Green Mountain Outlook 07-24-2010

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Vol. 2 No. 29 • July 21 2010

Ludlow’s Farmers Market

Adoption

Abby looking for her forever home.

The Ludlow Farmers Market attracts all sorts of local vendors. It is open each Friday, 4-7 p.m. through summer and early fall.

See page 2

...Turn to page 3 to read the full article

Sports Vermont bounces back from two straight loses.

Clarendon plans event to support troops

See page 7

BANJO DAZE — On Tuesday, July 27, 7 p.m. Rutland County will welcome Banjo Dan and the Midnight Plowboys to the Castelton Green for a special free, outdoor concert. Banjo Dan holds fast to the tenets of bluegrass: strong rhythm, sparkling instrumental solos, soulful vocals and tight harmonies. For three decades, Banjo Dan and crew have represented the soul of bluegrass in Vermont.

By Lou Varricchio

newmarketpress@denpubs.com CLARENDON — America’s small towns are the backbone of freedom and this month, the Town of Clarendon will show its true colors—red, white and blue. The Clarendon community will gather at the Clarendon Elementary School on Saturday, July 31, for a special evening-long special salute to U.S. troops in harm’s way. The event starts with a community dinner at 6 p.m. and continues until 9 p.m. The salute, an opportunity for all residents to thank local armed forces members and others, will include a familystyle barbeque, 5-6:30 p.m., which sports a lip-smacking menu of ribs, pulled pork, chicken, corn-on-the-cob, baked beans, cole slaw with pineapple, potato salad, watermelon, lemonade, iced tea, and lots’mores. Special games and activities will be held 6-8 p.m.and include carnival games, a dunking booth, team ball games, face painting, bubbles, laughter yoga, and more. Attendees will be asked to help make a tile American flag for the school’s Clarendon Community Peace Garden. The actual salute to the troops special program starts at 8-9 p.m. with Christina Skeleros and the CES students singing. The students will screen their “Box of Kisses” for the troops video production at dusk.

Perfecting

Craft

his

YOUNG ARTIST — Violinist and violist Ethan Hoppe of Ludlow has performed at Okemo Young Artists all five summers and will attend music conservatory in the fall on a full scholarship.

• • • • •

Rusty DeWees............. 4 Local Flavor................ 5 Sports .......................... 7 Calendar ...................... 8 Classifieds ............10-11

$30,000 Powerball winner in Fair Haven By Lou Varricchio

newmarketpress@denpubs.com FAIR HAVEN — Vermont had a Powerball winner from the July 14 drawing. The lucky anonymous player purchased the $30,000 winning ticket at Stewart’s in Fair Haven. The winning ticket matched four numbers plus the Powerball number. And because the player selected the Power Play option, it multiplied their winnings from $10,000 to $30,000. Vermont lottery games are sold at almost 700 locations throughout the state. For information on lottery games and on-line game draw results, please visit www.vtlottery.com. All profits from Vermont Lottery are used to support the Vermont Education Fund. Lottery officials encourage everyone to play responsibly.

Star Gazer Amateur astronomer Lynn Barrier views the bright stars of the Summer Triangle through the Vermont Academy’s observatory telescope last week. The observatory is open to visitors Tuesday evenings this summer. For details about the free observing events, as well as for directions, call 802-869-2960.

...Continued on page 7

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Photo courtesy Castleton Summer Concert on the Green Series

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WEDNESDAY July 21, 2010

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Springfield Humane Society

Lovely 5 year old. Spayed Female. Hound mix. 48 lbs. I am a dog who deserves a second chance. When I was brought in by Animal Control my skin was red and inflamed and I had lost much of my hair due to uncontrolled allergies. I was picked up on June 15 in Center Rutland. I have been treated at the shelter and by local veterinarians for the past few weeks. I am on a special allergy diet and, as you can see, I look much better. I have no known history with kids or other animals but seem fine around animals here. Kids over 5, please, for safety’s sake. I really am a Lovely girl and you won’t be sorry if you take me home.

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Springfield Humane Society: Abby is an almost two-year-old cutie-pie who is looking for a home for herself and her half-brother Brownie. The dogs are a totally bonded pair who love to go for runs in the meadow, walks along the path and take long naps on a porch swing or even a couch. The pair are house and crate trained. They are shy with new people at first, but warm up soon enough. They both have a sad, unpleasant history with a human male—so they think a man would have to be pretty special to live in their house. Can you please give these kids the life they deserve? Call the Shelter at 885-3997 or stop by.

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Abby amazing cats to choose from. Now is a great time to adopt a new best friend. Weather permitting our weekly sales at the North Springfield Storage Units will be Fridays from 8-12. Three new truckloads of great items just arrived! If you have things to donate call Tom at 885-2174. Thank you for your used ink/toner cartridges; please keep them coming. Thanks to everyone who helps us this way. Tom Browe Executive Director Springfield Humane Society 401 Skitchewaug Trail Springfield, Vt. 05156 browe@vermontel.net 802-885-2174 www.spfldhumane.org

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Abby is an almost twoyear-old cutie-pie who is looking for a home for herself and her half-brother Brownie. The dogs are a totally bonded pair who love to go for runs in the meadow, walks along the path and take long naps on a porch swing or even a couch. The pair are house and crate trained. They are shy with new people at first, but warm up soon enough. They both have a sad, unpleasant history with a human male—so they think a man would have to be pretty special to live in their house. Can you please give these kids the life they deserve? Call the Shelter at 885-3997 or stop by. We also have two adorable male “Skiperanians” who need specific type homes. They are untrained 7 month olds with personality plus but barky as heck as Schipperkes and Pomeranians are. Adorable to the extreme, they need homes where barking is not a problem. And don’t forget cats and kittens. We have just a few kittens and a couple dozen

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WEDNESDAY July 21, 2010

OUTLOOK - 3

Emmett and Lini Dunbar:

By Mary McCallum Special to the Outlook LUDLOW — Ludlow-area farmer Emmett Dunbar is the kind of individual responsible for the growing success of Vermont’s farmers market movement. He can be found chatting beneath his Anjali Farms awning every Friday at the Ludlow Farmers Market. Part farmer, philosopher and raconteur, Emmett dispenses wit and anecdotes along with the organic berries, vegetables, heirloom tomato plants and the garlic that his farm is known for. Emmett operates Anjali Farms with his wife Lini Mazumdar (whose line of Lotus Moon Medicinals also occupies the shelves of their colorful stall). Lini’s herbal and medicinal body products are made in small batches from organic herbs grown on their farm. Each Friday, Emmett drives his handpainted “localvore” van to the grassy field of the Ludlow Farmers Market and creates a visual feast for customers. Pints of just picked berries in neat rows and jars of applesauce from his organic apple trees sit beside chunky cucumbers, homemade salad dressings and bags of delicate salad greens.

InBrief

Changes in TV programming LUDLOW — LPCTV, community TV for the Black RiverValley, announced several programming changes for early July. LPCTV is on local cable TV channels 8 and 10 in the towns of Ludlow, Plymouth, Cavendish, and Mount Holly. Local video programming can also be viewed online at www.lpctv.org. Complete program schedule listings are also found on LPCTV's website and can be seen on the TV Bulletin Board. CHANNEL 8 •American Legion Baseball •Volunteer sports programming producer Bruce Perry hosts coverage of Chester Legion baseball. •Sandra Wright Tribute Concert •Gypsy Reel and the Pleasants perform at the recent Sandra Wright Tribute concert at Okemo. •St. James Methodist Church services: Sundays at 9 a.m. and repeating several times throughout the week.

“The greens are our biggest seller,” he said. “The mix contains up to 25 different varieties of greens and edible flowers.” Dunbar has 13 years of experience managing and participating in the farmers market movement around the country. He was instrumental in starting two other markets in southern Vermont and estimates that he’s packed and unpacked his own wares at least 1,200 times. “I chose to be a vendor at the Ludlow Farmers Market because it’s a great new enterprise, a growing thing that I want to be part of,” he noted. “It’s got a good spread of food products, crafts, produce, baked goods and stuff for kids.” Dunbar, who has been farming for over ten years, specializes in growing and saving his own seed, especially tomatoes. “Our main vegetables are heirloom tomatoes and a half dozen varieties of seed-saved garlic. And we grow another crop that surprises many folks—hops.” Emmett and Lini believe in creating products from scratch using organic fruits, vegetables and organic and culinary herbs. They host overnight visitors for farmstays and hold special events at Anjali Farm that highlight the importance of agriculture and eating local foods. The Dunbars plan to be at the Ludlow Farmers Market every Friday through Columbus Day weekend. “For a market in its second season, it’s got more high quality vendors and variety than many other new markets,” according to Emmett. “It draws locals and tourists, has plenty of shade and lots of parking. And where else could you find fruits, vegetables, local meats, knitted Frisbees, frozen pizza, vegetable sushi, stuffed quail, fishing lures made of spoons and the best croissants you’ve ever tasted in Vermont?” Check It Out: Ludlow Farmers Market is located on Route 103 south of Ludlow on the lawn of Okemo Mountain School. It is open every Friday, 4-7 p.m. through summer and early fall. Anyone interested in signing up to be a vendor, do a demonstration, or play music at the market, should contact Jerry Milligan at 802734-3829 or e-mail him at lfmkt@tds.net. CHANNEL 10 •Plymouth School Closing Interviews: As the life inside the Plymouth School comes to a close, the memories will live on. Principal Susan Hackett videotaped several outgoing students interviewing familiar faces at Plymouth School. •Rutland-Windsor Supervisory Union Special Meeting on Governance: Gavel-to-gavel coverage of the recently-held RWSU informational meeting on governance and consolidation.

