Seven Days, March 9, 2005

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on public-access tv, the ‘deadbeat’ goes on p.18a smart read: marc estrin’s education p.32a M A R C H

0 2 - 0 9 ,

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V O L . 1 0

PAUL ASBELL roots around p.34a

Is Bill Keogh trying to dry up Burlington’s late-night watering holes? story: Ken Picard p.28A

N O . 2 8

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S E V E N D AY S V T. C O M

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march 09-16, 2005

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SEVEN DAYS

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march 09-16, 2005

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SEVEN DAYS

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SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005

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contents 05A

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 09-16, 2005

sections 37A

47A

on the cover

38A 39A 41A 42A 43A

RAZING the BARS

47A 47A

Is Bill Keogh trying to dry up Burlington’s late-night watering holes?

51A 51A 52A 53A 55A

story: Ken Picard p.28a

calendar scene@ calendar listings

32A

S E V E N D AY S V T. C O M

film film review film clips flick chick film quiz showtimes

03B

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art art review exhibitions

51A

VOL.10 NO.29

music soundbites club dates venues pop ten review this

22A

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04B 05B

14B

classes

18B

classifieds wellness automotive spacefinder employment

18B 23B 24B 32B

COVER: DIANE SULLIVAN [DESIGN] MATTHEW THORSEN [IMAGE]

features 22A

Booking Agent UVM Special Collections Librarian Connell Gallagher turns up the volumes BY CATHY RESMER

28B

personals

32A

Name Game Book review: The Education of Arnold Hitler by Marc Estrin BY PETER KURTH

funstuff

34A

newcomb news quirks bliss straight dope american elf story minute life in hell no exit red meat troubletown fickle fannie free will astrology 7D crossword lola dykes

34A 07A 12A 16A 16A 16A 50A 50A 50A 50A 52A 52A 19B 27B 28B 30B

Domestic Goods Music preview: Paul Asbell BY CASEY REA

columns 09A 10A 15A 18A 14A 19A

inside track BY PETER FREYNE AN IRREVERENT READ ON VT POLITICS local matters BY KEN PICARD AND CATHY RESMER consumer correspondent BY KENNETH CLEAVER tubefed BY RICK KISONAK THE OTHER TV GUIDE health wanted BY SARAH TUFF MAKING BODY-MIND CONNECTIONS hackie BY JERNIGAN PONTIAC A CABBIE’S REAR VIEW

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06A | march 09-16, 2005

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SEVEN DAYS

SEVEN DAYS

PUTTING THE PUB IN REPUBLICANS. P.O. BOX 1164, BURLINGTON, VT 05402-1164 T 802.864.5684 F 802.865.1015 E info@sevendaysvt.com W www.sevendaysvt.com CO-PUBLISHERS/EDITORS GENERAL MANAGER ASSOCIATE EDITOR CONTRIBUTING EDITOR STAFF WRITER MUSIC EDITOR CALENDAR WRITER PROOFREADER

<letters>

Pamela Polston Paula Routly Rick Woods Ruth Horowitz Peter Freyne Ken Picard Casey Rea Meghan Dewald Joanna May

ART DIRECTOR ASSISTANT ART DIRECTOR DESIGNERS PRODUCTION MANAGER/ CIRCULATION

Donald R. Eggert Rev. Diane Sullivan Jo Scott, Krystal Woodward

CLASSIFIEDS/PERSONALS OFFICE MANAGER SALES & MARKETING COORDINATOR ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES

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Jonathan Bruce

Judy Beaulac Robyn Birgisson Michael Bradshaw Michelle Brown Allison Davis Colby Roberts

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Marc Awodey, Kenneth Cleaver, Kristen Eaton, Peter Freyne, Rebecca Gollin, Susan Green, Margot Harrison, Ruth Horowitz, Kevin J. Kelley, Rick Kisonak, Peter Kurth, Cherise LaPine, Bill McKibben, Lola, Jernigan Pontiac, Cathy Resmer, Robert Resnik, Sarah Tuff

PHOTOGRAPHERS Andy Duback, Jay Ericson, Jordan Silverman, Matthew Thorsen, Jeb Wallace-Brodeur

ILLUSTRATORS Harry Bliss, Gary Causer, Steve Hogan, Abby Manock, Tim Newcomb, Dan Salamida, Michael Tonn

CIRCULATION Harry Appelgate, Barbra Babcock, David Bouffard, Jr., David Bouffard, Sr., Joe Bouffard, Pat Bouffard, Celeste Crowley, Heather Driscoll, Steve Hadeka, Abram Harrison, Justin Hart, Nick Kirshnit, Jack Lutz, Nat Michael, Heather Robinson, Bill Stone SEVEN DAYS is published by Da Capo Publishing, Inc. every Wednesday. It is distributed free of charge in greater Burlington, Middlebury, Montpelier, Stowe, the Mad River Valley, Rutland, St. Albans and Plattsburgh. Circulation: 30,000.

SUBSCRIPTIONS 6-month First Class subscriptions are available for $100. 1-year First Class subscriptions are available for $185. 6-month Third Class subscriptions are available for $50. 1-year Third Class subscriptions are available for $85. Please call 802.864.5684 with your VISA or Mastercard, or mail your check or money order to “Subscriptions� at the address below. For Classifieds/Personals or display advertising please call the number below. SEVEN DAYS shall not be held liable to any advertiser for any loss that results from the incorrect publication of its advertisement. If a mistake is ours, and the advertising purpose has been rendered valueless, SEVEN DAYS may cancel the charges for the advertisement, or a portion thereof as deemed reasonable by the publisher. SEVEN DAYS reserves the right to refuse any advertising, including inserts, at the discretion of the publishers.

Š 2005 Da Capo Publishing, Inc. All rights reserved.

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SMOKE MIRROR Again, thank you so much for Thanks so much for bringing Pam helping us to relay Pam’s powerful Laffin’s story to the attention of story. more Vermonters [“Tubefed,� Barbara A. Moeykens February 9]. Your article relays her ESSEX story in a powerful way and does Moeykens works for the Vt. Dept. justice to Pam’s cause, which is of Health Tobacco Control Program. our cause as well. We (the Vermont Department of Health COOL IT Tobacco Control Program) To Peter Freyne: First, thank you aired the ad you referred to, and for reporting on the North East tobaccostories.org is our website. Climate Conference. The world We are about to develop the webwould be a better place if there site further to relay stories from were more journalists that recogVermonters who have been hurt nized the “important� issues as you by tobacco, as well as stories from do. That said, I must say I was disthose who have succeeded in quit- appointed in your recent column, ting smoking. We have aired ads “Thinking Warm Thoughts� featuring Pam’s story as part of [“Inside Track,� February 23]. our youth prevention campaign Do we really need more hacks during this fiscal year, as well as on Governor Douglas? True, the during the last fiscal year as part of governor could be doing a much our young adult campaign. Pam’s better job on issues surrounding story has a strong impact on both climate change and the environyouth and adults. ment in general, but a personal I was not aware that Pam’s attack hardly seems useful, espevideo was currently out of stock. cially in the pages of Seven Days. Fortunately, when the video was I would imagine, correct me if first available, we ordered over 100 I’m wrong, that the people of copies and distributed them to the Burlington would be more inter59 tobacco coordinators who work ested in hearing about possible for the Vermont Department of solutions to the problem of global Education and to the 21 commuwarming than having to read for nity coalitions that we fund to do the thousandth time about the failcommunity-based tobacco educaures of our government. It is not tion/activities. We also made sure enough merely to point your finthat each of the four Health ger at the problem; much better to Education Resource Centers had a get to work. copy (these centers supply schools I think a better focus of your with health educational materials). article would have been on the And we sent 11 copies out to teen energy, spirit and critical thinking centers. the conference. 2x1.5-martins100604 10/7/04 1x2-petpal102203 1/5/04 11:05 that AM characterized Page 1 2:48 PM

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Anyone in Ira Allen Chapel last weekend could have told you that the climate-change movement has picked up incredible momentum in the last few months: New strategies are being adopted; important alliances are being formed with nontraditional partners such as labor, agricultural and faith-based groups; and bold initiatives are being planned for this spring and summer. The real story is not about Gov. Douglas but about the students and activists who are dedicating so much of their time and energy to come up with creative new ways to bring the issue of global warming to national attention and, more importantly, effect change. Much better to be thinking “cool thoughts� than to be thinking warm ones. Jamie Henn MIDDLEBURY

Henn was a presenter at the Climate Conference. HOT TOPIC Now that we’ve heard a concoction about Fords, governors and ribbon-cuttings as thin as any conspiracy theory Jesse Helms ever devised, I challenge Peter Freyne [“Inside Track,� February 23] to get real and do the hard reading and investigation necessary to write an informed story on global warming. I’m no fan of Bush, Fords or SUVS (the gigantic ones are pretty immoral, given environmental and an 5:00 PM Page realities), 1

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SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005

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letters 07A

SEVEN DAYS wants your rants and raves, in 250 words or fewer. Letters must respond to content in SEVEN DAYS. Include your full name and a daytime phone number and send to: SEVEN DAYS, P.O. Box 1164, Burlington, VT 05402-1164. fax: 865-1015 email: letters@sevendaysvt.com

ex-believer in Jim Douglas and politicians in general. Global warming is real and serious, and it carries potential for ecological and human disaster. Unfortunately, the politics behind American rejection of Kyoto are not as simple as Peter implies. Most people don’t know, and the media rarely remind them, that in 1997 the U.S. Senate passed a resolution rejecting U.S. participation in Kyoto by 95-0. Why did all those Democratic

Senators join with Republicans to repudiate Kyoto? Why did Bill Clinton decline to sign it? The reasons are the basis for a serious story about global warming and the ills of both major parties. Peter could start by looking up Rep. Dingle (D-Detroit) if he wants to understand the frustrations of trying to legislate SUV mileage and ratify Kyoto. Peter’s problem is the usual one in opinion journalism — he’s promoting an unhelpful, partisan soap

opera while dealing with the actual facts of the issue in a trivial way. Progress on global warming is unlikely until the public is educated about the real political and scientific issues. Stories built on halftruths simply impede that education. Ian Robertson WOLCOTT

LIVE LOVE I was encouraged to see that Seven Days was sponsoring a Singles

Night at Wine Works. Will people actually meet other people without their self-invented, delusional online-type personas? Dread the thought. I occasionally skim the Seven Days personals columns and have become aware over the years how it appears that the “I Spy” column has mushroomed from perhaps half a dozen entries to the point where, in recent editions, it reaches 45 percent of all the personals. I could be way off base, but this burgeoning trade seems to have run parallel to the growth of cellphone use. Here we have two opposing phenomena that may, in fact, be related. On the one hand, we have people placing desperate ads like “Umm...I think we passed on I-89. You were going north, me south. You in your ’05 Beemer, me in my 1986 Corolla (the one with the “Bernie For Mayor” sticker). You smiled at me (didn’t you?) before that logging truck severed our love. You missed my leer . . . call me and see what else I can do with my face.” On the other hand, the world is now infested with people seeming to have terminal earache, driving their cars with one hand, head glued to shoulder (God knows what the other hand is doing), suspended in their own audio cocoon, with terminal dry mouth from incessant, needy babbling. Being alone must scare the hell out of people.

Hats off to Seven Days for encouraging people to actually step up to the plate (or glass) at Wine Works (no logging trucks here), to swirl a few buttery Chardonnays or potent spicy Shiraz à la Sideways, to take a personal risk, just like in the old days, all in the hope of catching a fleeting invitation, responding, maybe connecting, perhaps with just a few words or even by body language alone, in the flesh, so to speak. J. Dylan Rivis MONTPELIER

WARM RECEPTION Thank you for the great review of “An Evening at the Old Souk” [Scene@, February 23]. My friends (and family — the “smiling turbaned man” was my husband, Art, and the storyteller was my daughter, Claire) and I worked very hard over months and weeks to create an oasis of warmth and color in Vermont’s “bleak midwinter,” and we were glad to see that the audience had as good a time as we did. Waell Murray of Global Market was a great booster for this event, as well as providing the delicious desserts. We are also very grateful to the Rose Street Artists’ Co-op for hosting us. We are now thinking of doing this every year. Thanks again for the good review! Christine Demarais BURLINGTON

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SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005 | inside track 09A L E U N I G ’ S

inside track

BY PETER FREYNE

P E O P L E

( A

S E R I E S )

“The place for Pinot Noir”

AN IRREVERENT READ ON VT POLITICS

—Donna Iverson and Bill Wargo

Cool Hand Leaving Albee told yours truly he’s going to join a small D.C. government-relations firm headed up by former Deputy White House Chief of Staff Steve Richetti, who worked for Clinton. St. Patrick told Inside Track he will sorely miss his Cool Hand Luke. Choosing the right person for staff chief is, after all, one of the most important decisions a senator can make. The “right” person, said Leahy, “has to be my alter ego.” With Albee, he said, “the friendship and respect we’ve had for one another made that work. We just talked in shorthand.” With four kids, noted St. Patrick, Albee has big college bills ahead and can easily earn a lot more in the private sector than he can on a senate staff salary. “There’s no chief of staff better in the whole Senate,” said Leahy softly. Dittos, folks. In Vermont’s political world and wars, the cool hand of Luke left many a mark without leaving fingerprints. Who else could have covered up the senator’s cross-dressing fling with a younger Sen. Orrin Hatch and then FBI boss J. Edgar Hoover? Just kidding. Best wishes, Luke.

Barkin Leaving Bernie — U.S. Rep. Bernie Sanders is losing his press secretary Joel Barkin to married life and the Big Apple. And, make no mistake, Joel is a little sad to leave. There’s only one Bernie on Capitol Hill, and being his press secretary is a oneof-a-kind-experience. Barkin’s been at it for three years. Ol’ Bernardo, said Barkin, “is one of the true good guys down here.” Barkin told Seven Days his wife landed a big job “at a major new media agency” in Manhattan. And he’s accepted a consulting gig with the Working Families Party “to help them in their Social Security campaign (http://www.inthistogethercampaign.org). “I’m leaving a bit reluctantly,” said Joel, “but married life is full of compromises, right?” Riiight.

Lieutenant Busted — Next to Gen. Martha Rainville, Lt. Veronica Saffo, public affairs officer at Ft. Ethan Allen, is probably the best known member of the Vermont National Guard. Saffo has appeared in dozens of TV stories and newspaper articles in the last year. But you won’t find any story anywhere about Lt. Saffo’s recent arrest on drunkdriving charges. Lt. Saffo was picked up in the wee snowy hours of Sunday, February 13, after Essex Police responded to a mobile call from a motorist on Route 15. The caller had spotted a white sport utility vehicle with New Hampshire plates running the red lights just east of Camp Johnson, while bouncing off snowbanks and guardrails. According to the police affidavit, it was INSIDE TRACK >> 20A

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even Days has learned that Luke Albee, longtime chief of staff for U.S. Sen. Patrick Leahy, has tendered his resignation. Yes, indeed, all good things do come to an end. In interviews conducted Tuesday, Mr. Albee didn’t sound happy about it. And neither did his boss. That’s because what these two guys did in the Senate for more than a decade is like what Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers once did on Hollywood dance floors. Luke, a UVM grad, has been with St. Patrick for 20 years. He will be departing the Leahy staff in April. Albee started out on Capitol Hill fresh out of college answering the senator’s mail. In fact, Luke beat out fellow young Vermonter Skip Vallee for the job. That’s right, the same dude known to readers today as Gasoline Vallee, our favorite Republican fundraiser. True story. For the last 11 years, Cool Hand Luke has been keeping the Leahy ship steady and on course as chief. Yours truly first got to know young Albee during the 1986 U.S. Senate race. Vermont’s first and only Democratic senator had won two squeakers in 1974 and 1980. In 1986, Big Bad Richard Snelling, former Republican governor and smartest man on Earth, was confident of sending Leahy the Lightweight into retirement. As everybody knows, it didn’t work out the way King Richard planned. Leahy’s campaign manager that year came in from South Boston. Luke left the D.C. staff and came home to help Mary Beth Cahill get the true Vermont feel. Quite simply, Leahy’s 1986 campaign team outplayed Snelling’s. They were always two jumps ahead. St. Patrick positively crushed Big Dick that November, winning 63 percent to Snelling’s 33 percent. If only Leahy Campaign Manager Mary Beth Cahill had the same touch for John Kerry in 2004, eh? If only she’d had a better candidate. After the Snelling Massacre of 1986, the young and battle-scarred Mr. Albee returned to the Washington staff and became legislative director. Capitol Hill was his playground. He settled down, got married and started a family. In 1993, Luke was tapped to be Leahy’s chief of staff. And what a ride it’s been! With that Arkansas fellow in the White House, things were sure looking up. At least for awhile, eh? Let’s just say Luke will never forget Bill Clinton and the giant media-sucking political war that erupted over the Presidential Pecker. In spite of the Clinton-Monica media orgy, the impeachment battle launched over lies about semen stains, and the GOP takeover of the White House and both branches of Congress, Ol’ St. Pat has continued to effectively fight the good fight, and Ol’ Luke has been a key reason. Let’s face it, the Vermont Republican Party hasn’t been able to find a credible candidate to challenge Leahy since 1992. And the one they came up with that year only got within 11 points. Hey, what ever happened to Jim Douglas, anyway?

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Film Renews “Crazy� Debate There seems to be no end in sight to pop culture’s fascination with — or shameless exploitation of — mental illness, especially where Vermonters are concerned. Following on the bruised heels of the Vermont Teddy Bear Company’s recent marketing faux pas with its Valentine’s Day “Crazy For You� bear, which came with commitment papers and a straitjacket, Hollywood has jumped back into the act. A new feature film from Warner Brothers, which opened nationwide last weekend, takes a few potshots at Vermonters, shell-shocked veterans and the mentally ill. The Jacket is billed as a genre-bending, gothic sci-fi thriller about Jack Starks, a U.S. Marine Corps sergeant and Gulf War veteran who returns to his native Vermont with psychological problems. After suffering a bout of amnesia due to a near-fatal gunshot wound to the head, Starks, played by Academy Award winner Adrien Brody (The Pianist), is accused of killing a cop and is committed to a mental institution. There, his equally off-kilter psychiatrist straps him into a straitjacket, pumps him full of mind-altering drugs, and locks him in a drawer in the basement morgue. This rather unconventional treatment sends the vet traveling back and forth through time in a race to find a woman who can help him clear his name before he gets killed. When called last week, the folks at the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMIVermont) said they hadn’t seen or even heard of the film yet. But they expressed concern that it will only reinforce myths and stereotypes about mental illness, particularly in Vermont. “It seems to perpetuate the media’s continued use of straitjackets and other inappropriate forms of mental-health treatment,� noted Executive Director Jerry Goessel. NAMI’s “StigmaBusters Network� hasn’t issued an alert yet about the film, though in the past, the group has taken to task other negative depictions of mental illness by the media. In August, for example, the group objected to a press kit from Universal Orlando Theme Parks that featured a convulsing psych patient in a straitjacket who is “driven insane� by the theme parks’ “Halloween Horrors� event. The lasting effects of The Jacket may be minimal, however. Despite the movie’s notable star power, which also includes Kris Kristofferson, Jennifer Jason Leigh and producers George Clooney and Steven Soderbergh, reviewers have called it exploitative, atrocious and inept. And it wasn’t even filmed in the Green Mountain State. KEN PICARD


SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005

<localmatters>

Vermont’s “Little Italy”

authoritatively declares, “Vermont’s civil-union law is secure.” But it goes on to encourage supporters to continue advocating for full marriage rights by working with the Vermont Freedom to Marry Task Force, which is still alive and well. VCU spokesperson Beth Robinson, one of the lawyers who argued the landmark Baker case that led to civil unions, says she won’t rule out any more lawsuits or trips to the legislature, though she doesn’t expect either of those situations to materialize anytime soon.

The new challenge is helping people to understand that the civil-union law, which was clearly a step forward in 2000, wasn’t the end of the line.

local matters 11A

I T A L I A N

C-U Later How often does a political action committee dissolve because it actually gets what it wants? That’s what happened to Vermonters for Civil Unions, the organization incorporated in 2000 to fund political candidates who supported the state’s groundbreaking civil-unions law. Civil unions aren’t so groundbreaking anymore; now that Massachusetts lets gay and lesbian couples get married for real, our secondclass-citizen civil arrangement has become the moderate fall-back position in the same-sexmarriage debate.

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BETH ROBINSON Though Vermonters booted some pro-civilunion politicians from statewide office in 2000, voters seem to have had a change of heart. In last November’s election, pro-civil-union candidates solidified their control of the legislature, and exit surveys showed 77 percent of Vermonters supported either gay marriage or civil unions. Proponents of the law declared the backlash over. The Vermonters for Civil Unions website — http://www.vtcivilunionspac.org — now

Right now the group is focused on the “grassroots groundwork” — explaining to allies why it’s important to keep working for marriage. “The new challenge,” she says, “is helping people to understand that the civil-union law, which was clearly a step forward in 2000, wasn’t the end of the line… We never felt then, and we don’t feel now, that that was the final step.” CATHY RESMER

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Last Saturday, the University of Vermont hosted its Third Annual Translating Identities conference, a one-day academic exploration of gender identity that concluded with an address by renowned transgender activist and author Leslie Feinberg. Dorothea Brauer, director of UVM’s Office of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Questioning and Ally Services, said nearly 500 attendees came from all over New England; presenters came from as far as New Zealand. Curiously absent were members of UVM’s Board of Trustees Diversity Committee — including committee chair Tom Little, a former Republican state senator who made waves for supporting civil unions way back when. Brauer and the members of the school’s GLBTQA student group have beseeched the committee to add gender identity to UVM’s non-discrimination policy. The Committee has so far refused, though the Burlington School District has adopted such language. Brauer said the trustees promised to educate themselves about trans issues, and points out that the TI Conference was a missed opportunity. She admitted she was “disappointed” by their absence. “It’s not like folks didn’t have enough information to know what was going on,” she said. “I would hope that... they would take the time to learn about it.”

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12A | march 09-16, 2005 | SEVEN DAYS

Curses, Foiled Again Police in New Castle, Delaware, identified Brent Brown, 25, as one of two men who robbed an 18-year-old woman because he called the victim on his cell phone afterwards to apologize and ask her out on a date. She declined and turned his number in to police. “It would make a perfect story for the television show, ‘The World’s Dumbest Criminals,’” police Cpl. Trinidad Navarro said. The Military Mind A U.S. Air Force research laboratory proposed creating a chemical agent able to stimulate homosexual behavior among enemy troops. The laboratory at Wright Patterson

ODD, STRANGE, CURIOUS AND WEIRD BUT TRUE NEWS

news quirks

December’s tsunami disaster. • The Japanese security firm Madre reported brisk sales of its knife-resistant sweatshirts and windbreakers for children. The apparel, priced between 38,900 yen ($374) and 43,900 yen ($422), is made with fiberglass and Spectra, a lightweight material 10 times stronger than steel, and can’t be sliced through with box-cutters or scissors, according to Madre’s president, Minoru Furuta. He attributed sales of more than 130 stab-proof items in the past six months to parents taking extra precautions since a 38-year-old man stabbed eight children to death and wounded 15 others at an elementary school in Osaka in 2001.

Better Safe Than Sorry Top hotels in several Asian capitals have stopped ordering sea bass and sole from the Indian Ocean to allay diners’ concerns that the fish feasted on victims of

Jumping to Conclusions After a

High Jinks Authorities in Adams County, Pennsylvania, charged two teenagers with causing or risking a catastrophe after they borrowed a two-seat Piper Cub airplane belonging to the father of one of the boys and pelted their high school with eggs. The low-flying airplane startled Gettysburg residents and caused the top two floors of a six-story hotel to be evacuated. Prosecutor Brian Sinnett called the prank “one of the most bizarre cases that I’ve been involved in.”

Holy Moley! “You will not sing in the shower,” former Jewish grand rabbi Mordechai Eliahu commanded Israeli listeners of an ultra-Orthodox religious radio program, explaining that the Hebrew language is not to be tarnished by use in the bathroom. The Yediot Ahronot newspaper reported that the former leader of Israel’s

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67-year-old Italian woman in Padua fell into a coma last September, her 71-yearold husband visited her daily. In January, the Italian news agency ANSA reported, the despondent husband committed suicide. Twelve hours later, his wife awoke from her coma. • Officials at East Jersey State Prison in Rahway, New Jersey, mistakenly released Walter Townsend after a court reversed his 2002 conviction for killing his girlfriend. They misread the 52-page legal decision, according to Corrections Department spokesperson Deidre Fedkenheuer. She explained that the last page did state that the murder conviction should be reversed, but page 9 of the decision noted that the conviction was reversed and remanded, meaning that Townsend was to continue being held until his new trial. Police rearrested Townsend after he spent a weekend of freedom making the rounds of Trenton-area bars.

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Mission Unaccomplished A poll taken on the eve of the second inauguration of President Bush, who vowed during the 2000 campaign to be a “uniter, not a divider,” found that 49 percent of the people viewed him as a uniter, and 49 percent of the people viewed him as a divider. Two percent of those interviewed in the CNN-USA Today-Gallup phone survey had no opinion. 쩾

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mal trainer Pierre Spenle, 40, was trampled to death after he fell while loading three elephants into a trailer in Fort Wayne, Ind. Coroner Jon Brandenberger said that the 7000-pound animals likely began stepping on him out of curiosity, not aggressiveness. “Once he’s on the floor, animal trainers will tell you, he’s no longer the trainer,” Brandenberger explained. “He’s another object, as if he were a basketball or whatever thrown in among the elephants’ feet.”

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Using Their Heads Andrew Fischer, 20, a Web designer in Omaha, Nebraska, auctioned his forehead on eBay for advertising and reported receiving $37,375 from the maker of a snoring remedy. Fischer denied accusations that the online auction was a publicity stunt organized by him and his new sponsor. • Richard Hamilton, 26, a basketball player for the Detroit Pistons, received an endorsement fee from a tire maker to wear his hair in the style of the tread pattern of one of the company’s tires. Neither the company nor Hamilton would say how much the company paid the player, but company spokesperson Ed Markey noted that Hamilton also received free tires. Occupational Hazards Circus-ani-

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Air Force Base in Ohio also suggested spraying enemy positions with chemicals that would attract biting and stinging insects, rodents and larger animals. Another tactic was giving enemy troops bad breath so they would stand out in a crowd and creating waves of fecal gas. Although the Defense Department explained that the ideas were merely tossed about in what amounted to “a brainstorming session” and never got off the ground, the Sunshine Project, an advocacy group that obtained the 1994 Air Force proposal under the Freedom of Information Act, insisted that the plan was still under consideration as recently as 2001.

Sephardic Jews did concede, “To hum without a word in Hebrew crossing your mind is acceptable.” • Roman Catholic authorities defrocked a British priest who disrupted the men’s marathon at last summer’s Athens Olympics. Neil Horan jumped out of the crowd and tackled Brazilian runner Vanderlei de Lima, who was leading the race but after the attack finished third. Horan also disrupted the British Grand Prix Formula One race in 2003 by wandering onto the track and doing what he described as a peace dance. “I now cannot preach. I cannot give out communion,” Horan pointed out after his dismissal from the priesthood. “I am little more than a pagan.”

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SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005

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local matters 13A

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Putting the Fun in Funeral Last Friday afternoon, pallbearers carried a coffin through the snowy streets of Montpelier, but no one shed any tears. In fact, the two-dozen or so mourners could hardly suppress their smiles. It was only an empty cardboard coffin, after all, and it’s hard not to giggle when the person setting the march tempo is beating a bass drum while wearing a handmade bird suit, complete with a foot-tall, long-beaked mask. The Second Vermont Republic staged this symbolic bit of street theater, a funeral for the first republic of Vermont (1777-1791, RIP). The group, which wants Vermont to secede from the United States, was acknowledging the day Vermont became a state, on March 4, 1791. Prior to the march, an assembly of reporters, TV cameramen and onlookers gathered at the Langdon Street Café. They listened to music from bagpipers and a speech from a man dressed as Ethan Allen. A man calling himself Father O’Matchstick — wearing a top hat and a washboard around his neck — delivered a eulogy. After bidding farewell to the plucky independent nation that “kicked the sapbucket” 214 years ago, the padre delivered a benediction: “In the name of the flounder, and of the sunfish and of the holy mackerel…” As the funeral march wound up the steps of the Statehouse, several cameramen scurried across the

snowy lawn to get a shot of the euphonium player, General Allen, and the avian drummer. Not a single reporter covered a similar event last summer that drew hundreds of people, but the 2004 election changed all that; since November, the Vermont secessionistas have been written up in a number of local papers, as well as by the Associated Press, The Nation and Salon. George W. Bush’s second term has been good for membership, too — 60 people have joined in the past four months, bringing membership to 160. It’s hard to put a finger on what’s so compelling about this quixotic quest for independence. Second Vermont Republic spokesperson Thomas Naylor insists that his group is dead serious about secession, but in the context of O’Matchstick’s blessing, that’s hard to swallow. If nothing else, their antics are entertaining. Jennifer Boccin, a black-clad Goddard College student who followed the procession, said she thinks the movement is exciting partly because it’s a little dangerous, because it makes people question the legitimacy of the union. She said it encourages Vermonters to have pride in their state. “There’s a stronger sense of place and community here than in other parts of the country,” she noted. Which is really just another way of saying, “only in Vermont.” CATHY RESMER

Turning Point Turned Down Turns out the Turning Point Recovery Center of Chittenden County won’t be moving to Burlington’s Old North End after all — last week the Development Review Board unanimously rejected its

The Design Review Board and Old North End residents felt that the proposed “sober club” did not fit with the city’s plans for the street. application. According to its mission statement, the nonprofit organization helps addicts and alcoholics “find, maintain and enhance their recovery experience through peer support, sober recreation and education-

al opportunities.” Turning Point had planned to move to 194 North Street. Progressive City Counselors Tim Ashe, Philip Fiermonte and Cheryl McDonough all filed letters opposing the plan before a February 15 public hearing. Though some residents spoke in favor of the center, most opposed it. Before the hearing, several residents and city officials said they feared the project, which is funded by grants from the Health Department, would reinforce North Street’s reputation as “a dumping ground for social services.” Kirsten Merriman Shapiro, the North Street Revitalization Coordinator, said the application was rejected because the DRB and Old North End residents felt that the proposed “sober club” did not fit with the city’s plans for the street. The preference is to bring in businesses to strengthen the tax base. Shapiro says she hopes Turning Point can find another home in Burlington. “We’re going to work with them to try to find something that will work,” she said. CATHY RESMER

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7D


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SEVEN DAYS

health wanted

BY SARAH TUFF

MAKING BODY-MIND CONNECTIONS

Lifting Hopes

I IMAGE Stefan Bumbeck For info on the Adventures in Living weekend at Sugarbush, call 233-0932. For more info on the Stowe Weekend of Hope, visit http://www. stowehope.org or call 253-7321.

t’s a powder day at Sugarbush. Thick pillows of snow are piled up among the pine and birch glades, and showboaters are fluffing them with frosty precision. But the white stuff can’t muffle the shouts of glee that reverberate around the mountain — least of all the amped-up hollers of Ann Taylor. She tips her Dynastar skis down the off-ramp of the Super Bravo Express Quad, then races a snowboarding buddy down the Valley House Traverse, trash-talking the guy while double-poling for speed. Passing her friend and hooking onto Spring Fling, Taylor takes a quick breath, then starts bouncing through the soft moguls, laughing and whooping all the way down the hill. “Skiing is such a joyful experience,” says Taylor, a Burlington-based physical therapist and ski instructor. You’d never know the 53-year-old is “suffering” from stage IV, or advanced, metastatic breast cancer. “You just laugh; you’re like a little kid again and there’s so much joy there . . . We call it fun therapy.” Taylor learned she had cancer in 1994. “It was like I was dead; it was extraordinarily scary and I was filled with doom and gloom,” she recalls. Living in Salt Lake City at the time, she discovered that one option for treatment and recovery lay in the surrounding Wasatch Mountains. During 14 weeks of chemotherapy, she says, “I just continued skiing, from 8000 to 11,000 feet at Snowbird.” Taylor’s betting the same sort of outdoor therapy works next weekend at Sugarbush, which tops out at just 4083 feet, for participants in the area’s first-ever Adventures in Living. Organized by Taylor along with fellow instructor and breast-cancer survivor Ashley Fischer and extreme skier John Egan, the event is open to

all cancer survivors and their friends and families. It combines the pure, on-snow fun of skiing or snowshoeing with “mindfulness” sessions led by Shambhala Tibetan Buddhist teacher Sharon Keegan. There are organized conversations, too, about the stresses and successes of a life burdened with a cancer diagnosis. It’s one of several grass roots efforts around the state that aims to change the way people cope with the disease. Nearly 10 years after Lance Armstrong started doing athletic battle with malignant tumors — detailed in his book, It’s Not About the Bike: My Journey Back to Life — Vermonters are trying a similar, adventurous approach. “Not everybody’s going to feel as good as I did,” says Fischer. She was astonished to find, after her 2003 diagnosis, that she still had energy to ski. “Too many people are told, ‘You’re going to be exhausted.’ Skiing, and running my dogs for agility, actually enhanced and helped my experience. They made me OK, and allowed me to say to myself, ‘You can have a normal life through all this.’” No national studies have documented the benefits of adventure therapy for cancer patients and survivors. But researchers at the University of Toronto have confirmed that climbing mountains can help adolescents with cancer. Anecdotal evidence suggests the same may be true for adults. “People have discovered that the more active they get, the better they feel,” says Williston’s Richard Lewis, who works for the American Cancer Society. “The movement of healing through activity is fairly recent.” Taylor takes a two-pronged approach to this activity — she inspires and helps others through the outdoors, and advocates for cancer

research and appropriate treatment. In the summers, she runs sea-kayaking retreats for cancer survivors through the Rutland Regional Medical Center. Much of her time indoors is now devoted to writing up ideas for a survivorship workgroup funded by the Centers for Disease Control. “Advocacy is key,” she says. “I’m probably not through with the cancer deal; I’m in an advanced group. But I’m going to beat the averages, because there’s nothing average about me. And once someone is stronger they can give back.” Taylor expects about a dozen participants at the Sugarbush Adventures in Living weekend. If history is any indication, interest is likely to snowball. Manchester’s Casting for Recovery was founded in 1996 to provide fly-fishing retreats for breast cancer survivors. There are now 30 different camps throughout North America. Organizers of the Stowe Weekend of Hope, meanwhile, are planning to host between 1500 and 2000 cancer survivors, patients and families from April 28 to May 1. Now in its fifth year, the event features free workshops, lectures and seminars with top oncologists and researchers, with free rooms at area hotels for first-timers and free rides on Amtrak’s Train of Hope. People come from as far south as Baltimore The freebies help draw hundreds, but by the weekend’s closing ceremonies, it’s a different kind of green that counts. “Being in Vermont in springtime has a very different feel than, say, being in a steel-mill town in the fall,” says Lewis. “This is a powerful time.” After three days of wandering the hills around Trapp Family Lodge, cycling Stowe’s bike path and snapping photos of cows, participants hang “flags of hope”

against the Green Mountain backdrop. It makes for a memorable image. “It didn’t matter what cancer we were battling . . . we all shared in making that cancer insignificant in relation to who we each really are,” one past attendee wrote in a thankyou note to organizers. “We are not patients or caregivers or supports or loved-ones-left-behind so much as we are each unique souls with love to offer and wisdoms to share. How better could we have renewed that part of ourselves than to be in those poetic mountains of Stowe?” Not everyone will feel well enough for outdoor pursuits. Some won’t live to see the next year, as event founder Dr. Patti O’Brien points out. A breastcancer survivor, she explains that some of the original volunteers have died from their cancers. But that reality doesn’t dampen her sense of renewal. “Nature can be a powerful source of space and inspiration for people,” says O’Brien. She tapped into that power by planting an apple tree in her back yard each time her cancer treatments and tests left her feeling rotten; she now has a small orchard. “Getting the diagnosis of cancer can be very disempowering,” she acknowledges. But “Stowe has been blessed with beauty we can use to remind ourselves that we can all heal and grow despite many challenges. Spring is a time of rebirth, and green is a color of hope.” Taylor intends to prove that hope can also come in white. “It’s that empowerment process; that’s what the weekend is about,” she says of Adventures in Living. “Being heard, being able to support each other. Within the context of support we share information, we empower each other, we have fun. It’s all those aspects in the discovery of the outdoors.” m


SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005 | consumer correspondent 15A

consumer correspondent BY KENNETH CLEAVER

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march 09-16, 2005

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SEVEN DAYS

bliss BY HARRY BLISS

the straight dope

BY CECIL ADAMS

ALL WORTHWHILE HUMAN KNOWLEDGE

ILLUSTRATION: SLUG SIGNORINO

16A

Dear Cecil, I’ve often read that if you jump off the Golden Gate Bridge, you will accelerate to the point where hitting the water will be like hitting concrete. But my little brain keeps saying, “Yeah, but it’s WATER!” Could you jump off a bridge like the Golden Gate and contort your body in such a way that you’d survive? Paul, Ann Arbor I’ve heard that if you jump off a tall enough building, you’ll pass out before you hit the ground due to falling so fast. My friend tells me this is not true. He argues that skydivers freefall and hit terminal velocity and are just fine. I told him that they haven’t fallen long enough. Can you help me prove him wrong? Katie, Bellingham, Washington Of course not, numbskull. Your friend is right. Skydivers in free fall routinely reach terminal velocity, i.e., the speed at which air resistance and weight balance out and acceleration stops, which often exceeds 120 mph. During a typical plunge they may drop 10,000 feet in 60 seconds, remaining conscious throughout. (The free-fall speed record, incidentally, is 614 mph, set in 1960 by Joseph Kittinger, who stepped out of a balloon gondola into the exceedingly thin air at 103,000 feet.) Nonetheless the belief persists that anyone leaping or falling from a great height blacks out, has the breath sucked out of them, etc. Fact is, some pass out, but not all. We know this because — you knew we’d get around to your question eventually, Paul — people have in fact survived a leap off the Golden Gate Bridge, and staying alert is one reason they did. Scientists have long been fascinated by what happens to people who fall from great heights without a parachute. Unsurprisingly, most of them get killed; perhaps surprisingly, a few don’t. A prime example of the latter was a 17-year-old male who in 1979 leaped off the

Golden Gate Bridge from a height of 250 feet. According to one report, “He recount[ed] a slowing of time initially, and mid-fall, when fully realizing the oncoming impact, strove to adjust his attitude to the vertical feet-first position. An almost perfect entry was achieved. Although dazed, he swam to shore” and checked into a hospital, where his worst injury turned out to be several cracked vertebrae. Walking away from something like that is rare. The Golden Gate Bridge is said to be the most popular suicide location in the world — at least 1200 people had jumped as of 2003, of whom fewer than 20 survived. A more typical outcome was that of a stuntman calling himself Kid Courage, who jumped off the bridge in 1980 trying to set a free-fall record. He landed flat on his back and was dead when pulled from the water with massive internal injuries. The key to survival appears to be vertical entry. Your little brain is right, Paul — there’s a difference between landing on water and landing on concrete, namely you can’t dive into concrete. The 17-year-old male survivor said he may have touched bottom, perhaps 20 to 25 feet down — plenty of room to disperse the force of impact. In contrast, Kid Courage’s body never sank beneath the surface, meaning he’d gone from 75 mph (a Golden Gate leaper’s peak speed) to zero in maybe six inches. Beyond a certain point even Olympic form won’t save you. One expert claims the upper limit for surviving water entry is around 80 mph. Presumably it’s less if you’re hitting something solid. Still, the literature teems with spectacular exceptions: • In a 1942 paper, physiologist Hugh De Haven told of eight people who survived falls of 50 to 150 feet on dry land, many with only minor injuries. The common denominator: something to break the fall or soften the impact, such as loose dirt, the hood of a car, or, in one astonishing but verified case, an iron bar, metal screens, a skylight and a metal-lath ceiling. • In 1963, U.S. Marine pilot Cliff Judkins’s chute didn’t open after he bailed out of his crippled fighter. He fell 15,000 feet into the Pacific, suffered numerous broken bones and a collapsed lung, but lived. • U.S. Army air force sergeant Alan Magee fell 20,000 feet from an exploding B-17 in 1943 and crashed through the skylight of a French train station. (A lesson emerges: Aim for the skylight.) Though his arm was shattered, he lived too. • When his bomber was shot down in 1942, Soviet lieutenant I.M. Chisov fell 22,000 feet into a snowy ravine. He was badly injured but recovered. • Luckiest of all was RAF flight sergeant Nicholas Alkemade, who leaped from his burning bomber in 1944 without a parachute at 18,000 feet. After a 90-second plunge, he crashed through tree branches in a pine forest and landed in 18 inches of snow. His only injuries: scratches, bruises, burns, and, in some accounts, a twisted knee.

Is there something you need to get straight? Cecil Adams can deliver the Straight Dope on any topic. Write Cecil Adams at the Chicago Reader, 11 E. Illinois, Chicago, IL 60611, or email him at cecil@chireader.com.


SEVEN DAYS

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march 09-16, 2005

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YOU HAVE

SEVEN DAYS

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17A


18A| march 09-16, 2005| SEVEN DAYS

tubefed

BY RICK KISONAK

THE OTHER TV GUIDE

All About Eva

P “The Deadbeat Club” airs Fridays at 11:30 p.m. and Sundays at 9 p.m. on Channel 15. Info, http:// www.chanz.tv/ DeadBeat Club.htm.

roducing, writing, editing and hosting a local cable television program can be a thankless, all-consuming enterprise. I know because I’ve done it: My half-hour movie-review show “The Good, The Bad & The Boffo!” was on the air for nearly 10 years. So I marvel perhaps more than most viewers when I happen across a really well done show on public access, as I did recently. “The Deadbeat Club,” airing twice weekly on Channel 15, is the high-energy handiwork of the multitalented Eva Sollberger, 31. The show features her, her sister and her mother as well as her dog and cat. Sollberger addresses the camera, usually in her back yard, on a variety of topics relating to a monthly theme. Periodically this cuts away to dazzlingly outré video creations that incorporate everything from vintage cinema and cartoons to splashy musical dance numbers and photographs of obscure artists, all set to a bouncy assortment of thematically linked pop tunes. “The Deadbeat Club” is not only funny, eclectic, brainy and original, but each episode is also a full 60 minutes long. Concerned that she might be hospitalized for exhaustion at any moment, I hurried to contact Sollberger and find out what makes her tick. SEVEN DAYS: Eva, “The Deadbeat Club” is a riot. What makes you tick? EVA SOLLBERGER: The act of creating. It is so easy to fall into a rut or get stuck doing things that don’t excite you. Working on an art project wakes me up to all the possibilities of life and the world. SD: Where’d you get the idea for the program? ES: When I moved to Vermont a year ago, I decided it was finally time to realize my longstanding dream of having a cable-access show. In California I was too busy hustling and bustling. Vermont seemed like the perfect place to realize my deadbeat dream.

SOPHIE QUEST, EVA SOLLBERGER AND MARGOT HARRISON

SD: You cover a lot of ground in the show, everything from high art to lowbrow entertainment. What are your influences? ES: They are sort of all over the place, which is why I try to feature as many types of art as possible in the show. Films, TV, music, photography, painting and novels have all played a large part in my development as an artist. Growing up in a small Vermont town, movies, TV and novels opened up a whole new, exciting world to me. SD: One of my favorite parts of your show are the lists you make. David Letterman could take a pointer or two. Your “Top Ten Celebrity Deadbeats” was hilarious. It’s not often that Baudelaire, Homer Simpson and Steve Buscemi get mentioned in the same breath. I think the best so far was your list of “Rules for the Tortured Artist”… ES: Thanks!

The show is all about celebrating the weird inner workings of your head. EVA SOLLBERGER

SD: Where does the title come from? ES: The title was my sister’s idea. It comes from a song by The B-52s that was popular in the ’80s. It perfectly captures the delicious feeling of being a small-town, laid-back artistic loser going nowhere fast. SD: What does the term “deadbeat” mean to you? ES: The show is all about celebrating the weird inner workings of your head. It’s about accepting some of your more eccentric, oddball qualities and enjoying them instead of feeling like an outsider or reject. Typically, the word “deadbeat” has a negative connotation, but it is strangely empowering to just accept that side of yourself and move on. Viva la deadbeat!

“Tubefed” is a monthly column that can also be read on www.sevendaysvt.com. To reach Rick Kisonak, email kisonak@sevendaysvt.com.

SD: On a scale of 1 to 10, how tortured are you? ES: I’m probably both a 2 (a very la di da, ho-hum, “look at the pretty flowers” kind of gal) and a fullon 11 (angsty, self-deprecating, dark and obsessed). It is hard being an artist without feeling some torture. I think the two dance hand in hand. SD: I must say, you do have a refreshingly dark side. I liked it when you dedicated your September episode, “The Love Show,” to the late James Dean and then went on to note that he was the one star who never sold out… What’s your philosophy of life, anyway? ES: Life, hmm. I am pretty excited by life. I spend a lot of my time recording it and taking notes in a lame attempt to understand it. The drama and the unknown are part of what makes it so spectacular. SD: Which do you believe to be the greater blight to humanity — reality TV or the Bush administration? You talk about both a lot in your show.

ES: Excellent question! We actually enjoy the naughtiness of reality TV. Bush and his cronies are a bit like a reality show, only a little too scary to make good television. SD: The show makes it clear you’re fascinated by the phenomena of Jessica and Ashlee Simpson. Why those two so much more than, say, a prefab celeb such as Paris Hilton? ES: Glad you asked! Paris is sort of like a paperdoll, vapid and 2D. She appears to be dead inside. Ashlee and Jessica Simpson have a strange appeal that I hate to even examine too long. Perhaps it is the way they’ve managed to dominate MTV and the entire mass media with their shlocky music? Ashlee’s belief that she is a true artist despite all the evidence to the contrary makes her a strangely fascinating character. Jessica’s ability to be herself without shame or artifice is something that draws one in against their better wishes. SD: What’s it like to work with your sister and mother? ES: The three of us haven’t lived in the same state for 20 years, so it is a really exciting experience for all of us to be together again. The show is a nice way for us to create something together. SD: Where do you edit? ES: On my home computer. SD: You make very creative and subtle use of pop music in the video segments you direct. Are you worried you’ll be sued? ES: Terrified. Don’t tell! SD: What do you see “The Deadbeat Club” doing for your career? ES: I see the show as a great learning experience. It is a way for me to practice editing and creating. I doubt it will lead to anything career-wise, but stranger things have happened. SD: Would you like to teach the world to sing? If not, what would you like to teach it? ES: Yes, I think the world should be singing! If life were a musical, we would sing while we were washing dishes, grocery shopping or meeting someone in the street. Imagine the benefits to this crazy world on the brink — eradicate all the stress, road rage and simple rudeness. The world would be a happier, healthier place full of song! Maybe a dance number or two would be nice as well? A girl can dream. m


SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005 | hackie 19A

hackie

BY JERNIGAN PONTIAC

A CABBIE’S REAR VIEW

A Service Tradition

A Check sevendaysvt.com to find out more about Jernigan Pontiac and his book, Hackie: Cab Driving and Life.

small, slender black woman and her teenage son sat talking softly in the back of the cab as we motored south on I-89. The pickings had been slim lately, so this fare to Norwich University was a welcome catch. It’s odd how these out-of-town runs appear; I can go a couple of weeks without leaving Chittenden County, and then a bunch of long-distance fares crop up in succession. “Yes, Mom,” the young man said. His voice carried the combination of exasperation and affection that marks a mother-son relationship, particularly as the boy is becoming a man. “I’ve got the transcripts. I told you — the folder’s tucked in with my laptop.” “Has your son applied to Norwich?” I asked the woman over my shoulder. “He sure has,” she replied. Glancing up at the rearview mirror, I noticed that a brilliant violet scarf was wrapped in a way that revealed not a wisp of hair. The head wrap accentuated the woman’s sharp but lovely features. “Tomorrow Robert has an interview. My goodness, I’m so nervous.” “Well, I’m sure you don’t need to be,” I replied with a chuckle. “If they asked him to come up for a personal interview, they’re already seriously interested in him. Besides,

On his face was the most loving expression — it nearly broke my heart. he looks like a terrific kid.” “That he is,” she said with a big smile. “He’s my baby.” She stretched her arm around his brawny shoulder and leaned up to give him a big smooch on the cheek. “Sheesh, Mom,” Robert said, shaking his head. He lifted a pair of tiny wire headphones from his neck and fitted the end pieces into his ears. The message couldn’t be clearer: No more mommy kisses! “It just occurred to me,” the woman said. “I did visit Vermont once before. It had to be the early ’60s, when I was about 8 or 9.” “Were you traveling with your family?” “Yes, my dad was a big one for packing the family into the station wagon and exploring the country.” She gave a small laugh and reached up to adjust her scarf. “That was my father, all right. ‘There’s a bigger world out there than Cincinnati,’ he’d say, ‘and this family’s gonna get out and see it.’” “So you’re talking about the civil-rights era, the 1960s? That must have been an interesting time for an African-American family to be road-tripping around the country.” “Oh, yeah,” she replied. “Particularly in the South.” “Wow, I can’t even begin to imagine.” “I’ll never forget one trip we made to visit an aunt and uncle in the Florida panhandle, I think it was Panama City. We were all tired and hungry and stopped for food somewhere in Georgia. It must have been quite far off the highway, which was a mistake to begin with.

“My parents knew there was essentially no chance of us being served a sit-down meal, so my father went in for some takeout. He came back moments later, the veins popping out of his neck. It seems they wouldn’t even let him order out in the dining room, only around the back at the delivery door. To this day, I can remember him slamming his door shut as we took off. He said he was a soldier, a World War II vet, and ‘damned if he was going around the back of the building to buy food.’ My mother calmed him down eventually. I can’t recall where we ever did eat that day.” We’d reached the Northfield exit and begun the precipitous 5-mile descent to hook up with Route 12. This has got to be one of the steepest paved roads in Vermont; near the bottom, a breakdown lane for runaway trucks runs up a sharp hill to the right. What a lifesaver that could be, I think every time I pass by it, riding hard on the brakes. “So where are you living now?” I asked. “We’re still in Cincinnati, believe it or not.” “You’re working down there?” “I was until this year. I had pretty decent career as an x-ray technician. But I’ve had a brain tumor, and after the operations, I lost a lot of my short-term memory and had to give up the job.” “Hey, Mom, check it out,” Robert said, suddenly springing to life. “This is it — Norwich University.” “So it is,” his mom said, peering out at the campus buildings. “A military school. You’re sure this is what you want to do, right?” “Only since I’ve been, like, 10.” “Just like your grandpa,” she said softly, almost more to herself. A mile north of the campus we found the B&B where they’d be staying the night. Robert carried the two heavier suitcases up to the front door and into the building, while his mother opened her bag to extract the money for the fare. When he came back three minutes later she was still looking for the envelope where she’d placed the cash earlier that morning. “I’m so sorry to hold you up,” she said, as she fished around through one bag, then another. “I know I put it in here somewhere, I just can’t remember where.” As another minute passed, I expected Robert to jump in and help her out. But he just stood by the door patiently, not saying a word. On his face was the most loving expression — it nearly broke my heart. “Aha!” she said, pulling out a folded business envelope. “I knew it was in here. It just takes me a while these days.” She counted out the money, passed me the bills and said, “Thanks so much for the ride.” “Hey, my pleasure,” I replied. “And good luck, Robert.” “Thank you, sir,” he said. Then he smiled and put his arm gently around his mother’s waist, and the two of them turned and walked into the inn. 쩾 “Hackie” is a biweekly column that can also be read on www.sevendaysvt.com. To reach Jernigan Pontiac, email hackie@sevendaysvt.com.

Want your music reviewed Send albums to Casey Rea in SEVEN DAYS? clubs@sevendaysvt.com or P.O. Box 1164 Burlington, VT 05402-1164

let’s get the band back together, man!


20A | march 09-16, 2005 | SEVEN DAYS

inside track << 09A

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2:50 a.m. when two Essex squad cars finally got Lt. Saffo to stop her SUV. The Vermont Guard spokesperson told the officer she’d had “one drink approximately two hours earlier.” However, according to Ofc. Robert Hall, Veronica was having difficulty standing and was not even aware that her front right tire was flat. Lt. Saffo was taken to the police station, where her breath sample showed a blood alcohol level of .224 — almost three times the legal limit. Despite refusing to be either fingerprinted or photographed as required, Lt. Saffo was released that morning on a citation. According to the police affidavit, a friend picked her up. Last Thursday, District Court Judge Ed Cashman ordered Saffo to report to the Essex Police within two weeks to be photographed and fingerprinted. A hearing on a civil suspension of her driver’s license is scheduled for March 23. When first contacted on Monday, Assistant Adjutant Gen. Bill Noyes said he was not aware of any of his officers being arrested recently. When we mentioned Saffo’s name, he replied, “I might have heard something.” On Tuesday morning Noyes read us a statement citing the Privacy Act as the reason the Vermont Guard would have no comment on Saffo’s DWI charge. “Obviously, we take any allegations involving drinking and driving seriously,” he said. “However, since this issue is being dealt with in a civilian court, we will have no comment.” Lt. Saffo was out of town Tuesday. She did not respond to a message left on her cell phone.

Irish Eyes — No smiles this St. Patrick’s Day, folks. Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams of Northern Ireland is not invited to the White House. Instead, five family members of a Belfast Catholic man who had been murdered outside a bar by “republicans” will be received by President George W. Bush. The IRA has expelled three unnamed members in response to the killing and “suspended” seven others. The IRA has also been accused by both British and Irish governments of the $50 million robbery of the Northern Bank in Belfast just before Christmas. However, no evidence has been produced. From a distance, it’s been remarkable to watch how quickly the Fianna Fail government of Prime Minister Bertie Ahern in the Republic of Ireland has pounced on Gerry Adams and the Sinn Fein Party. Given that Ahern has presided over one of Europe’s most corrupt governments for more than a decade, he must be thrilled to see Adams getting gored in the press on a daily basis instead of himself. Ireland has been one of the Western world’s most rapidly changing societies in the last decade. It was once known as a Catholic country. Today only 10 percent of its Catholics go to church. One Catholic we know who does go to church, Sen. Patrick Leahy, sounded a little upset about the current mess when we raised

the Gerry Adams issue Tuesday. “Unfortunately,” said St. Patrick sharply, “Gerry is never able to say something in one word if he could use 500.” Leahy was one of three senators who, as he reminded us, “stuck our necks out” in 1994 to get President Bill Clinton to grant Gerry Adams a visa to enter the U.S. Back then, peace was in the air. And the IRA has maintained its self-imposed ceasefire. But everything fell apart last fall when Ulster Unionists demanded and did not receive what they considered sufficient proof of IRA weapons decommissioning. Sen. Leahy told Inside Track he wanted “to talk to the parties first” before commenting further on the current imbroglio. “I think things could be a lot better,” he said. Not good.

Media War — Politics and media. Media and politics. Like horse and carriage, you can’t have one without the other. And a check of the online archives at Vermont’s TV news power, WCAX, shows some politicians doing a lot better than others. Remember, in politics, exposure is job one. For example, House Republican leader Peg Flory of Pittsford gets very high marks. Princess Peg replaced Rep. Rick Hube as leader of the GOP caucus on January 18. Since then, she’s appeared about a dozen times with a speaking part in a Ch. 3 news broadcast. Cool. Her counterpart, House Democratic Leader Carolyn Partridge, could learn a few things from Flory. Rep. Partridge has appeared but once — that’s right, once — on the WCAX-TV news since the session started on January 3. Ah, but the House Speaker is a Democrat, you say. Well, rookie House Speaker Gaye Symington of Jericho is also no match for Peg Flory when it comes to getting the attention of the WCAX Statehouse news team. It looks like Speaker Gaye has been on the Ch. 3 news with a speaking part 13 times. However, most of her appearances were oneline reactions to Gov. Douglas’ State of the State and Budget speeches in the early days of the session. Since Peg Flory became Republican leader seven weeks ago, Speaker Gaye has been seen and heard in a WCAX news story just three times. Clearly, House Democrats could improve their media skills. Perhaps they could take a page from the playbook of the top Democrat in the Vermont Senate: Peter Welch of Hartland. Seems Sen. Grape Juice is always on Ch. 3! Of course, Welch has to pay for most of it. But, seriously folks, those commercials during the news that feature Sen. Welch as a caring lawyer with an 800 number, dedicated to getting injured people the money they deserve, does a lot for name recognition. We’ll see if Partridge & Co. don’t have to resort to buying spots to break out of the Ch. 3 shadows.


SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005

“Inside Track” is a weekly column that can also be read on www.sevendaysvt.com. To reach Peter Freyne, email freyne@sevendaysvt.com.

inside track 21A

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Adapted for the theater from The Stinky Cheese Man & Other Fairly Stupid Tales this rare production retells (and wreaks havoc on) the allegories we all thought we knew by heart.

