FREE
Alternative approach to smoking tobacco has people ‘vaping’.
There are more new, stunning flowers to see in gardens around Vermont.
Take one
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May 29, 2010
Largest local Memorial Day parade, observance - May 31 VERGENNES—Somber reflection. Patriotism. The unofficial beginning of summer. These are what most people think about on Memorial Day in Vermont. All three ingredients will be present during what is expected to be one of the largest Memorial Day parades in Vermont as the City of Vergennes hosts the parade and follow on ceremonies this Monday, May 31. The day begins when the parade, titled “Never Forgotten”, sponsored by Vergennes American Legion Post 14, steps off from Vergennes Union High School at 11 a.m. Floats, marching bands, color guards, veterans’ groups, scouts, fire trucks, antique cars, and many more participants will cover the two-mile route as they parade down Main St., make a loop through side streets and conclude at Vergennes City Park. Both Gov. Jim Douglas and U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders are expected to participate. Ann Sullivan will announce the participating groups and personalities on the public address system as they pass the reviewing stand on Main Street. Following the parade, Master of Ceremonies and Legion Commander Larney McGrath will kick off the ceremonies from the bandstand in the park. The Vergennes Union High School band will play the National Anthem prior to an invocation by Rev. Yvon Royer, pastor of St. Pe-
A TIME TO REMEMBER—Thanksgiving is a day when we pause to give thanks for the things we have. Memorial Day is a day we pause to give thanks to the people who fought for the things we have. Please remember America’s fallen this Memorial Day. —The Staff of New Market Press Newspapers. Photo art by J. Kirk Edwards
ter ’s Catholic Church. Vergennes Mayor Michael Daniels will deliver greetings and present a key to the city
‘Paint bomb’ detonates, spatters paint inside van FROM NEWS & STAFF REPORTS MONKTON—The Vermont State Police are investigating a disturbing paintbomb incident that occurred May 15 in a passenger van at a family farm near the New Haven-Monkton town line. The incident probably occurred after 10 p.m. according to the farm’s residents; the remains of a device were discovered by the van’s owner on Damage from a “paint bomb” inside a the morning of May family van in Monkton May 15. Names 16. Remains of what are being withheld for now. appeared to be a Eagle photo charred fuse trailing away from the damaged van were also uncovered.
to parade Grand Marshall Petty Officer First Class Cassandra Foote, USN. Navy vets will lay a wreath at the monu-
ment to Commodore Thomas McDonough, a hero of the Battle of Plattsburg on Lake Champlain during the War of 1812. Three VUHS students will then take center stage. Brendan Duke, a VUHS sophomore, will honor an American Revolutionary War soldier buried in the old Vergennes cemetery. Juniors Hanna Sturtevant and Nathan North will then recite “in Flanders Field” and the Gettysburg Address, respectively. Col. Jeffrey Farnsworth, U.S. Army, a Vergennes native, will follow with the Memorial Day address after being introduced by retired Navy captain and Legion member John Mitchell. A unit of the Vermont National Guard will conduct a 21-gun salute in honor of those who gave their lives during our nation’s wars and conflicts. Buglers Melvin and Aaron Hawley will then sound taps. The ceremonies will conclude with benediction offered by Rev. Michael Doran, pastor of the Vergennes Methodist Church. Those who wish to continue the festivities are cordially invited to the annual chicken barbecue under the tent at the Legion post, 100 Armory Lane. The $7 price includes not only the chicken, but also all the fixings and dessert. For details, call 802-877-9289.
FARM FIRE— Middlebury firefighters responded to an overheated tractorengine oil fire that occurred in a field along Creek Road in Middlebury May 24. Several fire vehicles arrived on the scene, including a brush truck, where the field opposite Otter Creek, was being plowed. Recent low humidity—more typical of northern Arizona than northern Vermont—had firefighters and fire wardens on the lookout for wildfires. Photo by Lou Varricchio
See PAINT BOMB, page 3
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VERGENNES—The Vergennes Area Chamber of Commerce, a division of the Addison County Chamber of Commerce, with support from sponsor Green Mountain Power, will host the second annual Otter Creek Basin Bash on Saturday, June 12, from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Held in Vergennes’ Falls Park at Otter Creek Basin, the free, day-long event features learning opportunities, activities and demonstrations all focused on Otter Creek and its historical impact on Vergennes. A new event has been added for 2010—Philomene’s Fury— a 4- or 8-mile paddling/rowing race on Otter Creek. Organized by the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum, registration begins at 9:30 a.m. at Falls Park and the race begins at 10:30
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a.m. A registration form is available on the event website at www.ottercreekbasinbash.com and more information is available by calling 802-475-2022 x113. In addition to watching the race, attendees will have the opportunity to paddle in a kayak or canoe and see demonstrations of fly fishing, fly tying, rope making, flint knapping. The Basin Bash will host a bird watch, storytelling, historical walking tour, exhibits, children’s activities, food and a street dance featuring L.C. Jazz. To close the event, at 9 p.m. the Otter Creek Falls will be lit, courtesy of Green Mountain Power. For a full schedule of events, visit the event website at www.ottercreekbasinbash.com. For more information call 802388-7951.
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This inspection sticker will expire by the last day of June. Call for an appointment!
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SATURDAY May 29, 2010
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Paint Bomb From page 1 The exploding device employed spray paint as a key component. The heat of the “bomb” burned a large hole in the floor of the van. Blue spray paint was spattered inside the unoccupied van. The van was in a private driveway and unlocked at the time of the incident. VSP detectives are continuing the investigation and following leads. Anyone with additional information concerning this incident should contact Det. Sgt. Sam Capogrossi at the Vermont State Police at 802-388-4919.
COMMUNITY SPIRIT The GFWC Orwell Fortnightly Club hosted its annual guest night potluck dinner recently. All members brought a favorite dish to the Orwell Congregational Church basement. Hostess tasks were coordinated by Sue Young, Linda Oaks and Rita Baccei. Joan Korda introduced our guest speaker Steve Buxton of Orwell Historic Society.
FEEDBACK What features would you like to see? Have a suggestion for a new article or column? Let us know what’s going on in your community!
Call 802-388-6397 or e-mail lou@addison-eagle.com
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4 - THE EAGLE
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www.denpubs.com PUBLISHER GENERAL MANAGER MANAGING EDITOR OFFICE MANAGER PRODUCTION DESIGN
Edward Coats Mark Brady Lou Varricchio Leslie Scribner Denton Publications Production Team EDITORIAL WRITER Martin Harris
MARKETING CONSULTANTS Linda Altobell • Tom Bahre • Brenda Hammond Heidi Littlefield • Hartley MacFadden Joe Monkofsky CONTRIBUTORS Angela DeBlasio • Rusty DeWees • Alice Dubenetsky Roz Graham • Michael Lemon • Joan Lenes Catherine Oliverio • Karissa Pratt • Beth Schaeffer Bill Wargo • Dan Wolfe PHOTOGRAPHY J. Kirk Edwards ©2009. New Market Press, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in whole or part without written permission of the publisher. Editorial comments, news, press releases, letters to the editor and items of interest are welcome. Please include: name, address and phone number for verification. Subscriptions: All New Market Press publications are available for a subscription $37 per year; $24 six months. First Class Subscription: $200/year. Subscriptions may also be purchased at our web site www.denpubs.com
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Memories in the headlights
D
riving along you’d click it down with the upper third or quarter or eighth of your left foot, and bang: job done, no hands man, it was low beam and keep ‘em coming—cars that is. You know what I’m talking about? How old are you? Let’s see, you’d have to be what, 40, or 35 maybe, if your first car was used, to know what I’m talking about. Because if you count 18 as being first car owning age—and you’re 35—now, you were18, let me figure this, a 35 (sorry, I add out loud), year old was 18 in, what, 1992—so yeah, I’m right, if you’re in your 30s now, you’d have to have had an older car as your first car to know what I’m talking about; how beautifully the toe clicker high/low beam switch worked. Remember the sound it made? It was a solid, All-American, “I poured eleven concrete piers today, got done at tenthirty, pouring the last one tomorrow,” guy type sound. Stop reading for a second and if you know the sound I speak of, and listen for it. Solid. The definitive “kahnahca” sound the clicker made was enhanced by it’s being constructed so perfectly that when you pressed down on it your foot would ground off the strength of it’s rugged design, sending a not so subtle volt of juice up through your leg to your hip bone creating a muscle memory that, for me hasn’t dimmed a titch in more than twenty years. (Partially explains so many baby-boomer hip replacements) Interesting that the angle your foot rested on the clicker made it so the pressure you applied to operate the switch did not move it in a straight down trajectory, which led one to assume the clicker might wear fast, or malfunction regularly. But it rarely did. Over time as the clicker clicked, your ears and bones would pick up more rattles; the once smooth down-up motion slowly evolved into a rickety down up. A simple drop of 3-in-1 Oil stymied most hitches in the clickers step for a good long while. No oil needed when road dirt and salt would jam the clicker, most usually in the down position. Angling your left foot so the soul of your shoe was to the right and middle of the body of the clicker, then moving your foot only a tad,
Messages in an electromagnetic bottle
M
ost T.V. channels straddle the 54–890 MHz (megahertz) frequency band. But even as technology changes, and more closed circuittype T.V. transmission methods are used en masse, it is likely that future video signals will still leak into space. But for our discussion, we’re interested in those early broadcast analog T.V. signals—signals out there. Somewhere. What would happen if terrestrial audioand-visual signals, dating back to the Golden Age of Television, were detected by extraterrestrials on distant planets? Is such an idea possible? And what would extraterrestrials make of our earliest T.V. signals? Even with today’s digital television retooling efforts, television is disseminated widely by an old medium—radio transmission. Broadcast T.V., in its purest sense, is a form of radio; that is, radio with pictures. It may come as a surprise to discover that the first powerful broadcast T.V. signals leaving planet Earth were neither the shortwave experiments by pioneering sci-fi writer and experimenter Hugo Gernsback in New York in the 1920s nor the broadcasts of 1950s American T.V. shows. Instead, the first T.V. signals to leave the Earth originated in Nazi Germany. Earth’s earliest, far-ranging video signals were German propaganda broadcasts between the 1930s and mid 1940s. While its video propaganda plans never panned out, the socialist Nazi government had hoped to equip every German household with a free T.V. set. While the technology existed for German television by the mid 1930s, the cost of CRT (cathode-ray tube) manufacturing and the infant medium’s transmission infrastructure remained elusive. Hilter ’s opening remarks at the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games appear to qualify it as the first deep-space signal. Radio astronomer Chris Davis, of Britain’s Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, claims that terrestrial T.V.-radio signals like the Nazicasts of the ‘30s and ‘40s could be picked up on distant planets with the proper hardware and software. “A good amount of Earth’s artificial radiowaves, like the shortwave frequency variety, never get past the ionosphere,” Davis said in a recent BBC interview. “However, modern broadcast television signals can pierce the atmosphere. These signals easily traverse space at the speed of light.” But as these signals cross interstellar medium, they would become very diffuse and difficult to focus at the
receiving end. “There are two things that you would need to get such a signal—firstly, it has to be able to leave our planet, By Lou Varricchio secondly it would have to have as much power as possible,” Davis noted. “As you go into space that power would dissipate. They would need more and more sensitive equipment to pick it up.” I’m sure that if advanced civilizations exist, they will have the ability to detect Earth’s faintest television-radio signals. Of the question, what would aliens make of these signals, well, that’s anybody’s guess. But, somewhere—out there—the television broadcasts of the Apollo 11 lunar landing, and original episodes of “Star Trek” and “The Brady Bunch” are approaching the recently discovered planetary system of Zeta Reticuli. Farther out into space, the original broadcast signals of “The Lone Ranger” and “Howdy Doody” are approaching the planets orbiting Pi Mensae. And reaching even farther into the vastness of the Milky Way, hypothetical extraterrestrials 73 light years distant may be watching humanity’s first interstellar greeting—from none other than Adolph Hitler. What’s in the Sky: As we saw last week, many deep space objects congregate in Cassiopeia this month. The brighter ones are NGC 884, NGC 869, and Cr 33.
Seeing
Stars
Lou Varricchio, M.Sc., is a former NASA science writer. He is a NASA-JPL Solar System Ambassador in Vermont and the 2009 recipient of U.S. Civil Air Patrol-USAF auxiliary’s Maj. Gen. Chuck Yeager Aerospace Education Achievement Award.