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4 - OUTLOOK

Visit us today at

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 Tom Bahre • Brenda Hammond • Heidi Littlefield Hartley MacFadden • Mary Moeykens • 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

New Market Press, Inc., 16 Creek Rd., Suite 5A, Middlebury, Vermont 05753 Phone: 802-388-6397 • Fax: 802-388-6399 • newmarketpress@denpubs.com Members of: CPNE (Community Papers of New England) IFPA (Independent Free Papers of America) • AFCP (Association of Free Community Papers) One of Vermont’s Most Read Weekly Newspapers Winner of 2006 FCPNE and 2008 AFCP News Awards ©2010. 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 New Market Press, Inc. and its advertisers are not liable for typographical errors, misprints or other misinformation made in a good faith effort to produce an accurate weekly newspaper. The opinions expressed by the editorial page editor and guest columnists are not necessarily those of New Market Press, and New Market Press cannot be held liable for the facts or opinions stated therein. 67975

Pluto’s long, long night N

ew Mexico astronomer Clyde Tombaugh discovered Pluto accidentally in 1930. I had the pleasure of meeting and chatting with Tombaugh in 1977 at a meeting of the Lehigh Valley Amateur Astronomical Society in Allentown, Pa. Tombaugh was a gentle and humble man. I think Tombaugh would be proud of NASA’s New Horizons mission to reach this smallest of planets. Sadly, it is probably one of NASA’s final great interplanetary missions; the space agency is currently being gutted by the clearly anti-space Obama regime. NASA’s peaceful mission to explore the cosmos has never been more uncertain and a U.S. president has never been more hostile to the space-science community. NASA’s New Horizons robot spacecraft is on its nine-year deep-space voyage to the planet Pluto—ok, dwarf planet or KBO (Kuiper Belt Object) or—whatever current buzz word you want to slug this fascinating world. The plutonium-powered spacecraft, traveling at 47,000 mph, will flyby chilly Pluto five years from now—July 2015. If successful, it will be the first humanmade object ever to reach Pluto approximately 3 billion miles from Earth. Pluto is the farthest, large planetary body from our Sun. Occasionally, Pluto gives up this position to Neptune due to the unusual, elliptical Plutonian orbit. A year on Pluto lasts 248 terrestrial years. In 2000, after scrubbing its Pluto Fast Flyby, later renamed Kuiper-Pluto Express mission, space agency officials were forced to reconsider their mistake when many scientists and vocal pro-space groups protested loudly. “We have to get to Pluto quickly,” the experts claimed. So, from the ashes of the PFF/KPE mission was born New Horizons. But what’s the hurry and why should we visit Pluto now, you may ask? As it moves away from the Sun, Pluto’s atmosphere will re-freeze falling to the surface as a nitrogen-carbon dioxidemethane snow sometime around the year 2020. Hence, scientists are anxious to get to Pluto now, while it still has a

My pal Arden O

le Russ. Fweoohwee. Sorry I’m late.” “Not a concern Arden, thanks for showing up anyways. I wanted to know how much you think you’d end up charging me if you plowed my dooryard for this winter? “Well, ahh. ffpheeew. You want it pushed back fully, back there? ffPheeew, haaaa. Let me catch my breath first.” “Take your time, Arden. (I laughed) Got all day. No snow in the forecast for a while anyway … that you’d need ta plow, I’m guessing.” “Well, Russ, I hate to be late ya know, but the gol darn people drinkin them, fwooofph … bitter, foreign coffees. What is it they like about it? It’s strong? They tryin to get high? Why don’t they just drink booze? It’s quicker by two.” “What are you sayin’, Arden?” “I’m overly busy. Took too much on, too many jobs. Stone skippin season’s bout flush, winter’s comin’, the ole rubble trailer foundation gotta be bucked up with spruce poles and hemlock boughs right off. I’m hammered with work. Woke up this morning, give myself a French dry-clean, hit the road runnin’, doin’ stuff alllll day. Couldn’t imagine being married. Sorry I’m late.” (I laugh) “You ain’t holding me up, Arden.” “Hope not. But see they got one a them frappacheenolatte, capalatte, fralattes, yogalattes, er fricken pilattes, I don’t know, I can’t keep my lattes straight nowadays, bbut anyway, they got one a them big gol’ darned frickin’ coffee machines at my place I buy my lottery tickets at. Big as a wood splitter. It’s not so bad it takes half the day for the future state senator behind the counter to pull me two or three lotto tickets, but when she’s got ta make one a them coffeecheeno rigs, for some filthy-footed flip-flop wearin’ hippie, why the Egyptians push blocks up the long side of a pyramid faster. The fact that it takes a jet engine to froth milk—the poor gol’ darn hippies in that restaurant tryin to be peaceful reading gluten-free food hand-outs and playin Jumble, why they’d like to power-blast granola out their nostrils when that frothin machine goes off. Must be there’s the same engines in the milk frothin’ machines as they use in the gal danged automatic hand dryers in the public rest rooms now. Miniature 747 engines in them hand dryers. Loud? Ffwwaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhh. My friggin’ hands don’t need to be bone-dry man. I like em a little moist! Them dryers are environmentally good cause they don’t make no paper, but crap, the noise pollution. I stopped at a rest area, one that’s closed now because the state government’s spending too much money, so they thought they’d close some rest areas and take the money they save from closing the rest

WEDNESDAY July 21, 2010

areas and go ahead and spend it opening up a new jail for women, but I was at the rest area doing my number one business, guy triggered the hand-dryer -scared the fluid down outa me so hard I sandblasted a nickel sized whole straight through the urinal. Didn’t know it was so loud to make heat in the 21st century. Cavemen rub two sticks together, make fire, took a while, but cripes, least it didn’t wake the babies back at the cave. My 40-year-old woodstove makes more heat then them hand dryers and it burns quiet as Helen Keller doing karaoke. No need to have fancy coffee. Two teaspoons of instant stirred with your finger set ya right up. But you pay four or five dollars for a coffee made from foreign bean, topped with an inch of very loudly made milk froth, you feel special, like a New York Yankee, or Dallas Cowboy, or a retired French teacher living in Paris. Make you feel like things you envy but know you’ll never be. Fancy coffee makes them people feel rich. Or, richer, relative to what they are. That’s the hook, I know that, and I’m dumb.” “So, ole’ Russ, if your driveway includes the right-of-way, its 45 bucks a plow. If it starts at them two birch posts stuck into, and stickin’ out of the ground, 25. I won’t plow but only when there’s more en four inches. My hand from fingertip to wrist is eight. I put a salute stiff hand, finger first into the freshly fallen, and if my hand’s covered more than half, I plow … if that’s alright?” (I laughed) “It starts at the right-of-way. So fifty. You’re hired Arden.” “Any cash layin’ around you gotta get rid of? Rid of it my way and I’ll take two twenties a plow instead. Barrack ull never know the difference.” “Two 20s it is. Things are out of hand in America ain’t they Arden?” “Well I don’t know if they’re out-a-hand ole Russ, but I know frothin milk and dryin hands is louder than NASCAR. I gotta get. Work, work, work. Can’t believe there’s people can’t find any. My down fall? Never feeling entitled.” 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

gaseous atmosphere. Missing the January-February 2006 launch date would have meant waiting until the year 2200 when Pluto’s longsleeping atmosphere sublimes back from ice to gas. What will we find when we finally visit Pluto? By Lou Varricchio Being almost 6 billion km from the Sun, the rock and ice-bound planet’s surface must be terribly cold, colder than liquid nitrogen. Estimates place Pluto’s surface at a cryogenically chilly minus 396 degrees Fahrenheit. That’s cold enough for water ice to act like rock. But the warmer interior protected by miles of thick nitrogen, methane and carbon monoxide ices, and heated by radioactive rocks at the planet’s core, may support a deep layer of liquid water—a Plutonian ocean. It’s fun to speculate what life forms might have evolved in that Stygian sea. Any future astronauts landing on Pluto will stand on the frontier of the solar system. They will see the dwarf planet’s cratered moon Charon looming large in the sky. Inward, toward the Sun, our feeble home star will appear much like Venus does from Earth. There will be no warmth from its rays. Outward, the explorers will gaze into the immense gulf of interstellar space. What’s in the Sky: A full Moon occurs July 25 at 9:36 p.m. On July 27, look for the elusive planet Mercury at dusk in the west. Mercury is to the lower left of the star Regulus about 25-30 minutes after sunset. All you need are binoculars to get a glimpse of the hot little planet.

Seeing

Stars

Lou Varricchio, M.Sc., is a former science writer at the NASA Ames Research Center in California. He is Vermont’s NASA-JPL Solar System Ambassador and a recipient of the U.S. Civil Air Patrol’s Gen. Chuck Yeager Aerospace Education Achievement Award.

Two percent solution

I

f you lack the imagination to invent a London-based private eye (with a sharp M.D. sidekick) as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle did in the late 1800s, you can always ripoff the author’s inventiveness by appropriating the fictional characters (mix in a few historical ones), give one of them a heroin addiction and the other a cure and—voila!—you can call your opus “The Seven Percent Solution” and even get the little unoriginal tale turned into a Hollywood movie. That’s what screenwriter-director Nicholas Meyer did back in the mid-1970s. His Holmes/Watson theft left no lasting literary footprint, but his title did (which was even a variation on Conan Doyle’s own text); it has since been applied to everything from debtgrowth analysis to diabetes management. Other numbers have been used as well; one is “the two percent solution”, a 2005 political treatise by Matthew Miller. It’s now a Sierra Club catch-phrase for carbon-footprint reduction. Not to be outdone, the Vermont Education Department has its own “two percent solution”: a pro forma budget-cut suggestion to local school districts. Since annual K-12 spending is now above $1.4B, two percent works out to all of $23MM. As I’ve laid out the basic math in previous columns, this amount could be captured by raising the pupil-teacher ratio from 10-to-1 to 12-to-1, about where it was in the cave-dweller school days of the previous decade. A recent math exercise by Hugh Kemper demonstrates the political impossibility of any 2 percent solution based on any such primitive behavior as a public-school-teacher Reductionin-Force: he calculates that going from 10.9 to 11.8 in median class size (approximately the same as p/t ratio) would require the RIFing of 837 teachers, losing their votes and all of their extended families’ votes as well. Going to a class size of an educationally punitive 13 would sidewalk —gasp—1,500. When class sizes, nationwide, were twice that number—mid-1960s—test scores were marginally higher and per-pupil costs were a lot lower, but the present-day educator-vote trumps all such considerations. Meanwhile, beneath the radar, the state ed department—in adept co-operation with the Golden Domers on the north side of Montpelier’s State Street—has been operating a different cost-reduction program, so successful that its statistics are beginning to show up in such places as state census data and school enrollment numbers. As a 2007 study by the Vermont Housing Finance Agency documented, increasing housing costs has had the desirable effect of reducing school age-child population per house. Recent federal census data have shown, from 1995 to 200, Golden Domer actions raising an entire range of cost-of-residency items in Ver-

mont have had the salubrious effect of causing a major out-migration of the 25-to-39 agegroup (over 2200 in five years) and, thanks to recent research showing that, when young adults leave the state, they actually take their children with them, reducing K-12 enrollment proportionately. As of 2008 it was at 94K, down from an earlier high of 106K, and even below the VHFA prediction of 95K by mid-decade. The strategy has even successfully reduced the Vermont birth rate, now lowest in the nation at about 10 per 1,000 of population compared to a national 14. You might call this pursuit of enrollment-reduction the Sarah Lawrence option, after the Bronxville, N.Y., college (1981 S.L. graduate— on campus recently, to give informal instruction in Chicago-style, back-alley Democrat politics, was controverisal White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel) management decision in the 1970s to solve a fiscal-deficit-per-student problem by reducing the number of students. The objective: to achieve, if not profitability, at least income-expense balance. Since Vermont now, like Sarah Lawrence then, finds its perpupil costs excessive, the solution lies in reducing the enrollment until the necessary savings have been captured. Seen in that light, with a target of $23MM and an annual per-pupil cost of $14.3K (2008) with basic math skills you can see that an enrollment cut of about 1,600 would do the job. Indeed, such cuts are already underway; they approximate the annual enrollment drop already achieved, by means of prescient and thoughtful Golden Dome policy, recorded for each of the last four years. The public school establishment has historically taken varied views of the unit-cost question. When enrollments were growing, educrats argued that each new student was a measurable new cost for seating and staffing, but as the 1950s receded and the 1960s proceeded, enrolments stagnated and then, in some states such as Vermont which, with foresight, enabled the trend, began to shrink, the reverse was argued: now, no student number shrinkage ever triggers a spending reduction, Sarah Lawrence to the contrary notwithstanding. In light of all the above, it’s now clear that the SED-proposed two percent solution is already in the works, and is succeeding exactly as planned, although not exactly as publicized. Longtime Vermont resident Martin Harris now lives in Tennesee.