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LECTURES& EXHIBITIONS DIALOGUES IN DIVERSITY SERIES: 3.7.05 - 3.8.05 Celebration of Asian Culture: a discussion with John Balaban 3.22.05 Celebration of Womens History Month: 2 musical workshops with Charlie King and Karen Brandow

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Welcome, Bishop Sal! — The announcement came suddenly last Thursday. The Pope had found a replacement for Vermont’s Bishop Kenneth Angell. The selection could not have offered more of a visual contrast. The Bingo Bishop, after all, is a rather large fellow. Easy to see Ken Angell playing offensive tackle as a young man. His replacement, however, looks suited for a career in the saddle at Saratoga. Monsignor Salvatore R. Matano, all 5-foot-4 of him, will be elevated to bishop in April. He’ll officially take over running the Vermont diocese in August when Bishop Angell retires. A Rhode Island native, Sal the Jockey’s been working out of the Vatican Embassy in D.C. for the last four years. That ought to tell you Vermont’s bishop-to-be ain’t no political novice. He’s also a generation behind Angell. Matano’s a baby boomer who was a seminarian in the ’60s, and a very bright one, too. Matano studied theology in Rome and was ordained as a priest in St. Peter’s Basilica in 1971. “While I don’t know intimately of Vermont,” said Matano, “I do know of Vermont because you are very prominent in the news.” Vermont, he said, is known for its “progressive views.” Hey, word travels fast, eh? Given that only about 25 percent of Vermont Catholics attend Mass anymore, and that most of the current priest crop is eligible for Social Security, we asked Monsignor Sal if he felt like he was taking over a sinking ship. “Is the ship sinking?” asked Rhode Island Sal. “Well, let’s say we have a few corks in a few holes.” Always wondered what they did with the corks from the altar wine, didn’t you? Without referring to the current shrinkage in parishioners and the never-ending criminal and civil court cases involving sexual misconduct by priests, Matano reminded us the Catholic Church has survived many difficulties. “We’ve endured for an awful long time,” said Sal reflectively. “It’s probably the oldest institution in Western civilization.” Hmmm. We would have guessed bordellos. “The ship will continue to sail,” said Matano, “and hopefully grow stronger.” Well, if anyone can pull it off, this politically aware guy from Rhode Island just might be the ticket. One thing’s obvious: Vermont’s new bishop neither looks nor sounds anything like the bishop he is replacing. Got a good feeling about Bishop Sal. m

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<BOOKS>

Booking Agent UVM Special Collections Librarian Connell Gallagher turns up the volumes

A

row of computers is the first thing you see when you enter the University of Vermont’s Bailey-Howe Library. These days, old-fashioned book repositories have become just another place to hop online. STORY But UVM Librarian Connell Gallagher, CATHY Director for Research Collections, encourRESMER ages students, faculty and staff — heck, anybody and everybody — to connect IMAGES with the bibliothèque on another level. MATTHEW Namely, the basement. THORSEN Gallagher oversees the Special Collections department, which is tucked into a corner on the library’s bottom floor. It’s open fewer hours than the rest of the library, and is separated from the rest of the building by walls of windows and a metal door. This isolated fiefdom — along with an annex building on East Avenue — houses the 70,000 items that make up UVM’s Vermont archives, as well as a variety of rare and unusual books. Few who frequent the library find their way down.

That isolation is unacceptable to Gallagher. The 60-year-old librarian — whose pale, owlish visage reflects a career spent underground — has logged nearly 35 years cataloging and improving the library’s special collections, and he wants the entire community to appreciate them. His ambassadorial efforts earned him a Distinguished Service Award from the New England Archivists in 2001. He prompts UVM professors to incorporate the collection into their classes, and invites students from schools all across Vermont to visit and check out the books themselves. Not “check them out” literally — all viewing is limited to within the monitored reading room. But at UVM, you don’t have to be a graduate student or credentialed researcher to handle the collection. Gallagher loves to see students actually turning the pages of rare, valuable books. “I don’t just acquire stuff to put it on the shelf,” he says during a leisurely weekday tour. “If it just sits there and gathers dust,


SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005 | feature 23A

you’re missing the purpose, in my book.” His mission is evident on a recent Monday morning, when students from a digital art class trickle into the reading room for an introduction to the “book arts” collection. Gallagher asks Jen Nelson, a UVM senior majoring in art education, if she’s visited before. She says it’s her first trip down. “That’s great,” he responds in a quiet but excited voice. “You’re going to get a surprise.” Gallagher instructs Nelson and her classmates to sign in and pull on a pair of disposable white gloves from a box. On a long table at one end of the room, he’s placed an assortment of limited edition, handmade artist books, each of which is worth between several hundred

heads and look inside. They see a series of pages cut to depict a wavy blue hole that shrinks as it recedes. Lines of a poem appear on the edges of each page. “Who are you to talk of rigorous intellectual honesty?” it asks. “You who use ink as an octopus does / ...you for whom words are a decoy and a disguise.” “It’s like Christmas or something,” says one white-gloved female student. During his talk a short while later, Gallagher explains that artists often create just a handful of these concept books. Chen made only 25 copies of Evidence of Compression, for example. That’s why it sells for $1200. Why, he asks rhetorically, would an artist spend so much time handcrafting dozens of copies of

If it just sits there and gathers dust, you’re missing the purpose, in my book. CONNELL GALLAGHER

and a few thousand dollars. Before he launches into his lecture, he invites the students to discover the books for themselves. Most don’t look like books at all — they’re more like threedimensional sculptures. Gallagher’s predecessor, John Buechler, began building the library’s fine-art book archive, and Gallagher has continued his work. It’s his real passion. It’s easy to see why. Murmurs of surprise and delight are audible as the students explore these colorful objets d’art. One woman opens a silk-covered box containing a copy of Julia Chen’s Evidence of Compression. Inside, protected by a suede-lined cradle, is what appears to be a rock with a brass hinge on its side. It opens to reveal several circular lines of text descending into a crater containing two small, seed pod-shaped books. Someone lets out a muted “wow.” At the other end of the table, a guy opens a copy of Octopus, another Chen creation. He spreads it accordion-style across the end of the table. The book has become a tunnel. To read it, the students must crane their

a book instead of painting a picture, or sculpting a statue? “You can sit down with a book,” he answers. “You can get close to it.” A better question might be why librarians like Gallagher collect these specimens. He picks up another volume, this one by Buzz Specter. It contains 181 copies of the same page, torn so that when you open the book, only a tiny sliver of each page is visible, just enough so that all the pages, seen together, read like a page of unbroken text. When it came in, he tells the students, “I heard rumors that they said, ‘Connie Gallagher has gone off the deep end. He paid $1000 for a book with all the pages torn out.’” He laughs off the criticism. In an earlier interview, he explained the need for this obscure collection. “It’s not something you can really run into anywhere,” he observed. “I want Vermonters to be able to look at it . . . I like being able to show them something really beautiful, so when they leave they want to make something really beautiful.” >> 24A

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Gallagher likes regular books, too — the kind with pages and a spine. His windowless office is full of them; plastic bags on the floor bulge with donations, random volumes crowd his desk. He’s devoted his life to studying and preserving them.

Vermont. He became UVM’s Manuscript Librarian in August 1970. The Special Collections department had only been established eight years earlier, after UVM’s library moved from Billings to Bailey-Howe. Prior to

Collections, he catalogued more than 100 of the University’s collections, including archival documents and personal papers. He also worked to expand the library’s holdings, which already included prizes such as the papers of Vermont politician

Gallagher tells tales about diving through dumpsters and excavating burned buildings to salvage documents for posterity. Gallagher grew up in Brooklyn, earned an English degree from Pace College and a Master’s in English from the University of Wisconsin, then worked as an archivist at the Wisconsin Historical Society before marrying and moving to

the move, most of the rare items had been inaccessible to the public. During his early years at UVM, Gallagher helped bring some of those materials to light. In the 18 years between the time he arrived and when he was appointed Director for Research

and scholar George Perkins Marsh, and a rare cache of letters from writer Willa Cather. In 1990, he spent his sabbatical in Washington, D.C., locating and archiving the legislative papers of Vermont Senators Patrick Leahy and Robert Stafford.


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When describing how he finds artifacts to add to his collection, Gallagher sounds like a rakish, daring Indiana Jones clone. He tells tales about diving through dumpsters and excavating burned buildings to salvage documents for posterity. For a time, he met monthly with a Burlington man he describes as “an old codger.� The man called him offering papers that belonged to his father, who helped establish the Long Trail and the Green Mountain Club. The man would leave a box on the porch in anticipation of Gallagher’s visits, open the door a crack, and peer out at him. Eventually, the mystery man let Gallagher into the house. Careful sorting through the man’s papers yielded an invaluable set of letters and slides that shed light on the development of the Long Trail. “Most of it was pure junk,� says Gallagher. “But you never know.� He recalls another adventure, to retrieve the papers of former Vermont Governor and UVM President Thomas Salmon. Gallagher and Kevin Graffagnino — the current director of the Vermont Historical Society, who was then the curator of UVM’s Vermont collection — drove to Salmon’s house and carted boxes of papers out of a thirdfloor attic. The way Gallagher tells it, the day was hot and the stairs were steep. “That was a hell of a job,� he recalls. Graffagnino, nearly 20 years Gallagher’s junior, relates a version of events that’s slightly different from his mentor’s story. He agrees it was hot up in the attic of the big Victorian house, but the way he remembers it, he

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did most of the lifting. Gallagher spent most of his time downstairs schmoozing with Salmon’s wife. “Connie is an extrovert,” says Graffagnino fondly. “He gets along well with everyone. He breaks the librarian stereotype of a mousy person who would rather not see human beings in the flesh.” And Graffagnino’s not bitter about doing more than his share of the work that day. “Without the schmoozing,” he notes, “we wouldn’t have gotten the collection.” Gallagher also uses his people skills to fundraise — to buy those artist books he’s so crazy about, he has to write grants and cultivate donors. It’s a major part of his job. Vermont artist and bookmaker Claire Van Vliet is grateful for his efforts. The Newark resident, who often collaborates with writers such as Peter Schumann of Bread and Puppet Theater, praises Gallagher as “an ideal librarian.” Van Vliet’s publishing house, Janus Press, will celebrate its 50th anniversary later this year. Gallagher is planning a January exhibit at the library, and will produce a published catalogue celebrating her

books. Van Vliet, who has perhaps garnered more fame nationally than in Vermont, will also have shows at the Grolier Club in New York City and the National Gallery in Washington, D.C. She notes that UVM is the only Vermont library that collects her books. “It certainly makes you feel like your community is interested in what you do, and that it’s accessible to the public at large . . . they might see something different there from what they’d see at Barnes & Noble.” Gallagher is happy to provide that exposure. He looks forward to the day when Special Collections moves out of the basement and back to Billings, probably around 2008. Unfortunately, he’ll probably be retired by then. For now, he contents himself with coaxing visitors down the stairs. Last week he hosted a local Boy Scout troop. The kids were researching Burlington’s New North End, and he let them sneak a few peeks at the artist books. One of the boys was really impressed. “He asked me, ‘Is this your library?’” Gallagher recalls. “I said ‘yes.’ He said, ‘This is the coolest library ever.’” 쩾

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SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005 | feature 29A

RAZING the BARS

BILL KEOGH

Is Bill Keogh trying to dry up Burlington’s late-night watering holes? story: Ken Picard

NANCY CUNHA

It’s a bone-chilling Tuesday night on Church Street, but inside Burlington City Hall, Nancy Cunha is feeling the heat. Cunha, who owns Manhattan Pizza & Pub, waits anxiously for the City Council, acting in its role as the Local Control Commission, to decide whether to suspend her liquor license for 48 hours. The proposed penalty, which stems from an October incident in which a patron was allegedly served too much alcohol, would effectively shut down her business during Mardi Gras, when some 20,000 revelers descend on downtown. For 11 years, Cunha has operated the pub and pizza parlor on the corner of Church and Main, which on weekend nights is the most bustling intersection in Vermont. This was her first liquor license violation. According to the police report, an intoxicated man was arrested down the street at Superior Court Plaza for threatening pedestrians with a broken pool cue. He told officers he’d been drinking at Manhattan Pizza, then walked out with their pool cue. The man, whose blood-alcohol content was nearly twice the legal limit, was admitted overnight to a detox unit. He later testified that he was also on antidepressants at the time and couldn’t remember where he’d been drinking or where the pool cue came from; Cunha insists that none of her pool cues went missing that night. But despite some fuzzy facts and Manhattan Pizza’s otherwise clean record, the license committee recommended the two-day shutdown.

Cunha doesn’t have to wait long for the verdict. Councilor Bill Keogh (D–Ward 5), who chairs the three-person License Committee, moves to deny Cunha’s attorney’s request to stay the suspension pending an appeal to the Vermont Supreme Court. Keogh’s motion is seconded and the council unanimously agrees. The entire proceeding takes five minutes. Afterwards, Cunha is furious. “Mardi Gras is our busiest weekend of the year,” she says. “It’s what pulls us out of debt for the whole winter. And Keogh knows that.” Two days later, the Vermont Supreme Court grants the temporary stay and Manhattan Pizza is back in business for Mardi Gras. But the whole affair leaves Cunha angry, frustrated and financially strapped. “I’ve just gone through a virtual witch hunt that’s going to cost me nine grand,” she says. “Bill Keogh has a vendetta against downtown.” Other downtown restaurant and bar owners share that view of the License Committee chairman. Though few are willing to say so on the record, the prevailing sentiment is that a handful of city councilors, and Keogh in particular, would rather see Burlington roll up its sidewalks at 11 p.m. Bar owners’ snipes about Keogh and the License Committee are nothing new. For years, Keogh butted heads with Jack O’Brien, the pugnacious former owner of Red Square, who was repeatedly cited for liquor and fire-code violations. Lately, however, the chorus of com-

plaints has spread to other business people in the hospitality industry. Currently, there are 88 places in downtown Burlington to get a meal and/or a drink. On the Flynn block alone, which has the highest density of bars in Vermont, more than 1000 people can be drinking alcohol at any given time. But many of the owners say that when it comes to granting entertainment permits and overseeing liquor sales, the License Committee paints all establishments with the same brush. They find this attitude particularly frustrating because in the last year, the hospitality industry has made a concerted effort to clean up its act. Last May, the Church Street Marketplace Commission helped launch the Hospitality Resource Panel, bringing together various downtown stakeholders to tackle issues such as excessive

images: Matthew Thorsen

noise, underage drinking, vandalism and late-night rowdiness. Not surprisingly, most restaurant and tavern owners are uneasy about publicly voicing their dissatisfaction with the License Committee, fearing retribution when their liquor licenses come up for renewal. Several express a fear of becoming “the next Jack O’Brien.” “All of us feel intimidated because it’s our livelihood,” explains Al Gobeille, the owner of Breakwaters, Shanty on the Shore, Burlington Bay Market & Café, and Lake Champlain Cruises. Gobeille chairs the Vermont Lodging and Restaurant Association, and has nine liquor licenses in Burlington. “If you’re a builder, you don’t fight with the building inspector if you want to be a builder for very long. And if you’re a bar owner, you

don’t fight with the liquor commission.” Nevertheless, many downtown proprietors are equally concerned that Burlington is earning a reputation for being inhospitable to its hospitality industry, a sector that now employs about 2100 people, or 10 percent of the city’s workforce. Some people suggest it’s why Higher Ground didn’t move to Burlington, even though co-owner Alex Crothers is also part owner of the former Sh-Na-Na’s building on Main Street. (Crothers says only that the decision to locate in South Burlington was based on a number of considerations.) Deserved or not, Burlington’s neo-prohibitionist reputation is having an impact. “It’s affecting Mardi Gras, it’s affecting Jazz

Festival, it’s affecting our livemusic scene and the sale of businesses,” says one Church Street restaurateur. “[Keogh] wants all the fun to end when the sun goes down.” Like many of his fellow restaurant owners, Gobeille was incensed when he heard that Keogh nearly pushed through some major changes to the liquor-license requirements without holding public hearings or seeking input from the business community. The proposed conditions, which were brought to the City Council February 7, included a provision that restaurants couldn’t earn more than 30 to 35 percent of their gross revenues from alcohol sales. Another provision would require food establishments “maintain complete restaurant services” whenever they serve alcohol, effectively forcing them to keep their kitchen staffs on duty until closing time. Yet another change would mandate that all licensees “maintain a clear, unobstructed view of all areas of the premises . . . where alcohol will be sold or consumed.” That condition raised a host of logistical dilemmas for establishments with private dining rooms, balconies, patios and pool rooms, and even room service at the Wyndham Hotel. The requirement would have forced bar owners to make costly renovations or risk a citation. The City Council voted to send the provisions back to committee for further review. At the License Committee’s next meeting on February 17, bar and restaurant owners showed up in force to express their outrage, not just with the new rules but with the entire process. “I have a wife and three kids who depend on my income, and

Go see what downtown is like at 2 o’clock in the morning on a warm June, July or August night. All those people out there that have been drinking for two or three hours? It’s scary. It’s scary ! BILL KEOGH employees that I cherish,” Gobeille told the committee. “With the stroke of a pen you can hurt a business, and that can never be done in a vacuum or behind closed doors.” Greg Noonan, owner of Vermont Pub & Brewery, was equally disgusted. “I think this whole thing, very honestly, was very poorly crafted,” he said at the meeting. “And the way this whole thing was done was very irresponsible.” License Committee member Barbara Perry (I–Ward 6) later admitted that the proposed changes were only supposed to be a communication to the council and should never have been brought to a vote. “That was inappropriate,” she says. “The business community was very upset, and

they had a right to be.” Keogh, who didn’t attend the February 17 committee meeting, now says the more controversial measures will likely be scrapped. “What we tried to do — and it kind of backfired on us — is explain to licensees what some of the regulations are,” Keogh says. “We probably went too far.” Keogh rejects the charge that he and his committee paint all bar owners with the same brush. “That’s not true,” he says. “But we have to come up with rules and regulations that apply to everybody, including those who want to push the envelope.” Then he adds, “Go see what downtown is like at 2 o’clock in the morning on a warm June, July or August night. All those people out there that have been drinking for two or

three hours? It’s scary. It’s scary!” The folks in the hospitality industry say remarks like that, and this recent episode with City Council, are indicative of the underlying problem: The city’s License Committee, which wields enormous power and influence over bars and restaurants, is chaired by a city councilor who finds the late-night bar scene inherently distasteful. And that fuels an adversarial environment whenever licensees go before the committee to renew their liquor licenses, change their hours of operation, apply for an outdoor entertainment permit, or sell their businesses. Consider, for example, a permit request filed last year by Bill and Melissa Shahady, owners of Wine >> 30A


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Works, across the street from City Hall Park. They asked the License Committee to allow them to put six tables on the sidewalk and serve drinks outdoors until 11 p.m. Wine Works has been in business for six years and never been cited for a license violation. The Shahadys got the OK from every other city agency, including Planning and Zoning, Public Works and the fire and police departments. But the License Committee dragged its feet for four months and refused to bring the matter to a vote, according to Shahady. Each time he went before the committee, a new condition was added, he says, including one that Melissa personally notify every resident on the block of their intentions to serve drinks outdoors. Shahady spent about $550 on the process, including the cost of adding the city to his insurance policy to cover the sidewalk in front of his business. By the time the License Committee acted on his application, the weather had turned cold, effectively making the request moot.

Keogh, who’s been a city councilor for nine years and has chaired the License Committee for the last six, categorically denies that he’s an opponent of the Burlington nightlife. By and large, he says, Burlington’s restaurants and bars are well managed; it’s the few “bad apples� who spoil it for everyone. “We have maybe 10 bars that cause all the

problems, not the 95 others that are no problem at all,� he says. “But when we draft regulations, we have to do it for the 10 that are always looking for a loophole.� One “loophole� Keogh objects to allows restaurants to turn into bars after 11 p.m. Under state law, proprietors apply for either a restaurant or a cabaret license, depending upon whether their primary source of revenue will be food or alcohol, and whether they’ll offer live entertainment. The Local Control Commission recommends to the Vermont Department of Liquor Control (DLC) which type of license should be issued based on several factors, including how close the establishment is to residential neighborhoods, its proposed hours of operation and its seating capacity. “We’re having people who come in for a restaurant license that later morphs into a bar,� Keogh explains. “They convince all of us that it’s going to be nice, that they’ll have adults and a little live music. Six months later, the college kids are in there until 2 a.m. raising hell and having a good time.� Keogh says his committee intends to crack down on such places, either by not renewing their liquor licenses or by scaling back the hours when they’re allowed to serve booze. Although he admits that such a move would only affect “maybe three� downtown establishments, he says it would “send out a message� to other restaurant owners that they

shouldn’t “push the envelope to the edge or off the edge.â€? “That could happen in the next couple of months,â€? Keogh adds. “When they renew their licenses for April 1, we can say, ‘Restaurant license? No way! And you’re in a residential neighborhood and we’re not going to give you a cabaret license.’â€? Tim Halvorson, owner of Halvorson’s Upstreet CafĂŠ and chairman of the Church Street Marketplace Commission, says that attitude overlooks a desirable characteristic of the downtown scene. “Burlington, and Church Street in particular, is blessed with a bunch of amorphous operations that are restaurants and bars in combination, and serve an adult population in a very positive way,â€? Halvorson says. “But [some councilors] don’t like the fact that sometimes when you go into Leunig’s or Sweetwaters it feels more like a bar, and sometimes you go into RĂ­ Rå’s and it feels more like a restaurant. They feel like they got bamboozled.â€? Moreover, the city already has noise ordinances, and the state has laws about over-service, underage drinking and overcrowding. Many business owners can’t understand what’s driving this “get-tough-onbarsâ€? attitude, especially when, by most measures, things in downtown are getting better. Burlington Deputy Police Chief Walt Decker notes that in recent years, the downtown area has seen a steady decline in the number of disturbances, arrests and individuals taken to detox. He attributes


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What can be done to create a more cooperative climate? One promising solution now in the works is the Hospitality Resource Panel (HRP), a committee made up of various downtown stakeholders, including representatives from the hospitality industry, area residents, public safety agencies, and the city’s economic development office. HRP panels have been successful in 26 other cities around the country. In May, Mayor Peter Clavelle appointed an HRP steering committee to address late-night noise and outdoor entertainment. The HRP has been slow out of the gate. Nancy Wood, executive director of the Burlington Business Association, hopes the HRP will be used to address a number of business concerns, such as streamlining the licensing process for establishments that have sold alcohol for years without incident. Councilor Perry agrees that the HRP may be effective. However, she also points out that sometimes the License Committee has good reason to move cautiously before approving a new liquor license. Sometimes, she says, the only opportunity the city has to change an existing business is when it’s sold. “Every time we’ve gone too fast we’ve regretted it,” Perry says. “Folks need to understand that a liquor license is an important piece of paper and an important responsibility.” For his part, Keogh is cautiously optimistic about the HRP and hopes it will relieve the License Committee of many of the timeconsuming tasks involved in overseeing downtown. “We have a better group of bar and restaurant owners now than we’ve had in 10 years,” Keogh says. “With the HRP, I think we can work this all out together, I really do. Whether I’m on this committee another year or not, I think we’re moving in the right direction.” Does that mean Keogh is planning to leave his position as License Committee chairman? He says he hopes this will be his last year. That’ll be music to the ears of many bar owners. m

BURLINGTON BARS AND RESTAURANTS BY THE NUMBERS: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

Restaurants with liquor licenses: 56 Establishments with cabaret (bar) licenses: 23 Combined maximum occupancy of downtown bars: 2375 Total alcohol violations reported in 2002-03: 739 Fines assessed by Department of Liquor Control: $24,200 Violations for selling or furnishing alcohol to minors: 356 Failure to meet staff training requirements: 113 Violations for serving intoxicated patrons: 35 Failure to control conduct of patrons: 34 “Happy hour” violations: 5 Employees drinking on duty: 11 Doors locked while customers are inside: 3 Annual number of customer visits to downtown bars: 450,000 Annual number of customer visits to downtown restaurants: 3.2 million Number of jobs provided by downtown hospitality industry: 2100 Annual amount of donations (cash and in-kind) to nonprofit groups: $350,000

Sources: Vermont Department of Liquor Control (2003 data); Downtown Hospitality Survey.

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this trend to improved education and training of bar staffs, increased cooperation between the police and club owners and, most importantly, proprietors “taking ownership” of their patrons and policing themselves. Decker says the key to addressing alcohol-related problems such as over-service, underage drinking, patrons’ misconduct and drunk driving is “responsible property owners and responsible business management.” In part, that means bar managers who are willing to call the police before a minor incident escalates. But a number of club owners admit privately that they’re often reluctant to call 911, since it’s widely believed that the License Committee uses those police calls against them when reviewing their license renewals. Keogh denies the charge. “We do not take that into consideration whether or not the license is going to be renewed,” he insists. “They’re encouraged to call the cops.” Councilor Perry says, however, that when the License Committee debated how to penalize Manhattan Pizza, they considered the fact that the police had been called to the corner in front of that establishment more than 40 times in the last year. She adds that the License Committee uses those incidents as an opportunity to “create some positive conditions to work with the police department to see why problems are happening and see how to make them better.” Perry also emphasizes, though, that the committee doesn’t look to deny liquor licenses or dole out harsh punishments. In fact, she says, the city is more lenient than the DLC when it recommends penalties for license infractions. “We love our bars and restaurants,” Perry says. “I don’t want to give up the vibrancy of downtown. I’m often down there after the Flynn having a 12 o’clock meal. It’s fantastic. We just have to find a way to keep some of this outdoor entertainment quieter.”

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Name Game Book review: The Education of Arnold Hitler by Marc Estrin

B STORY

PETER KURTH The Education of Arnold Hitler by Marc Estrin. Unbridled Books, 464 pages. $14.95.

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efore I commence to praise — no, rave about — Burlington writer Marc Estrin’s new novel, The Education of Arnold Hitler, I need to confess that I’m a bit intimidated by the assignment, both his and mine. I don’t write fiction, and I’m amazed at the mixture of erudition, imagination and sureness of purpose that went into the creation of a work as sharp and enticing as this. Estrin’s official biography describes him as “a writer, cellist and activist living in Burlington, Vermont.” He’s a member of the Vermont Philharmonic Orchestra as well as the author of Rehearsing With Gods (“an examination of The Bread & Puppet Theater”) and a highly praised first novel, Insect Dreams — The Half Life of Gregor Samsa (Blue Hen Publishing, 2002). The latter is a riff, or extended meditation, on The Metamorphosis, Franz Kafka’s hair-raising tale of “a man turned inexplicably into vermin,” as Estrin explains in an online interview, “alienated from all others.” “Most people don’t like cockroaches,” Estrin remarks; “others are equally wary of Kafka. I love both.” On publication, Insect Dreams won such critical accolades as to send any writer’s head spinning (“Brilliant . . . compelling . . . arresting . . . strikingly original . . . wrenching, funny, learned and, at times, poetic”). I confess I’ve had to tear myself away from reading it in order to get this review finished on time. About now, I’d read the phone book if it were written by Marc Estrin, and I can “critique” The Education of Arnold Hitler only with my eyes wide open with won-

der. Before I gush any further, some introduction is in order. The “Arnold Hitler” of Estrin’s title is not, repeat, not related in any way to “the” Hitler, the uniquely evil master of the Third Reich. All they share is a surname and initials, the central conceit of Estrin’s tale. Arnold is a boy from Mansfield, Texas, a suburb of Dallas-Fort Worth. Blond, handsome, strong, Aryan, a football star and future Harvard graduate, his “earliest detailed memory is of being held above a crowd by his father,” George, to watch the burning of a cross on the lawn of Mansfield High. It is 1956, the era of court-ordered desegregation, and, as Arnold overhears, “Three niggers think they’re gonna register this morning.” In fact, they don’t; their path is blocked by a phalanx of Mansfield’s roused and racist white citizenry. “Three niggers,” Arnold repeats aloud. “Don’t say ‘nigger,’” his mother replies. So Arnold says it to himself: “Nigger, nigger, nigger.” It is his first confrontation with the symbolic and finally arbitrary meaning and usage of words. This is mightily confusing to a boy with a sensitive mind, who thinks too much, broods a lot and cries easily. “He said ‘nigger,’” Arnold protests to his father. “Why can’t I say ‘nigger’?” “Different people talk differently,” George Hitler explains. “We don’t say ‘nigger’ in this family. We say ‘Negro’.” For Arnold, this is no solution. And he will find, later on, that the name “Hitler” carries its own power, regardless of his own,


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Vermont VideoWorks Filming and producing events on DVD innocent relation to it. One who “talks differently” in Mansfield, Texas, is Arnold’s mother Anna, an Italian native. She met his father when George, fighting the Nazis in Ferrara at the end of World War II, tossed a hand grenade through the window of what might have been a synagogue — the building had a Star of David on the door — and blew off one of Anna’s legs before subsequently saving her life. The Hitlers’ unlikely romance is at first uncomplicated, either by George’s surname or the fact that Anna’s father is Jewish. In small-town Texas, they live like anyone else. Mansfield is racist in only a stupid, unthinking way. As Estrin makes clear, it’s a town where the only real crime is “agitation,” “stirring things up.” George Andrew Hitler, Estrin writes, born in 1924, grew up at a time when it was fine to be so named. Until the age of nine, his last name was neither here nor there — just another moniker, that of his own father, Tom. From nine to eighteen, the homonym was noticed by only a minority of North Texans whose newspaper reading went beyond the sports page, the funnies, the local letters and obits. And for them it was Adolf Hitler, if anyone, who seemed the imposter, some German politician who had made off with George’s good name. But for Arnold it will become a torture — an existential agony that gives Estrin room to roam the whole map of 20th-century political, philosophical, metaphysical, religious, historical and linguistic concerns. In an early conversation with his mother, the course of Arnold’s life and preoccupations is defined and revealed: “Why is a fox called a fox?” he asked. “It’s called a fox just in English.

In Italy, it’s called un volpe.” “But it’s a fox? The same fox?” “It’s the same fox, but it has a different name.” “How can it have a different name if it’s the same?” “I don’t know. It just does. Italians call things differently than Americans.” He began to cry. After Arnold badly burns his hand at the age of 4, Anna, in an effort to distract him, says that “if he would put his left knee to his mouth” he can speak directly to “Nonno Jacobo,” his Jewish grandfather in Italy, who, she insists, “would feel a tickling in his left knee, and put his ear to it and listen, and he would be able to hear Arnold.” Sure enough, it works. Even Anna, who knows about legs, is mystified: “This was a little uncanny.” But with this deft, unforced touch of magic realism, Estrin gives Arnold a friend and a mentor, whose voice will guide him, instruct him, soothe him, counsel him and confound him for years to come. “Names are important,” Jacobo advises. “Words are important . . . Death and life are in the power of the tongue.” And another time: “Your life, Arnold, consider your life. The Jewish God is a god of onward — and onward is you. ... Anything you do can be a channel to God — or it can be a wall.” To talk too much about the actual story of Arnold’s adventures would be a disservice to both author and reader. As a teenager, Arnold becomes an expert on the Kennedy assassination as a well as a football star. He finds a girlfriend and gets to “third base.” After high school, he heads to Harvard, where no one will room with him on account of his name; where he struggles with the protests and violent unrest of the Vietnam

era, meets Noam Chomsky and Leonard Bernstein; debates becoming a “full-fledged” Jew; is approached for enlistment in a proto-fascist student organization; has an affair with a female professor; falls in love with Bernstein’s daughter; confronts the fury of nascent feminism; and emerges, so he thinks, no wiser than before. “He seemed more bent and less handsome than he had been,” Estrin observes. “There was a new tremor in his hand. His eyes were deeper in his skull. His mind was a question mark, walking.” After Harvard, it’s New York, no job, no friends, no money, strangers in the park and a stint on the Bowery, before Arnold meets an artist called Evelyn Brown. “Evelyn” being a diminutive for the original woman, “Eve,” or, in German, “Eva” — a point that Estrin does not belabor and leaves his readers to discern. The whole of the book is told in the same style of understatement, inference, suggestion and wonderment, at the same time never pausing at the expense of narration. The Education of Arnold Hitler is not just a book for the mind, but for the soul, the heart and pleasure. If I have a quibble with Estrin’s novel — and I feel like an amateur saying so — it’s that the women in the story all tend to be and sound exactly the same. All of them are bright as hell; all of them know their own minds and speak to Arnold in tones of instruction and exasperated affection. But, perhaps, in a way, this is a true reflection of the choices we do make in our lovers and friends: As with everything else — and finally, too, in Arnold’s case — we endow the words we hear and speak with meanings all our own. 쩾

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FROM THE EDUCATION OF ARNOLD HITLER: The Book of Questions — its very title spoke of Arnold’s being, its fragmented contents of the state to which his soul had been refracted. Jabès’s imaginary rabbis seemed to direct their questions and commentaries directly into the uncomfortable space he occupied: they echoed painfully off its walls and pressured their way to higher volumes and temperatures. It was Jewish writing . . . stubbornly assailing the unsayable with paradox and contradiction. The book was impossible to read in the ordinary sense — traversing blocks of consequential meaning. To read it so was to be defeated. Rather, one had to fill the lawless spaces with unstable, enigmatic meanings in this story of fragments and gaps, an account, beyond communication, ‘of a love destroyed by men and by words.’”

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epression-era folk music has long fascinated Vermont guitar legend Paul Asbell. As a child, he thrilled at exploring his folksinging father’s collection of antique 78 records, and developed a lifelong connection STORY to bygone styles. On his critically acclaimed CASEY 2000 release, Steel String Americana, Asbell REA wove various musical traditions into a vibrant, organic tapestry. Its upcoming IMAGE sequel, Roots and Branches: Further MATTHEW Adventures in Steel String Americana, adds a THORSEN few new threads. Featuring Delta blues, British Isles folk, reconfigured piano rolls Paul Asbell and even a Leonard Bernstein composition, presents Roots Roots is every bit as remarkable as its predeand Branches, cessor. A CD release party takes place this Further Sunday at the FlynnSpace in Burlington. Adventures in Steel String Now 56, Asbell grew up in the Chicago Americana, area, where he paid his dues as a sideman for FlynnSpace, such blues greats as Otis Rush, Junior Wells Burlington, and John Lee Hooker, to name a few. On March 13, the legendary LP The London Howlin’ Wolf 7:30 p.m. Sessions, the guitarist rubbed shoulders with Eric Clapton and members of The Rolling Stones. Seeking a “spiritual battery recharge,” he moved to the Green Mountains in 1971. The Windy City’s loss was Vermont’s gain — as a member of Kilimanjaro and Big Joe Burrell’s Unknown Blues Band, Asbell delighted audiences throughout the Northeast with cool blues and white-hot jazz. He’s also taught fretboard maneuvers to some pretty formidable players, including six-string superstar Trey Anastasio. Although Asbell has played on countless albums, Roots and Branches is only his second solo release. Seven Days recently chatted with the guitar maestro about several of the 14 cuts on the new disc, and what it’s like to be alone in the spotlight.

“NEEDED TIME/ JESUS ON THE MAINLINE” (Traditional) SD: Both of these songs are Southern spirituals. How did you come across them? PA: I’m a real big gospel music fan. I’ve been into it since my dad took me to churches on the South Side of Chicago, which is where I used to live. I didn’t really know what I was hearing then; I just knew I liked it in some way. It was only much later that I heard recordings of people like Blind Willie Johnson playing slide guitar and singing. It took awhile before I realized that these were the same songs, because those versions aren’t at all like a church choir. They’re both true folk songs that got treated very differently over decades, cultures and geography. “AIN’T MISBEHAVIN’” (H. Brooks/A. Razaf/T. Waller) SD: It must be tough transposing a Fats Waller piano tune to guitar. Is the challenge part of the fun? PA: Yeah, the challenge is fun. But once you’ve got the moves, the important part is to do it with grace. I’ve gotten myself to the point where I can pull the tune off, but the real challenge is to do it every time, and to make sure I don’t get sloppy on it. This is part of the reason of doing solo stuff. For a while, I was really daunted by the idea of going onstage and saying, “Oh, I guess you’re here to see me.” You’re in the middle of a tune, you look around and, hey, there’s no one else here! But it’s a way of keeping yourself honest. If you’re gonna establish a benchmark for yourself, this will do it. You just hope you’re up for the task. And I do ask myself that!

“CHUNKY MONKEY GUMBO” (P. Asbell)

“PARKER’S MOOD” (C. Parker)

SEVEN DAYS: You wrote this tune for Ben & Jerry’s. Were you inspired by the ice cream flavor itself, or was there another muse? PAUL ASBELL: It was really just the vibe that the ad campaign needed to have. My take on it was sort of a “rough-hewn” Americana approach — the kind of guitar playing that still has some bark on it, you know what I mean? It’s not based on anything specific, but I think it evokes familiarity. There are certain kinds of ragtime chord progressions that we’ve come to feel have an ease about them, a laziness. What’s kind of ironic, of course, is that you can’t be lazy and play it!

SD: You play this one with a Delta blues feel in spots, but Charlie Parker is not commonly associated with that style. What’s the link? PA: There’s a bit of “what if ” to a lot of these tunes. What if two people who are keenly associated with a style of music hooked up or cross-pollinated one another’s musical notions? In this case, what if Robert Johnson and Charlie Parker did that? I have an odd background in that I play music that’s related to Robert Johnson and other Mississippi stylists, but I have also, unusually, played a lot of bebop. And there’s not a lot of perceived crossover there. But looking at musical history, some of these “what ifs”


SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005 | feature 35A

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A Saint Patrick’s Day Celebration

aren’t that far-fetched. I mean, Robert Johnson probably learned as much from copying records as he did by watching Son House. And he was very future-oriented in his playing. There’s no doubt he would’ve played an electric guitar, as soon as he could have gotten his hands on one. And he may have — we just don’t know. When the music itself takes me to places where certain things seem plausible, I start thinking, “Hmm. I bet I’m not the first person to try that.” It’s like a reverse-engineering of musical history. “SOMEWHERE” (L. Bernstein) SD: This one’s from “West Side Story,” which mixed ethnic and folk styles in symphonic composition. What’s your take on the piece? PA: On my first record, I did a piece from Porgy and Bess, which I heard as a kid, that just haunted me. It occurred to me that a lot of composers have tried to ennoble American roots stuff with a certain amount of technique, to bring out its inherent beauty. People have been doing that for a long time. There’s a big tent that I try to create, under which a lot of American music can be played on this one instrument. West Side Story was just my next thought along these lines.

“SAINT BRENDAN’S FAIR ISLE/ST. ANNE’S REEL” (Traditional) SD: These are both British Isles folk numbers. How did this music affect American roots styles? PA: Well, that’s really where so much Appalachian music began. That area in particular was settled by a lot of British Isles folks, but I suspect that they had an ambivalence towards everything from their old world. On one hand, they really wanted to define themselves as Americans, and Americans should have their own music. On the other, it’s like food. You grew up eating a certain food, and it’s kind of hard to completely throw it aside. There’s a certain darkness in a lot of the themes — kind of an apocalyptic flavor in the Christianity that got inherited. That style eventually became blended with bluesy, African expressions. Now it’s big, so to speak. Gillian Welch does that kind of stuff, and it’s great. “THE WATER IS WIDE” (Traditional) SD: You first heard your dad sing this number as a child. Do you recall your impressions? PA: I just thought it was a pretty tune, I didn’t know anything

about it. I probably started hearing it when I was about half a year old! My dad was a professional musician when I was a kid. He played with Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, Leadbelly. He was part of the lefty folk, pro-labor movement. Through him, I inherited a sense of the meaning of the word “folk” that had very little to do with Peter, Paul & Mary. “MYSTERY TRAIN” (H. Parker/S. Phillips) SD: Elvis once cut this for Sun Records. Was his version, or early rock ’n’ roll, an influence? PA: My dad had this one as a 45, and I’m sure his friends thought, “Bernie, what are you doing? Elvis Presley? Have you gone nuts?” When I was a kid, I liked a couple of early Elvis things, but some stuff I thought was corny. I’d been listening to a lot of Woody Guthrie at the time, but when I found this in my dad’s collection, I played it and thought, “It’s kind of cool, actually, not like all that silly stuff on the radio.” Elvis’ version set a path for a certain amount of American electric music — drawing from country and blues, and kind of making a third way out of it. And there’s something about trains that’s so quintessentially American, you know? m

John Williams, multi-instrumentalist

Martin Hayes and Dennis Cahill & Special Guests

Thursday, March 17 at 7:30 pm

“There’s no more impressive partnership in Irish instrumental music today.” (Irish Echo)

Áine Meenaghan, vocals

Presented in association with the Burlington Irish Heritage Festival

Sponsored The Law Firm of Collins, and by McMahon and Harris, PLLC

Media Support from

tickets & info: www.flynncenter.org 9:57 AM Page 1 86-flynn! or call 153 Main St., Burlington, VT 802.863.5966, V/relay

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SEVEN DAYS

MONDAY, MARCH 14TH

1 0 TH ANNUAL

Lecture: James Joyce 7:00 p.m. Tom Simone, professor at the UVM English Department, will give a presentation on one of the most famous Irish writers, James Joyce. Co-sponsored by the English Department of St. Michael's College. Location: Farrell Room, 3rd floor, St. Edmund's Building, St. Michael’s College, Colchester Admission: Free, donations welcome

BURLINGTON VERMONT

www.vtirishfestival.org

TUESDAY, MARCH 15TH

FRIDAY, MARCH 11TH Lecture: The Irish in Vermont Noon Vincent Feeney, historian and adjunct professor of Irish history at the University of Vermont, will present a lecture based on the his research into the surprisingly large numbers of people from Ireland who emigrated to Vermont in the years prior to 1840. Location: Community Room, Fletcher Free Library, Burlington Admission: Free, donations welcome

SUNDAY, MARCH 13TH Festival Ceili 1:00 p.m. This popular event features Vermont musicians skilled in Irish traditional tunes. Location: Contois Auditorium, Burlington City Hall Admission: Free, donations welcome Tommy Makem in Concert 7:00 p.m. A legend of Irish music comes to Burlington. Don’t miss this memorable evening. Location: Contois Auditorium, Burlington City Hall Admission: Ticket price is $22 in advance ($25 on the day of show) and are available by calling the Flynn Box Office at (802) 863-5966.

Irish Song Concert 7:30 p.m. Irish culture can be sampled in her songs. Tom McCaffrey has been collecting & singing these folk songs for 40 years--happy, sad, funny, tragic, ballad & broadside--familiar or not so. He'll share his favorites, and doubtless some of yours. Come ready to sing & join in on the choruses! Location: Assembly Room, College Street Congregational Church, College St., Burlington Admission: Free, donations welcome

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16TH Lecture: "The Story of the Great Blasket Island" 7:00 p.m. Micheál De Mórdha, Manager of Blasket Island Heritage Centre, will present a lecture about the Great Blasket Island, the most westerly point in Europe located 3 miles off the tip of the Dingle Peninsula, Co. Kerry. The Great Blasket Island has a long and interesting history which we will explore. Location: Community Room, Fletcher Free Library, Burlington Admission: Free, donations welcome

SMUGGLERS’ NOTCH NOW THOUGH SUNDAY, MARCH 13, 2005 2 for 1 lift tickets! Flash your Wizard Card at Smugglers’ Notch when you buy a full-day, three-mountain lift ticket and you’ll get the second lift ticket FREE! Check out www.smuggs.com .

WHITEFACE MOUNTAIN STARTING MONDAY, MARCH 14, 2005 $35 full day lift tickets! Flash your Wizard Card (Monday-Friday only) at Whiteface Mountain when you buy a full-day lift ticket and you’ll get it for just $35! Whiteface Mountain is just 40 minutes from Plattsburgh near Lake Placid, NY. Go to www.whiteface.com for directions and info.

WIZARD POWER LUNCH!

STOP IN AT JOLLEY FOR A DELICIOUS WRAP AND DIET DR. PEPPER!

Join us this week (March 10) at Jolley: 1110 Shelburne Road (near Perry's Fish House) Any wrap —hot or cold with a FREE Diet Dr. Pepper for $1.06! Every Thursday in March from 12-1pm, we will be roaming Vermont at all the Jolly locations. Check in next week for the next location. All specials are good at all locations for the Power Lunch!

SIGN UP FOR YOUR FREE WIZARD CARD AT: WIZARD EVENTS • WWW.WIZN.COM • THURSDAYS: AT THE WIZARD’S POWER LUNCH FRIDAYS: AT THE WIZARD’S BAR & GRILL AT THE LINCOLN INN

Don’t forget our Raffle tickets! Win a trip for two to Ireland! $10 each. Available at most events.

SUPPORTING ROLE? SEVEN DAYS is seeking a drama queen or king — that is, a THEATER CRITIC.

Are you right for the part? working knowledge of classical and contemporary theater ability to assess the elements of a play without bias

FRIDAY MARCH 18 @ CLUB METRONOME

9PM DOORS $10 TIX ON SALE NOW AT FLYNN THEATER BOX OFFICE, PURE POP AND ONLINE AT FLYNNTIX.COM

creative, lively and well-ordered writing familiarity with the Vermont theater scene

This is a year-round, freelance position, with reviews assigned according to local theater schedules. Will require some weekend nights.

ability to meet deadlines no conflict of interest (e.g., not working in local theater)

UVM

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SAT. 3/12, 11:30am

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If you’re interested and meet the requirements, please send a resumé and cover letter supporting your “cred” as a critic, as well as three nonfiction writing samples, to pamela@sevendaysvt.com or SEVEN DAYS, P.O. Box 1164, Burlington, VT 05402, Attn. Theater Critic.


SEVEN DAYS

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march 09-16, 2005| music 37A

<music> RESPECTFUL RASTA :: Jamaican music sensation

Blender

Everton

bridges the gap

between roots and dancehall reggae. The Kingston-born singer first gained prominence in 1991 with the autobiographical Create a Sound, and later founded his own record label — a rarity among artists from the island. On tour to support his latest release, Traveled the World, Blender brings his message of generosity, balance and gratitude to Club Metronome this Monday with openers The Reggae Angels.

MON

14

<music> Club listings & spotlights are written by Casey Rea. Spotlights are at the discretion of the editor. Send listings by Friday at noon, including info phone number, to clubs@sevendaysvt.com. Find past album reviews, full venue descriptions and a local artists’ directory online at www.sevendaysvt.com/music.


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SEVEN DAYS

soundbites

Got music news? Email Casey Rea at casey@sevendaysvt.com.

BY CASEY REA

LABEL MATES

PAIRING OFF Burlington’s ephemeral alt-rockers Carrigan have gone through several incarnations since coming together in 1999. Originally a duo composed of vocalist/multi-instrumentalist Zach Martin and bass whiz Jebson Interlandi, the band soon expanded to include drummer Ken Johnson. At that point, their tunes were largely instrumental, à la Chicago postrock institutions Tortoise. Interlandi left the group after their debut release, and Carrigan adopted a more straight-ahead rock sound. Local guitar hero Daryl Rabidoux and reformed hardcore bassist Dave Barnett came aboard, but the lineup produced no official releases. Now Carrigan is a two-piece again, with frontman Martin supported by Johnson, a keyboard and a variety of effects pedals. Performing last Wednesday at the Higher Ground Showcase Lounge, with The Double and Ratatat, the duo showed that you don’t necessarily need a lot of musicians to make a big noise. There’s still plenty of ambient sound in the band’s new tunes, but Johnson’s powerful drumming anchors the backwash to a steady, hypnotic pulse. Think John Bonham banging the skins for Kraut-rockers Can. A couple of songs even have a bluesy vibe — a bit surprising considering the band’s origins. Martin’s vocals are deliberately obscured; his eerie wails are treated as just another instrumental texture. His phrasing, particularly in the higher register, occasionally veers a little too close to Radiohead territory, though. Still, it’s always a treat to see him play guitar, keyboard bass, trigger samples and sing at the same time. The band has been selling a new three-inch CD demo at shows, and promise that a new full-length is on its way. Let’s hope so — this version of Carrigan is easily as strong as any previous formation.

GIVE A LITTLE, GET A LOT

STEPHEN KIERNAN

The Committee on Temporary Shelter, or COTS, was formed in 1982 by community members and local organizations determined to do something about Burlington’s growing homeless population. The enterprise has grown to include two family shelters, a shelter for individuals and a day station. But the organization offers more than sanctuary from the streets. Health services, substance-abuse counseling and employment outreach programs are all part of the long-term solution to homelessness. All this good work takes capital, though, and the nonprofit relies on contributions from the community to keep its programs running. Still, it’s always nice to be entertained in exchange for your donations. On Friday, March 11, at the FlynnSpace in Burlington, Vermont guitarist/songwriter Stephen Kiernan plays a benefit concert for COTS. His technically brilliant guitar work ranges from frenetic fingerpicking to gentle ballads. Incorporating blues, bluegrass, jazz and folk into a vibrantly dynamic sound, Kiernan’s mastery of six- and 12string styles is bound to impress. In addition to his moving originals, the guitarist has been known to tear through tunes by Michael Hedges, Leo Kottke and even J.S. Bach — how’s that for eclectic? The show kicks off at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $20 and available at the Flynn Center box office, online at http://www.flynncenter.org, or by calling 86-FLYNN.

Fattie B., a.k.a. Kyle Thompson, has long been a champion of local hip-hop. With multiple releases under his belt, the MC and DJ is no stranger to music promotion. Now’s he’s partnering with production ace and rapper Nastee to build a Burlington-based “urban” record label. Called Legal Tender Records, the imprint will feature recordings from local and regional artists. The duo definitely has cred, and they’ve managed to score some investment capital. “Some of the people I knew around here with a bit of money FATTIE B. felt that, between me and Nastee, it would be a pretty good thing to get involved in,” Fattie B. says. And, the local hip-hop community is pretty vital these days. “We knew there was a lot of talent around here,” he says. “There’s just so much going on.” Beyond their microphone skills, the two will bring other talents to the enterprise. “Not many people know this, but Nastee’s production credits are pretty insane. He’s got the recording stuff on lock-down. And the graphics stuff I’ve got on lock-down,” declares Fattie. In addition to releasing CDs and 12-inch vinyl, Legal Tender will promote its roster through college radio, the Internet and cable television ads, allowing the label to tap into markets beyond the Queen City. “We do great in Burlington, but an hour and a half away there’s Montréal and Plattsburgh — places that we haven’t even touched,” he says. Special events and parties will also help get the word out, and a cable-access show is in the works. Still, the duo is taking it one step at a time. “Basically, our plan of attack is to do four to five releases a year,” the MC says. “We’re hoping that by putting out quality stuff, people will see the logo and think, ‘I know that’s probably all right.’”

SOUNDS FAMILIAR… Looking to catch some live music from groups you haven’t heard in a while? Well, on Saturday, March 12, you’ll have two chances. The tough part will be picking which show to see. First up, part-time chanteuse, full-time mom and salon owner Peg Tassey brings her group The Kissing Circle to the Black Door Bar & Bistro in Montpelier at 9:30 p.m. Coming out of “retirement,” for one night only, Tassey will entertain the Capitol City crowd with her captivating, occasionally spooky torch songs. Special guests include Magic City vocalist Miriam Bernardo and 5 Seconds Expired drummer Gary Williams. Stepping away from the skins, Williams plays bass at this gig. If you want something to watch besides the band, Tassey pal Marc Awodey will be creating “live paintings” during the performance. “That’s a real treat, since he’s a bit of a recluse,” she says. Takes one to know one, Peg? Back in Burlington, Club Metronome hosts a rare appearance from world-music ensemble New Nile Orchestra in a 7 p.m. show. Though the band is still active on the festival circuit, it’s been a long time since they’ve hit local clubs. Featuring Ethiopian singer Kiflu Kidane, Burlington fusion guitarist Steve Blair and drum phenom Marcus Copening, New Nile are a polyrhythmic powerhouse. Time to flip a coin, maybe?

Join us... Before dinner

Sun. March 13 18+

for a starter

Wed. March 16

FRIDAY NIGHT # 9PM

Sun. March 27 18+

TORNADO SISTER

EVERCLEAR W.ZOX

THE SAMPLES

After dinner

RUSTED ROOT

for some dessert

VACO

Piano Bar THUR. - SAT.

Listen, Relax, Request!

Thurs. March 31 16+

CAMUEL CROSS

Fri. April 8 16+

STARTING LINE

Fri. April 15 18+

jazz

NEW BLOOD REVIVAL

A fun and lively atmosphere with creative tastes, great drinks and live local music.

Fri. April 29 18+

PARANOID SOCIAL CLUB Tickets available online or by phone

133 ST. PAUL STREET BURLINGTON • 951.WINE WWW.WINEWORKS.NET

SATURDAY NIGHT # 9PM

802. 422.3035 Killington Road, Killington www.picklebarrelnightclub.com

seven days


SEVEN DAYS

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march 09-16, 2005| music 39A

<clubdates> AA = ALL AGES NC = NO COVER

WED.09 :: burlington area

IRISH SESSIONS, Radio Bean, 8 p.m. NC. PINE STREET JAZZ W/SUSAN SQUIER, Parima, 7 p.m. NC. TOP HAT KARAOKE, 135 Pearl, 9 p.m. NC. SONNY & PERLEY (international cabaret), Leunig’s, 7 p.m. NC. CIRCADIA (Irish/Celtic), Rí Rá Irish Pub, 7 p.m. NC. JAZZ GUYS (indie-rock), Red Square, 8 p.m. NC, followed by MEMBERS ONLY W/FATTIE B. (’80s DJ), 11 p.m. NC. DJ A-DOG PRESENTS KNOW YOUR ROOTS (reggae), 1/2 Lounge, 10 p.m. NC. OSHE, THE GRIFT (jam-rock/’80s covers), Nectar’s, 9 p.m. NC. HIP-HOP SHOWCASE W/EARATIK STATIC, TABLEEK, CIENCIA FIXION, DIGGA, H THE GREAT, THE LOYALISTS, Club Metronome, 9:30 p.m. $3. OPEN MIKE W/ANDY LUGO & DJ TRANSPLANTE, Manhattan Pizza & Pub, 10 p.m. NC. ELECTRICLADYLAND W/DJS DARCIE, SEKHEMET, LEIA, VALERIE (jungle/hip-hop/techno), Second Floor, 10 p.m. $3/5. 18+ before 11 p.m. DAVE HARRISON W/STARSTRUCK KARAOKE, JP’s Pub, 10 p.m. NC. ATMOSPHERE, P.O.S., GRAYSKUL (hip-hop), Higher Ground Ballroom, 9 p.m. $16/18. 18+. DJ DEMUS & JAH RED (reggae/dancehall), Monkey House, 10 p.m. NC. OPEN MIKE, Geno’s Karaoke Club, from 8 p.m. NC. KARAOKE, Edgewater Pub, 9:30 p.m. NC.

:: champlain valley LADIES’ NIGHT, City Limits, 9 p.m. NC. RICK CELLABOS (old-time/traditional), Good Times Café, 8:30 p.m. $10.

:: central DAN WALKER (singer-songwriter), Charlie O’s, 10 p.m. NC.

OPEN MIKE, Langdon St. Café, 7 p.m. NC. OPEN MIKE W/ZO TOBI, Middle Earth, 8 p.m. $3. ROB WILLIAMS (singer-songwriter), Purple Moon Pub, 7 p.m. NC.

:: northern OPEN MIKE W/BILLY CALDWELL, Overtime Saloon, 9 p.m. NC. OPEN MIKE W/MIKE PEDERSEN, Monopole, 9 p.m. NC. CAL STANTON (blues), Bee’s Knees, 7:30 p.m. NC.

THU.10 :: burlington area

SHANE HARDIMAN TRIO (jazz), Radio Bean, 6 p.m. NC, followed by ABBY’S AGENDA (jazz), 9 p.m. NC, followed by DAN WALKER (singersongwriter), 10 p.m. NC. QUEEN CITY ROCK W/DJS ELLIOT & CHIA, 135 Pearl, 10 p.m. NC. FRIENDS OF JOE FEATURING LIL’ JOE MOE & SPECIAL GUEST (jazz/blues), Halvorson’s, 8 p.m. NC. ELLEN POWELL (jazz), Leunig’s, 7 p.m. NC. SETH YACOVONE (solo acoustic), Rí Rá Irish Pub, 7 p.m. NC. FATTIE B. & DJ A-DOG (live hip-hop), Red Square, 10 p.m. NC. NICOLAS CASSARINO (jazz), 1/2 Lounge, 9:30 p.m. NC. LYNCH, LESTER SWING (funk-rock), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. NC. 105.9 WOMM BENEFIT W/RYAN POWER TRIO, THE ACTIVISTS/DICTATORS, THE HORSE (indie-rock), Club Metronome, 9:30 p.m. $5-10 donation. TOP HAT ENTERTAINMENT DANCE PARTY (hip-hop/r&b DJs), Rasputin’s, 10 p.m. NC. TALENT SEARCH W/DA CHAMP, Second Floor, 10 p.m. $3/10. 18+ before 11 p.m. C-LOW (hip-hop DJ), Ruben James, 10 p.m. NC.

