.,  Ayer,  MA.  Sat.,  mo.  plus  utilities.  Credit  and  Aug  8;͞  289  Lyman  St.,  West-­ references  required.  1  year  borough,  MA.  1-­800-­536-­1401.  lease.  No  pets  or  smoking.  www.AuctionsInternational. 802-­352-­6678. com. 2,000  SQ.  FT.  PROFESSION-­ MAXIM  OUTDOOR  WOOD  AL  office  space  in  Middlebury,  PELLET  Furnace  by  Central  multi-­room.  Ground  level,  park-­ Boiler.  Clean,  safe  and  ther-­ ing,  handicap-­accessible.  Avail-­ mostatically  controlled.  Boivin  able  now.  802-­558-­6092. Farm  Supply,  802-­475-­4007.

For  Rent

For  Rent

It’s  against  the  law  to  discriminate  when  advertising  housing Particularly  on  sites  like  Craigslist. And  it’s  easier  to  break  the  law  than  you  might  think.  You  can’t  say  â€œno  childrenâ€?  or  â€œadults  only.â€?  There  is  lots  you  can’t  say.  The  federal  government  is  watching  for  such  discrimination. Let  us  help  you  sift  through  the  complexities  of  the  Fair  Housing  Law.  Stay  legal.  Stay  on  the  right  side  of  the  nation’s  Fair  Housing  Law.  Call  the  Addison  Independent  at  (802)  388-­4944. Talk  to  our  sales  professionals.

ADDISON COUNTY

INDEPENDENT

VERMONT’S TWICE-­WEEKLY NEWSPAPER 0LGGOHEXU\ 97 ‡ ‡ ZZZ $GGLVRQ,QGHSHQGHQW FRP

OFFICE  SPACE-­SINGLE  ROOM  office  in  historic  down-­ town  Middlebury  building,  lo-­ cated  one  block  from  Main  Street.  Office  shares  common  areas  and  amenities  with  other  business  tenants.  $450  /  month,  utilities  included.  Call  802-­989-­8822  to  inquire. RETIRED  ART  PROFESSOR  from  Oberlin  wants  long-­term  roommate.  $700  /  mo.  of  which  part  could  be  paid  by  being  studio  assistant.  Furnished  room  with  plenty  of  light  and  air.  Includes  access  to  pool.  Bristol,  802-­453-­6975.

BRISTOL  1  BEDROOM,  1  bath,  efficient  gas  heat,  new  windows,  excellent  condition.  Wi-­Fi,  water  and  sewer  includ-­ ed.  No  pets,  no  smoking.  $735  /  month  802-­635-­9716.

Wood  Heat MIDDMEN  /  FIREWOOD    W W W . M I D D M E N . C O M    1-­855-­MIDDMEN   Affordable,   split,  16â€?,  mixed  hardwood,  delivered.

Real  Estate BRANDON  DOWNTOWN  CONDO:  New  (‘08)  luxury  space,  3BRs,  2  marble  baths  (walk-­in  showers,  jetted  tub),  2,650  sq  ft.  Cherry  kitchen,  stainless  appliances,  hardwood  floors,  media  room,  deeded  parking  spaces.  HERS  rat-­ ed-­59.  Sunny  /  bright.  Views,  vil-­ lage  /  mountains.  Walk  to  every-­ thing.  $249,000.  Whittaker  Real  Estate,  Inc.,  802-­247-­6633.

2  BR  SUMMER  RENTAL.  En-­ joy  Lake  Dunmore  in  your  own  private  camp.  Hillside  camp  overlooking  Lake  Dunmore  with  320’  private  frontage.  Across  from  road  on  East  side  above  Branbury  State  Park.  Rental  to  one  family,  $3,600.  for  whole  season.  Rental  ends  Oct.  15,  2015.  Mostly  furnished,  with  all  appliances.  Beautiful  views,  great  swimming,  sun  deck  and  dock  on  water.  Call  802-­352-­6678.