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WEDNESDAY July 21, 2010

OUTLOOK - 5

Chester Music Series starts

SLIPPERY ROCKS — Growing up, some of us were lucky to have a big brother to watch out for us when it came time to cross the slippery rocks of life. In the case of these three boys at Quechee Falls, the steady hand of a caring adult male makes a day at the local swimming hole a cool, fun and safe experience. About navigating those slippery rocks today? No sweat, man! Photo by Stephanie Simon

Rutland area teens missing RUTLAND TOWN— On July 8, 14-year-old Erika Grosso, and 16-year-old Robert West were reported missing. Erika is from Rutland Town and Robert is Wallingford. They are believed to be together, however their location is unknown. Erika's clothing description is unknown. Erika is white female 5'2" tall with shoulder length red hair, brown eyes, and fair skin. Erika weighs 130 pounds. Robert's clothing description is unknown. Robert is a white male, 5'7" tall with dyed black hair (Roberts's hair is shorter in the back and longer in the front), blue eyes, and fair skin. Robert weighs 125 pounds. Anyone with information regarding these juveniles is asked to contact the Vermont State Police, Rutland Barracks at 802-773-9101.

Woodmen of Wells bingo WELLS — Modern Woodmen of America of Wells will host two special bingo events; Thursday, July 29, 5:30–10 p.m., and Saturday, Aug. 1, 10:30-3 p.m. The bingo events will be held at the Modern Woodmen Hall in Wells. The public is welcome to attend; the proceeds will benefit Habitat for Humanity’s efforts to provide safe, decent and affordable housing for low-income families in the area. Habitat is currently building a home for the Giorgi family and will begin construction this fall on a home for the Reed family. Call Ruth Banghart at 802-375-0014 for more details or to help out.

BUSY BEE—The Annual Mt. Holly Farm and Garden Tour will be held July 24, 9:30 a.m.-4 p.m. The self-guided tour of diverse high-altitude farms and gardens. Tickets and a map can be purchased the day of the tour at the Mt. Holly Community Center and Library on the Green in Belmont for $12. This popular event benefits restoration of the historic Mt. Holly Community Center and Library. Rain or shine.

CHESTER — Chester ’s Summer Music Series returns to the Academy building lawn in downtown Chester with four Thursday night concerts starting July 22 from 6:30-8 p.m. The series kicks off with the sounds of the Chris Kleeman Band. Chris and his band will be performing all types of blues along with some of Chris’ fancy finger picking. The following Thursday, July 29, the Starline Rhythm Boys will be picking and singin’. Thursday, Aug. 5, the Music Series welcomes back Gerry Grimo and the East Bay Jazz Ensemble. A perennial favorite, Gerry and his jazz ensemble have captivated listeners with their big band sounds, R & B, jazz, and pop selections. The final concert will be the sound of Rick Redington and the Luv in their first visit to the Music Series. Bring your blankets and lawn chairs and be prepared to sit back and listen to great music on a summer night right in downtown Chester. Local underwriters for Chester ’s series include the Rotary Club of Chester and local businesses. All concerts are free and for all ages. In case of rain, the concerts will be held at the Stone Hearth Inn on Route 11 West. For more information call 875-3400.

The Chris Kleeman Band performs at the free Chester Summer Series.

Smith to run for state’s attorney in primary RUTLAND — Katie Smith of Rutland announced she is running for the position of Rutland County State’s Attorney. She is running in the Republican primary race scheduled for vote on Aug. 24. Smith has been engaged in the practice of criminal law, including experience in Rutland County at the Vermont State’s Attorney’s Office and at the Public Defender ’s Office, for the past decade. Smith said she believes the state’s attorney, who is the chief law enforcement

officer in the county, needs to work with local police to ensure public safety. “Crime is a hindrance to the community—to the safety and well being of community members and to the businesses trying to succeed in this difficult economy. The state’s attorney needs to focus on accountability; accountability both for those who commit crime and accountability within the office for those who prosecute those crimes.” When asked why she chose to return to run in the

Republican primary race for Rutland County State’s Attorney she said, “Rutland County has a lot to offer. I am dedicated to returning it to its vitality and to making it a drug free, crime free community. I want people to want to remain in Rutland County, to raise families, to send their children to school and to open businesses. I have a vision of safe neighborhood communities where we all work together to improve the county and one another ’s quality of life.”

Katie Smith

Poultney Chamber awards July Fourth winners POULTNEY — Poultney Chamber of Commerce has announced the winners of its annual July 4 contests held for parade float entries and its Martin Devlin Memorial 5K Fun Run. This year ’s parade theme was Our Community, Our Volunteers. The 2010 Float Categories and Winners: Most Patriotic–Young At Heart Senior Center, Poultney. Best Depicts Theme-Fair Haven Knights of Columbus, Fair Haven. Best Depicts The Organization–Poultney Women’s Club, Poultney. Most Photographic–Pampered Paws, Poultney. Best Out of Town Float–West Rutland ATV Club, West Rutland.All category signs for the parade were carried by Poultney Goat Goers 4H Club. The 2010 Martin Devlin Memorial 5K Fun Run, a fundraiser competitive event raised $1,200.00 for Hospice of the Rutland County Visiting Nurse Association which, since 1946, provides skilled, compassionate care and peace of mind to people throughout Rutland County. Over 200 Registrants competed in the run and the geographic areas represented, in addition to runners from the local Vermont-New York area included New Jersey and Florida. The Run winners, judged by age categories were: Youngest Female-Kayla Hickey, age 7, Rutland

Youngest Male-Jared Migloire, age 10 0-12 Female-Olivia McChesney, Pawlet 0-12 Male-William Rienas , Old Tappen, N.J. 13-19 Female-Corrie Gethard, Toms River , N.J. 13-19 Male-Bryan Loughlin 20-29 Female-Maggie Klein, Castleton 20-29 Male-Keith Williams, Poultney 30-39 Female-Ericka Eckrote, Poultney 30-39 Male-Eric Fisk, Rutland 40-49 Female-Helen Mango, Tinmouth 40-49 Male-Kevin Perlmutter, Metuchen, N.J. 50-59 Female-Mary Ann Malura, Granville, N.Y. 50-59 Male-Carley Scott 60+ Female-Kim Showalter, Orlando, Fla. 60+ Male-Peter Rowland,Poultney Race Winner Female-Kate Duffy, East Poultney Race Winner Male-Tim Best

Submit items for publication to editor Lou Varicchio at lou.varricchio@myfairpoint.net


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6 - OUTLOOK

WEDNESDAY July 21, 2010

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NOT I! By Corey Rubin 1 8 13 20 21 22 23 25 26 27 28 30 31

37 40 41 42 43 48 50 53 54 55 57 58 59 63 66 67 68 75 76 77 78

ACROSS To blame Porch tune, maybe Spa treatment Washington’s coin Yoga posture Fancy furs Organize guards? Friday show? Prefix with plane Lavish affection Roman’s 103 Oenophile’s concern How the Knicks of 19852000 may have rested their hopes? Take a shot Post-OR area Caspian feeder Major ISP Where the Oregon swim team practices? Auto designer Ferrari Chat room “Incidentally ...” Was too sweet Meter opening Lab animals Not stuffy Roll call response Backlash from a Canadian territory? Agt. under Ness Retailer with blue-and-yellow megastores Lure sneakily Reverse course against one’s better judgment? Set straight Execute perfectly Hun king of myth Answer to “Man, where can I find good music videos online?”

83 Ernest’s unseen friend, in films 87 Chop finely 88 Mineo and a mule 89 Resistance unit 90 Andy’s deputy 92 Mock ending? 93 McGregor of “Star Wars” films 95 Grateful words for a delivery company? 97 Maker of Good Grips kitchen tools 98 College srs.’ tests 101 A, in Avignon 102 Set, as a price 103 Headline about declining sales of Nesquik? 111 Summer quaffs 112 Navigate 113 Jumble wordplay: Abbr. 114 In __: stuck 118 Rise again 121 Card in the game Car Flop Monopoly? 125 Bridge call 126 Papal garment 127 Fail 128 Show contempt for 129 Normand of silents 130 Reagan A.G. DOWN Turquoise hue Use a fork, in a way Off the foul pole, e.g. Threepio’s pal Salt Lake City athlete “Ben-Hur” author Wallace Switch to a better model Saguaros Visibly terrified Try to sink, maybe Like a family sharing a vehicle 12 Pacific weather phenomenon 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit, 1 to 9

13 14 15 16 17 18 19 24 29 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 44 45 46 47 49 50 51 52 55 56 57 59 60 61 62 64 65 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 79 80

TV and radio Sheet music abbr. “ ’S a __ request”: Burns Cell user’s need Tee off Canada __ Perfumer’s compound Drag “Nice weather we’re having” and the like Number of Dvorák symphonies Breezed through Astronaut Grissom Guerra’s opposite Milne tyke PC troubleshooter Have power over Lab assistant in a 1939 film Some canines “Impressive!” Work of Sappho In a funk “The Matrix” hero Helmet wearer Mousquetaires count Crossword inventor Arthur Hammerhead cousin Anatomical passage Way to make steak Demolition supply Biathlete’s gear Agonize Cry of distress Umpteen Self starter? “__ moon, Alice!”: Gleason catchphrase Toward the back Inviting, as lips Straighten out Brother of Fidel Birds’ bills Stable staple Dream Team’s team Gillespie’s genre

81 Doctors hear a lot of them 82 ASCAP competitor 84 “The Council of Elrond” singer 85 Flying Clouds, e.g. 86 Syllable from Curly 90 Beethoven’s birthplace 91 Chevy subcompact 93 Prefix with skeleton 94 Court 95 Pres. before RBH

This Month in History - JULY 23rd - Charles E. Minches of St. Louis, Missouri fills a pastry cone with two scoops of ice cream, and the ice cream cone is invented.(1904) 23rd - Air Force Colonel Eileen M. Collins becomes the first woman to command a space shuttle. (1999) 26th - Mickey Mantle hits his first “Grand Slam”. (1952)

SOLUTIONS TO LAST WEEK ’ S PUZZLES !