THE BIG OTHER (alt-rock), JP’s Pub, 10 p.m. NC. ANDRIC SEVERANCE (jazz piano), Wine Bar at Wine Works, 6 p.m. NC. LARRY BRETT’S JUKEBOX LADIES’ REQUEST NIGHT (rock/urban/ dance/DVD), Henry’s Pub, 8 p.m. NC. JON CLEARY, GRACE POTTER & THE NOCTURNALS (singer-songwriter/ jazz/blues/funk/soul), Higher Ground Showcase Lounge, 8 p.m. $14/16. AA. DJ TRICKY PAT (house/techno), Monkey House, 10 p.m. NC. BUDDHA FOOD GROUP (rock), Trackside Tavern, 9 p.m. NC. KARAOKE, Geno’s Karaoke Club, from 6 p.m. NC. KARAOKE, Edgewater Pub, 9:30 p.m. NC. KARAOKE W/REX, Franny O’s, 9 p.m. NC.

:: champlain valley KIP MEAKER (blues/jazz), Toscano Café & Bistro, 7 p.m. NC. WATER’S EDGE REVIVAL (rock ’n’ roll), The Bobcat Café, 8 p.m. NC.

:: central DOUG PERKINS & JAMIE MASEFIELD (bluegrass), Black Door Bar & Bistro, 8 p.m. $3. MARK LEGRAND & FRIENDS (singersongwriter), Langdon St. Café, 12:30 p.m. NC, followed by DYLAN WALLER (singer-songwriter), 7 p.m. NC, followed by DAMN YANKEE STRING BAND (old-time), 8:30 p.m. NC. BILLY CALDWELL (singer-songwriter), Purple Moon Pub, 7 p.m. NC.

:: northern HOUSE BAND (classic rock), Sami’s Harmony Pub, 9 p.m. NC. MITCH & MIKE (piano jazz), Chow! Bella, 6 p.m. NC. HOUSE BAND, Monopole, 9 p.m. NC. LADIES’ NIGHT W/DJS ROBBY ROB & SKIPPY (hip-hop/r&b), Tabu Café & Nightclub, 9 p.m. NC.

THU.10 >> 40A

MUSIC HALL • LOUNGE 1214 WILLISTON ROAD • SOUTH BURLINGTON • INFO 802-654-8888 DOORS 8 PM / SHOW 9 PM unless noted • ALL SHOWS 18+ WITH POSITIVE I.D. unless noted SHOWCASE LOUNGE OPEN AT 6PM ON SHOW NIGHTS SERVING DINNER & DRINKS. COME EARLY! WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9 $16 ADVANCE $18 DOS 90.1 WRUV WELCOMES @ AT AGAIN TOUR

ATMOSPHERE LEZ ZEPPELIN WITH BAND

P.O.S. OF DOOMTREE, GRAYSKUL

FRIDAY, MARCH 11 $13 ADVANCE $15 DOS | ALL AGES 104.7 THE POINT & MAGIC HAT WELCOME

Friday & Saturday March 11 & 12

THE PULSE rock 1190 Mountain Road Stowe, VT • 253 NAIL Check out: www.rustynailbar.com

BLUE FLOYD

Forbidden Fruit... with real raspberries

Curacao Trippel X wee heavy Ethan Alien Logger Burly Irish Ale Dogbite Bitter Silk Ale Bombay Grab I.P.A. Handsome Mick’s Stout Vermont Smoked Porter 2 Cask Ales

FEAT. JEFF PEVAR, AUDLEY FREED, MATT ABTS, JOHNNY NEEL, BERRY OAKLEY SATURDAY, MARCH 12 $12 ADVANCE $14 DOS TWO SEATED SHOWS: 7:30PM & 10PM 106.7 WIZN & BUD LIGHT WELCOME THE BEST OF BOSTON

NORTH SHORE COMEDY SHOW: STEVE CAOUETTE, KELLY MACFARLAND, ROB STEEN

DESIGNATED HOTEL? Give us your keys, we’ll give you ours. We’re right across the street from Higher Ground. Ask for our special “Event Rate”.

SAT, MARCH 19 $17 ADV $20 DOS | ALL AGES | DOORS 7PM | SEATED SHOW 104.7 THE POINT & LONG TRAIL WELCOME

CATIE CURTIS THE SAMPLES PATRICK FITZSIMMONS LUKE ERIKSON & JOHARI WINDOW SATURDAY, MARCH 12 $18 ADVANCE $20 DOS | DOORS 7PM 106.7 WIZN & MAGIC HAT WELCOME CELEBRATING THE 40TH ANNIVERSARY OF PINK FLOYD

om r2004 f e r ’ We nt, o m r e V w We bre e what w.. want .

SAT, MARCH 19 $15 ADVANCE $17 DOS

ROOMFUL OF BLUES JON CLEARY SUPERHONEY GRACE POTTER & THE NOCTURNALS

STEVE FORBERT

headquarters

(ALL GIRLS. ALL ZEPPELIN)

THURSDAY, MARCH 10 $14 ADVANCE $16 DOS | DOORS 7PM

FRIDAY, MARCH 11 $13 ADVANCE $15 DOS | DOORS 7PM 104.7 THE POINT & SAM ADAMS WELCOME

stowe’'s apres-ski

FRIDAY, MARCH 18 $10 ADVANCE $12 DOS 106.7 WIZN & BUDWEISER PRESENT

SUNDAY, MARCH 13 $17 ADVANCE $20 DOS

SUN, MARCH 20 $16 ADV $18 DOS | ALL AGES | DOORS 7PM 104.7 THE POINT & BUDWEISER WELCOME

CRACKER CAMPER VANBEETHOVEN: -UNPLUGGED-

FEAT. DAVID LOWERY & JOHNNY HICKMAN

THE HACKENSAW BOYS TUESDAY, MARCH 22 $20 ADVANCE $23 DOS | DOORS 7PM

ORCHESTRA BAOBAB WED, MARCH 23 $20 ADV $20 DOS | DOORS 7PM | ALL AGES SEATED SHOW 95 TRIPLE XX WELCOMES

VANESSA CARLTON CARY BROTHERS

ANTHONY B RICKIE LEE JONES ITATION SOUND MR. CROWES JOHN VALBY AKA DR. DIRTY GARDEN THURSDAY, MARCH 24 $30 ADVANCE $33 DOS | SEATED SHOW!

TUES, MARCH 15 $32 ADVANCE $36 DOS | ALL AGES | DOORS 7PM

FRIDAY, MARCH 25 $13 ADVANCE $15 DOS 106.7 WIZN & BUD LIGHT WELCOME, HIGHER GROUND COMEDY SERIES

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16 $5 AT DOOR | DOORS 7:30PM

FRIDAY, MARCH 25 $6 AT DOOR TOP HAT ENTERTAINMENT WELCOMES

OSHE, MOUNTAIN MOJO AUTHORITY, AKASHIC RECORD, BRIXTON GUNS THURSDAY, MARCH 17 $18 ADVANCE $20 DOS

70S & 80S FLASHBACK DANCE PARTY SATURDAY, MARCH 26 $6 AT DOOR FREE SALSA/MEREGUE DANCE LESSONS: 8PM

VICTOR WOOTEN LATIN QUARTER PARTY RYANLUCY MONTBLEAU BAND W/DANCE HECTOR ‘EL SALSERO’ COBEO CHAPIN THURSDAY, MARCH 17 $5 ADVANCE $8 DOS | DOORS 7PM

FRIDAY, MARCH 18 $18 ADVANCE $20 DOS 106.7 WIZN WELCOMES

1285 Williston Rd S. Burlington

(802) 865-3400

SATURDAY, MARCH 26 $10 ADVANCE $12 DOS | DOORS 7PM

MURPHY & OZRIC LOTUS TENTACLES GANDALF THE SLAMBOVIAN CIRCUS OF DREAMS TICKETS AVAILABLE AT WWW.HIGHERGROUNDMUSIC.COM, HG BOX OFFICE (M-F 11am-6pm), PURE POP, PEACOCK MUSIC, or call 888.512.SHOW

WWW.HIGHERGROUNDMUSIC.COM


40A

|

march 09-16, 2005

|

fresh music served daily

SEVEN DAYS

<clubdates> AA = ALL AGES NC = NO COVER

THU

SAT.MAR.12 SAT.MAR.12

ORDINARY K

10

W.W. FEAR FEAR NUTTIN NUTTIN BAND, BAND, AND AND MR. MR. DANG DANG DANG DANG

ST. PATTY’S DAY

CHIN HO! WED 9

FRI 11 SAT 12

ORDINARY K

THU 10

:: burlington area

W. FEAR NUTTIN BAND, AND MR. DANG DANG

SUN 13 HOSTED BY DREW OF NAMED BY STRANGERS

OPEN MIC NIGHT

TUE COLLEGE DAZE FINALE 15

THE CASUAL FIASCO AND THE FLO THE GRIFT ST. PATTY'S DAY PARTY

THU 17

CHIN HO!

ALL NIGHT LONG

JOSH ROSEMAN'S SPECIAL UNIT

FRI 18

W. THE INBETWEENS

SAT 19 SUN 20

TUE 22

NAMED BY STRANGERS W. CLIFF STREET

OPEN MIC NIGHT

HOSTED BY DREW OF NAMED BY STRANGERS

CLOSED JAPHY RYDER

BIG MOUTH

:: The unique talents of Rahzel

defy classification. Based in hip-hop but capable of

much more, the performer makes highly nuanced music with just his mouth. Growing up in Queens gave him a crash course in hip-hop, while subsequent work with Philly genre-busters The Roots brought worldwide acclaim. Recent collaborations with eclectic pixie Bjork and shape-shifting avant-rocker Mike Patton further showcase Rahzel’s cutting-edge style. See the “human beatbox” this Thursday at the Pickle Barrel in Killington with DJ JS-One.

FREE Bluegrass Night! EVERY WEDNESDAY 9PM

WED 23 W. THE GRIFT

$2 Budweiser Drafts

EVERY THURSDAY:

No Cover Charge

Get Smart Trivia Night

prizes and specials, 7:30-9:30 A-Dog & Nastee present:

'93 Till every monday! UPCOMING 3/26: 3/30: 4/7: 4/14: 4/15: 4/16: 4/20:

@ N E C T A R ’S

THE GRIPPO FUNK BAND KRS-ONE W. GRANDMASTER CAS, BUSY BEE, AND MORE... PROJECT OBJECT THE ZEN TRICKSTERS THE PERCEPTIONISTS FT. MR. LIF, AND AKROBATIK DJ LE SPAM AND THE SPAM ALL-STARS THE BREAKFAST W. OSHE

Live Classic Rock Every Friday & Saturday

Henry’s Pub at

WINNER 2003 & 2004

658-4771 • all shows at 9pm main street burlington

liveatnectars.com

ROB DUGUAY’S MEOW MIX (jazz), Radio Bean, 6 p.m. NC, followed by ALEX WILSON (singer-songwriter), 9 p.m. NC, followed by MICKEY WESTERN & THE MAGNUM 44s (country-rock), 9:30 p.m. NC. DJS EV, PRECIOUS (dance/house), 135 Pearl, 10 p.m. $5. TORNADO SISTER (rock), Sweetwaters, 9 p.m. NC. DJ COREY (hip-hop), Rí Rá Irish Pub, 10 p.m. NC. CHROME COWBOYS (country/rock ’n’ roll), Red Square, 8 p.m. $2, followed by DJ NASTEE (hip-hop), midnight. $2. THE BOSTON HORNS, UNEXPLAINED BACON (funk/jam), Nectar’s, 9 p.m. $3. TURKEY BOUILLON MAFIA, LIGHTNING RIDGE (jam/funk/rock), Club Metronome, 9:30 p.m. $5. TOP HAT DANCETERIA (DJs), Rasputin’s, 10 p.m. $3. FLAVA W/DJS ROBBIE J., TOXIC (hiphop/reggae/dancehall), Second Floor, 9 p.m. $3/10. 18+ before 11 p.m. STEPHEN KIERNAN (acoustic guitarist/singer-songwriter; COTS benefit), FlynnSpace, 7:30 p.m. $20. HIP-HOP/REGGAE/DANCEHALL DJS, Ruben James, 10 p.m. NC. DAVE HARRISON W/STARSTRUCK KARAOKE, JP’s Pub, 10 p.m. NC. PIANO LOUNGE W/MITCH, Wine Bar at Wine Works, 5:30 p.m. NC, followed by SHANE HARDIMAN DUO (piano jazz), 9 p.m. NC. BIKINI BASHMENT W/DEMUS (reggae DJ), Kahiki Moon, 10 p.m. NC.

Get Duped!

VermontDuplication.com info@vermontduplication.com • 482.2800

media • music • movies • software • webcast • documentation • VHS

1/2 LOUNGE Small Food. Big Drinks. Wed.3.9/10pm

MYSTERY SPIN (local DJs) Sat.3.12/7pm

KIP MEAKER (blues/jazz) Tue.3.15/8:30pm

ANDREW MOROZ TRIO (jazz)

Come in for weekend

BRUNCH!

:: southern

FRI.11

W. UNEXPLAINED BACON DAN WALKER (8-9)

WED 16

BIG SPLINTER (mountain country), Bee’s Knees, 7:30 p.m. NC. LADIES’ NIGHT (Sound Obsession DJ), Naked Turtle, 9:30 p.m. NC. THE SHED BAND (rock), The Matterhorn, 9 p.m. NC.

RAHZEL & DJ JS-ONE (hip-hop/beatbox), Pickle Barrel, 9 p.m. $13-15.

{

OSHE W. THE GRIFT LYNCH FEAT. JIM FROM MOE BOSTON HORNS

THU.10 << 39A

1068 Willliston Road South Burlington 863-6363

Wed.3.16/10pm Tricky Pat presents

WHIPLASH FEATURING “PSI DREAM” Tue.3.17/9:30pm

AARON FLINN (singer-songwriter)

1361/2 CHURCH STREET 865.0012


SEVEN DAYS

GEORGE VOLAND & LAR DUGGAN (jazz), Upper Deck Pub, Windjammer, 7 p.m. NC. KARAOKE KAPERS (host Bob Bolyard), St. John’s Club, 7 p.m. NC. RUN 4 COVER (rock), Henry’s Pub, Holiday Inn, 9 p.m. NC. THE SAMPLES, LUKE ERIKSEN & JOHARI WINDOW (rock/jam/singersongwriter), Higher Ground Ballroom, 9 p.m. $13/15. AA. STEVE FORBERT (singer-songwriter/ Americana), Higher Ground Showcase Lounge, 8 p.m. $13/15. 18+. THE HUNTINGTON PROJECT (funk/ jam), Monkey House, 10 p.m. $3. KARAOKE W/MR DJ, Champlain Lanes Family Fun Center, 8:30 p.m. NC. AA. KARAOKE W/PETER BOARDMAN, Backstage Pub, 9 p.m. NC. WIZN BAR & GRILL (live radio show), Lincoln Inn Lounge, 4 p.m. NC, followed by SUPERSOUNDS DJ (dance party/game show), 9 p.m. NC. LITTLE BUS (classic rock), Banana Winds Café, 9 p.m. NC. STUR CRAZIE (rock), Edgewater Pub, 9 p.m. NC. KARAOKE, Geno’s Karaoke Club, from 6 p.m. NC. CRITICAL MASS (rock), Franny O’s, 9 p.m. NC.

:: champlain valley TOP HAT ENTERTAINMENT DANCE PARTY, City Limits, 9 p.m. NC. DJ CHARLIE (rock), Red Mill Restaurant, 10:15 p.m. NC.

:: central STARLINE RHYTHM BOYS (honky-tonk/ rockabilly), Charlie O’s, 10 p.m. NC. DJ ELLIS (lounge), Langdon St. Café, 5 p.m. NC, followed by WILL KILLHOUR (singer-songwriter), 7 p.m. NC, followed by DOWNBOI (Latin jazz), 9 p.m. NC. JOSH BROOKS (singer-songwriter), Purple Moon Pub, 7 p.m. $5. ABBY JENNE (rock/singer-songwriter), Black Door Bar & Bistro, 9:30 p.m. $5.

FRI.11 >> 44A

venues 411

After Dark Music Series at United Methodist Church, Rt. 7/Seminary St., Middlebury, 388-0216. American Flatbread, 115 St. Paul St., Burlington, 861-2999. Ashley’s, Merchant’s Row, Randolph, 728-9182. Backstage Pub, 60 Pearl St., Essex Jct., 878-5494. Backstreet, 17 Hudson St., St. Albans, 527-2400. Bad Girls Café Main St., Johnson, 635-7025. Ball & Chain Café 16 Park St., Brandon, 247-0050. Banana Winds Café & Pub 1 Towne Marketplace, Essex Jct., 879-0752. Barre Opera House, 6 North Main St., Barre, 476-8188 Bayside Pavilion, 13 Georgia Shore Rd., St. Albans, 524-0909. Bee’s Knees, 82 Lower Main St., Morrisville, 888-7889. Beyond Infinity Upstairs, 43 Center St., Brandon, 247-5100. Black Bear Tavern & Grill, 205 Hastings Hill, St. Johnsbury, 748-1428. Black Door Bar & Bistro, 44 Main St., Montpelier, 223-7070. The Bobcat Café, 5 Main St., Bristol, 453-3311. Borders Books & Music, 29 Church St., Burlington, 865-2711. Breakwater Café, 1 King St., Burlington, 658-6276. The Brewski, Rt. 108, Jeffersonville, 644-6366. B.U. Emporium, 163 Porters Point Rd., Colchester, 658-4292 Capitol Grounds, 45 State St., Montpelier, 223-7800. Champlain Lanes Family Fun Center, 2630 Shelburne Rd., Shelburne, 985-2576. Charlemont Restaurant, #116, Rt. 100, Morrisville, 888-4242. Charlie B’s, 1746 Mountain Rd., Stowe, 253-7355. Charlie O’s, 70 Main St., Montpelier, 223-6820. Chow! Bella, 28 N. Main St., St. Albans, 524-1405. City Limits, 14 Greene St., Vergennes, 877-6919. Club Metronome, 188 Main St., Burlington, 865-4563. Contois Auditorium, Burlington City Hall, 865-7166. Cuzzin’s Nightclub, 230 North Main St., Barre, 479-4344. Eclipse Theater, 48 Carroll Rd., Waitsfield, 496-8913. Edgewater Pub, 340 Malletts Bay Ave., Colchester, 865-4214. Finkerman’s Riverside Barbecue, 188 River St, Montpelier, 229-2295. Flynn Center/FlynnSpace, 153 Main St., Burlington, 863-5966. Franny O’s, 733 Queen City Pk. Rd., Burlington, 863-2909. Geno’s Karaoke Club, 127 Porters Point Road, Colchester, 658-2160. Gezellig, 324 N. Winooski Ave., Burlington, 660-9346. Good Times Café, Rt. 116, Hinesburg, 482-4444. Halvorson’s Upstreet Café, 16 Church St., Burlington, 658-0278. Hardwick Town House, 127 Church St., Hardwick, 456-8966. Henry’s Pub, Holiday Inn, 1068 Williston Rd., S. Burlington, 863-6361. Higher Ground, 1214 Williston Rd., S. Burlington, 654-8888. JP’s Pub, 139 Main St., Burlington, 658-6389. Jeff’s Maine Seafood, 65 N. Main St., St. Albans, 524-6135. Kacey’s, 31 Federal St., St. Albans, 524-9864. Kahiki Moon, 1 Lawson Lane, Burlington. 660-4852. Lakeview Inn & Restaurant, 295 Breezy Ave., Greensboro, 533-2291. Langdon St. Café, 4 Langdon St., Montpelier, 223-8667. Leunig’s, 115 Church St., Burlington, 863-3759. Lincoln Inn Lounge, 4 Park St., Essex Jct., 878-3309. Lion’s Den Pub, Mountain Road, Jeffersonville, 644-5567. Mad River Unplugged at Valley Players Theater, Rt. 100, Waitsfield, 496-8910. Manhattan Pizza & Pub, 167 Main St., Burlington, 658-6776.

|

Matterhorn, 4969 Mountain Rd., Stowe, 253-8198. McKee’s Pub, 19 East Allen St., Winooski, 655-0048. Middle Earth Music Hall, Bradford, 222-4748. The Monkey House, 30 Main St., Winooski, 655-4563. Monopole, 7 Protection Ave., Plattsburgh, N.Y., 518-563-2222. Muddy Waters, 184 Main St., Burlington, 658-0466. Music Box, 147 Creek Rd., Craftsbury, 586-7533. Music Club, 110 Business Center Rd. Williamstown, 443-6106. Naked Turtle, 1 Dock St., Plattsburgh, N.Y., 518-566-6200 Nectar’s, 188 Main St., Burlington, 658-4771. 1/2, 136 1/2 Church St., Burlington, 865-0012. 135 Pearl St., Burlington, 863-2343. Old Lantern, Greenbush Rd., Charlotte, 425-2120. Orion Pub & Grill, Route 108, Jeffersonville, 644-8884. Overtime Saloon, 38 S. Main St., St. Albans, 524-0357. Paramount Theater, 30 Center St., Rutland, 775-0570. Parima, 185 Pearl St., Burlington, 864-7917. Park Place Tavern, 38 Park St., Essex Jct., 878-3015. Peabody’s Pub, Plattsburgh, 518-561-0158. Pickle Barrel Nightclub, Killington Rd., Killington, 422-3035. Phoenix Bar, Sugarbush Village, Warren, 583-2003. The Positive Pie, 69 Main St., Plainfield, 454-0133. Purple Moon Pub, Rt. 100, Waitsfield, 496-3422. Radio Bean, 8 N. Winooski Ave., Burlington, 660-9346. Rasputin’s, 163 Church St., Burlington, 864-9324. Red Mill Restaurant, Basin Harbor, Vergennes, 475-2311. Red Square, 136 Church St., Burlington, 859-8909. Rhapsody Café, 28 Main St., Montpelier, 229-6112. Rhythm & Brews Coffeehouse, UVM, Burlington, 656-4211. Riley Rink, Rt. 7A Noth, Manchester, 362-0150. Ripton Community Coffee House, Rt. 125, 388-9782. Rí Rá Irish Pub, 123 Church St., Burlington, 860-9401. Riverwalk Records & The Howard Bean Café, 30 State St., Montpelier, 223-3334. Rozzi’s Lakeshore Tavern, 1072 West Lakeshore Dr., Colchester, 863-2342. Ruben James, 159 Main St., Burlington, 864-0744. Rusty Nail, Mountain Rd., Stowe, 253-6245. Sami’s Harmony Pub, 216 Rt. 7, Milton, 893-7267. Second Floor, 165 Church St., Burlington, 660-2088. Smuggler’s Notch Inn, 55 Church St., Rt. 108, Jeffersonville, 644-6607. St. John’s Club, 9 Central Ave., Burlington, 864-9778. Starlight Lounge, 48 Carroll Rd., Waitsfield, 496-8913. Starry Night Café, 5371 Rt. 7, Ferrisburgh, 877-6316. Stowehof Inn, Edson Hill Rd., Stowe, 253-9722. Sweetwaters, 118 Church St., Burlington, 864-9800. Tabu Café & Nightclub, 14 Margaret St., Plattsburgh, 518-566-0666. Three Mountain Lodge, Jeffersonville, 644-5736. Toscano Café & Bistro, 27 Bridge St., Richmond, 434-3148. Trackside Tavern, 18 Malletts Bay Ave., Winooski, 655-9542. Two Brothers Tavern, 86 Main St., Middlebury, 388-0002. 242 Main, Burlington, 862-2244. Upper Deck Pub at the Windjammer, 1076 Williston Rd., S. Burlington, 862-6585. Valley Players Theater, Rt. 100, Waitsfield, 496-8910. Vermont Pub & Brewery, 144 College St., Burlington, 865-0500. Waterbury Wings, 1 South Main St., Waterbury, 244-7827. Wine Bar at Wine Works, 133 St. Paul St., Burlington, 951-9463.

march 09-16, 2005| music 41A

WEDNESDAY March 9

SOUNDCLICK

SPRING TOUR HIP-HOP SHOWCASE FT. EARATIK STATIK, TABLEEK, CIENCIA FIXION, DIGGA, H THE GREAT, AND THE LOYALISTS THURSDAY March 10 BENEFIT FOR “THE RADIATOR” 105.9 FM WOMM W. RYAN POWER TRIO THE ACTIVISTS/DICTATORS FT. DAVID KAMMERER & TOM LAWSON AND THE HORSE FRIDAY March 11

TURKEY BOUILLON MAFIA W. LIGHTNING RIDGE

SATURDAY March 12 7PM

NEW NILE ORCHESTRA MONDAY March 14

FULL SPECTRUM SOUND & SAM ADAMS PRESENT

EVERTON BLENDER

& BLEND DEM BAND W. THE REGGAE ANGELS & SELECTAH MEXZENJAH THURSDAY March 17

ST. PATTY’S DAY BLOWOUT

THE MIDDLE 8

W. LOWELL THOMPSON FRIDAY March 18

SPIRIT OF GUTHRIE

W. ROB WASSERMAN JIM PAGE & VINCE HERMAN W. THERESA ANDERSSON THURSDAY March 24

LES GEORGES LENINGRAD

W. JAMES KOCHALKA & JEFF HOWELL FRIDAY March 25

LED LOCO

FRIDAY April 1

PHREAKSHOW II

get your

GEEk on!

Friday 3/11

BareRoots Hydroponics

@

MAIN ST. BURLINGTON 658-4771 PRESENTED BY

LAZLO CAMEO FRI & SAT 11&12

INDECENT EXPOSURE

Thursday 3/17

St. Patty’s Day Party!

Friday 3/18

ST. PATRICK’S DAY

W/

Hydroponics Supplies Garden Grow Lights Grow Bags / Pots Organics / Soils Starter Kits And much more 88 Mallets Bay Ave Winooski VT 802-655-4195 www.barerootshydro.com

TUESDAY April 5

MONO, ELUVIUM

CARRIGAN

FRIDAY April 8

SMIFF-N-WESSUN

W. LEE & SIN, DJ CRE8 DJ/ZJ AND FATTIE B. LIVE FT. JEN HARTSWICK & MORE SUNDAY April 10 7PM

JEFFREY GAINES

W. STEVE HARTMAN SUNDAY April 17

WRUV PRESENTS

M83 W. ULRICH SHNAUSS

WEDNESDAY April 27

POTEEN

PETE ROCK

##############

T H U R S DAY 3/ 1 7

Play as a team or go solo. THURSDAYS 7:30-9:30

LIVE • LOCAL

TAX RETURN?

Theresa Lesage Federal & State Taxes 35 Years Experience 655-1834

TRIVIA MANIA

2 FLOORS • 20+ DJS

READY FOR YOUR

BLACK SEA QUARTET

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UPCOMING SHOWS 3/27 AQUASKY VS. MASTERBLASTER 3/30 MAGIC HAT PRESENTS JAZZ GUYS, THE BREAKING IN, THE HORSE 4/20 BENEFIT FOR “THE RADIATOR” ALICE IN WONDERLAND PARTY FT. CHARLES DEAD OR ALIVE

WITH

SAND BLIZZARD

12 Mallets Bay Ave Winooski 655-9542

4/22 GRANOLA FUNK EXPRESS W. ANALOG METHOD

GREENSBORO, VERMONT WWW.LAKEVIEWINN.BIZ

888.251.0100


42A

|

march 09-16, 2005

|

SEVEN DAYS

1popten 0 T O P S E L L E R S AT L O C A L I N D E P E N D E N T R E C O R D S T O R E S . D AT E : S U N D AY 0 2 / 2 7 - S AT U R D AY 0 3 / 0 5

PURE POP RECORDS, BURLINGTON

BUCH SPIELER MUSIC, MONTPELIER

EXILE ON MAIN ST., BARRE

VERMONT BOOK SHOP, MIDDLEBURY

PEACOCK MUSIC, PLATTSBURGH

1. Mars Volta — Frances the Mule 2. Jack Johnson — In Between Dreams 3. Death Cab for Cutie — John Byrd EP 4. Thievery Corporation — Cosmic Game 5. Iron & Wine — Woman King EP 6. Aesop Rock — Fast Cars, Danger, Fire & Knives 7. Doves — Some Cities 8. Bright Eyes — I’m Wide Awake, It’s Morning 9. Ani DiFranco — Knuckle Down 10. Kings of Leon — Aha Shake Heartbreak

1. Ani DiFranco — Knuckle Down 2. Ray Charles — Genius Loves Company 3. Green Day — American Idiot 4. Bright Eyes — I’m Wide Awake, It’s Morning 5. Madeleine Peyroux — Careless Love 6. Don Fields & His Pony Boys — Historic WDEV Broadcasts 7. Alison Krauss & Union Station — Lonely Runs Both Ways 8. Pat Metheny — The Way Up 9. Madeleine Peyroux — Dreamland 10. Original Soundtrack — Garden State

1. Jack Johnson — In Between Dreams 2. Judas Priest — Angel of Retribution 3. Joe Bonamassa — A New Day Yesterday Live 4. The Game — Documentary 5. Original Soundtrack — Garden State 6. Lynyrd Skynyrd — All Time Greatest Hits 7. Chris Botti — When I Fall in Love 8. Joss Stone — Mind, Body & Soul 9. Papa Roach — Getting Away With Murder 10. Lee Ann Womack — There’s More Where That Came From

1. Blue Merle — Burning in the Sun 2. Don Fields & His Pony Boys — Historic WDEV Broadcasts 3. Ray Charles — Genius Loves Company 4. Nanci Griffith — Hearts in Mind 5. Alison Krauss & Union Station — Lonely Runs Both Ways 6. Pat Metheny — Way Up 7. Original Soundtrack — Finding Neverland 8. Anäis Mitchell — Hymns for the Exiled 9. Bluegrass Gospel Project — Wander On 10. Django Reinhardt — Best Of

1. 50 Cent — Massacre 2. Gibson Brothers — Long Way Back Home 3. Jack Johnson — In Between Dreams 4. Gibson Brothers — Bona Fide 5. Mars Volta — Frances the Mule 6. Ray Charles — Genius Loves Company 7. U2 — How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb 8. Judas Priest — Angel of Retribution 9. The Game — Documentary 10. Modest Mouse — Good News for People Who Love Bad News

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SEVEN DAYS

|

march 09-16, 2005| music 43A

reviewthis

THE GRIFT, LIFE BEYOND ALUMINUM

FREEFALL, SQUARE ONE (Self-released, CD)

(GlennSource Records, CD)

As the spotlight on the jam-band scene grows dimmer, you have to wonder if bands like The Grift are the result or the cause of the genre’s waning popularity. At a time when many groups are striving for something new and different, The Grift have released their second studio album, Life Beyond Aluminum. Unfortunately, it’s a derivative mélange of the worst aspects of the last 10 years in music. Composed of four transplants now calling Vermont their home, The Grift aim for that good old, Strangefolk-style groove feel. Except they’ve left out most of the catchy hooks. Repetitive guitar strumming is partially hidden behind superfluous DJ scratching, resulting in a mismatched urban-folk collision. Live bands have successfully brought in record cutters before, but it helps when the DJ does more than just scratch the word break back and forth. Vocal harmonies are the highlight of the disc; for the most part the band’s smartly rhythmic singing complements the music. Of course, there are several exceptions, such as when they attempt to (gasp!) rap over their folksy melodies. With odes to living in West Addison, playing at UVM and claims that Route 22A is “better known as the deuce-deuce,” this is hip-hop for your grandmother to enjoy. The main problem with Life Beyond Aluminum is that it never really takes off, energy-wise. Whatever dynamic these guys may have in their live performances somehow wasn’t captured in the studio. Lost girlfriends and self-indulgence are common lyrical themes, which drag the music into tepid ballad territory. The disc starts off upbeat, but each track seems to be slower than the previous one. Things start to pick up again halfway through the cut “Vegas.” A gritty guitar hook is complemented by a welcome trumpet overlay, but the tune quickly falls back into the same lackadaisical haze. The real con here — the true “grift” — is that the band has the balls to call itself a funk act. But the soul is probably at the bottom of their Birkenstocks. The Grift play at Nectar’s every Wednesday through the month of March, plowing through a different decade of cover tunes in each set. You can hear for yourself how their own music stands up to rock’s greatest hits.

ADAM KING

Burlington-based jazz-fusion unit Freefall have been playing together in one form or another for 15 years, but it’s been awhile since we’ve heard much from them. Many of the members have kept busy with other projects, but recently the whole group found time to finish Square One. Featuring the technically impressive and melodically inventive playing of guitarist Steve Blair, Freefall are heavy on musical muscle. Although chops are a major part of the group’s dynamic, the players avoid stepping on each other’s toes. Keyboardist Andy Hildebrandt’s vamps combine flamboyance with economy, while drummer Gabe Jarrett’s clean, polyrhythmic shuffles demonstrate why he’s so in demand. Bassist Stacy Starkweather’s low-end work is busy but always spot-on. Adding another textural and melodic dimension is tenor/alto/soprano saxophonist Lee Gillies, whose sharp attack and impeccable solos make you wonder why he’s not in the latest touring incarnation of Steely Dan. But fusion is not for everyone. While heavy on solos, Freefall’s music is too complex for many jam-rock fans, and jazz purists might not approve of the band’s more progressive leanings. Still, Square One is a whip-smart and crafty release. Hildebrandt’s “If I Were You, I’d Be Mad,” is fairly traditional in form. Kicking off with a moderate swing, the tune soon switches to doubletime, with the keyboardist taking a rhythmically savvy solo. “Spiral Steps” features a sophisticated acoustic guitar intro by Blair, complemented by Gillies’ cascading sax lines. The two face off with short solos before coming together for several quicksilver runs. Blair’s “Wacky” is just that, a samba-fied oddity that’s equal parts Discipline-era King Crimson and Warner Brothers cartoon soundtrack. The tune’s labyrinthine arrangement is dizzying; if anything shows off Freefall’s collaborative dexterity, it’s this cut. Closing track “Mozambique” — another Blair composition — places bionic melodies in a propulsive, polyethnic rhythmic structure. Blair’s solos are fluid but lack a certain amount of soul. Likewise, Hildebrandt’s chordal stabs seem too mechanical for such an exotically named tune. Freefall win big with their ensemble playing, though. They are among the tightest, and most telepathic, fusion bands I’ve heard — local or otherwise. Square One is a fine summation of the group’s daredevil musicality.

CASEY REA


44A

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march 09-16, 2005

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SEVEN DAYS

<clubdates> AA = ALL AGES NC = NO COVER

FRI.11 << 41A JON POUSSETTE-DART (singer-songwriter), Middle Earth, 8 p.m. $15. DAVE KELLER (blues/singer-songwriter), Finkerman’s Riverside Barbeque, 7 p.m. NC.

:: northern KARAOKE W/DON’T FRET ENTERTAINMENT, Sami’s Harmony Pub, 9 p.m. NC. CHUCH (truckstop rock/speedwestern), Monopole, 9 p.m. NC. VIP LADIES’ NIGHT W/DJ SKIPPY (top 40/r&b/reggae), Tabu Café & Nightclub, 9 p.m. NC. 18+. LIVE MUSIC, Riverview Café at Tabu Nightclub, 10 p.m. $3. 18+. THE PULSE (jazz/dance/top 40), Rusty Nail, 10 p.m. $5. LAZLO CAMEO (jam/blues), Lakeview Inn, 10 p.m. $5. MARK LEGRAND & SARAH MUNRO (heartsick country), Bee’s Knees, 5 p.m. NC. DUANE CARLETON (singer-songwriter), Charlie B’s, 8:30 p.m. NC. DOUG FLUTIE BAND (rock), The Matterhorn, 9 p.m. NC.

:: southern

FRI

PEAT MOSS & THE FERTILIZERS (rock covers), Pickle Barrel, 9 p.m. $12-20.

11

SAT.12

:: burlington area

WED

16 BACK TO THE ROOTS :: The early ’90s were big for laid-back rockers The Samples, but label fiascos and lineup changes made for a rocky ride in the latter part of the decade. Still, with more than a dozen releases under their belts, the band is part of neo-jam history. After several years in Colorado, chief Sample Sean Kelley headed back to Vermont, where he first started writing tunes. The band bring their earnest, pop-influenced music to two local stages this week — Higher Ground Ballroom on Friday, and Pickle Barrel in Killington on Wednesday, March 16. Luke Eriksen & Johari Window kick off the South Burlington gig.

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SUBJECT BIAS (alt-rock), Radio Bean, 8 p.m. NC, followed by LITTLE WOODEN MEN (alt-rock), 9 p.m. NC, followed by EVERYTHING NOW (altrock), 10 p.m. NC. JAZZ & SONG W/MITCH (lounge), Parima, 7 p.m. NC. DJS PRECIOUS, VALERIE (dance/techno), 135 Pearl, 10 p.m. $5. CAMUEL CROSS (jazz), Sweetwaters, 9 p.m. NC. THE COMPLAINTS (rock), Rí Rá Irish Pub, 10 p.m. NC. AMORPHOUS (funk), Red Square, 8 p.m. $2, followed by DJ A-DOG (hip-hop), midnight. $2.

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SEVEN DAYS

|

march 09-16, 2005| music 45A

<clubdates>

:: champlain valley SUPERSOUNDS DJ, Red Mill Restaurant, 10:15 p.m. NC. SNAKE MOUNTAIN BLUEGRASS, Two Brothers Tavern, 9 p.m. NC. DANCE PARTY (DJ), City Limits, 9 p.m. NC.

:: central TALL PALM (rock), Charlie O’s, 10 p.m. NC. SUGAR BLUE (old-time), Langdon St. Café, 12:30 p.m. NC, followed by GREEN MOUNTAIN JAZZ SERIES PLAYERS (art auction; jazz), 7 p.m. NC.

PEG TASSEY (singer-songwriter/ eclectic), Black Door Bar & Bistro, 9:30 p.m. $5. WILLIE EDWARDS BLUES BAND, Middle Earth, 8 p.m. $8. REV. NATHAN BRADY CRAIN (dirty solo acoustic), Purple Moon Pub, 7 p.m. $3.

KARAOKE, Edgewater Pub, 9:30 p.m. NC.

:: champlain valley JAZZ BRUNCH W/FRED BARNES (piano), Two Brothers Tavern, 10:30 a.m. NC.

:: central

:: northern ELLEN POWELL DUO (jazz), Jeff’s Maine Seafood, 6:30 p.m. NC. PAUL DOUSE (singer-songwriter), Overtime Saloon, 9 p.m. NC. RANE (rock/jam), Monopole, 9 p.m. NC. STOLEN MOMENTS (bossa nova/swing), Bee’s Knees, 7:30 p.m. NC. ALL NIGHT DANCE PARTY W/DJ TOXIC (hip-hop/top 40/house/reggae), Tabu Café & Nightclub, 5 p.m. – 4 a.m. NC. 18+. THE PULSE (jazz/dance/top 40), Rusty Nail, 10 p.m. $5. SETH EAMES TRIO (blues), Charlie B’s, 8:30 p.m. NC.

JAZZ NIGHT W/ROB MORSE, GEZA WESH, SHANE HARDIMAN & SPECIAL GUESTS, Langdon Street Café, 6:30 p.m. NC.

:: northern SOUND OBSESSION DJ, Naked Turtle, 9:30 p.m. $1. BEN ROY & DAVID LANGEVIN (improv piano & percussion), Bee’s Knees, 10 a.m. NC.

:: southern EVERCLEAR (rock), Pickle Barrel, 9 p.m. $20/23.

:: southern PEAT MOSS & THE FERTILIZERS (rock covers), Pickle Barrel, 9 p.m. $12-20.

MON.14 :: burlington area

SUN.13 :: burlington area

OLD-TIME SESSIONS (traditional), Radio Bean, from 1 p.m. NC, followed by TOM BIANCHI (singer-songwriter), 8 p.m. NC, followed by COLLETTE NOVAK (singer-songwriter), 9 p.m. NC. OPEN MIKE W/DREW OF NAMED BY STRANGERS, Nectar’s, 9 p.m. NC. SUNDAY NIGHT MASS (dance/techno DJs), Club Metronome, 10 p.m. NC. PAUL ASBELL (jazz/Americana), FlynnSpace, 7:30 p.m. $14. OPEN MIKE, JP’s Pub, 9 p.m. NC. ANTONY B., ITATION SOUND (reggae/dancehall), Higher Ground Ballroom, 9 p.m. $17/20. AA. KARAOKE, Geno’s Karaoke Club, from 6 p.m. NC.

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OPEN MIKE, Radio Bean, 7 p.m. NC. DAVE GRIPPO (funk/jazz), Red Square, 10 p.m. NC. ’93 TILL W/A-DOG & NASTEE (hiphop), Nectar’s, 9 p.m. NC. EVERTON BLENDER, THE REGGAE ANGELS (reggae/dancehall), Club Metronome, 9:30 p.m. $15/18. VIRGA, EL TORO, ISLAND VIEW DRIVE, AKRASIA, CARACALLA (rock/metal), Second Floor, 8 p.m, $5/10. 18+ before 11 p.m. MUSIC MACHINE W/DJ TRANSPLANTE (eclectic), The Monkey House, 10 p.m. NC. KARAOKE, Trackside Tavern, 9 p.m. NC.

:: northern OPEN MIKE, Sami’s Harmony Pub, 7 p.m. NC. JERRY LAVENE (jazz guitar), Chow! Bella, 6:30 p.m. NC.

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ORDINARY K, FEAR NUTTIN BAND, MR. DANG DANG (hip-hop/funk), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. $3. NEW NILE ORCHESTRA (African pop/funk), Club Metronome, 7 p.m. $5, followed by RETRONOME (’70s’80s DJs), 10 p.m. $3. MASSIVE (DJs), Rasputin’s, 10 p.m. $3. REWIND (’70s-’80s/old-school hiphop), Second Floor, 9 p.m, $3/10. 18+ before 11 p.m. RUGGER (hip-hop/r&b DJ), Ruben James, 10 p.m. NC. DAVE HARRISON W/STARSTRUCK KARAOKE, JP’s Pub, 10 p.m. NC. ANTHONY GERACI (jazz/blues piano), Wine Bar at Wine Works, 5:30 p.m. NC, followed by DAWNA HAMMERS (vocals & piano/singer-songwriter), 9 p.m. NC. NASTEE DOG W/DJ A-DOG & NASTEE (hip-hop), Kahiki Moon, 10 p.m. NC. RUN 4 COVER (rock), Henry’s Pub, Holiday Inn, 9 p.m. NC. BLUE FLOYD (Pink Floyd tribute; blues), Higher Ground Ballroom, 9 p.m. $18/20. 18+. STEVE CAOUETTE, KELLY MACFARLAND, ROB STEEN (comedy), Higher Ground Showcase Lounge, 8:30/10:30 p.m. $12/14. 18+. MACHINES AT REST (rock), Backstage Pub, 9 p.m. NC. STUR CRAZIE (rock), Edgewater Pub, 9 p.m. NC. KARAOKE, Geno’s Karaoke Club, from 3 p.m. NC. KARAOKE W/REX, Franny O’s, 9:30 p.m. NC.

GUA GUA (psychotropical), Radio Bean, 6 p.m. NC, followed by LEAH QUINELLE ALLSTARS (rock), 9 p.m. NC, followed by CHRIS BURKE (singer-songwriter), 10 p.m. NC. TSUNAMI BENEFIT W/OUTBREAK, REAGANOMICS, NOT LIKE YOU, THE CHASERS (punk), 135 Pearl, 9:30 p.m. NC. $6. WILL PATTON (Gypsy jazz), Leunig’s, 7 p.m. NC. BASHMENT W/DEMUS & SUPER K (reggae/dancehall), Red Square, 9 p.m. NC. COLLEGE DAZE FINALE W/THE FLO, CASUAL FIASCO (acoustic rock/jam), Nectar’s, 9 p.m. NC. LIVE DJS, Kahiki Moon, 10 p.m. NC. KARAOKE, Edgewater Pub, 9:30 p.m. NC. MONKEY FUNK (jazz/funk/jam), The Monkey House, 10 p.m. NC.

ONLY W/FATTIE B. (’80s DJ), 11 p.m. NC. TRICKY PAT PRESENTS WHIPLASH (jungle/drum ’n’ bass), 1/2 Lounge, 10 p.m. NC. MYSTIC VIBES, THE GRIFT (reggae/ jam/’90s covers), Nectar’s, 9 p.m. NC. OPEN MIKE W/ANDY LUGO & DJ TRANSPLANTE, Manhattan Pizza & Pub, 10 p.m. NC. TSUNAMI RELIEF BENEFIT W/NASTEE, JACK SPADE, S.I.N., G. MONEY (hip-hop), Second Floor, 9 p.m. $3/7. 18+ before 11 p.m. DAVE HARRISON W/STARSTRUCK KARAOKE, JP’s Pub, 10 p.m. NC. OSHE, MTN. MOJO AUTHORITY, AKASHIC RECORD, BRIXTON GUNS (jam/reggae/funk/rock), Higher Ground Showcase Lounge, 8:30 p.m. $5. 18+. DJ DEMUS & JAH RED (reggae/dancehall), Monkey House, 10 p.m. NC. OPEN MIKE, Geno’s Karaoke Club, from 8 p.m. NC. KARAOKE, Edgewater Pub, 9:30 p.m. NC.

:: champlain valley

:: champlain valley

LADIES’ NIGHT, City Limits, 9 p.m. NC. JULEE GLAUB & PETE SUTHERLAND (old-time/traditional), Good Times Café, 8 p.m. $15.

LADIES’ NIGHT, City Limits, 9 p.m. NC. JULEE GLAUB & PETE SUTHERLAND (old-time/traditional), Good Times Café, 8 p.m. $15.

:: northern

:: central

KARAOKE W/SASSY, Monopole, 9 p.m. NC. CHRIS LYON (solo guitar), Bee’s Knees, 7:30 p.m. NC.

JAY EKIS (singer-songwriter), Charlie O’s, 10 p.m. NC. OPEN MIKE W/GABRIELLA, Langdon St. Café, 7 p.m. NC. OPEN MIKE W/THE GULLY BOYS, Middle Earth, 8 p.m. $3. ROB WILLIAMS (singer-songwriter), Purple Moon Pub, 7 p.m. NC.

TUE.15 :: burlington area

WED.16 :: burlington area

IRISH SESSIONS, Radio Bean, 8 p.m. NC. PINE STREET JAZZ W/JODY ALBRIGHT, Parima, 7 p.m. NC. TOP HAT KARAOKE, 135 Pearl, 9 p.m. NC. PAUL ASBELL TRIO (jazz), Leunig’s, 7 p.m. NC. CIRCADIA (Irish/Celtic), Rí Rá Irish Pub, 7 p.m. NC. NBFB (jazz/hip-hop), Red Square, 8 p.m. NC, followed by MEMBERS

:: northern OPEN MIKE W/BILLY CALDWELL, Overtime Saloon, 9 p.m. NC. OPEN MIKE W/MIKE PEDERSEN, Monopole, 9 p.m. NC. EAMES BROTHERS (blues), Bee’s Knees, 7:30 p.m. NC.

:: southern THE SAMPLES (rock/jam), Pickle Barrel, 9 p.m. $20/23. 쩾

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DEMOLITION BASHMENT with Demus & Super K WEDNESDAY • 11PM

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with THE ACTIVISTS/DICTATORS featuring David Kammerer & Tom Lawson

Wednesday, Friday & Saturday shows start around 8-ish

CHROME COWBOYS Three ruble cover at the door Friday & Saturday nights S 3/12 EMORPHOUS Eighties Explosion with Fattie B. W 3/16 NBFB THURSDAY • 9PM THREE THE HARD WAY F 3/18 STARLINE RHYTHM BOYS Live Hip Hop S 3/19 MATT CHASE BAND FRIDAY W 3/23 SKLAR GRIPPO QUINTET DJ A-Dog 5-8 DJ Nastee 12-2 F 3/25 BOOTY JUICE (for real) SATURDAY S 3/26 A-DOG ALL NIGHT DJ A-Dog 12-2 SUNDAY • 9PM W 3/30 JENNIFER HARTSWICK QUARTET F 3/11

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46A | march 09-16, 2005 | SEVEN DAYS

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www.sevendaysvt.com/ar t

art review

|

march 09-16, 2005

|

art 47A

<art >

BY MARC AWODEY <exhibitions>

CALL TO ARTISTS THE LANGDON STREET CAFE is seeking small-scale artworks for a show entitled "Bathroom Art." Info, call 223-8667. HEALTHY LIVING in South Burlington seeks local artists to display in the windows of its café gallery. Contact Rhoby at 863-2569, #318.

OPENINGS

Waxing Eloquent

E EXHIBIT “The Emotional Landscape,” encaustic paintings by Earl C.C. Schofield III. Doll-Anstadt Gallery, Burlington. Through March.

ARTWORK “Red Marsh Pines”

PHOTO Marc Awodey

arl C.C. Shofield III’s show, “The Emotional Landscape,” currently at Burlington’s Doll-Anstadt Gallery, is made up of 12 paintings that use a 2000-year-old medium. His encaustic works use a wax-based method developed during Hellenistic times in the Roman Empire. Among the earliest surviving encaustics are Egyptian funereal portraits painted on wood, and wall paintings excavated from the ashes of Pompeii. Shofield’s paintings are more about life than the afterlife. The zesty surfaces and lively hues of his “emotional landscapes” express more joy than angst — usually. From Dublin, New Hampshire, Shofield portrays the world around him with equal measures of abstraction and realism. His artist statement reveals: “I am most drawn to the formal aspects of painting, a sense of order in the composition on which I can impose loose brush work, arbitrary color, unique mark making, drips, tears, scratches, layers of translucent and opaque wax . . . all ‘chaotic’, expressive tools.” “Red Marsh Pines” demonstrates exactly what Shofield means. Its bright white foreground is essentially an abstractexpressionist field painting, while bushy pines deeper in the picture plane are both “realistic” and rendered in gobs. His red is a brownish-red oxide laid out in staccato vertical brushstrokes. “Red Marsh III” depicts the same place, but the painting has a higher horizon, with the tree line squeezed into the upper tenth of the canvas. Layers of translucent wax seem to cascade over the foreground. “Lake View” may be that same watery location in a different season, without red weeds in the pond. Shofield’s landscape vistas are all 40 inches square, which is large-scale for encaustic works. He varies spaces in the paintings by adroitly adjusting horizons and brushwork. “Call’s View” presents a more pastoral scene. A country road wends its way up a village hill, just as the maples are beginning to turn scarlet in early autumn. But that’s where the

sweetness ends. Shofield seems to have slashed lines into the wax and let dirty umber drips creep out of the heavens, adding tension to an otherwise peaceful New England country idyll. Shofield’s four paintings of bugs and a frog are 15-inchsquare closeups of creatures that might be found near his neighborhood marshy pond. Rather than just calling the creatures by their names, he adds mythological edges to the titles. Thus the frog work is “Hades/Wood Frog,” and the dragonfly is called “Mercury/Dragonfly.” The other two biomorphic paintings are “Mars/Big Red Bug” and “Venus/Bumblebee.” The mythological add-ons seem a little pretentious, but they do obliquely refer to the Roman roots of encaustic. In any event, the paintings are great despite the curious titles. “Venus/Bumblebee” captures the bee on a bright lilac blossom amidst a beautiful triadic harmony of green, yellow and mauve. It’s a photorealistic depiction, complete with a diffused background and shallow depth of field, as is common in nature photography. Of course, the paint surface is quite uncommon, and the insect works have smooth as well as diffused backgrounds. Shofield goes to the opposite extreme in his “Black Sun Series.” Those two 36-inch-square paintings capture the sun seemingly clawing its way through tangled branches. They are painted in heavy wax impastos, thicker than in any of his other pieces. “Black Sun Series #2” has the sun at left, a yellow-white disk penetrating an orange-and-black forest of leafless trees. “Black Sun Series #1” is a little more subdued: The sun is white with a few rays emanating from it, behind a forest of green leaves and gray tree trunks. Ancient encaustic painters may have had a slightly tougher job than do modern ones — contemporary artists have the benefit of premixed commercial recipes, blow dryers, precisely heated spatulas and other blending tools. Nevertheless, encaustic remains a demanding medium. In Shofield’s hands, it’s an extremely versatile one. m

BARBARA MOLLOY: Recent prints. Julian Scott Memorial Gallery, Johnson State College, 635-1469. Reception March 10, 3 p.m. Through March 19. ‘WOMEN’: A mixed-media show by local artists celebrating females. E1 Studio Collective, Burlington, e1studiocollective@yahoo.com. Reception March 11, 5:30-8 p.m. Through March. OLIVER VERNON: "Modern Mantra," acrylics, giclée prints and "live" paintings inspired by Eastern yogic and meditative traditions. Lineage Gallery, Burlington, 862-7766. Reception March 11, 7-10 p.m. Through April 10. TOVE OHLANDER: The 2005 winter artist-inresidence shows her glass works. Firehouse Center for the Visual Arts, Burlington, 8657166. Reception March 11, 5-7 p.m. Through March 26. TSUNEO NARUMI & STEVE HALFORD: Sculpture and raku vessels, respectively. Carving Studio and Sculpture Center, W. Rutland, 438-2097. Reception March 11, 5-7 p.m. Through April 24. JANET FREDERICKS: "Water, Water," collaborations and drawings exploring the nature and language of water. William Feick Arts Center, Green Mountain College, Poultney, 287-8000. Gallery talk March 11, 4-5 p.m., followed by reception 6-8 p.m. Through April 2. LYNA LOU NORDSTROM: "Mixed Media," an exhibit of one-of-a-kind and multiple-image prints. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 878-4918. Reception March 12, 11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Through March. ‘EMERGING ARTISTS’: Works in mixed media by students of Mt. Abraham High School. Art On Main, Bristol, 453-4032. Reception March 12, 2-5 p.m. Through March. BARBARA K. WATERS: "A Few Life Lessons," monotypes. Café Piccolo, Burlington, 9510234. Meet the artist March 15, 8-10 a.m. Through April 1. MELISSA BOUNTY & STEVEN LICHTI: A collaboration of words and art. Bad Girls Café, Johnson, 635-7423. Reception March 16, 5-6:30 p.m. Through March.

TALKS/ EVENTS TOVE OHLANDER: The Artist-in-Residence, a glass artist from Sweden, will have open studio hours at the Firehouse Center for the Visual Arts, 4th floor, Burlington, 8657165. March 12 & 19, noon - 5 p.m. She will also give a glassmaking demonstration at Church & Maple Glass Studio, Burlington, on March 10, 5-7 p.m. BIRD LIVES!: An art auction including the cartoon artwork of Ed Koren and Jeff Danziger, and a live jazz party commemorating the 50th anniversary of Charlie "Bird" Parker's death benefits the Green Mountain Jazz Series. Langdon Street Café, Montpelier, 229-4427. March 12, 7-10 p.m.

TALKS/EVENTS >> 48A PLEASE NOTE: Exhibitions are written by Pamela Polston; spotlights written by Marc Awodey. Listings are restricted to exhibits in truly public places; exceptions may be made at the discretion of the editor. Submit art exhibtions at www.sevendaysvt.com/art or send exhibitions via email by Thursday at 5 p.m., including info phone number, to galleries@sevendaysvt.com.


48A

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march 09-16, 2005

|

SEVEN DAYS

<exhibitions> TALKS/EVENTS << 47A

PHOTO: MARC AWODEY

‘ART IN THE SNOW’: The annual event includes a tour of the town's historic buildings and galleries and studios. Brandon Artists Guild, 247-4956. March 12, 1:304:30 p.m. GALLERY TALK: Stanford Italian literature prof Robert Harrison talks about the meanings of the garden, from enchanted to infernal, in conjunction with a current exhibit. Harman Periodicals Reading Area, College Library, Middlebury College, 443-2240. March 14, 4:30 p.m. LUNCHTIME GALLERY TALK: Religion lecturer Jonathan Gold presents a talk entitled "Present Gods: Divinities in Indian Art." Fleming Museum, UVM, Burlington, 6560750. March 16, 12:15 p.m.

ONGOING

THINKING CHINESE

Chen Lushen, Zhang Wei-

Xing, Jia Ru, Ming Zou and Li Xubai don’t show their work in Vermont very often. But this year they are the featured artists at the Phoenix Gallery’s third annual “Return of the Spring” exhibition of contemporary Chinese art. In addition to paintings and calligraphic works, a Tibetan manuscript book and traditional Chinese brushes and inks are also on display. No communist-style social realism here; the only “Maoist” piece is Jia Ru’s “Chon-Mao” (pictured), with two panda bears snacking on bamboo.