BUILDING  LOT,  DAISY  LANE,  East  Middlebury.  Town  water,  underground  telephone,  cable  and  electric  service.  Good  perk-­ ing  soil.  Regular  septic.  Site  approved  for  4  bedroom  home.  Jack  Brown,  802-­388-­2502  or  802-­388-­7350.  Email:  brown-­ nov@together.net.

MIDDLEBURY;͞  INDUSTRIAL  PARK.  Available  2  acres,  lease  or  build  to  suit.  802-­558-­6092.

Att. Â Farmers

GOSHEN,  15  WOODED  ACRES.  Private.  Power,  brook,  long  road  front.  $45,000.  Bicknell  Real  Estate  Inc.  802-­388-­4994.

BRISTOL  2  BEDROOM  apart-­ ment  with  basement  and  ga-­ ROOM  FOR  RENT;͞  Middle-­ RIPTON  LAND.  6.56  acres,  rage.  Heat,  hot  water,  snow  bury.  Kitchen  privileges.  $600  more  or  less.  Billings  Farm  removal,  lawn  care  included.  /  mo.  Deposit.  Available  now.  Road.  $38,000.  802-­388-­2640. 802-­453-­2566. 802-­388-­1912. STUDIO  APARTMENT  FOR  1-­2  persons.  Quiet.  10  minutes  BRISTOL;͞  3  BEDROOM  apart-­ from  Middlebury.  Nice  views.  ment.  Heat,  snow  removal  and  Includes;͞  utilities,  snow  and  lawn  care  included.  No  pets.  trash  removal.  No  pets.  No  No  smoking.  Available  now.  smoking.  References  and  de-­ 802-­453-­2566. posit  required.  $800  /  mo.  Call  802-­462-­2271. C O R N W A L L ,  L A R G E  ONE-­BEDROOM,  second  floor,  VALLEY  VIEW  APARTMENTS  1  1/2  half  bath,  private  deck,  is  currently  accepting  applica-­ skylights.  $890,  includes  heat.  tions  for  1  and  2  BR  apartments  batesproperties@yahoo.com. in  Vergennes.  All  income  /  assets  must  be  verified  to  determine  DOWNTOWN  MIDDLEBURY;͞  monthly  rent,  but  tenants  only  3  BR  apartment  for  rent.  pay  30%  of  their  income  toward  Walking  distance  to  college.  rent.  Elderly  or  disabled  only.  Available  June  1st.  Call  Baba  W/D  onsite.  Call  802-­247-­0165  802-­373-­6456. or  visit  our  website  www.sum-­ IDEALLY  LOCATED  2  BED-­ mitpmg.com.  Equal  Housing  ROOM,  1  bath  apartment  in  his-­ Opportunity. toric  home,  2  floors,  fenced  yard  and  parking.  $1,150  /  month,  plus  utilities.  Available  Aug.  15th.  1  year  lease.  For  more  VERGENNES-­1  BEDROOM  information,  please  contact  with  den  available  8/1,  near  Ashley  802-­922-­1924;͞  arobin-­ schools,  city  pool,  tennis  and  basketball  courts.  $975  /  month,  sonld@gmail.com.

includes  heat  and  hot  water  and  KHG MIDDLEBURY  EDROOM,  EOLV 32X  B onsite  laundry.  Lease,  security  LĂ€HG $GV &ODVV fully  furnished  apartment.  In-­ /  deposit  and  credit  check  re-­ t verything  (except  ge.  cludes  inter-­ quired.  802-­877-­1509. For  Rene T se  to  colle APARTMEN wly  refurbished.  Clo ROOM  /  net).  mo.  y,  ne 1  BE$D1,650  ur02-­349-­8544. eb8 dl id 0. 00 ,  M -­0 et Main  Stre ,  includes  heat.  000 VERGENNES;Íž  283  MAIN  th iddlebury . M I$7 D50D/mLonE B U RY  O T, F F I C E   north  of  Mavailable  00 now.  Quiet,  Street,  EN ile 00 M  m 0-­ RT ,  1 00 PA t.  sh A si OM  ,  rubbi th  plus  deporenovated,  medium  SPACE.  1  BEDROPrime  at,  electricStreet  595/monnewly  ludes  heCourt  ediately,  $ upstairs,  incGround  ilable  immfloor.  Off  va location.  A e apartment.  .   7 te sized,  2  anbedroom  d  referenc on  Rou e s.  Deposit  BILE  hom street  parking.  lus  utilitie  psq.  OM  MO600-­2,000  o. L  a undry  h ookups,  large  porch,  O /m R D 50 $6 BE 2  rivate  lot.  .  Panagement,  ft.  Real-­Net  Inc.  heat  and  hot  water  included.  in  SalisburyM-­0 000. quired. re 00 s   0 ce d. en require DO $920  802-­388-­4994. ent.  Refer mmonth.  Call  only  8  am-­8  se/  USE/CON  TOWNHO nnes.  Garage  and  ba .  000-­0000. M O O R D 2  BE o  pets ons,  Verge  and  heat.  Npm.  802-­877  -­3679. ntry  Comm ities