96 97 99 100 103 104 105 106 107 108 109

Carousel sight “Yeah, right!” Like coin flips Author Welty Fish stories Cinema name Compass dirección Took four of four, say Oahu outsider Drone’s gathering, briefly Be off one’s guard

110 __ Manor: “Batman” mansion 115 Hardy’s “obscure” stonemason 116 Seemingly forever 117 Greedy cry 119 1921 Capek play 120 ABC talk show, for short 122 Put the cuffs on 123 Grass in strips 124 Bottom line


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OUTLOOK - 7

Clarendon event From page 1 The cost is $15 adult, $10 child and includes dinner, games and entertainment. This event will help Clarendon’s Box of Kisses project that ships music CDs, videos and boxes of kisses to U.S. troops currently serving overseas. Attendees are asked to bring a lawn chair, a blanket for sitting—friends and families around the region are invited to join an entire Vermont town for a very unique, patriotic event.

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for-6 with one run, a double and two RBI. Adalberto Santo was 3-for-4 with two runs, a double and three RBI, while Gift Ngoepe and Kyle Saukko both had two hits and three runs. The loss was the fourth straight suffered by Vermont at State College, dating back to 9-6 and 12-0 losses to the Spikes at Medlar Field July 3-4, 2008. With losses in the first two of the three-game series, Vermont will lose its first series of the season after winning seven and splitting a two-game series. Blke Kelso and David Freitas both had two of Vermont's six hits in the game, while the Lake Monsters scored their two runs on a bases loaded in the first inning and a Justin Miller RBI infield single in the 9th. After the back-to-back losses the Vermont Lake Monsters got back in the win column July 13 as Colin Bates and Shane McCatty both tossed four strong innings, while Russell Moldenhauer added a two-run double in a 3-1 victory over the Spikes in the final game of their three game set. Vermont got its first run in the top of the first as Hendry Jimenez tripled with one out and scored on a Stephen King sacrifice fly. Jimenez's triple was just the second of the season for the Lake Monsters and the first since Ronnie LaBrie tripled on June 22. Bates got the start for Vermont and allowed three hits with one walk and two strikeouts over the first four innings. Two of those hits were two-out singles in the first and the other a two-out single in the second. McCatty (2-1) took over in the fifth, allowing one run on four hits in his four innings for the win. The game stayed 1-0 Vermont until the sixth when Spikes reliever Trent Stevenson walked Chad Mozingo and Stephen King ahead of Moldenhauer's two-run double to centerfield. It was Moldenhauer's first double of the season to go along with his five home runs and he nows leads the team with 13 RBI in just 11 games. McCatty had a 16-inning scoreless streak snapped in the seventh inning when he gave up a one-out double to Matt Skirving and a two-out RBI single to Gift Ngoepe, who was tagged out trying to advance to second. Neil Holland tossed a scoreless ninth inning to earn his second save of the season. David Freitas was 2-for-4 with an RBI to extended his hitting streak to 11 games, the longest for a Lake Monster since J.R. Higley and Francisco Soriano both had 12-game hit streaks during the 2009 season. Freitas, who is now hitting .381 over-

Ru

The Vermont Lake Monsters continue to enjoy success in the 2010 season. After losing two in a row on the road against the State College Spikes last Sunday and Monday, including a 132 thumping on Monday, Vermont bounced back to take the third game last Tuesday 3-1. They then went on to defeat the Aberdeen Iron Birds 6-1 last Wednesday to open a six game home stand. After the back-to-back wins the Lake Monsters were 19-7 and had widened their lead over the Connecticut Tigers to 6 games in the New York-Penn League’s Stedlar Division. After winning the opener of their three game series on Sunday, July 11th 3-0 the State College Spikes brought the bats on Monday and destroyed Vermont pitching with a 13-2 win in the second game. The Spikes produced twenty hits to put back-to-back losses on Vermont for the first time this year. Vermont (17-7), which came into the game having allowed the fewest hits (161) in the New York-Penn League this season, gave up the most hits by a Lake Monsters team since Jamestown had 21 hits on August 19, 2009 at Centennial Field in a 13-0 Jammers win. The Spikes used a walk and four hits in the bottom of the first inning to score four runs off Vermont starter Matt Swynenberg (2-1), who had allowed just one run on 11 hits over 22 innings in his first four starts of the season. State College scored two more runs on five hits in the second inning to chase Swynenberg, who gave up six runs on nine hits in just two innings on Monday. Three more runs on three hits and two walks off reliever Cameron Selik gave the Spikes a 9-1 lead after three innings. Vermont used five pitchers in the game with each pitcher allowing at least one run. After four doubles in a 3-0 win over Vermont Sunday, State College added five doubles and a solo homer among its 20 hits in Monday's win. Matt Curry was 4-for-5 with two runs, a double, homer and four RBI for State College (13-11), while Kelson Brown was 4-

64

Lake Monsters widen lead

all, has nine two-hit games during the 11-game hitting streak. Starter Tyler Waldron (0-2) gave up one run on four hits over five innings to take the loss for State College (13-12), which had won the first two games of the series to give Vermont its first series loss of the season. Bobby Hansen tossed six solid innings and Vermont used a four-run seventh inning to pull away from the Aberdeen Ironbirds as the Lake Monsters opened a six-game home stand with a 6-1 New York-Penn League victory Wednesday, July 14, at historic Centennial Field.

68

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Religious Services

Special Thanks To These Fine Local Businesses For Supporting The Religious Services Page

Brandon Baptist Church, Corner of Rt. 7 & Rt. 73W (Champlain St.) Brandon, VT 802-247-6770. Sunday Services: 10a.m. Adult Bible Study, Sunday School ages 5 & up, Nursery provided ages 4 & under. Worship Service 11a.m. *Lords supper observed on the 1st Sunday of each month. *Pot luck luncheon 3rd Sunday of each month. Wednesdays 6:30p.m., Adult prayer & Bible study, Youth groups for ages 5 and up Grace Episcopal Church Rt. 73, Forestdale February-April: 9am, Holy Eucharist; 9a.m. Sunday Morning Program for children preschool and older. 247-6759, The Rev. Margaret (Margo) Fletcher, Priest-inPartnership LifeBridge Christian Church - 141 Mulcahy Drive, 247-LIFE (5433). Sunday Worship 9a.m., www.lifebridgevt.com, LifeGroups meet weekly (call for times and locations) Living Water Assembly of God 76 North Street (Route 53), Office Phone: 247-4542. Email: LivingWaterAssembly@gmail.com. Website: www.LivingWaterAOG.org. Sunday Service 10a.m. Wednesday Service 7p.m. Youth Meeting (For Teens) Saturday 7p.m. St. Mary’s Parish - 38 Carver St., 247-6351, Saturday Mass 4p.m., Sunday Mass 9:30a.m. St. Thomas’ Episcopal Church - Rt. 7, Brandon Village. February-April services will be held at Grace Church, Rt. 73 Forestdale: 9a.m., Holy Eucharist; 9a.m. Sunday Morning Program for children preschool and older. 247-6759, The Rev. Margaret (Margo) Fletcher, Priest-in-Partnership United Methodist Church Main St., 247-6524. Sunday Worship 10a.m. CASTLETON Castleton Federated Church Rt. 4A - 468-5725. Sunday Worship 10:30a.m. Church of Christ Bible study & services Sunday 10:00a.m. All are cordially welcome. Contact Mike Adaman 273-3379. Faith Community Church Mechanic St., 468-2521. Sunday Worship 10:45a.m. Fellowship Bible Church Rt. 30 North, 468-5122. Sunday Worship 10:45a.m. & 6p.m. Hydeville Baptist Church - Hydeville, Rt. 4A Sunday Worship 9:30a.m. • 265-4047. St. John the Baptist Catholic Church Saturday Mass 4p.m., Sunday 8:30a.m. St. Mark’s Episcopal Church - Main St. Sunday Worship 10:45a.m. third Sunday of the month. CHITTENDEN Church of the Wildwood United Methodist Holden Rd., 483-2909. Sunday Service 10:30a.m. Mt. Carmel Community Church - South Chittenden Town Hall, 483-2298. Sun. Worship 5:30p.m. St. Robert Bellarmine Roman Catholic Church - Saturday Mass 4p.m. Wesleyan Church North Chittenden, 4836696. Sunday Worship 10a.m. CLARENDON The Brick Church 298 Middle Rd. 773-3873. Sunday Worship 10a.m. Nursery Care Available. www.brickchruchvt.com Reformed Bible Church Clarendon Springs, 483-6975. Sunday Worship 9:30a.m. FAIR HAVEN First Baptist Church South Park Place, Sunday Worship 11a.m. First Congregational Church Rt. 22A Sunday Worship 10a.m. Our Lady of Seven Dolors 10 Washington St. Saturday Mass 5:15p.m., Sunday 8 & 9a.m. St. Luke’s - St. Mark’s Episcopal Church Sunday Worship 10:45a.m. United Methodist Church West St., Sun. Service 8:30a.m. FORESTDALE Forestdale Wesleyan Church Rt. 73 Sunday Worship 11a.m. St. Thomas & Grace Episcopal Church Rt. 7, Brandon village: 8 a.m., Holy Eucharist, Rite 1 (traditional language). 9:30 a.m., Holy Eucharist, Rite 2 (contemporary language), with music. “Sunday Morning Program” for children preschool and older (during school year). Telephone: 247-6759, The Rev. Margaret (Margo) Fletcher, Priest-in-Partnership Grace Church Rt. 73, Forestdale - part of St. Thomas & Grace Episcopal Church: May-July services held at St. Thomas, Brandon village (corner of Rt. 7 and Prospect): a.m., Holy Eucharist, Rite 1 (traditional language.) 9:30 a.m., Holy Eucharist, Rite 2 (contemporary language), with music. “Sunday Morning Program” for children preshcool and older (during shcool year.) Telephone: 247-6759, The Rev. Margaret (Margo) Fletcher, Priest-in-Partnership.