ELISABETH HOWLAND: "Welcome to the Blue World," silver gelatin prints. 1/2 Lounge, Burlington, 555-1212. Through March 30. ANIMÉ ART CONTEST: Works by local high school and university students. L/L Gallery, Living/Learning Center, UVM, Burlington, 656-4200. Through March 18. ROBERT WALDO BRUNELLE, JR.: "Gold House," recent paintings. Sneakers Bistro, Winooski, 655-9081. Through March. ESSEX HIGH SCHOOL ART STUDENTS: Acrylic paintings and black-and-white photographs. Bingo's Pizzeria, Essex Jct., 879-1000. Through March 13. 18TH ANNUAL CHILDREN’S EXHIBITION: Works by children in Burlington public schools. Metropolitan Gallery, Burlington City Hall, 865-7166. Through March. SCOTT KING: "Recent Works," figurative and abstract paintings in acrylic and mixed media. The Men's Room, Burlington, 978921-2948. Through April 29. JOHN PAUL MARMONTI: A nationally touring collection of post-9/11 paintings commemorating firefighters, Fletcher Room; and JEFF SCHNEIDERMAN: "Beauty Around Us," photographs of nature, Pickering Room; and ERIC KIDHART, MICHAEL SMITH & RICK HAYES: "Realm of the Gun," works about arms and the man, Mezzanine Balcony. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 865-7211. Through March. NVAA GROUP SHOW: Members of the Northern Vermont Artist Association show their works. Union Station Gallery, Burlington, 893-6877. Through March 26. ‘REACHING OUT, REACHING IN’: Works from participants in Burlington City Arts' out-

YOU’LL BE

AMAZED AT HOW MUCH OUR

reach programs: Art From the Heart, Senior Art Guild and Foster Arts Mentoring Program. Airport Gallery, S. Burlington, 8657166. Through March. ‘HONORING THE BARN’: Nine local artists interpret the enduring rural structure in a variety of media. Shelburne Craft School's Gallery on the Green, Shelburne, 985-3648. Through April. MATTHEW MAZZOTTA: "Regrouping," paintings, prints and mixed-media work; and MICHAEL STRAUSS: "Insectarium," bugs and other creatures in ink and watercolor, Greenhouse. Daily Planet, Burlington, 8629647. Through March. EARL C.C. SCHOFIELD III: "The Emotional Landscape," encaustic paintings. DollAnstadt Gallery, Burlington, 864-3661. Through March. SANDRA M. WALSH: Watercolors of Vermont scenes and florals. Proceeds from sales will benefit the Walsh Fund for Arts in Healthcare. Uncommon Grounds, Burlington, 8656227. Through March 28. ESSEX HIGH SCHOOL ART STUDENTS: Acrylic paintings and black-and-white photographs. Bingo's Pizzeria, Essex Junction, 879-1000. Through March 12. HILARY BALDWIN & ANN YOUNG: "Myth Making," two installations utilizing traditional and unconventional materials. Firehouse Gallery, Burlington, 865-7165. Through March 13. ABBY MANOCK: "Derailed," new paintings. 47 Sanctuary Upstairs, 47 Maple St., Burlington, 864-5884, ext. 278. Through March 25. HILLARY MILENS: "New Work," paintings. Smokejacks, Burlington, 658-1119. Through March. ‘RETURN OF THE SPRING III’: Paintings and calligraphic works by five internationally celebrated Chinese artists: Chen Lushen, Zhang Wei-Xing, Jia Ru, Ming Zou and Li Xubai. Phoenix Gallery, Burlington, 8639400. Through April 3. CAMERON HARVEY: "January Diaries," recent oil paintings on wood. Stella Shoes, Burlington, 864-2800. Through March 7. HEIDI ALBRIGHT: "Ophidian Skins," painted serpent sculpture made from local hardwood. Artists' Mediums, Williston, 879-1236. Through March. SHAMMS MORTIER: "She Dances Timeless Void, Curious Wind," 18 electric, surrealist, large-format digital prints on canvas. CCV Hallway Galleries, LL Atrium, Burlington, 865-4422. Through May 5.

KEVIN KIP MATOTT: "In Circulation," abstract, design-based oil paintings. CCV Hallway Galleries, Burlington, 865-4422. Through May 5. ‘THIRTEEN VERMONT ARTISTS’: Works by Josh Neilson, Kristen L'Esperance, Abby Manock, Jeremy Ayers, Ira Cummings and others. Opaline Gallery, One Lawson Lane, Burlington, 660-8875. Through March. JENNE GREAVES: Self-portraits in oil; and MICHAEL T. JERMYN: Ethereal photographs; and MAGGIE NEALE: Abstract paintings in oil and acrylic. Artpath Gallery, Wing Building, Burlington, 563-2273. Through April. ‘NEW WORKS’: Featuring represented artists Christian Brown, Sarah Haskell, Russ Keil, Sean Callahan and Steve Goodman. Enigma Gallery, Essex, 879-9220. Ongoing. KIMBERLEE FORNEY: Original acrylic paintings and giclée prints. Center for Community and Neighborhoods, Burlington (above City Market), 872-9605. Through March. ‘COLLECTING THE BODY, TRANSFERRING DESIRE’: Curated by UVM students, the exhibition uses objects from the permanent collection to present a cross-cultural look at how spirituality, sexuality and societal obsessions shape our experiences and perceptions of the human body. Wolcott Gallery, Fleming Museum, UVM, Burlington, 6560750. Through June 5. ‘ART/DOCUMENT: DEFINING AMERICAN PHOTOGRAPHY’: From the museum's permanent collection, the exhibition juxtaposes Lewis Hine's documentation of child laborers in Vermont with other important early-20thcentury photographs. Fleming Museum, UVM, Burlington, 656-0750. Through April 24. JEFF CLARKE: "Natural Sights," new blackand-white landscape photography. Flynndog, Burlington, 863-2227. Through March 24.

:: champlain valley ‘WEAVINGS OF WAR: FABRICS OF MEMORY: A traveling exhibit of textiles depicting the horrors of war by women from Central and Southeast Asia, Latin America and South Africa. Vermont Folklife Center, Middlebury, 388-4964. Through May 28. KARLA VAN VLIET: Asian-inspired brush paintings. Bobcat Café, Bristol, 453-3311. Through April. LINDA DURKEE: Photographs. Briggs Carriage Bookstore, Brandon, 247-0050. Through March 18.

PLANNING DAY FOR

The Vermont Student Assistance Corporation presents College Pathways, a free college planning conference for high school juniors and their parents. Dozens of presenters will be on hand, with 16 workshops to choose from, like applying to college, preparing for standardized tests, finding scholarships and more. To register and choose your workshops, visit vsac.org or call 800-798-8722. Sponsored by VSAC with additional support from Nellie Mae Education Foundation, WCAX Channel 3, and Clear Channel Communications.

PAYS OFF.

Your partner on the pathway to college. vsac.org

COLLEGE

HIGH SCHOOL JUNIORS

ESPECIALLY SINCE IT’S

FREE.

Saint Michael’s College Saturday, March 19th, from 8am to 3:30pm (Register by March 11th)

Castleton State College Saturday, April 9th, from 8am to 3:30pm (Register by April 1st)


SEVEN DAYS

march 09-16, 2005

art 49A

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GO FIGURE

‘MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE PRESIDENTS’: An exhibition of official portraits of recent Middlebury College presidents includes a hologram of 15th President Emeritus John McCardell Jr., made by John Perry. Middlebury College Museum of Art, 4435235. Through August 14. CONTEMPORARY PHOTOGRAPHY AND THE GARDEN: "Deceits and Fantasies," more than 60 images of gardens from around the world by European and American photographers. Middlebury College Museum of Art, 443-5007. Through April 17.

The Burlington establishment 1/2 on Church Street may be the smallest venue in Vermont, but photographer Elisabeth Howland has managed to fit 40 framed pieces into it. Her exhibition of edgy, mostly

:: central JOHN PATERSON: "Serious Craft of Whimsy," collages, assemblages and photos by the Art Resource Association member. City Center, Montpelier, 476-4057. Through March. PRIA CAMBIO: "Expressions in Dryer Lint: November Landscapes," works expressing the dreariest time of the year. Katie's Jewels, Montpelier, 229-9649. Through March. NANCY WIGHTMAN: Prints. Two Rivers Printmaking Studio, White River Junction, 295-5901. Through March. CRISTINA PELLECHIO: "Ceramic Wall Works," handbuilt works with mixed-media. Governor's Office, Statehouse, Montpelier, 828-5657. Through March. JIM WALLACE & KATE MUELLER: "Body of Work," nude photographs and pastels, respectively. Plainfield Community Center, 223-4865. Through March. JOYCE KAHN: "Florals," pastel paintings. Shoe Horn, Montpelier, 229-9409. Through March. ‘THE ABCS OF ART’: Works by local students, K-12, on the theme of careers in the arts. Chandler Gallery, Randolph, 728-3232. Through March 12. AXEL STOHLBERG: Charcoal drawings and assemblages. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, axelart@sover.net. Through March. RALPH STODDARD: Large-scale photographic portraits. Bundy Center for the Arts, Waitsfield, 496-4781. Through May 30. ELINOR RANDALL: "The Eye on the Journey," works in paint and ink. Institute for Social Ecology, Plainfield, 454-8493. Through April 15. ‘ART OF ACHIEVEMENT’: An exhibition of work by 25 award-winning Vermont artists, past and present, in multiple media. T.W. Wood Gallery, Montpelier, 828-3291. Through April 17. ‘WHITE OUT’: A show celebrating winter features photography by A. Blake Gardner; oil paintings by Kevin McMullen and Virginia

|

figurative, black-and-white 5-by-7inch photos is entitled “Welcome to the Blue World.” Pictured, “I’m Choosing Joy.”

Webb; collage and assemblage by Thom Rock; and multimedia by Michael Stewart. Cooler Gallery, White River Junction, 2801864. Through March. ‘LETTERS, WORDS & BOOKS’: An exhibit of artists' books, altered books and art inspired by letters and words by more than 40 area artists. Also, "Making an Impression," block prints by Williamstown High School students, second floor. Studio Place Arts, Barre, 479-7069. Through March 26. FALIF HAGOPIAN: Neo-realistic oil paintings. Rhapsody Café, Montpelier, 229-6112. Through March 15. ‘FEATURED ARTIST EXHIBITION’: Bob Burchess, Sloanne Dawson, Susan McDormand, Thomas Torak and Nelson Parker show their works, along with those of the Rutland High School Advanced Placement Students. Chaffee Art Center, 775-0356. Through March 27. POULTNEY AREA ARTIST GUILD: Sap buckets painted in a maple sugar theme, exhibited in storefronts on Main Street in Poultney, are silent auction items to fundraise for the guild. Auction March 19, 7 p.m. Info, 287-5295. PETER BERGENDAHL: Photographs from Vermont and around the world. Northern Power Systems, Waitsfield, 496-2955, ext. 287. Through April 22. ‘WINTER DREAMS’: Twelve artists celebrate the season, in multiple media. The Book Garden, Montpelier, 223-2824. Through March.

MICKI COLBECK: "Rural Labors," large oil paintings reflecting rural life. Supreme Court Building, Montpelier, 828-4784. Through March 25. STUDENT PHOTOGRAPHY SHOW: Eleven students from Community College of Vermont show more than 20 images in the storefront window. Rite Aid, Montpelier, 223-3216. Through March 15.

:: northern KIM MOLLOY & KATHERINE SIMS: Small paintings and large photographs. Red Mill Gallery, Vermont Studio Center, Johnson, 635-2727. March 13-21. THOM ROCK & NITA PENFOLD: Spiritually inspired assemblages in mixed media. Catamount Gallery, St. Johnsbury, 748-2600. Through March. ‘ART SCHOLARSHIP SHOW’: Gil Perry, Elisabeth Wooden-Prior and Lisa Angell along with 19 other gallery artists show and sell works to benefit the art scholarship fund at Johnson State College. Vermont Fine Art Gallery, Stowe, 253-9653. Through March. ELROY TOWLE: Landscape paintings and other works in multiple media. Back Room Gallery, Northeast Kingdom Artisans Guild, 467-3701. Through March. GRACE ARTISTS: An exhibit of five artists from the permanent collection: Robert Gove, Phyllis Putvain, Curtis Tatro, Stanley Marcile and Huddee Herrick. Firehouse Gallery,

Hardwick, 472-6857. Through March 20. STUDENT ART SHOW: Works by students at the Peoples Academy of the Arts. Tegu Gallery, Morrisville, 888-1261. Through March 14. SHEA HEMBREY: "Bound," acrylic-on-board still lifes by the Arkansas artist. Also, LUCIEN DAY: A retrospective of oils and watercolors featuring Northeast rural and urban geography. Helen Day Art Center, Stowe, 253-8358. Through April 2. ‘NEW WORKS’: An exhibit of works by 25 artist-members of the newly formed Stowe Studio Arts. Stowe Town Hall, 253-8571. Through March. J.C. WELCH: Woodcuts and oils; also paintings, photography, Cibachrome, reproductions and Ukrainian eggs by other artists. The Blue Eyed Dog Gallery & Frame Shop, St. Albans, 524-4447. Through March.

:: southern RICH GOMBAR & MARIO MESSINA: Oil landscapes and lamps, respectively. V Gallery, Woodstock, 457-9294. Through March 18. FEBRUARY SOLO EXHIBITIONS: Nine regional artists exhibit their works in multiple media. Southern Vermont Arts Center, Manchester, 362-1405. Through March 15. DALE CHIHULY: "Glass and Prints," works by the famed glass artist. Southern Vermont Arts Center, Manchester, 362-1405. Through March 15.

:: regional BILL VIOLA & LORNA SIMPSON: "Transcending Time: Recent Work," four digital video works about humanity, race, gender and time. Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H., 603-646-2426. Through March 13. ‘ETERNAL EGYPT’: Masterworks of ancient art, spanning more than 3000 years, from the British Museum. Jean-Noel Desmarais Pavilion, Montréal Museum of Fine Arts, 514285-1600. Through May 22. ‘CRITICAL FACULTIES: TEACHING WITH THE HOOD’S COLLECTIONS’: Installations by faculty of anthropology, art history, classics and studio art illustrate how each discipline approaches teaching with art, utilizing the museum's permanent collection. Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H., 603-646-2426. Through March 13. ‘PICTURING CHANGE: THE IMPACT OF LEDGER DRAWINGS ON NATIVE AMERICAN ART’: An exhibit illustrating how the first Americans adopted and adapted Western materials, methods and conventions and transformed their own artistic traditions, from the 19th century to the present. Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H., 603-646-2808. Through May 15. 쩾

Shelburne

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tools • watches • findings • gift baskets • repairs

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honoring the

BARN March 2 – April 30

depictions of a cherished structure by artists working in several mediums

Gallery on the Green / 985-3648 generously underwritten by

Opening reception Friday, March 18, 5:30-7:30 With live music music by Lewis Franco (of Gross Domestic Products) on guitar and harmonica


< funnies >

50A funnies| march 09-16, 2005

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SEVEN DAYS


SEVEN DAYS

www.sevendaysvt.com/film

film review

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march 09-16, 2005

|

film 51A

< film> <filmclips>

BY RICK KISONAK

PREVIEWS BOSNIA, AFTER EVERYTHING: Burlington filmmaker Aida Sehovic shot this documentary of her return visit to the homeland she and her family fled in 1995. (85 min, NR) BORN INTO BROTHELS: British-born photojournalist Zana Briski immersed herself in the culture of Calcutta’s red-light district and emerged with a powerful portrait of children growing up there. Codirected by Ross Kaufman. (85 min, R) GREEN MOUNTAIN FILM FESTIVAL: Thirty films from around the world screen at Montpelier’s Savoy Theater and City Hall Arts Center March 17-27. See http://www.focusonfilm.net for the full schedule. HOSTAGE: Bruce Willis gets back in the action with the story of an LAPD negotiator who tries to start a new life after a hostage situation leaves a mother and child dead. With Kevin Pollack. Directed by Florent Emilio Siri. (113 min, R) ROBOTS: Academy Award-winning director Chris (Ice Age) Wedge brings usa CGI saga set in a world inhabited entirely by mechanical beings. The voice cast includes Ewan McGregor, Greg Kinnear and Robin Williams. (93 min, PG)

SHORTS

Be Cool ★

Y MISSTEPPING OUT

Thurman and Travolta reunite, but the result is a far cry from Pulp Fiction.

ikes! How long has this thing been festering on some studio shelf? And why in God’s name didn’t MGM leave it there? Even by moronic, mercenary sequel standards, Be Cool is seriously sub-par stuff. In the follow-up to 1995’s Get Shorty, John Travolta reprises the role of former Miami loan shark Chili Palmer. Since we last saw him, Palmer has risen to semi-prominence in the movie business, grown restless and decided to try his hand in the music industry. He lays out this game plan to a pal played by James Woods in what may be cinematic history’s most stilted and lifeless opening scene. The two drive around L.A. and then sip iced tea at a curbside café, exchanging dialogue so mundane that one is not distraught when mobsters appear out of the blue and cut the chitchat short by blowing Woods away. It’s a sign of just how fake and slapped-together a film this is that neither Travolta nor the guy’s widow, played by Uma Thurman, give any indication of being distraught. His ashes aren’t in an urn five minutes before Palmer is putting the moves on Thurman and trying to finagle a piece of the recording studio she and her late husband built together. I’m not sure I’ve ever seen a movie character go so under-mourned. As it turns out, Woods was $300,000 in debt at the time of his demise, a fact that doesn’t come to light until the rival label head to whom he owed the money comes to collect. Cedric the Entertainer costars as the owner of a hip-hop company. We know it’s a hip-hop company because everywhere he goes he’s accompanied by a gang of gun-toting, muscle-bound goons who travel in a motorcade of matching Hummers blasting the same hip-hop song every time they enter a scene. The big joke here is that CTE is, in fact, highly educated. He’s only affecting his gangsta persona. That’s this movie’s idea of humor. When the fellow threatens Thurman with the hostile takeover of her business, Travolta, naturally, steps in and does his Chili Palmer thing: He bluffs the thugs into believing they’ll be paid by the end of the week and never breaks a sweat. For a second there, the character Travolta played 10 years ago seems about to come into focus. But

then we hear his master plan. Step one is to take over the management of an aspiring young singer (Christina Milian). She’s under contract to an abusive boob (Vince Vaughn), a white man who also affects a gangsta persona. (The people who made this movie really like that joke.) Palmer informs the guy that the singer’s contract is henceforth null and void and, because he’s an abusive boob, the audience is expected to overlook this violation of Vaughn’s legitimate legal rights. Step two is to strike it rich by making her an overnight star. What is this, a Judy Garland/Mickey Rooney musical? It’s another sign of just how fake and slapped-together the film is that this part of Palmer’s plan hinges on the pure coincidence that Aerosmith is playing in town that weekend, and Thurman’s character used to do their laundry way back when. The brainstorm: Wow Steven Tyler with the girl’s demo tape and convince him to let her open the show. As if opening acts aren’t hired well in advance of a concert. As if these two would be able to access someone like Tyler as easily as the movie suggests. As if a rock ’n’ roll icon like Tyler would be wowed by this kid’s singing — it’s strictly “American Idol” lite. As if opening one show makes you magically, suddenly rich. I won’t reveal any more of the story except to add that The Rock and Danny DeVito are squandered in nothing roles and the great Harvey Keitel is reduced to mixing it up with Russian mobsters, one of whom continually loses his toupée. You know you’ve hit bottom when a script resorts to running rug gags. We’re not supposed to mind the mess, though, since in the middle of the movie, completely unrelated to the plot, Travolta and Thurman hit the dance floor. Get it? Just like they did in Pulp Fiction! We may not be making movie history here, but we’re referring to it. This little movie moment fails to slow the downward spiral. In fact, the film is filled with in jokes and references to better pictures, which its creators must have considered clever, and none of them help one bit. With a premise this preposterous and writing this lame, there was never any way this sequel was going to be cool. m

A VERY LONG ENGAGEMENT★★★★★ Aurdrey Tautou stars in Jean-Pierre (Amélie) Jeunet’s WWI-era drama about a woman who refuses to accept the reality of her fiancé’s death. With Gaspard Ulliel and Clovis Cornillac. (134 min, R) ARE WE THERE YET?★1/2 Brian (Beethoven, Snow Dogs) Levant brings us this comedy about a ladies’ man who attempts to score points with the woman of his dreams by driving her two kids, who live in Portland, Oregon, to visit her in Vancouver, where she’s been forced to find work. Ice Cube and Nia Long star. (91 min, PG) BE COOL★ In this sequel to the 1995 hit Get Shorty, John Travolta reprises the role of wise-guy Chili Palmer. This time around, he moves from the motion-picture business to the music industry. Based on the bestseller by Elmore Leonard. With Uma Thurman and Danny DeVito. F. Gary Gray directs. (114 min, PG-13) BECAUSE OF WINN-DIXIE★★1/2 Wayne (Smoke) Wang directs this family film about a young Florida girl who adopts an orphaned dog. Based on the bestseller by the same name. Starring Jeff Daniels, Cicely Tyson and Dave Mattews. (106 min, PG) BEING JULIA★★★ Annette Bening and Shaun Evans star in Istvan Szabo’s character study about an aging London theater actress who suffers something of a breakdown until love comes into her life in the form of a young man half her age. With Jeremy Irons and Michael Gambon. (104 min, R) COACH CARTER★★★ Samuel L. Jackson stars in the fact-based story of a highschool basketball coach famous for benching his entire team due to poor academic performance. Rob Brown costars. Thomas Carter directs. (134 min, PG-13)

SHORTS >> 53A

RATINGS ★ = refund, please ★★ = could’ve been worse, but not a lot ★★★ = has its moments; so-so ★★★★ = smarter than the average bear ★★★★★ = as good as it gets Ratings assigned to movies not reviewed by Rick Kisonak are courtesy of Metacritic.com, which averages scores given by the country’s most widely read reviewers (Rick included).


52A

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march 09-16, 2005

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SEVEN DAYS

BOSNIA, AFTER EVERYTHING

flick chick

BY SUSAN GREEN

SHORT TAKES ON THE REEL WORLD

Going Home Again

I could have been one of those people if my path hadn’t gone another way. AIDA SEHOVIC

Then, they woke up one morning to discover that their next-door neighbor, a Serb, was no longer talking to them. There were barricades. School closings.” She came to the United States in 1997, by way of Turkey and Germany, through the refugee resettlement program. Last summer Sehovic returned to the Balkans with her American boyfriend, University of Vermont senior Gates Gooding, to shoot Bosnia, After Everything. The 59-minute documentary, which had its first public screening two

weeks ago at UVM, examines the current reality for young people in the still-beleaguered country. The couple spent six weeks in Bosnia and Herzegovina, as one segment of the splintered nation is now called. But Banja Luka was off-limits. “Technically I could go back to the region where I’m from, but it would still be really dangerous,” Sehovic notes. Gooding, a Colorado native, is a geography major but studied at New York University’s film school in his sophomore year. During that time Sehovic attended the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan. She graduated UVM in 2002. The idea for their cinematic collaboration came in the fall of 2003. “I did an independent study about Bosnia to prepare,” says Gooding, 22. He funded the project with a $4000 UVM grant and private donations. With a Panasonic digital video camera, they flew to Eastern Europe. In her luggage, Sehovic was also schlepping 200 porcelain coffee cups, representing a small percentage of victims so far identified from a 1995 massacre in Srebrenica. On the ninth anniversary of the event she used the cups to create an installation, resembling a map of the country, in the dirt of a Sarajevo town square. Sehovic and Gooding chronicled that daylong effort in a short doc, For Those Who Aren’t Here. The symbolism was significant. “In

Bosnian society, it’s considered very intimate and personal when someone invites you for coffee,” Sehovic says. She was 15 when her family moved away, so the journey back was a revelation. They encountered a range of Bosnians — a cab driver, an artisan, an athlete, a former soldier who happens to be Sehovic’s cousin — willing to discuss their views of the future in a country plagued by bureaucracy, corruption, economic woes and continuing ethnic tensions. Many of those interviewed envision immigrating elsewhere. One man pledges to stay because if he left, surviving the genocidal madness “would all be for nothing.” Neither option is easy. In a traditionally patriarchal culture, the job market favors older men. Consequently, there is a 50 percent unemployment rate among Bosnian youth. Drugs and alcohol are prevalent. Landmines dot the rural and urban terrain. Pessimism rules. “I could have been one of those

people if my path hadn’t gone another way,” Sehovic observes. “Film is a powerful tool. I would never have had such conversations otherwise.” “She was discovering her country along with me,” Gooding says. They returned with 30 hours of footage — a tenth the amount typically shot for a documentary. “It was only in the editing process we began to think we had something valuable,” Sehovic says. They devoted five months to shaping the finished product, which was greeted with a standing ovation at its UVM premiere. The crowd included many local Bosnians. “We’d like to show it at the Sarajevo Film Festival in August,” Gooding notes. There’s also a free screening at 5:40 p.m. on March 13 at the Roxy in downtown Burlington. Meanwhile, Sehovic’s parents have to contend with more than 1000 coffee cups — the final tally used for her installation — that she has stored in their basement. They may still bear traces of Sarajevo soil. m

“Flick Chick” is a weekly column that can also be read on www.sevendaysvt.com. To reach Susan Green, email flickchick@sevendaysvt.com.

fickle fannie BY DAVID DIEFENDORF

READ THIS FIRST:

This week, as always, the things Fannie likes (shown in CAPITAL letters) all follow a secret rule. Can you figure out what it is? NOTE: Fickle Fannie likes words. But each week she likes something different about them — how they’re spelled, how they sound, how they look, what they mean, or what’s inside them.

Lots of mail-order brides have a RUSSIAN ACCENT. A SILVER BULLET was used to whack werewolves. A BRONZE DAGGER killed Cleopatra’s dermatologist. Vegetarians crave PRIME MEATS in their off-moments. Not many STAR REPORTERS work for The Star. Winona found her engagement ring in a POUND CAKE. While in the clink, Martha developed an IRRITABLE COLON. A BLOODY SLASH was the calling card of Jack the Editor. Just one more dollar can put you in a new TAX BRACKET. Pablo needed some Prozac during his BLUE PERIOD. E me with your Qs or comments (dd44art@aol.com). Difficulty rating for this puzzle: HARD AS HIGH SCHOOL ENGLISH. If you’re stuck, see the HINT on this page. If you cave, see the ANSWER on page 55A. So much for Fickle Fannie’s tastes this week. Next week she’ll have a whole new set of likes and dislikes.

FICKLE FANNIE HINT: Mark my words.

W

hen Aida Sehovic’s family left Banja Luka in 1992, the bloody conflict that would soon devastate the former Yugoslavia had not yet reached them. But their ethnically diverse city, about 85 miles northwest of Sarajevo, was already transformed. Her family was Muslim, and it was no longer safe for them to remain in their homeland. “People thought the war would never get there,” explains Sehovic, now a 28-year-old Burlington artist and filmmaker. “Everyone was so intermarried. It all seemed beyond.


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< filmclips> SHORTS << 51A in his care of their vast inheritance. With Meryl Streep, Billy Connolly, Liam Aiken and, of course, Jude Law. (113 min, PG) MAN OF THE HOUSE★1/2 Stephen (Rock Star) Herek directs this fish-out-of-water comedy about a grizzled FBI agent assigned to protect a cheerleading squad from a lurking threat. Tommy Lee Jones stars. (97 min, PG-13) MEET THE FOCKERS★★★ As Ben Stiller’s daffy mom and dad, Dustin Hoffman and Barbra Streisand complicate premarital matters when in-laws are introduced to one another in this sequel to the 2000 hit. With Blythe Danner and Robert DeNiro. Directed by Jay Roach. (PG-13) MILLION DOLLAR BABY★★★★★ Clint Eastwood follows the highly acclaimed Mystic River with this highly acclaimed character study in which a down-on-hisluck trainer takes on a spunky young fighter and helps her rise through the ranks of women’s boxing. Starring Eastwood, Hilary Swank and Morgan Freeman. (137 min, PG-13) POOH’S HEFFALUMP MOVIE★★★ Brenda Blethyn, Jim Cummings and David Ogden Stiers lend their voices to the latest bigscreen outing based on A. A. Milne’s beloved children’s books. This time around, Pooh, Piglet and Tigger learn about acceptance and diversity with a little help from a much-feared monster. (68 min, G) RACING STRIPES★★ Frankie Muniz Bruce Greenwood and Whoopie Goldberg are featured in the family-friendly saga of a zebra who longs for a chance to realize his inner Seabiscuit. Snoop Dogg and Jeff Foxworthy also star. (84 min, PG) SIDEWAYS★★★★1/2 Alex (About Schmidt) Payne directed and co-wrote this buzzhappy story about two old friends who take a wine-tasting road trip and assess their lives along the way. Starring Paul Giamatti and Thomas Haden-Church. (98 min, R) SON OF THE MASK★ Jamie Kennedy, Alan Cumming and Bob Hoskins team up for this sequel to the 1994 Jim Carey comedy. This time around, the magical mask makes its way into the hands of a cartoonist’s newborn son. (86 min, PG) THE AVIATOR★★★ Howard Hughes was an innovator and a risk taker. So it’s ironic that Martin Scorsese’s screen portrait of him is the least audacious and adventurous movie he’s ever made. Leonardo DiCaprio does a captivating impression, but the script never quite brings its subject meaningfully to life. With Cate Blanchette, Alec Baldwin and, it goes without saying, Jude Law. (117 min, PG13)

CONSTANTINE★★1/2 Keanu Reeves stars in music-video director Francis Lawrence’s metaphysical thriller about a loner cursed with the ability to recognize devils in human disguise and condemned to spend his days sending them back where they came from. Based on the Vertigo Comics series. With Rachel Weisz and Max Baker. (121 min, R) CURSED★★ Christina Ricci and Joshua Jackson are paired in the latest from horror legend Wes Craven, the supernatural saga of a brother and sister who develop superhuman abilities in the wake of a mysterious car crash. Shannon Elizabeth costars. (86 min, PG-13) FINDING NEVERLAND★★★1/2 Johnny Depp stars in the new film from Monster’s Ball director Marc Forster, a fantasytinged look at the life of Peter Pan author J.M. Barrie. Costarring Kate Winslet and Radha Mitchell. (106 min, PG) HITCH★★1/2 Will Smith stars in this romantic comedy about the adventures of a date-doctor legendary for his matchmaking skills. Kevin James and Eva Mendes costar. Andy Tennant directs. (115 min, PG-13) HOTEL RWANDA★★★★ Don Cheadle takes his career to a new level with his performance in this fact-based account of a hotel manager who risked his life to save large numbers of Tutsi people from massacre by the Hutus in 1994. Nick Nolte costars. Terry George directs. (111 min, PG-13) IN GOOD COMPANY★★★1/2 Writer-director Paul Weitz has come a long way since American Pie. First he surprised everybody with About a Boy. Now he’s back with a quirky, thoughtful comedy about a 50-year-old ad salesman who finds himself working for a new, 26-year-old boss who falls for his daughter, who’s just 18. Dennis Quaid, Topher Grace and Scarlett Johansson star. (110 min, PG-13) KILL BILL VOLUME 1★★★1/2 Everyone’s Kung-Fu fighting in Quentin Tarantino’s blood-soaked saga of a one-time assassin (Uma Thurman) who vows to take revenge on the boss who tried to off her. David Carradine, Lucy Liu, Daryl Hannah and Michael Madsen costar. (96 min, R) KILL BILL VOLUME 2★★★1/2 Uma Thurman and David Carradine are back for the closing chapter in Quentin Tarantino’s critically lauded revenge epic. Sonny Chiba, Daryl Hannah and Lucy Liu costar. (130 min, R) LEMONY SNICKET’S A SERIES OF UNFORTUNATE EVENTS★★★ Jim Carey stars in this big-screen adaptation of the popular children’s book series by Daniel Handler. He plays a scheming count consumed with the desire to relieve three orphans placed

T H E

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C I N E M A S

THE INCREDIBLES★★★ Pixar’s latest and winner of this year’s Best Animated Picture Oscar tells the story of a superhero who’s retired from crime-fighting and relocated to the suburbs, where he battles boredom and a bulging waistline as an insurance claims adjuster. Featuring the voices of Craig T. Nelson, Holly Hunter and Samuel L. Jackson. Directed by Brad Bird. (118 min, PG) THE JACKET★★ Adrien Brody stars in this psychological thriller about a vet who returns to his home in Vermont, only to experience mysterious bouts of amnesia. Jennifer Jason Leigh and Keira Knightley costar. (102 min, R) THE LIFE AQUATIC★★★★ Bill Murray stars in the new one from Rushmore director Wes Anderson, the offbeat saga of an oceanographer who undergoes an existential crisis after his partner is eaten by a giant shark. Costarring Owen Wilson, Cate Blanchette, Anjelica Houston and Willem Driver. (118 min, R) THE MERCHANT OF VENICE★★★ Al Pacino takes on the role of Shylock in Michael (Il Potino) Radford’s big-screen version of the Bard’s classic play. With Jeremy Irons and Joseph Fiennes. (138 min, R) THE PACIFIER★1/2 With his dramatic and action options dwindling by the minute, Vin Diesel resorts to comedy in director Adam Shankman’s laugher about a military-commando type whose latest mission calls for him to pull babysitting duty. With Faith Ford and Brad Garrett. (91 min, PG) THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA★★ Joel Schumacher directs Gerard Butler and Emmy Rossum in this adaptation of the popular musical by Andrew Lloyd Webber. With Minnie Driver. (143 min, PG-13)

NEW ON DVD/VHS CHRISTMAS WITH THE KRANKS★ This year’s Christmas-related Tim Allen comedy concerns a married couple whose plans to forgo holiday celebrations in favor of a Caribbean vacation are foiled at the last minute. Based, believe it or not, on a novel by John Grisham. Jamie Lee Curtis costars. Joe Roth directs. (94 min, PG) LADDER 49★1/2 Jay (Tuck Everlasting) Russell directs this saga celebrating the bond between Baltimore firemen. Starring John Travolta and Joaquin Phoenix. (115 min, PG-13) m

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<showtimes> All shows daily unless otherwise indicated. Film times may change. Please call theaters to confirm. * = New film.

BIJOU CINEPLEX 1-2-3-4

MAJESTIC 10

THE SAVOY THEATER

Rt. 100, Morrisville, 888-3293.

Maple Tree Place, Taft Corners, Williston, 878-2010.

Main Street, Montpelier, 229-0509.

wednesday 9 — thursday 10 Be Cool 6:45. The Pacifier 6:35. Cursed 7:05. Hitch 6:55. friday 11 — thursday 17 *Robots 1, 3 & 4:45 (Sat & Sun), 6:30, 8:15 (Fri & Sat). Constantine 1:20 & 3:50 (Sat & Sun), 7, 9:15 (Fri & Sat). The Pacifier 1, 3 & 4:45 (Sat & Sun), 6:40, 8:15 (Fri & Sat). Be Cool 1:15 & 3:40 (Sat & Sun), 6:50, 9 (Fri & Sat).

wednesday 9 — thursday 10 Are We There Yet? 12:30, 6:10. The Aviator 2:40, 8:20. Because of Winn-Dixie 1:05, 3:40, 6. Be Cool 1, 3:50, 6:40, 9:30. Constantine 1:10, 4, 7:05, 9:45. Cursed 8:10, 10. Hitch 12:40, 3:25, 6:50, 9:40. The Jacket 12:50, 4:10, 7, 9:55. Man of the House 1:15, 4:20, 7:10, 9:50. Million Dollar Baby 12:35, 3:30, 6:30, 9:25. The Pacifier 12:30, 2:35, 4:40, 7:15, 9:35. Sideways 12:45, 3:35, 6:20, 9:20.

ESSEX CINEMA Essex Outlet Fair, Rt. 15 & 289, Essex Junction, 879-6543 wednesday 9 — thursday 10 Be Cool 10 (Wed), 1, 3:45, 6:40, 9:20. Because of Winn-Dixie 10 (Wed), 12:30, 4:30, 7:15, 9:40. Constantine 3:45, 6:45, 9:30. Cursed 12:45, 3, 5:15, 7:30, 9:45. Hitch 10 (Wed), 1:10, 4, 7, 9:40. Man of the House 10 (Wed), 12:30, 2:50, 5:10, 7:30, 9:45. Million Dollar Baby 10 (Wed), 12:45, 3:40, 6:30, 9:20. The Pacifier 10 (Wed), 12:50, 3, 5:10, 7:20, 9:30. Pooh’s Heffalump Movie 10 (Wed), 2:45. Son of the Mask 10 (Wed), 1.

friday 11 — thursday 17 *Robots 12:25, 1, 1:45, 2:40, 3:10, 4, 4:50, 5:20, 6:30, 7:10, 8:45, 9:15. *Hostage 1:10, 4:10, 7:15, 9:45. Be Cool 12:50, 3:40, 6:45, 9:25. Constantine 3:50, 7, 9:45. Hitch 1:20, 4:20, 7:25, 9:55. The Jacket 7:30, 9:50. Million Dollar Baby 12:30, 3:25, 6:25, 9:35. The Pacifier 12:40, 2:50, 5, 7:20, 9:30. Sideways 12:35, 3:35, 6:20, 9:20. Because of Winn-Dixie 1:15. Times subject to change. See http://www.majestic10.com.

MARQUIS THEATER friday 11 — thursday 17 *Robots 10 (Sat & Wed), 12:30, 1, 2:40, 3:10, 4:50, 5:20, 7, 7:30, 9:10, 9:40. *Hostage 10 (Sat & Wed), 1:15, 4, 6:45, 9:25. Be Cool 10 (Sat & Wed), 1, 3:45, 6:40, 9:20. Because of Winn-Dixie 10 (Sat & Wed), 12:30, 4:30. Hitch 10 (Sat & Wed), 1:10, 4, 6:50, 9:40. Man of the House 7, 9:15. Million Dollar Baby 10 (Sat & Wed), 12:45, 3:40, 6:30, 9:20. The Pacifier 10 (Sat & Wed), 12:50, 3, 5:10, 7:20, 9:30. Pooh’s Heffalump Movie 2:45.

Main St., Middlebury, 388-4841. wednesday 9 — thursday 10 Hitch 6:30, 8:30. Million Dollar Baby 7, 9:15.

Ethan Allen Shopping Center, North Ave., Burlington, 863-6040. wednesday 9 — thursday 10 Phantom of the Opera 6:30, 9:15. In Good Company 7, 9:30. Coach Carter 6:40, 9:20. The Life Aquatic 6:50, 9:25. friday 11 — thursday 17 Are We There Yet? 1:10 & 3:20 (Sat & Sun), 7. Phantom of the Opera 1:30 (Sat & Sun), 6:30, 9:15. Coach Carter 6:40, 9:10. In Good Company 6:50, 9:05. Being Julia 9. Racing Stripes 1:20 & 3:45 (Sat & Sun). The Incredibles 1 & 3:35 (Sat & Sun). Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events 4:10 (Sat & Sun). Matinees Saturday & Sunday only. See www.merrilltheatres.net.

film 55A

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I M A G I N E. Shelburne Rd, S. Burlington, 864-5610. wednesday 9 — thursday 10 Be Cool 12:20, 3:20, 6:45, 9:35. The Pacifier 12:40, 3:55, 7:05, 9:15. The Jacket 1, 4:10, 7:15, 9:45. Cursed 12:50, 4:20, 7:20, 9:50. Man of the House 12:15, 3:35, 7:10, 9:40. Because of Winn-Dixie 12:55, 4, 7. Constantine 12:25, 3:50, 6:40, 9:25. Hitch 12:35, 3:40, 6:50, 9:30. Meet the Fockers 9:20. The Aviator 12, 3:30, 7:30. friday 11 — thursday 17 *Robots 12:05, 2:25, 4:40, 7:10, 9:35. *Hostage 12:45, 3:45, 6:55, 9:50. Be Cool 12:20, 3:25, 6:45, 9:40. The Pacifier 12:10, 2:30, 4:45, 7:05, 9:15. The Jacket 1, 4:05, 7:15, 9:45. Because of Winn-Dixie 12:55, 4, 7. Constantine 12:25, 3:50, 6:40, 9:25. Hitch 12:35, 3:40, 6:50, 9:30. Meet the Fockers 9:20. The Aviator 12, 3:30, 7:30.

Matinees Saturday & Sunday only.

friday 11 — thursday 17 *Bosnia, After Everything 6:40 (Sun). *Born Into Brothels 1, 3, 5, 7:10, 9:10, 11 (Fri & Sat). Hotel Rwanda 1:15, 3:55, 6:45, 9:25, 11:45 (Fri & Sat). Finding Neverland 1:25, 3:40, 7, 9:20. Be Cool 1:10, 3:35, 6:35, 9:15, 11:35 (Fri & Sat). A Very Long Engagement 3:30, 9:05. The Merchant of Venice 1:05, 6:25. Sideways 1:20, 4, 6:40, 9:15. Kill Bill Volume 1 11:40 (Fri & Sat). Kill Bill Volume 2 11:30 (Fri & Sat).

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wednesday 9 — thursday 10 Be Cool 7:30. The Pacifier 7:30. Million Dollar Baby 7:30.

wednesday 9 — thursday 10 Be Cool 1:10, 3:35, 6:35, 9:15. The Merchant of Venice 1, 3:45, 6:25, 9:10. Hotel Rwanda 1:15, 3:55, 6:45, 9:25. Finding Neverland 1:30, 3:40, 7, 9:20. Sideways 1:05, 3:50, 6:40, 9:30. Being Julia 1:20, 7:05. A Very Long Engagement 3:30, 9:05.

2:30 PM

march 09-16, 2005

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friday 11 — thursday 17 *Robots 12:30, 2:30 & 4:30 (Sat & Sun), 6:15, 8:15. Million Dollar Baby 1:15 & 3:45 (Sat & Sun), 6:30, 8:30.

MERRILL’S ROXY CINEMA ETHAN ALLEN CINEMAS

wednesday 9 — thursday 17 The Life Aquatic 1:30 (Sat-Mon), 4 (Wed), 6:30, 8:50. Green Mountain Film Festival (Fri-Thu) various times.

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friday 11 — thursday 17 *Robots 2:30 & 4:30 (Sat & Sun), 6:45 (Fri & Sat), 7:30 (Sun-Thu), 8:45 (Fri & Sat). Be Cool 2:30 & 4:45 (Sat & Sun), 7 (Fri & Sat), 7:30 (Sun-Thu) 9:15 (Fri & Sat). The Pacifier 2:30 & 4:30 (Sat & Sun), 6:45 (Fri & Sat), 7:30 (SunThu) 8:45 (Fri & Sat).

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Savoy Theater 26 Main St • Montpelier • 229-0509 Page 1 www.savoytheater.com

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Schedules for the following theaters are not available at press time. CAPITOL SHOWPLACE 93 State Street, Montpelier, 229-0343. THE ECLIPSE THEATER Rt. 100, Waitsfield, 496-7787. PARAMOUNT THEATRE 211 North Main Street, Barre, 479-4921. WELDEN THEATER 104 No. Main St., St. Albans, 527-7888.

Late night shows Friday & Saturday only. Times subject to change. See http://www.merrilltheatres.net.

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HAPPY 19

TO US! 8 years at 4 Market Street this month, plus 11 next door…wow! We’re almost 19!!

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1 cup cubed day-old bread • 1/4 cup half & half 1/4 cup ricotta cheese • 1 lb Misty Knoll ground turkey 1 egg • 3 T minced shallot • 1/4 t minced garlic 2 T minced parsley • 1/4 t fresh thyme leaves 5 juniper berries processed until powdered (optional) 1 t coarse salt • 1/4 t ground black pepper • olive oil Fontina cheese • 4 hamburger rolls

Break up the turkey in a medium bowl. Add the egg, shallot, garlic, parsely, herbs, and salt and pepper, mixing well until completely combined. Add the soaked bread and mix to combine. With wet hands form four good-sized patties. Preheat the broiler. Heat about 2 T olive oil on medium-high heat in a nonstick pan until shimmering. Carefully add the burgers, and cook undisturbed for 8 minutes, until beautifully browned. Carefully turn and cook for 5 minutes. Lower heat and partially cover (allowing steam to escape) until instant read thermometer registers 160 degrees, approximately 10 minutes. Place burgers on baking sheet and put about two slices of fontina on each burger. Broil until fontina is softened.

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When we moved to 4 Market Street, these 4 came along for the ride... and they’ve been riding ever since! Left to right:

TIM, OUR BOOKKEEPER When not working: in the garden with his dog, Max

MIKE, CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER When not working: Black Sea Quartet and mandolin maniac

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FRONT PAGE GALLERY “Pink Pony,” found object sculpture by Julia Dotoli of Burlington. SUBMISSION GUIDELINES Seven Days accepts hi-resolution digital files and full-color reproductions of 2-dimensional artwork from Vermont artists for a one-time, non-paying exhibition in the FRONT PAGE GALLERY of Section B. Submissions must be vertically-oriented, non-originals no larger than 8 1/2" x 11". Please do not send work in a current public exhibit. We will only return artwork that includes a SASE with the appropriate postage. Please include your name, address, phone number, title of the works, and medium. Send submissions to: SEVEN DAYS, c/o FPAG, PO Box 1164, Burlington, VT 05402 or email to: fpag@sevendaysvt.com. No phone calls, please.


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SUPPORTING ROLE? SEVEN DAYS is seeking a drama queen or king — that is, a THEATER CRITIC.

Are you right for the part? working knowledge of classical and contemporary theater ability to assess the elements of a play without bias

with

creative, lively and well-ordered writing familiarity with the Vermont theater scene

This is a year-round, freelance position, with reviews assigned according to local theater schedules. Will require some weekend nights.

ability to meet deadlines

2005

no conflict of interest (e.g., not working in local theater)

Half-Price Skiing with Coupon, Each Week through April! Join us this Friday, March 11th at Sugarbush Don’t forget the Sam Adams Aprés Ski Party at 4pm! Next Friday, March 18th we’re at Mad River Glen

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If you’re interested and meet the requirements, please send a resumé and cover letter supporting your “cred” as a critic, as well as three nonfiction writing samples, to pamela@sevendaysvt.com or SEVEN DAYS, P.O. Box 1164, Burlington, VT 05402, Attn. Theater Critic.

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<calendar > MARCH 09-16

www.sevendaysvt.com/calendar

FRI.11-SAT.12

FREEDOM OF MOVEMENT

Amy Chavasse understands that intensive training in a physical discipline can make someone more confidently spontaneous. Wellversed in the techniques of ballet, world and contemporary dance, the choreographer and performer guides a group of students and faculty colleagues at Middlebury College. “She Never Walked the Same Way Twice” is a duet set to the music of Lou Reed, among others. It examines relationship angst and cabinfever survival tactics. Chavasse goes solo for “Not Mistaken,” which she says is “inspired by the rhetoric and political maneuverings of several current public officials.” Wonder if there are any figure-eights involved.

AMY CHAVASSE Friday, March 11, Dance Theatre, Middlebury College Center for the Arts, 4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 4436433. Saturday, March 12, FlynnSpace, Burlington, 8 p.m. $15. Info, 863-5966.

:: submission guidelines

<calendar>

All submissions are due in writing at noon on the Thursday before publication. Be sure to include the following in your email or fax: name of event, brief description, specific location, time, cost and contact phone number. SEVEN DAYS edits for space and style.

Listings and spotlights by Meghan Dewald.

WEB: www.sevendaysvt.com/calendar EMAIL: calendar@sevendaysvt.com. MAIL: SEVEN DAYS, P.O. Box 1164, Burlington, VT 05402-1164 FAX: 802-865-1015


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<calendar > scene@CONTACT IMPROVISATION JAM BURLINGTON CITY HALL AUDITORIUM, SATURDAY, MARCH 5, 1:30 P.M. People touched among themselves last weekend at Burlington’s Contois Auditorium. Not to mention bumped, leaned, nudged, rolled onto, over and under, and leapt onto backs and into arms. An orgy in City Hall? Not quite. This was the thoroughly wholesome Contact Improvisational Jam, organized by seasoned local contacters, including Kevin Nielson of Burlington. Contact improv is loosely considered dance, but there are no predetermined moves or steps. The configurations of bodies are limited only by the dancers’ imaginations. While no dance experience — or even dexterity — is required, it helps to be limber, uninhibited and willing to sustain a few bruises. Vermont’s contact scene goes back about 20 years, Nielson said; this annual affair is its main event. The jam attracted some 50 participants from around the region. And it offered a lot of contact time: 25 hours from Friday evening through Sunday afternoon. While the majority of dancers were in their twenties, thirties or forties, the youngest looked about 3; the oldest, sixtysomething. Talk about “all-ages.” Moving about the room in loose clothing and bare feet, the dancers at first seemed to carom aimlessly. When two or more bodies connected, the movement became more intentional and convoluted, albeit still spontaneous. Some looked momentarily joined at the head, shoulder or hip. Without music, the sound in the room was akin to a wrestling match, minus the grunting. Laughter erupted frequently. Some movements attracted a crowd, probably because they looked like so much fun. Such as when eight or so people lay side-by-side on the floor, and the person on the end “crowd-surfed” across the others. Rolling one at a time, the group resembled a human conveyor belt. Most of the kids ran and tumbled around the way kids always do. But one little girl caught my eye: Six-year-old Emily Bushey seemed more experienced and daring. For the blond, pint-sized dancer, step-dad Shawn May was a one-man playground: She clambered to his shoulders, slid down his back, and clung to his waist as he swung her around, trusting that dad would catch her when she fell. Emily clearly “got” the meaning of contact, and seemed to enjoy the company of grown-ups who remember how to play. PAMELA POLSTON

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Tommy Makem Sunday, March 13, 7pm Contois Auditorium, City Hall, Burlington $22 advance/ $25 day-of-show

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9/23

Dougie MacLean (co-sponsored UVM Lane Series)

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Liz Carroll & John Doyle

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SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005

|

calendar 05B

WED 09 THU 10 FRI 11 SAT 12 SU N 13 MON 14 TU E 15 WED 16

WED.09 music Also, see clubdates in Section A. ‘VOICE LESSONS’: Soprano Beth Thompson Kaiser sings various works, accompanied by pianist Cynthia Huard. Concert Hall, Middlebury College Center for the Arts, 8 p.m. Free. Info, 443-6433. DAVID MURPHEY: The local singer entertains eaters with a concert of American roots music. Positive Pie, Plainfield, 5:30-8 p.m. Free with dinner. Info, 454-0133. ROYALTON TOWN BAND: Musically inclined community members play show tunes and Sousastyle marches at the Statehouse, Montpelier, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 828-2228. ‘THE HISTORY OF IRISH MUSIC’: Author Art Edelstein talks about the Emerald Isle’s poetic past, then plays some musical examples. South Burlington Community Library, noon - 1 p.m. Free. Info, 652-7076.

dance ‘SALSALINA’ PRACTICE: Work on your sensuous nightclub routines at this weekly Latin dance session. Salsalina Studio, Burlington, nonmembers 6 p.m., members 7 p.m. $5-10. Info, 598-1077. ISRAELI & MIDDLE EASTERN DANCE: Circle dancers go through the motions, both new and traditional. Ohavi Zedek Synagogue, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Donations. Info, 864-0218.

drama ‘THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK’: Based on a young girl’s journal, this play chronicles a family’s struggle to survive the Holocaust. Briggs Opera House, White River Junction, 7:30 p.m. $16-37. Info, 296-7000. JAMES NAISMITH PORTRAYAL: Actor Robert Cheney assumes the identity of basketball’s inventor and talks about the history of the sport. Essex Parks & Recreation, Essex Junction, 12:30 p.m. Free. Info, 899-4305. DOROTHY CANFIELD FISHER PORTRAYAL: Helene Lang resurrects the writings and life story of this Vermont author. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6955.

film

kids

activism

‘THE MERCHANT OF VENICE’: Al Pacino portrays Shylock in this 2004 film version of Shakespeare’s controversial play. Catamount Arts Center, St. Johnsbury, 7 p.m. $6.50. Info, 748-2600. ‘BREAD & ROSES’: Actors read this half-hour play about the women who galvanized support for unions in the garment industry. KelloggHubbard Library, Montpelier, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 225-8906.

WESTFORD PLAYGROUP: Children gather for games, songs and stories at the Westford Library, 9:30-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 878-5639. PRESCHOOL STORYTIME: Tots take in their favorite tales at the Pierson Library, Shelburne, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 985-5124. ANIMAL FEEDING: Watch critters do lunch with help from the animal-care staff at the ECHO Center, Burlington, noon & 3 p.m. $6-9. Info, 864-1848. BARNES & NOBLE STORYTIME: Readings of family faves provide morning fun for toddlers at Barnes & Noble, South Burlington, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 864-8001. WATERBURY STORYTIME: Little ones ages 2 and under get hooked on books at the Waterbury Library, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 244-7036. BROWNELL LIBRARY STORYTIME: Growing readers aged 3-5 participate with picture books and puppets at the Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 10-10:45 a.m. Free. Info, 878-6956. HINESBURG PLAY GROUP: Little ones let loose in a fun, friendly, toy-filled atmosphere. Hinesburg Town Hall, 10-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 453-3038. CHARLOTTE COMMUNITY PLAYGROUP: Children and their caregivers gather for crafts, reading and music-making. Charlotte Community School Cafeteria, 9-10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 425-7120. ‘MOVING & GROOVING’: Two- to 5-year-olds boogie down with rock ’n’ roll and world-beat music. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 865-7216. SPANISH-ENGLISH STORYTIME: Boys and girls between 2 and 5 years old hear bilingual songs and rhymes at the Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 865-7216.

BURLINGTON PEACE VIGIL: Activists stand together in opposition to the U.S. occupation of Iraq. Top of Church Street, Burlington, 5-5:30 p.m. Free. Info, 863-2345. INTERNATIONAL SOCIALISTS: Marx-minded activists strategize about the labor and antiwar movements. Room 100, Lafayette Hall, UVM, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free. Child care and info, 864-9678. DISABILITY AWARENESS DAY: Rights activists attend legislative committee meetings, then host a dinner reception. Meetings at the Statehouse, Montpelier, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Free. Dinner at the Capitol Plaza Hotel, Montpelier, 5-8:30 p.m. $25. Reservations and info, 223-6140.

art See exhibitions in Section A.

words BOOK DISCUSSION: Readers of Kent Haruf’s novel The Tie That Binds navigate its treatment of family obligations. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7211.

talks RAISING EAGLE CHICKS: Ornithologist Eveleen Cecchini offers an illustrated talk about local efforts to reintroduce bald eagles to Vermont. Shelburne Farms, 7 p.m. Free. Registration and info, 985-8686. ‘MENTAL HEALTH & AGING’: Community health nurse Andrea Schreiner discusses changes in cognition — and how to recognize them. Noble Hall, Vermont College, Montpelier, 1 p.m. Free. Info, 828-8804. ‘THE FIRST ASCENT OF ADI KAILASH’: Local climber Paul Zuchowski presents an illustrated talk about a British expedition to this Indian peak. Climb High, Shelburne, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 985-5055. ‘HOW TO USE A FAMILY COURT’: A lawyer explains the procedure and paperwork behind pleadings, motions and affidavits. South Burlington Community Library, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 652-7076. ‘WOMEN IN VERMONT PRISONS’: State Senator James Leddy speaks about the effect of female incarceration on children and community health. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 657-0242.

etc ‘RAPTORS UP CLOSE’: Nature lovers get a look at live birds on tours of the VINS Nature Center, Quechee, 2 p.m. $8. Info, 359-5000. CHOCOLATE-DIPPING DEMO: Fans of cocoa-covered confectionery see how it’s made at Laughing Moon Chocolates, Stowe, 2 p.m. Free. Info, 253-9591. ‘STITCH & BITCH’: Experienced knitters help out newbies at this communal wool gathering. Bad Girls Café, Johnson, 6-9 p.m. Free. Info, 635-7423. ‘THE MANY FACES OF POVERTY’: A week-long conference combines speakers, films and interactive exhibits about economic inequality. Middlebury College, various locations and times. Free. Info, 443-5652. WOMENSAFE AWARD CEREMONY: The local organization honors lawyer and Justice of the Peace Pam Marsh for her family advocacy. United Methodist Church, Middlebury, 5:30 p.m. Free. Info, 388-9180.

sport SENIOR EXERCISE: Those over 60 sample stretches and strength training. Senior Community Center, The Pines, South Burlington, 2:30 p.m. $2. Info, 658-7477. COUGAR CHALLENGE: Students take on faculty and staff at a basketball double header to benefit the Make-A-Wish Foundation. Mt. Mansfield Union High School gymnasium, Jericho, 6-9 p.m. $2. Info, 899-4690.

THU.10 >> 06B

the barre opera house

C E L E B R A T I O N S E R I E S underwritten by Banknorth Vermont

Second City PA C K E D H O U S E P R O D U C T I O N S P R E S E N T S

Reunion of the Legendary Lead Singers of

The Temptations Saturday, March 19 @ 7:30 PM TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: Paramount Theatre Box Office 36 Center St., Rutland 775-0903 www.paramountvt.org SPONSORED BY 98.1 WJJR and The Palms Restaurant

Friday, March 18, 8 p.m. Barre Opera House For tickets ( $10-26) and info call 476-8188. The famous improvisational troupe that launched the careers of John Belushi, Dan Ackroyd, John Candy, Gilda Radner, Chris Farley, Mike Myers and many others brings its brilliant comedy to The Barre Opera House. Adult content.

“Legendary.” THE NEW YORK TIMES Sponsored by Green Mountain Orthopaedic Surgery, Miles Supply and The World; media support for the show has been provided by WDEV.