SATURDAY May 29, 2010 and gently to the left for two solid taps, would release the clicker back to it’s up position. For severe jams, repeating the left foot tap would be necessary. Now and then, without warning, the clicker would release itself from the down position with a longslung spring-sprung “bouwnng,” promptly scaring the beejeebers out of you. I miss playing the clicker in syncopation to “Jingle Bells” while I drove over the river and through the woods to grandmas. I remember toe clicking the second banjo part from “Dueling Banjos” so beautifully, the mice residing in my heater popped their little heads out of holes in my dash, and, with their mouths full of straw, hooted me a bravo. I would trade global-positioning rigs, DVD players, individual compartmental heating options, cameras that assist you backing up, heated seats, 20-inch wheels, in-car computer gauges that give you a running tally of transmission temp, and any of the other fantastical bull-flop charge us a 10-pound bag load for more stuff we don’t need, for the old toe-clicker high/low beam switch in a heart beat. The toe-clicker high/low beam switch was a more than efficient and fun-to-work characteristic that now, along with being able to change your oil, plugs and points, represents life lived in a less complicated generation. Mr. Ford, Mr. Chevy—please bring back the toe-clicker hi/low beam switch! My blinker/hazard/front wiper-washer/rear wiper-washer/high/low beam switch lever is too busy with knobs for a simple-minded guy like me. I’m not kidding. I long for the vanished toe-clicker high/low beam switch. Rusty DeWees tours Vermont and Northern New York with his act “The Logger.” His column appears weekly. He can be reached at rustyd@pshift.com. Listen for The Logger, Rusty DeWees, Thursdays at 7:40 on the Big Station, 98.9 WOKO or visit his website at www.thelogger.com
More gesture politics
I
n a mirror-image of a six-year-old quote—applicable to current events under the U.S. Capitol dome—we now know that members of the legislative branch, in deciding whether to audit the Fed, just voted against it before voting for it. Most of us were not yet around when an earlier generation of legislators in the twin chambers adjacent to the capitol rotunda voted to create the Fed as a way of side-stepping their own constitutional duty of managing the American currency for value and stability. In 1913, dissatisfied with private-sector banking’s issuance of bank notes over a 124year period with a dismal record of 12 percent in dollar-value shrinkage, the legislators installed a bureaucracy which has presided over (or orchestrated—you choose the correct verb) a 95 percent loss in purchasing power. To this day, you won’t find that historical performance record discussed in the mainstream news media, much less conceded by Fed leadership itself. Critics of the dollar-value shrinkage have been ignored or silenced: in my own amateur economist readings, I’ve learned that ex-Wall Streeter Benjamin Graham in the 1930s and past Fed member Wayne Angell in the 1990s proposed commodity based currency-stabilization designs. Meanwhile, present U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan started making commodity basket suggestions during the 2000s. But the history of Fed fecklessness goes back to its pre-World War I birth, not just the Great Depression. Nowhere is it better described than in a 2009 tome entitled “Lords of Finance” authored by Liaquat Ahamed. In 564 pages, “Lords...” paints a centurylong portrait of European and American financial leadership stippled with a document cascade of inept decisions, colleague deception, incorrect statistics, and raw politicking— a pattern preceding and paralleling, within the American Fed, the goings-on in the various European central banks. Instead of relying on the “skilled” judgment of financial wizards to manage currency for constant value (the Fed now admits its goal is 2 percent annual inflation), the commodity dollar would be on automatic pilot so that its commodity purchasing power would remain constant, neither inflating nor deflating. An old book, “Storage and Stability” is worth reading. Here’s from a website about the book: “When Benjamin Graham wrote Storage and Stability in 1937, the world was in the midst of the Great Depression. Written as a blueprint for economic recovery, the book was designed to spur both governments and the public to greater financial awareness. Based upon years of research and economic modeling, Graham's new theories focused on the inherent importance of supply and demand,
production and consumption, and their inherent influences on value investing.” Well, that was in the 1930s. In the 1990s, Fed governor Wayne Angell hoisted a similar flag. Angell, now a Columbia professor, is no longer on the Fed. He has enjoyed similar political success in marginalizing even professional economists like Joseph Stiglitz, once a World Bank economist). Here’s a typical professional (Stiglitz) opinion: “If we (World Bank) had seen a governance structure that corresponds to our Federal Reserve System, we would have been yelling and screaming and saying that country does not deserve any assistance, this is a corrupt governing structure”. Stiuglitz’s comments drew neither official recognition nor response. And here’s Martin Harris’ opinion: Whether the Fed is internally corrupt or not— and that includes its documented history of tweaking monetary policy to please the inpower administration—matters less than whether it accomplishes its assigned mission, to regulate the value of the currency. It has failed at that mission. Could a commodity based dollar driven by mathematical formula, not professional judgment, perform any worse than 95-year/95 percent-devaluation failure? You decide. But probably it doesn’t matter. That’s because gesture politics—the legislative branch’s proposed kabuki-play enactment of Fed-audit—contemplates none of the following: 1.review of the Fed’s 95-year performance history, 2. review of the Fed’s policy-tweaking political-campaign-support pattern, 3. The Fed’s role in enabling Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to fund a trillion dollars worth (actually, worthless) of sub-prime mortgages, and 4. the academic argument for a more mathematical monetary policy, closer to the workings of a currency board regulating domestic currency to balance. Such a revision to present Fed authorization would replace skilled judgment (which has proven decidedly unskilled) with a more robotic formula. You might call this a gold standard without the gold. But gesture politics will doubtless dominate, so the legislative branch’s review will focus on—drum-roll, please—emergency lending rules. More next week. Martin Harris is a retired Vermont architect and an observer of all things strange and political.
SATURDAY May 29, 2010
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THE EAGLE - 5
Summer fun for MUHS names valedictorians kids at Ilsley Library MIDDLEBURY—“Make a Splash–Read!” is Middlebury’s Ilsley Public Library summer reading program theme. The 2010 program is open to youth from pre-school through high school and children may sign up starting June 1. Each child who signs up will receive a punch card to start tracking how many books read during the summer. Children are encouraged to set a personal summer reading goal and use the punch card to track progress toward that goal. Children entering grade four and above may turn in completed punch cards to enter into a drawing for an Ipod Shuffle. Children entering grade three and under may choose a prize from the children’s room Treasure Chest for each completed punch card they turn in. The summer reading program runs from June 21 through Aug. 5. All parts of the program are free, though some events do require advance registration or tickets. Sign up sheets and tickets are available at the youth services desk two weeks prior to each event or activity. Please visit us or call 388-4097 with any questions. For kids entering grade four and above there are three series programs. Since these programs meet for several sessions, we ask children to sign up in person, by calling us at 802-388-4097 or by e-mailing Judah.Hamer@ilsleypubliclibrary.org. The first of these programs is “Midd’s Got Media,” and it will meet for one hour on Tuesdays and Thursdays June 22—July 8 at 1:30 p.m.. These workshops are designed in collaboration with Middlebury Community Television (MCTV), and they provide kids an opportunity to combine media literacy, creativity, and video skills. The second series program is “Kids Cook,” and it will meet on Thursdays July 15—29 from 12:00—1:15 p.m. Kids who’d like to participate should bring their lunch, and we’ll make something to go along with it like Dangerous Chocolate Cake, Down & Dirty Cream Puffs, or Build Your Own Nachos. The third series program is a “Classic Children’s Books” brown bag lunch book discussion series that will meet on Tuesdays noon1:15 p.m. June 29, July 13 and July 27, and August 10. Selections are Treasure Island, Through the Looking Glass, Peter Pan and The Adventures of Pinocchio. There are also programs for children entering grade four and above that do not require registration. “Wii Games” will meet on Mondays on June 21, July 19, and Aug. 9 from 10:30—11:30 a.m. “Tie Dye” will take place on Monday June 28 from 10:30—11:30 a.m. This is an opportunity for kids to create cool tie dye designs on their own clothes. “Bird Houses” will meet on Monday, July 12, from 10:30—11:30 a.m. Youht made bird houses will be displayed in the Children’s Room (winners will be awarded a prize). In addition to programs for older children, there are many activities for younger children. Ilsley Public Library is offering three series programs for younger children that do not require registration. Contact Judah Hamer at 802-388-4097 for a complete list of activities.
Adult learners to graduate at Kirk Alumni Center MIDDLEBURY—Vermont Adult Learning of Addison County announces its GED, Vermont Adult Diploma Program and High School Completion Program graduation ceremony, set for Thursday, June 10, from 6-8 p.m. at the Kirk Alumni Center of Middlebury College. The graduation ceremony and celebration will honor adult learners for dedication to their goals, for their educational achievement, and for becoming role models in their communities. This year's speakers will be Vermont Adult Learning graduates. There is no charge to attend to this occasion to honor the graduating students. Vermont Adult Learning, a member of Learning Works, Vermont's Adult Education and Literacy System, has helped thousands of adults attain their educational goals.
ChampRide cyclists to return to Kingsland Bay FERRISBURGH—Riders of all ages and abilities have been signing up for Vermont CARES’ annual ChampRide cycling event. Returning teams Fierce Hot Mess, Pedal Pushers, General Dynamics/ECAC, Bike Recycle will join new riders and teams on Saturday, June 12, at Kingsland Bay State Park in Ferrisburgh, Vermont. A Friday night pasta dinner for riders and supporters at Oakledge Park in Burlington will kick off this year ’s ChampRide with a hearty-carb meal and time to meet other riders.
MIDDLEBURY—Middlebury Union High School officials selected three co-valedictorians for the Class of 2010— Craig Burt is the son of Nate and Lynda Burt of Middlebury. He has achieved High Honors and Honors throughout high school, earning the Presidential Award for Academic Excellence in grades nine and ten. Craig received an Honorable Mention Award as a National Merit Scholar. He was also a Presidential Scholars Semi-Finalist from Vermont. Craig was the recipient of the American Legion Department Award for math and science in grades nine and eleven and received the Middlebury College Book Award last June. He is the president of the local chapter of National Honor Society and a Peer Leader Coordinator. Kaitlin Kirkaldy is the
Ross
Burt
Kirkaldy
daughter of Andy and Kristine Kirkaldy of Middlebury. She has achieved High Honors throughout high school, earning the Presidential Award for Academic Excellence in grades nine, ten and eleven. Kaitlyn was presented with the Dorey Cup last June, an honor bestowed on one male and one female student in grade 11 for overall athletic ability, leadership, scholarship and moral integrity.
Connor Ross is the son of Peter Ross and Elizabeth Connor of Bridport. He has achieved High Honors throughout high school, earning the Presidential Award for Academic Excellence in grades nine, ten, and eleven. Connor was the recipient of the American Legion Department Award for mathematics in grade ten. He is currently a member of the National Honor Society. In sports, Connor
played soccer each year of high school and served as captain of the team this year. He was active in the Student Senate for ninth, tenth, and eleventh grade and served as a Peer Leader this year. Connor was selected to attend Green Mountain Boys’ State. He also volunteered for several community service projects ranging from Special Olympics to helping at the Humane Society.
College honors student artists MIDDLEBURY—Each year the Friends of the Art Museum at Middlebury College recognize those who have made significant contributions to the community, either through their creative endeavors or through support for the visual arts in Addison County. At the recent annual meeting, the friends honored five individuals in five categories. Student award winners were Middlebury College senior Jack Reed of Stowe, Mount Abraham Union High School senior Anna Pierattini of Monkton, North Branch School eighthgrader Luke Freidin of New Haven, and Weybridge Elementary School sixth-grader Nikhil Plouffe of Weybridge. Artist Kate Gridley of Middlebury was the award recipient in the category of Professional or Amateur Artist, Craftsperson, or Teacher. Jack Reed’s work includes painting, printmaking, sculpture and set-design. He has excelled in Studio Art classes,
and during his junior year he attended the Slade School of Art in London. Anna Pierattini’s extensive and remarkable body of work ranges from portraits of orphans in Myanmar and El Salvador to murals for the school and to almost a thousand miniature drawings in a series called “Good Dog Nigel.” Luke Freidin creates photographs of unusual power and beauty which, according to teacher Tal Birdsey are not accidental. According to art teacher, Sarah Flinn, Nikhil Plouffe’s use of perspective results not from training, but from close observation of his environment and from the concentration and care he uses in his art. As an artist of independent vision and astonishing technique, Kate Gridley’s paintings have an infectious energy and an arresting point of view. She is able to suffuse everyday subjects with grace and elegance.
Pony Club elects new officers NORTH FERRISBURGH—The Charlotte Pony Club, established in 1958, has elected a new slate of officers for its 52nd year as an active chapter of the United States Pony Club. Kathleen Carrara of Charlotte has been elected D.C., or District Commissioner, and Kathleen Rule of New Haven will serve as joint D.C. Jennifer Gilbert of Shelburne will serve as Secretary, and Lisa Nostrand of Hinesburg and Liz Baker of South Burlington as Treasurers. Andrea Brainard of Hinesburg is heading up the Cross Country and Horse Trials
Committees. The Charlotte Pony Club is a horse riding club for youth from Charlotte and surrounding towns between the ages of 9 and 21. Three equestrian disciplines are taught including dressage, cross country jumping, and stadium jumping. Younger members are mentored by older members, and life skills such as discipline, teamwork, and horsemanship are emphasized. Participants progress through a series of ratings that are more and more rigorous to acquire, and the Charlotte Pony Club has had sever-
al of its members achieve the highest ratings offered on a national level by the United States Pony Club. The Charlotte Pony Club’s instructors are John and Alice Bourgoin from Arbrook Farm and Andrea Monsarrat Waldo from Triple Combination Farm. The couple is qualified eventing instructors with years of experience competing and instructing in the eventing disciplines. meetings will begin on Monday, June 21 at Triple Combination Farm, 9 a.m. Call Wendy Beach at 802-475-2150 for details
Gas station to pay $35,000 fine for fuel leak SOUTH BURLINGTON—The owners of the Gracey's Store gas station and convenience store on Williston Road in South Burlington, Slimain Handy's Convenience Stores, will pay a $35,000 penalty to the State of Vermont as a result of a gasoline leak from an underground storage tank that contaminated the soil and groundwater at the station. “We take the enforcement of our environmental laws seriously, particularly when it involves a release of a hazardous substance like gasoline,” Vermont Attorney Gen. William H. Sorrell said. “Because even a small amount of gasoline can cause serious environmental harm, owners of underground storage tanks must be vigilant in monitoring their tanks.”
Under the court approved settlement, Slimain Handy's Convenience Stores will pay the state $35,000 stemming from the release of gasoline from the store's underground storage tanks in October 2006. The leak contaminated the soil and groundwater at the corner of Williston and Hinesburg roads. The Attorney General's Office and the Agency of Natural Resources Underground Storage Tank Program sought the penalties in Washington Superior Court after the contaminated soil and groundwater were cleaned up following the leak.
Stevens memorial
Burke committal service
EAST MIDDLEBURY—A memorial service for U.S. Army veteran and MAUHS alumnus John W. Stevens III, age 56, who died in the Veteran’s Hospital in Oklahoma City, Ok., April 13, after a short illness, will be held at Valley Bible Church, East Middlebury, Saturday, June 5, at 3 p.m. Rev. Ed Wheeler will officiate.