Living Water Assembly of God 76 North Street (Route 53), Office Phone: 247-4542. Email: LivingWaterAssembly@gmail.com. Website: www.LivingWaterAOG.org. Sunday Service 10a.m. Wednesday Service 7p.m. Youth Meeting (For Teens) Saturday 7p.m. HUBBARDTON Hubbardton Congregational Church Sunday Worship 10a.m. • 273-3303. East Hubbardton Baptist Church The Battle Abbey, 483-6266 Worship Hour 10:30a.m. IRA Ira Baptist Church Rt. 133, 235-2239. Worship 11a.m. & 6p.m. LEICESTER Community Church of the Nazarene 39 Windy Knoll Lane • 9:30a.m. Worship Service, 11:00 a.m. Bible School, 6:00p.m. Evening Service. Wed. Evening 7:00p.m. Dare to care and Prayer. 3rd Sat. of the month (Sept.-May) 8:00a.m. Men’s breakfast St. Agnes’ Parish - Leicester Whiting Rd, 247-6351, Sunday Mass 8a.m. MENDON Mendon Community Church Rt. 4 East, Rev. Ronald Sherwin, 459-2070. Worship 9:30a.m., Sunday School 11:00a.m. PAWLET Pawlet Community Church 325-3716. Sunday Worship 9:30a.m. St. Francis Xavier Cabrini Church West Pawlet. Sunday Mass 9:30a.m. The United Church of West Pawlet 645-0767. Sunday Worship 10a.m. PITTSFORD Pittsford Congregational Church Rt. 7, 483-6408. Worship 10:15a.m. St. Alphonsus Church Sunday Mass 9a.m. POULTNEY Christian Science Society 56 York St., 287-2052. Service 10a.m. St. David’s Anglican Church Meet at Young at Heart Senior Center on Furnace St., 6451962. 1st Sun. of every month, Holy Eucharist 9:30a.m. Poultney United Methodist Church Main St., 287-5710. Worship 10:00a.m. St. Raphael Church Main St. Saturday Mass 4p.m., Sunday Mass 10a.m. Sovereign Redeemer Assembly sovredeemer@gmail.com • Sunday Worship 10a.m. Trinity Episcopal Church Church St., 287-2252. Sunday Holy Eucharist 10:45a.m. United Baptist Church On the Green, East Poultney. 287-5811, 287-5577. Sunday Worship 10a.m. Welsh Presbyterian Church Sunday Worship 10a.m. PROCTOR St. Dominic Catholic Church 45 South St. Sunday Mass 9:15a.m. St. Paul Evangelical Lutheran Church Gibbs St. Sunday Worship 9a.m. Union Church of Proctor Church St., Sun. Worship 10a.m. SHREWSBURY Shrewsbury Community Church Sun. Service 10:30a.m. SUDBURY Sudbury Congregational Church On the Green, Rt. 30, 623-7295 Open May 30-Oct. 10, for Worship (No winter services) & Sun. School 10:30a.m. WALLINGFORD East Wallingford Baptist Church Rt. 140, 259-2831. Worship 11a.m. First Baptist Church School St., 446-2020. Worship 11a.m. First Congregational Church 446-2817. Worship 10a.m. St. Patrick’s Church Sat. Mass 5p.m., Sun. 10:30a.m. Society of Friends (Quaker) Rotary Bldg., Rt. 7 Sunday meeting for worship 10a.m. South Wallingford Union Congregational Church Sunday Worship 9a.m. WEST RUTLAND First Church of Christ, Scientist 71 Marble St., Sunday School & Service 10a.m., Wednesday Evening Service 7:30p.m. St. Bridget Church Pleasant & Church Streets Saturday Mass 5p.m., Sunday 9a.m. St. Stanislaus Kostka Church Barnes & Main Streets, Saturday Mass 4:30p.m., Sunday 9a.m. United Church of West Rutland Chapel St., Worship 10a.m. 6-12-2010 • 56621

775-4221

Since 1875

Friday, July 23 BELMONT — The Little Mermaid On Stage at Rutland High School's Summer Encore Theatre’s adaptation of The Little Mermaid at 6:30 p.m. on the Mt. Holly Library/Community Center stage. Free. 26 Maple Hill Rd. in Belmont. For more information, 259 3707. BRANDON — Brandon Farmer’s Market, on Fridays from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. in Central Park. Contact Wendy Cijka at 273-2655. BRISTOL — Three Day Stampede for the cure for Cystic Fibrosis. BRISTOL — Have a Heart Food Shelf will offer food distribution at St. Ambrose Catholic Church next to the town Green at 6 p.m. Call Becky Price at 453-3187 or Eldon Sherwin at 453-3189. FAIR HAVEN — The regular market hours for the 2010 season are Fridays from 3-6 p.m. running in the Fair Haven Park. Sherry Smith at 518-282-9781 or Sherry12887@yahoo.com. HINESBURG — Author event at Brown Dog Books & Gifts at 7 p.m. Elizabeth Bassett presents ‘Nature Walks in the Northwest Vermont and the Champlain Valley’ Saturday, July 24 BRISTOL — Three Day Stampede Ride to help cure Cystic Fibrosis. Join Red Knights Vermont IV departing from Rec Field at 2 p.m. and returning at 4 p.m. in time for the Chicken BBQ and delivering of donation check. $25 per driver, $10 per passenger. Rain or shine. 349-8930. NEW HAVEN — Vermont Classic Horse Shows, July 24-25. Call 363-1997 or shellyedson@aol.com. HINESBURGH — Marijke's Perennial Gardens and Open House, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Garden tours 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. our 35 exquisite display gardens, small fruits path, large collection of sedums. Call 453-7590. RUTLAND — Saturday Night Live: Worship on the Hill. Outdoor worship experience in the shadow of the Green Mountains on four Saturday evenings in July and August. Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Rutland (behind Pizza Hut) 5:30 p.m. Sunday, July 25 BRISTOL — Three Day Stampede for the cure for Cystic Fibrosis. FAIR HAVEN —The Fair Haven Farmer's Market at Fair Haven Park, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Contact Sherry Smith at 518-2829781 or Sherry12887@yahoo.com. MIDDLEBURY —Dennis Hopper, Peter Fonda and Jack Nicholson in 1960s film of rebellion, “Easy Rider”. At Town Hall Theater, 7 p.m. Call 382-9222. MONKTON — Monkton Friends Church and Bristol Federated Church shared worship at the East Monkton Church on Church Road, celebrating Christmas in July. Picnic following church at the Monkton Recreation Field. VERGENNES — Vergennes Dorchester Lodge F&AM last Sunday of the month breakfast at lodge on School Street, 7:30-10 a.m.

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Thursday, July 22 BRISTOL — Bristol Republican Town Committee Caucus to be held at 7:30 p.m. at the Town Offices. HINESBURG — Hinesburg Lions Farmers Market on Thursdays from 3:30 and 7 p.m. at the Hinesburg Community Church. ORWELL — Orwell Town Band Rehearsals on Thursdays, July 22 and 29 at 7:30 p.m. at the Orwell Village Green. Rain site: Town Hall. Call 989-4794 for more information.

Bus. Rte. 4 & Pleasant St., • West Rutland, VT • 802-438-2945

the

Voted

Ongoing... VERGENNES — Vergennes City Band Concerts every Monday evening at 7 p.m. on the green until August 23. Except July 12 when it will be at the Falls Park.

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For Calendar Listings— Please e-mail to: newmarketpress@denpubs.com, m i n i m u m 2 w e e k s p r i o r t o e v e n t . E - m a i l o n l y. y. N o faxed, handwritten, or USPS-mailed listings accepted. For questions, cal l Leslie S cribner at 8 0 2 - 3 8 8 - 6 3 9 7. 7.

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RUTLAND All Saints Anglican Church An orthodox Anglo-Catholic Christian Community. Mass & Liturgy offered every Sunday at 4:00p.m. Childcare available. Handicap Accessible. Christian Education. 42 Woodstock Ave., Rutland (Services at Messiah Lutheran Church) 802-282-8098. Email: AllCelticStaintsRutland@comcast.net Alliance Community Fellowship Howe Center, Sunday Worship 10:30a.m. Phone: 773-3613 Calvary Bible Church 2 Meadow Lane, Rutland, VT • 802-775-0358. (2 blocks south of the Rutland Country Club) Sunday Worship Service 9:30a.m. Nursery care available. www.cbcvt.org Christ the King 66 South Mail St. - Saturday Mass 5:15p.m., Sunday Masses 7:30, 9:30 & 11a.m. Church of the Nazarene 144 Woodstock Ave., Pastor Gary Blowers 483-6153. Sunday School for all ages at 9:30a.m. Morning Worship at 10:30a.m., Evening Worship at 6:00p.m. & Wednesday Prayer at 7:00p.m., Children’s Church available during Worship Service. Church of Christ 67 Dorr Dr., Sunday Worship 10:30a.m. The Church of Jesus Christ of LatterDay Saints North Strewsbury Rd., 773-8346. Sacrament 10a.m. Church of the Redeemer Cheeney Hill Center, Cedar Ave., Sunday Service 10a.m. First Baptist Church 81 Center St., 773-8010 - The Rev. Mark E. Heiner, Pastor. Sunday worship 10:30a.m., Sunday school 9:00a.m. Good Shepherd Lutheran Hillside Rd. - Saturday Worship 5:30 p.m., Sunday Worship 10:30a.m. Grace Congregational United Church of Christ - 8 Court St., 775-4301. Sunday Chapel Service 8:30a.m., Worship 10a.m. Green Mountain Baptist Church 50 Barrett Hill Rd. , 747-7712. Sunday Worship 11a.m., Evening service 6p.m. Green Mountain Missionary Baptist Church - 98 Killington Ave., 775-1482 • Sunday Worship 11a.m. & 6p.m. Immaculate Heart of Mary - Lincoln Ave. Saturday Mass 4:30p.m., Sunday Mass 8 & 10:15a.m. Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witnesses Gleason Rd. - Public Meeting 10a.m. Messiah Lutheran Church 42 Woodstock Ave., 775-0231. Sunday Worship 10a.m. New Hope in Christ Fellowship 15 Spellman Terrace, 773-2725. Sunday Worship 10:15a.m. Pentacostals of Rutland County Corner of Rt. 4 and Depot Lane, 747-0727. Evangelistic Service 6p.m. Roadside Chapel Assembly of God Town Line Rd., 775-5805. Sunday Worship 10:25a.m. Rutland Jewish Center 96 Grove St., 773-3455. Fri. Shabbat Service 7:30p.m., Sat. Shabbat Service 9:30a.m. Salvation Army - 22 Wales St. Sunday Worship 11a.m., Praise Service 1:30 p.m. Seventh-Day Adventist 158 Stratton Rd., 775-3178. Saturday Worship 11a.m. St. Nicholas Orthodox Church 8 Cottage St. - Sunday Service 10a.m. St. Peter Church Convent Ave. - Saturday Mass 5:15p.m., Sunday Masses 7:30 and 11:30a.m. Trinity Episcopal Church 85 West St., 775-4368. Sunday Eucharist 8, 9 & 10a.m., Wed. 12:05p.m., Thurs. 9a.m., Morning Prayer Mon.-Sat. at 8:45a.m. True Vine Church of God 78 Meadow St., 775-8880 or 438-4443. Sunday Worship 10:30a.m. • Training for Reigning, Wednesdays at 7p.m. Nursery available during Sun. & Wed. services. J.A.M. Sessions for teens bi-weekly Fridays at 7p.m. Women’s Bible Study Tuesdays at 10:30a.m. Unitarian Universalist Church 117 West St., 775-0850. Sunday Services 10:30a.m. Rev. Erica Baron United Methodist Church 71 Williams St., 773-2460. Sunday Service in the Chapel 8 and 10a.m. United Pentecostal Church Corner of Rt. 4, Depot Lane, 773-4255. Sunday Services 9:30a.m. and 6p.m., Evangelical Service 5p.m. Wellspring of Life Christian Center 18 Chaplin Ave., 773-5991. Sunday Worship 11a.m. BRANDON Brandon Congregational Church Rt. 7 Sunday Worship 10a.m.