3A


06B

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march 09-16, 2005

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SEVEN DAYS

<calendar >

WED.09 << 05B

THU.10 music Also, see clubdates in Section A. RAVIKIRAN: The acclaimed instrumentalist performs classical South Indian music on the chitra veena, a fretless lute with 21 strings, to benefit tsunami relief efforts. McCarthy Arts Center, St. Michael’s College, Colchester, 7:30 p.m. $15. Info, 654-2000. WOOD’S TEA COMPANY: The Vermont-based folk band sings out sea shanties and fiery Celtic tunes at Warren Elementary School, 7 p.m. $8. Info, 496-9714. POJAZZ: Music and poetry meld at an open evening of improv between writers and instrumentalists from area college faculties. Stearns Hall, Johnson State College, 8 p.m. Free. Info, 635-1476. FREE CONCERT: Pianist Carley Coolidge, guitarist David DiDomenico and bassist Brian Woods play classical and jazz music at the Governor’s House Inn, Hyde Park, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 888-6888. ADIRONDACK BRASS QUINTET: The five members of this ensemble toot their horns on 16th-century compositions, among other works. Krinovitz Recital Hall, Hawkins Hall, SUNY Plattsburgh, N.Y., 8 p.m. Free. Info, 518-564-2180. JAZZ FOR PEACE: Pianist Rick DellaRatta and Jazz for Peace pour it on to raise consciousness and cash for The Water March. See calendar spotlight. FlynnSpace, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $32. Info, 863-5966.

dance BALLROOM LINE DANCING: You don’t need a partner to learn samba, merengue and mambo steps in row formations. Jazzercize Studio, Williston, 8 p.m. $12. Info, 862-2207.

drama ‘THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK’: See March 9, 2 & 7:30 p.m. ‘VAMPIRE’: This surrealist play by Snoo Wilson satirically charts the bloody course of free will through British history. Hepburn Zoo, Middlebury College, 8 p.m. $1. Info, 443-6433. ALONZO BODDEN: The flight-mechanic-turnedfunny-man from the TV show “Last Comic Standing” delivers cynically good-natured lines. Lake Placid Center for the Arts, N.Y., 7:30 p.m. $15. Info, 518-523-2512.

‘BANG BANG YOU’RE DEAD’: Students perform this contemporary play to trigger community conversations about school violence. Bellows Free Academy Middle School gymnasium, Fairfax, 7 p.m. $5. Info, 849-6711. VARIETY SHOW AUDITIONS: Talented folks try out for the chance to demonstrate their skills at a mud season showcase. Chandler Music Hall, Randolph, call for time slot. Free. Info, 728-9010. ‘A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM’: UVM Theatre offers Shakespeare’s puckish comedy full of fairies, farce and mixed-up love. Royall Tyler Theatre, UVM, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $15. Info, 656-2094. DAISY TURNER PORTRAYAL: Actor-historian Naima Wade resurrects this gifted storyteller and Vermont farmer who was the daughter of former slaves. Lamoille Family Center, Morrisville, 12:45 p.m. Free. Info, 888-5229. ELIZABETH CADY STANTON PORTRAYAL: Historian Susanne Poulette-Cheney brings the fiery suffragist — and her views on women’s rights — to life. United Church of South Royalton, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 763-8766.

film ‘THE MERCHANT OF VENICE’: See March 9. ‘THE END OF SUBURBIA’: Examining the fossilfuel forces that drive the American Dream, this documentary posits international oil depletion in the not-too-distant future. Burlington College, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 862-9616. ‘AFGHANISTAN UNVEILED’: In this documentary, indigenous women reveal how Taliban rule and the U.S. military campaign have affected their lives. Room 110, Sunderland Hall, Middlebury College, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 388-4964. ‘POVERTY OUTLAW’: This documentary chronicles the development of a leading U.S. advocacy group for the poor. Room 220, McCardell Bicentennial Hall, Middlebury College, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 443-5652. BRATTLEBORO WOMEN’S FILM FESTIVAL: Over three weekends, 22 international indie flicks feature females. Hooker-Dunham Theater & Latchis Theatre, Brattleboro, 6:30-11 p.m. $8-35. Info, 258-9100.

art Also, see exhibitions in Section A. COMMUNITY DARKROOM: Shutterbugs develop

A selection of our wedding & anniversary band collection

film and print pictures at the Center for Photographic Studies, Barre, 6-9 p.m. $8 per hour. Info, 479-4127.

words VERANDAH PORCHE READING: The Vermont performance poet, teacher and editor revs up audiences with her work. Champlain College Dining Hall, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 860-2700. GARRET KEIZER READING: The Northeast Kingdom-based author offers Help, his philosophical book-length essay about how humans do — and don’t — assist each other. Briggs Carriage Bookstore, Brandon, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 247-0050. ‘MEMORABLE MEMOIRS’ SERIES: Readers of Paul Monnette’s Becoming a Man discuss what makes it a compelling life story. Fairfax Community Library, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 849-2420. ‘TENACIOUS TYPES’ SERIES: Chisel into cultural memories at a discussion of Carol Shields’ novel, The Stone Diaries. Senior Center at the Pines, South Burlington, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 652-7080. BOOKER PRIZE WINNERS: Readers appraise novelist Arundhati Roy’s The God of Small Things. Stowe Free Library, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 253-6145. GRAPHIC NOVEL SERIES: Fans of sophisticated stories in comic-book form review Neil Gaiman’s The Sandman: Preludes & Nocturnes. Aldrich Public Library, Barre, 6:15 p.m. Free. Info, 476-7550.

talks ‘DURABLE POWERS OF ATTORNEY’: Local lawyer Betsy Wolf-Blackshaw explains the importance of planning for the future. Waterbury Branch Library, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 244-7036. ‘METAPHOR & MEANING’: UVM professor emeritus Bill Eddy talks about making connections via unconscious comparisons. St. Johnsbury House, 1-2:30 p.m. $5. Info, 626-5135. FOREST TALK: Natural historian Charlie Cogbill describes 250 years of woodland changes in northern New England. Simpson Hall, Sterling College, Craftsbury Common, 6:30-8 p.m. Free. Info, 586-7711, ext. 101. NATURAL RESOURCES PANEL: Three former secretaries for the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources discuss the role of science in environmental decisions. Room 104, Aiken Center, UVM, Burlington, 12:30-1:45 p.m. Free. Info,

656-4280. ‘POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY’: Professor Carolyn Whitney talks about support systems and coping mechanisms among college students. Room 207, St. Edmund’s Hall, St. Michael’s College, Colchester, 11:45 a.m. Free. Info, 654-2536. ‘THE GREAT PAINTER OF DREAMS’: Music lovers examine the Impressionist movement through the works of French composer Claude Debussy. South Burlington Community Library, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 652-7076. ‘CHOICES FOR SUSTAINABLE LIVING’: Dave Thurlow of the Vermont Earth Institute comments on making and keeping ecologically friendly commitments. Hunger Mountain Co-op, Montpelier, 6:30-8 p.m. Free. Registration and info, 223-8004, ext. 202.

kids ANIMAL FEEDING: See March 9. SOUTH BURLINGTON LIBRARY STORYTIME: Youngsters ages 3-5 get together for easy listening at the South Burlington Library, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 652-7080. BARRE LIBRARY STORY HOUR: Three- to 5year-olds break into books at the Aldrich Public Library, Barre, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 4767550, ext. 308. WESTFORD STORYTIME: Kids ponder picture books and create crafts at the Westford Library, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 878-5639. DADS’ PLAYGROUP: Fathers and their offspring bond through fun and games. Family Center, Montpelier, 6 p.m. Free. Info, 828-8765. KIDS’ GARDEN TOUR: Young ones explore the world of plants on a walk around the Four Seasons Garden Center, Williston, 10 a.m. & 1 p.m. Free. Info, 658-2433. ‘LITTLE ROOTS’ STORYTIME: Kids gather in the garden to hear tales about plants, flowers and bugs. Four Seasons Garden Center, Williston, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 658-2433. BABY TIME: Little ones up to age 2 meet each other at the Pierson Library, Shelburne, 10:15 a.m. Free. Info, 985-5124. ‘ITTY BITTY SKATING’: Pint-size bladers take to the ice at Leddy Park Arena, Burlington, 10-11 a.m. $5. Info, 865-7558. PRESCHOOL STORYTIME: Future readers aged 24 take in tales at the Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 865-7216. ‘COYOTE TALES’: In this comical play for ages 3 and up, a furry mischief maker tries to trick other animals into being his dinner. Moore

Want your music reviewed in SEVEN DAYS?

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Auditions

Theatre Guild at the Town Hall Theatre, Main Street in Stowe

Nunsense by Dan Goggin

Directed by Carole Vasta-Folley & Musical Direction by Jane Bouffard

Saturday, March 12th at 10 am th or Sunday, March 13 at 10 am You don’t need to be Catholic to be one of our nuns, but you do need to be a strong singer and a good comedic actress!

For details visit stowetheatre.com or call Producer Andrea Wolga Freeman 253-6367

Send albums to Casey Rea clubs@sevendaysvt.com or P.O. Box 1164 Burlington, VT 05402-1164

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SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005

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calendar 07B

WED 09 THU 10 FRI 11 SAT 12 SU N 13 MON 14 TU E 15 WED 16

SKI INN: Cross-country enthusiasts glide over snowy trails at Highland Lodge, Greensboro, 9:45 a.m. Free. Registration and info, 533-2647.

activism BURLINGTON PEACE VIGIL: See March 9. WINTER GAMES VOLUNTEERS: Want to lend a helping hand? Pitch in for any part of the three-day Vermont Special Olympics at Bolton Valley Resort. Call for meeting times. Free. Info, 863-5222. TOWN PLANNING FORUM: Essex residents offer their two cents on municipal development decisions. Essex Middle School, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 878-1343.

etc ‘RAPTORS UP CLOSE’: See March 9. CHOCOLATE-DIPPING DEMO: See March 9. VERMONT CONSULTANTS NETWORK: Businesspeople breakfast, then learn tips for promoting their websites. Network Performance, South Burlington, 7:30 a.m. $15. Info, 865-0239. TOASTMASTERS CLUB: Speechmakers gather to practice public oratory and leadership-building skills. McClure MultiGenerational Center, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 879-2808. POKER GROUP: Straight-faced card players gather for no-hold-’em stud games. Call for Burlingtonarea location and time. Free. Info, 578-7654. LGBT FINANCIAL PLANNING: A consultant from the queer community offers info on monetary positions of strength. Clarion Hotel, South Burlington, 6 p.m. Free. Info, 628-2132. PARENT GROUP: Caregivers with infants newborn to 9 months share their joys and concerns. Expectant families are also welcome. Child’s Garden campus, Orchard Valley School, Montpelier, 1 p.m. Donations. Info, 456-7400. COMMUNITY CLINIC: Alternative practitioners demonstrate hands-on healing arts. Vermont Integrative Medicine, Montpelier, 5:30-8:30 p.m. Donations. Info, 229-1999.

2x6-alice020205

1/27/05

12:35 PM

music Also, see clubdates in Section A. BIRDS OF A FEATHER: Drummer Roy Haynes gathers a flock of four accomplished jazz musicians to play tribute to Charlie Parker. Flynn MainStage, Burlington, 8 p.m. $27-39. Info, 863-5966. LEIPZIG STRING QUARTET: This famous German ensemble presents works by Beethoven and Brahms, along with Alban Berg’s Lyric Suite. UVM Recital Hall, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $25. Info, 863-5966. STEVEN OSBORNE: This Scottish pianist entertains with a rare marathon performance of composer Olivier Messiaen’s Vingt regards sur L’Enfant JÊsus. See calendar spotlight. Concert Hall, Middlebury College Center for the Arts, 8 p.m. $12. Info, 443-6433. CHARLOTTE COFFEEHOUSE: The Highland Weavers sing Celtic tunes in close harmony at the Charlotte Senior Center, 7 p.m. $5-7. Info, 434-4565. JAZZ CAFÉ: Grammy Award-winning bassist Oscar Stagnaro fronts his Latin jazz quintet after a pre-show performance by the Proctor High School Jazz Band. The Carving Studio, West Rutland, 7:30 p.m. $12. Info, 775-5413. STEPHEN KIERNAN: This guitarist-composer coaxes big sounds from his strings in a genre-bending benefit for COTS. FlynnSpace, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $20. Info, 863-5966. GRYPHON & COMPANY: This folk and early music trio performs pieces from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance on voice and various instruments. North Avenue Alliance Church, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free. Info, 864-0501. ADAM ROSENBERG: The local musician plays songs on keyboard and guitar at the Briggs Carriage Bookstore, Brandon, 7-9 p.m. Free. Info, 247-0050.

dance AMY CHAVASSE: The dancer-choreographer and her fleet-footed fellows explore Vermont winters and past mistakes in two separate pieces. See calendar spotlight. Dance Theatre, Middlebury College Center for the Arts, 4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 443-6433.

Page 1

This is Alice Music‌

U2 Avril Lavigne

THURSDAY 10

John Mayer

Matchbox 20

Project5

WATER PRESSURE

Hydration is healthy and bottled water ubiquitous. But the costs of pre-packaged H2O go way beyond its retail price. Multinational corporations profit by sucking up and selling community aquifers; “spring� water standards are less rigorous than the requirements for city tap water; and many of those clear plastic containers, though recyclable, actually end up in landfills. The Water Stewards Network, based in South Burlington, is launching The Water March, a two-year cross-country trip to raise awareness about access to life’s fundamental liquid. A benefit concert by pianist, vocalist and composer Rick DellaRatta and his internationally touring Jazz for Peace turns on the tap.

JAZZ FOR PEACE Thursday, March 10, FlynnSpace, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $32. Info, 863-5966.

3/8/05

FRI.11 >> 08B

10:46 AM

Lola

sport

FRI.11

Don’t forget to check out... the love counselor pg 28B

Theater, Hopkins Center, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H. 7 p.m. $18. Info, 603-646-2422.

2x6-BenFranklin030905 Page 1

3/7/05

5:40 PM

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SEVEN DAYS Today’s Best Music!

lola@sevendaysvt.com

XXX $SFBUJWF)BCJUBU75 DPN t 4 ) & - #6 3 / & 30" % t . 0 / o ' 3 * 4 "5 4 6 /


08B

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march 09-16, 2005

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SEVEN DAYS

<calendar >

FRI.11 << 07B MAPLE SUGAR FESTIVAL: Western-style steps pace partners who do-si-do, then eat sugaron-snow. South Burlington Middle School, 7-11 p.m. $3-58, free to watch. Info, 985-2012. BURLINGTON CONTRA DANCE: The band Lift Ticket raises the roof with traditional tunes. Caller Linda Leslie guides dancers in clean, soft-soled shoes. St. Anthony’s Church Hall, Burlington, 8 p.m. $7. Info, 434-2446. BALLROOM DANCE SOCIAL: Singles and couples of all ages learn ballroom, swing and Latin dancing. Jazzercize Studio, Williston, 7 p.m. $10. Info, 862-2207.

sport

talks

SENIOR EXERCISE: See March 9, 10 a.m.

‘FAMINE IN AFRICA’: International volunteer Dr. David Heiden presents a physician’s view of medicine in various countries. Ross Dining Hall, Middlebury College, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 443-5652. ‘STORIES FROM THE LAND’: Writer, photographer and conservationist Peter Forbes shares stories and images about cultural connections to terrain. Unitarian Church, Montpelier, 7:30 p.m. $5. Info, 229-6206. HEALTH-CARE SERIES: Registered nurse Annmarie Plant-DeHayes talks about seniors’ home health-care options. Faith United Methodist Church, South Burlington, 2 p.m. $5. Info, 863-5980. ‘THE CATAMOUNT TRAIL’: Outdoor adventurer Ted Milks relays his experience of skiing the length of Vermont. Twilight Hall, Middlebury College, 7 p.m. $8. Info, 244-7037. ‘THE IRISH IN VERMONT’: History professor Vincent Feeney discusses the Irish immigration boom in the Green Mountains before 1840. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, noon. Free. Info, 863-3403.

drama ‘THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK’: See March 9. ‘VAMPIRE’: See March 10. ‘BANG BANG YOU’RE DEAD’: See March 10. ‘A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM’: See March 10. ‘HARVEY’: This three-act comedy classic follows a charming eccentric whose best friend is an invisible, man-sized bunny. Holley Hall, Bristol, 8 p.m. $8. Info, 453-5885. ‘GUYS & DOLLS’: This lively musical features a gambler who bets on love. Lamoille Union High School Auditorium, 7 p.m. $6. Info, 851-1271. ‘STRICTLY STRING’: Actor-puppeteer duo Caglayan Sevincer and Jana Zeller breathe life into their characters’ gypsy dreams in a succession of puppet vignettes. Sandglass Theater, Putney, 8 p.m. $12. Info, 387-4051.

kids ANIMAL FEEDING: See March 9. WATERBURY STORYTIME: See March 9, Waterbury Branch Library, for children ages 3-5. SOUTH BURLINGTON LIBRARY STORYTIME: See March 10. ‘MUSIC WITH ROBERT AND GIGI’: Kids sing along with Robert Resnik and his fiddle-playing friend Gigi Weisman. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 11 a.m. Free. Registration and info, 865-7216. ‘THE STINKY CHEESE MAN’: Based on the Caldecott Honor book by the same name, this play plays with fairy tales to humorous, smartaleck effect. Dibden Center for the Arts, Johnson State College, 10 a.m. & 7 p.m. Free. Info, 635-1476. ‘KIDS’ KNIGHT OUT’: Ages 5-12 enjoy movies, swimming, food and more at the Ross Sports Center, St. Michael’s College, Colchester, 5-9 p.m. $10. Registration & info, 654-2721. FAMILY GAME NIGHT: Refreshments and door prizes augment “Apples to Apples,” a card game for those aged 8 and up. Barnes & Noble, South Burlington, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 864-8001.

film BRATTLEBORO WOMEN’S FILM FESTIVAL: See March 10. ‘THE CORPORATION’: Documentarians Mark Achbar and Jennifer Abbott use humor and hard-hitting interviews to dissect companies’ legal basis for existing. Campus Center Theatre, Billings Student Center, UVM, Burlington, 7:15 p.m. Free. Info, 401-391-1564. ‘SIDEWAYS’: In this film, two mid-life guy friends release bottled-up potential while on a wine tour in California. Catamount Arts Center, St. Johnsbury, 7 p.m. $6.50. Info, 748-2600.

art See exhibitions in Section A.

words

‘YANKEES & STRANGERS’: Readers of Kenneth Lockridge’s history, A New England Town, talk 2x2-PineComputers022305 2/18/05 9:37 AM Free about pastoral stereotypes. Fletcher Library, Burlington, 4 p.m. Free. 865-7211.

Page 1

activism BURLINGTON PEACE VIGIL: See March 9. WINTER GAMES VOLUNTEERS: See March 10.

etc ‘RAPTORS UP CLOSE’: See March 9. CHOCOLATE-DIPPING DEMO: See March 9. TERTULIA LATINA: Fluent Spanish speakers converse at Radio Bean, Burlington, 5:30-7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 656-1926. FRIDAY FISH FEST: Those celebrating Lent sample seafood prepared by New England Culinary Institute chefs. St. Augustine’s Hall, Montpelier, 5-7 p.m. $7. Info, 223-6430. OXFAM HUNGER BANQUET: At this fundraiser for Heifer International, diners assigned a “global personality” get portions sized to simulate the imbalance of worldwide food distribution. Ross Dining Hall, Middlebury College, 5:30 p.m. Donations. Info, 443-5652. WOOD SHOW: Students display simple and intricate projects made from felled trees. Simpson Hall, Sterling College, Craftsbury Common, 6:30-8 p.m. Free. Info, 586-7711, ext. 101. AUTISM FUNDRAISER: San Diego Chargers quarterback Doug Floutie plays drums in his Floutie Gang Band while partygoers shake a leg during a silent auction and raffles. Matterhorn Bar & Grill, Stowe Mountain Resort, 9 p.m. $20. Info, 253-8198. HUMAN AWARENESS INSTITUTE: Folks contemplate changing their lives and deepening their relationships at this introductory meeting. Gideon King House, Burlington, 7-9:30 p.m. Free. Info, 453-8484. DEVELOPMENT SYMPOSIUM: National land use policy leaders talk about small-town America and big-box retail stores. Chase Community Center, Vermont Law School, South Royalton, 9:15 a.m. - 5 p.m. Free. Info, 831-1309.

SAT.12 music

Also, see clubdates in Section A. 2x2-corestudio022305 1x6-musicreveiw2005 2/22/05 3:14 PM Page 1

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WOOD’S TEA COMPANY: See March 10, Second Congregational Church, Jeffersonville. $10. Info, 644-2233. VERMONT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: The ensemble presents Gustav Mahler’s challenging Fifth Symphony. Flynn MainStage, Burlington, preconcert talk 7 p.m., concert 8 p.m. $12-44. Info, 863-5966. TIM JENNINGS & LEANNE PONDER: Celtic music on harp and concertina accompanies folk tales for all ages from these two central Vermont performers. Elementary School Gym, Bellows Free Academy, Fairfax, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 524-4643. JAZZMOSIS: This six-piece instrumental band offers lively takes on jazz standards at the Vergennes Opera House, 8 p.m. $12. Info, 877-6737. RWANDAN PERFORMANCE: Multilingual musician Jean-Paul Samputu and his eight-member group The Ingeli Troupe offer music and dance. McCollough Student Center, Middlebury College, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 443-2427.

dance AMY CHAVASSE: See March 11, FlynnSpace, Burlington, 8 p.m. $15. Info, 863-5966. MAPLE SUGAR FESTIVAL: See March 11, 10 a.m. - 11 p.m. CONTRA DANCE: Northern Spy turns out traditional tunes for dancers in soft-soled shoes. Caller David Millstone makes the rounds at Tracy Hall, Norwich, 8 p.m. $7. Info, 785-4607. BALLROOM DANCE SOCIAL: Singles and couples of all ages learn ballroom, swing and Latin dancing. Jazzercize Studio, Williston, 7 p.m. $10. Info, 862-2207.

drama ‘THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK’: See March 9, 2 & 7:30 p.m. ‘VAMPIRE’: See March 10, 2 & 8 p.m. ‘BANG BANG YOU’RE DEAD’: See March 10. ‘A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM’: See March 10. ‘HARVEY’: See March 11. ‘GUYS & DOLLS’: See March 11. ‘STRICTLY STRING’: See March 11. ‘MARX IN SOHO’: Theatergoers unite for progressive historian Howard Zinn’s one-man comedy setting Karl Marx in contemporary New York City. Middle Earth Music Hall, Bradford, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 222-4748. 2/21/05

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SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005

|

calendar 09B

WED 09 THU 10 FRI 11 SAT 12 SU N 13 MON 14 TU E 15 WED 16

NORTH SHORE COMEDY: The best of Boston’s funny business stands up at Higher Ground, South Burlington, 7:30 & 10 p.m. $12-14. Info, 888-512-7469. ‘NUNSENSE’ AUDITIONS: Actors pitch their pipes for parts in this musical comedy about funny nuns. Town Hall Theater, Stowe, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. Free. Info, 253-3961. LOST NATION THEATER AUDITIONS: Actors, interns and apprentices seek a fit with one of this company’s five separate summer productions. Memorial Room, Montpelier City Hall, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m., call for appointment. Free. Info, 229-0492.

film BRATTLEBORO WOMEN’S FILM FESTIVAL: See March 10, 1:30-11 p.m. ‘SIDEWAYS’: See March 11, 7 & 9 p.m. ‘ELEPHANT’: Loosely based on the Columbine murders, this film directed by Gus Van Sant depicts a ho-hum high school day that erupts into violence. Dana Auditorium, Middlebury College, 3 & 8 p.m. Free. Info, 443-6433.

art Also, see exhibitions in Section A. FAMILY DAY: Artist Jon Gailmor leads creative activities for all ages. Helen Day Art Center, Stowe, noon - 4 p.m. Free. Info, 253-8358. UKRAINIAN EGG DECORATING: Handcrafter Theresa Somerset adorns ovoids with wax patterns, then dyes them. Artists’ Mediums, Williston, 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. Free. Info, 879-1236. INTRODUCTION TO DRAWING: Amateur artists get some perspective through pencil practice. Deborah Rawson Memorial Library, Jericho, 10:30 a.m. Free. Registration and info, 899-4942. ART AUCTION & JAZZ PARTY: Works by local artists and improvising groups of musicians honor the 50th anniversary of Charlie Parker’s death. Langdon St. Café, Montpelier, 7-10 p.m. Free. Info, 229-4427.

words ‘LOVERS IN LOVE’ SERIES: Readers react to the romantic delights of Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s Love in the Time of Cholera. Varnum Memorial Library, Jeffersonville, 3 p.m. Free. Info, 644-6632.

talks

FRIDAY 11

MOLLY STEVENS: The cookbook author and classically trained chef shares culinary ideas and offers samples in a taste test. Barnes & Noble, South Burlington, 2 p.m. Free. Info, 864-8001. ‘GARDEN DESIGN FOR SMALL SPACES’: Plant enthusiasts with tiny backyards or porches learn how to do more with less. Gardener’s Supply Company, Burlington, 10:30 a.m. noon. $10. Registration and info, 660-3505. ‘WATER FEATURES FOR SMALL GARDENS’: Green-thumbed folks learn which plants grow best in above-surface pools. Gardener’s Supply Company, Burlington, 1-2 p.m. $10. Registration and info, 660-3505. SKIING SAFARI SLIDESHOW: Vermont-based adventure skiers and photographers Brian Mohr and Emily Johnson share stories and images from a South American backcountry trip. Vermont Ski Museum, Stowe, 7-8:30 p.m. $5. Info, 253-9911. ‘SOUNDS LIKE RESEARCH’: Geology professor Tom Manley explains how sonar technology can provide images of the bottom of Lake Champlain. ECHO Center, Burlington, 2-3 p.m. $9. Info, 864-1848. ‘SMART MEDS’: Pharmacist Janet Farina discusses the differences between various medications. South Burlington City Hall, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 879-2684.

kids ANIMAL FEEDING: See March 9. ‘THE STINKY CHEESE MAN’: See March 11, 7 p.m. ‘SATURDAY STORIES’: Librarians read from popular picture books at the Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 879-7576. BORDERS STORYTIME: Little bookworms listen to stories at Borders, Burlington, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 865-2711. CHILDREN’S STORYTIME: Youngsters take in their favorite tales at the Book Rack & Children’s Pages, Essex, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 872-2627. BARNES & NOBLE STORYTIME: Kids ages 4 and up settle down for stories at Barnes & Noble, South Burlington, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 864-8001. IRISH STORYTIME: Crafters 5 and up hear a classic Emerald Isle tale, then create an item from the story. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 863-3403. LITKIDS: Literary picture books draw school-age kids to the Waterbury Library, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 244-7036.

ART IS LONG

Too sentimental for the 20th-century avant-garde, French composer Olivier Messiaen collected birdsong for most of his life. Transcriptions of warblings are woven into his sensitive symphonies, which are marked by miniscule rhythmic variations. A deeply religious Catholic, Messiaen wrote his mammoth piano cycle Vingt Regards sur l’Enfant Jésus after spending a year in a Polish concentration camp. The piece is complex and lasts two hours, so it doesn’t get played very often. But pianist Steven Osborne has the spiritual, emotional and physical stamina to do it justice. The Scottish virtuoso recorded the work in 2002 to worldwide acclaim, and now offers a rare public performance.

STEVEN OSBORNE Friday, March 11, Concert Hall, Middlebury College Center for the Arts, 8 p.m. $12. Info, 443-6433.

SAT.12 >> 10B

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10B

|

march 09-16, 2005

|

SEVEN DAYS

SAT.12 << 09B TEEN FILM CLUB: Youthful movie buffs chuckle at Monty Python and the Holy Grail, a silly take on the Arthurian epic. Pierson Library, Shelburne, noon. Free. Info, 985-5124.

sport ECOLOGY SNOWSHOE: Middlebury poet John Elder and the Vermont Sierra Club teach the importance of protecting wilderness in the Battell Old Growth Forest Preserve. Call for East Middlebury location, 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Free. Info, 862-1362. TRACKING WORKSHOP: Research biologist Jim Andrews focuses on animal signs and local conservation history. Birds of Vermont Museum, Huntington, 1-4 p.m. $15. Registration and info, 434-2167. WINTER TREE I.D.: Curious about that shrub? Ecologist Matt Landis gives tips for telling what type it is, by examining bark, bud and silhouette. Meet at the Seminary St. parking lot, Middlebury, 9 a.m. Free. Info, 388-1007. SATURDAY SKI: Winter athletes glide along the Bayley-Hazen Road on this moderate, 7-mile outing. Call for meeting location, 8 a.m. Free. Info, 479-2304. BLACK BEAR RAMBLE: Snowshoers of all ages learn about ursine activity on this easy-terrain hike at Mad River Glen, Waitsfield, 10:30 a.m. & 1:30 p.m. $20. Info, 496-3551, ext. 117. CAMEL’S HUMP: Hikers ascend this peak from Duxbury for a difficult, 6-8-mile workout. Call for meeting time and location. Free. Info, 660-9891.

activism WINTER GAMES VOLUNTEERS: See March 10. SECOND VERMONT REPUBLIC MEETING: Prosecessionists convene a statewide meeting to discuss Vermont’s independence. Unitarian Church, Montpelier, 2 p.m. Free. Info, 425-4133.

etc ‘RAPTORS UP CLOSE’: See March 9, 11 a.m. & 2 p.m. ART FOR POVERTY: Students perform music, dances and dramatic works in response to local and international need. Coltrane Lounge, Adirondack House, Middlebury College, 8 p.m. Donations. Info, 443-5652. SUGARING TOUR: Maple explorers tap trees, then boil sap into a sweet treat. Shelburne Farms, tour departs at 10, 10:30, 11, 11:30 a.m. & 1, 1:30 & 2 p.m. $12. Registration and info, 985-8686.

<calendar > ‘SUGAR ON SNOW’ PARTY: Hardened maple syrup and other edibles usher in spring at two locations. Dakin Farm, Ferrisburgh and South Burlington, noon - 4 p.m. $7. Info, 800-993-2546. CHOCOLATE-MAKING TOUR: Would-be Easter bunnies learn how to craft cocoa confections for loved ones. Lake Champlain Chocolate Factory Store, Burlington, 1 p.m. Free. Info, 864-1807. PANCAKE BREAKFAST: Diners sample this year’s maple syrup on buttery, fluffy flapjacks. Dakin Farm, Ferrisburgh, 7:30-11:30 a.m. $7. Info, 800-993-2546. ST. PATRICK’S DAY SUPPER; Corned beef, cabbage and boiled potatoes provide hearty fare for diners. Our Lady of the Holy Rosary Parish Hall, Richmond, 5:30-7 p.m. Donations. Info, 434-3045. ST. JOSEPH SCHOOL AUCTION: Items donated by area businesses keep the bids going at this fundraiser. Alliot Hall, St. Michael’s College, Colchester, 6 p.m. $15. Info, 864-5623. ‘PREPARING FOR THE NEW SAT’: High school students practice for the college entrance test’s new writing requirement. VSAC Resource Center, Champlain Mill, Winooski, 11 a.m. Free. Registration and info, 800-642-3177. MODEL ROCKET LAUNCH: Weather permitting, fans of pyrotechnics and mini-parachutes lay low for lift-offs. Sand Bar State Park, Milton, call for time and location. Free. Info, 899-3697. MUD SEASON MARDI GRAS: New Orleans and Rio converge in a cabin-fever carnival and costume dance party. Lebanon Opera House, N.H., 7:30 p.m. - midnight. $25. Info, 603-448-0400. MODEL RAILROAD SHOW: Engineers steer miniature trains through more than 120 exhibits of hobby supplies at this all-ages event. Champlain Valley Exposition, Essex Junction, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. $4. Info, 878-1135. OPEN HOUSE: Parents with preschool-age children can check out four classrooms at the Trinity Children’s Center, UVM Trinity Campus, 10 a.m. - noon. Free. Info, 656-5026.

SUN.13 music Also, see clubdates in Section A. WOOD’S TEA COMPANY: See March 10, South Burlington Community Library, 2 p.m. Free. Registration and info, 652-7080.

TOMMY MAKEM: The Irish music legend sings banjo-accompanied ballads in fine folk music style. See calendar spotlight. Burlington City Hall Auditorium, 7 p.m. $25. Info, 863-5966. PAUL ASBELL: The locally based guitar virtuoso celebrates his newest CD, Roots and Branches, with selections of solo acoustic jazz and bluesy Americana. See story, this issue. FlynnSpace, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $14. Info, 863-5966. VOICE RECITAL: Mezzo-soprano Jessica Grigg and pianist David Holkeboer acclimatize audience members with composer Jorge Martin’s song cycle “A Cuban in Vermont.” Concert Hall, Middlebury College Center for the Arts, 3 p.m. Free. Info, 443-6433. IRISH HERITAGE CEILIDH: Vermont musicians of all stripes join this session to take a crack at traditional tunes. Burlington City Hall Auditorium, 1 p.m. Free. Info, 310-4510. KIRTAN SINGING: Students of yoga stretch vocal cords with chants in Sanskrit. Yoga Vermont, Burlington, 6 p.m. Free. Info, 324-1737. GRACE CHURCH FESTIVAL CHOIR: With help from a children’s group and African drums and dancers, this ensemble performs David Fanshawe’s African Sanctus. Grace Congregational Church, Rutland, pre-concert talk 6:30 p.m., concert 7:30 p.m. Donations. Info, 775-4301.

dance INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING: Don your dirndl and get ready for line and circle dances from Europe and the Middle East. Tracy Hall, Norwich, 3-6 p.m. $7. Info, 633-3226. DANCES OF UNIVERSAL PEACE: Meditative movers promote peace through joyful circle dances. Montpelier Shambhala Center, 4-6 p.m. $5-7. Info, 658-2447.

drama ‘THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK’: See March 9, 5 p.m. ‘A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM’: See March 10, 2 p.m. ‘NUNSENSE’ AUDITIONS: See March 12. ‘COMEDY BATTLE’ AUDITIONS: Amateur hams stand up to compete in an April stage comedy contest. Higher Ground, South Burlington, 2-4 p.m., call to schedule time. Free. Info, 6520777, ext. 102. ‘FIDDLER ON THE ROOF’: Set in a Russian shtetl, this classic musical follows a familyloving milkman who struggles with the chang-

ing times when his daughters want to marry. Flynn MainStage, Burlington, 7 p.m. $35-50. Info, 863-5966.

film BRATTLEBORO WOMEN’S FILM FESTIVAL: See March 10, 1:30-11 p.m. ‘THE CORPORATION’: See March 11. ‘SIDEWAYS’: See March 11, 1:30 & 7 p.m.

art See exhibitions in Section A.

talks ‘A LAND OF TWO PEOPLES’: Professor Paul Mendes-Flohr of Jerusalem’s Hebrew University talks about philosopher Martin Buber’s approach to the Arab-Jewish conflict. Robert Jones House, Middlebury College, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 443-5289. APPLIED ARCHITECTURE: John Connell, the founder of Warren’s Yestermorrow Design/Build School, discusses his recent book, Creating the Inspired House. Barnes & Noble, South Burlington, 2 p.m. Free. Info, 864-8001. ‘WAS IT CHAMP?’: Researcher Liz Muggenthaler shares her documented recording of a creature producing bio-sonar sounds in Lake Champlain. ECHO Center, Burlington, 11 a.m. - noon. $9. Info, 864-1848. ‘HOW FISH TALK’: Natural resources professor Ellen Marsden explains that dolphins and whales aren’t the only vocal animals in the water. ECHO Center, Burlington, 2-3 p.m. $9. Info, 864-1848. THE FLOOD OF 1927: Historians Deborah and Nicholas Clifford shed new light on the worst natural disaster ever to strike Vermont. Ethan Allen Homestead Museum, Burlington, 2 p.m. Free. Reservations and info, 865-4556. THE ETHAN ALLEN TOWER: Vermonter David Arms describes growing up in Burlington and learning about the history of this local landmark. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 1:30 p.m. Free. Info, 658-1047.

kids ANIMAL FEEDING: See March 9.

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SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005| calendar 11B

WED 09 THU 10 FRI 11 SAT 12 SU N 13 MON 14 TU E 15 WED 16

sport CROSS-COUNTRY SKI: State Senator Ginny Lyons joins this Sierra Club outing to talk about Vermont’s important environmental issues. Call for meeting location, 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. Free. Info, 862-8324. GORE MOUNTAIN: Snowshoers hike a difficult six miles up one of the Northeast Kingdom’s highest peaks. Call for meeting time and location. Free. Info, 223-0918. ‘SIGNS OF SPRING’ SNOWSHOE: This easy outing investigates seasonal changes in the woods of Mad River Glen, Waitsfield, 10:30 a.m. & 1:30 p.m. $20. Info, 496-3551, ext. 117. VERMONT PADDLERS’ CLUB: Kayakers practice rolls in an indoor pool session. First in Fitness, Barre, 6 p.m. $10-20. Info, 224-9103.

activism QUEER LIBERATION ARMY: Queer-identified activists of all ages plan flamboyant responses to intolerance. 135 Pearl, Burlington, 4 p.m. Free. Info, 864-6665.

etc ‘RAPTORS UP CLOSE’: See March 9, 11 a.m. & 2 p.m. PANCAKE BREAKFAST: See March 12. BURLINGTON AREA SCRABBLE CLUB: Letter wranglers make every word count in a tournament-style competition. Bring your board to Allenwood at Pillsbury Manor, South Burlington, 2-6 p.m. Free. Info, 655-6192. AUDUBON ‘SUGAR ON SNOW’: Sweet treats await those who walk through tapped trees to learn about sugarbush-nesting birds. Green Mountain Audubon Center, Huntington, 1-4 p.m. Free. Info, 434--3068.

MON.14 music Also, see clubdates in Section A. DAVID ASBURY: The classical guitarist performs works by Fernando Sor, Isaac Albeniz and Agustin Barrios Mangore. Withey Hall, Green Mountain College, Poultney, 7 p.m. $5. Info, 287-8310.

CHAMPLAIN ECHOES REHEARSAL: Ladies who like to sing are welcome at a meeting of this women’s barbershop chorus. The Pines, South Burlington, 7-9:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-5001.

SUNDAY 13

drama ‘FIDDLER ON THE ROOF’: See March 13, 7:30 p.m.

film ‘THE CORPORATION’: See March 11. ‘SIDEWAYS’: See March 11. ‘OIL ON ICE’: The Vermont Sierra Club presents this award-winning documentary connecting the fate of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to U.S. energy policy. Room B106, Angell Building, UVM, Burlington, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 734-8823.

art Also, see exhibitions in Section A. COMMUNITY DARKROOM: See March 10. LIFE DRAWING SESSION: Creative types try a hand at sketching. Wolfe Kahn Building, Vermont Studio Center, Johnson, 6-8 p.m. $7. Info, 635-1769.

words ‘JAMES JOYCE’: UVM English professor Tom Simone talks about the contributions of the Irish literary giant who authored Ulysses and Finnegan’s Wake. Farrell Room, St. Edmund’s Hall, St. Michael’s College, Colchester, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 310-4510. JODY GLADDING: The Vermont-based poet leads a discussion of her award-winning collection, Stone Crop. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 223-3338.

talks ‘POLITICS & THE PUBLIC TRUST’: Senator Patrick Leahy, former governor Madeleine Kunin, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., New York Times correspondent Adam Clymer and UVM political science professor Frank Bryan consider the next generation of civic heroes. Ira Allen Chapel, UVM, Burlington, 4 p.m. Free. Info, 656-3126.

IRISH AYES

When he first came to the U.S. from Ireland about 50 years ago, Tommy Makem tried to make it as an actor. Then someone handed him $30 for playing a few songs at a midnight concert, and he realized he’d reached the land of opportunity. Before long, the banjo-playing Makem joined forces with the Clancy Brothers, and the group toured worldwide on the crest of the burgeoning folk movement. Solo for several years but always busy performing and songwriting, Makem is now universally acknowledged as the godfather of Irish music. He gets listeners to sing along on rowdy songs, and — given his gift for gab between sets — a pint of Guinness says he’ll make ’em laugh, too.

TOMMY MAKEM Sunday, March 13, Burlington City Hall Auditorium, 7 p.m. $25. Info, 863-5966.

MON.14 >> 12B

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Healthy and 18-40 years of age Have regular menstrual cycles Are not using hormonal contraception And do not smoke

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www.7Dpersonals.com

Say, did you place that ad in the personals?

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SEVEN DAYS personals

something for everyone

seven days Make Your Own Sale!

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OFF any single item*

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Just Off I-89, exit 16 Across from Libby’s www.NoahsArkVT.com • 655-9911


12B

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march 09-16, 2005

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SEVEN DAYS

<calendar >

MON.14 << 11B PROVERBS & MASS COMMUNICATION: UVM adage scholar Wolfgang Mieder explains why a saying is worth a thousand words. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 1:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-4918. ‘SPIRITUALISM IN VERMONT’: Spooky storyteller and folk historian Joe Citro presents an illustrated lecture on colorful locals who believed in ghosts. Congregational Church, Cornwall, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 462-2719. ‘ITALIAN RENAISSANCE CITIES’: Art historian Christie Fengler-Stephany, UVM professor emerita, reviews the physical differences between Florence and Sienna from 1300-1500. Faith United Methodist Church, South Burlington, 2 p.m. $5. Info, 863-5980.

kids ANIMAL FEEDING: See March 9. WATERBURY STORYTIME: See March 9, for children ages 3-5. BROWNELL LIBRARY STORYTIME: See March 9. Toddlers take their turn with tales first, 9:109:30 a.m. ‘ITTY BITTY SKATING’: See March 10. BARRE LIBRARY STORY HOUR: Babies up to age 2 take in tales at the Aldrich Public Library, Barre, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 4767550, ext. 308. FAMILY SING-ALONG: Parents and kids belt out fun, familiar favorites at the Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 10-10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 865-7216.

sport SENIOR EXERCISE: See March 9, 10 a.m.

activism BURLINGTON PEACE VIGIL: See March 9. VERMONTERS FOR A JUST PEACE: Locals review global issues in Palestine and Israel. Peace & Justice Center, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 863-2345, ext. 5. AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL: Members of this worldwide organization meet to discuss humanrights activism. Unitarian Church, Burlington, 5:30-6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 862-1358.

etc ‘RAPTORS UP CLOSE’: See March 9. CHOCOLATE-DIPPING DEMO: See March 9.

LEGISLATIVE BREAKFAST SERIES: Speaker of the House Gaye Symington and Senate President Pro Tem Peter Welch discuss policy with morning diners. Sheraton Hotel, South Burlington, 7:30-9 a.m. $16. Registration and info, 863-3489, ext. 207. VIRUS & SPYWARE WORKSHOP: Library patrons learn how to protect their computers from online threats. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 3-4:30 p.m. $3. Registration and info, 865-7217. ‘G-SPOT’: Provocateurs play bingo, then watch episodes of the TV series “The L-Word.” 135 Pearl, Burlington, bingo 8 p.m., show 10 p.m. Free. Info, 863-2343. REIKI SOCIAL: Students and practitioners compare notes on this hands-on healing method. MoonLight Gifts, Milton, 7-9 p.m. Free. Info, 893-9966. KINDERGARTEN REGISTRATION: Burlington residents ready to commit their kids to school secure a spot for fall. Bring a copy of the child’s birth certificate and immunization record. All Burlington elementary schools, 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. Free. Info, 864-8463.

TUE.15 music Also, see clubdates in Section A. IRISH SONG CONCERT: Folk song collector Tom McCaffrey shares 40 years of his favorite ballads and broadsides. College St. Congregational Church, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 310-4510. ST. PATRICK’S DAY SING-ALONG: All ages raise their voices in song, and some balladeers bring sweet treats to share. Unitarian Church, Montpelier, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 223-7035. GREEN MOUNTAIN CHORUS: Male music-makers rehearse barbershop singing and quartetting at St. Francis Xavier School, Winooski, 7-9:30 p.m. Free. Info, 860-6465. AMATEUR MUSICIANS ORCHESTRA: Community players of all abilities and levels of experience practice pieces and welcome new members. South Burlington High School, 7:30-9:30 p.m. $6. Info, 985-9750. THE SAW DOCTORS: This longstanding Irish rock band cuts into pop stereotypes at the Lebanon

Opera House, N.H., 7:30 p.m. $19-24. Info, 603-448-0400. STUDENT RECITAL: Music majors perform on various instruments at the UVM Recital Hall, Burlington, 7:30-9 p.m. Free. Info, 656-3040.

kids

LINE DANCING: Show off your fancy footwork at the Harvest Moon Banquet Room, Essex Junction, 6:30-9:30 p.m. $8.50. Info, 288-8044. SWING DANCING: Movers of all ages and abilities dance at the Greek Orthodox Church, Burlington, 7:30-9:30 p.m. $3. Info, 860-7501.

ANIMAL FEEDING: See March 9. ‘MUSIC WITH ROBERT AND GIGI’: See March 11. TODDLER-AND-UNDER STORYTIME: Wee ones up to age 3 open their ears to songs and stories. South Burlington Community Library, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 652-7080. EAST BARRE STORY HOUR: Babies aged 2 and under take in tales at the Aldrich Public Library, East Barre branch, 10:15 a.m. Free. Info, 476-5118. ECHO STORYTIME: Young explorers discover the wonders of the natural world through books and imaginative play. ECHO Center, Burlington, 11 a.m. $6-9. Info, 864-1848.

film

activism

‘SIDEWAYS’: See March 11.

BURLINGTON PEACE VIGIL: See March 9. ANTIWAR COALITION: Citizens opposed to U.S. military activities in Iraq strategize at the Peace & Justice Center, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 656-1926. WILPF MEETING: Activists review current world events at this gathering of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom. Peace & Justice Center, Burlington, 5-7 p.m. Free. Info, 862-4929.

dance

art See exhibitions in Section A.

words MICHELLE KENNEDY: This author describes her experience of homelessness by sharing her memoir, Without A Net. Bear Pond Books, Montpelier, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 229-0774. BURLINGTON WRITERS’ GROUP: Bring pencil, paper and the will to be inspired to the Daily Planet, Burlington, 7-9 p.m. Free. Info, 758-2287.

talks ‘RADICAL SIMPLICITY’: Author Jim Merkel gives an illustrated talk on sustainable, eco-friendly societies around the world. Charlotte Senior Center, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 425-6320. ‘WOMEN, ARCHAEOLOGY & THE ANDES’: Anthropologist Deborah Blom discusses research careers and recent findings. John Dewey Lounge, Old Mill, UVM, Burlington, 12:30 p.m. Free. Info, 656-4282. PERSONAL PERSPECTIVES ON DISABILITY: Deborah Lisi-Baker of the Vermont Center for Independent Living talks about female activists in the disability-rights movement. Memorial Lounge, Waterman Building, UVM, Burlington, 3 p.m. Free. Info, 656-7892.

etc ‘RAPTORS UP CLOSE’: See March 9. CHOCOLATE-DIPPING DEMO: See March 9. KINDERGARTEN REGISTRATION: See March 14. LAUGHING CLUB: Local yoga instructor and author Carol Winfield touts the untapped healing power of yukking it up. Union Station, Burlington, 8-8:30 a.m. Donations. Info, 864-7999. CHAMPLAIN VALLEY BUSINESS NETWORK: Entrepreneurs make corporate connections at the Courtyard by Marriott, Williston, 7:30-9 a.m. Free. Info, 434-6434. PAUSE CAFÉ: Novice and fluent French speakers brush up their linguistics — en français. Borders Café, Burlington, 6 p.m. Free. Info, 655-1346. CHRISTIAN MEDITATION WORKSHOP: Participants think over contemplative prayer from ancient to modern traditions. St. Paul’s Cathedral, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 864-0471.

All-new edition coming in May 2005!

The most comprehensive dining and nightlife guide in Northwestern Vermont.

FREE at newsstands everywhere and downloadable from sevendaysvt.com/7nights

SEVEN DAYS


SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005

|

calendar 13B

WED 09 THU 10 FRI 11 SAT 12 SU N 13 MON 14 TU E 15 WED 16

KNITTING & FELTING WORKSHOP: Crafty types gather wool to make purses or pencil cases from densely packed fabric. Lake Champlain Waldorf School, Shelburne, 7-9 p.m. $4. Registration and info, 985-2827. KNITTING CIRCLE: Creators of hats, scarves and more complex projects work in wool at the Stowe Free Library, 3-4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 253-8776. CATAMOUNT BUSINESS NETWORK: Local leaders meet and greet at the Hampton Inn, Colchester, 7:30-9 a.m. Free. Info, 654-7646, ext. 161. SMALL BUSINESS NETWORKING: Entrepreneurs gather for dinner and discussion of how to grow their businesses. Seven Days co-publisher and editor Paula Routly speaks about her experience. College Hall, Vermont College, Montpelier, 5-8:30 p.m. $15. Reservations and info, 479-1053.

WED.16 music Also, see clubdates in Section A. DAVID MURPHEY: See March 9. GREEN MOUNTAIN BRASS BAND: Brass and percussion musicians play traditional and popular tunes at the Statehouse, Montpelier, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 828-2228.

dance ‘SALSALINA’ PRACTICE: See March 9.

drama ‘THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK’: See March 9.

sport

Also, see exhibitions in Section A. ‘DRAWING ON NATURE’ WORKSHOP: Illustrator Sandy McDermott and bookbinder Linda Lembke show participants how to sketch winter scenes. VINS Nature Center, Quechee, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. $95. Registration and info, 457-1053, ext. 115.

SENIOR EXERCISE: See March 9. MAP & COMPASS REFRESHER: Participants in this workshop orient themselves outdoors on snowshoes. Green Mountain Club, Waterbury Center, 6:30-9 p.m. $18. Registration and info, 244-7037.

words ‘CHASING THE BUTTERFLIES’: Middleburybased author Julia Alvarez reads from her work In the Time of the Butterflies. See calendar spotlight. Firehouse Center for the Visual Arts, Burlington, 7-9 p.m. $20. Info, 862-4929.

talks SKIING SAFARI SLIDESHOW: See March 12, Climb High, Shelburne. Info, 985-5055. ‘BLANKET ISLAND’: Micheál De Mórdha, manager of the Blanket Island Heritage Centre in County Kerry, shares stories about Ireland’s — and Europe’s — westernmost point. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 863-3403. WOMEN’S ACTIVISM: Mia Herndon and Amy Richards of the Third Wave Foundation talk about female political action. Campus Center Theatre, Billings Student Center, UVM, Burlington, Free. Info, 656-7892. ‘VERMONTERS & GEOLOGY’: Storyteller and raconteur Willem Lange discusses how the local landscape determined the type of people who chose to live here. Aldrich Public Library, Barre, 1 p.m. $5. Info, 828-8804. PEACE CORPS PANEL: Returning members of the Peace Corps describe their experience overseas. John Dewey Lounge, Old Mill, UVM, Burlington, 6 p.m. Free. Info, 656-8269.

kids

film ‘SIDEWAYS’: See March 11.

WEDNESDAY 16

art

WESTFORD PLAYGROUP: See March 9. PRESCHOOL STORYTIME: See March 9. ANIMAL FEEDING: See March 9. BARNES & NOBLE STORYTIME: See March 9. WATERBURY STORYTIME: See March 9. BROWNELL LIBRARY STORYTIME: See March 9. HINESBURG PLAY GROUP: See March 9. CHARLOTTE COMMUNITY PLAYGROUP: See March 9. ‘MOVING & GROOVING’: See March 9.

Find the calm within.

(yes, it’s really in there...)

activism BURLINGTON PEACE VIGIL: See March 9. INTERNATIONAL SOCIALISTS: See March 9.

etc ‘RAPTORS UP CLOSE’: See March 9. CHOCOLATE-DIPPING DEMO: See March 9. ‘STITCH & BITCH’: See March 9. FORESTRY WORKSHOP: Landowners with small woodlots branch out by learning to manage their trees. Deborah Rawson Memorial Library, Jericho, 6:30 p.m. Free. Registration and info, 899-4942. BUSINESS AFTER HOURS: Members and guests of the Lake Champlain Regional Chamber of Commerce meet and greet at the James Moore Tavern, Bolton Valley Resort, 5:30-7:30 p.m. $15. Registration and info, 863-3489, ext. 211. EMP WORKSHOP: Landlords and property managers learn the “essential maintenance practices” required for lead paint under Vermont law. Burlington City Hall Auditorium, 5-9 p.m. Free. Registration and info, 865-7599. ‘MAC USERS UNITE!’: Apple enthusiasts gather for their monthly meeting. Gailer School, Shelburne, 7-9 p.m. Free. Info, 864-1985. BURLINGTON BREAD MEETING: Local economic advisors and interested folks discuss the city’s community currency. Radio Bean, Burlington, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 434-8103.

PEACE AND JUSTICE

The Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom was founded during WWI by women on both sides of the conflict interested in ending war. Ninety years later, it’s still trying. Middlebury College writer-in-residence Julia Alvarez celebrates the WILPF’s anniversary with a slide talk about her 1994 novel In the Time of the Butterflies. The story is based on the true tale of activist sisters who opposed a dictatorship in the Dominican Republic. Raised in that country herself until the situation got too dangerous, Alvarez now helps to run the Alta Gracia sustainable coffee cooperative in the Dominican highlands. Listening ladies can warm their political hopes with some of this shadegrown java.

‘CHASING THE BUTTERFLIES’ Wednesday, March 16, Firehouse Center for the Visual Arts, Burlington, 7-9 p.m. $20. Info, 862-4929.

JOHNSON S TAT E COLLEGE COMMUNITY JOURNALISM DAY Friday, March 25, 2005

Come to this free daylong event. Featuring two interactive forums with the following prominent Vermont journalists and political figures focusing on Vermont's vibrant local media. Biddle Duke, publisher of the Stowe Reporter, Ethan Dezotelle, editor of the Franklin County Courier, Pamela Polston, publisher and editor of Seven Days, Angelo Lynn, publisher/editor of the Addison County Independent, Ross Connelly, editor of the Hardwick Gazette, Geoff Gevalt, managing editor of The Burlington Free Press, Maria Archangelo of the Barre Montpelier Times-Argus, former Vermont governor Madeleine Kunin, Progressive Party activist Anthony Pollina, Bob Kinzel of Vermont Public Radio, and Emerson Lynn, publisher of the St. Albans Messenger. To reserve your spot at the Community Journalism Day at JSC, please call the Admissions Office at

1-800-635-2356 or e-mail jscadmissions@jsc.vsc.edu.

Ha! Funnies are on wellnessaahhhhh... Weekly in Section B.

page 50A this week.


14B

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09-16, 2005

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SEVEN DAYS

<classes> Written by Katherine Reilly-FitzPatrick. Class listings are $15 per week or $50 for four weeks. All class listings must be pre-paid and are subject to editing for space and style. Send info with check or complete credit-card information, including exact name on card, to: Classes, SEVEN DAYS, P.O. Box 1164, Burlington, VT 05402-1164.

acting

cooking

PROFESSIONAL FILM ACTING CLASSES: Presented by Jock MacDonald in conjunction with Cameron Thor Studios. Classes Mondays in Waterbury, Tuesdays in Burlington, Wednesdays in Montréal and Thursdays in Toronto. Boston class now forming. Info, 318-8555, http://www.thoreast.com or http://www.cameronthor.com. Vermont native actor and acting coach, Jock MacDonald, has acted professionally for over 25 years and has taught professionally for over 10 years. Cameron Thor Studios is regarded as one of the best film acting studios in the world. It has helped start the careers of some of the industry’s biggest stars. Cameron Thor Studios clients include: Faye Dunaway, Sharon Stone, Hank Azaria, Courtney Cox, David Arquette, Drew Carey, Cameron Diaz and many more.

LEARN TO COOK: By appointment, in your home. The cost will be determined by the number of people and the length of the class. Info, 310-7113. Learn to cook everything from the basics to the gourmet in your own home. I am a professionally trained chef who will come to your home and teach you and friends to cook whatever you would like. LOVE TO COOK? THEN LEARN FROM THE BEST: Info, www.VTCulinaryResort.com or call 802-878-1100 or email info@VT CulinaryResort.com. The New England Culinary Institute at The Inn at Essex is pleased to present a series of hands-on demonstrations, classes and unique dining experiences. Enjoy first-rate instruction at the Inn’s new Dacor Culinary Theatre.

aromatherapy

BASIC BEADING: Saturdays, 3-5 p.m. and Thursdays, 6-8 p.m. The Blue Plate Ceramic Cafe, 119 College St., Burlington. $15, plus materials. Preregister, 652-0102. Learn the basics of stringing beads: which wire or thread to use, measuring for the right length, bead size and type, and using the right tools. You will learn about color, design and mixing types of beads for an interesting design. You’ll learn how to attach the clasp and how to make your knots stay in place. FIREHOUSE CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS CLAY AND CRAFT STUDIO, BEGINNING SILVER JEWELRY WITH LISA WHALEN: Thursdays, April 7 through May 5, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Info, 865-7166 or visit www.Burling tonCityArts.com. Learn how to use jewelry hand tools as you practice the art of making original finished pieces of silver jewelry. Classes include lecture, demonstrations and hands-on work.