BRIDPORT—A private graveside committal service and burial for Marianna Palmer Burke, who died Dec. 3, 2009, was held May 20 at the family lot, in Bridport Central Cemetery. Gary Stanley, officiated. Arrangements were under the direction of the Miller & Ketcham Funeral Home in Brandon.
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CVPS recognizes energy customers Central Vermont Public Service celebrated the success of CVPS Cow Power™ by recognizing the farms and customers who have helped make it one of the top renewable energy choice programs in the world. Honored by CVPS at a customer and farm appreciation event were the first six farms to produce Cow Power and the program’s top 10 commercial customers based on kilowatthour purchases. “Our Cow Power farms and customers are the true backbone of this program,” CVPS President Bob Young said. “Because of their participation and support, Cow Power has become a meaningful option for all CVPS customers who want to buy renewable energy and support the local farm economy.” Among the honorees were the Blue Spruce Farm, Pleasant Valley Farm, Green Mountain Dairy, Montagne Farm, Maxwell’s Neighborhood Farm and Gervais Family Farm. On the customer enrollment side, Green Mountain College, Long Trail Brewing Company, Mary Meyer Stuffed Toys,
Harrison Concrete Construction, Handy Automotive, Cobb Hill Cohousing, Middlebury College, Co-Operative Insurance Companies, Cas-Cad-Nac Farm and the Green Mountain National Forest were recognized for their significant voluntary support of the program. The Cow Power process is simple: manure and other agricultural waste are held in a sealed concrete tank at the same temperature as a cow’s stomach, 101 degrees. Naturally occurring bacteria digest the volatile components, creating methane and killing pathogens and weed seeds. The methane fuels an engine/generator which sends electricity onto the power grid. The process kills almost all manure odors, and provides a soft material for bedding animals. CVPS customers can choose to purchase the electricity at a premium of 4 cents per kWh which goes to participating farm producers, to purchase renewable energy credits when enough farm energy isn’t available, or to the CVPS Renewable Development Fund which provides grants to farm owners to develop on-farm generation. There are currently 3,640 customers enrolled in the program. Since the first farm came on-line in 2005, CVPS Cow Power™ has generated over 29 million kilowatt hours of clean, locally produced renewable electricity. On average, the six Cow Power farms produce about 1.4 megawatts of electricity, enough to power 1,660 average Vermont homes while removing over 16,000 metric tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalents from the atmosphere through methane destruction.
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LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Unfair dealings To the Editor: As we write this we are thinking ahead to the one-year anniversary of the closure of the Champlain Bridge connecting Vermont and New York. And, we are wondering if many of our small farms and stores will still be in business. The sudden closure of the bridge had a negative impact on many. We began contacting federal and state representatives shortly after the bridge closed to ask for assistance and to offer some practical suggestions such as providing grants and loans as mechanisms to help business owners along the corridors to and from the bridge. The Vermont State Legislature voted 98 percent against grants for all affected by the closure. They did pass a bill, S. 288, to provide much needed support in the form of loans designed to help businesses affected by the bridge closure. Porter Hospital in Middlebury received a $40,000 appropriation from the legislature to reimburse employees who incurred additional expenses from commuting longer distances from their homes in New York. This appropriation was made outside of the process that other businesses were required to follow. State Senators Ayre and Bartlett, circumventing the process that was established in S.288, did this. We deserve an explanation as to how this favoritism came about. Our elected officials are expected to represent all citizens. We are frustrated by the decision making in Montpelier. It does not appear that there has been fair treatment. It certainly looks like who you are and who you know matters more than actually needing some help to stay afloat until the new bridge is constructed. Andy Megroz Panton General Store Panton
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THE EAGLE - 7
New, stunning flowers for Vermont gardens Dr. Leonard Perry UVM Extension Professor The All-America Flower Selections program is an awards program for new flower and vegetable introductions, grown from seeds, which must bloom the first year in the case of flowers. In the past, winners were released to display gardens a year prior to their public introduction for sale. This year marks the first time winners are being released for sale as they are announced. The four flower winners previously selected for 2010 include the compact, yellow blanket flower 'Mesa Yellow'. 'Twinny Peach' is a snapdragon with butterfly, double peach flowers-- a snapdragon without flowers that go snap when pinched! 'Endurio Sky Blue Martien' is the latest viola winner, flowers under an inch across and a sky blue. 'Zahara Starlight Rose' is a new zinnia, about a foot tall, that stands out with its white flowers and contrasting rose-red centers. The most recently announced award winners for 2010 include two more zinnias in the Zahara series: 'Double Zahara Cherry' and 'Double Zahara Fire'. The former is of course a cherry pink, the latter is a rich reddish orange, and both are double with many petals. All three winners in this series of zinnias
Award-winning hybrid African marigold: Moonsong Deep Orange. UVM photo
are about a foot high and wide, with flowers 2 inches or more across. Being a cross of more than one species, this Zahara series has good resistance to leaf spot and powdery mildew diseases. Plan on a couple months from sowing to first flowers. There is a marigold winner this year,
BROWN’S TREE & CRANE SERVICE
the first one in several years. 'Moonsong Deep Orange' is a hybrid African type. Some prefer to call these American marigolds, as this genus is originally from Mexico to South America, not Africa. This marigold gets about a foot high, and should be spaced about a foot apart. Its dense, double flowers are a deep orange and about 3 inches across. Start seeds 4 to 6 weeks before the last frost when you can plant outside. Unlike many newer annuals you find for sale now that need lots of fertilizer, too much fertilizer for this one will give lots of green leaves with few flowers. The only vegetable winner for this year is a globe-shaped watermelon. 'Shiny Boy' has red flesh, dark seeds, a sweet tropical flavor, and a crisp texture. It is a vigorous hybrid, with vines growing up to 12 feet and fruit reaching 20 pounds. Start checking fruit for ripeness about 75 days from transplanting. It tolerates severe weather, and can be grown in vertical gardens (with proper support given, of course, for the fruit such as a mesh bag or cloth sling). Look for seeds in mail-order catalogs, and seed racks this spring at your local garden store. For more details on these and past All-America winners, visit their website (www.all-americaselections.org).
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F or Calendar Listings— Please e-mai l to: newmark etpr ess@denpubs.com, min imum 2 weeks prior to ev ent. E-mai l only. only. No f ax ed, handwri t ten, or USPS-mai led l istings ac cepted. Tele Tele phone numbers only; no e-mai l or websi te addr esses wi l l be included. F or questions, cal l Lesl ie S cribner at 802-388-6397. 802-388-6397.
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Thursday, May 27 MIDDLEBURY — Opening Reception May 27, 5-7 p.m. at the Sheldon Museum for the exhibit The Nature of Wood: Vermont Furniture and Woodware, 1790 to the Present. The Nature of Wood, a 2010 State of Craft Showcase event, is on view through Oct. 23. 802-388-2117. NORTH CLARENDON — The Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice is offering a Blood Pressure and Foot Care clinic at the Community Center at 12:30 p.m. There is a suggested donation of $2 for blood pressure screenings and $5 for foot care. 802-775-0568. RUTLAND — The Southwest Freedom Riders will hold their monthly meeting at the Rutland Elks Club on Pleasant Street at 7 p.m. 1-888-299-SWFR. VERGENNES — Salute to Our Troops: Adults 60 and over, come to St. Peter's Parish at Noon and show your support for the troops while enjoying this special meal of Roasted Turkey, fixings, and a 50/50 raffle and door prizes. $3. 802-388-1946 or 1-800-642-5119 x615.
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MIDDLEBURY — Zumba fitness dance classes now offered all over Addison County and beyond! Zumba is a high-energy class with easy-tolearn moves that will melt the pounds off. Morning, mid-day, and night classes available. Contact Lindsey at 802-388-3381.
Friday, May 28 BRANDON — Brandon Farmer’s Market, Running now until October 8th on Friday’s from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. in Central Park. 273-2655. VERGENNES — Onion River Entertainment will present an evening of terrific music beginning at 7 p.m. at the Vergennes Opera House. The Green Mountain Folk Revival will kick off Summer's fist holiday weekend with the music of Gordon Stone Band, Jeremy Harple and Creaky Trees. 802-838-3006.
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Saturday, May 29
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HINESBURG — Film at the Carpenter-Carse library at 7:30 p.m. Free, donations for library accepted. The Film: “Storm” by Hans-Christian Schmid. 540-661-2216. LINCOLN — Annual Lincoln Townwide Lawn Sale sponsored by Weathervane United Elderly Housing will be held from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m., rain or shine. 802-453-4280.
OMC/COBRA MINN KOTA HONDA 52309
SATURDAY May 29, 2010
NEW HAVEN — New Haven Townwide Lawn and Garage Sales, 9 a.m -4 p.m. Maps at the town office, library, stores. 802-453-5978 or 802-453-3516. SOUTH STARKSBORO — Flea market, bake sale and bottle drive from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. at the Jerusalem Schoolhouse, proceeds to benefit the Ladies Home Circle and the Schoolhouse Renovation Fund. 802-453-4573.
Sunday, May 30 PITTSFORD— Amazing sale: remainder of estate, home baked goods, vegetable and house plants. Proceeds benefit local community fund, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. at the Maclure Library. 802-483-0074. VERGENNES — Pancake breakfast and more at the Vergennes Dorchester Lodge F&AM on School Street, 7:30-10 a.m.
Wednesday, June 2 RUTLAND — Vermont Christian riders, a TEAM with Motorcyclists for Jesus Ministries meeting, 6 p.m. at Denny's. All welcome. RUTLAND — The Vermont Rental Property Owners Association monthly meeting in the conference room of the Godnick Adult Center, 1 Deer St., 7 p.m. Kevin Loso of the Rutland Housing Authority will be the guest speaker. 802-7754351. RUTLAND — The Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice (RAVNAH) is offering a comprehensive cardiovascular/cholesterol health risk screening, including a total lipid profile and blood glucose at the RAVNAH office on 7 Albert Cree Drive at 8:30 a.m. Lipid Profile and Glucose is $30. 802-775-0568. WALLINGFORD — The Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice is offering a Blood Pressure and Foot Care clinic at the Wallingford House at 10:30 a.m. There is a suggested donation of $2 for blood pressure screenings and $5 for foot care. 802-775-0568.
‘Thursday, June 3 CASTLETON — The Castleton Community Center will be offering an introductory painting course led by art teacher Linda Tuscano, 1-2 p.m. each Thursday for 4 weeks starting June 3. $25. 802-469-3093. MIDDLEBURY — Twist O' Wool Guild Meeting, 6 –9 p.m., at the American Legion on Wilson Way. Poluck. All are welcome. 802-453-5960. RUTLAND — The Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice is offering a Blood Pressure and Foot Care clinic at Parker House at 10 a.m. Donation of $20 for blood pressure screenings and $5 for foot care. For 802-775-0568.
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Friday, June 4 BRANDON — Brandon Farmers Market, Running now until October 8th on Friday’s from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. in Central Park. 802-273-2655. FAIR HAVEN — Fair Haven Farmers Market, Fridays from 3-6 p.m. in the Fair Haven Park. 518-282-9781. HINESBURG — Music Night at Brown Dog Books & Gifts at 7 p.m.- John Daly guitarist. Complimentary refreshments. Free. 802-482-5189. IRA — The Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice is offering a Blood Pressure and Foot Care clinic 802-775-0568. POULTNEY — The Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice is offering a Blood Pressure and Foot Care clinic at the Young at Heart Senior Center at 9:30 a.m. 802-775-0568. RICHMOND — The opening day of the Richmond Farmers’ Market will feature Tammy Fletcher, Bob Hill and Jim Pitman on Stage 5-6 p.m. Market is open 36:30 p.m. on Volunteers Green. 802-434-5273.
Saturday, June 5 CROWN POINT, N.Y. — Champlain Valley Flyers Club R/C Fly-In. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Airshow featuring R/C planes and helicopters. 802-758-2578. MIDDLEBURY — Watch as opera legend Patrice Munsel works with singers from Opera Company of Middlebury's "The Pearl Fishers." At Town Hall Theater at 2 p.m. 802-382-9222 for details. ORWELL — Orwell Free Library Annual Plant/Book/Bake Sale, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. at library right on Main Street. 802-948-2049 for details. RUTLAND — Annual Extension Master Gardener Plant Sale9a.m. to noon. The sale will be held inside the Godnick Adult Center located at 1 Deer St. (off Woodstock Avenue).
Sunday, June 6 ESSEX JCT. — CUFF Cancer (Cops United For Fighting Caner) fundraiser for Camp Ta-Kum-Ta at Green Mountain Harley-Davidson, 157 Pearl St., 10-11:30 a.m. BBQ. $10 donation. 802-8784778. MIDDLEBURY — The Opera Company of Middlebury celebrates its Season with Bizet's early masterpiece "The Pearl Fishers". 802-382-9222 for details. MOUNT TABOR — The Green Mountain Harmony Farm Flea, Arts and Crafts Outdoor Market grand opening, 9 a.m.-1 p.m., at Sue and Elbert Crosby’s field on the corner of Mount Tabor Avenue and Route 7 South. RUTLAND — Rutland Dismas House conducts annual benefit dinner and auction, 802-775-5539 for details.
Monday, June 7 CASTLETON — The Castleton Community Center free nutrition and fitness program called Eating Better and Moving More, 9:30-10:30 a.m. 802-468-3093 for details. HINESBURG —Town of Hinesburg Route 116 Streetscape Meeting, conference room, town hall, 7-7:45 p.m. 802-482-2096 for questions. PITTSFORD — The Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice is offering a Blood Pressure and Foot Care clinic at Village Manor at 11:30 a.m. 802-7750568.