Cou  util her,  excluding atellite,  was pletely $1,000/mo. ERN,  com  Hi-­speed  internet,  s ery  energy D O ,  M M O 2  BEDRO ke  Dunmore  house. 85’  lake  frontage.  V URXJK -XQH WK l,  678. La furnished  ed  porch,  drilled  wel QJ $XJXVW s  utilities.  802-­352-­6 UWL lu en dryer,  scre PRQWK UHQWDO VWD tiable.  $1,000/mo.  p go RU g.  Pets  ne HIÂżFLHQW ) on-­smokin 26,  2010.  N Â

897-­5145.

WHITNEY’S  CUSTOM  FARM  WORK.  Pond  agitating,  liquid  manure  hauling,  drag  line  aer-­ ating.  Call  for  price.  462-­2755,  John  Whitney.

Boats 1995  19’  SEA  NYMPH  fishing  pleasure  deck  boat,  90HP  Evin-­ rude  and  trailer.  Runs  great.  802-­897-­2374.

Trucks 1998  CHEVROLET  PICKUP,  4WD,  3500  1  ton  with  towing  package.  Always  adult  owned  and  driven  by  seniors.  Fresh  paint,  no  rust,  6-­1/2’  box.  Snow  plow,  used  for  own  driveway.  $10,000.  invested,  take  $8,000.  OBO.  Call  for  details,  evenings,  802-­453-­4235.

Wanted ANTIQUES  WANTED.  Local  3rd  generation  dealer,  free  ver-­ bal  appraisals.  Call  Brian  Bittner  at  802-­272-­7527  or  visit  www. bittnerantiques.com.


PAGE  30  â€”  Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015

Public Notices Index Public  notices  for  the  following  can  be  found  in  this  ADDISON  INDEPENDENT  on  this  Page  30.

Addison  County  Superior  Court  (1) Addison  Northeast  Supervisory  Union  â€“  Bristol,  Lincoln,  Monkton,  New  Haven,  Starksboro,  Mt.  Abraham  UMHS  (1)  Middlebury  (4)

TOWN OF MIDDLEBURY INVITATION TO BID BID NUMBER 06-­30-­2015 Sealed  competitive  bids  for  the  â€œTown  of  Middlebury,  Catch  Basin  replace-­ PHQW´ ZLOO EH UHFHLYHG DW WKH RIÂżFH RI WKH 7RZQ 0DQDJHU 7RZQ 2IÂżFHV 0DLQ Street,  Middlebury,  Vermont  05753  until  1:00pm  on  August  6,  2015  and  will  be  publicly  opened  and  read  aloud  soon  thereafter.  Bid  packet  is  available  at  WKH 7RZQ 0DQDJHUÂśV 2IÂżFH DW 0DLQ Street  and  Public  Works  Department  1020  South  Rt.  7 There  will  be  a  mandatory  Pre-­Bid  Meet-­ LQJ RQ )ULGD\ -XO\ DW DP Meeting  will  be  held  on  site  at  Seymour  St.  @  intersection  of  Methodist  Ln.  The  Town  of  Middlebury,  Vermont  re-­ serves  the  right  to  waive  any  informali-­ ties  in,  or  reject  any  and  all  bids,  or  to  accept  any  bid  deemed  to  be  in  the  best  interest  of  Town. Kathleen  Ramsay,  Town  Manager 7/27,30