WEDNESDAY July 21, 2010

57600

8 - OUTLOOK


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APARTMENT FOR RENT FOUR STUDENTS-4 bedroom, 2 bath college apartment. Large brownstone, furnished, includes washer/dryer. 92 Court St. $2150 per student/semester plus electric. 518-572-3151.

COMMERCIAL RENTAL BUSY ROUTE 3 rental/office/distribution. 2300 sq. ft. plus attached garage area. $1850 month. Directly behind Rambach Bakery. Will divide. 518-572-3151.

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$35,000 / 3BR COTTAGE ON ISLE MADAME, CAPE BRETON, NS, CA OVER LOOKING PETIT DE GRAT HARBOR WITH BEACH AND HARBOR ACCESS. NEAR CAPE AUGET ECO-TRAIL AND A MARINA. MANY UPDATES - ROOF, ELECTRIC, APPLIANCES, PARTIALLY FURNISHED, FULLY EQUIPPED KITCHEN. PUBLIC WATER/SEWER AND WIRED FOR CABLE/INTERNET. MORE INFO, PICTURES AT CA REALTOR LISTING WWW.MLS.CA. SELECT RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES PRESS ENTER. AT TOP OF SCREEN ENTER MLS NUMBER 75008706 AND PRESS ENTER. THIS AD IS POSTED BY THE US OWNER (336-969-0389).

4 BEDROOM, 2 Bath house for rent in Port Henry, NY. Conveniently located within walking distance to stores, pharmacy, restaurants, library, and Lake Champlain and Port Henry Beach. Spacious kitchen, large living room, dining room, and laundry room. Newly weatherized. Easy maintenance yard. Available September 1st. $900.00/month plus utilities, security deposit and references. Call 518-597-3160 or 597-3545. PRIVACY & CONVENIENCE: 3 bdr. home,

on 4 acres. 1 1/2 bath. 2-car garage. Unfurnished. Truesdale Hill Road, LG. Available Aug. 1. 518-232-5393. Anytime.

REAL PROPERTY FOR SALE BY OWNER: Own 1/4 interest in 2-bedroom Camp with 3.6 acres on Dry Channel Pond, Tupper Lake. Taxes/insurance less than $400 year. $28,000. For details 518-8915962 - 518-891-0775

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LOOKING FOR HOME TO RENT. A mature, highly responsible couple is looking to rent a good 2 - 4 bedroom home with fireplace in Middlebury area or surrounding communities. Would be interested in long term arrangement. 388-0399

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THE CL ASSIFIED (802) 388-6397 FAX: 802-388-6399 • EMAIL: GAIL@DENPUBS.COM ADOPTION A CARING, LOVING couple seeks to adopt a newborn and provide happiness and security. Expenses paid. Please call us at 877-574-0218.

ADOPTION: WE are a professional secure couple ready to love, protect and create a life of happiness for your infant. Let us help with all medical/living expenses. Confidential/legal. David Radis Our attorney 800-637-2882 www.radis-adopt.com ADOPTION: WE are a professional secure couple ready to love, protect and create a life of happiness for your infant. Let us help with all medical/living expenses. Confidential/legal. David Radis Our attorney 800-637-2882 www.radis-adopt.com PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? You choose from families nationwide. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Abby’s One True Gift Adoptions. 866-413-6292.

ANTIQUES ANTIQUE FAIR AND FLEA MARKET July 31 & Aug 1 Washington County Fairgrounds, Rte. 29, Greenwich NY. $2 admission. (Sat. 8a-6p, Sun 9a-4p) Featuring over 175 dealers. GREAT FOOD. Early-Bird Friday (7/30 - 6a-6p - $10). RAIN or SHINE. Call (518) 331-5004

APPLIANCES KENMORE DRYER, Standard capacity, Nearly new, $225, 518-547-8471 REFRIGERATOR FOR Sale, $50, 518-5468614.

ELECTRONICS DIRECT TO home Satellite TV $19.99/mo. FREE installation, FREE HD-DVR upgrade. New customers - No Activation Fee! Credit/Debit Card Req. Call 1-800-795-3579 X-BOX 360 Rock Band Bundle “Special Edition” guitar, drum, etc. original box, like new. $149.99. Call 802-558-4860

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$$$ACCESS LAWSUIT CASH NOW!! Injury lawsuit dragging? Need $500-$$500,000+? We help. Call 1-866-386-3692, http://www.lawcapital.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 1986 WARDS 8600BTU Air Conditioner, Model CWE-5665B 115VAC, Wt. 97lbs. Good Condition, $55 OBO 518-761-3399 5 GALLON gas cans, like new, all 5 for $35. Call 518-623-2203. ACR METAL ROOFING/SIDING DIST. Quality Products, Low Prices, Metal Roofing and Trims. Complete Garage & Barn Packages, Lumber, Trusses. Delivery available. Free literature. 1-800-325-1247, http://www.acrmetal.com/

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 PRO FORM XP185U bike exerciser. 1 year old, hardly used. Paid $300, asking $100 802-434-3107 SMALL DOG Quick Finder Safety Nail Clippers, New $35, Make Offer. 518-4940141. SNOW PLOW F017 Honda ATV. Used once cost $575. Sell for $200. Schroon Lake area. All calls returned. 518-532-9841. TELESCOPING ANTENNA Pole, 4 Stages, Goes Up About 50 ft., Never Used, $75, 518798-1426 TRAILER WITH sturdy 4x6 wooden box, spare tire, cover, lights, tie downs, $90. Call 518-585-7549.

ADIRONDACKS DAY LILIES. 100 varieties all colors. Call for hours and directions. 518962-4801, Westport.

WESLO CADENCE G-25 Electric Treadmill, Great Condition, Space Saver, Currently Using, $200, Thurman. Call 518-623-2381.

BEAUTIFUL CHINA hutch, maple finish, 6’7”H x 53.5”, $400. 2-205/60R15 tires, excellent condition, $60. 563-3406 or 2489310.

FREE

BIKE CARRIER for roof of car etc. $19.99 Call: 802-459-2987 DIRECTV - $26 off/mo! 150+ Channels & Premium Movie Channels $29.99/mo. FREE SHOWTIME - 3 mos. New customers only. 1888-420-9472

2 ADULT male cats. Very pretty, neutered, all shots. Owner deceased. 563-7059. FREE TO a good home. Black 2 year old neutered male Shepherd. Great with children. 518-573-6321. MOVING: Head Racing Skis (plus others), Whitewater practice Kyack. $100 takes all. 518-232-5393. Anytime.

FURNITURE

ELECTRIC WINCH FOR SALE - X1 Superwinch 12 volt DC - power in and out 40 ft cable and hook, 1500 pulling power. $75 Lake Clear 518 891-7662

BEAUTIFUL OAK Corner TV/China Cabinet from Wood Carte, $150, Call 518-761-6192.

FORECLOSED HOME AUCTION 300+ NE Homes - Auction:7/31, Open House: July 17, 24, 25, REDC. View Full Listings. www. Auction.com, RE Broker#109901870

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.

FOUR WHEELER w/ snow plow & brush buggy. Moving. $1,500 Exit 23/ I-87. 518232-5393. Anytime.

LAZY BOY Rocker Recliners,one pair, one brown, one beige. good condition, $50 ea. 518-494-5030

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LEATHER LIVING ROOM SET in original plastic, never used. Original price $3000, sacrifice $975. Call Bill 857-453-7764.

GIGANTIC GYM MIRRORS, $99 48”X100” (11 available) @ $115/each. 72”x100” (9 available) @ $165/each. 60”x84” beveled (3 available) @ $135/each. Will Deliver free. Installation Available. 1-800-473-0619.

PINE DINING Set, 60” table with two 12” leaves, 2 captain and 4 mate chairs, $200. Call 518-494-2056.

HOT TUB Cover, Like New, 86”x74”, Hunter Green, $200, Chestertown. Call 518-4945687. LEATHER DESK chair, Mint condition, (stationary ,rock ,up or down) $45. 563-2681 OUTDOOR FURNITURE Includes Hexagon Table, Six Chairs, Lounge Chair with Cushions, $175, 518-494-4909

GARAGE SALES EVERY SATURDAY , 10-4 July-August. All kinds craft supplies with both patterns/ fabrics and more. Household items. 215 Cutting Rd., Elizabethtown. 873-6331.