THE EAGLE - 9
Wednesday, June 9 SOUTH STARKSBORO — The Jerusalem Schoolhouse Lecture Series, Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. 802-453-3826.
Memorial Day Weekend Special
Thursday, June 10 CASTLETON — The Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice is offering a Blood Pressure and Foot Care clinic at Castleton Meadows at 12:30 p.m. 802-775-0568.
Friday, June 11 BRANDON — Brandon Farmer’s Market, Running, 9 a.m. - 2 p.m., in Central Park. 802-273-2655. FAIR HAVEN — Fair Haven Farmers Market, 3-6 p.m., in Fair Haven Park. 518-282-9781. RUPERT — The Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice is offering a Blood Pressure and Foot Care clinic at the fire house, 10 a.m. 802-775-0568.
Saturday, June 12 FERRISBURGH — Vermont CARES Champ Ride from 6 a.m.–5 p.m. at the Kingsland Bay State Park. HIV prevention and services in Vermont. Register now. 802-863-2437. RUTLAND — Annual Crowley Brothers' Memorial 10K Road Race and events at the Sport and Fitness Expo.
Monday, June 14
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VERGENNES — Vergennes City Bank Rehearsal from 7-9 p.m. in the Vergennes Union High School Bank Room.
Wednesday, June 16 DORSET — The Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice is offering a Blood Pressure and Foot Care clinic at the Dorset Nursing Office at 9 a.m. RUTLAND — The Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice is offering a Blood Pressure and Foot Care clinic at The Meadows at 1:15 p.m. for residents only. There is a suggested donation of $2.00 for blood pressure screenings and $5.00 for foot care. For more information, please call 775-0568. RUTLAND — The Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice is offering a Blood Pressure and Foot Care clinic at The Gables at 3:15 p.m. for residents only. There is a suggested donation of $2.00 for blood pressure screenings and $5.00 for foot care. For more information, please call 775-0568.
Friday, June 18 BRANDON — Brandon Farmer’s Market, Running now until October 8th on Friday’s from 9 a.m. - 2 p.m. in Central Park. A wide variety of farm & craft products are offered. Contact Wendy Cijka at 273-2655 or cijka4@localnet.com for more info. FAIR HAVEN — The regular market hours for the 2010 season are Friday's from 3-6 p.m. running from June 4 - October 8 in the Fair Haven Park. We are on the green at the south end of the park next to the parking lot. For more information about The Fair Haven Farmer's Market contact Sherry Smith - Fair Haven Farmer's Market Manager at 518-282-9781 or Sherry12887@yahoo.com.
Saturday, June 19 VERGENNES — Basin Harbor 8th Annual 5K at Basin Harbor Resort. Enjoy an invigorating run filled with gorgeous Green Mountain scenery and smooth rolling hills. Race Day registration starts at 7:30 a.m. Kids Fun Run starts at 8:30 a.m. 5K starts at 9a.m. Awards start at 9:45a.m. Register and pay online at www.http://www.basinharbor.com/racesignup.php. To pre-register with a race shirt, you must sign up by May 27th. For more information, please call 1-800-622-4000.
Get the Garden Planted We have the annuals, perennials, veggies, onion sets, seed potatoes and all the supplies for the best garden ever! Our yard is filled with thousands of trees, shrubs, evergreens and perennials. The greenhouse is bursting with hanging baskets. Bark mulch and compost for pickup and delivery. Don’t forget to visit our beautiful garden & gift shop!
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RUTLAND — The Rutland Area Visiting Nurse Association & Hospice is offering a Blood Pressure and Foot Care clinic at the Bardwell House at noon. 802-7750568.
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SATURDAY May 29, 2010
E-cigarettes, a New Age smoking alternative By Lou Varricchio newmarketpress@denpubs.com
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CASTLETON CORNERS—Even before he graduated from Temple University Law School last week, Adam Tredwell— founder and co-owner of Vermont Vapor, Inc. of Castleton— was well on his way to being a successful entrepreneur. Tredwell’s Rutland County business started with a simple solution for millions of tobacco smokers worldwide: how to enjoy smoking without the risk of inhaling cancer-causing smoke, tars and related by-products? Tredwell, a Rutland High School Class of 1996 alumnus, developed his electronic cigarette, or e-cig, operation while still a college undergraduate. The business evolved at his mother ’s suggestion; she wanted to quit smoking and had learned about unusual electronic devices manufactured in communist China (although the Chinese-made liquids vaporized by the e-cigs to form the ersatz smoke are of very dubious quality and content). “You get the feeling of smoking without smoking,” he said. “My Vermont-made content is clean water vapor with a little citric acid and natural flavoring.” Tredwell and his mother, Linda Barker, manage the year-old corporation all by themselves. For Tredwell, it took focus, a creative product idea (a much needed smoking alternative), a clever marketing plan, a user-friendly website, and a genuine Vermont storefront to establish the business. He had already decided to find an al-
ternative to traditional smoking when he couldn’t smoke during college exams. With all that now in place, Vermont Vapor is really—you should pardon the expression— smokin’! Despite a fire last month that destroyed Vermont Vapor ’s rented e-liquid production space on Route 4 in Rutland Town, the company is back on track. Despite a local rumor, fire investigators found that the blaze started in an adjoining business; it had absolutely no connection to Vermont Vapor ’s operation. Vermont Vapor ’s cozy retail shop at Castleton Corners has attracted e-cig fans from as far away as Montreal and Boston. In addition to the shop, a new laboratory and production facility will “rise from the ashes” adjacent to the outlet in mid June. Tredwell is committed to satisfying the needs of hardcore smokers who are looking for a clean alternative to puffing on traditional cigarettes, cigars and pipes. The Vermont Vapor-brand e-cig device itself is an odd blend of Chinese technology (Asians hold the patent on the electronic device) and high-quality Vermont USA e-liquid made by Tredwell. He oversees the production of his e-liquid product line which is made in a clean, quality-controlled environment. As a result, the Vermont Vapor e-cig is a truly smokeless, odorless device that is evocative of smoking—yet it is not smoking in the traditional sense.
See VAPING, page 11
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Vaping From page 10 Yes, a user puffs on an e-cig, but the misty material expelled isn’t smoke—it’s nearly 100 percent water vapor. (The e-cig uses a mini, battery-powered atomizer, or vaporizer, to turn pure water, food-grade glycerin, and natural flavoring into a pseudo-smoking experience.) Thus, puffing on a Vermont Vapor e-cig is called “vaping”—short for vapor inhaling. And for many e-cig users who have failed to quit smoking tobacco through the use of foultasting nicotine chewing gum, cumbersome patches, even cold turkey fits, Vermont Vapor is a real lifesaver—literally. “What you're seeing is just the vapor—no smoke. There is nothing that is burned. It's the e-liquid in the cartridge which is heated by the atomizer when you draw on the e-cig. There is usually no odor at all except maybe from the flavors, which are never overpowering or objectionable,” Tredwell claims on the company website. Because he and his mother so passionately believe in the benefits of the e-cig as an alter-
native to smoking, Tredwell and Barker chose to begin selling them and make their own quality-controlled liquid product line. Vaping is clearly a viable alternative for smokers. While it’s not cheap to switch from mainstream cigarettes to e-cigs (try around $70 for a starter kit that includes two long-lasting ecigs, batteries, cartridges, A.C. battery charger, and starting liquid), the long-term costs of vaping are amazing compared to the hundreds of dollars spent monthly by traditional smokers—a cost that amounts to about $5 a week for heavy users. A single bottle of Vermont Vapor flavored vaping e-liquid will last the user many, many weeks depending on frequency. The e- cigarette is a high-tech alternative to smoking but it is not a smoking cessation device, Tredwell said. “Some people have quit smoking using the electronic cigarette but we make no such claims as to effectiveness for that purpose and e-cigs are not sold for that purpose,” he said. “At Vermont Vapor, all the liquid we sell is mixed entirely by us; we start with 100 percent pure food grade glycerine and add distilled water, nicotine (if you want it), and citric acid to balance the pH,” he said. “To this
THE EAGLE - 11
base we add only food grade flavorings— well, with the exception of our tobacco flavoring for some of the liquids we sell. Any of our tobacco flavors we make ourselves from ground tobacco leaves.” So, how safe are Vermont Vapor ’s e-cigarette products? “Our e-liquid generally contains only nicotine, vegetable glycerine, water, flavoring and citric acid. Our menthol liquids also contain propylene glycol and ethanol,” said Tredwell. “These ingredients are U.S. pharmacopeia grade and/or are FDA-approved food additives. The liquid is heated in the e-cigarette until it forms a vapor, analogous to steam when water is heated. Since nothing is burned, the user never inhales any smoke or
tar and only inhales those ingredients listed on each bottle of Vermont Vapor e-Liquid. However, because nicotine is an addictive stimulant, it is always best to check with your doctor before using this product. Likewise, children and persons who are pregnant or may become pregnant should not use this product.” Check It Out: To learn more about the science and art of electronic cigarettes, or for an e-cigarette demonstration, visit the Vermont Vapor store at 15 Route 4A West in Castleton. Hours: Monday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m; Sunday, noon-5 p.m. You can also check out the company’s website at www.vtvapor.com or telephone 802-779-0185 for more details.
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12 - THE EAGLE
SATURDAY May 29, 2010
Nippon is focus of Sheldon Museum program MIDDLEBURY—On Tuesday, June 8, at noon, Douglas Brooks will present a lecture entitled “Building in the Japanese Spirit” offered at the Sheldon Museum in conjunction with the Sheldon’s current exhibit, “The Nature of Wood: Vermont Furniture and Woodware 1790 to the Present” has worked primarily as a boat builder, but also builds furniture and Japanese-style interiors. He has also worked as a timber framer and restoration carpenter. Brooks' interest in Japan has led to recent work building tansu, or Japanese cabinets. The pieces reflect both the complicated join-
ery and a unique aesthetic that are intrinsic to Japanese woodworking. He will share photographs drawn from a dozen trips to Japan. Brooks has traveled to Japan since 1990 to research traditional Japanese boat building, and has built boats with five Japanese masters. He is currently working on his third book on Japanese boat building. Bring a brown bag lunch; beverages and dessert provided. Fee: $2. The Sheldon Museum is located at 1 Park Street in Middlebury across from the Ilsley Public Library. For information call 388-2117.
Hiking club celebrates 100 years in Killington KILLINGTON—The Killington Section of the Green Mountain Club and the Inn at Long Trail will host a centennial celebration of the Green Mountain Club with a benefit dinner to be held at the historic Inn at Long Trail on Saturday, June 5, at 6 p.m. All proceeds will benefit the trail work of the club. The Green Mountain Club maintains the Long Trail, the oldest long distance trail in the United States which follows the Green Mountains through Vermont from Massa-
chusetts to the Canadian border. For more information and to make a reservation for the dinner, you can call the Inn at 802-775-7181 or sign up on the web site www.innatlongtrail.com. The Killington Section will also host a volunteer work day on the trail on June 5 and also will sponsor a local hike on Sunday June 6. Contact Kathleen Krevetski at 802-7791485.
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THE EAGLE - 13
Three Panthers earn honors Three members of the Middlebury College women's lacrosse team have been named to the All-Pilgrim Region team by the IWLCA (Intercollegiate Women's Lacrosse Coaches Association). Senior Dana Heritage (Cheshire, Conn.), junior Chase Delano (Greenwich, Conn.) and sophomore Lily Nguyen (Oakland, Calif.) all earned first-team honors. The group helped lead the Panthers to an 8-7 overall record, with a trip to the NESCAC Tournament. Heritage capped an impressive fouryear career at Middlebury, leading the team with 38 goals and 47 points to go along with her nine assists. The first-
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team All-NESCAC selection scored a season-high five goals in a win over Williams, scoring four goals in six other contests this season. Heritage had a huge game on April 10th at Bowdoin, scoring four goals and dishing out five assists for a nine-point game. She ended her career with 135 goals and 47 assists for 182 point in 66 career games. Delano earns a spot on the second team as a junior at Middlebury. Her 26
goals and 36 points were second only to Heritage this season, while her 10 assists placed her third among her teammates. Delano scored three or more goals seven times this season, including four in the NESCAC Quarterfinals against Colby. The junior now has 106 goals and 29 assists for 135 career points in 43 games. Nguyen ended the season second in the NESCAC with a .524 save percentage this season. She finished with a record of 8-7, playing all by 16 minutes between the pipes this season. Her 152 saves were second in the league, as she made a season-high 17 in a March 23rd win at Gettysburg.
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June 3 - 6, 2010 FREE Opening Ceremony Concert in Shepard Park • Thursday, June 3 at 7:30 PM - See what all the fuss is about at this free concert in Lake George Village’s Shepard Park. See many of this year’s headliners perform a handful of songs getting us all ready for the exciting weekend of Elvis entertainment to come. After the concert, come to the Adirondack Pub & Brewery for more entertainment as the tribute artists and fans take the microphone for an informal vocal warm up. Elvis After Hours at the Boardwalk Restaurant • Friday, June 4 at 11:00 PM - Tribute Artists and Elvis fans party late into the evening at our two After Hours events. Friday night Joe Ramsey hosts giving our tribute artists and fans a chance to take the microphone and perform Elvis music and other hits. Watch the guys let their hair down and perform without costumes or judges. Elvis Aboard the Minne-Ha-Ha • Saturday, June 5, departing at 1:30 PM, 3:00 PM and 4:30 PM - See majestic Lake George from the deck of the Minne-Ha-Ha while listening to Elvis Tribute Artists. The cruise is just $11.75 for adults ($5 off with your Blue Suede Pass). Call the Steamboat Company at 518-668-5777 to make your reservations. Elvis Dinner at the Shoreline Restaurant • Saturday, June 5 at 5:00 PM - Dine while listening to Elvis Tribute artists including last year’s LakeGeorge.com Elvis Festival champion Matt Joyce. The restaurant promises some “Elvis inspired” specials. Come early, we expect the event to fill up. Elvis After Hours at King Neptune’s Pub • Saturday, June 5 at 11:00 PM - Tribute Artists and Elvis fans party late into the evening at our two After Hours events. On Saturday night, King Neptune’s presents Tom Gilbo and the Blue Suedes with other Elvis Tribute Artists joining him on stage throughout the evening. Elvis Gospel Music Competition • Sunday, June 6 at 9:30 AM - For the first time this year we’ve turned our Elvis Gospel event into a competition with tribute artists competing for the LakeGeorge.com Elvis Festival Gospel Music Trophy. Come and listen to our talented competitors pay tribute to the roots of Elvis’ musical legacy.