TOWN OF NEW HAVEN PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE

New  Haven  (1)

DEVELOPMENT REVIEW BOARD

MORTGAGEE’S NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE OF REAL PROPERTY UNDER 12 V.S.A. SEC 4952 ET SEQ. As  ordered  by  the  Court  set  forth  below  and  in  connection  with  a  certain  mortgage  given  by  Penny  J.  Danyow  to  Mortgage  Electronic  Registration  Systems,  Inc.,  as  nom-­ inee  for  Accredited  Home  Lenders,  Inc.,  dated  April  12,  2006  and  recorded  in  Book  62  Page  619  of  the  land  records  of  the  Town  of  Vergennes,  of  which  mortgage  the  Plaintiff  is  the  present  holder.  In  accordance  with  the  Judgment  Order  and  Decree  of  Foreclosure  entered  October  11,  2013  in  the  action  entitled  JPMC  Specialty  Mortgage  LLC  f/k/a  WM  Specialty  Mortgage  LLC  v  Penny  J.  Danyow  and  Capital  One  Bank.,  by  the  Addison  Unit,  Civil  Division,  Vermont  Superior  Court,  Docket  No.  68-­3-­13  Ancv  for  breach  of  the  conditions  of  said  mortgage  and  for  the  purpose  of  foreclosing  the  same  will  be  sold  at  Public  Auction  at  45  West  Main  Street,  Vergennes,  Vermont  on  August  11,  2015  at  10:30  am  all  and  singular  the  premises  described  in  said  mortgage,     To  wit:  Land  with  dwelling  at  45  West  Main  Street,  Vergennes,  and  being  all  and  the  same  lands  and  premises  conveyed  to  John  A.  Hamel  and  Rosemary  P.  Hamel  by  Warranty  Deed  of  Leslie  H.  Rich,  Jr.,  and  Susan  A.  Rich  dated  August  19,  1977,  and  recorded  at  Book  28  Page  244  of  the  Vergennes  Land  Records,  and  being  therein  more  fully  described  as  follows: “Being  all  and  the  same  land  and  premises  described  in  a  Warranty  Deed  from  John  Earl  Ware  and  Julia  D.  Ware  to  Leslie  R.  Rich,  Jr.  and  Susan  A.  Rich  and  recorded  in  Book  26  Page  268-­269  Vergennes  Land  Records  and  being  therein  described  as  follows: It  being  the  present  homeplace  of  the  Grantors  herein  situate  at  45  West  Main  Street,  and  described  as  follows: Beginning  at  the  westerly  corner  now  or  formerly  of  the  Gendron  home  lot  in  the  southwesterly  line  of  Main  Street,  and  running  in  said  Gendron  line  southeasterly  127  feet  5  inches,  more  or  less; Thence  southwesterly  53  feet  and  8  inches,  more  or  less,  to  the  line  of  property  of  Dorothy  Evans; Thence  in  the  said  Evans  line  127  feet,  more  or  less,  to  said  line  of  Main  Street; Then  in  said  line  of  Main  Street  northwesterly  59  feet  and  9  inches,  more  or  less,  to  the  place  of  beginning. Being  all  and  the  same  land  and  premises  conveyed  to  the  Grantors  herein  by  Warranty  Deed  from  Marguerita  Burnham  date  September  12,  1973  of  record  in  Volume  25,  Pages  127-­128  of  the  Land  Records  of  the  City  of  Vergennes. Reference  is  hereby  made  to  said  deeds  and  their  records  and  to  all  prior  deeds  and  their  records  for  a  further  and  more  complete  description  of  the  land  and  prem-­ ises  herein  conveyed.â€? Subject  to  easements  and  rights  of  away  of  record. Reference  is  hereby  made  to  the  above-­mentioned  instruments,  the  records  thereof,  the  references  therein  made,  and  their  respective  records  and  references,  in  further  aid  of  this  description. Reference  is  hereby  made  to  the  above  instruments  and  to  the  records  and  references  contained  therein  in  further  aid  of  this  description. Terms  of  sale:  Said  premises  will  be  sold  and  conveyed  subject  to  all  liens,  encum-­ brances,  unpaid  taxes,  tax  titles,  municipal  liens  and  assessments,  if  any,  which  take  precedence  over  the  said  mortgage  above  described. TEN  THOUSAND  ($10,000.00)  Dollars  of  the  purchase  price  must  be  paid  in  cash,  FHUWLÂżHG FKHFN EDQN WUHDVXUHUÂśV RU FDVKLHUÂśV FKHFN DW WKH WLPH DQG SODFH RI WKH VDOH E\ WKH SXUFKDVHU 7KH EDODQFH RI WKH SXUFKDVH SULFH VKDOO EH SDLG LQ FDVK FHUWLÂżHG FKHFN EDQN WUHDVXUHUÂśV RU FDVKLHUÂśV FKHFN ZLWKLQ WKLUW\ GD\V DIWHU WKH GDWH RI VDOH 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.    DATED  :  July  7,  2015 By:  /s/:  Valerie  A.  Finney,  Esq.,  Bendett  and  McHugh,  PC )DUPLQJWRQ $YH 6WH )DUPLQJWRQ &7 ‡ 7/13,  7/20,  7/27