GENERAL **ALL SATELLITE Systems are not the same. Monthly programming starts under $20 per month and FREE HD and DVR systems for new callers. CALL NOW 1-800-7994935 AIRLINES ARE HIRING Train for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified Housing available. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (888) 686-1704 AIRLINES ARE HIRING: Train for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified Housing available. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance. 866-453-6204. ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Paralegal, *Accounting, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. Call 800-510-0784 www.CenturaOnline.com ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from home. Medical, Business, Paralegal, Accounting, Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial aid if qualified. Call 800-494-3586 http://www.CenturaOnline.com/ BUILDING SALE! “ROCK BOTTOM PRICES!” Quick Delivery. 25X30 $4577. 30X40 $7140. 32X60 $11,950. 35X60 $13,990. 40X70 $14,650. 46X140 $37,600. OTHERS. Ends optional. Pioneer DIRECT 1800-668-5422 DIRECTV 50% OFF for one year! FREE HD/DVR Upgrades, Standard Install, 3mo STARZ + SHOWTIME. Get started for $0! New cust only, qual pkgs. DirectStarTV 1800-279-5698 DIRECTV FREE Standard Installation! FREE HD/DVR upgrade! New Customers Only. Qual. Pkgs ends 7/27/10. 1-877-462-3207

HANDS ON CAREER Train for a high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified Job placement assistance. Call AIM today (866)854-6156. MAPLE CABINET set, corner base over refrigerator & wall, 30x30, all 3 for $475. 6486169 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 TRAILERS NEW/ Pre-owned/ Rentals. Largest supplier in Northeast. Guaranteed fair pricing! Landscape/ construction/ auto/ motorcycle/ snowmobile, horse/ livestock, more! Immediate delivery. CONNECTICUT TRAILERS, BOLTON, CT 877-869-4118, http://www.cttrailers.com/ WANTS TO purchase minerals and other oil & gas interests. Send details to P.O. Box 13557, Denver, Co 80201

BUY VIAGRA, Cialis, Levitra, Propecia and other medications below wholesale prices. Call: 1-866-506-8676. Over 70% savings. www.fastmedonline.com BUY VIAGRA, Cialis, Levitra, Propecia and other medications below wholesale prices. Call: 1-866-506-8676. Over 70% savings. www.fastmedonline.com IF YOU USED Type 2 Diabetes Drug Avandia between 1999-present & suffered a stroke/ heart attack or congestive heart failure you may be entitled to compensation. Attorney Charles Johnson 1-800-535-5727. IF YOU USED Type 2 Diabetes Drug Avandia between 1999-present & suffered a stroke/ heart attack or congestive heart failure you may be entitled to compensation. Attorney Charles Johnson 1-800-535-5727. NEED MEDICAL, DENTAL, & Prescription Benefits? $79/month for the entire family!! Unlimited usage. Dental, vision & hearing included free today. Everyone is accepted! Call 866-610-2540.

EDUCATION

30-30 Model 679 Mossberg Lever Action Rifle, $300, 518-546-7221. GUNS WANTED. Good quality rifles, handguns, shotguns and antique guns. Call 802492-3339 days or 802-492-3032 evenings.

LAWN & GARDEN LAWN MOWER Troy-Bilt 21” Rotary Mower with grass catcher. Used very little, excellent condition. $199.00 (518) 546-9759

MUSIC MANDOLIN AND hard case. $80. You pick up. Call Atom @ 518-576-4016.

ENGAGEMENT: Elizabeth Rizzie, Cadyville, NY to John (Dick) Adams of Altona, NY. Formerly of Grand Isle, Vt. An August 2010 wedding is planned.

FREE KITTENS 1 black, 2 grey and white, 1 black and white, will make good farm cats, 518-546-7978, you pick up, before 8:30am. Bring your own cage.

FREE HD for LIFE! DISH Network. $24.99/mo. - Over 120 Channels. Plus $500 BONUS! Call 1-800-915-9514.

LABRADOODLE PUPPIES, F1B’s: Family raised, paper trained, microchippec, first shots/wormings, vet checked, good hips http://www.lyonshadepups.com/ for app./info. 802-860-5828, $1,000

FREE HD FOR LIFE! Only on DISH NETWORK! Lowest Price in America! $24.99/mo for over 120 Channels! $500 Bonus! 1-888377-8994

HEALTH

GUNS/AMMO

DIRECTV SAVE $29/mo for a YEAR! NO Equipment/Start-Up Costs! Free HD/DVR Upgrade! Other Packages Start $29.99/mo! Ends 7/21/10. New cust. only, qual pkgs. DirectStarTV 1-800-620-0058

FREE HD FOR LIFE! Only on DISH Network! Lowest Price in America! $24.99/ mo for over 120 Channels. $500 Bonus! Call 1-800-7270305

34643

KAYAK SPORT skirt for oversized cockpit measuring 21 1/2 wide and 40 long. Brand new, tags on $30. 873-2424

PETS & SUPPLIES

TINY TINY Shorkie puppies for sale. Vet checked, 1st shots, dewormed. Ready now. $400 each. Call 518-643-0167

SPORTING GOODS

ACCREDITED HIGH SCHOOL DIPOLMA. English/Spanish. Earn your diploma fast! No GED. CALL NOW! 1-888-355-5650 ATTEND COLLEGE Online from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Paralegal, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 877-692-9599 www.Centura.us.com ATTEND COLLEGE Online from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Paralegal, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 877-692-9599 www.Centura.us.com 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. 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. 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. Call us at 1-800-989-4237

Call and place your listing at 1-800-989-4237

Service You Want & Deserve. 6 ways to place a

Walk In The Eagle: 16 Creek Rd., Suite 5 Middlebury, VT 05753

Call 1-800-989-4237 x109

classified ad in the...

Email gail@denpubs.com

• Call And Place Your Classified Listing Today!

•• • ND

••A

Mail The Eagle 16 Creek Rd., Suite 5 Middlebury, VT 05753

Web www.denpubs.com

Special Savings Available!

Fax (802) 388-6399 34644


www.gmoutlook.com

WEDNESDAY July 21, 2010

OUTLOOK - 11

Help Wanted

Need a job? Looking for that “right fit” for your company?

Find what you’re looking for here!

92391

HELP WANTED/LOCAL

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

C A R E TA K E R / M A I N T E N A N C E Willsboro,NY Grounds maintenance Cabin repair/upkeep: light carpentry, plumbing, roofing, elect., painting. Possible on-site housing Applicants must be able to work independently and be self-motivated. Please send references to longpond@cabinscottages.com, 518 963-4126

HELP WANTED $$$ 47 PEOPLE WANTED $$$ EARN Up To $4,794 Weekly Working From Home Assembling Information Packets. No Experience Necessary! Start Immediately! FREE Information. CALL 24hrs. 1-866-8992756 $$$ START NOW $$$ 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 $50/HR potential. Get Paid to Shop and Eat. Retail Research Associate Needed. No Experience. Training Provided. Call 1-800742-6941 ACTORS/MOVIE EXTRAS - $150-$300/Day depending on job. No experience. All looks needed. 1-800-281-5185-A103

TRAVEL CONSULTANT/Agents needed Immediately in Addison County, FT/PT. Commissions/Bonuses. Will Train. Call Debby 802-893-1666

4 C o lo r P ress F o rem an This is an opportunity to be part of a 62-year-old independently owned company with an excellent business and financial reputation. Denton Publications, Inc. is accepting applications for a 4 Color Press Foreman to lead our second shift schedule. Ideal person will have strong leadership, organizational and quality control skills, as well as the drive to continuously improve.

HIRING IMMEDIATELY FOR PROJECTS IN VERMONT

If you believe you have the qualifications necessary to fill this position or have skills you feel we could use in our firm, please submit your resume including compensation requirements.

INSTRUCTION & TRAINING

PIPE FOREMEN

Benefits include, shared cost health insurance, paid days off, 401k retirement program and life insurance.

HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA! Graduate in 4 Weeks! PACE Program. FREE Brochure. CALL NOW! 1-866-562-3650 Ext. 30 www.southeasternhs.com

Come in and talk to: Tom Henecker, Human Resource Manager or call 518-873-6368 x222

HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA! Graduate in just 4 Weeks! PACE Program. FREE Brochure. CALL NOW! 1-800-532-6546 Ext. 412 www.continentalacademy.com

Denton Publications PO Box 338 Elizabethtown, NY 12932 E-mail: tom@denpubs.com

ASSEMBLE MAGNETS & CRAFTS at home! Year-round work! Great pay! Call toll free 1-866-844-5091

67968

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

For Application & Interview CALL 802-626-5201 Fax 802-626-8011 Apply online at www.jamcdonald.com EOE M/F

52383

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. BARTENDERS IN Demand. No Experience Necessary. Meet New People, Take Home Cash Tips. Up to $200 per shift. Training, Placement and Certification Provided. Call (877) 435-8840 BODYGUARDS WANTED FREE training for members. No experience OK. Excellent $$$. Full & Part Time. Sign on bonus. 1-615-2281701. http://www.psubodyguards.com/ DRIVERS: Get home multiple times per week! Excellent Pay, Benefits More Dedicated. N. Springfield, VT oppty w/ Werner Enterprises 1-800-959-7103 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 INDEPENDENT SALES AGENTS WANTED - Merchant Services Industry. B2B experience preferred, full training provided. Lifetime residuals plus upfront comm. Unlimited earning potential. Greg 866-725-8500x104,mailto:gregg@processpremier.com MYSTERY SHOPPERS! Earn up to $150 daily. Get paid to shop pt/ft. Call now 800690-1272. THE JOB FOR YOU! $500 Sign-on-bonus. Travel the US with our young minded enthusiastic business group. Cash and bonuses daily. Call Shawn 800-716-0048 today TRAVEL, TRAVEL! $500 Sign-on Bonus! Seeking Sharp Guys & Gals, Rock-n-Roll Atmosphere, Blue jean environment. Nick 888-890-2055 TRAVEL, TRAVEL! $500 Sign-on Bonus! Seeking Sharp Guys & Gals, Rock-n-Roll Atmosphere, Blue jean environment. Nick 888-890-2055

Check out the classifieds. Call 800-989-4237

NURSING

Post-Acute Unit Clerk Helen Porter is searching for a Unit Clerk for our Post-Acute Neighborhood for the day shift, Monday through Fridays. A qualified applicant will have a passion for caring and the desire to learn and work with others. Our mission at Helen Porter is to promote a swift recovery of those needing rehabilitation and to be a true home for those staying longer. We have transformed our units into neighborhoods in an effort to provide a home for our community members. Join our community and have the opportunity to build long, meaningful relationships with the elderly and assist those in need. Qualified applicants must have: • A high school diploma – some college preferred • Previous experience as a unit clerk in a short-term rehabilitation environment or acute care facility • Exceptional organizational skills and attention to detail • Ability to multi-task and perform in a fast-paced, sometimes stressful environment • Excellent communication skills and phone etiquette Compensation will be negotiated based on experience.