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14 - THE EAGLE
GUESTVIEWPOINT A monument to thee
A
group of local Middlebury officials, residents, and historians have recently created the Middlebury Centerpiece Committee to flush out plans for a monument to stand in the soon-to-be built roundabout on the Main Street side of the Cross Street Bridge. “Committee members believe the monument should be ‘substantial’ in size because the roundabout will be considered a second ‘pole’ of the downtown.”
According to the committee, the purpose of the monument would be to either: 1. provide a gateway to the college 2. celebrate getting the Cross Street Bridge built after a half-century of trying. 3. commemorate the 250th anniversary (in 2011) of the town charter 4. or make a statement of civic pride. What could argue for each purpose? A question worth examining.
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1. We should dismiss the “gateway” concept out of hand. Too ostentatious for a small, traditional New England college. Not to mention, it won't be in the correct location. A simple, clear traffic sign with an arrow should suffice to point the ways. 2. Getting the bridge built has been described as a “monumental achievement” (get it?). Not building the bridge, itself, which after all, is not quite as accomplished as building the pyramids or the Taj Mahal. The Cross Street achievement will be in finally getting the $16 million necessary to build it and enough folks in town to vote for it. But in a world with billions and trillions being tossed around like nobody's business, is $16 million monument worthy? It's just money. Even though some of us worship money,
SATURDAY May 29, 2010
should we dedicate a monument to it? 3. Selectman Victor Nuovo, who happens to lead this committee as well as the town selectboard, has said that perhaps this centerpiece "commemorates the town—the fact that we've been here 250 years in this place...” Imagine that: 250 years. But in the light of day, that doesn't give Middlebury any real distinction. When how many years you've been around is the measure of things, you have to go to a place like the Eternal City, Roma, which has been around since at least 753 B.C. Even if you stayed within the confines of America, you'd have to go to Jamestown or St. Augustine as locations that deserve a monument based on time. The mere fact that a town has lasted 250 years is a bronze plaque mounted
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prominently on its town hall. 4. Erecting a monument as a symbol of civic pride is an interesting idea. It’s sort of like raising a monument to ourselves. What is a town but those who live in it? So to say we're proud of our town says we're proud of ourselves. But if we don't celebrate ourselves, who will? The next generation surely won't, they will be busy celebrating themselves and forget all about us. Besides, some people might think that the level of civic pride required for a monument of "substantial" size would by necessity need to be inflated. How else could you explain, to prove the point, the crumbling pavement and railing along the sidewalk that runs in front of Otter Creek Books and Green Mountain Apparel. Is it probably a safety hazard or practically a landmark? Either way, it's still a thorn in the side of civic pride. Well, no matter the purpose. Someone can think something up. In the meantime, it will be a substantial monument and it won't cost us a thing. It will all be financed by donations and grant money. Nothing wrong with donations. People are still free (as of this writing) to give their money to whatever purpose he or she wants. But for it to
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be a true donation, it should be given without benefit of some tax deduction. There's nothing more self-serving than a bunch of people forming a cause that qualifies to give donors a tax deduction and then giving to it. Grants are a different matter. A lot of people refer to grants as so-called free money, but of course there is no such thing. The government gets its grant money from us through taxes. The government is banking on our short attention span, so that by the time they give some of it back in the form of “grants” we will have forgotten that it was ours in the first place. Meantime, our taxes keep going up—in part to help finance all these so-called giveaway grants of “free” money. Bottom line: Some Joe Schmoe making $7.25 an hour elsewhere could find his hardearned tax money used to pay for Middlebury’s monument. Schmoes across the country are building little grant-funded monuments for people in celebration of themselves. Is this a great country or what? To be fair, there are also grants that come from private foundations. It’s a very interesting how that works, too. Wealthy corporations, trusts and individuals form private foundations and give away money. And they say Americans are greedy? Okay, it's true that these organizations are required to distribute 5 percent of their total assets each year to maintain tax-exempt status. This means they have to give away money. By giving away some money, they save more money for themselves and have the additional benefit of appearing to be civically generous. Truth is, because those wealthy corporations, trusts, and individuals save taxes, the government has to raise taxes for the rest of us to make up for the difference. So in a way, we're still paying for the “free money” grants a select few are getting. Is that what is called “fair”? It could be argued that the grant business has a good side—it creates jobs. Jobs for people to make up forms, fill out forms, write grant proposals, read grant proposals, make presentations and play Santa Claus. Even “free” money is limited, so there has to be a process to see who deserves it more then the other guy. Maybe that's why it's called a grant because someone, somewhere is the decision-maker and like a king he or she grants the chosen some free money. The biggest concern Middlebury should have is how the whole thing looks. Not the monument itself, but the act of spending money on something completely unnecessary when Vermont herself is having money problems. The state legislature just got through agonizing over how to cut the budget. Middlebury will appear to be blind, deaf, and pretentious. Maybe that's it! That’s the purpose the committee is looking for. Okay, problem solved. Meanwhile, does anyone want to donate money to fix that downtown Middlebury sidewalk? —Flip Bradford Writer Flip Bradford lives in Middlebury. His work has appeared in several Vermont publications. Views expressed by the writer are not necessarily those of the management and staff of New Market Press Newspapers.
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Religious Services ADDISON ADDISON COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH - Addison Four Corners, Rts. 22A & 17. Sunday Worship at 10:30am, Adult Sunday School at 9:30am; Bible Study at 2pm on Thursdays. Call Pastor Steve @ 759-2326 for more information. WEST ADDISON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - Sunday, 9am HAVURAH, THE JEWISH CONGREGATION OF ADDISON COUNTY. Havurah House, 56 North Pleasant St. A connection to Judaism and Jewish life for all who are interested. Independent and unaffiliated. High Holy Day services are held jointly with Middlebury College Hillel. Weekly Hebrew School from September to May. Information: 388-8946 or www.addisoncountyhavurah.org BRANDON BRANDON BAPTIST CHURCH - Corner of Rt. 7 & Rt. 73W (Champlain St.) Brandon, VT • 802-247-6770. Sunday Services: 10a. Adult Bible Study, Sunday School ages 5 & up, Nursery provided ages 4 & under. Worship Service 11 am *Lords supper observed on the 1st Sunday of each month. *Pot luck luncheon 3rd Sunday of each month. Wednesdays 6:30pm, Adult prayer & Bible study, Youth groups for ages 5 & up LIFEBRIDGE CHRISTIAN CHURCH, 141 Mulcahy Drive, 247-LIFE (5433), Sunday worship 9am & 10:45am, www.lifebridgevt.com, LifeGroups meet weekly (call for times & locations)
ST. AMBROSE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH - Saturday service 5:15pm, & Sunday 9am BRISTOL SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH - 839 Rockydale Rd. - Saturday Services: Bible Studies for all ages-9:30am to 10:30 am, Song Service, Worship Service at 11am. Prayer Meeting Thursday 6:30pm. 453-4712 THE GATHERING - Non-denominational worship, second & fourth Saturday of the month, 7pm Sip-N-Suds, 3 Main St. • 453-2565, 453-3633 CORNWALL FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH OF CORNWALL - Sunday worship 9:30am EAST MIDDLEBURY/RIPTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - Sunday worship, 9am VALLEY BIBLE CHURCH, Rev. Ed Wheeler, services on Sundays: Sunday School for all ages at 9:30am, morning worship at 10:45am (nursery provided), and 6:30pm on Wednesdays; Youth Group and AWANA meet on Thursday evenings at 6:30pm
THE CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH OF MIDDLEBURY (UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST) - Sunday 10am worship service
VICTORY CENTER - Holiday Inn, Williston Road, South Burlington • 658-1019
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS Sunday Sacrament 10am-11:15am
BURLINGTON UNITED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH - Pastor Paul Lyon • 860-5828. Sundays: 10am & 6pm. Wednesdays: 7pm. at 294 North Winooski Avenue.
EASTERN ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN WORSHIP - Service in Middlebury area: call 758-2722 or 453-5334. HAVURAH, THE JEWISH CONGREGATION OF ADDISON COUNTY - Saturday morning Shabbat services, 388-8946
MIDDLEBURY FRIENDS MEETING - (Quakers), Sunday worship & first day school 10am (meets at Havurah House)
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - 10am Grades K-5: Activities, Grades. 6-8 & 9-12: Church School Classes, Refreshments & fellowship time: 10:45am-11am. Sunday morning worship service 11am. Nursery provided both at 10am & 11am. MONKTON MONKTON FRIENDS UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - Sunday service & Sunday school, 8:45am NEW HAVEN ADDISON COUNTY CHURCH OF CHRIST - 145 Campground Rd., 453-5704. Worship: Sunday 9 & 11:20am; Bible classes: Sunday 10:30am, Tuesday 7pm. Watch Bible Forum on MCTV-15 (Middlebury) or NEAT-16 (Bristol) NEW HAVEN CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH - Church services 10am on Sunday. All are welcome. NEW HAVEN UNITED REFORMED CHURCH - Sunday services, 10am & 7pm ORWELL FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH - Sunday worship service, 10:45am SAINT PAUL’S ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH - Sunday mass 11am, 468-5706 RICHMOND RICHMOND CONGREGATIONAL UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST - 20 Church St., Richmond • 434-2053. Rev. Len Rowell. Sunday Worship with Sunday School, 10am; Adult Study Class, Sunday 8:30am
ESSEX JUNCTION CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH - 61 Main St., Essex Junction 878-8341
SALISBURY SALISBURY CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH (UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST) - Sun. worship svc., 10am
FERRISBURGH/NORTH FERRISB. FERRISBURGH METHODIST CHURCH, Sunday worship 9:30am
SHELBURNE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF SHELBURNE - 127 Webster Road, Shelburne • 985-2848
NORTH FERRISBURGH UNITED METHODIST CHURCH, 227 Old Hollow Rd., North Ferrisburgh, VT 802-425-2770. Rev. Kim Hornug-Marcy. Sunday worship 10am, Sunday School 10am, Nursery Available. http://www.gbgm-umc.org/ nferrisburgumc/
TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 2166 Shelburne Rd., Shelburne. 985-2269 Sunday Services: 8am & 10am. Bible Study 9:00am • Sunday School: 9:50am. The Reverend Craig Smith
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SUDBURY SUDBURY CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH - Sunday worship service and Sunday school, 10:30am SOVEREIGN REDEEMER ASSEMBLY - Sunday worship 10am VERGENNES/PANTON ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHRISTIAN CENTER - Sunday school 9:45am, Sunday worship service 8:30am, 10:45am and 6pm CHAMPLAIN VALLEY CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH - Sunday worship svcs. 10am & 7pm
ST. STEPHEN’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH - (On the green in Middlebury). Reverend Terence P. Gleeson, Rector. Sunday Eucharist 8 & 10:30am Child care & Sunday school available at 10:30am service. Wednesday at 12:05pm Holy Eucharist in the chapel. www.ststephensmidd.org or call 388-7200.
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH OF VERGENNES (UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST) - Sunday, 9:30am NEW WINE COVENANT (CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST) Sunday worship 10am PANTON COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH - Sunday school from 9:30am-10:15am Pre-K to adult, Sunday worship service 10:30am ST. PAUL’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH - Main and Park Streets, Vergennes. Rector: The Rev. Alan Kittelson. Sunday Services 8am and 10am; childcare provided at 10am. All are welcome. For information call 758-2211. ST. PETER’S ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH - Saturday 5pm, Sunday 8:30am, 10:30am VERGENNES UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - 10:30am VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH - 862 US Rt. 7, SUNDAY: 9:45am Bible Hour For All Ages Including 5 Adult Classes; 11:00am Worship Including Primary Church Ages 3 to 5 & Junior Church 1st - 4th Graders; 6pm Evening Service Worship For All Ages. WEDNESDAY 6:30pm Adult Prayer & Bible Study; AWANA Children’s Clubs (3yrs to 6th grade); JAM Junior High Group (7th & 8th grade); Youth Group (9th 12 grade). Nursery is provided for children up to 3 years old. Classes are provided for children age 3 and up. 802-877-3393 WEYBRIDGE WEYBRIDGE CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH - Worship and Sunday School 10am. Daniel Wright, Pastor. 545-2579. WHITING WHITING COMMUNITY CHURCH - Sunday school 9:45am, Sunday Service 11am & 7pm WILLISTON CHRIST MEMORIAL CHURCH - 1033 Essex Road, Williston. 878-7107. St. Minister Wes Pastor. Services: 8:30am and 10:30am TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH - 19 Mountain View Rd., Williston. 878-8118 CHRIST MEMORIAL CHURCH - 1033 Essex Rd., Williston 878-7107 CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE - 30 Morgan Parkway Williston, VT 05495 • 802-878-8591 bwnazarene@juno.com CAVALRY CHAPEL - 300 Cornerstone, Williston. 872-5799 MARANATHA CHRISTIAN CHURCH - 1037 S. Brownell Rd., Williston. 862-2108
ALL SOULS INTERFAITH GATHERING - Rev. Mary Abele, Pastor. Evensong Service and Spiritual Education for Children Sun. at 5pm. 371 Bostwick Farm Rd., Shelburne. 985-3819 SHELBURNE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - 30 Church St., Shelburne • 985-3981 • Rev. Gregory A. Smith, Pastor, 8:00am - Holy Communion Service • 9:30am - Family Worship Service with Sunday School
Special Thanks To These Fine Local Businesses For Supporting The Religious Services Page
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SOUTH BURLINGTON NEW COVENANT BAPTIST CHURCH SBC - 1451 Williston Rd., South Burlington. 863-4305
RIPTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH, 388-2510
FERRISBURGH CENTER COMMUNITY METHODIST CHURCH, Rt 7, Ferrisburgh - next to the Town Offices / Grange Hall. New Pastors Rev. John & Patrice Goodwin. Worship time is now 10:45am.