CONGAS AND DJEMBES: Beginning Conga classes on Wednesdays, 5:30-6:50 p.m. Djembe classes on Wednesdays, 7-8:20 p.m. Three-week sessions, beginning March 16. $30. No Conga or Djembe class in April. Seven-week sessions beginning May 4. $70 for seven weeks. Classes are held in the Taiko Space, 208 Flynn Ave. Burlington. Intermediate/Advanced Conga class meets on Wednesdays or Fridays at a different location. Info, Stuart Paton 658-0658, paton@sover.net or 872-0494. Walk-ins are welcome. TAIKO: Kid’s Beginning Taiko classes, Tuesdays, 4:30-5:20 p.m. Six-week sessions, beginning April 5 and May 17 4/5. $42. Kids’ Intermediate classes, Mondays, 3:15-4 p.m. Six-week sessions begin April 4 and May 16. $42. Adult Beginning classes, Mondays, 5:30-6:50 p.m. Six-week sessions begin April 4 and May 16. $48. All Taiko classes are held in the Taiko Studio, 208 Flynn Ave., Burlington. Info, Stuart Paton 658-0658, paton@sover.net or 872-0494. Walk-ins are welcome.

dance

education

BLUES DANCE WORKSHOP: March 12, 1-4:30 p.m. Salsalina Dance Studio, Pine St, Burlington. $30. Info, 233-3554. Blues dance can enable intense individuality in expressing the music. Although the dance is based in “lead and follow”, the music leads the dance; the dancers are merely the interpreters. Blues Dance demonstrates a passionate range of emotions - from sensuality to sadness to joy - all to up-tempo music, as well as slow. DANCE STUDIO SALSALINA: Salsa classes: Nightclub-style, group and private, four levels. Mondays, Wednesdays (walk-in on Wednesdays only at 6 p.m.) and Saturdays (children’s lessons). Argentine Tango on every other Friday, 7 p.m., walk-ins welcome. Social dancing with DJ Raul, once-a-month, call for date. Monthly membership, $35 or $55, $10 for individual classes, $5 for socials. 266 Pine St., Burlington. Info, contact Victoria, 598-1077 or info@salsalina. com. No dance experience or partner necessary, just the desire to have fun! You can drop in at any time and prepare for an enjoyable workout! FLYNNARTS DANCE AND THE BODY WITH ERIKA SENFT MILLER: Saturday, April 9, 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. Flynn Center Studios, Burlington. Info, 652-4537 or email registrar@flynncenter.org. Explore the body from an anatomical perspective and focus on enhancing critical aspects of the dancer’s body. Learn to move with greater ease and openness.

COLLEGE AWARENESS SESSION: Saturday, April 9, 8:30 a.m. - noon. Shelburne. $75. Info, Enrollment Management Services, 9859477. Eighth graders through high schoolaged students. learn the college admission process.

INTRODUCTION TO AROMATHERAPY: Friday, March 25, 6:30-8 p.m. Spirit Dancer Books & Gifts/Star Root Aromatherapy. $10, please pre-pay by March 22. Info, 660-8060. Learn how you can incorporate aromatherapy and essential oils into your everyday life. We will discuss what essential oils are, how they affect the body and mind, and how to use them for their aesthetic effects. Each participant will receive a sample oil.

art FIREHOUSE CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS, EXPLORATORY DRAWING WORKSHOP WITH JANET FREDERICKS: Saturday and Sunday, March 12 and 13, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Info, 8657166 or visit www.Burlington CityArts.com. This workshop will allow the experienced participant an opportunity to expand visual vocabulary and to increase experience with materials and methods. Before the class starts, you will create some of your own implements and can collect drawing materials and think about themes that are speaking to you.

business GETTING SERIOUS: March 12, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Women’s Small Business Program. $95, scholarships available. Info, 864-7338. Explore business ownership with others through this day-long workshop. Getting Serious will help you discover if business ownership is right for you and where it might fit in your life.

climbing INTRO TO MOUNTAINEERING: March 12, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Petra Cliffs Mountaineering School. $100, all technical equipment included. Info, 657-3872 or visit http:// www.petracliffs.com. Learn the fundamentals of safe winter travel over snow and ice! Components of instruction include the use of crampons and ice axe, rope management skills, glissading and self-arrest techniques.

communication COURSE IN INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION: Thursdays, April 7, 13 and 21, 7-8:30 p.m. Offered by Demeter Resolutions, llc and instructed by Anthe Athas. Burlington. $125 per person. Info, 864-0624 or email Demeter Resolve@aol.com or visit www.DemeterResolu tions.com. These three sessions give both the basics of effective interpersonal communication and the opportunity to practice skills, both in and out of class, that will help you say what you want to foster, rather than impair with regards to relationships. Space is limited to eight participants, so please reserve your place by calling for information about year-round individual coaching sessions and customized workshops and classes.

craft

POST-NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTION SWING DANCE CLASSES IN RICHMOND: Popsicle Toes presents six Thursdays of Swing with Chris Sumner and Dan Carhart. Thursdays, March 10 through April 14, Lindy 2B: Fun with Fundamentals, 6:15-7:15 p.m. Lindy 1: Introduction to Lindy, 7:30-8:30 p.m. Richmond Free Library, 201 Bridge St., Richmond. $50 for 6 classes. Info, call Dan, 434-5776 or email Chris, swivel@wildmail. com. No partner necessary. Please bring clean, soft-soled shoes. These classes will teach the rudiments of Swing, with a strong emphasis on technique, center, balance, connection, lead and follow, timing and more. It’s not just moves; it’s the way that you move.

drumming

fishing FLY TYING FOR BEGINNERS: Weekly classes, Sundays, 1-3 p.m. Green Mountain Troutfitters. $15 per class, every third class is free. Info, 800-495-4271 or visit gmtrout.com. Learn the art of fly tying through various basic, yet effective patterns. Equipment/materials provided. Instructional video rentals, comfortable setting. Call to schedule.

glass LEARN TO WORK PYREX GLASS ON THE TORCH: Classes are small, 2-4 people and space is limited. Galaktica Glassworks, 21B Munson Ave., Morrisville. Four one-hour classes for $120. Info, 279-6588. This is an extremely intriguing art medium that offers infinite fun, challenge and creativity. If you are artistic, like to work hands-on, or just want to try something new and original, come change the way you see glass.

health FIBROMYALGIA AND CHRONIC FATIGUE WITH KELLEY ROBIE: Wednesday, March 16, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Purple Shutter Herbs, 100 Main St., Burlington. $15. Info, 865HERB or psherbs@sover.net. Do you or someone you know have fibromyalgia or chronic fatigue? These illnesses are becoming some of the most misunderstood conditions that people are struggling with today. Dismissed by many of the mainstream medical community, people may find relief through herbs and supplements. Join Kelley, who is not only the teacher but a past sufferer, as she discusses a range of natural remedies that may bring relief, as well as a better understanding. Kelley is a practicing herbalist and certified Iridologist. THE WATER ELEMENT IN WINTER: HOT LIQUIDS FOR HEALTH WITH SANDRA LORY: Sunday, March 13, 1-3 p.m. Purple Shutter Herbs, 100 Main St., Burlington. $10. Info, 865-HERB or psherbs@sover.net. Together we will discuss key concepts in keeping healthy during the coldest and darkest months of the year, a time when we may be susceptible to temporary conditions like colds, flu, congestion, lethargy and depression. We’ll explore nourishing and catalyzing broths, teas and foods to restore our balance and heal our ailments. You’ll take home recipes, helpful tips and understanding of how you can care for yourself and your family naturally and affordably this season. Sandra is a whole foods chef, herbalist and artist.

herbs CORDIALS: Tuesday, March 15, 6:30-7:30 p.m. Purple Shutter Herbs, 100 Main St., Burlington. $5. Info, 865-HERB or psherbs@sover. net. Make Bailey’s or Kahlua in your own kitchen, –it’s easy! These classes are designed to be simple and straight forward, no frills. Join Laura, the owner of Purple Shutter Herbs, in learning and actually making each product yourself. HONORING HERBAL TRADITIONS: Eightmonth apprenticeship program, one Saturday a month: April 24, May 22, June 19, July 17, August 21, September 18, October 16, November 13. Held on a horse farm in Milton. $770, includes all supplies and textbook plus membership to United Plant Savers. Sliding scale and work position available. Preregistration required, 893-0521 or 563-3185. Join Certified Herbalists Kelley Robie and Sarah Zettelmeyer for an interdisciplinary experience understanding the traditional wisdom of holistic health. We will be covering diet and nutrition, organ systems and supporting herbs. Herb walks will take place in field, forest and wetland. Eat wild foods and learn about plant sustainability. Emphasis will be placed on women’s health through all cycles. Animal companion remedies with practical experience on horses will be covered. Make part of your year an empowering health journey for yourself.


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classes 15B

No money? No problem. ORIENTAL HERBAL THERAPY PROGRAM: Begins September, 2005. 150-hour program. Elements of Healing, 62 Pearl St., Essex Junction. Info, 288-8160 or visit www.elementsofhealing.net. This class will meet one weekend a month and will give students a strong foundation in the use of Chinese and Japanese herbs to treat numerous disharmonies. Students will learn the fundamentals of Oriental theory and diagnosis incorporating yin yang, five elements, eight principles, and Oriental internal medicine theory. An in-depth study of abdominal, tongue and pulse diagnosis will make this course an extremely practical introduction to the art and science of Oriental herbal therapy. There will also be a hands-on approach to working with loose herbs and combining them into classical formulas. This class will be appropriate for all body workers and health-care providers, as well as those seeking to begin studies in alternative therapies. VSAC Grants are available to those who qualify. WISDOM OF THE HERBS 2005: AN EXPERIENTIAL JOURNEY THROUGH THE SEASONS: Eight-month Herbal Certification Program, one weekend a month, April to November 2005. $1200, non-refundable deposit of $150. Foundations of Herbalism: A Three Month Herbal Program, one weekend a month, June, August and October 2005. $525, non-refundable deposit of $100. Taught by herbalist Annie McCleary with naturalist George Lisi. Lincoln, Vermont. VSAC grants available to qualifying participants, please apply early. Info, 453-6764 or anniemc@gmavt.net or visit http://www.purpleconeflowerherbals.com. Identify and develop relationship with local wild plants as wise spirits who offer counsel and companionship. Learn though nature adventures–hike in wild places, lie on the earth. Make herbal medicine in sacred tradition. Harvest, prepare and eat wild edibles. Allow the transformation that comes with conscious association with the plant people.

jewelry JEWELRY WRAPPING WITH SHAYNA LERNER DIAMOND: Monday, March 14, 6-8:30 p.m. Purple Shutter Herbs, 100 Main St., Burlington. $20. Info, 865-HERB or psherbs@sover.net. In this introductory workshop, participants will learn the basics of wire jewelry wrapping. Shayna will demonstrate different wrapping techniques, which can be applied to an array of styles and designs. Using sterling silver wire and semiprecious stones, you’ll have time to wrap two pendants. Wire and stones will be provided, but feel free to bring your own. Shayna attended the Ringling School of Art and Design as well as the Rhode Island School of Design Summer Program. Her jewelry is available exclusively at Purple Shutter Herbs.

kids FIREHOUSE CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS, WRITE PLACE LEXICON DEVILS WITH SUSAN WEISS: Ages 12-18. Tuesdays, April 5 through May 10, 7-8:30 p.m. Info, 865-7166 or visit www.BurlingtonCityArts.com. Words are very powerful. Words are weapons. Words are bliss. Do you dare to put the force of your own words into action? Lexicon Devils is about creating controversial written work: posters, poems, letters, bumper stickers, scrawls and short masterpieces that protest, provoke, demand. FIREHOUSE EDUCATION SUMMER CAMPS: Summer camps for kids and teens, ages 6-18. Info, 865-7166 or visit www.BurlingtonCityArts.com. Enjoy photography, clay, painting, drawing, graphic design, writing and crafts. Full and half-day camps. Here’s just a few of the over 60 summer camps available: Free Wheelin, Claymation and Cartooning, ArtSmarts, Photo Shoot, Young Silver-Smiths, Junior Reporters and much more. YOGA VERMONT CHILDREN’S PROGRAM: Yoga Vermont Baby (newborn to almost crawling), Session 1: Sundays, March 13 through April 24, 10:30-11:15 a.m. Session 2: Tuesdays, March 15 through April 19, 11:15 a.m. noon. Yoga Vermont Toddlers (precrawling to 24 months), Session 1: Sundays, March 13 through April 26, 9:30-10:15 a.m. Session 2: Thursdays, March 17 through April 21, 11:15 a.m. - noon. Yoga Vermont Kids (2-4 years) Session 1: Sundays, March 13 through April 24, 11:30 a.m. - 12:15 p.m. Chace Mill, Burlington. Preregistration required for six-week sessions. Space limited. $48 per session. Info, 660-9718 or www.yogaver mont.com. New children’s yoga program at Yoga Vermont.

martial arts AIKIDO OF CHAMPLAIN VALLEY: Adult introductory classes begin Tuesday, April 5, 5:30 p.m. and Tuesdays and Thursdays, 5:30 p.m. Please watch a class before enrolling. Day and evening classes for adults, seven days a week. Children’s classes, ages 7-12, Saturdays, 9:30-10:30 a.m. and Wednesdays, 4-5 p.m. Muso Shinden Ryu Iaido (the traditional art of sword drawing), Tuesdays, 3:45-5 p.m. and Saturdays, noon-1:30 p.m. Zazen (zen meditation, free and open to the general public), Tuesdays, 8-8:45 p.m. Aikido of Champlain Valley, 257 Pine St., Burlington. Info, 951-8900 or www.aikidovt.org. This traditional Japanese martial art emphasizes circular, flowing movements, joint locks and throwing techniques. Visitors are always welcome to watch Aikido classes. Please call if you would like to observe an iaido class. BLUE WAVE TAEKWONDO: The benefits of a traditional martial art, with the excitement of a modern sport. Adult, family and children’s classes available, Monday through Thursday evenings and Saturdays for beginners, advanced and competitive students. 182 Main St., Burlington, next to Muddy Waters. Student and family discounts available, all new students receive a free uniform. Info, 658-3359 or email info@blue wavetkd.com or visit www.bluewavetkd.com. Sixth Degree Black Belt and former national team member Gordon White puts over 20 years of experience to use teaching the exciting martial art and Olympic sport of Taekwondo. Proper body mechanics and Taekwondo technique are emphasized during plyometric, technical and cardio training sessions to improve flexibility, strength and overall fitness. MARTIAL WAY SELF-DEFENSE CENTER: Day and evening classes for adults. Afternoon and Saturday classes for children. Group and private lessons. Colchester. Free introductory class. Info, 893-8893. Kempo, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, Arnis and Wing Chun Kung Fu. One minute off I-89 at Exit 17. MOO GONG DO: Free Introductory classes, Monday Friday, 5:30 p.m. or 6:30 p.m., or Saturday, 8:30 a.m. or 10 a.m. Classes open to all ages. Four convenient locations: 13 Susie Wilson Rd., Essex, 879-6763; 142 W. Twin Oaks Terrace, South Burlington, 864-9985; 4068 Shelburne Rd., Shelburne, 425-5764; 9 Wilson Rd., Middlebury, 453-8155. Info, SaBomNimAllen @aol.com or visit http://www.MooGongDo.com. Moo Gong Do is a traditional Korean martial art emphasizing personal development and strength of character in a safe and controlled environment. Come learn about yourself and the elements of Earth, Water, Fire, Wind and Spirit. Learn to find and lead a balanced life. A great family activity! (Weapons, Instructor, and SelfDefense programs also available.) With over 20 certified instructors, you will be sure to get a great deal of personal attention. VERMONT BRAZILIAN JIU-JITSU: Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, Monday through Friday, 7-8:30 p.m. and Saturdays, 10 a.m. The “Punch Line” Boxing Class, Tuesdays and Thursdays, 6-7 p.m. Vermont Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, 4 Howard St., A-8, Burlington. First class free. Info, 660-4072 or visit wwww.bjjusa.com. Brazilian JiuJitsu is a complete martial arts system based on leverage (provides a greater advantage and effect on a much larger opponent) and technique (fundamentals of dominant body position to use the technique to overcome size and strength). Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu enhances balance, flexibility, strength, cardio-respiratory fitness and builds personal courage and self-confidence. Vermont Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu offers Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and SelfDefense classes (all levels), Boxing and NHB programs available. Brazilian Head Instructor with over 30 years of experience (5-Time Brazilian Champion - Rio de Janeiro), certified under Carlson Gracie. Positive and safe environment. Effective and easy to learn techniques that could save your life. Accept no imitations. WING TAO MOBILITY ARTS KUNG FU: Thursdays, 56:30 p.m. St. Anthony’s Social Hall (next to church on Flynn Ave., just below Pine St.). $10 per class, family discounts available. Info, 860-1443. Family Kung Fu classes include yoga, self-empowerment, stretching, connecting and collaborating for all ages and levels together, in a friendly, relaxed atmosphere.

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massage ASIAN BODYWORK THERAPY: Now enrolling for a new 400-hour training program. September 10, 2005 - June 13, 2006. Classes meet Mondays, 9 a.m. - noon and Tuesdays, 9 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. and four other required weekends, September 10, 11, November 12, 13, January 21, 22, April 15, 16. Tuition: $3750 plus textbooks. Touchstone Healing Arts, 205 Dorset St., South Burlington, VT 05403. Info, 658-7715 or visit http://www. touchstonehealingarts.com. This course provides students with a solid foundation in Oriental medicine theory and two forms of Oriental massage; Amma massage and Shiatsu massage. Amma and Shiatsu are two complimentary forms of bodywork that give students the necessary tools to treat a wide range of disorders and imbalances.

music LEVEL II FLAMENCO GUITAR WITH JAMES O’HALLORAN: Grade 11 - adult. Wednesdays, March 9 through May 18, 7:30-9 p.m. Hoehl Studio at the Flynn Center, Burlington. $200 for 12 weeks. Info, 652-4537 or registrar@flynncenter. This intermediate/ advanced level class focuses on three Flamenco styles or palos - the solea, the alegrias and the bulerias. Students polish righthand techniques such as tremelo, picado, alzapua and rasqueado. Participants must have their own nylon-string guitar. LUNCHTIME BEGINNING GUITAR WITH JAMES O’HALLORAN: Adults, Thursdays, March 10 through May 19, noon-1 p.m. Hoehl Studio at the Flynn Center, Burlington. $135 for 12 weeks. Info, 652-4537 or registrar@flynncenter.org. Dust off your guitar and come join others for this fun and supportive class covering basic finger-picking and strumming techniques, reading chord charts, playing out of a song book, tuning, technique and tone. Take your abilities to the next level, and learn to feel comfortable playing on your own. Participants provide their own acoustic guitar. Repeat students welcome.

painting ART FOR ALL AGES, INC.: Offering a series of classes with children, grandparents, adults and senior members of our community, through schools and colleges, recreation departments, community centers and libraries. These classes take place throughout Addison, Chittenden, Franklin and Grand Isle counties, including art shows and openings. Info, PO Box 1783, Burlington, VT 05402, 802-343-6293, artforallages@gmavt. net or visit www.artforallages.org.

photography FIREHOUSE CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS COMMUNITY DARKROOM, INTERMEDIATE DARKROOM WITH MARY JOHNSON: Tuesdays and Thursdays, March 31 through April 19, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Info, 865-7166 or visit www.BurlingtonCityArts.com. Learn advanced printing techniques to make your prints have full tonal scale comprising deep, rich blacks and bright highlights with plenty of detail. Both RC and fiber paper will be used. Good quality negatives a must. Portfolio review required.

FIREHOUSE CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS COMMUNITY DARKROOM, INTERMEDIATE 35 MM WITH JOE PEILA: Wednesdays, March 23 through April 27, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Info, 865-7166 or visit www.BurlingtonCity Arts.com. In this class we will explore the more advanced workings of the 35 mm camera with an emphasis on flash, lighting and composition. If you are looking to advance your technique or refresh your ideas, this class is for you. Plan on shooting some 35 mm slide film for assignments. FIREHOUSE CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS COMMUNITY DARKROOM, ALTERNATIVE PRINTING WITH ZSOFIA JILLING: Wednesdays, April 6 through 27, 6-8:30 p.m. Info, 865-7166 or visit www.BurlingtonCity Arts.com. Prerequisite: Good working knowledge of black-and-white printing. This course will teach you how to make your own VanDyke Browns and Cyanotypes. An experienced practitioner of these beautiful alternative styles of printing will guide participants.

pilates AFFORDABLE PILATES PRIVATES AT THE PILATES DEN: Offering ongoing, small group mat classes. $10/class. Reformer private sessions, $35. The Pilates Den, Williston. Info, 879-7302 or http://www. pilatesden.com. Join us in our sunny home studio and experience Joseph Pilates’ dynamic body conditioning system. Our mat classes are challenging, fun and enhanced by small apparatus like magic circles, foam rollers, therabands and light weights. Our Reformer private sessions feature resistance training on Joseph Pilates’ spring-based Reformer bed that promises to “re-form” your body. CORE STUDIO: Burlington’s premier Pilates Studio. Ongoing small group classes utilizing Im=X mat and Xercizer beds and Stott mat programs. Options include private sessions, monthly Passports, drop-in rates. Free consultation and introductory mat class offered. Conveniently located on the waterfront in downtown Burlington. Info, 862-8686 or visit www.corestudioburlington.com. Small group sessions offer you a complete body workout using small equipment, including body bars and Pilates rings. Familiarize yourself with our open, welcoming studio, our professional certified instructors and our energizing “green” atmosphere. PILATES SPACE: A PLACE FOR INTELLIGENT MOVEMENT: We offer Pilates, Gyrotonic®, Yoga and Physical Therapy in a warm, welcoming and affirming atmosphere. Our full schedule of Pilates Reformer, Mat and Anusara Yoga classes and privates begins Monday, February 28. Not sure what Pilates is? Please call to sign up for a one-time free introduction to the Pilates Reformer, Saturdays, 11:45 a.m. We can also arrange a time that may fit in your schedule more easily. Come and visit our beautiful new studio, conveniently located near Oak Ledge Park, Burlington. 208 Flynn Ave. Studio 3A. Info, 863-9900 or visit www.pilatesspace.net.

pottery RIVER STREET POTTERS: March/April classes for seven weeks, beginning March 7. Adult Wheel, Beginner/Intermediate, three classes, Mondays, 6-9 p.m., Tuesdays, 9:30 a.m. 12:30 p.m. and Tuesdays 6-9 p.m. Handbuilding, all levels, beginners welcome. Wednesdays, 6-9 p.m. Kids All Ages, All Levels, two handbuilding and wheel classes, Tuesdays, 3:30-5 p.m. and Saturdays, 1-3 p.m. Free practice for adults. 141 River St., Montpelier (Rte. 2). Info, 224-7000. Celebrate the new year by letting your creativity have free rein in a friendly, supportive atmosphere.

printmaking FIREHOUSE CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS PRINT STUDIO 250, BOOK/BOX MAKING WITH DIANE FINE: Saturday, March 19, 9:30 a.m. - 6:30 p.m. Info, 865-7166 or visit www.Burlington CityArts.com. Quick drawings will serve as the content for a traditional Chinese non-adhesive, accordion book. Students will then make a drop-spine clothcovered box to house the book. Both the book and the box can easily serve as models for future projects. No previous binding experience necessary.

qi gong CLOUD HANDS QI GONG AND EARTH MEDITATION: March 26-27, Saturday 10 a.m. 3:30 p.m. and Sunday, 11:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. Elements of Healing, 62 Pearl St., Essex Junction. $90. Info, 288-8160 or visit www.elementsofhealing.net. The Cloud Hands and Earth Meditation are from the Tao Ahn Pai (Taoist Elixir Method) system of internal cultivation. The main purpose is to promote self-healing and circulation of Qi and blood. When practiced regularly, students may experience healing from many chronic ailments as well as a deep sense of relaxation. Please bring a cushion for the meditation. Scott

Moylan has been given permission from Master Share K. Lew to teach this set from his internal cultivation system.

reiki REIKI LEVEL 11: Saturday, April 2, 9:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. Rising Sun Healing Center, Burlington. Info, 865-9813, channa@ gmavt.net or www.risingsunhealing.com. Receive an attunement which allows you to use Reiki energy for healing and personal growth. Learn the hand positions for giving a complete Reiki treatment to yourself and others and have time to practice these skills. Taught by Chris Hanna, MSW, Reiki Master.

self-defense STREET-WISE SELF-DEFENSE: Info, www.securitywise.us. Are you afraid of being attacked, mugged or raped? You don’t have to be. Not kung-fu, not karate, but a unique, reality-based personal protection system called Street-Wise Self-Defense. You don’t need to spend countless dollars and years going to martial arts classes. Street-Wise can be mastered by anyone within months. You don’t have to live with fear anymore.


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<LIST YOUR CLASS> DEADLINE: Thursday at 5 p.m. Call: 864-5684 email: classes@sevendaysvt.com / fax: 865-1015

snowkiting

women

SNOWKITING: Intro to Snowkite, up to 3 people, 3 hours. $85. Learn safety, set-up, how to fly the kite and get your first rides. On the Boards Lesson, up to 3 people, 2 hours. Learn how to stay and ride upwind, refine your technique, start jumping. $75. Info, 4969691 or visit http://www.stormboarding.com. Get ready to get going this winter snowkiting. Ski, tele or snowboard with a kite, cruise or go as extreme as you can handle. This exciting and fast-growing sport has a place for everyone - cruising, jumping, going fast, riding terrain/rails, accessing backcountry and adding a new dimension to winter sports. We also sell kites and gear, gift certificates available.

WOMEN’S MOTORCYCLE FORUM: A series of bi-monthy meetings, March through May, focused on learning the ABC’s of touring, basic motorcycle maintenance, fashion vs. function, and finding our way to being self-sufficient on the road. Info, Stacy, 433-6201. If you are a woman with your motorcycle license, or a wish to get your license, and looking for other women to ride with, relate to or learn from, I’m interested in what you have to say.

spirituality INTEGRATIVE SPIRITUALITY: Thursdays, March 10 through May 19, 6-8 p.m. Montpelier. $225 for ten weekly group meetings. Info, call Robert A. Reimondi, M.A. licensed psychologist-master, 223-3572. A 10week group on spirituality to assist one in practicing one’s faith and enhancing one’s spiritual development. Through the lens of Transpersonal Psychology we will examine the perennial philosophies and spiritual traditions in which we believe. In doing so we will review our spiritual autobiography, revitalize our spiritual vision, and strengthen our spiritual practice. Objectives of the group include: bridging the gap between the science of psychology and religious tradition, understanding psychic phenomena from both a psychological and spiritual perspective, identifying the spiritual type that best describes the manner in which one practices, cultivating a compassionate spiritual diversity and examining and strengthening one’s personal spiritual practice. SPIRITUALITY AND WELL-BEING CLASSES WITH LINDY SAYWARD, M.DIV., D.MIN, NATURAL HEALER, SPIRITUAL COUNSELOR: Beginning March 9, second and fourth Wednesdays, 6:30-8:30 p.m. 28 E. State St., Montpelier. First class, $30, $25 each additional class. Info, 223-3250 or lindylight@yahoo.com. Gathering those interested in changing their life and practitioners who desire to move into greater multidimensional understanding and experience spirituality and well-being. Especially for those who are committed to their passion, potential and purpose. Information and transformational healing comes through Lindy, so bring your intention and curiosity.

tai chi ONGOING TAI CHI CLASSES: Mondays and Wednesdays, 5:45-7:15 p.m. Elements of Healing, 62 Pearl Street, Essex Junction. Info, 288-8160 or http://www.ele mentsofhealing.net. Traditional Yang-style short form is a gentle, flowing exercise that helps correct posture and creates deep relaxation and overall health. TAI CHI/MONTPELIER: Beginning students welcome to join ongoing class. Eight-week series, beginning Monday, March 14, 5-6:30 p.m. 64 Main St., Montpelier. $72. Register by March 13. Info, 456-1983 or email grhayes@vtlink.net. Instructor Ellie Hayes has been practicing and teaching Hwa Yu Style Tai Chi since 1974. This style features circular movement, deep relaxation and significant health benefits.

weight loss HEALTHY LIFESTYLES OFFERS 12-WEEK LEARN PROGRAM FOR WEIGHT MANAGEMENT: Ongoing 12week sessions facilitated by certified Lifestyle Counselor, meeting various days and times in convenient South Burlington location. $20 per class. Info, call Kathryn, 658-6597 or email healthylifevt@cs.com. Lose weight permanently and improve the quality of your life by using a proven-effective program. Small classes provide structure, support and accountability. No pills, special foods or diets, just good sense.

writing FIREHOUSE CENTER FOR THE VISUAL ARTS WRITE PLACE, THE PATHS OF POETRY WITH SETH JARVIS: Mondays, March 28 through May 9, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Info, 865-7166 or visit www.BurlingtonCityArts.com. Explore the variety of styles and processes involved in creating and sharing poetry with a special emphasis on taking your work from the page to the stage.

yoga BIKRAM YOGA: Ongoing daily classes for all levels. 257 Pine St., Burlington. Info, 651-8979. A heated studio facilitates deep stretching and detoxifying. BRISTOL YOGA: Daily Astanga Yoga classes for all levels. Special workshops and classes for beginners, intermediate series and meditation. Private individual and group classes available by appointment. Old High School, Bristol. $12 drop-in, $100 for ten classes. Or $100 monthly pass. Info, 482-5547 or http://www.bris tolyoga.com. This classical form of yoga incorporates balance, strength and flexibility to steady the mind, strengthen the body, and free the soul. ITSY BITSY YOGA: New sessions begin March 26. Classes offered: Baby (newborn to almost crawling) and Tots (precrawling to 24 months). Seeds of Yoga. $64 for eight-week session. Info, 434-4599 or visit www.seed sofyoga.com or www.itsybitsyyoga.com. Itsy Bitsy Yoga® introduces your child to the benefits of Yoga in the first years of life. Learn more than 75 Yoga poses and techniques developmentally nutritious and deepen the parent/child bond. You and your baby/toddler will delight in practicing Yoga, discovering movement, and singing IBY rhymes together. Children participate according to their ability, learning style and personality, and learn Yoga poses through repetition, play and bonding. YOGA AT THE REHAB GYM: Offering individual and a variety of group classes. Very Gentle Yoga, Wednesdays, March 9, 16, 23, 30, 7:15-8:30 p.m. at the Evergreen site. Power Yoga, Saturdays, 10:30-11:45 a.m. Lunchtime Yoga begins Thursdays, March 3, noon - 12:45 p.m. at Evergreen site. Kids Yoga-Fitness, Saturdays, 9:30-10:15 a.m. Maple Tree Place, Williston. Info, 8766000 or visit www.rehabgym.com. Levels of instruction range from very gentle to more advanced and the instructors are physical therapists. Yoga offers a mindbody approach to rehabilitation and general wellness. All levels of fitness and ability are welcome. YOGA VERMONT: Daily classes, open to all levels. Astanga, Vinyasa, Jivamukti, Kripalu, Sivananda, Eclectic Hatha, Prenatal, Itsy Bitsy, Teens and Senior classes. Register for our six-week Introduction to Astanga Yoga Session, Wednesdays, March 9 through April 13 with Scott York or Mondays, March 28 through May 2 with Jessica Petraska, 7:30-8:30 p.m. Six-week Yoga for Teens session with Sara Goldstein, Wednesdays, March 16 through April 20, 7:30-8:30 p.m. Chace Mill, Burlington. $12 drop-in, 10 classes/$100. Month pass $120. Info, 660-9718 or www.yogavermont.com. Explore a variety of Yoga styles with experienced and passionate instructors. Classes seven days a week, open to all levels. m

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18B | march 09-16, 2005 | SEVEN DAYS

7D WELLNESS 4 hand/arm health

4 colonic hydrotherapy COLONIC HYDROTHERAPY: Digestive wellness. 20 years experience in holistic therapies. “Wellness begins from within.” Call for appt. 660-0779.

4 feng shui FENG SHUI VERMONT: Consultations for homes, businesses, schools. Change your surroundings, change your life! Certified Feng Shui Practitioner Carol C. Wheelock, M.Ed. 802-496-2306, cwheelock@fengshuiver mont.com, www.fengshuiver mont.com.

4 general health MALE ENHANCEMENT PILL! She’ll be bragging to her friends.100% guaranteed. Safe, natural, permanent. Order “Extra” today! GPI-DIRECT, 800-731-1414. (AAN CAN)

4 massage

MUSICIANS/COMPUTER USERS: Eliminate pain. Learn to coordinate the positioning and movement of your fingers, hands and arms. Gain accuracy, speed, ease. Alison Cheroff, concert pianist, Taubman Approach. 802-454-1907.

4 healing touch CRANIO-SACRAL THERAPY for whole body healing and relaxation. Clean out energy blockages and rewrite cellular memory. Have table, will travel. For appointments call Scot Foxx, 802-862-8806 ext. 5. LIGHTHEART HEALING ARTS: Maureen Short. Physical, emotional, mental and spiritual issues. Healing sessions in peaceful sanctuary in the forest. 802-4534433. New Haven, VT. www.Lightheart.net.

4 hypnotherapy HYPNOSIS. YES. IT WORKS. Effective for smoking cessation, weight loss, motivation, stress management and more! Call Kristin Watson, Certified Hypnotherapist, at Pathways to WellBeing, 862-8806 x 2.

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A GIFT TO YOURSELF or to a loved one during this winter season is to get a relaxing massage and watch your blues disappear. Massage for men with Sergio Corrales CMT, 324-8235. A HEALING TOUCH Swedish massage. Relax deeply and receive all the benefits of an experienced, caring therapist. Gentle or deep pressure, depending on your needs. $50/1.15 hrs. Sierra-Maria Magdalena. 862-4677, 306 So. Union St., Burlington. EAST MEETS WEST when you’re treated to a full-body massage by Chinese-American Roy, who releases and revitalizes your tired body and stressed mind. 660-0903. ENJOY THE RELAXATION of a therapeutic massage. Quality bodywork with a compassionate touch. Please call Emily Kniffin, Nationally Certified Massage Therapist, 651-7579. GENTLE VISCERAL MANIPULATION enhances your internal organs’ freedom and aliveness, benefiting even the healthiest body. Onehour tune-up, $70. Elaine Russell, CMT, MM, LADA, Montpelier, Portals, 223-7678.

MASSAGE STUDENT looking to help you get rid of your winter blues. Offering a huge discount for a therapeutic Swedish massage. Only $35 for 1-hour full body massage. Gift certificates avail. Call Kymberly now to make your appointment. 310-6562. THERAPEUTIC MASSAGE and Bodywork: Kastle Combs, Certified Massage Therapist. Your session is uniquely structured to fit your specific concerns. Gift certificates available. Convenient downtown location. Visit www. healthymassage.INFO for more information. For appointment scheduling, please call 862-8806 ext. 7. THERAPEUTIC MASSAGE WORKS! Swedish Esalen modality: comfort the muscles, relax the mind, uplift the spirit. Diane Horstmyer, certified therapeutic massage practitioner. Call for appointment. 658-7458.

4 psychotherapy SALLIE WEST, M.A., M.F.T. Licensed psychotherapist. Individuals, couples and corporate coaching. Emphasis on relationships and spiritual/personal growth, treatment of depression and anxiety, 12-step recovery and life transitions. Burlington and Waitsfield. 496-7135.

4 space for rent

4 weight loss

BURLINGTON: Looking for practitioner to rent space in established holistic healthcare center. Convenient downtown location. Beautiful, light space. Pathways to WellBeing, 862-8806 x 2, ask for Kristin.

BURN FAT, block cravings and boost energy like you have never experienced. Weight-loss revolution. Money-back guarantee. Call 800-207-0766.

4 women’s health

4 spirituality

IN-HOME BREASTFEEDING SUPPORT: Lactation Resources of Vermont, Sally MacFadyen IBCLC, Kathleen Bruce IBCLC and Mary Bibb IBCLC will provide professional lactation consultations in your home. Your insurance may even cover it. Call for details. 878-6181.

NATURAL HEALER, SPIRITUAL COUNSELOR, Lindy Sayward, M.Div, D.Min. Private sessions, classes, workshops, spiritual alignment. Open to powerful energies of spirituality and well-being. Awaken to your multidimensional essence of freedom and purpose. Healer-to-healers. 802223-3250, lindylight@ yahoo.com. SATSANG: 2nd Sunday of each month, 3 p.m. for coffee/tea and discussions on the concepts of Advaita (not-two) as taught by Ramesh Balsekar and others. For directions, call Bill 862-4891.

4 work wanted A C.M.T SEEKS LONGTERM, part-time employment in the Champlain Valley. Trained at Virginia School of Massage, Swedish, Deep Tissue, Myofascial release modalities. Legally blind, this is the work I want/need to be doing. Highest ethical standards, local refs. For more contact info, email middlebury ethics@hotmail.com.

Wellness AAHHHHH... Stretch your possibilities.

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HEALTH TALK

Back To Wellness Chiropractic Center

Learn how to get healthy & stay healthy! Every Wednesday 12 noon & 6 pm. Space is limited, reserve your seat today!

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Providing effective quality care to achieve and maintain health.

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Katherine Graves. CMT, BHS Bodywork Therapist

In practice over 20 years.

Specializing in low back, neck and shoulder conditions, headaches and general spinal health. 187 St. Paul Street, 9/23/04 Burlington 4:51

1:12 PM

* Swedish/Sports Massage * Deep Tissue * Energy Work (Brennan Graduate) * LaStone Therapy * Thai-Yoga Bodywork

Dr. Heather L. Diederich

2x4-elements092904

431 Pine St., Burlington

3/29/04

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802.864.4959

Stowe 253-8427 Winooski 515 Moscow Rd. www.stoweyoga.com MacGregor 2x3-090104-soulstice 1/31/05 6:46 PM Page Bld. 1 321 Main St.

Soulstice

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wellness@sevendaysvt.com | SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005 | 19B

free will astrology

L RE A

MARCH 10-16

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Some freaks of nature, like four-leaf clovers, are considered good luck. Others, like six-legged frogs, are omens that something is amiss. Then there are the prodigies that are a little scary because they’re so bizarrely extraordinary, even if they’re also signs of hope. A few years back, for example, some Native Americans believed the birth of a white buffalo in Wisconsin heralded the healing of Grandmother Earth and the unification of the races. It’s quite possible, Aries, that you will soon have brushes with all three types of mutants. To increase the likelihood that you’ll escape an encounter with the sixlegged frog variety, all you have to do is avoid indulging in negative thoughts about people.

son. Many long-time fans are rethinking their devotion to the sport. “The distressing thing is, my heroes are morons,” Vaughn Derderian told the Detroit Free Press. “And that’s a reflection on me.” I bring this to your attention, Cancerian, in the hope it will prod you into taking inventory of your own heroes, teachers, and role models. Are they truly serving you? Is it possible they served you at one time but have become nostalgic artifacts of an earlier phase of your development? Could you make them work better for you if you were more analytical about their impact on you? Meditate on questions like these as you consider the possibility that you’re ready to go hunting for a fresh batch of inspiring influences.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): For over

TAURUS

(April 20-May 20): One Christmas, I went to a Buddhist retreat center to hear Hindu prayers sung by world music pioneer Jai Uttal, who was raised in the Jewish faith. The all-embracing spirit of this event is what I urge you to cultivate in the coming days, Taurus. It’s time to erase boundaries and bulldoze pigeonholes; to expand your imagination as you welcome in the widest variety of influences you can summon. You’re ready to get so far out of the box that you can’t even see the box anymore.

GEMINI

(May 21-June 20): Let’s add a new word to your vocabulary: veraison. It’s used by grape growers to define the explosive ripening their crop undergoes about a month before the harvest. Up to this point, the grapes are small and hard and pale. Then, within a few days, they get softer and sweeter as they darken in color and grow dramatically bigger. Even experienced viticulturalists don’t know when exactly veraison will occur. It happens fast and without warning. But I can pretty confidently predict that you’re about to enjoy the human version of veraison, Gemini. Happy ripening season!

CANCER

(June 21-July 22): An intractable dispute between players and owners has caused the National Hockey League to cancel its entire sea-

two decades, Peter Jouvenal worked as a journalist and cameraman who filmed war-battered hotspots, including Iraq in the Gulf War and Afghanistan during the Soviet invasion. Now he’s retired from that gig and owns a restaurant in Kabul. He has few regrets, but one came after the fall of the Taliban in 2001. While exploring the organization’s deserted safe houses, he happened upon a place where Osama bin Laden and his wife had lived. Among the items the couple left behind was one of her bras. In retrospect Jouvenal realized he should have pocketed the exotic piece of lingerie; a tabloid newspaper would have paid him a fortune for it. But because he had spent his entire career dealing with more respectable news media, the idea didn’t even occur to him at the time. Remember this tale, Leo. Don’t overlook things that could prove valuable even though you wouldn’t normally think they were.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Shortly after the year 1000, Icelandic Vikings made two sojourns in the land that’s now called North America. During the second expedition, one of the brave explorers, Gudrid Thorbjarnardottir, gave birth to a son. Snorri Thorfinnsson became the first European born in the New World. I hereby appoint Snorri to be your patron saint in the coming weeks, Virgo. May he inspire you to beget a brainchild as you

BY ROB BREZSNY

You can call Rob Brezsny, day or night, for your expanded weekly horoscope 1x9-personal 3/8/05 11:09 1-900-950-7700. $1.99 per minute. 18 and over. Touchtone phone.

acclimate yourself to living in a frontier.

LIBRA

(Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Russian President Vladimir Putin says global warming might be a boon for his country because people “would spend less money on fur coats and other warm things.” Similarly, my meteorologist friend Kurt notes that as air pollution has grown worse, sunsets have become more spectacularly beautiful. I like to think that you will find comparable redemption from your recent crises, Libra. In fact, I will make this prediction: The metaphorical version of a toxic spill will somehow lead you to a magical elixir.

only use 10 percent of our brains. He dreamed up a brilliant experiment that involved 12 ferrets watching the movie, The Matrix. His research was so convincing that the prestigious journal Nature published it. He concluded that we actually use 80 percent of our available brainpower, though much of the activity takes place unconsciously. I predict your own efficiency will be even higher in the coming weeks, Capricorn, perhaps zooming above the 90 percent level. It might be time for you to try solving some of your most enduring mysteries. You’ll no doubt be able to come up with approaches as innovative as having ferrets watch The Matrix.

Wellness

(Jan. 20-Feb. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): AQUARIUS 18): Be very discriminating about how

“Many of us don’t change until we’re in crisis mode,” notes psychologist Robert Maurer, “until our mate leaves us or we lose our job. Once that moment comes we look for a big leap to get out of pain.” Unfortunately, big leaps under pressure usually don’t work. If you really want to change, you have to accomplish it little by little, and it’s best to begin long before you’re feeling miserable, scared or backed into a corner. I mention this, Scorpio, because it’s a perfect time to launch a step-by-step course correction that will ensure you won’t get pinched by a predicament in April. Start modifying your behavior and adjusting your attitude while you’re at the top of your game.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Your metaphor for the week is a spork, the dining implement that combines the features of a spoon and a fork. It has a rounded basin to hold liquids as well as a few tines on the end to stab solid food. Like the spork, you should be versatile as you gather nourishment for body and soul. On the one hand, you should be willing to make yourself a receptive vessel that can draw sustenance from ephemeral or mercurial stimuli; on the other hand you should be poised to aggressively snag more substantial fare.

you give and receive gifts, Aquarius. Unless everyone’s motives are clear and impeccable, seeming acts of generosity could get distorted by hidden agendas. Please know that I am by no means making a prediction that there will be trouble. It’s just that you must exercise even more than the usual amount of care to ensure that the bestowing of blessings doesn’t lead to unintended consequences. Did you hear about the two teenage girls in Colorado who got sued by a neighbor after they brought her a late-night surprise gift of freshly baked cookies?

PISCES

(Feb. 19-March 20): The hero of Haruki Murakami’s surrealistic novel, Kafka on the Shore, can cause schools of fish to fall like rain from the sky. I suspect that you might be able to do that yourself, Pisces. At least temporarily, you have uncanny abilities; I’m tempted to say that you actually possess magical powers. Be careful how you use your wizardry, please. Use it exclusively to perform good works. There’s no need to turn your adversaries into jack-inthe-boxes if you can simply make them less adversarial. You shouldn’t waste your talent on materializing $20 bills on the sidewalk when you can just as easily manifest an improvement in your working conditions.

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CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19): Michael Weliky, a professor of brain and cognitive sciences, decided to test the accuracy of the old saw that we

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20B | march 09-16, 2005 | SEVEN DAYS

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CLASSIFIEDSLISTING ANNOUNCEMENTS, BUY THIS STUFF AND MORE 4 announcements DIVERSITY IN JOURNALISM: The Academy for Alternative Journalism, established by papers like this one to promote diversity in the alternative press, seeks talented journalists and students (college seniors and up) for a paid summer writing program at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism. The eight-week program (June 19 - August 14, 2005) aims to recruit talented candidates from diverse backgrounds and train them in magazine-style feature writing. Ten participants will be chosen and paid $3000 plus housing and travel allowances. For information visit the website at http://aan.org/aaj or write for an application: Academy for Alternative Journalism, Northwestern University, Medill School of Journalism, 1845 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, IL 60208. Email altacademy@north western.edu. Application deadline February 11, 2005. Northwestern University is an equal opportunity educator and employer. (AAN CAN) ORGANIC VEGETABLES delivered to you! Join our 2005 CSA program. Applications at City Market, www.arethusacollective farm.com or Arethusa Collective Farm, 578-6429.

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4 art

FIRST FOUR VERMONT DUCK STAMP prints with stamp. Matted and framed handsomely. 244-7801. PRIVATE ART LESSONS with professional artist/teacher. All ages welcome. $75/hour. 2D, 3D, art history. Carol, 578-8231.

4 business opps

2005 POSTAL POSITIONS! $17.50-$59+/hour. Full benefits. Paid training and vacations. No experience necessary! Green Card OK! For more info, call 866-3290801 ext. 1050. (AAN CAN) $525 WEEKLY INCOME possible mailing sales letters from home. Genuine opportunity working with our wellness company. Supplies provided. No selling. FT/PT. 708-536-7040 or www. CardonaConsulting.com. (AAN CAN) A $250K - $500K+ first year income opportunity. Homebased, not MLM! No personal selling. Training and support provided. Proven system. Call 877-347-3745, 24 hrs. (AAN CAN)

2/18/05

1:31 PM

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professional services

APRIL’S HOME IMPROVEMENT, INC. Let us help you repair/ remodel the home you worked so hard to get. We have been certified in lead paint work and certified in disability modifications. 27 yrs exp. fully insured.Chittenden County area. References. 802-310-7579 ATTENTION SMALL BUSINESS OWNERS: Flexible full-service bookkeeping and QuickBooks ® setup, training and troubleshooting to suit your time and needs. Barb Grogard, 878-6015. BUILDING A HOME OR ADDITION? Call Homemakers EcoConstruction specializing in finely crafted, traditional timber frames, always using local materials. Straw bale wall systems and earthen plasters available. Call Amber, 802 454-1167.

LAWN CARE: Larrows’ Lawn Care. Call Chris, 802-372-5201, leave a message. MOORE AND MOORE COMPUTERS: Got Troubles? Computer slowing down? Spyware and pop-ups a problem? Call us, (813)862-0069 or see our website www.mooreandmoorecomputers.com. Low prices on inhome and in-office service. ROOMMATES.COM: Browse hundreds of online listings with photos and maps. Find your roommate with a click of the mouse! Visit http://www.Room mates.com. (AAN CAN) THE LEARNING TREE: Specialized educational consulting and instruction. Call 864-1913. WANT YOUR HOUSE PAINTED? Call Homemakers Eco-Construction. Offering an alternative to toxic interior paints. Nontoxic, earthen plasters, milk paints and clay finishes adding color, depth and sparkle to any type wall. Call Amber, 802454-1928.

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4 buy this stuff

2003 EDGE 311 Fitness Stair Climber. Digital readouts, very sturdy. Costs 200, asking $75. Jeff, 864-2130. 27” HITACHI TV SET. Stereo sound & hookups for surround sound. Make offer. 343-1823. 4 MICHELIN TIRES: 205/65/16 on Nissan alloy rims. 5 lug tires, brand new, sold car. $475.00 obo 879-3790. A SNOW SALE- MUST SELL: Table w/6-ladder back chairs, maple, $200. Fedders A/C, only used twice, 6000 BTU, $100. 2 wicker IKEA chairs w/cushions, $50, mission-style computer desk, $50. 482-2628.

AFGHANS AND BEADED JEWELRY for sale. Terry, 734-5379 or 802-318-0585. AIWA STEREO SYSTEM - Radio, dual cassette deck w/dubbing, 3CD changer, 2 floor speakers, turntable connector. Excellent condition, 2 years old. $115/OBO. 863-7374. ANTIQUE WOOD COOK STOVE: Albion, manufactured in British Columbia about 1940s. White enamel w/warming oven and water reservoir. Great condition. Asking $500. 802-525-6531. BEAUTIFUL 1/4 CARAT ENGAGEMENT ring. Diamond solitaire, 4-prong setting. I love this ring, but it’s time for it to go. Paid $679, asking $350. 862-4517. BOSOX AT NEW YORK: April 5 and 6. Single tickets, Tuesday and Wednesday games. Each ticket is close to each other. Best offer. 802-598-4908. BRAND NEW TRAMPOLINE MAT: 12’ diameter, 96 rings. Paid $175, never used. Will sell for $75. Please call 888-1196. CAR AMPLIFIERS: Sony Xplod 760 watt, $90/OBO. Pyramid 600 watt, $60/OBO. Both in excellent condition. Call for more info, 355-1799. CELESTRON TELESCOPE: Great condition, call for details. Matt, 426-4187. COME ALONG: Two ton come along. New in box. $20. 8721575, leave message or CRYAN BVT@aol.com. DIGITAL CAMERA: Sony MVCSD88, 1.3 mega pixels. Records on standard floppy. Comes with everything. $75. 862-8269. ELECTRIC KILN, 220V w/some accessories. $300/OBO. Kid’s desk, $50. Pine table w/drawer, $50. 989-8663. ENGAGEMENT: “Betrothal/a hostile encounter or battle.” Oh, the irony. Beautiful 1/2 carat solitaire w/baguettes. Make an offer. 482-2628. FREE 4-ROOM DIRECTV SYSTEM including standard installation. 3 months free 50 + premium channels. Access to over 225 channels! Limited-time offer. S&H, restrictions apply. 800877-1251. (AAN CAN) FREE SLIDING GLASS DOORS: Includes frame. Great for 3-season porch or camp. Come and pick up. 878-7880. GE PROFILE JPG932 30” Gason-Glass built-in Cooktop. Black. Brand new. Never installed. Never used. All parts, manuals, etc. $599. 434-7630. GE REFRIGERATOR: Large, almond color. About 16 y.o. Runs fine. $50. 434-7630. GOLD’S GYM SET: Never been used. XR66, 2-person workout. $950. Renee, 655-0091 ext. 13. LIVING ROOM FURNITURE: Sofa, love seat, and chair with mauve cloth upholstery, and glass coffee and end table. Great condition. $200. 878-3987 weekends and evenings. LORD OF THE RINGS complete trilogy on VHS. Special extended editions. 6 tapes. Totally brand new, still wrapped. $75/OBO. Montpelier, 223-6595. MINI FRIDGE: Gets freezing cold, works excellently. 1.5-2 cubic feet w/freezer. $50/OBO. 355-1799.

OAKWORKS MASSAGE TABLE CART: Brand new condition. Only used twice! Paid $89. Selling for $65. 860-9502. ORIGINAL NES in mostly working condition, w/two controllers and two guns plus 28 games, incl. Excite Bike, Contra, Dr. Mario, Kung Fu, Zelda, etc. $40/OBO. Call 310-7735. RECORDERS: 2 Analog 4-track. Tascam. Make offer. 343-1823. SET OF 4 WINTER studded rims/tires. Used 3 seasons, good condition. Off from Nissan 2wd p/u truck. 14” x 6 lugs. $120 OBO. johnjmcmurry@ yahoo.com or 316-0776. SHOWCASES FROM VON BARGEN’S Fine Diamonds and Jewelry. Moving from 150 to 131 Church St. Cases for sale: 3 metal uprights, 4 cherry floor models. Call 864-0012. STEEL GYM LOCKER: Measures 15x15x79. Painted gray, some wear. Great for garage. $50. Call 872-1575, email CRYANBVT@ AOL.COM. SUN SYSTEM from Sunlight Supply, remote ballast. 400 watt HPS lights. Call Neil 439-3055. SYLVAN CLASSIC FISHERMAN BOAT: 14’, steering console, 20hp Mercury, elec start, trailer w/power winch, depth gauge, trolling motor. $2500. 893-7102. TECHNIC 1200S: Two “Tech 12” turntables in good working order. The defacto standard for DJs many years now. Recently reconditioned and tuned up. Even the pop-up lights work! $600 for the pair. Call 401569-2663. TWO TIER LIGHT GARDEN by Gardeners Supply. Used very little. Perfect for seedlings and houseplants. $250. ($400 new) 734-1778. UPRIGHT FREEZER: Sears ColdSpot 15.9 cu. ft. About 16 years old. Little used. $125. 434-7630. USED WOMEN’S SNOWBOARD: Killer Loop 146 in decent condition. Brand new, never used women’s size 8.5 snowboard boots, Burton Women’s Freestyle. $150/OBO. Call 310-7735. WE HAVE ROAD CASES for anyone that is willing to pick up and haul away! Great condition, many sizes. First come, first serve, hurry! $150/OBO. 859-2125. WEIDER MULTI STATION Total Home Gym: You must assemble, $50. 877-3893. WOOD STOVE for sale. Hearthstone wood stove with plenty of piping. Great for home or camp. In good shape. Asking $300 or best offer. 764-4021.

4 childcare

AFTER-SCHOOL CHILDCARE wanted, three days a week. 2:30-5:30 p.m. Children ages 8 and 9. Burlington, New North End. 865-1733. FULL-TIME NANNY NEEDED for 2 kids, starting July 1. Good pay, laid-back family. Must be experienced with infants and toddlers, make a long-term commitment, have driver’s license. Email if interested, timand melisa@comcast.net.

4 computer svcs. In-House

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4 entertainment

EXOTICA DANCERS featuring girls going wild for your next birthday, bachelor party or funon-one show. 802-658-1464. New talent welcome. PLATTSBURGH-AREA: New adult night club. Dancers wanted. Not Diamond Dolls. 518569-0127.

4 financial

A CASH NOW OFFER: Turn future money from lawsuit settlements, lottery awards and annuity payments into cash now. Free quotes. 800-815-3503 or www.ppicash.com. (AAN CAN) CASH: Immediate cash for structured settlements, annuities, law suits, inheritances, mortgage notes and cash flows. J.G. Wentworth, 800-794-7310. (AAN CAN)

4 furniture

BEAUTIFUL DINING SET: Glass hutch, solid base, solid wood maple table w/six ladder back chairs. Comes with leaf. Seats 810. Must sell. Will sacrifice $600 for both or can sell separately. 482-2628.

>NOT FOR KIDS> 18+ ONLY >NOT FOR KIDS>


7Dclassifieds.com | SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005 | 7D Classifieds 21B

BED: Gold bond, double, box spring and mattress. $50/OBO. Montpelier, 223-6595. BUFFET: Genuine Cushman colonial crafted in Bennington, VT. Solid maple, exquisite, fine quality. Mint condition. 48”x19 3/4”x34 1/4” deep. $500. 863-9207. COUCH: Maple frame w/cushions. Double bed, mattress and box spring. Coffee table. Cabinet for stereo, TV, etc. Best offer! 453-2076. DESK: 20” x 96”. Solid maple. 6 drawers. Excellent condition. $75. 802-578-8282. LOVE SEAT: Great condition. Nice stained wood frame very sturdy and comfortable. Made by This End Up. Solid blue cushions/ padded armrests. Asking $150. 734-6227. MID-CENTURY MODERN: Great pair of Viko armless vinyl chairs, charcoal gray and white pattern, $100. Aqua vinyl Thonet chair, bentwood frame, $40. Call 879-0419. NICE ENTERTAINMENT CENTER: Hardwood. Lots of storage space. Holds 25” TV. $100. You haul away. Call 324-3100.

4 lost & found

FOUND: California driver’s license and Vermont Federal Credit Union card. Name: Brain F. evangl11@netzero.net. LOST: Red and white Hawaiian bandana. Mardi Gras 2/26, Hood parking lot party. Sentimental value. Reward. Call 863-9513.

4 music for sale

ARTIST CELLO 4/4: Solid carved maple w/German spruce top. Ebony fittings, D’Addario Helicore strings, Joh Krausch bow w/padded case. Bought new, never got to use! $1200. 802-238-2679. BOSS RC-20 loop station, $200. Boss BD, 2 blues driver, $50. Packaging and manuals incl. 877-6624. CELLOS, STRING BASSES, VIOLINS, VIOLAS: New and old instruments, sales, restoration and repair. Experienced luthiers. Paul Perley Cellos, in business since 1988. 802-229-1501, pperleycellos@aol.com. FENDER CYBER DELUXE: Likenew $500. Like new Fender Acoustisonic SFX 2 $550. Used Fender Prinston Chorus Amp $250. Nice Frankenstrat w/case $300 229-6219. HAMMERED DULCIMER: Mahogany and maple, $75/OBO. 877-3893. POWERED SPEAKER: 400-watt Yamaha MSR400 with 15-inch speaker in great condition, can be used for self-contained PA system, extension for existing PA or instrument amplifier. Microphone, line and 1/4 inch inputs. 3 years old, no glitches. Check out specs on emusic gear.com. Asking $350. Call 658-5522, please leave message. SWR SM-400S BASS AMP with SKB rack, $599. SWR Goliath JR III, $325. Both excellent condition. 877-3893. YAMAHA VIBRAPHONE: $1200/OBO. 496-5315.