If you would like to apply for this position please contact: Joshua Darragh, Human Resources Helen Porter Healthcare and Rehabilitation Center 30 Porter Drive, Middlebury, VT 05753 jwdarragh@hphrc.org (802) 385-3669 Visit our website, www.portermedical.org for more information.

Helen Porter is searching for flexible nurses with a passion for caring and the desire to learn and work with others for our long-term care neighborhood. Our mission at Helen Porter is to promote a swift recovery of those needing rehabilitation and to be a true home for those staying longer. We have transformed our units into neighborhoods in an effort to provide a home for our community members. Join our community and have the opportunity to build long, meaningful relationships with the elderly and assist those in need. We offer competitive wages, benefits including paid vacations, sick time, tuition, dental, vision, and health insurance, and a 403B plan. Join our community and get the opportunity to learn and utilize our new “state of the art” electronic charting system and chart your notes right on the computer screen. Below are the positions available. Full-time Nurse – Night Shift (10:45p – 7:15a) Requirements: Experienced RN or LPN Weekend Nurse – Evening Shift (2:45p – 11:15a) Requirements: RN preferred. Will consider LPN with experience. Every Other Weekend, Cart or Charge Nurse – Day Shift (6:45a – 3:15p) Requirements: RN preferred. Will consider LPN with experience. Per Diem Nurses Requirements: RN or LPN Flexibility is the key component to this position

Get your application online at portermedical.org, stop in to pick up an application, or mail resume to: 30 Porter Drive, Middlebury, VT 05753 For questions contact: Human Resources at (802)385-3669 or e-mail jwdarragh@hphrc.org 50414 50424

Automotive

Need an auto? Need someone to take that auto off your hands?

Find what you’re looking for here!

92397

(518) 642-3167 Fax (518) 642-3039

C

6 Miles South of Granville on Route 22

Automotiv Valley eL e t L a

Sl

7311 State Route 22 Granville, NY 12832

We carry

Used Auto Parts • Free Nationwide Parts Locating Service Always Buying Cars & Trucks • Call for Pricing (Free Towing)

Autobody Repairs

Mechanical Services

Free Estimates • PPG Paint Mixing On Site • Frame Repairs Auto Glass Replacement • 100% Warranty 71803 51576

Servicing All Makes and Models with Honesty & Integrity

BOATS

FARM EQUIPMENT

2007 SEADOO 4-TEC GTI SE 1494CC SUPERCHARGED, INTERCOOLED mint jet ski, adult owned, less than 50 hours..$9K new, sell $6.9K trlr incl...ALSO...EZ DOCK FLOATING DOCK SYSTEM, three 5’ x 10’ docks, one 6 x 10 section,one ezport III jet ski dock, all hardware for install $5K. Can deliver for fee. Call for more info., pictures (518)569-6970 adkdolphin@hotmail.com

1939 ALLIS Chalmers W/C tractor, loader, sickle bar, $2500. New Idea 10A horse drawn manure spreader, $1650. 2001 Tandem axle trailer, electric brakes & new tires, $975. 518643-9020 or 518-570-8367.

HORNBECK GUIDE BOAT. 14’ CUSTOM BUILT KEVLAR; 55 LBS.; WOOD/CANE ACCESSORIES, BRASS HDWR.; INCLUDES OARS, GUIDE PADDLES. EXCELLENT CONDITION, ONE OWNER. $3150. OBO. CALL PETER AT 518-7455670.

L OANS A VAILABLE NO CREDIT? BAD CREDIT? BANKRUPTCY?

ZODIAC SB285, 3.5hp motor. Used very little. $1695. 802-425-3041.

Hometown Chevrolet Oldsmobile

94 OLDS Regency, Florida car, clean...no rust, must see, 4 good tires, plus 4 new snows, 3.8 engine, leather, 109560 miles, 518-524-6973, $2550, Lake Placid.

152 Broadway Whitehall, NY • (518) 499-2886 • Ask for Joe

71070

CARS FOR SALE 1972 CORVETTE STINGRAY. 67,900 miles. 4-speed, stainless steel calipers, T-Tops, all original. VERY NICE, NOT MINT. $15,500 OBO. 518-563-2771. 1989 CADILLAC Brougham, $2100. Call after 5pm 518-962-2376

MOTORCYCLE/ ATV 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.

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

DONATE YOUR CAR. FREE TOWING. “Cars for Kids”. Any condition. Tax deductible http://outreachcenter.com/ , 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

TRUCK FOR SALE

AUTO DONATIONS AAAA DONATION Donate your Car, Boat or Real Estate, IRS Tax Deductible. Free Pickup/ Tow Any Model/ Condition. Help Under Privileged Children Outreachcenter.com, 1800-883-6399. 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 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

2001 International 4700 24’ box with ramp, 25,500 GVW - no CDL, 444E V8 diesel, auto. trans., 256,087 miles. Runs well. $4,000 OBO Call Bill at (518) 873-6368, ext. 224

06045


www.gmoutlook.com • • • 2010 • • •

THE CHAMPLAIN VALLEY FAIR

Best of

GEORGE B. TUCKER, INC.

A N A H K GYM

“Over 30 Years of Experience”

Complete Excavating

WE DELIVER

Snowplowing and

675 Route 100 South Mailing Address: 551 Town Farm Road Ludlow, VT 05149

Sanding Needs

Phone: 802-22TRUCK (802) 228-7825) Fax: 802-228-7612

George Tucker Owner gtuckerinc@tds.net

& Games” ore Than Fun

tM

90157

ho Wan “For Riders W

WEDNESDAY July 21, 2010

52887

12 - OUTLOOK

Sponsored By:

September 3rd • 12 NOON • ••• Event List •••

Sponsored In Part By: • Millbrook Shavings • Denny’s Restaurant • JUMP & BEND • BALL & CHAIN • MR Satellite • WEAVE & BACK • BARREL RACE • Corey Equine Dental • SKILL BARRELS • HORSE SHOE RACE • Fashion Corner Bridal • G.W. Tatro Construction Inc. • Harvest Equipment (Optional Game - No Points) • Riverside Tractor • Pet Food Warehouse • BCI Construction • Blue Flame Gas 2 Rider Team Event - 2 Rider Team Event $ • Walker’s Farm, Home & Tack 20 Bales of Shavings 200 To Each Rider • Upper 10 Trailer Sales To Each Rider Of The Winning Team Of The Winning Team • Vermont Large Animal Clinic Compliments of Compliments of Equine Hospital Millbrook Shavings • www.HorsemensGuide.com FORD-TOYOTA-SCION • New World Coin & Jewelry • Natural Horsemanship Center of VT at New Horizons Farm

1st Place Award • $1,000

•••Special Exhibition Event••• RESCUE RACE

Champlain Valley Exposition

Essex Jct., VT • Rain or Shine

FOX & HOUND

Technical support for this event is provided by Shirley Langlois & Northwestern Riding & Driving Club Staff

(Compliments of 98.9 WOKO & The Eagle) nd

2

Place Award • $500 (Compliments of Poulin Grain & Depot Home & Garden)

3rd Place Award • $350 (Compliments of Family Farm Insurance)

4th Place Award • $250 (Compliments of F.E. Hart Fence Co.)

5th Place Award • $150 (Compliments of Tony’s Tack Shop)

1000

$$

TO WINNER OF THE

BARREL RACE

Competitors must be 16 years or older to participate in events. 45 Rider Maximum Pre-registration required by August 3rd! Register early...we sold out last year! Rider must run in all 6 classes - $75 entry fee for 6 events. Special Exhibition Event Optional. No Point Value No Extra Charge - Just Fun!

Sponsored By Ridgefield Stables Bill & Dawn Superneau, owners

52323

ALL RIDERS MUST BE CHECKED IN BY 11 AM DAY OF SHOW For More Info. or Sign-up Packet Call Heidi Littlefield: 802-527-0257 or e-mail: heidivttimes@yahoo.com

60663

WE HAVE...The Cleanest, Lowest Mileage, BEST Priced, Pre-owned Chryslers, Dodges, & Jeeps... 2006 JEEP LIBERTY SPORT

Sharp!

$

10,995

2005 DODGE RAM 2500

4WD Quad Diesel RARE, $ Only 44,000 Miles

2009 Dodge Durango SLT , Only 22,000 Miles!!........................$24,995 2009 Dodge Ram 1500 SLT , Quad Cab 4WD, Only 13,000 Miles..............................................................................$25,995 2009 Dodge Grand Caravan, Like New, 30,000 Miles..............$17,995 2009 Dodge Journey SXT, 6 Cyl, Fully Equipped......................$18,995 2008 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo, Gorgeous 26,000 Miles..$19,450 2008 Dodge Caliber SE, Auto, Air, 24,000 Miles.......................$12,495 2008 Chrysler Town & Country LX, Only 38,000 Miles...........$14,995 2007 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo, Only 30,000 Miles .....................................................................................$17,995 - SOLD 2007 Ram 2500 HD, Quad 4WD, 27,000 1-Owner...................$26,995 2007 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT, Loaded, 3 To Choose From, All Excellent Condition....................................................$14,995 2006 Chrysler Pacifica, AWD, Loaded, 36,000 Miles, 1 Owner.$15,995 cing Great Finane! Availabl es! We Love Trad

26,995

2003 DODGE INTREPID SE

Only 60,000 Miles, Always $ Serviced Here, Nice

5,950

2006 Dodge Dakota, Quad Cab 4WD, Fully Loaded.................$15,995 2006 Jeep Liberty Sport, Auto, Full Power, 44,000 Miles.........$13,995 2006 Jeep Liberty Sport, Auto, Great Buy................................$10,995 2006 Chrysler Town & Country, 1-Owner...................................$8,995 2005 Chrysler Town & Country Touring, Sold By Us, Serviced Here, Nice..................................................................$10,995 2004 Chrysler Sebring Touring, Xtra Clean Car.........................$6,995 2004 Ram 2500 SLT , Quad Cab 4WD, 16,000 Miles, 1-Owner........................................................................$20,995 - SOLD 2003 Chrysler Town & Country Touring, Rust Free Clean Pa., Van.......................................................................................$9,995 2003 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo, Super Clean & Nice.........$7,995 2001 Dodge Ram 1500 SLT , Quad 4WD Diesel, 1-Owner, Spent Winters In The South, No Rust!!.....................................$12,995

Compare, You’ll See, We Won’t Be Undersold!! 20 Liberty Street, Fair Haven, VT • 265-4964

64003


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