$1,100 $1,500
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY - Middlebury. Middlebury Community House, Main and Seymour Sts, Sunday Service and Church School-10am; Wednesday-7:30pm.
ESSEX CHRISTIAN & MISSIONARY ALLIANCE ESSEX ALLIANCE CHURCH - 36 Old Stage Rd., Essex • 878-8213
CROSSROADS CHAPEL, 41 Middlebrook Rd., Ferrisburgh, VT 05456. (802) 425-3625. Pastor: Rev. Charles Paolantonio. Services: Sunday 10am.
SHOREHAM FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH-UCC - Sunday worship and Sunday school 10am. Pastor Gary O’Gorman. 897-2687
MIDDLEBURY CHAMPLAIN VALLEY UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST SOCIETY Sunday service & church school, Sunday 10am
SAINT MARY’S ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH - Saturday, 5:15pm, Sunday 8am, 10am
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF BRISTOL - Service Sunday, 10am
SHOREHAM ST. GENEVIEVE/ST. BERNADETTE - Combined parish, Saturday mass 7:30pm, May 1-Oct. 31. (See Bridport)
STARKSBORO THE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF STARKSBORO - 2806 Route 16, Starksboro. Sunday worship 11am. Chat, Chew & Renew, a pre-worship fellowship and discussion time 10am10:45am. Sunday mornings in the Fellowship Hall on the accessible first level. All are welcome. First Baptist is an American Baptist church yoked with The Community Church of Huntington for support of its pastor, The Rev. Larry Detweiler revdets@gmail.com; 802.453.5577.
LINCOLN UNITED CHURCH OF LINCOLN - Sunday worship service 9:45, Church school 11:15am, united Student Ministries for grades 7-12, 6:30pm Sunday evenings. 453-4280
HOPE COMMUNITY FELLOWSHIP - Meets at Bridport Community Hall. Bridport, VT • 759-2922 • Rev. Kauffman. Sunday 9am, 10:30am, evening bible study.
BRISTOL FEDERATED CHURCH - Sunday service at 10:15am
UP TO
ST. JUDE THE APOSTLE - 10759 Route 116 Hinesburg. Masses: Sat. 4:30pm; Sun. 9:30am
MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH - 97 South Pleasant St., Middlebury. Sunday morning worship & church school 10am, Wednesday evening Bible Study, 6:30pm. 388-7472.
BRISTOL BRISTOL CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP - The River, 400 Rocky Dale Rd., Bristol. Sunday Worship 9:00am. 453-2660, 453-4573, 453-2614
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HINESBURG LIGHTHOUSE BAPTIST CHURCH - 90 Mechanicsville Rd., Hinesburg. Sunday Service at 10:30am. Pastor Hart, info: 482-2588.
BRIDPORT BRIDPORT CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH - Middle Rd., Bridport, VT. Pastor Tim Franklin, 758-2227. Sunday worship services at 8:30am and 10:15am with nursery care provided. Children’s ministries include Sprouts for children age 3-Kindergarten and WOW for grades 1-6, during the 10:15am service.
ST. BERNADETTE/ST. GENEVIEVE - Combined parish, Saturday mass 7:30pm Nov.1-April 30 (See Shoreham)
35651
THE EAGLE - 15
IMMACULATE HEART OF MARY - Route 2, Williston 878-4513 SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH - Route 2A, Williston 878-2285 WILLSTON FEDERATED CHURCH - 44 North Willston Rd., Williston. 878-5792 4-24-2010 • 56612
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16 - THE EAGLE
SATURDAY May 29, 2010
PUZZLE PAGE THEY’RE BESIDE THEMSELVES By Pamela Amick Klawitter
1 6 10 13 18 19 20 21 22 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 35 38 39 40 43 45 47
ACROSS Garfield’s middle name Tiptop Timber shaper Big Indians At large Property claim Scripps competition Disqualify (oneself), in court Introductory assortment of wreckage? Protozoan Swears to Home of Texas A&M International University Pooh-pooh Manhattan component Boris Godunov, e.g. Lost the point Vardon Trophy org. Be of service to Pointed remark Legal conclusion? One-of-a-kind book? Exercised in a lane Barely earn, with “out” Online bulletin board mgr.
48 49 50 53 55 56 57 60 61 63 64 65 70 71 73 74 75 77 78 80 82 84 85 86 90 91 92 94 96 98
Pub staple It isn’t really a bear Vestige Put in the warehouse Cut down One who follows the news? Cinnamon tree IV to III? River duck Writers Marching start? Place to leave the flock during vacation? Hobby shop buy Significant times Hard on the eyes Thing to bend or lend Speaks disrespectfully to “If it’s all the __ to you …” Star’s opposite Bow ties and elbows Early mobile home Soap whose first slogan was “It floats” Scroogean word Uses a keyboard Rule of crime writing BlackBerry message Try to get tallow? Fire or side attachment Secluded lowland Continued
99 100 102 103 106 107 109 113 114 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
Practice, as a trade Comebacks Like some telegrams Dosage amt. Goddess of wisdom Noisy summer bug Artful handling Lost some locks Music for painters? Feudal lords He played Quasimodo in 1923 Justice’s garb Dylan Thomas’s home Put in Explosive letters Whack Skiing locale DOWN __ Romeo Cloth quantity Cheer Sunflower relative Like Oscar Madison’s room Charity Grafton’s “__ for Corpse” When many a bell is rung As a group More competent Safe document Nonentity Common word in rallying slogans
14 Biting 15 Scallions for an anniversary party? 16 Parenthetical comments 17 Withdraw 21 Hawkeye associate 23 Starting squad 24 Duff 31 Islamic holy month 32 Modern office staples 33 Chap 34 Mule’s papa 36 Antares, for one 37 Something to walk on 38 Whalebone 41 Chuck 42 __ nerve
43 Sun, in Spain 44 21-Down’s real first name, on TV 46 Food for sea urchins 49 President under whom the Peace Corps was formed 51 Navel phenomenon 52 Expenditures 54 Hawaii’s “Gathering Place” 55 Other side 57 Pirate booty holder 58 Halos 59 Short treatise on junk e-mail? 60 Luxury seating 62 Discounted 66 Fires up 67 Split, as some hoofs 68 Round Table knight 69 Starbucks buy 72 As __ on TV 76 Indicates 79 Fido’s dinnertime extra 80 Trim, as apples
81 Semi-serious “I understand” 83 Casey Jones, e.g. 85 Cottage 87 Lassie, once 88 Slender swimmer 89 5-Down place 92 Thinks over 93 Up to 94 Like productive land 95 Hang on to 97 Reporters chase them 98 Largest of the Marianas 101 Outcropping 102 Meager 104 Hoodwinks 105 Step on it 107 Breton, e.g. 108 Privy to 109 Pump inserts 110 Storage cylinder 111 Trickle 112 Start of North Carolina’s motto 115 Many a Wharton grad
S OLUTIONS TO LAST WEEK ’ S C ROSSWORD PUZZLE
Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit, 1 to 9.
Trivia Answers! •••••••• From Page 2 ••••••••
ANs. 1 FOLDS INTO A WALL ANs. 2 SLEEPING SICKNESS LAST WEEK’S SUDOKU ANSWERS 34642
www.Addison-eagle.com
SATURDAY May 29, 2010
THE EAGLE - 17
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ANTIQUES ANTIQUE HOOSIER kitchen cabinet, beautiful, excellent condition $400, will dicker, 518504-4393 OLD NATIONAL cash register around 1930s, brass tape dispenser on side, works $45 518-747-3558
APPLIANCES DORM SIZE refrigerator, rarely used, $100 or best offer 518-543-6419
300 ARTICLES of clothing all sizes clean & on hangers, $100. Slacks, Pants, Jeans, Shirts, Blouses, Jackets, Vests, Dresses, etc. Call 615 7880 CYBER TECH 32 bulb tanning bed. New bulbs. $400 OBO. 518-524-3324. ELECTRIC ORGAN with sheet music. Like new. $75. 518-561-6388. EMERGENCY GENERATOR: Coleman series 5.4, 4kw, over 10 years old. $200. 518798-6261 after 6pm. ENTERTAINMENT CENTER. Nice looking, excellent condition. TV space is 29 1/2” wide x 25 1/2” tall. Glass sliding doors above and below. $55 firn. 518-291-4610. HARD ROCK Vermont Maple hutch. Details on call. Must sell, no room. $300 OBO. 518946-7739. LOVELY PINE corner dining nook. Cost $375. Never used. Asking $195. Rutland, Vt. 802-773-8895 MEMORY FOAM THERAPEUTIC NASA VISCO MATTRESSES WHOLESALE! T$299 F-$349 Q-$399 K-$499 ADJUSTABLES - $799 FREE DELIVERY 25 YEAR WARRANTY 90 NIGHT TRIAL 1-800ATSLEEP 1-800-287-5337 WWW.MATTRESSDR.COM SAGE DOUBLE recliner love seat, remote control. Mint condition. $475. 518-645-6390. TWO 13” TV’s. $20 each. 518-561-6388.
GE REFRIGERATOR/freezer side by side, ice water on door, 4 yr $300 518-494-4270
FREE
BUSINESS SERVICES
SET OF Britanica Encyclopedias with 10 yearly updates. 518-946-2347.
MOBILE HOME REPAIR General maintenance, Kool Seal Bathroom repair, etc. Call Mike 802-885-3632 Cell: 603-401-9135
COINS & COLLECTIBLES 2000-05 NASCAR limited edition R/C cars #8&3, Earnhart, father & son, $350ea. Call 518-623-9509 after 12noon DEBBIE MACOMBER books, Cedar Cove Series 1-9 $30 cash, located in Brant Lake 518-494-2823
COMPUTERS COMPUTER SUPPORT. Repairs, upgrades, installation, back-ups, virus removal, network support. Affordable rates. Call Josh 802-7582140. mailto:acerepair197@gmail.com .
ELECTRONICS * REDUCE YOUR CABLE BILL! * - Get a 4room, all-digital satellite system installed for FREE and programming starting under $20. Free Digital Video Recorders to new callers. So call now, 1-800-795-3579. 36” SONY Trinatron KV-36, FS-10 color TV $125 518-307-1118, after 6 p.m. Glens Falls, NY
FARM PRODUCTS QUALITY 1ST HAY Delivered Nearby Allan Churchill 802-886-8477
FINANCIAL SERVICES $$$ACCESS LAWSUIT CASH NOW!! Injury lawsuit dragging? Need $500-$$500,000+? We help. Call 1-866-386-3692, www.lawcapital.com $$$ACCESS LAWSUIT CASH NOW!!! As seen on TV, Injury Lawsuit Dragging? Need $500-$500,000++ within 24/hrs after Approval? Compare our lower rates. CALL NOW 1-866-386-3692 www.lawcapital.com
FURNITURE 1950 MAPLE ladies desk with upper hutch, 2 doors, and mail slot $100 518-585-7002 CHERRY BEDROOM SET Solid wood, never used, brand new in factory boxes. English dovetail. Original cost $4500. Sell for $795. Can deliver. Call Tom 617-395-0373. EARTH TONE floral sofa bed, excellent condition $150 518-798-6150 FOR SALE: Beautiful Bedroon Set Excellent Condition —Danish Modeern—solid wood; two dressers, one with large mirror. Sizes: 60.5 “ W X 31” H X18.5” D with beautiful mirror. And 44.5” H X 31” H X18.5” D Also, comes with matching Head Board— for full or queen size bed. $475 546-7821 LEATHER LIVING ROOM SET in original plastic, never used. Original price $3000, sacrifice $975. Call Bill 857-453-7764.
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DEPOT THEATRE giant rummage sale. FriSat 5/28-29, 9-4, Sun 5/39, 9-1 - bag day! Two locations: 6705 Main St & 6309 Main St., Westport.
GENERAL 275 GAL. oil tank, used once, like new, asking $200 518-494-5272
OLD GUITARS WANTED! Fender, Gibson, Martin, Gretsch, Prairie State, Euphonon, Larson, D’Angelico, Stromberg, Rickenbacker, and Mosrite. Gibson Mandolins/Banjos. 1930’s thru 1970’s TOP CASH PAID! 1-800-401-0440 REACH OVER 30 million homes with one buy. Advertise in NANI for only $2,795 per week! For information, visit www.naninetwork.com STEEL BUILDINGS 5 only - 20x20, 30x44, 40x56, 45x84, 80x150. Must move now! Will sell for balance owed. Still crated. Free delivery. 1-800-411-5869x235 T-SHIRTS Custom Printed. $5.50 heavyweight. “Gildan” Min. order of 36 pcs. HATS Embroidered $6.00. Free catalog. 1-800242-2374. Berg Sportswear. 40.