4 music instruct.

CLAW HAMMER BANJO: Learn Appalachian style pickin’ and strummin’. Emphasis on rhythm, musicality and technique. $25/ hour. Call Mara, 862-3581. DRUM LESSONS: Energetic instructor with touring/recording experience seeks students of all ages. Emphasis on technique, musicianship, style. Learn more at stevehadeka.com or steve @stevehadeka.com. 658-6205

GUITAR: All styles/levels. Emphasis on developing strong technique, thorough musicianship, personal style. Paul Asbell (Unknown Blues Band, Kilimanjaro, Sneakers Jazz Band, etc.), 862-7696, www.paulasbell.com. GUITAR: Berklee graduate with classical background offers lessons in guitar, theory and ear training. Individualized, step-bystep approach. I enjoy teaching all ages/styles/levels. Call Rick Belford at 864-7195. JOY AND CREATIVITY! Classical Jazz and Free Improvisation piano lessons. All ages, all levels. William Michael, 802-8996700 or 355-6234. PIANO AND/OR IMPROVISATION: Lessons in theory, harmony and improvisation for all instrumentalists and vocalists. All ages! Beginning through advanced concepts taught with clarity and patience. Questions? Call Shane Hardiman, 279-8859, Winooski. hipkeys@lycos.com. PRIVATE GUITAR INSTRUCTION: Essex Junction. 872-8861 or franky.andreas@verizon.net. PROFESSIONAL MUSICIAN w/25 years experience offering guitar/bass lessons, songwriting &/or improvisational support. Call D. Davis: 363-9900.

4 music services

COSMIC HILL RECORDING: MIDI and production services. Years of experience in writing, playing, recording and production. Dedicated to making your music sound great. $25 per hour. 496-3166. Moretown, VT. NORTHERN VERMONT MUSIC Protools Recording Studio, mastering services, remote recording. Special block rates. CD/DVD duplication. Songwriter demos. Backing tracks avail. Call 802744-6446 or http://www.north ernvermontmusic.com.

4 musicians avail

BASS PLAYER: Professional and experienced. Looking for a band, older country, Western swing, rockabilly, etc. Call Paul, 877-3893.

4 musicians wanted BASS PLAYER WANTED: Ready to gig band looking for a bass player. Vocals, back vocals a plus. 802-288-1528. DJ: Spirit of Ethan Allen needs DJ for weddings and parties. Need person who is entertaining, knows music and electronics. 802-862-8300. FEMALE VOCALIST for prof. funk/soul band. Experience is important, instrumentalist is a plus. Be the star you’ve always wanted to be. Call Jay, 578-0741. SUCCESSFUL IRISH PUB BAND waiting for the right musician with Celtic attitude, willing to give our music priorty. We are dedicated to our band, friendly and supportive. All calls welcome, 802-865-4319. WANTED: WESTERN SWING KEYBOARD WIZARD. Rick & The Ramblers Western Swing Band seeks an experienced keyboard player who can handle parts for section work and boogie down, too. Summer gigs, mostly daytime weekend concerts, special events & festivals. No smoky bars. Check out our website, www.rickandtheramblers.com and call Rick, (802) 864-6674. WATERBURY GARAGE BAND needs reliable bass player for Friday night practice & gigs. Originals. I have garage & amp. Call Glenn 244-6126.

7D CLASSIFIEDSLISTING

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BEATLES ALBUMS, life size poster and individual pictures. Best offer. 603-315-7892.

4 pets

MOLOCCAN COCKATOO: Friendly, healthy, trainable, great sense of humor. Selling due to family problems. Not for breeders, only inquiries with previous large parrot experience please. Call 660-4897 or blondemss@ hotmail.com.

4 photography

FEMALE MODELS: 15-35, needed for fashion shoots and other projects. No experience needed but models must be attractive and in good shape. Compensation in pictures, experience and possible start in modeling industry. Call David Russell Photography, 862-1172 for interview or email rusldp@juno.com.

4 tutoring

SCIENCE TUTOR: 20 years teaching experience. Master’s degree. Grades 7-12 and college students. Reasonable rates. 802863-8823.

received in the Clerk/Treasurer’s Office by 4:30 p.m., Wednesday, April 6, 2005. Appointments to these commissions/boards will occur at the April 11, 2005 City Council Meeting. Applicants must be nominated by a member of the City Council to be considered for a position; a list of Council members is also available at the Clerk/Treasurer’s Office. Please call the Clerk/Treasurer’s Office at 865-7136 for further information. STATE OF VERMONT CHITTENDEN SUPERIOR COURT CHITTENDEN COUNTY, SS. DOCKET NO. S0001-05 CnC Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., As nominee for GMAC Mortgage Corporation, Plaintiff v. Michael W. Brace, USAA Federal Savings Bank and Occupants residing at 5044 Spear Street, Shelburne, Vermont, Defendants SUMMONS & ORDER FOR PUBLICATION

TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT: Michael W. Brace You are hereby summoned and required to serve upon Joshua B. Lobe, Esq., plaintiff’s attorney, HELP A SENIOR LIVE INDEwhose address is P.O. Box 4493, PENDENTLY: The Champlain 35 King Street, Burlington, Valley Agency on Aging (CVAA) Vermont 05406, an Answer to is seeking kind souls who can plaintiff’s Complaint in the donate one hour per week to above entitled action within visit with a senior and/or assist forty-one (41) days after the with essential tasks such as grodate of the first publication of cery shopping or light housethis Summons, which is February keeping. Info, contact Brett or 28, 2005. If you fail to do so, Tom, 800-642-5119. judgment by default will be taken against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. Your Answer must also be filed MODERN 50S AND 60S FURNIwith the Court. Unless otherTURE by Eames, Knoll, Herman wise provided in Rule 13(a). Miller, Bertoia, Saarinen, Aalto, Your Answer must state as a Fritz Hansen, etc. Sometimes Counterclaim any related claim called “space-age” or “retro”. which you may have against the Also interested in pottery, plaintiff, or you will thereafter ceramics and lighting from this be barred from making such era. 864-9386. claim in any other action. YOUR USED SOUND OR SYNTH MODANSWER MUST STATE SUCH A ULE, half or single space and COUNTERCLAIM WHETHER OR designed for live performance. NOT THE RELIEF DEMANDED IN 951-1966. THE COMPLAINT IS FOR DAMWANTED: Bowflex in good conAGE COVERED BY A LIABILITY dition. Please call 879-6961, INSURANCE POLICY UNDER leave message. WHICH THE INSURER HAS THE RIGHT OR OBLIGATION TO CONDUCT THE DEFENSE. If you believe that the plaintiff is not Burlington City Council entitled to all or part of the OPENINGS claim set forth in the Complaint, BURLINGTON CITY COMMISor if you believe that you have a SIONS/BOARDS Counterclaim against the plainBoard of Assessors tiff, you may wish to consult an Term Expires 3/31/06 One openattorney. If you feel that you ing cannot afford to pay an attorFence Viewer Term Expires ney’s fee, you may ask the clerk 6/30/05 of the Court for information One Opening about places where you may Planning Commission seek legal assistance. Term Expires 6/30/06 Plaintiff’s action is a Complaint One Opening in Foreclosure which alleges that Board of Tax Appeals you have breached the terms of Term Expires 6/30/05 a Promissory Note and Mortgage One Opening Deed dated May 21, 2001. Board of Tax Appeals Plaintiff’s action may effect your Term Expires 6/30/06 interest in the property One Opening described in the Land Records of Telecommunications Advisory the Town of Shelburne at Volume Committee 250, Page 556. The Complaint Term Expires 6/30/07 Two also seeks relief on the Openings. Promissory Note executed by you. A copy of the Complaint is 1 2x1.5-Gaelic College030905 3/7/05 3:38 PM Page Applications are available at the on file and may be obtained at Clerk/Treasurer’s Office, Second the Office of the Clerk of the Floor, City Hall, and must be Superior Court for the County of

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NOTICE OF NON-DISCRIMINATORY POLICY AS TO STUDENTS

The Gaelic College Foundation, USA, Inc. admits students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of its educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic or other school administered programs.

www.gaeliccollege.edu

Chittenden, State of Vermont. It appearing from Affidavit duly filed in the above entitled action that service cannot be made with due diligence by any of the methods prescribed in V.R.C.P. 4(d) through (f) inclusive, it is hereby ORDERED that service of the above process shall be made upon defendant, Michael W. Brace, by publication pursuant to V.R.C.P. 4(g). This Order shall be published once a week for three consecutive weeks on February 28, 2005, March 7, 2005 and March 14, 2005 in Seven Days. A copy of this Order shall be mailed to defendants at their address if their address is known. DATED at Burlington, Vermont this 16th day of February, 2005. ____/s/ Richard W. Norton_______ Hon. Richard W. Norton Presiding Judge Chittenden Superior Court JBL165-8

Superior Court for the County of Chittenden, State of Vermont. It appearing from Affidavit duly filed in the above entitled action that service cannot be made with due diligence by any of the methods prescribed in V.R.C.P. 4(d) through (f) inclusive, it is hereby ORDERED that service of the above process shall be made upon defendant, Michael W. Brace, by publication pursuant to V.R.C.P. 4(g). This Order shall be published once a week for three consecutive weeks on February 28, 2005, March 7, 2005 and March 14, 2005 in Seven Days. A copy of this Order shall be mailed to defendants at their address if their address is known. DATED at Burlington, Vermont this 16th day of February, 2005. _/s/ Richard W. Norton______ Hon. Richard W. Norton Presiding Judge Chittenden Superior Court JBL165-10a

STATE OF VERMONT CHITTENDEN SUPERIOR COURT CHITTENDEN COUNTY, SS. DOCKET NO. S1664-04 CnC

STATE OF VERMONT CHITTENDEN SUPERIOR COURT CHITTENDEN COUNTY, SS. DOCKET NO. S0014-05 CnC

Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., As nominee for WMC Mortgage Corporation, Plaintiff v. Michael W. Brace and Occupants residing at 19 Irish Cove Road, South Burlington, Vermont, Defendants

JPMorgan Chase Bank, NA, Successor by merger with Bank One, NA, Plaintiff v. Katherine L. Olgiati and Occupants residing at 104 Maple Leaf Road, Underhill, Vermont, Defendants

SUMMONS & ORDER FOR PUBLICATION TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT: Michael W. Brace You are hereby summoned and required to serve upon Joshua B. Lobe, Esq., plaintiff’s attorney, whose address is P.O. Box 4493, 35 King Street, Burlington, Vermont 05406, an Answer to plaintiff’s Complaint in the above entitled action within forty-one (41) days after the date of the first publication of this Summons, which is February 28, 2005. If you fail to do so, judgment by default will be taken against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. Your Answer must also be filed with the Court. Unless otherwise provided in Rule 13(a). Your Answer must state as a Counterclaim any related claim which you may have against the plaintiff, or you will thereafter be barred from making such claim in any other action. YOUR ANSWER MUST STATE SUCH A COUNTERCLAIM WHETHER OR NOT THE RELIEF DEMANDED IN THE COMPLAINT IS FOR DAMAGE COVERED BY A LIABILITY INSURANCE POLICY UNDER WHICH THE INSURER HAS THE RIGHT OR OBLIGATION TO CONDUCT THE DEFENSE. If you believe that the plaintiff is not entitled to all or part of the claim set forth in the Complaint, or if you believe that you have a Counterclaim against the plaintiff, you may wish to consult an attorney. If you feel that you cannot afford to pay an attorney’s fee, you may ask the clerk of the Court for information about places where you may seek legal assistance. Plaintiff’s action is a Complaint in Foreclosure which alleges that you have breached the terms of a Promissory Note and Mortgage Deed dated May 14, 2003. Plaintiff’s action may effect your interest in the property described in the Land Records of the City of South Burlington at Volume 612, Page 1. The Complaint also seeks relief on the Promissory Note executed by you. A copy of the Complaint is on file and may be obtained at the Office of the Clerk of the

SUMMONS & ORDER FOR PUBLICATION TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT: Katherine L. Olgiati You are hereby summoned and required to serve upon Joshua B. Lobe, Esq., plaintiff’s attorney, whose address is P.O. Box 4493, 35 King Street, Burlington, Vermont 05406, an Answer to plaintiff’s Complaint in the above entitled action within forty-one (41) days after the date of the first publication of this Summons, which is February 28, 2005. If you fail to do so, judgment by default will be taken against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. Your Answer must also be filed with the Court. Unless otherwise provided in Rule 13(a). Your Answer must state as a Counterclaim any related claim which you may have against the plaintiff, or you will thereafter be barred from making such claim in any other action. YOUR ANSWER MUST STATE SUCH A COUNTERCLAIM WHETHER OR NOT THE RELIEF DEMANDED IN THE COMPLAINT IS FOR DAMAGE COVERED BY A LIABILITY INSURANCE POLICY UNDER WHICH THE INSURER HAS THE RIGHT OR OBLIGATION TO CONDUCT THE DEFENSE. If you believe that the plaintiff is not entitled to all or part of the claim set forth in the Complaint, or if you believe that you have a Counterclaim against the plaintiff, you may wish to consult an attorney. If you feel that you cannot afford to pay an attorney’s fee, you may ask the clerk of the Court for information about places where you may seek legal assistance. Plaintiff’s action is a Complaint in Foreclosure which alleges that you have breached the terms of a Promissory Note and Mortgage Deed dated December 29, 1999. Plaintiff’s action may effect your interest in the property described in the Land Records of the Town of Underhill at Volume 100, Page 187. The Complaint also seeks relief on the Promissory Note executed by you. A copy of the Complaint is on file and may be obtained at the Office of the Clerk of the Superior Court for the County of

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22B | march 09-16, 2005 | SEVEN DAYS

7D SUPPORTGROUPS Chittenden, State of Vermont. It appearing from Affidavit duly filed in the above entitled action that service cannot be made with due diligence by any of the methods prescribed in V.R.C.P. 4(d) through (f) inclusive, it is hereby ORDERED that service of the above process shall be made upon defendant, Katherine L. Olgiati, by publication pursuant to V.R.C.P. 4(g). This Order shall be published once a week for three consecutive weeks on February 28, 2005, March 7, 2005 and March 14, 2005 in Seven Days. A copy of this Order shall be mailed to defendants at their address if their address is known.

HEPATITIS C SUPPORT GROUP: Thursday, March 10, 6-7:30 p.m. McClure Multigenerational Center. North Winooski Ave., Burlington. Support group for those who have Hepatitis C, their family members and friends. CANDIDA SUPPORT GROUP: Now forming. Share stories. 860-9506. DIABETES EDUCATION and Support Group of Chittenden County meets the third Thursday of every month at the Williston Federated Church, 6:30-8 p.m. We often have guest speakers. Info, 847-2278. CHADD SUPPORT GROUP MEETING: CHADD is a support organization for children and DATED at Burlington, Vermont adults with Attention Deficit/ this 16th day of February, 2005. Hyperactivity Disorder. Every second Tuesday of the month at Champlain College, 7-8:30 p.m. ___/s/ Richard W. in room 217 in the Global and Norton_________ Technology Building. Hon. Richard W. Norton MOOD DISORDER SUPPORT Presiding Judge GROUP: Every Monday, 4:30-6 Chittenden Superior Court p.m. Pastor United Church. Info, JBL165-9 contact Lorraine, 485-4934. WOMEN HELPING BATTERED STATE OF VERMONT PROBATE WOMEN offers free, confidential COURT educational support groups for DISTRICT OF CHITTENDEN women who have fled, are fleeIN RE THE ESTATE OF JILL A. ing or are still living in a world ROBERTSON where intimate partner violence LATE OF SOUTH BURLINGTON, is present. WHBW offers a variVERMONT ety of groups to meet the diverse needs of women and NOTICE TO CREDITORS children in this community. To the creditors of the estate of Info, 658-1996. Jill A. Robertson late of South AUTISM: Free support group for Burlington. parents of children with autism. First Monday of each month, 7-9 I have been appointed as perp.m., 600 Blair Park Rd., Suite sonal representative of the 240, Williston. Info, 660-7240 or above named estate. All credivisit http://health.groups. tors having claims against the yahoo.com/group/AutismSupport estate must present their claims Daily/. in writing within four months of VT PARENTS OF FOOD ALLERthe first publication of this GY CHILDREN EMAIL SUPnotice. The claim must be prePORT GROUP: Info, contact sented to me at the address listMaryKay Hill, VTPFAC@verizon. ed below with a copy filed with net or call 802-373-0351. the register of the Probate MIXED GENDER COMING OUT Court. The claim will be forever SUPPORT GROUP: Every 2nd barred if it is not presented as and 4th Thursday, 6:30 p.m. Codescribed within the four month facilitated by supportive peers deadline. and mental-health professionals and open to all lesbian, gay, Dated: March 4, 2005 bisexual transgender and quesCherrill S. Rowell tioning adults age 23 and up. 248 Highlands Drive Check out this group meeting at Williston, VT 05495 R.U.1.2?. (802) 878-3454 ARE YOU A PARTNER OR close ally of a transgender or transAddress of Probate Court: sexual person? We have a supProbate Court, District of port group designed for your Chittenden unique needs. The second P.O. Box 511 Wednesday of every month at 6 Burlington, VT 05402 p.m. R.U.1.2 Community Center, 34 Elmwood Ave., Burlington. Info, 860-7812. TRANS SOCIAL AND SUPPORT DON’T SEE A SUPPORT group GROUP: First Wednesday, 6:30 here that meets your needs? Call p.m. Looking for peer support United Way GET-INFO (a confiamong other transgendered dential help line) 652-4636, folks? Need a safe space to relax Monday-Friday, 8:30 a.m. and be yourself? Check out this 4:30 p.m. group meeting at R.U.1.2? DREAM GROUP: A supportive 60+ SUPPORT GROUP: Ongoing dreamgroup for those serious weekly support group for men about exploring dreams. Janis and women over the age of 60. Comb MA facillitator, will share Share your strengths and struga technique called Embodied gles with this particular stage of Dreanwork, an experiential life. We have fun! Facilitated method of working with dreams. by Barbara L. Kester, Ph.D. Info, 253 -7959. 657-3668. THE CHAMPLAIN VALLEY MOOD DISORDER SUPPORT EAST CHAPTER of the GROUP: First group meeting, Compassionate Friends meets on Monday, November 8, 4:15-6 the third Tuesday of each p.m., Northfield United Church, month, 7-9 p.m. at the Christ Main St. Info, 485-4934 or Church Presbyterian, 400 email suppgrp@yahoo.com. Redstone Campus, UVM. Info, TOPS (Taking Off Pounds 482-5319. The meetings are for Sensibly) Chapter meeting, St. parents, grandparents and adult Francis Xavier School, Winooski. siblings who have experienced Sundays, 6 p.m. weigh-in, the death of a child at any age 6:30-7:30 p.m. meeting. from any cause. 5x2-newweb2005 2/1/05 11:37 Page 1 655or Bennye, call Fred Info, AM 3317 or Patricia, 658-6904.

4 support groups

INTERESTED IN WRITING for children? Support and critique group meets monthly. Call Anne, 861-6000 or anne@booksby me.us. NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS is a group of recovering addicts who live without the use of drugs. It costs nothing to join. The only requirement for membership is a desire to stop using. Info, 8624516, or visit www.together. net/~cvana. held in Burlington, South Burlington and Colchester. For more information, call 8608388 or toll-free, 1-866-972-5266. SURVIVORS OF SUICIDE: Support group for those who have lost a loved one to suicide. Meets the 2nd Wednesday of every month at the Holiday Inn in South Burlington, (1068 Williston Rd.), from 6-7:30 p.m. For more information, please contact Cory Gould, 223-4111 or cgould1136@earthlink.net. Sponsored by the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention-VT. SEX AND LOVE ADDICTS ANONYMOUS: 12-step recovery group. Do you have a problem with sex or relationships? We can help. Sunday meetings, 78:30 p.m. Men call Sandy, 8635708. Women call Valerie, 655-9478. SUICIDE SURVIVORS GROUP: Survivors and their families meet monthly for mutual support in the Burlington area, 6-7 p.m. Call for location, 223-4111. SMOKING CESSATION GROUP: Willing to kick the habit? This free, five-week program helps quitters to follow through. Community Health Center of Burlington, 5:30-6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 864-6309. DOES YOUR PARTNER/ SPOUSE HAVE AD/HD (Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder)? Support group meets every other week in Burlington to share experiences, challenges, laughs, resources. Want more information? Write addpart ner@yahoo.com. WEDNESDAYS CIRCLE: A Transpersonal support group, every Wed., 6 p.m., Innerharmony Community Wellness Center, Rt. 100N, Rochester, VT. 767-6092. A sharing circle focusing on personal growth, transformation, spirituality and healing, led by Jim Dodds. DECLUTTERS SUPPORT GROUP: Are you ready to make improvements but find it overwhelming? Maybe 2 or 3 of us can get together to help each simplify. 453-3612. PARENTS TOGETHER: Support group will be meeting in Rutland on Monday evenings. Snacks and childcare provided. All groups are free and confidential. Please call Amy at 2475460 for more information. WOMEN CHANGING: A continuous educational support group for women who are interested in changing patterns in their lives. Wednesdays-ongoing. 12:30-2 p.m. Call Angie at AWARE in Hardwick, 472-6463. SUPPORT GROUP FOR WOMEN who have experienced intimate partner abuse, facilitated by Battered Women’s Services and Shelter of Washington County. Please call 1-877-543-9498 for more info. WANTED: Fellow painters to get together bi-weekly for coffee and to discuss our work. Support each other’s creativity! Show your work. Meet at local downtown coffee shops. Call 658-2976, if interested.

AHOY BREAST CANCER SURVIVORS: Join our support group where the focus is on living, not on the disease. We are a team of dragon boaters. Learn all about this paddle sport and its healthgiving, life-affirming qualities. Any age. No athletic experience needed. Call Linda at 802-4344423 or email: dragonheartver mont@gmavt.net or go to: www.dragonheartvermont.org. SELF-REALIZATION: Social/support group for likeminded people interested in spirituality, yoga, psychic experiences, transcendence and transformation. Burlington. If interested, call Jill at 877-3375 or email jlo@together.net. NAKED IN VERMONT: The premier Nudist/Skinnydipper organization in Vermont offering information library, message board, chat room, yahoo group, and more. (ALL FREE) Visit www.nakedinvermont.com. SCLERODERMA FOUNDATION New England: Info, Blythe Leonard, 878-0732 or atblythel@aol.com. WOMEN’S WEIGHT LOSS SUPPORT GROUP: Do we know what to do? Yes! Do we do it? Not always! Sometimes the answer is mutual support — for free! Let’s decide together what works for us. I want to start — do you? Anne, 861-6000. BIPOLAR SUPPORT GROUP open to new members. Meets downtown. Our goal is to become healthy and happy. For info, call Gerhard at 864-3103. ALS (LOU GEHRIG’S DISEASE) monthly support group: For patients, caregivers and loved ones who are living or have lived with ALS. Third Thursday of the month, 1-3 p.m. Jim’s House, 1266 Creamery Rd., Williston. Info and directions, 802-8628882 or vt@alsanne.org. AL-ANON: Thursdays, 12:301:30 p.m. at the AWARE office, 88 High St., Hardwick. Info, 472-6463. WOMEN IN TRANSITION: Join a support/social group for women who are separated or divorced. The goal is to form a circle of friends for support and social activities. If interested email Katherine at MKR27609@ aol.com. SMART RECOVERY: For info, contact Bob at 425-4058 or email carmody@madriver.com. BRAIN INJURY ASSOCIATION of Vermont: Daytime support group meets the second Thursday of each month at the Fanny Allen Hospital in Colchester, from 12-2 p.m. For more info, contact Polly Erickson at 847-6941. METHADONE ANONYMOUS: A medication-assisted recovery support group. Tuesdays, 7-8 p.m. The Alano Club. Directions: Rt. 15 Fort Ethan Allen entrance, Barnes Ave., third right on to Hegeman Ave., #74 on left. All are welcome. TRANS PARTNERS support group: Meet and talk w/other partners of transgendered/transsexual people. The second Friday of every month. R.U.1.2? Community Center, 6 p.m. 860-RU12. ARE YOU A BUTCH, F2M, StoneButch, TGButch, TransMan, Femme, High Femme or any other description of Butch, FtM or Femme/feminine woman? If so, join us as we plan fun activities and offer each other resources, support and friendship within the Butch/FtMFemme world. For more info, contact Miss Morpheus at miss morpheus1@yahoo.com.

HARD-OF-HEARING support group: I’m starting a support group for adults who have a hearing loss that affects the quality of their work/family/ social life. Let’s share personal experiences and knowledge of hearing-aid technology. Marlene, 865-9781. SKINNYDIPPERS UNITE! Visit Vermont Au Naturel. Join other naturists and like-minded people for support, discussions and more! www.vermontau naturel.com. PARENTS TOGETHER support groups: Would you like to talk and share ideas with other parents about the joys and challenges of children? Support groups for all parents. Desireah, 796-3119. MENTAL ILLNESSES: The National Alliance for the Mentally Ill holds support meetings for the families and friends of the mentally ill at Howard Center, corner of Flynn and Pine. Second and fourth Tuesdays of every month at 7 p.m. Park in Pine St. lot and walk down ramp. 862-6683 for info. NONCUSTODIAL SUPPORT group for parents. Contact Bill Bagdon, 434-6495. ARE YOU UNABLE TO get out of debt? Do you spend more than you earn? Is it a problem for you? Get help at Debtor’s Anonymous. Wednesdays, 7:308:30 p.m. The Alano Club, 74 Hegeman Ave., Fort Ethan Allen, Colchester. Contact Valerie P. at 324-7847. BRAIN INJURY: Open to people who sustained a brain injury, their caregivers and family. Expert speakers often scheduled. 1st Wed. of every month, 6-8 p.m. Fanny Allen Campus, Colchester. Call Barb Winters, 434-7244. LESBIAN, GAY, BISEXUAL, Transgender, Queer and Questioning: Support groups for survivors of partner violence, sexual violence and bias/hate crimes. Free and confidential. SafeSpace, 863-0003 or 866869-7341 (toll-free). MENTAL HEALTH RECOVERY group: support and education for people with psychiatric challenges. Joan, 865-6135. FAMILY/FRIENDS OF THOSE suffering from Alzheimer’s Disease and Dementia: second Monday of the month, 4-5 p.m. The Arbors. 985-8600. SURVIVORS OF SEXUAL violence: Form contacts and discuss ways to begin healing. Women’s Rape Crisis Center, Burlington, 6-7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 864-0555. DIVORCED PEOPLE: If you are separated, thinking of separating, in the process of divorce, or just divorced, I’m thinking about starting a loose group where such people can talk, whine, have some fun, and maybe even get together. Perhaps there is life after him or her. If interested email Bob at bberman@ttiglobal.com or call/lv msg. at 802-388-0779. WIDOWS & WIDOWERS: Looking for persons interested in forming a support group for activities in the Burlington area. Info, 656-3280. “HELLENBACH” CANCER support: Every other Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. Middlebury. Call to verify meeting place. Info, 3886107. People living with cancer and their caretakers convene for support.

DEBTORS ANONYMOUS: All men and women welcome. There are currently four meetings per week. Mon., 6-7:15 p.m. Wed. 78 a.m. Thurs., 7:30-8:30 p.m., Sat. 10-11:30 a.m. Brenda, 658-9278. BURLINGTON MEN’S GROUP: Ongoing Tuesdays, 7-9 p.m. Free. Info, 877-3742. Area men are invited to join this weekly group for varied discussions and drumming. PROSTATE CANCER: The second and fourth Tuesday of the month, 5 p.m. Board Room of Fanny Allen Hospital, Colchester. Info, 800-639-1888. This “manto-man” support group deals with disease. OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS: Daily meetings in various locations. Free. Info, 863-2655. Overeaters get support in addressing their problem. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: Daily meetings in various locations. Free. Info, 860-8382. Want to overcome a drinking problem? Take the first step of 12 and join a group in your area. AL-ANON: Ongoing Wednesdays, 8 p.m. First Congregational Church, N. Winooski Ave., Burlington. Free. Info, 6556512. Seven other locations also. Info, 860-8388. Do you have a friend or relative with an alcohol problem? Al-Anon can help. DOMESTIC AND SEXUAL violence: WomenSafe offers free, confidential support groups in Addison County for women who have experienced domestic or sexual violence. Info, 388-4205. NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS: A group of recovering addicts who live without the use of drugs. It costs nothing to be a member. The only requirement is a desire to stop using. For meeting info, call 802-862-4516 or visit www.together.net/cvana. SEX AND LOVE ADDICTS Anonymous: Sundays, 7 p.m. Free. Info, write to P.O. Box 5843, Burlington, VT 05402. Get help through this weekly 12step program. HEROIN 101: Educational and informational support group. Free. First Wednesday of every month, 5:30-7:30 p.m. GMNC. 275 College St. Info, 860-3567. ALZHEIMER’S CAREGIVERS: Burlington, meets at Birchwood Terrace, 2nd & 4th Wed., at 1:30 p.m. Colchester, meets at FAHC, Fanny Allen Campus, 1st Thurs. of month at 3 and 7 p.m. Shelburne, meets at The Arbors, 2nd Tues. of month at 10 a.m. DEMENTIA & ALZHEIMER’S disease support group for the caregivers: Barre, meets at Rowan Ct., 4th Wed. of month at 3 p.m. Montpelier, 338 River St., 2nd Wed. of month at 7 p.m. PARKINSON’S DISEASE: meets 1st Tues. of each month at the Heineburg Sr. Ctr., Heineburg Ave., Burlington. Lunch is avail. by calling 863-3982 in advance. CANCER SUPPORT GROUP: For people with cancer and their families. UHC Campus, 1 South Prospect St., Arnold 2 Resource Rm. Every 2nd and 4th Mon., 56:30 p.m. Info, 847-8400. WOMEN’S CANCER SUPPORT group: UHC campus, 1 South Prospect St., Arnold 2 Resource Rm. Every 1st and 3rd Mon., 56:30 p.m. Info, 847-8400.

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7Dclassifieds.com | SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005 | 7D Classifieds 23B

7D ONTHEROADVEHICLES 4 automotive ACURA INTEGRA GS, 1992: Black, alloys, loaded, auto, highway miles, CA car, very well maintained by second owner. $1700/OBO. Must see. Call 310-8371. AUDI 200 SEDAN 1989. Runs great. Mint black exterior and interior. Sunroof. Asking $1000. Call Dave Justice at 316-0459. BUICK PARK AVE, 1994: Blue, loaded, leather, great condition in/out, new snows, all-weathers, 116 K. $2995. 479-1034. CHRYSLER LEBARON, 1987: Coupe. Only 72 K. Solid car. Asking $700. 999-1239. DREADING SELLING YOUR FOREIGN CAR? It takes so much of your time to advertise, take phone calls, set up test drives, haggle over the money, etc. We’ll do the work for you! Get top dollar for the sale of your car! www. autocraftsmen.com, 2233563, we’ll gladly explain the details! HONDA CIVIC EX, 2001: Blue, 2-door, FWD, 24 K, STD, excellent condition, fully loaded w/sun roof. $10,900. 872-0805. HONDA PASSPORT SUV, 1999 Silver power windows V6 4WD 70k miles. AC, sunroof. Non-smoker, good tires. Great condition. Tim/Deb evenings 658-5637.

www.ShearerPontiac.com

HYUNDAI ACCENT, 1999: 87K, 2-door, good condition. Dual side airbags, antilock brakes, AM/FM, audio cassette. Winter tires + good set of all seasons. Asking $2500. Call 863-5734. JETTA GLS, 2000: Green, 5speed, 54 K, power windows/locks, cruise, sun roof, 6-disc CD changer, alloys, new winters. Book, $11,300. Asking $10,000. Call 802279-6902. MITSUBISHI ECLIPSE GT, 2000: V6, 5-speed, hatchback, 69 K. $10,900. Warranty until 100 K. Black, leather, AM/FM/CD changer/ cassette, moon roof, power seat. 249-2372. PONTIAC BONNEVILLE SE, 2004: Sedan, 4-door, white, auto, FWD, A/C, power steering/windows/locks, tilt, cruise, CD. 16,353 K. Best price, $14,683. Call Shearer Pontiac, 658-1212. PONTIAC GRAND AM SE, 2002: Sedan, 4-door, silver, auto, power steering/locks, ABS, CD, auto, FWD. 32,805 K. Best price, $8967. Call shearer Pontiac, 658-1212. PONTIAC GRAND AM SE, 2005: Sedan, 4-door, beige/tan, V6, auto, FWD, A/C, power steering/windows/locks, cruise, CD. 13,868 K. Best price, $14,647. Call Shearer Pontiac, 658-1212. PONTIAC GRAND PRIX GTP, 1995: 2-door, auto, A/C, power windows/locks/sun roof. Loaded, hood scoop, rear spoiler, white, well maintained, 128 K highway miles. Asking $3600. 802525-6531.

CARPOOL CONNECTION Call 864-CCTA to respond to a listing or to be listed.

If you don’t see your route listed here, call 864-CCTA today and we’ll send you a FREE matchlist of commuters in your area.

Don’t see your commute listed here? Call 864-CCTA for additional listings or to get your commute posted here! Barre/Montpelier to IBM: Looking for vanpoolers to share a commute. We work the N2 shift. If you’re interested, we have space beginning Feb. 2. Please ref: IBMVAN. Burlington to South Burlington: Looking for a ride. My hours are Mon-Fri from 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m., but a little flexible. If you can help, please ref # 41070. Jericho to Burlington: Looking to share a commute Mon-Fri from 8

TOYOTA COROLLA DX WAGON: 1995, blue-green. Body great, but needs new engine. Have all service records. $1995 OBO. Alice 878-8525. VOLKSWAGEN JETTA GLX, 1999: 5-speed, manual, 62 K. Original owner, excellent condition, 6-CD changer, power windows/doors, snow tires, ski rack, red exterior/ black interior. $8500. Call Dan, 864-4435. VOLKSWAGEN MOTOR: Air cooled, high performance, 041 heads, webers and kadrons. Needs to be assembled. $550. 893-2743, between 6-9 p.m.

4 trucks 20 FT TRUCK CAMPER, 1978: Generator, fridge, stove, sink, full bathroom, cherry wood floors, sleeps 24. Needs repair to transmission/brakes/water-damaged ceiling/wiring. Once fixed, will run like a dream. If you have a few thousand bucks, this is a steal. $1500/firm. You must arrange tow-away. 454-1082. DODGE DIESEL, 1992: 4x4 3/4 ton extended cab, long bed. Looks and runs great! 218 K, auto, very minor rust. Driven daily. $5000/OBO. 518-569-1273 NORTH STAR TRUCK CAMPER, 2000: For 1/2 tons, extended cab, was on Toyota T-100, great condition, stored inside. Call Joe, 802-373-5521. Serious inquiries only, best offer!

TOYOTA PICKUP, 1994: 135 K, 2WD auto, extended cab, good condition, A/C, CD/ AM/FM, great sound, new snows. Asking $4000. 999-6968. TOYOTA TACOMA, 2004: Only 47 K! Mint condition, 3.4L V6, SR5, all options! Bed liner, 7-year warranty! Must sell! $21,300/OBO. Call 802-598-8785.

4 suvs 1994 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE: V8, AWD. Automatic transmission. Green. Leather interior, AM/FM radio, CD player, PW, PL, PS. High miles. Priced at $3500. 578-5634 CHEVROLET BLAZER SPORT UTILITY, 2004: 4-door, beige/tan, V6, auto, 4WD, LS, power steering/windows/ locks, cruise, CD. 14,121. Best price, $16,935. Call Shearer Pontiac, 658-1212. FORD BRONCO: 1993 green with tan interior V8 351. 4WD. 150K miles. Needs some work. $1000/firm. 318-0488. FORD EXPLORER XLT, 1998: Red, V8, 4WD, 4-door, A/C, cruise, keyless entry, power moon roof/windows/ locks, CD. Great condition! 118 K. $6200/OBO. 310-0567. HONDA ELEMENT EX SPORT UTILITY, 2003: 4door, pewter, auto, 2WD, A/C, power steering/windows/locks, CD, cruise, ABS. 25,795 K. Best price, $17,816. Call Shearer Pontiac, 658-1212.

JEEP CHEROKEE SPORT, 2000: 6 cyl, 4.0 L, new tires, forest green, power locks/windows, Bearcat CB weather band radio, fun to drive! $10,900. 802522-3517. JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE, 2000: Limited, auto, 4WD, silver w/black leather interior, CD, only 65 K. Great winter car. Best price, $14,950. Call Andy, 646-334-7370. JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LAREDO, 2004: 4-door, silver, auto, 4WD, A/C, cruise, CD, roof rack. 33,237 K. Best price, $18,441. Call Shearer Pontiac, 658-1212. PONTIAC AZTEK SPORT UTILITY, 2001: 4-door, red, V6, FWD, A/C, power steering/windows/locks, cruise, CD, ABS. 27,686 K. Best price, $9975. Call Shearer Pontiac, 658-1212. RANGE ROVER, 1994: CD, power everything, loaded, 4x4 center maintained, great truck. 124 K. $6500. Call 434-409-6420.

4 minivans MERCURY VILLAGER, 1993: Runs good. 140 K. $1800/OBO. 343-9681. OLDSMOBILE TRUCK SILHOUETTE PREMIERE EXTENDED MINIVAN, 2003: White, V6, auto, AWD, A/C, cruise, CD, ABS, leather, quad seating. 15,289 K. Best price, $20,915. Call Shearer Pontiac, 658-1212.

www.ShearerPontiac.com

802-658-1212

802-658-1212

Save money this winter and join a carpool today!

PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SE, 2002: Sedan, 4-door, red, auto, FWD, A/C, cruise, CD, power steering/windows/ locks. 21,366 K. Best price, $10,783. Call Shearer Pontiac, 658-1212. PONTIAC VIBE SPORT WAGON, 2004: 4-door, dark blue, auto, FWD, A/C, power windows/locks/steering, cruise, CD, roof rack. 23,739 K. Best price, $15,255. Call Shearer Pontiac, 658-1212. PONTIAC VIBE SPORT WAGON, 2004: 4-door, white, auto, FWD, A/C, cruise, CD, Premium sound, alloy wheels. 29,012 K. Best price, $12,867. Call Shearer Pontiac, 658-1212. SAAB 900 SE, 1996: Auto, fully loaded, excellent condition, new tires, well under Blue Book, $4800/OBO. Call 310-8371. SATURN SL1, 2002: Sedan, 4-door, black, 4-cyl., 5speed, FWD, A/C, power steering/windows/locks, cruise. 26,980 K. Best price, $8315. Call Shearer Pontiac, 658-1212. SUBARU FORESTER, 1999: AWD, green, auto, ABS, A/C, cruise, 78 K, NS, new studded Hakkapeliittas. Excellent condition. $8700. Call Matt, 453-3343. SUBARU LEGACY 1997: sedan, 5 speed, dark green. 146 K miles. New brakes & tires. $3650. 655-9538.

a.m. - 4:30 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 41055. Burlington to Montpelier: Looking for a ride Mon-Fri, 8 a.m. 4:45 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 41053. Jericho to Waterbury: Looking to share a ride. My hours are Mon-Fri from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 40962. Hinesburg to Plainfield: Looking to share a commute to Goddard College. I work Mon-Fri from 7:30 a.m. - 4 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 41063. St. Albans to Georgia: Looking for a ride Mon-Fri, 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. If you can help, please ref. # 41060. Enosburg Falls to Essex Junction: Looking to share a commute to IBM. I work 7 a.m. -7 p.m. If you can help, please ref. # 41050. Charlotte to Berlin: Looking to share a commute. I work Mon-Fri from 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. with some flexibility. If you can help, please ref # 40946.

South Burlington to Rutland: Looking for a ride. Time is flexible. If you can help, please ref # 41048. Colchester to Burlington: Looking to share a ride. I work Fridays from 8 a.m. - 2 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 40961. St. Mike’s to Ethan Allen Dr.: Looking for a ride. My hours are Mon-Fri from 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. with some flexibility. If you can help, please ref # 41070. Essex to Burlington: Looking for a ride. I work Mon-Fri, from 8 a.m. 4:30 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 41069. Plainfield to Essex Junction: Looking to share a ride to IBM. I work 7 p.m. - 7 a.m. If you can help, please ref # 41062. Rutland to Williston: Looking to share a ride. Hours are Mon-Fri from 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. If you can help, please reference # 41047. Essex Junction to Waterbury: Looking to share a commute MonFri at 7:30 a.m. - 4 p.m., but flexible. If you can help, please reference # 41046. Winooski to Montpelier: Looking to share a commute Mon-Fri from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 41045.

Starksboro to Colchester: Looking for a ride. Hours are Mon-Fri from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 41035. Essex Junction to Waterbury: Looking to share a ride to State Offices. My hours are Mon-Fri from 7:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. with a little flexibility. If you can help, please ref # 41046. South Burlington to Burlington: Looking for a ride Mon-Fri from 6:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 41036. Burlington to Shelburne: Looking for a ride Mon-Fri from 7 a.m. - 4 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 41042. Essex Junction to Barre Town: Looking for a ride. I work 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m., Mon-Fri. If you can help, please ref # 41045. Shelburne to Montpelier: Looking to share a ride Mon–Fri, 7:45 a.m. 4:30 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 41027. Bolton to South Burlington: Looking for a ride Mon-Fri from 410 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 41064. Charlotte to Burlington: Looking to share a ride Mon-Fri from 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 40947.

South Burlington to Essex Junction: Looking for a ride to IBM. I work Mon-Fri, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 40955. Burlington to Shelburne: Looking to share a ride Mon-Fri, 6:30 a.m. 4:30 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 40967. Williston to Burlington: Looking to share a ride Mon-Fri, 7:30 a.m. 4:45 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 40967. Hinesburg to Burlington: Looking for a ride to UVM. I work Mon-Fri, 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 41066. Richmond to Essex Junction: Looking to share a ride to IBM Mon-Fri, 7 p.m. - 7 a.m. If you can help, please ref # 40969. Colchester to Burlington: Looking to share a ride Mon-Fri, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 40971. Winooski to Burlington: Looking for a ride to Starr Farm Nursing Center Mon-Fri, 6:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 40973. Burlington to Poultney: Looking to share a commute to Green Mountain College. I work Mon-Fri,

Lose the P.O. Box and settle down!

See SPACEFINDER on p. 24 B

4:15 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 41059. Burlington to Williston: Looking for a ride Mon-Fri, 8:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 41056. Burlington to Springfield: Looking to give or share a ride Mon-Fri, 7 a.m. - 5 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 40980. Waitsfield to Hinesburg: Looking for a ride Mon-Fri, 3:30-7:30 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 40987. Essex Junction to Williston: Looking for a ride Mon-Fri, 7 a.m. 3 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 41054. Waterbury to Essex Junction: Looking for a ride Mon-Fri, 7 a.m. 3:30 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 40989. Underhill to Waitsfield: Looking for a ride Mon-Fri, 7 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 41002. Barre to Essex Junction: Looking to share a ride to IBM Mon-Fri, 7 a.m. - 7 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 41013. Richmond to Waterbury: Looking for a ride Mon-Fri, 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. If you can help, please ref # 41022.


24B | march 09-16, 2005

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SEVEN DAYS

SPACEFINDER 4 housing for rent AVAIL 6/1: MANY LISTINGS. Please call Investment Property Manager, 658-3600. BOLTON VALLEY: 1-bedroom, completely renovated, 1st-floor, gas heat, lease. $900/mo. + utils. + dep. + refs. Call Kevin, 401-8459220 or Marcia, 434-4051, leave message. BOLTON VALLEY: Efficiency. 380 sq. ft. Incl. local phone/heat. $650/mo. 6month - 1-year lease, neg. 434-3444 ext. 1223 or 203520-9800. BURLINGTON: 1 basement room. Avail. 3/18. $300/mo. Large room w/3 large windows. $400/mo. Avail. 5/1. 68A S. Willard St., located between Church St. & University. 1.5-bath, fireplace, W/D, parking. First + last. No pets. Call 6607172 or 598-7423. BURLINGTON: 1-6 bedrooms. Walk to UVM/Church St., some or all utilities included. Available 6/1. No pets. 951-2457. (24 hours). BURLINGTON: 1-bedroom, $695/mo. 5-bedroom, $1875/mo. Apts. avail. 4/1. Located in brick Victorian. Convenient to all colleges/ downtown/medical center. Call 899-3795 or 233-6313. BURLINGTON: 1-bedroom apt. 4-blocks to UVM. Gas heat, off-street parking, W/D. $750/mo. +. Call 657-2519. BURLINGTON: 1-bedroom, completely remodeled. Sweet. $775/mo. 233-5123.

BURLINGTON: 1-bedroom, walk downtown/UVM, hdwd, W/D, porches, quiet, gas heat. $795/mo. incl. elec. + hot water. Call tenant: Matthew Moore, 318-6186. Avail. immediately. BURLINGTON: 1-bedrooms. Nice, clean, quiet, wood floors, porch, gas heat, well insulated/energy efficient, parking, coin-op, NS. Quiet building. Avail. 4/1 and 5/1. 879-2436. BURLINGTON: 141 Intervale Ave. 2nd floor, parking, front deck, backyard. Avail. now. $500/mo. + utils or $600 incl. all. 655-1032. BURLINGTON: 2 and 3-bedroom apts. Heat/hot water incl., parking, garbage/snow removal. Full bath, pets possible. $1200/mo. and $1350/mo. + dep. Avail. 6/1. 802-863-9612. BURLINGTON: 2 large, bright 1-bedroom apts, in nice, quiet, small building. Recently renovated & painted. Prime location near UVM, FAHC, downtown. High ceilings, large windows, wood floors, gas heat. Off-street parking. Separate storage area & coin laundry in basement. Credit check, references, and security deposit required. No dogs. Avail. 4/1. $900/$1000/mo. + utils. 425-4549. BURLINGTON: 2-bedroom, 1 large bath, quiet neighborhood, on bus line, parking, on-site laundry facility, gas heat, not pets. Avail. 4/1 $825/mo. Call 864-9966. BURLINGTON: 2-bedroom, 2-bath, College St. condo. 1block from Church St. Laundry facilities. NS/pets. $1400/mo. + utils. 864-3746.

REAL ESTATE, RENTALS, HOUSEMATES AND MORE

BURLINGTON: 2-bedroom apt. sunny, hardwood floors, cathedral ceiling, loft, W/D, off-street parking, backyard. 5 min. walk downtown. $1200/mo. incl. heat. 4/1. 951-9231 BURLINGTON: 2-bedroom, bright, central, large living room, newer carpet, gas heat, low utils. $875/mo. Avail. now. 862-9182, call anytime, until 11 p.m. BURLINGTON: 2-bedroom, clean, modern unit. Gas heat, off-street parking, 2nd floor, Old North End. Avail. 4/1. NS $850/mo. + utils. Dianne. 864-9344. BURLINGTON: 3-bedroom, 2-bath. Porch, short walk to downtown/Battery Park. Completely renovated, new appliances. Off-street parking. Section 8 approved. $1000/mo. + utils. 862-3496. BURLINGTON: 3-bedroom, sunny, spacious, 2-blocks from downtown, parking, heat/hot water incl. Sec. 8 OK. Avail. immediately. $1200/mo. + dep. 859-0493. BURLINGTON: 4-bedroom apt. Large, sunny, D/W, W/D, yard, deck, storage, off-steet parking. $1700/mo.+ utils. Avail 6/1. 324-3500. BURLINGTON: Adorable 2bedroom avail. 4/1. Small back yard, off-street parking, walking distance to down town. Incl. garbage/recycling/water. $1100/mo. + utils. Call 862-4094. BURLINGTON: Apts., 3-4 bedrooms, great locations, parking, W/D. Avail. 6/1. Call Rick, 864-3430.

BURLINGTON: Apts./houses. 1-7 bedrooms, very near UVM, yard, parking, no dogs. Avail. 6/1. 862-1094. BURLINGTON: Avail. 4/1. 1-bedroom, clean, quiet, offstreet parking, within walking distance to waterfront/ downtown. No pets. $550/ mo. 863-5397. BURLINGTON: Avail. 4/1. South Union St. Large 2-bedroom, 2-floors of living space, hdwd, great views, sky lights, off-street parking, semi-private yard, gas heat, sunny and bright. $1275/ mo. + utils. 310-4205. BURLINGTON: Avail. 6/1. Downtown, off-street parking. 4-bedroom, $2000/mo. heat incl. 3-bedroom, $1300/mo. + utils. 2.5-bedroom, $1100/mo. + utils. 203-457-0028. BURLINGTON: Avail. immediately. Clean, bright 1-bedroom, all new floors. NS/ pets. $650/mo. + elec. 363-8084. BURLINGTON: Avail. now. 1-bedroom at 62 North Union. $750 + utils. 238-9803. BURLINGTON: Avail. now. Spacious, modern, renovated 3-bedroom w/parking. $1250/mo. +. Downtown 2bedroom condo, $1100/mo. Red E Rentals, 860-4641. BURLINGTON: Beautiful 1bedroom, 4-rooms, hdwd, middle of downtown. Pets OK! $685/mo. 802-865-4307. BURLINGTON: Bissonette Properties. 1, 2, 3 and 4bedroom apts for rent. Burlington/Winooski-area. Avail. immediately. $575$1300/mo. 864-4449.

WORKSPACE 4 commercial props.

BURLINGTON: 139 Elmwood Ave. Approx. 500 sq. ft. Close to downtown. $400/mo. Call Coburn & Feeley. 864-5200 ext. 229. WINOOSKI BUSINESS OPP:Turn key, fully fixtured restaurant. 700 sq. ft. +/-. 6-burner stove, char grill, 5bay steam table, hood and ansul system, smallwares. Everything needed to run business. Open by April. Seating up to 25. ADA compliant. Terms negotiable. 316-1695.

4 office space BURLINGTON: Professional office space avail. with parking. 100-3000 sq. ft. Call Ken at 865-3450. SOUTH BURLINGTON: 500 sq. ft. prime office location on busy Williston Rd. New construction, clean upgraded interior. Many possibilities: office, retail, massage studio, etc. $525/mo. utils. incl. Immediate availability. 264-9612.

4 space for rent BARRE: Fabulous studios soon avail at Studio Place Arts, a vibrant arts center in downtown Barre. Call Sue, 479-7069 or email shigby@sover.net for more info. BURLINGTON: Artist space. Bright, friendly. Join other artists. Heated, A/C, parking, convenient location, 180 Flynn Ave. $350/mo. Avail. now. Call Andy, 864-6838.

BURLINGTON: Buell St. Avail 6/1. 1-bedroom, 3rd-floor, $660/mo. and $695/mo. incl. heat/hot water. No parking, no pets. Neville Companies, Inc. 660-3481 ext. 1021. www.nevilleco.com. BURLINGTON: Colchester Ave. Avail 6/1. 1-bedroom, 2nd floor. $695/mo. Parking, laundry, no pets. Neville Companies, Inc. 660-3481 ext. 1021. www.nevilleco.com.

BURLINGTON: Colchester Ave. Avail 6/1. 4-bedroom. $1095/mo. Coin-op W/D, storage, parking, no dogs. Neville Companies, Inc. 6603481 ext. 1021. www.nevil leco.com. BURLINGTON: Cute efficiency on Park St. Available now. Hot & cold water, off-street parking, trash/snow removal incl. $500/mo. Cats negotiable. 865-2605.

FORSALE>> by owner COMMERCIAL/RESIDENTIAL

NEW HAVEN: Great business location. Large retail space with attached 2-story home, heated 3-bay garage and private 2-acre backyard oasis. Priced to sell $169,000. 802-877-2724.

SHELBURNE: 4-bedroom, 3bath, hdwd, newly remodeled, country setting, babbling brook, oversized lot, dogfriendly. Must see, motivated for quick sale. Asking $281,000, motivated. 802985-9827 or 802-373-9169, ask for Franki.

OWN YOUR OWN HOME on Sugarbush Access Rd. Very large, 2+bedrooms, W/D hookup, sauna, pool, tennis. All new appliances. Asking $147,000. 496-2646.

MALLETTS BAY: Spectacular 5000 sq. ft. home on two private acres with 350 ft. of westerly view lakefront. For details: www.mallettsbaylake front.com.

COLCHESTER: 1995 Redmond 14'80", 3-bedroom, 1-bath mobile home. Large yard, storage shed, swimming pool, tennis/basketball courts, private P.O. Box. Located in Westbury Trailer Park. $39,000. $2000 back at closing. 434-3287.

BURLINGTON: Beautifully renovated, award-winning, 2950 sq. ft. Victorian for sale, 83 N. Willard. 7bedroom, 3-bath, wood floors throughout, fully renovated kitchen (cherry cabinets, breakfast bar, stainless appliances). Master bedroom suite w/dressing room, walkin closet, full bath, walk-in shower. Grand foyer, dining room, French doors, formal living room w/fireplace, new wood stove supplements gas, forced hot air heat. Full, unfinished, dry basement. 1-car attached garage. Roof, furnace, kitchen, all new baths, central vac, storm windows new in last 5 years. $479,900. Brooke, 863-2307.

ADDISON: Amazing 3300 sq. ft., three-floor cathedral ceiling "lighthouse" home with 1100 sq. ft. wrap-around deck overlooking Lake Champlain/ Adirondack Mountains. Beach/lake access. $425,000. Bill and Shari, 759-2985.

WINOOSKI/COLCHESTER: 18-Bedroom Colonial Inn, near Exit 15, St. Mike’s college, high traffic, garage. Great Opportunity. Creative owner. Financing possible. 802-324-3291

SHELBURNE: 3-4 bedroom home. 2150 sq. ft. 2- bath, new appliances, garage w/storage area, mud room, deck, perennial gardens. $249,000. 802-985-3617.

YOUR HOUSE HERE: Advertise your FOR SALE BY OWNER, $35/week for 25 words and photo or $60/ 2 weeks. Contact Katherine 802-864-5684 classified@sevendaysvt.com

UNDERHILL: Rt. 15. Large w/barns. Renovations! Also, new appliances and heating system. 25 mins. to Burlington. $315,000. 802899-2727. Additional info at www.picketfencepreview.com.

HINESBURG: 1 large bedroom, 1-bath. Open floor plan. Windows! Adirondack views. Stone patio. 1.5-car garage. 1/3-acre +.25 mins. to Burlington. $198,000. 802-482-5202

www.7Dclassifieds.com


7Dclassifieds.com | SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005 2x2-BCLTcityedge022305

2/21/05

1:21 PM

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7D Classifieds 25B

SPACEFINDER

Page 1

City’s Edge South Burlington's newest 60-unit condominium project.Grants ranging from $25,000 to $35,000 are available for income-eligible buyers. Tours now available!

802.655.9100 www.CitysEdgeVT.com www.GetAHome.org

RE/MAX North Professionals

BURLINGTON: Delightful 3bedroom house. Close to UVM/hospital. Enclosed yard, W/D, mudroom, hdwd, parking, deck, three porches. Gourmet kitchen. Recently decorated. Available now. 802-372-8491. BURLINGTON: Downtown, sunny, traditional, spacious 1-bedroom w/separate breakfast nook/kitchen, hdwd, fireplace, parking, heat incl. $1000/mo. starting 4/1. Lease req. No pets. Red E Rentals, 860-4641. BURLINGTON: Efficiency, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5-bedroom apts. Avail. 6/1. Excellent location. No pets. 318-8242. BURLINGTON: Executive 4room (1-bedroom plus loft.) Near UVM green. Beautiful, restored, sunny, historic. W/D. $1700/mo. + utils. 802-425-2239. BURLINGTON: Great downtown location. Large 2-bedroom apt. w/high ceilings and hdwd. Off-street parking. Avail. 4/1. $1050/mo. + utils. 860-1172 or 355-2218. BURLINGTON: Large 1-bedroom apt. at the top of Loomis St. Wood floors, offstreet parking, nice, quiet place. Avail. 4/1. $775/mo. + utils. 238-2476. BURLINGTON: Large 3-bedroom apt. downtown w/parking, basement, private porch. Avail. 6/1. $1075/ mo. + utils. 878-2860. BURLINGTON: Large 4-bedroom. Old North End. Second floor, large porch. Avail. 4/1. $1350/mo. +. Off-street parking, gas heat. 893-0000. BURLINGTON: Large firstfloor 3-bedroom apt in great South End neighborhood. Eat-in kitchen, pantry, hdwd, porch, D/W, onsite W/D, parking. Avail. immediately. $1300/mo. + utils. + lease. 864-9972. BURLINGTON: Mill St. Avail 5/1. 3-bedroom, 1st-floor. $1050/mo. incl. hot water. Dog OK w/ref, WD hook-ups. Neville Companies, Inc. 6603481 ext. 1021. www.nevil leco.com. BURLINGTON: Near UVM green. Beautiful, sunny, large 1-bedroom and living area. Coin-op. Part of charming, historic home, executive building. $1075/mo. + utils. Avail. immediately. 802425-2239. BURLINGTON: New North End studio. All utils. heat/ elec. W/D. NS/pets. $700/ mo. + lease. 862-2551.