 The  New  Haven  Development  Review  Board  (DRB)  will  hold  a  public  hearing  on  the  following  application(s)  beginning  at  7:00  P.M.  on  Monday  August  17,  2015  at  WKH 1HZ +DYHQ 7RZQ 2IÂżFH    1.  Application  #  2015DRB-­03-­SD  is  a  UHTXHVW IRU ÂżQDO SODW DSSURYDO IRU ORW minor  subdivision  (lot  #1-­76.9  acres,  lot  #2-­ 80.6  acres)  of  parcel  #  0830  on  map  #5  by  Elgin  Springs  Farm,  represented  by  Alan  Bessette  pursuant  to  section  260  (NHSR).   The  property  is  located  on  Quarry  Road  in  the  RA-­2  District.  This  application  will  be  the  1st  item  of  business  on  the  Board’s  agenda.     Applications  are  usually  scheduled  to  be  heard  in  the  order  they  are  listed  above.  However,  applicants  and  interested  persons  should  refer  to  the  Boards  agenda  that  will  be  posted  pursuant  to  State  law  for  changes.  All  the  above  applications  DUH DYDLODEOH IRU UHYLHZ DW WKH 7RZQ 2IÂżFH Interested  persons  are  invited  to  attend  the  hearing,  or  send  a  representative.  Pursuant  to  24  VSA  §  4464(a)(1)(C)  and  4471(a),  participation  in  this  local  proceeding  is  a  prerequisite  to  the  right  to  take  any  subsequent  appeal. 'DYLG :HWPRUH $GPLQLVWUDWLYH 2IÂżFHU 7/27   Date  July  27,  2015

PUBLIC NOTICES are found in the ADDISON Â INDEPENDENT every Monday and Thursday.

TOWN OF MIDDLEBURY REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS

Civil Engineering Services for the Demolition of the Town of Middlebury Municipal Building and Design Services for the Construction of a Park  The  Town  of  Middlebury  is  seeking  SURSRVDO IURP TXDOL¿HG ¿UPV IRU &LYLO (QJLQHHULQJ 6HUYLFHV LQ SUHSDUDWLRQ IRU WKH GHPROLWLRQ RI WKH 0XQLFLSDO %XLOGLQJ DQG 0XQLFLSDO *\PQDVLXP ORFDWHG DW 0DLQ 6WUHHW LQ WKH 7RZQ RI 0LGGOHEXU\ 9HUPRQW DQG WKH UHGHYHORSPHQW RI WKH VLWH IRU D SXEOLF SDUN 7KH GHDGOLQH IRU VXEPLVVLRQ LV $XJXVW &RSLHV RI WKH IXOO 5)3 DUH DYDLODEOH DW WKH 0LGGOHEXU\ 7RZQ 0DQDJHUœV 2I¿FHV 0DLQ 6W RU RQOLQH DW ZZZ WRZQRIPLGGOHEXU\ RUJ  (See  Agendas/ 1RWLFHV :DUQLQJV )RU TXHVWLRQV SOHDVH FDOO WKH 7RZQ 0DQDJHUœV 2I¿FH DW [