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ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from home. Medical, Business, Paralegal, Accounting, Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial aid if qualified. Call 800-494-3586 www.CenturaOnline.com
UNEMPLOYED? - Train for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 866-854-6156
DIRECTV - $26OFF/mo! 150+ Channels & Premium Movie Channels $29.99/mo. FREE SHOWTIME - 3 mos. New customers only. 1888-420-9472
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DIRECTV FREE MOVIES 3 MONTHS! NO Equipment or Start-Up Costs! Free HD/DVR Upgrade! Other Packages Start $29.99/mo! Ends 7/14/10. New cust. only, qual pkgs. DirectStarTV 1-800-620-0058 DIRECTV FREEBIES! FREE Standard Installation! FREE SHOWTIME + STARZ 3/mo., FREE HD/DVR Upgrade! PLUS Save $29/mo for 1 yr! Ends 7/14/10. New cust only, qual pkgs. DirectStarTV 1-800-279-5698 DISNEY ORNAMENTS. 38 boxed collectible ornaments. $1400 value, asking $475. 518335-3687 or 450-247-3725. EVERY BABY DESERVES a healthy start. Join more than a million people walking and raising money to support the March of Dimes. the walk starts at marchforbabies.org. FREE 6-DISH Satellite System! $19.99/mo (1 year) $400 Signup Bonus! Call 1-800-9159514.
RUG-BRAIDED, oval approx. 12X8, very nice, greens, browns, ochres, cleaned $50 O.B.O. Chestertown 518-256-6020
GARAGE SALES
GET DISH - FREE Installation-$19.99/mo HBO & Showtime FREE- Over 150 HD Channels Lowest Prices-No Equipment to Buy! Call for Full Details 877-883-5725
TABLES TO RENT Call 802-875-4540 or 802-380-8351 Pickup or Delivery FREE 6-ROOM DISH Network Satellite System! FREE HD-DVR! $19.99/ mo, $120+ Digital Channels (for 1 year). Call now $400 Signup Bonus! 1-800-727-0305 1981 RED Burgandy SE550L, runs, needs minor work, $350.00 518-597-3913 FREE 6-ROOM DISH Network Satellite System! FREE HD-DVR! $19.99/mo (1 year.) Call Now - $400 Signup BONUS! 1-888-6803359
FREE DISH Network Satellite System! FREE HD-DVR! $19.99/mo, 120+ Digital Channels (for 1 year.) PLUS - $400 Signup BONUS! Call 1-888-377-8994 GASLIGHT VILLAGE showcase $100 518798-6150 WANTED DIABETES TEST STRIPS Any Kind/Any brand Unexpired. Pay up to $16.00 per box. Shipping Paid. Call 1-800-267-9895 or www.SellDiabeticstrips.com
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LAWN CARE Mowing - Property Management Driveways - Mulch Allan Churchill 802-886-8477
EDUCATION
LAWN & GARDEN LAWN MOWER Honda 216 self propelled, excellent, moving, $125 518-494-3182 LAWN TRACTOR with rear bagger, 12 hp, 38” cut, 7spd., $400.00. 518-623-2203.
MUSIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS CLARINET/FLUTE/VIOLIN/TRUMPET/Trom bone/Amplifier/Fender Guitar, $69each. Cello/Upright Bass, Saxophone/French Horn/Drums, $185ea. Tuba/ Baritone Horn/Hammond Organ, Others 4 sale. 1-516377-7907
PETS & SUPPLIES AKC LAB PUPPIES. 3 yellow males, 3 black females, 3 black males. Vet checked, 1st shots, micro-chipped, dew clawed. $500 each. Ready June 29th. 518-873-6743 BABY CANARIES $150 each, to good homes. 802-824-5226 FOR SALE: 2 Russian Tortoise/complete setup-$300. 2 Redfoot Tortoises/complete setup-$300. 3 Bearded Dragons $40 each. 563-2877
PHYSICAL FITNESS AB DOER exercise machine with instructional DVD originally $175 asking $100 518-5859787
WANTED MTD GARDEN tractor for parts with Peerless hydrostatic transmission. Agway or other brand, approx. 20 years old. 518-493-2882.
GUNS WANTED. Good quality rifles, handguns, shotguns and antique guns. Call 802492-3339 days or 802-492-3032 evenings.
WANTED TO BUY Diabetic Test Strips. Cash paid up to $10/ box. Call Wayne at 781-7247941.
NEW HERITAGE Rough Rider 22 combo. 22 long rifle, 22 mag., 6 1/2” barrel, satin finish, adjustable sights. Black pearl grips, 2 extra cylinders, handmade holster. $400. Must have pistol license. Call anytime after 1pm, 518-873-6833.
TOOLS 10” CRAFTSMAN Table saw with cast iron top and router, table with 1.5 hp router $300 O.B.O. 518-597-9447
REMINGTON MODEL 700 rifle, synthetic stock, ADL 7mm08, black matte finish $400 518-546-7221
HEALTH
THOMPSON CENTER Encore 223 w/3x9 scope and extra barrel. 7.69x39, four boxes of shells. $498.00. 802-434-3107
ARE YOU PAYING too much for your HEALTH INSURANCE? 50 seconds could save you 50% on your monthly premiums! Call today to get a FREE quote on your health insurance! Call 888-673-3397.
LAWN & GARDEN
BACK BRACE. Covered by Medicare/Ins. Substantial relief, comfortable wear. 1-800815-1577, Ext 409. www.LifeCareDiabeticSupplies.com
Service You Want & Deserve. 6 ways to place a
1/2 price insulation, 4x8 sheets, high R, up to 4” thick, Blue Dow, 1/2” insul board. 518-5973876 or Cell 518-812-4815 275 GALLON fuel tank, self-cleaning, $75. 30” Whirlpool electric range, self-cleaning, $125. 518-563-3406 or 518-248-9310. BIG SCREEN high definition TV, $200. Call 873-2494.
HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA FROM HOME, 68 Weeks. ACCREDITED. Career Opportunities. FREE Brochure. Toll Free 1800-264-8330, www.diplomafromhome.com
LOGGING LANDOWNERS!! LAVALLEE LOGGING is looking to harvest and purchase standing timber, mostly hardwood firewood. Willing to pay New York State stumpage prices on all species. References available. Matt Lavallee, 518-645-6351.
EQUIPMENT NEW EQUIPMENT *Quick attach Post Hole Digger $2200, Pallet Forks HD $800 , Bale Spears $480, Buckets; *3pt. Bale Spears $180, Post Hole Digger 6” $450, 9” 500, & 12” $550; * Back Blades - Box Blades; * Landscaping Rakes; * Steel Hay Racks Running Gears; * Tedders 2 Star $2175, 4 star $4250; * Ag Rims. USED EQUIPMENT: *10’ Brillion 2 Role Cultipacker, Int 784 Hours $7250, Int 400 Hours $2500; * 10’ JD Transport Disc Harrows $750; * 3pt. Plows 12 or 3 Bottom Plows $160 and up; * Running Gears - Post Holes Diggers - Tedders, Hay Racks Cultivators - Quick Hitch Equipment. MORE NEW & USED EQUIPMENT AVAILABLE. 518-639-5353 OR 518-796-5303.
LEGALS The Eagle Legal deadline Friday @ 3:00pm Please Send Legals By EMAIL To: legals@denpubs.com
NOTICE OF LEGAL SALE View Date 06/03/2010 Sale Date 06/04/2010 Starr Lafountain Unit#21 Easy Self Storage 46 Swift, South Burlington, VT 05403 (802) 863-8300 TE-5/22,5/29,6/5/10-3TC-68055
The Classified Superstore 1-800-989-4237
Walk In The Eagle: 16 Creek Rd., Suite 5 Middlebury, VT 05753
Call
classified ad in the...
Email gail@denpubs.com
CASH NOW! Get cash for your structured settlement or annuity payments. High payouts. Call J.G. Wentworth. 1-866-SETTLEMENT (1-866-738-8536). Rated A+ by the Better Business Bureau.
FOR SALE
AVIATION MAINTENANCE/AVIONICS Graduate in 15 months. FAA approved; financial aid if qualified. Job placement assistance. Call National Aviation Academy Today! 1-800-292-3228 or NAA.edu.
1-800-989-4237 x109
BAD CREDIT? No Credit? Bankruptcy? We Have A Loan That Is Right For You! Apply Today 1-866-360-8289.
START SAVING TODAY. Debt consolidation. Personal/Business Loans. Low Monthly Payment. Trinity Financial Group. 1-877-8381492
THE OCEAN Corp. 10840 Rockley Road, Houston, Texas 77099. Train for a New Career. *Underwater Welder. Commercial Diver. *NDT/Weld Inspector. Job Placement Assistance. Financial Aid available for those who qualify. 1-800-321-0298.
GUNS/AMMO
USED TAURUS PT 22 caliber. Clean, Mother of Pearl, white pearl grips. Extra magazine, Nylon holster. $300. Must have pistol license. 518-873-6833. Call anytime after 1pm.
34643
ARBORVITAE/CEDAR 2’/$5.95, min 20. 3’/$7.95, min 15. Shipped FEDEX. Creates dense privacy hedge. Other sizes & species available by installation. 888-449-3358. www.cedartrees.com
The Eagle 16 Creek Rd., Suite 5 Middlebury, VT 05753
Call And Place Your Classified Listing Today!
Web www.denpubs.com
Fax Special Savings Available!
(802) 388-6399 34644
www.Addison-eagle.com
18 - THE EAGLE
SATURDAY May 29, 2010
SERVICE GUIDE Place an ad for your business in the Eagle’s Service Guide! Call COMPLETE CHIMNEY CARE Cleaning • Repairs Stainless Steel Lining Video Camera Inspection Brian Dwyer 1-800-682-1643 388-4077 65415
SEPTIC SERVICE
CLARK SEPTIC SERVICE Complete Septic System Maintenance & Repair Systems Installed Prompt Service
388-0202 453-3108
Serving Addison County & Beyond!
49446
ALL ASPECTS OF BUILDING & REMODELING
GLASS
Small Projects & Light Small Dump Truck Work
Glass • Screens • Windshields
DOZER • EXCAVATOR BACKHOE • DUMP TRUCK
DESABRAIS GLASS
Fully Insured Free Estimates Josh Watson (802) 777-9256 Randy Ouellette (802) 349-5454
HEATING
Boardman Street, Middlebury, VT
388-9049
Email: cornerstone-llc@comcast.net www.cornerstone@servicemagic.com
Contact: Larry Provost
Add Value To Your Home! 58119
802-236-6175
TAXI SERVICE
VACUUM SALES/SERVICE
Small City Taxi
Auto • Home Commercial
50322
WASTE MGMT.
Serving Addison County for Local or Long Distance Travel
Roll Off Container Service
Please call us for your roofing, remodeling, demolition and new construction projects. Fast, friendly, reliable service and competitive rates.
199
Sells the Best Vacs
Operating 24-7 Auto Lock Outs
WASTE MANAGEMENT
American Built Vacuums by Riccar starting at $ up to a 4 year warranty
Services All the Rest
NEW TAXI SERVICE!
3020 Williston Rd., So. Burlington, VT 05403
802-658-2780 • 1-800-VAC-CITY
Toll Free: 888-433-0962 Phone: 877-2102 • Fax: 877-8390 49447
SALES SERVICE PARTS REPAIR
64820
ROOFING
FRIEND 453-2255
CONSTRUCTION BRISTOL, VT
• Equipment Installation & Financing • Heating Systems • Service Contracts & 24 Hour Emergency Service
ROOFING
802 388-8449 50 Industrial Ave., Middlebury
Specializing In Asphalt Shingles - Free Estimates - Fully Insured -
65626
50321
WINDOW/SIDING
WINDOWS/SIDING
CLOVER STATE
CLOVER STATE
877-3395
230 Cross Road, Ferrisburgh, Vermont
388-6397 for information and rates.
EXCAVATION
50261
Member of VT, NYS & National Chimney Sweep Guilds
CONTRACTOR
64797
CHIMNEY SWEEP
(802)
WINDOW & SIDING CO., INC.
Marcel Brunet & Sons, Inc.
Windows & Siding
Featuring Products by:
We offer sales and installation of:
Replacement Windows Vinyl Siding Asphalt & Metal Roofs As well as construction of
Additions & Garages
Toll Free: 888-433-0962 Tel: 877-2102 49448
Vergennes, Vt.
Siding • Additions Roofs • Garages Replacement Windows Decks • Free Estimates! Owned and Operated by Richard Brunet Since 1981 800-439-2644
877-2640
65190
Real Estate
Need a home? Looking for someone to fill that vacancy?
Find what you’re looking for here!
92396
APARTMENT FOR RENT
CHESTER, VT. Exquisite 1-bdrm, large LR, DR & plenty of closet space. HT/HW/trash removal included. $785/mo. Call Neil 802885-6292.
BELLOWS FALLS, VT. Newly remodeled apartments located in the heart of town. 1bdrm, $639. Includes heat, hot water, rubbish and snow removal. Please contact 802-8857885. Income limits do apply. SPRINGFIELD, VT. 2-bdrm apt. Large LR, DR, eat-in kitchen w/DW and pantry. Shiny hardwood floors & carpet. HT/HW/trash removal included. $945/mo. Call Neil 802885-6292. SPRINGFIELD, VT. 3-bdrm, $705. Includes H/HW/trash/snow removal. WD hookups. Stewart Property Management. Equal Housing Opportunity. 802-885-7885. Income limits do apply. Limited time only, we will pay your security deposit for you. SPRINGFIELD, VT. Totally remodeled, 700 sq. ft. 1-bdrm. Large LR, DR, eat-in kitchen. Beautiful hardwood floors & carpet. HT/HW/trash removal included. $750/mo. Call Neil 802-885-6292.
***FREE FORECLOSURE Listings*** OVER 400,000 properties nationwide. Low down payment. Call now 800-250-2043. ARIZONA LAND LIQUIDATION. Starting $129/mo. 1to 2-1/2 acre ranch lots. 1 hour from Tucson. No credit check. Guaranteed financing. Money Back Guarantee. 1-800631-8164, Code4019, http://www.sunsiteslandrush.com/
REAL PROPERTY FOR SALE 20 ACRE RANCHES Near Growing El Paso Texas. Only $12,900 $0Down, $99 per/mo. Owner Financing. No Credit Checks Money Back Guarantee. Free Map/Pictures. 1-800755-8953 www.sunsetranches.com
RENTALS
CONSTRUCTION HAS YOUR BUILDING SHIFTED? Contact Woodford Bros., Inc. for straightening, leveling, foundation and wood frame repairs at 1800-OLD-BARN, www.woodfordbros.com, MAHIC#155877; CTHIC#571557; RICRB#22078
MOBILE HOME FOR SALE
50090
8 GLENEAGLE Dr. 2 bdr, 2 bath, all appliances, shed, new roof, new hot wtr. tank, nat. gas, landscaped, immaculate. Move in condition today! Asking $19,000. 493-4140 or 2367654.
RENTALS FOR SALE
REAL ESTATE
1 & 2 BEDROOM apartments available in Chester & Bellows Falls. 802-869-2400. www.rootspropertymanagement.com.
Grover Hills - 3 bedroom 1/2 duplex - $650 per mo.
Port Henry - Lease to own Two rental trailers with one lot - $850 per mo. plus taxes, water and sewer Grover Hills - 3 bedroom duplex - $89,900 Witherbee 353 Witherbee Rd. - Half House 355 Witherbee Rd. - Half House *Best Offer: $3,000 down, balance financed by owner Ticonderoga - Building lot - $10,000 Town water & sewer, owner financing.
518-546-7557
50258
LONDONDERRY INN charming & spacious rooms, long term & seasonal rentals $500$700/mo. includes private bath, all utilities, cable TV, WI-FI, laundry, pool tables, community kitchen, nature trails, fun people. 1st/sec. 802-824-5226 Maya and Brian.
In the market for a new car? See the areas best in the classified columns. To place an ad, Call 1-802-460-1107.
Garage sales, yard sales & moving sales, oh my! Please print your message neatly in the boxes below:
With
FREE
Centering & Border!
Sold To Your Phone #
Personal Ad Rates Choose Your Zone Package ZONE A 1-Zone... $20 RT, TE and TO
Name
Address City/Town
State
Zip
Payment Info Exp.
CC#
Plu s,w e’ll pu tyou r cla ssified a d on lin e FREE
CID# Run#
Starting thru Classification
Words
2-Zones... $25
ZONE B NCM, TLFT and VN
3-Zones... $30
ZONE C TT, AJ and NE
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* Payment must be received before ad can be published.
Deadline For Vermont Papers Friday at Noon Deadline for New York Papers Monday at Noon
Mail to... Attn: Classified Dept. Denton Publications 24 Margaret Street, Suite #1 Plattsburgh, New York 12901 Fax: 518-561-1198 Phone: 518-561-9680 ext. 109 email: gail@denpubs.com 58272
www.Addison-eagle.com
SATURDAY May 29, 2010
THE EAGLE - 19
Help Wanted
Need a job? Looking for that “right fit” for your company?
Find what you’re looking for here!
92391
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
GET PAID TO SHOP! Earn up to $50/hr. No experience required. Training provided. Call NOW!! 1-888-727-0603.
ACTORS/MOVIE EXTRAS - $150-$300/Day depending on job. No experience. All looks needed. 1-800-281-5185-A103
ALL CASH Vending! Be your own boss! Local Vending route. 25 machines + candy. $9,995. 1-800-807-6485. (Void/SD/CT)
HELP WANTED
ASSEMBLE MAGNETS & CRAFTS At Home! Year-round Work! Great Pay! Call toll free 1-866-844-5091
$$$ 24 PEOPLE WANTED $$$ Make $1,400 - $4,600 Weekly Working From Home Assembling Information Packets. No Experience Necessary! Start Immediately! FREE Information. CALL 24hrs. 1-866-8992756
ASSEMBLE MAGNETS & CRAFTS From Home! Year-Round Work! Excellent Pay! No Experience! Top US Company! Glue Gun, Painting, Jewelry, More! Toll Free 1-866-8445091.
ALL CASH VENDING! Do you earn $800 in a day? Your own Local Vending Route. 25 Machines and Candy for $9,995. 1-800-9208301 (Not valid- CT). GET YOUR DEGREE ONLINE *Medical, *Business, *Paralegal, *Accounting, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available.Financial Aid if qualified. Call 800-510-0784 www.CenturaOnline.com
$$$ START NOW $$$ Earn Extra Income. Assembling CD Cases from home! No Experience Necessary. Call our Live Operators for more information! 1-800-4057619 Ext 2181 www.easywork-greatpay.com
CERTIFIED BARTENDERS WANTED! Training Course & Job Placement Assistance Provided. Nationally recognized. Earn up to $60/hr. 888-834-1816
$50/HR potential. Get Paid to Shop and Eat. Retail Research Associate Needed. No Experience. Training Provided. Call 1-800742-6941 1000 ENVELOPES = $5000. Receive $5 for every envelope stuffed. Guaranteed. 800805-4880 EARN $50/HOUR Potential. Get paid to Shop and Eat! Retail Research Associate needed. Training. No experience. 800-6901272. GOVERNMENT JOBS - $12-$48/hr Paid Training, full benefits. Call for information on current hiring positions in Homeland Security, Wildlife, Clerical and professional. 1-800320-9353 x 2100
EARN TOP COMMISSIONS Telemarket from your home or our office. We are building a sales force to sell network classified advertising. Earn 25% commission + bonus for every new customer! There is no limit on how much you can earn. Training provided. Call 877-423-6399. THE JOB For You! $500 sign-on bonus. Travel the US with our young minded enthusiastic business group. Cash and bonuses daily. Call Jan 888-361-1526 today! TRAVEL, TRAVEL! $500 Sign-on Bonus! Seeking Sharp Guys & Gals, Rock-n-Roll Atmosphere, Blue jean environment. Janelle 888-882-9922. CHECK us out at www.denpubs.com
INSTRUCTION & TRAINING HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA! Graduate in 4 Weeks! PACE Program. FREE Brochure. CALL NOW! 1-866-562-3650 Ext. 30 www.southeasternhs.com HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA! Graduate in just 4 Weeks! PACE Program. FREE Brochure. CALL NOW! 1-800-532-6546 Ext. 412 www.continentalacademy.com
Looking for a new car? Check out the classifieds. Call 802-460-1107.
Automotive AUTO ACCESSORIES
MOTORCYCLE/ ATV
2 USED Bridgestone tires P215/60 R16 $30. Thurman, NY 518-623-4081
BOATS DOCK RENTAL. Protected bay near Ticonderoga beach. 30’ maximum. Seasonal only. 518-585-7002. OLD NEPTUNE trolling motor, around 1940s $275 518-798-1426 OLD TOWN canoe, king fisher, very good condition, paddles, vests, seat backs $450, 15 ft. 518-494-0053
CARS FOR SALE 1989 CADILLAC Brougham, 73,483 miles, $2200. Call after 5pm 518-9622376
1995 FORD F150, pickup, 5 speed, 2 wheel drive, needs some work, $400 518-251-0178 2005 HONDA Accord Silver EX, 65000 miles, 5 speed manual transmission, very clean and in good condition, rear spoiler, thermometer, power moon roof, cruise control.Call 802-885-9404 evenings or email sjm@stevemillay.com. Asking $10,420. AUTO FOR SALE 1995 Bronco 302 V8 33” Tires 1993 14ft Commercial Box Truck 1995 Jeep Cherokee 20 MPG 1984 34ft RV Class A 454 V8 1982 CJ7 Roll Bar 33” Tires V8 Call (518) 597-3270
Customer Satisfaction is our trademark and our reputation.
07 KAWASAKI ZX-14 Adult owned, about 16,500 miles, needs new tires, $5900 5637505. 2009 HONDA Rebel, 250cc, like new, 110 miles. $3,250 OBO. 518-236-5404. WANTED JAPANESE MOTORCYCLES KAWASAKI,1970-1980, Z1-900, KZ900, KZ1000, H2-750, H1-500, S1-250, S2-250, S2-350, S3-400. CASH PAID. 1-800-7721142. 1-310-721-0726.
SELLING New & Used Motorcycles & ATVs
REC VEHICLES SALES/RENTALS 2003 FLAGSTAFF pop-up camper, sleeps 8, stove, sink, fridge, shower/toilet combo, hardly used, excellent condition, must see. Asking $3800. Tel#518-494-7990 CLASS A Motorcoach 2005 Independant Gulf Stream very low mileage , very good Condition , sleeps 7 , Slide out. Must Sell Firm Offer $72,500 Seroius Buyers Only call 518-561-9592
AUTO DONATIONS
COMMUNITY HEALTH NURSES This position will provide skilled nursing services to agency patients based upon a plan of care approved by the physician. In the delivery of care, the nurse will use independent judgment based on common principles of pathophysiology and accepted standards of care. This person will work collaboratively with patients, families, other disciplines and community agencies. Must have a current VT RN license and two years of nursing experience. HOSPICE RN Addison County Home Health & Hospice, Inc. is looking for a full-time Hospice Nurse to join our growing team and participate in providing high quality end of life care in our newly expanded Hospice & Palliative Care Program. Must have a current VT RN license and two years of nursing experience. Hospice and/or palliative care experience is preferred.
We take trades & consignments.
51560
Dan Turco & Sons North Clarendon, VT
Rt. 7, Just south of Rutland
802-773-8690
www.turcosyamaha.com
FULL & PART TIME PHYSICAL THERAPISTS: Qualifications include a current Vermont Physical Therapy license and a minimum of two years of experience preferably within a rehabilitation program. Qualified candidates should send resumes to ACHH&H, Attn: Human Resources, PO Box 754, Middlebury, VT 05753, email to hr@achhh.org, or apply directly online at www.achhh.org. 50265
AAAA ** DONATION Donate your Car Boat or Real Estate. IRS Tax Deductible. Free Pick-up/Tow. Any Model/Condition. Help Under Privileged Children. Outreach Center. 1-800-928-7566 AAAA DONATION Donate your Car, Boat or Real Estate, IRS Tax Deductible. Free Pickup/ Tow Any Model/ Condition. Help Under Privileged Children Outreach Center. 1-800883-6399. DONATE A CAR - HELP CHILDREN FIGHTING DIABETES. Fast, Free Towing. Call 7 days/week. Non-runners OK. Tax Deductible. Call Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation. 1-800-578-0408 DONATE A Car Today To Help Children And Their Families Suffering From Cancer. Free Towing. Tax Deductible. Children’s Cancer Fund of America, Inc. www.ccfoa.org 1-800469-8593
L OANS A VAILABLE NO CREDIT? BAD CREDIT? BANKRUPTCY?
60 ETHAN ALLEN DRIVE
SOUTH BURLINGTON, VT 05403 (802) 660-0838 (888) 9 WRENCH USED CAR SALES
WE SERVICE HONDA, SUBARU, TOYOTA & ACURA
DONATE YOUR CAR. FREE TOWING. “Cars for Kids”. Any condition. Tax deductible Outreach Center. 1-800-597-9411 FREE JUNK CAR REMOVAL Nationwide! We haul away your junk CAR, boat, motorcycle trailer, any type of motor vehicle. FREE of charge. 1-800-We-Junk-Cars; 1-800-6758653.
152 Broadway Whitehall, NY • (518) 499-2886 • Ask for Joe
71070
50085
DONATE YOUR CAR Help Families in need! Fair Market Value Tax Deduction Possible Through Love, Inc. Free towing. Non-runners OK. Call for details. 800-549-2791 DONATE YOUR CAR! Breast Cancer Research foundation! Most highly rated breast cancer charity in America! Tax Deductible/Fast Free Pick Up. 800-771-9551 www.cardonationsforbreastcancer.org
Hometown Chevrolet Oldsmobile H & M AUTO SUPPLY
We use uncontaminated, clean Bar & Chain Oil!
“EVERYDAY LOW PRICES” FOREIGN ~ DOMESTIC ~ CUSTOM MADE HYDRAULIC HOSES
USED CARS • STATE INSPECTIONS 25 School House Rd., E. Middlebury, VT 05740
BOURDEAUMOTORS.COM
802-382-8838
Not Just Parts,
49444 49942
PARTS PLUS!
482-2400 482-2446 Route 116
Hinesburg
Open 8-5 Monday - Saturday
71192
THE DEALERSHIP ALTERNATIVE BE PREPARED FOR SUMMER GET YOUR MAXIMUM MILEAGE POTENTIAL WITH OUR SUMMER SAFETY & MECHANICAL INSPECTION. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Belts & hoses Fluid levels Tire tread & pressure Brakes Basic air conditioning Cooling system Chassis Lighting & wipers Exhaust Charging systems
BRING IN THIS AD TO RECEIVE THIS SPECIAL FOR ONLY
$19.95 When you schedule this appointment, schedule your summer tire changeover for the same day and take
MANY ACCORD AND CIVIC MODELS AT SIMILAR SAVINGS!
10% off both services (labor only)
We also offer tire storage. Mon -Fri 7:30am - 5pm • Flatbed service available 83 Huntington Rd., Richmond VT • 802-434-3940 www.washburnservicenter.com • Brian@washburnsauto.com
57960
50088
Our summer special checks the following:
ASK US ABOUT THE PREFERRED AUTOMASTER CUSTOMER PACKAGE!
50086
20 - THE EAGLE
www.Addison-eagle.com
SATURDAY May 29, 2010
52307