Hunters: apply now for antlerless deer permits MONTPELIER  â€”  The  Vermont  Fish  &  Wildlife  Department  reminds  hunters  they  can  apply  for  muzzleloader  season  antler-­ less  deer  permits  for  use  in  the  Dec.  5-­13  muzzleloader  season. Hunters  can  apply  on  the  Vermont  Fish  &  Wildlife  Department’s  website  (www. vtfishandwildlife.com).  A  quick-­ link  to  the  information  and  appli-­ cation  is  provided  on  the  home  page.  Or,  they  can  apply  with  a  paper  application  available  from  license  agents. “The  online  application  is  a  really  swift  and  easy  process  that  ensures  you  are  immediately  entered  into  the  lottery,â€?  said  Mark  Scott,  director  of  wildlife.  â€œPlus,  it  saves  you  postage.  We  encourage  you  to  use  the  online  application  because  it  is  more  efficient  for  you  and  for  us.  Be  sure  to  apply  before  the  August  28  deadline.â€? Like  in  the  past,  a  person  may  apply  in  the  lottery  category,  or  as  a  landowner.  It  is  a  violation  for Â

a  landowner  to  apply  for  a  land-­ owner  antlerless  permit  if  they  are  posting  their  land  against  hunt-­ ing.  Fish  &  Wildlife  says  it  will  be  closely  monitoring  landowner  applications  and  listing  permit  winners  in  both  categories  on  its  website.  The  number  of  December  muzzleloader  season  antler-­ less  permits  is  9,650  distributed  in  10  of  Vermont’s  21  Wildlife  Management  Units  (WMUs). “The  number  of  muzzleloader  season  antlerless  deer  permits  was  reduced  from  the  17,050  issued  last  year  due  to  a  decline  in  deer  numbers  caused  by  two  severe  winters  in  2014  and  2015,â€?  said  Scott.  â€œThe  department’s  recommendation  for  antlerless  deer  hunting  is  based  on  popula-­ tion  trend  estimates,  biological  data,  deer  sighting  rates  reported  by  hunters,  and  winter  sever-­ ity  data,  as  well  as  input  from  game  wardens,  foresters  and  the  public.â€?

 +++++++++++++++  TOWN OF MIDDLEBURY

TOWN OF MIDDLEBURY REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS

REG. SELECTBOARD MEETING 78(6 -XO\ ‡ 3 0 5866 6+2/(6 6(1,25 &(17(5 /2:(5 /(9(/ 081,&,3$/ *<0 86( &2//(*( 67 5$03

&2//(*( 675((7

AGENDA 7:00 &DOO WR 2UGHU $SSURYDO RI 0LQXWHV RI -XO\ 5HJXODU 6HOHFWERDUG 0HHWLQJ $SSURYDO RI $JHQGD &LWL]HQ &RPPHQWV >2SSRUWXQLW\ to  raise  or  address  issues  that  are  not  otherwise  included  on  this agenda] 7:10 &RQVLGHU $PHQGHG 3XEOLF $V semblage  Permit  Application  for  New  )LOPPDNHUV )HVWLYDO $XJXVW 7:20 )ROORZ 8S 'LVFXVVLRQ IURP -XO\ WK 0HHWLQJ ZLWK 6HFUHWDU\ RI Transportation  Minter 7:35 $SSURYH )< :DWHU DQG :DVWH water  Treatment  Budgets 7:40 &RQVLGHU 6HFWLRQ 1RWLFH IRU &RQYH\DQFH RI DQ (DVHPHQW IRU 7RZQ 2ZQHG 3URSHUW\ DW )RUUHVW Lane 7:50 &RPPLWWHH 3URMHFW 5HSRUWV D 3ROLF\ 5HYLHZ &RPPLWWHH 0HHW LQJ RI -XO\ E (', 5)3 5HYLHZ 3UH PHHWLQJ RI -XO\ DQG $SSRLQWPHQW RI (', 5)3 5HYLHZ &RPPLWWHH Members 8:05 $SSURYDO RI &KHFN :DUUDQWV 7RZQ 0DQDJHUÂśV 5HSRUW %RDUG 0HPEHU &RQFHUQV ([HFXWLYH 6HVVLRQ Âą 5HDO (V tate  Matter $FWLRQ RQ 0DWWHUV 'LVFXVVHG LQ ([HFXWLYH 6HVVLRQ 8:20 $GMRXUQ *  Decision  Item    **  Possible  Decision If  you  need  special  accommodations  to  attend  this  meeting,  please  contact  the  7RZQ 0DQDJHUÂśV 2IÂżFH DW [ DV HDUO\ DV SRVVLEOH Additional  information  about  most  Agen da  items  is  available  on  the  Town’s  web VLWH ZZZ WRZQRIPLGGOHEXU\ RUJ RQ WKH 6HOHFWERDUG SDJH 7/27

ROOF REPLACEMENT FOR POOL HOUSE BUILDING

  The  Town  of  Middlebury  is  issuing  a  Request  for  Proposals  to  complete  an  assessment  and  recommendation,  including  costs  for  repair  or  replacement  of  the  roof  on  the  Town’s  Pool  House,  located  at  Recreation  Park,  296  Buttolph  Drive.    The  complete  RFP  is  available  in  the  7RZQ 0DQDJHUÂśV 2IÂżFH 0DLQ 6WUHHW Middlebury,  Vermont   05753  or  online  at  www.townofmiddlebury.org. 3URSRVDOV ZLOO EH UHFHLYHG XQWLO S P on  August  21,  2015.     Contact  Parks  and  Recreation  Director,  Terri  Arnold,  802-­388-­8100,  ext.  205,  for  additional  information.                     7/27,  7/30,  8/3,  8/6

send it in:

news@addisonindependent.com

ADDISON NORTHEAST SUPERVISORY UNION DISTRICT

(Bristol, Lincoln, Monkton, New Haven, Starksboro, Mt. Abraham UMHS) NOTICE  OF  RECORDS  DESTRUCTION ATTN:   Parents  &  eligible  students  who  received  Special  Education  services  up  to  June  2009.  The  Vermont  Agency  of  Education’s  State  Board  of  Ed.  Manual  of  Rights  and  Practices,  Section  2366,2.13(a)   Destruction  of  Information,  states:   â€œFor  purposes  of  an  audit,  when  a  participating  agency  has  counted  a  child  to  justify  receipt  of  IDEA  funds,  the  district  shall  retain  copies  of  the  child’s  IEP  and  special  education  eligibility  evaluations,  for  a  minimum  of  5  years  from  the  end  of  the  school  year  in  which  the  document  was  in  effect.â€?   If  you  received  Special  Education  services  and  graduated  in  2009  you  are  entitled  to  a  copy  of  your  records.   The  ANESU  District  will  destroy  these  Special  Education  records  on  Monday  8/10/15.   If  you  want  a  copy  of  your  records,  contact  $1(68 6XSHULQWHQGHQWÂśV 2IÂżFH DW 6951.   Your  request  must  be  received  prior  to  Friday,  8/7/15.                        7/20,  27,  8/3


Addison  Independent,  Monday,  July  27,  2015  â€”  PAGE  31

City  council  announces  agenda  for  coming  week

Real Estate

VERGENNES  â€”  The  Vergennes  City  Council  has  several  typical  housekeeping  items  on  the  agenda  for  this  week.  Aldermen  and  alder-­ women  will  meet  on  Tuesday,  July  EHJLQQLQJ DW S P DW WKH Âż UH station  meeting  room. After  the  Pledge  of  Allegiance  and  citizens’  comments,  council  members  will  make  appointments  to  the  Vergennes  Planning  Commission,  Development  Review  Board  and  Transportation  Advisory  Committee. City  Manager  Mel  Hawley  then  will  report  on  the  city  budget  â€”  retrospectively  and  prospectively  â€”  the  Water  Tower  Fund  allocations,  and  the  education  tax  rates  and  local  tax  rate  calculation.

EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY

All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 as amended which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, national origin, sexual orientation, or persons receiv-­ ing public assistance, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.â€? This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertisement for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimina-­ tion, call HUD Toll-­free at 1-­800-­424-­8590. For the Remember, it’s important to Washington, DC area please call HUD at 426-­3500. Reuse

Remember, it’s important to

Reuse

& Recycle and that includes your local newspaper!

Now is a great time to buy!

48 Mountain Terrace Bristol, VT 05443 0( s FAX 802-453-5898 Visit our websites at: www.wallacere.com www.greenbuiltvermont.com

Kelly

Claire

Tom

Please  call  Kelly,  Claire,  or  Tom

Recycle and that includes your local newspaper!

and that includes your local newspaper!

Sudoku  Solution July 27

Puzzle Solutions

Super Summer Savings

Nursery Specials

Off  to  a  great  start AMANDA  BODETTE,  A  longtime  Vermont  resident  and  graduate  RI 0LGGOHEXU\ 8QLRQ +LJK 6FKRRO WRRN ¿ IWK SODFH LQ WKH QRYLFH ¿ J XUH FDWHJRU\ RI WKH 1&3 1RUWKHDVW 6XPPHU &ODVVLF 1DWLRQDO 4XDOL ¿ HU ERG\EXLOGLQJ FRPSHWLWLRQ RQ -XO\ LQ :KLWH 3ODLQV 1 < 7KLV ZDV KHU ¿ UVW WLPH FRPSHWLQJ Photo  by  RI  Shots

NEW  9â€?  POTS  just  $9.99

Auctions

WALLACE REALTY

or  2  for  $16.99

8

6

4

2

1

3

7

9

5

2 1

5 9

3 7

9 8

7 4

6 5

1 2

8 3

4 6

3

2

1

5

9

4

6

7

8

4 9

8 7

6 5

1 6

3 2

7 8

9 4

5 1

2 3

6

3

2

7

8

9

5

4

1

5 7

4 1

9 8

3 4

6 5

1 2

8 3

2 6

7 9

1

2

3

4

11.99 S A I D

$11A 15

25% OFF Select

TREES, SHRUBS & PERENNIALS Offer  valid  on  in-­stock  items  only  â€“  while  supplies  last.  Now  thru  7/31/15.

NEW Â SHIPMENT Â OF Â HOUSE Â PLANTS!

MIDDLEBURY AGWAY 388 Exchange Street Open

388-4937

7 days

Mon. - Fri. 8-6, Sat. 8-5, Sun. 9-4 www.MiddleburyAgway.com

I

18

A

D

D

12

D S

E S

I S

P

30

O

35

K

39

E

43

D

24

L

U

25

A

Y

A R T

O

62

E P

S

U E

E

A M

R U

W E

51

H

A T E

E N E D

I N E R

6

P A N

O N

E

E

P

D

E

P

S

E

T

G A

T

E

E M A

27

34

T 38

S

A

S

R

R

41

10

A

I

R

48

T

R

45

D

9

A

R E

C

B

F I

8

P

U

22

33

A

20

T

G

A

S

17

N

R M E

14

E

26 32

7

A W

A M

37

R

44

5

R

40

E K

C

T

T

N O W S

50

59

S

36

47

56

U

19

31

R

F

16

A 21

23

13

J

29

N

N O

T

E

T

L

E

S

A

D

E

S

S

O 42

T E

28

46

C

49

C O M M A

52

C

57

R

60

O

63

H I N

W A

R D E R

I E S

S

T

53

54

M A

58

C O

61

H O 64

55

S

L

T

S

E

N O W


PAGE 32 — Addison Independent, Monday, July 27, 2015


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.