BURLINGTON: Newly painted 2-bedroom, 2nd-floor, W/D, deck, yard, off-street parking, efficient gas heat, walk to lake/downtown. Avail. 4/1 or sooner. $875/ mo. ($825/mo. for single) + low utils. 802-355-6003. BURLINGTON: Nice 1-bedroom apt. 1-block from Church St., off-street parking, sun room, quiet, in back of large Victorian home. $775/mo. incl. all 999-1531. BURLINGTON: North Willard St. Avail 6/1. 3-bedroom, 2nd-floor. $1395/mo. incl. heat/hot water, parking for 1 car, no pets. Neville Companies, Inc. 660-3481 ext. 1021. www.nevilleco.com. BURLINGTON: Northshore Condo. 2-bedroom townhouse, 1.5-bath, fireplace, gas heat, W/D, garage, pool & tennis on-site, no pets, $1500/mo. Call Coburn & Feeley, 864-5200, ext. 229. BURLINGTON: Northshore Village. 2-bedroom, 2.5bath, 2 story. Lake view! W/D, garage, pool, tennis, bike path. NS/pets. Avail. 4/1. $1500/mo. Call 999-7471. BURLINGTON: Real nice 1or 2-bedroom, great location, hdwd, parking. Avail. now. Call Rick, 864-3430. BURLINGTON: Renovated 3bedroom. 3-season porch, W/D hook-ups, fenced back yard, walk to lake, near bike path/park. Avail. 4/1. $1250/mo. 660-3026, ask for Brian or Anne. BURLINGTON: Renovated Hill Section. Large 1-bedroom, walk to downtown/ UVM/Champlain/hospital. Off-street parking. Avail. 4/1. $775/mo. 660-3026, ask for Brian or Anne. BURLINGTON: Riverwatch. Great view, W/D, D/W, pool, deck, heat incl. $1100/mo. 233-1783, leave message. BURLINGTON: Shelburne St. Avail 6/1. 3-bedroom, 2ndfloor. $1250/mo. incl. heat/hot water. Parking, no dogs. Neville Companies, Inc. 660-3481 ext. 1021. BURLINGTON: Shelburne St. Avail 7/1. 2-bedroom, 1stfloor. $795/mo. Parking, no dogs. Neville Companies, Inc. 660-3481 ext. 1021.

BURLINGTON: South End, Catherine St. Comfortable 3bedroom, 1-bath duplex in quiet family neighborhood. 3-levels w/large, gabled 3rdfloor master bedroom, wallto-wall carpet, no dogs, gas heat, large yard, driveway, remodeled kitchen. $1250/ mo. Lease + refs. + dep. 660-8957. BURLINGTON: South Willard. Avail 5/1. Large bright efficiency, 1 bath, fireplace, heat & electricity included, no pets $675/mo. Call Coburn & Feeley, 8645200 ext. 229. BURLINGTON: Staniford Rd. 3-bedroom house. Now or 4/1. Finished basement, yard, eat-in kitchen. 1-bath incl. W/D, quiet residential neighborhood. 1-year lease. No dogs. Red E Rentals, 860-4641. BURLINGTON: Two 3-bedroom apts. avail 6/1. No. Willard Street. $1650 incl. ht. Colchester Ave. $1500 plus utils. 863-9656 before 7:00 p.m. BURLINGTON: Two 3-bedroom apts. Walk to UVM & downtown. W/D. Avail. 6/1 & 7/1. $1100 & $1300. plus utils. 434-4449. BURLINGTON: Vermont House. Avail. 4/1. Downtown Condo, 2-bedroom, 1 1/2 baths, lake views, heat & air conditioning included, parking available, not pets. $1300/mo. Call Coburn & Feeley. 864-5200 ext. 229. BURLINGTON: Waterfront. Spacious 1-bedroom. Parking, laundry. $1050/mo. Avail. immediately. 578-6924. CHARLOTTE/FERRISBURGH BORDER: Sunny 2-bedroom apt., on 2-floors w/deck, spacious lawn and garden. $875/mo. + sec. + ref. 767-9455. COLCHESTER: 2-bedroom, 1-large bath mobile home, W/D, shed. $800/mo. + utils. Avail. 3/1. Contact Eric, day 862-0252 or evening 879-7742.

WHERE > apartments THE >> services jobs GOOD > cars ARE.

COLCHESTER: 2-bedroom townhouse, 1.5-bath, gas heat, A/C, garage, full basement. NS/pets. On bike path. Avail now. $1050/mo. +. 238-9803. See http:// www.longmeadowvillage.net. COLCHESTER: Church Rd. 2bedroom townhouse, 1.5bath, basement W/D, garage, yard, oil heat. No pets. $975/mo. Call Coburn & Feeley, 864-5200 ext. 229. COLCHESTER: Lake front. Vacation year-round. Cozy contemporary. Great views, big deck, hot tub, wood stove, loft, W/D, D/W, new kitchen/appliances/paint, next to bike path. 1-year lease. Avail. 4/1. $1600/mo. 658-6013. COLCHESTER: Year-round lake front, 3-bedroom, 2bath, porches, beach, wonderful view, large windows, large yard, fireplace, hdwd, new carpets, garage, plowing incl., great location, next to park/tennis courts/skateboard park/volleyball nets, dock, moorings, outside smoking, pets maybe. $1950/mo. + sec. Avail. now. Call 655-6371. ESSEX JUNCTION: 2-bedroom cape house near IBM. Garage, yard, porch, W/D. $1200/mo. + utils. + dep. Ref. req. + lease. Avail. now. 802-879-6137. ESSEX JUNCTION: 3-bedroom duplex in village. Gas heat, large yard, hdwd, full basement, W/D, 2 porches, nice neighborhood. NS/pets. $1100/mo. 872-9350. ESSEX JUNCTION: Highland Village 2 bedroom penthouse, 2.5-bath, W/D, garage, gas heat, dog OK w/dep. Fitness & conference room on-site. $1800/mo. Call Coburn & Feeley, 8645200 ext. 229. FACING FORECLOSURE? Offering assistance w/nationally recognized programs. Free consultation. 877-391-0772.

HUNTINGTON: Beautiful Huntington River, Camel’s Hump views. New 2-bedroom, 1.5-bath duplex. No pets. Ceramic tile and wood floors. $1150/mo. Call Moise or Nicole, 434-5792. JOHNSON: Nice 2-bedroom duplex w/den in a quiet neighborhood. Yard, W/D, 1car garage. All utils. incl. Sec. + dep. $1100/mo. Avail. 3/5. 434-7636. MILTON: Large 4+ bedroom, 2-car garage, huge yard. Avail. now. $1400/mo. +. 896-0000, Marcou Real Estate. RICHMOND: Excellent duplex, country setting, nice yard, 5 minutes to Interstate. 2+ bedroom, 2bath, 2-levels, large renovated kitchen, D/W, full freezer, hook-ups, privacy, trails, river, views. NS/pets. $1150/ mo. + utils. 865-4399. RICHMOND: Great 4-bedroom w/dining, kitchen, mud room, hdwd. Nestled on one acre of land w/river frontage great for fishing/canoeing. $1300/mo. incl. heat. 373-4328. RICHMOND: Two furnished apts avail. immediately for short-term rent. 2-3 bedroom, $1300/mo. 1-bedroom studio, $800/mo. NS/pets. Both incl. heat/hot water. 434-5282. SOUTH BURLINGTON: 3bedroom, 2-bath house. Garden, tub, study, sun room, fenced yard, beautiful gardens, off-street parking for two cars. Quiet neighborhood. Close to schools. NS. Avail. 4/1. $1700/mo. + utils. landscaping incl. Sarah, 802-951-9933. SOUTH BURLINGTON: Queen City Park, 2-bedroom, 2-bath house. Wood floors, W/D, new renovations, garage, shed. NS. $1300/mo. Avail. immediately. Call Barb, 862-1567.

SOUTH BURLINGTON: Superior 2-bedroom, 2-bath townhouse. Off-street parking, W/D. Avail. 3/1. $1200/mo. + utils. 9859099, ask for David. SOUTH HERO: Vintage ranch house on lake. 3-bedroom. $1250/mo. 372-5257. STOWE: Bright and beautiful! 2-bedroom apt. Newly renovated, sliding doors onto deck w/Mansfield view, surrounded by woods. Off Mt. Road, near rec. path. $975/mo. utils. incl. Avail. immediately. (Option of third-bedroom + den/office, 2nd-bath, garage/laundry). 802-253-8002. UNDERHILL: 2-bedroom open and large w/fieldstone fireplace, W/D and heat incl. Parking, nice yard. Will consider pets. $950/mo. 6550091 ext. 13. UNDERHILL: Park St. Avail 4/1. 2-bedroom, 2nd-floor. $725/mo. Avail 5/1. 3-bedroom, 2nd-floor. $825/mo. incl. heat/hot water, parking, no dogs. Neville Companies, Inc. 660-3481 ext. 1021. www.nevilleco.com. WATERBURY: 2-bedroom + den/office, new duplex rental, pastoral-setting, seconds to Exit 10, 1.5-bath, all new appliances, patio, heated-tile floors. 5-star energy rating. $1250/mo. + utils. 244-6111. WATERBURY: Beautiful, restored farmhouse. 25 min. to Burlington. 3-bedroom, 2bath, W/D, 2-car garage, 3acres. $1300/mo. + utils. Pets possible. Contact Gordon, 244-5289. WILLISTON: Condo 2-3-bedroom, 2-bath, 1500 sq. ft., new carpet, gas heat, garage, pool, NS/pets, W/D hookup, water incl., lease. $1300/mo. + utils. Avail. now. 802-233-2651. WILLISTON: Looking for one person to share 3-bedroom country home. W/D. Mostly furnished. Grad/med. students welcome. Avail. 4/1. $450/mo. + 1/3 utils. 879-9946.

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26B | march 09-16, 2005

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SEVEN DAYS

SPACEFINDER

REAL ESTATE, RENTALS, HOUSEMATES AND MORE

HOMEWORKS

it all starts HERE...

HINESBURG (Mechanicsville): Really great 3+BR. Steam-boat Gothic Victorian home. Circa 1860s. Restored in mid-70s. Many updates since. Double living room w/fireplace. Double floor-toceiling French doors leading to large wraparound porches. Large 2-level barn. Many possibilities. 1.9 acres.

Foulsham Farms Real Estate (802)861-7537

t o

$310,000

a d v e r t i s e

i n

BARRE: Central downtown commercial building for lease or sale, ideal for coffee shop, retail, office or restaurant space. Seats approximately 140. Two floors, fully sprinklered, parking, new front deck, slate roof, 2880 +/- square feet. Asking $269,900

CHARLOTTE: Impeccably restored 4,000 sq. ft. brick 1812 georgian-style former tavern. 4 fireplaces, 4 + bedrooms 3.5 stories. All historic detailing perfectly reproduced & updated utilities. A separate, newer 2-story garage plus a 1 BR & loft cottage. 32 manicured rolling acres, pond & gardens. Foulsham Farms Real Estate 861-7537 • www.foulshamfarms.com

Gregoire Real Estate • 802-476-8708 salesgregoirere@cs.com

HOMEWORKS call

allison at 865-1020 x22

1x1-mortgage-022305

2/21/05

1:24 PM

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for line listings: www.7Dclassifieds.com n housing for rent cont. WINOOSKI: 3-bedroom apt. Newly painted, new carpet, well-maintained, W/D, D/W, pets negotiable. Heat/hot water incl. Section Eight OK. $1275/mo. 316-1695. WINOOSKI: Bright, spacious, quiet 1-2 bedroom apt. Close to UVM. W/D, offstreet parking, yard. $825/mo. + utils. Sorry, no pets. Avail. 3/1. 865-8071. WINOOSKI: First mo. 1/2 off. Totally renovated w/charm, large 2+ bedroom w/office in upstairs/downstairs apt. Private porch entrance, brand-new flooring, brand-new appliances, brand-new natural gas heaters. Pets neg., off-street parking and garage space. Avail 3/1. northernproper ty@together.net or 233-1556. WINOOSKI: Lovely, furnished 2-bedroom, 1 den/bedroom, 2nd-floor, D/W, W/D, parking, decks, nice area, NS/no pets. $1250/mo. 655-6877. WINOOSKI: Main St. Avail 4/1. 2-bedroom. $750/mo. 1st floor, parking, no dogs. Neville Companies, Inc. 6603481 ext. 1021. www.neville co.com. WINOOSKI: Maple St. Avail 5/1 and 6/1. 1-bedroom. $695/mo. 1st-floor, parking, no dogs. Neville Companies, Inc. 660-3481 ext. 1021. www.nevilleco.com. WINOOSKI: Partially-furnished, 1200 sq. ft, 2-bedroom apt. $1100/mo. incl. heat/water/parking. NS/no pets. Lease + sec. dep. Avail. now. 655-2315. WINOOSKI: Renovated, spacious 3-bedroom, off-street parking. Avail. 3/1. $1300/mo. Call 660-3026, ask for Brian or Anne.

2x2-BCLT-Abbyrd.030905

WINOOSKI: Sunny, beautiful, spacious and private 2bedroom apt. Wood floors, natural gas fireplace. New kitchen, basement, W/D. Next to Landry Park, pool/tennis. NS. Avail. 4/1. $1100/mo. +. 802-425-2910. WINOOSKI: West Spring St. 3-bedroom, 2-bath, full basement, W/D, parking, gas heat. $1300/mo. Call Coburn & Feeley, 864-5200 ext. 229. WINOOSKI/COLCHESTER: 3-bedroom house, sunroom, warm & cozy, great big yard. W/D hookup. Everything fresh & upgraded. $1300/ mo. + utils. Pets OK. 899-4828.

4 sublets BURLINGTON: 4/1 to 6/1 One bedroom in large house with porch, yard and parking. Close to town and lake. $400/month includes utils. 318-0488. BURLINGTON: Professional woman with one cat needing a subletter for April and May in a cozy, quiet, spacious 2 bedroom house in the South End. $375/mo. 238-5603.

4 for sale

Let me help with selling or buying your next home.

t o n y 846•9580 s h aw Coldwell Banker Hickok & Boardman

3/7/05

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AVAILABLE NOW: 3-bed, 1-bath, townhousestyle condo with appx. 1,280 sq. ft. of living space. This home is in a family-oriented neighborhood which includes an in-ground pool, clubhouse, playground, basketball court, and hiking trails. Heat is energy-efficient natural gas, and there’s a new furnace. Pets are welcome! Purchase Price: $193,000 - 46,000 * grant for income-eligible buyers $ 147,000 ** Amount needed to finance www.getahome.org Call Brandy 864-2620

ADDISON: Amazing 3300 sq. ft., three-floor cathedral ceiling “lighthouse” home with 1100 sq. ft. wraparound deck overlooking Lake Champlain/Adirondack Mountains. Beach/lake access. $425,000. Bill and Shari, 759-2985. BURLINGTON: Beautifully renovated, award-winning, 2950 sq. ft. Victorian for sale, 83 N. Willard. 7-bedroom, 3-bath, wood floors throughout, fully renovated kitchen (cherry cabinets, breakfast bar, stainless appliances). Master bedroom suite w/dressing room, walk-in closet, full bath, walk-in shower. Grand foyer, dining room, French doors, formal living room w/fireplace, new wood stove supplements gas, forced hot air heat. Full, unfinished, dry basement. 1-car attached garage. Roof, furnace, kitchen, all new baths, central vac, storm windows new in last 5 years. $479,900. Brooke, 863-2307. COLCHESTER: 1995 Redmond 14’80”, 3-bedroom, 1-bath mobile home. Large yard, storage shed, swimming pool, tennis/basketball courts, private P.O. Box. Located in Westbury Trailer Park. $39,000. $2000 back at closing. 434-3287. HINESBURG (Mechanicsville): Really great 3+bedroom. Steamboat Gothic Victorian home. Circa 1860s. Restored in mid-70s. Many updates since. Double living room w/fireplace. Double floor-to-ceiling French doors leading to large wrap-around porches. Large 2-level barn. Many possibilities. 1.9 acres. $330,000. Foulsham Farms Real Estate, 861-7537. LAKE BOMOSEEN-AREA: 32acres, 2-story chalet, needs lots of work, great getaway, paved road, off the grid, but in the sunshine. $89,900. Ivan, 802-324-3291. MALLETTS BAY: Spectacular 5000 sq. ft. home on two private acres with 350 ft. of westerly view lakefront. For details: www.mallettsbaylake front.com.

Free Pre-Approval! Mark R. Chaffee (802) 658-5599 x11

NEW 2-BEDROOM LOG HOME on 73 acres. Ultimate privacy, yet 5 min. to town, 10 min. to Jay Peak Ski Area. Features include: laundry room, walk-out basement, mud room, office, cathedral ceilings, wood and gas heat, hemlock floors and wrap-around porch w/amazing views and more! $249,000. (802)326-3093. NEW HAVEN: Great business location. Large retail space with attached 2-story home, heated 3-bay garage and private 2-acre backyard oasis. Priced to sell $169,000. 802877-2724. NORTH HERO: 3-bedroom, waterfront, lake views. Many recent improvements incl. hdwd, roof, kitchen, waterheater, Jotul gas stove, energy-efficient windows. Large deck. $187,900. 598-7919. OWN YOUR OWN HOME on Sugarbush Access Rd. Very large, 2+bedrooms, W/D hookup, sauna, pool, tennis. All new appliances. Asking $147,000. 496-2646. SHELBURNE: 3-4 bedroom home. 2150 sq. ft. 2-bath, new appliances, garage w/storage area, mud room, deck, perennial gardens. $249,000. 802-985-3617. SHELBURNE: 4-bedroom, 3bath, hdwd, newly remodeled, country setting, babbling brook, oversized lot, dog-friendly. Must see, motivated for quick sale. Asking $281,000. 802-985-9827 or 802-373-9169, ask for Franki. UNDERHILL: Rt. 15. Large w/barns. Renovations! Also, new appliances and heating system. 25 mins. to Burlington. $315,000. 802-8992727. Additional info at www.picketfencepreview.com. WINOOSKI: 5-unit building and a single family house. 82-86 Malletts Bay Ave. 99% renovated and updated. Great cash flow, shows well and rents easy. All units are hard wired plus some sprinkler heads. $580,000. Call 373-4123.

WINOOSKI/COLCHESTER: 18-bedroom Colonial Inn, near Exit 15, St. Mike’s college, high traffic, garage. Great opportunity. Creative owner. Financing possible. 802-324-3291.

4 land for sale HUNTINGTON: 2 5-acre lots, pending permits. Starting at $89,900. Call 434-4652.

4 housing wanted BURLINGTON-AREA: Prof/grad student + dog (w/refs) seeks nice 1-2 bedroom, W/D, hdwd, yard. 6/1 or 8/1. 802-598-6262. COUPLE SEEKS PEACEFUL HOME, quiet woods location. Move in May 1. Cabin or small house. Reasonable rent/work trade. Hour drive to Burlington. Danielle, 802257-2652 or cricket@rise up.net.

4 room for rent BURLINGTON: Furnished bedroom. High-speed Internet, parking, bike storage, coin laundry. Clean, quiet, NS/pets. Share kitchen/bath w/other grad./med. students. $500/ mo. incl. all. 802-862-3341. WEEKLY LODGING: European-style and equipped. Kitchen use, cable TV, great ambiance, on bus route. $200/weekly. Maggie’s Inn, 324-7388 or 324-3291 or dilee63@yahoo.com.

4 vacation rental ADIRONDACKS: 2 comfortable cabins in beautiful valley, peace & privacy, fully equipped, telephone, creative workspace included. 1 1/2 hours from Burlington. $440/wk. Paradox, NY. 518581-2514. joenaomi@blue moo.net. FLORIDA TIME SHARE: Avail. for rent 4/8 - 4/15. Sleeps 4-8. $1500. If interested call France, 310-1147.

4 housemates BURLINGTON: 1 room avail. 3/15. Looking for relaxed, respectful, responsible N/S. Off-street parking, W/D, Internet, backyard, garden, $387.50/mo. + utils. 658-6687. BURLINGTON: 1 room avail. in apt. on Colchester Ave. Off-street parking, close to UVM/FAHC. NS/pets. Females only, mature, young prof./ grad. student. Please call 233-8926. $330/mo. + utils. Avail. immediately. BURLINGTON: 1-bedroom w/private bath in great 2bedroom house. Hill section, small yard. NS/no pets, please. $625/mo. + 1/2 utils. Avail. 4/1. 860-9576. BURLINGTON: 1-large bedroom avail. in a sunny 2bedroom apt. Close to downtown. Off-street parking. $425/mo. + utils. Avail. immediately. 598-6251. BURLINGTON: Downtown. Mature, feminist woman for cooperative, clean, beautiful house and garden. No messes/smoking/pets. $400/mo. +. Call 860-6828. BURLINGTON: F seeking prof/student (F preferred) to share 2-bedroom, cozy, clean apt. NS/pets (cat already included). $437.50 + 1/2 utils. 233-5795. BURLINGTON: Heady roommate wanted for 4-bedroom, 2-bath downtown. Mid May through 5/06. $550/mo. Heat/hot water, off-street parking, hugs and dank cooking. 578-5433. BURLINGTON: Looking for F roommate, 18-25 YO, to sublet 2-bedroom apt. on S. Willard St., March 1 through May 31. Call Cindy, 203913-0081. BURLINGTON: Need roommate for condo in North End. $550/mo. + utils. Lots of room, great condition. Near bike path. Would consider pets. Call John, 734-6370. BURLINGTON: Prof. roommate. St. Paul St. Large 3floor, 2-bedroom. $475/mo. +1/2 utils. Coin-op W/D, offstreet parking, close to downtown. Avail 4/1. Matt, 802-238-0398. BURLINGTON: Prof/grad to share beautiful, historic 2bedroom apt. Walk to downtown. $550/mo. + utils + dep. Avail. 4/1 or sooner. Call 734-1603.


7Dclassifieds.com | SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005 1x1-mortgage-022305

AFFORDABLE NEW CONSTRUCTION HOMES FOR SALE Expected completion April 2005! Shelburne Fourteen 3-bedroom, 1 and 2 bath homes. A mix of single family homes, flats and townhomes. One unit fully accessible. A prime location on Harbor Road off of Rt. 7, near Shelburne Elemen-tary and surrounded by protected open space. All homes come with a garage and a small private yard. 1,126 or 1,332 sq. feet. $188,900 - $196,900 with a $30,000 down payment grant for eligible buyers (mortgage amount: $158,900 - $166,900).

ALSO AVAILABLE: St. Albans 3 BR Homes Priced at: $ 188,000 - 25,000 * BCLT down payment grant $ 163,000 = your mortage

Jericho 3 BR Farmhouse Priced at: $ 190,000 - 25,000 * BCLT down payment grant $ 165,000 = your mortage

Reserve yours today! www.getahome.org • Call Brandy at 864-2620

2/21/05

Free Pre-Approval! Mark R. Chaffee (802) 658-5599 x11

BURLINGTON: Seeking young prof./grad. F for large room in spacious 2-bedroom apt. Off-street parking, back yard, garden, near UVM. $475/mo. +utils. Avail 4/1. Call 318-3800. BURLINGTON: Share large Victorian home, 1 block to Church St. Library, grand piano, 2 wood stoves, private bath, jacuzzi, parking. $575/mo. incl. all. 999-1531. BURLINGTON: Third roommate needed to join one M and one F. Sunny 2nd-story apt. in South End. Move in 4/1. $367/mo. +1/3 utils. 864-9678. COLCHESTER, Malletts Bay: Single, clean, quiet, responsible person. No pets. Great neighborhood. Includes large room, appliances, private bathroom, parking, and closets. Access to laundry, art room and toolshop. Extra storage. $600 including utilities. Available April ‘01. 865-9257.

To place your ad online:

7Dclassifieds.com

1:24 PM

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DUXBURY: Looking for a cooperative, relaxed and industrious individual in 2bedroom house w/gardens, wood heat, workshop & stream. NS, pets negotiable. 793-8557. ESSEX JCT.: 19 South Hill Dr. Elderly gentleman seeks roommate to help out around the house. Use of kitchen, laundry, cable TV, garden. NS. $325/mo. 878-2638. ESSEX JUNCTION: Prof M seeking M/F to share 2-bedroom condo. $450/mo. + 1/2 utils, free DSL. Req. 1stmo. + dep. 879-3377 or 310-0818. ESSEX: Prof. to share large house. Great location near IBM. 20 acres, pond, hot tub. Dogs OK, no cats. Avail. now. $400/mo. + utils. Call 802-316-6965. ESSEX: Roommate wanted to share quiet, laid-back house. South St. Rooms from $425/mo. utils. incl. Sorry, no pets. Queer-friendly. Call Brad for more details, 578-0848. FAIRFAX: M/F, NS/no pets. Country home on Blacktop Rd., across the road from organic vegetable farm. $425/mo. incl. utils. 849-6086. HINESBURG: NS, 2-bedroom, 2-bath, deck, w/mountain views, garage, 2-acres. DSL. $475/mo. utils. incl. 999-8109.

|7D

Classifieds 27B

SPACEFINDER JERICHO: Great pvt. place. 25 min. drive to Burlington. Looking for kind, clean & responsible individual. $350/mo. + 1/2 utils. Call to inquire, 862-2212 or 899-3244. MILTON: Housemate wanted to share 5-bedroom home on 3/4 acre. Choice of 3 rooms. NS, must like dogs. $500/mo. incl. everything. 355-4832. SOUTH BURLINGTON: 2 roommates wanted for 3bedroom house. 2 living rooms, W/D, plenty of storage, large back yard, close to shopping/FAHC. NS/pets. No lease, $650/mo. incl. everything. Avail. now. Call Lisa at 862-6765. SOUTH BURLINGTON: Conscientious 25 + prof. only. 1-bedroom apt. attached to large farmhouse. Private space, we share kitchen. Pet OK. D/W, W/D, hdwd, fireplace, parking, back yard, basement storage. $600/mo. + utils. Avail. 3/1. 865-5976. SOUTH BURLINGTON: Looking for a responsible housemate to share home off Shelburne Rd. W/D, pool, hot tub, storage, parking, yard. Avail. immediately. $425/mo. + utils. 865-9627.

SOUTH BURLINGTON: NS prof. female to share Summer Woods townhouse. Large bedroom/private space. Cable, fireplace, W/D, deck. $525/mo. + utils + dep. No pets. 863-1219. SOUTH BURLINGTON: Two active, fit, organized, women, 35-65, sought to live longterm in elegant 4-bedroom Spear St. home w/multigenerational target mix of two men + two women. 3-acres + majestic Adirondack/lake views. Amenities, gardening, shop. 864-3330 or rick@rick hubbard.org. WINOOSKI: 4 openings to share large, fully-furnished house. All utils. incl. 2.5bath, laundry, parking, garbage/snow removal, large yard, safe neighborhood, basic cable TV. Close to SMC/UVM/IBM/FAHC/ Champlain College. On the bus line. $600/mo. + dep. Avail. 3-rooms 6/1 and 1room 4/1. 802-863-9612.

4 homeshare SOUTH BURLINGTON: Friendly, humorous gentleman seeks homesharer to provide overnight presence in exchange for sharing his home. Call HomeShare Vermont, 802-863-0274 or visit www.HomeShare Vermont.org. EHO

Equal Housing Opportunity

All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and similar Vermont statutes which make it illegal to advertise any preference, limitations, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, sexual orientation, age, marital status, handicap, presence of minor children in the family or receipt of public assistance, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or a discrimination. The newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Any home seeker who feels he or she has encountered discrimination should contact the: HUD Office of Fair Housing, 10 Causeway St., Boston, MA 02222-1092, (617) 565-5309. OR Vermont Human Rights Commission, 135 State St., Drawer 33, Montpelier, VT 05633-6301., 800-416-2010 Fax: 802-828-2480

7Dcrossword

m

last week’s answers on page 50A


28B | march 09-16, 2005

|

SEVEN DAYS

>> PLACE ONE FOR FREE

love: ♥♥♥♥

THE ONLY REPUBLICAN IN BURLINGTON is looking for a date. SWF, 32 YO, attractive, intelligent, fit and funny seeks similar, right-leaning M, 28-45 YO. I like skiing, hiking, writing, movies. Call me or I’m moving to a red state. 6511

looking for

what’s

that? A B BI C CU CD D F F2M FF G H ISO J L LTR M MA M2F N ND NS NA P Q S TS W WI YO

ASIAN BLACK BISEXUAL CHRISTIAN COUPLE CROSS DRESSER DIVORCED FEMALE FEMALE-TO-MALE FULL-FIGURED GAY HISPANIC IN SEARCH OF JEWISH LATINO/A LONG-TERM RELATIONSHIP MALE MARRIED MALE-TO-FEMALE NATIVE AMERICAN NO DRUGS NON-SMOKING NO ALCOHOL PROFESSIONAL QUEER SINGLE TRANSSEXUAL WHITE WIDOWED YEARS OLD

women > men LOVE PHOTOGRAPHY? A LITTLE QUIRKY? Sense of humor? Attractive, separated, WPF, 33 YO, 115 lbs. ISO tall, fit, NS/ND WM, 28-40 YO, interested in theater, movies, music, dining, people watching, cooking. Prefer hotels to tents. Friendship first, let’s talk. 6552

LOOKING FOR A HAPPY GUY W/A SENSE of humor who looks at life as an adventure, not a drama. I love music, being outside as much as possible, laughing, fun! Be honest and not into head games, please. 6498 WELL-ROUNDED SEEKS SAME. 35 YO DPF seeks PM, 30-40 YO for friendship, hopefully LTR. Outgoing, funny, smart, sensitive. Enjoy outdoor activities, movies, photography, cooking, kids, animals, travel, psychology, football, classic rock and Mozart. 6490

SF, 32 YO, MOTHER, HAPPY, GOOD sense of humor, wants to save the world, humanist and environmentalist. I love the outdoors, independent films, buying locally, eating organically, music and wine. No cigarettes, please. 6551 MAKE ME LAUGH! 31 YO ACTIVE SPF ISO mature and honest M who knows himself - no, really. Even better if you happen to like: biking, hiking, camping, laughing, dancing, foreign languages, travel and life’s little adventures. 6545

SPRING IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER. SWPF, 50+, seeks a witty, pleasant, educated nice guy to enjoy what’s just around the corner. 6477 JEANS-AND TEE-KIND OF GIRL, BUT LIKE to dress up, too! 25 YO DWF, brown/ brown ISO 25-35 YO SW redneck-kind of guy w/some culture. I’m fun-loving and outgoing. Love kids. Friendship first. 6473

PETITE FAIRY-GIRL PETITE/BLUE GREEN eyes, deep soul, sensitive, intuitive. Into healing arts. Seeking humorous, mortal, 49 YO +, open, available, financially secure for lighthearted connections. 6539

24 YO, SEPARATED, FF WOMAN LOOKING for friendship first. Likes: photography, music, movies, tattoos, piercings, coffee. Looking for someone who can make me laugh and enjoys having a good time. Call me if you’re interested. 6468

DWF, 25 YO, LOOKING FOR A M TO experience life with. I am very open to everything. I am an attractive prof. and a mother of two. Looking for someone ambitious, spiritual, active, open, friendly and sweet. 6537

1 Confidential Information

WPW, TALL, WARM AND SWEET: LOVELY looks, a bit sophisticated, fun-loving and intelligent, creative, open-minded, positive attitude. Curvy and zoftig, sensual, green eyes, dark hair. Early 50s. Great upbringing, lots of living, well-traveled, adventurous. 6492 40 YO LADY INTERESTED IN COMPANIONship w/a self-controlled, honorable M. 3548 YO sounds good. LTR-minded but must have the foundation of friendship. 420 friendly. Kindness and respect required/assured. No exceptions. 6455 ADVENTUROUS, SENSUAL, YOUTHFUL 51 YO SWF, 5’6”, 150 lbs. Very affectionate, loves to cuddle. Seeking SWM to share good times, laughs and falling in love. Don’t be shy. Let’s give this a try! All calls will be answered. 6404 SWF, YOUNG 48, NA/NS, BLONDE/BLUE, educated. Interests: biking, beginning hiking, love motorcycles, reading, movies, camping, intimate conversations. Me: honest, genuine, spiritual, playful, shy. Looking to meet employed, sane, SM for fun in the sun, perhaps? 6383 LET GO, LIGHTEN UP, LOVE, LEARN, laugh! SF 34 YO, looking to enjoy sunshine and nightlife w/an open and straight forward M, 30-40 YO. Hiking, cooking, Indie movies, dancing to live music are on my fun list. What’s on yours? 6375

TWO BEAUTIFUL 20 YO F ISO M W/ substance for double date. Are all the boyfriend types taken? If not, we enjoy dinners out, flowers, candy, massages and more. What are you waiting for? 6363 SWPF, 46 YO, YOUNG, LOVELY, SMART, passionate, seeks hearty soul, strong back, open mind for real deal. Love and friendship. Be employed. Education and wit definite +. Love to hike, travel, read, theater, etc. No drugs, no games. 6326 ATTRACTIVE, TRIM WOMAN, 50 YO, SEEKS kind, stable M. Book-lover, artist. Loves drawing and looking at art. Sensuous, loves dancing, working out and cooking while listening to jazz and opera. Burlington-area. 6312 ANY TALL, HANDSOME 30-SOMETHING fellows interested in a double date? Are you kind, tolerant and intelligent w/a sense of humor? Two good friends interested in expanding our social circle. Dinner, movies, music, ski, hike, snowshoe, up for anything. 6289 WANTED: ONE VERY SPECIAL M. I STILL believe. Me: 43 YO PWF. 6276 FOREVER WANTED: 45 YO SINCERE WOMAN seeks honest M, 44-50 YO for LTR. Honest, respect, romance required and given. 6274 LATIN DANCE PARTNER FOR TALL LADY, 60s. Coach will train. 6216

WPW, TALL, WARM AND SWEET: LOVELY looks, a bit sophisticated, fun-loving and intelligent, creative, open-minded, positive attitude. Curvy and zoftig, sensual, green eyes, dark hair. Early 50s. Great upbringing, lots of living, well-traveled, adventurous. 6492

OFTEN ADORABLE SWF, 30 YO, LONG, curly dark hair, introspective, fashionable, humorous. ISO SWM, 25-38 YO, tall, attractive, funny, healthy, clever, nonviolent, college-educated, non-criminal for movies, eating out, walks, long drives, coffee, chilling. Sucker for glasses, blue eyes, muscular arms, guitar players. 6536

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LOLA

the love counselor Dear Lola, I have had a wonderful relationship with “Marcia” for almost two years. We have always had intimate discussions on topics I’ve never felt comfortable sharing before. Marcia has always been very open, with one glaring exception. Every day at around noon, we check in with each other on the phone. I’m at my office and Marcia is at hers — except for once a week, when she calls me from her car. Clearly, she’s keeping an appointment, but she won’t tell me what it is. When I’ve asked, she’s simply said, “I’ll tell you eventually.” I respect her privacy, but this secrecy is starting to undermine my trust. Should I a) give her an ultimatum, or b) start holding back some information of my own? Curious in Corinth Dear Curious, The correct answer is c) neither of the above. Don’t resort to making threats or playing games. Explain your uneasiness to her exactly as you’ve expressed it to me. Then let her tell you why she feels the need to keep this part of her life private for now. My guess: You’ll feel less compelled to make her talk, and she’ll feel less compelled to keep mum. Love, Lola

REACH OUT TO LOLA... c/o SEVEN DAYS, P.O. Box 1164, Burlington, VT 05402 lola@sevendaysvt.com


SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005| 7D Personals 29B

LUXURY IS HELPING ON SMALL ORGANIC farms in beautiful places around the world w/an educated, active, middle-aged, kind, creative, handy travel companion who loves animals and wants to spend part of the year in New Zealand and Scotland. 6214 SILVER FOX, THE NEW 50. HAZEL EYES, slim, 5’6”,120 lbs, competitive athlete, artistic and articulate seeks fit, funny, smart, sexy M, 38-50 YO for fun and adventure. 6191 WHAT THE BLEEP DO WE KNOW? FUNloving, curious, FF, independent, 39 YO woman who happens to be blind. Looking for happy, intelligent, passionate, Pagenfriendly NS/ND M. Got to love my dog. Open to friendship or LTR. 6188 STRAWBERRY-BLONDE SPF. ACTIVE, LUCKY Charm-loving, rough-and-tumble seeks same in NS, non-vegetarian 25-37 YO M version for skiing, wood fires and trips to New Zealand. 6105 CUDDLY WOMAN, 50 YO W/WILD, CURLY hair, fun, active, intelligent, ample body, seeking gentle, easygoing M, for companionship and friendship, more if the chemistry is right, NEK area, call me, you won’t be disappointed! 6048

men > women SWM, MIDDLE-AGED, PISCES/HORSE ISO LTR w/a woman who can turn me on in several ways. True musician, 5’11”, 150 lbs., have all faculties and hair, some gray, acclimated, wise, can make conversation, independent thinker. 6557 I’D LIKE AN ATHLETIC FRIEND, COMPANion, 40-55 YO for long runs, strenuous hikes, bikes, cross-country ski trips. Extra pluses are slender, well-educated, unpretentious, good collaborator, politically liberal and open to a possibly deeper relationship. Interested? Call for details. 6554 ECCENTRIC, INTENSE SWM W/BIG, athletic, beautiful dreams. I’m looking for a small, pretty-faced woman to share conversation. someone w/a big heart w/lots of love to give, who likes being naughty. 6548

QUIET GUY, 50 YO, NS, ISO NOT-SO-QUIET woman, 45-50 YO. Take a chance, it could be your lucky year. 6508 40 YO PWM, 5’8”, 170 LBS. SINGLE PARent, attractive, honest, caring, supportive person, enjoys cooking, gardening, yard work, fine dining, dancing, reading, movies. ISO 30-45 YO F for friendship/ partnership/LTR. Are you my match? 6499 SM, HONEST, TRUSTWORTHY, FAITHFUL w/concrete values. Looking for same for fun and dating. Love to dance and go out, but just as comfortable snuggling down and watching a movie. 6484 30-SOMETHING, LOVER OF LIFE, ANIMALS and good food. Builder, baker, gardener, ISO 25-35 YO F who has visions of grandeur. Want help to make it all happen. 6470 ACTIVE, FIT, 50S, NS, DM, WHO’S CARING and secure. Looking for attractive, slender, healthy, self-confident woman, 40-55 YO to share love of walking, hiking, xc-skiing, traveling, arts, music and conversation for romance and LTR. 6464 SWM ISO HOT, SEXY, IN-SHAPE 50-60 YO passionate, sexy momma. I’m muscular, into exercise, country outings, hot all nighters and want a serious relationship. I’m in my mid-30s, don’t like head games and am sensitive. 6463 MYSTIC SCORPIO M SEEKING MAGIC CONnection w/a woman filled w/life, love and mystery. Chemistry appreciated, communication and laughter required. 6462 BURLINGTON-AREA: I WANT FUN, YOU want fun. Lets meet over drinks. SWM, 23 YO, slim, blonde. Seeking a cute F for a good time. 6456 SEEKING THAT SPECIAL CONNECTION. DWM attractive, athletic, young-looking. 45 w/muscular build seeking similar spontaneous, open adventurous F, slim to medium build for companionship. Fun and adventure. Central and northeast VT. 6395 SWDM, 46 YO, LOOKING FOR A DECENT looking F, age/race not important. Clean and well-kept, no drugs. Friends, companions or LTR. A couple of kids OK. Like the outdoors. No couch potatoes. 6387

SWM, 33 YO, 5’7”, MAYBE 5’8” W/MY boots on. Brown hair, blue eyes, 175 lbs, in-shape, self employed, outgoing, energetic, never married, no kids, honest, sense of humor, part gentleman, part redneck, part teenager! 6538

LIFE IS TOO SHORT, LET’S HAVE SOME fun! SWM, 43 YO ISO life w/active NS/ND F. I’m into long walks, camping, boating, anything outdoors, bowling, movies, candlelight dinners, cuddling, very affectionate. No head games. Kids OK. 6385

SM, TAN, FAIRLY MUSCULAR, NICELY hung, seeks in-shape, mature woman, 40 +, that can keep up sexually, be creative and keep me wanting more. LTR possible, if you can. 6535

25 YO SWM, NS, FUNNY, CARING, charming, outgoing, honest. Looking for a flirty type of lady, 19-33 YO who is honest, does not smoke. For dancing, dinner and fun. 6542

LIFE IS SUCH A GREAT MYSTERY, FILLED w/such incredible beauty and such terrible sadness. Do you ever feel overwhelmed w/a sense awe and gratitude and love? Maybe we should talk about sharing some of this strange journey together. 6513

25 YO SWM, NS, FUNNY, CARING, charming, outgoing, honest. Looking for a flirty type of lady, 19-33 YO who is honest, does not smoke. For dancing, dinner and fun. 6542

SINGLE, HANDSOME M, 26, SEEKING temporary marriage w/SF for business purpose. Housing and compensation will be provided. Serious respondents, please. 6382 ISO WS/D/MA WOMEN IN THEIR 40S, 50S or 60s, who are in need of sensual and emotional intimacy. I am in my late 20s. I am fit, intelligent, and attractive. I go crazy for classy older women! 6374 AGNOSTIC SWPM, 28 YO, ENJOYS MANdolin, snowshoeing, x-c skiing, running, dancing, politics, Collective Soul, Allison Kraus, Charlie Daniels, Crash Test Dummies, Weird Al, Batman, Lex Luthor, Hulk, Star Wars, Lemony Snickett, sushi, BBQ, spontaneity, What the Bleep. Seeks independent SPF. 6367 AFRICAN AMERICAN M SEEKS OPEN, athletic, charming women, 34-39 YO for warm memories, dancing, movies and cultural events. 6360 YOU ARE CREATIVE, INTELLIGENT, ACTIVE, dog-lover. Slightly eccentric writer, new to area ISO 36-41 YO for possible LTR. NS. No Republicans. Like beer and good talk. Will you be my muse or just amusing? 6351 SM, 26 YO, PHYSICALLY FIT, 5’9”, 165 lbs. Looking for positive-minded and beautiful woman to get to know and have a fun, intimate relationship. 6324 HANDSOME, FIT, ACTIVE, RESPECTFUL, yacht captain, recently relocated from FL. 55 YO, 6’2”, 185 lbs, safe. ISO slim SF. Companionship and mutual erotic fun. Commitment unnecessary. Open to LTR. Country home, own business. Show me VT. My motto, “Ladies first.” 6321

DWP, ATTRACTIVE, SPONTANEOUS, ARTIStic, energetic Frenchman in his 40s looking for LTR w/an attractive, funny, sexy, artistic, free-spirited woman. Great communication and trust are a must. No head games, life is too short for that! 6314 ARE YOU LONELY. TOO? SWM, 22 YO, NS. I’m honest, caring, athletic, love children, have big heart. ISO 19-27 YO F for possible LTR. I love everything outdoors, movies, romantic moments and cuddling. Much more to offer. 6313 39 YO SBM ISO F, 20-45, FOR INTELLIgent conversations, friendship and fun. Looking for Ms. Right who enjoys sports, movies, books and is well-cultured. If you’re out there, please holla. 6311 DO YOU LOVE ANIMALS AND LIVE FOR sunsets, walks in the woods, paddling by moonlight and gardening? SWM, 40 YO ISO partner to share life’s simple pleasures. Let’s put our kayaks in the stream and follow the currents. 6301 HANDSOME, POISED, EDUCATED, PROFESsional, trim and fit, NS, very young 51 YO WM, central VT. Seeks someone sharing strong interests in travel, music, art, dance, romance, entertaining, liberal politics and strong passion for love and life. Dog lovers a +. 6294 NEED FUN AND ATTENTION? SWM, young 41 YO, smoker. Good looks/build. ISO slender to average woman, 30-50 YO who enjoys Jacuzzi, Nascar, classic rock, dancing, good food and drink, movies and the touch of a very affectionate M. 6293 I’M AN 18 YO LOOKING FOR A GOODlooking older woman. 6273

SM ISO A JOY-FILLED, SENSUOUS WOman w/an artistic bent, a lover of dogs who connects to the earth and cosmos from a dark-eyed, mid-life wanderer who dabbles in the world of words, thoughts and carrots. 6400

34 YO GOOD LOOKING GUY. SEXY, CLEAN, healthy, fun, happy, S, well-endowed, nice, sexy body, very talented. I have a great job, cozy home. ISO girls, females to please. I’m good at licking, massaging, whatever. I will be discreet. 6261

SM ISO A JOY-FILLED, SENSUOUS WOman w/an artistic bent, a lover of dogs who connects to the earth and cosmos from a dark-eyed, mid-life wanderer who dabbles in the world of words, thoughts and carrots. 6400

DPWM SEEKING A FUN, ATTRACTIVE F FOR nights out/in. 40 YO but still feel like an 18 YO. I am physically fit and well above average in looks. Athletic, artistic, compassionate. Great communicator and lots of fun to be with. 6213

SKI, SNOWSHOE, HIKE W/HONEST, FIT, humorous, intelligent, financially secure SPM. Seeking adventurous, active, funloving SF, 35-45 YO to share meaningful conversation, fine wine, traveling, dining out and home-cooked meals w/romantic, confident, animal-lover. Friendship first, possible LTR. 6401

SWM, 30 YO, SEEKS SWF, 20-35 YO FOR LTR. Like movies, camping, music, concerts, fishing and just having fun. You must be caring, sincere, trustworthy, honest. If this sounds good, let’s meet. 6199

SKI, SNOWSHOE, HIKE W/HONEST, FIT, humorous, intelligent, financially secure SPM. Seeking adventurous, active, funloving SF, 35-45 YO to share meaningful conversation, fine wine, traveling, dining out and home-cooked meals w/romantic, confident, animal-lover. Friendship first, possible LTR. 6401

M, 52 YO. 6’, SLIM, BROWN/BLONDE, seeking aspiring woman to share the joy of life with. This M avails himself to that joy, which flows from within to without. 6189 SOMEWHERE OVER THE RAINBOW. LONGdistance runner, mid-aged, artist, 5’9”, 155 lbs. NS. Loves books, photography, writing, philosophy, woodworking. Seeks kind, caring, open-minded woman for friendship or more. May you stay forever young. 6184

Hi. They call me Mischief, and I'm looking for my partner in crime! Actually, I'm a very sweet and shy 2-year-old female tuxedo cat. At times I feel a bit overwhelmed by all I've been through these last few weeks. I came to HSCC as a stray, and I am very happy to be inside where I am warm, fed, loved, and well cared for. Since I can be so shy, it has been more difficult for the staff to get to know me. However, the folks have discovered that if you approach me gently and begin to pet me, you will find that I am a love sponge. I would love to find a gentle and loving family with adults only or with kids 15 and up who will cherish me. Visit me today at HSCC - 142 Kindness Court, South Burlington. Their hours are Tuesday through Friday from 1 pm to 6 pm, and Saturday from 10 am to 4 pm. Phone # 862-0135.

LOOKING FOR “ARE YOU LONELY?” YES, I am lonely, too. DWM, 59 years young, love to meet or hear from you. 6403 SUNRISE, SUNSET, YOU CHOOSE. SWDM, 35 YO, hardworking, cute, baseball cap/jeans-kind of guy. Seeks 25-40 YO redneck-type F. Must like the outdoors, sports and be interested in a LTR. With right person, maybe start a family. 6183 DWM, 36 YO, 6’1”, 190 LBS. LOOKING for women to have discreet meetings with if you’re not getting enough and wish to hook up w/an attractive M. Do not waste any more time. Call today! 6182 WM, NS, 50 YO, AVERAGE GUY LOOKING for average woman, NS. Hey, you never know, could be your lucky day! 6181 24 YO SM, HARDWORKING, FUN-LOVing, easygoing, goal-driven, LTR-prone guy who enjoys skiing, camping, 420, diving, fishing and other hobbies indoors/out. Seeking SF, 18-30 YO for fun and friendship first. 6177 NICE, 34 YO, 6’2”, SLIM, SWM, WORKINGclass VT native ISO nice lady who would really like to be loved and spend time w/me. I like good times and cuddling. Seeking LTR. Age/race unimportant. 6176 IS YOUR SIGNIFICANT OTHER GONE ALL the time? Has he stopped listening to your wishes? Do you need a lover, escort, friend or someone to talk to on the phone/email? Please respond. All calls answered. 6171 29 YO S REDNECK DAD OF TWO FROM Northeast Kingdom ISO 25-35 YO SF for warm and cozy winter evenings. Humor and easygoing a must. If John Deere, barn boots and brawn turn you on, you’re for me! 6103 I AM A HEALTHY ITALIAN M NEW TO THE area. I am looking for a fun, outgoing F to share some quality time with. I like to ski and skate in the winter and watch movies. 6097 OUTGOING 22 YO SWPM, 6’4”, BLONDE hair, blue eyes and 175 lbs. Likes to travel, long romantic walks on the beach, going to the theatre and romantic evenings at home. Looking for SWF 18-28 YO who shares the same interests. 6096 STILL WAITING FOR YOU! SWM, 50 YO, dark hair, blue eyes, shy, country boy, smoker. Enjoy music, dancing, walking, beaches, dining out, Nascar. Hoping to meet country or city girl, 40-55 YO, for friendship/love. 6093 ND, 31 YO SWM STILL LOOKING FOR A SF that is not a typical F. Not into bars and clubbing. Interests include movies, walks, dinner, camping, motorcycles, snow boarding, quality time. No head games or children, please. 6083

men > women 30b

Humane Society of Chittenden County

sponsored by SEVEN DAYS

w w w . c h i t t e n d e n h u m a n e . o r g


30B | march 09-16, 2005

|

SEVEN DAYS

>> PLACE ONE FOR FREE SWM, 56, 5’9”, 155 LBS. OWN HOME, Rutland, physically attractive, simple Christian lifestyle. Day-trips, Greyhound travel, snack bars, local events, concerts, plays, movies, rock, blues, country music, dancing, biking, hiking, gentle walks, other physical activity. ISO SWF, 43-55, romantic relationship, dating or possible LTR, cuddling, affection, similar interests. 6049 SM, 32 YO, NS, ARTISTIC, EMPLOYED, seeking NS SF. I enjoy Looney Tunes marathons on snowbound Saturdays, board games, antique video games, art house films, drawing, painting, photography. How about you? 6107 SM, 32 YO, NS, ARTISTIC, EMPLOYED, seeking NS SF. I enjoy Looney Tunes marathons on snowbound Saturdays, board games, antique video games, art house films, drawing, painting, photography. How about you? 6107 34 YO LOOKING FOR MRS. RIGHT WHO likes to go bowling, to the movies, coffee shops and spend time w/me and my daughter. Must be 30-35 YO, looking for LTR. Love walks on beach and riding bikes on bikeway. 6037 SWM, 50 YO, LOOKING FOR FULL-TIME girlfriend/lover/partner. Me: outgoing, loyal, romantic, ISO SF, 25-45 YO who is loyal, passionate, fun, desires to be cherished. Prefer A girls. Plattsburgh-area. 6035 LOVE IS THE ANSWER. DWM, 5’9”, 150 lbs., 40-looking, good shape. Seeking a woman that enjoy adventure, fun and a lot of travel. I’m youthful, appealing, open-minded, sensitive, proportionate, outgoing. For more info, call! 6032 LOVE IS THE ANSWER. DWM, 5’9”, 150 lbs., 40-looking, good shape. Seeking a woman that enjoy adventure, fun and a lot of travel. I’m youthful, appealing, open-minded, sensitive, proportionate, outgoing. For more info, call! 6032

60 + LONESOME: THERE WAS A LADY FROM THE Midwest who laid her husband to rest, so then she moved east and so she is seeking a gentleman to meet. 6352

women > women PQF, 38 YO. ANIMALS, ART, AUTHENTICIty, balance, children, color, commitment, communication, community, creativity, dance, depth, family, food, friends, fun, generosity, growth, health, holidays, home, music, passion, play, respect, risk, savoirfaire, simplicity, verve, work. Interested? Call! 6541 30 YO SEXY BIBW SEEKS 30 TO 40 YO clean, SF for private sexual fun w/endless possibilities. I want someone who is honest and a lover of women. 6472

40-55 YO NS. FINDING A SACRED, deep/spiritual connection w/another human being is the greatest worldly “gift” that can be obtained in our brief existence. Love is “alive”! First from within then extending outward to “you”, vehicle for enrichment and growth. 6320 PQ ISO ANOTHER PQ, LIPSTICK NOT necessary, suit is. My hobbies include all forms of snow sliding, cooking, art class modeling, blowing on bagpipes, hiking and bush whacking. If you can take the heat, you can enter my kitchen. 6292

I LOVE MEN OF ALL COLORS AND AGES. Every sexual experience is a new journey for me! Are you ready to have some fun w/this H 34 YO? If so, call me. You won’t be disappointed. 6031 SWGM, 25 YO, 5’3”, 145 LBS. 21-31 YO only. Looking for friendship, maybe more. 6030

bi seeking ?

S, 37 YO BARRE LADY LOOKING FOR FEM or soft butch friendship, maybe more. 6081

OLDER, SEXUALLY RECEPTIVE M WANTS to be regular sexual servant and whatever else for friendly, safe and sexually dominant BI or sexually questioning M. Brandon-Middlebury area. 6449

men > men

BIWM IN NEED OF A SLIM, SEXY TV/TU/ CD for anything-goes sex/love. LTR possible. Race unimportant. Very oral. 6405

CUTE GM, 22 YO, EDUCATED, HARDWORKing, traveled. Searching for someone who’s interesting, active and stable (well... partially at least). Age is irrelevant. Just know how to make me laugh! 6480

SWBIM, 26 YO, 5’8”, 140 LBS. CLEAN, discreet and well-endowed. ISO CU and select S to service in the erotic way. Open-minded, fun, clean and discreet a must. 6386

42 YO, LOOKING FOR THE ONE GUY THAT can’t get enough oral. Got a couple of hours? Wanna meet on a regular basis? Usually prefer older. 6448

TRANS GUY LOOKING FOR CURIOUS S/ BI/G M for hot fun. 6368

SWM EARLY 30S N/S ISO 23-35 YO SF to have fun with and possibly start LTR. I enjoy almost everything, cooking, gardening, animals. Looking for someone to turn my house into a home. 6399 39YO ATTRACTIVE YOUNG-LOOKING SM into playing music. Financially good. I like dinner out, music, dancing, movies, concerts and much more. In search of SF 33-43, trim, good looking, nice personality and likes to have fun. 6397 DGWPM, RECENTLY OUT, YOUTHFUL 60S, ex-Montréaler, urbane interests, seeks friendship, possible LTR. 6262 OLDER GWM LOOKING FOR MASCULINE company, 45 YO +. Interested in art, music, dining out, conversation, drives, local and Montréal for fun and pleasure. Great shape, athletic, over 60 YO can offer great sex but optional. Give a call. 6203 SWPM, 26 YO, ATHLETIC, FIT, HARDworking, sensitive, intelligent, creative. I’m looking for a M under 30 YO who will see me for who I am and love me for that. Who has kinetic chemistry. NS. 6178 NYS: ARE YOU INTO LIGHT BONDAGE, very light discipline and a whole lot of organ worship and climax control, building to a soul-satisfying orgasm? Hot, safe, discreet, trustworthy, fun. Let me tie you up and take you to Heaven. 6173 GIN: YOUR CALL NOW JUST MEMORY OF lace from Vicki and you had our one mad contact all wrong, not uphill; downtown. I will never forget you and haven’t, your jump into my car, your passion. 6054

BIF LOOKING FOR BIF TO GO ON A JOURney of self and of life. Looking for someone to share it with. Love to meet and see if we have a spark. 6279 BIM SEEKING FUN W/OTHER M AND OR F, in-shape, smooth, tan and well-hung. Wanna have some fun? Get in touch w/me. Plattsburgh area, will travel to VT. 6265 55 YO DBIM SEEKS TO JOIN OR START A masturbation group, either all male or mixed gender. Definitely hoping for a hands-on experience, but other activities are fine w/me. 6212 LOOKING FOR A GREAT TOP TO NAIL unmercifully or be nice and slow? Then I’m your man. Me: attractive, 30s, clean, slim w/a nice tool and tongue. Seeking guys 18-33 YO who are aching to bottom. Call! 6172 LOOKING FOR DISCREET, CLEAN, D/Dfree M. Into hot, wild times in bed. Like to perform oral. I do what your girlfriend won’t and don’t spill a drop and I like to do it for hours. Threesomes welcomed. 6088 57 YO BIM WHO LIKES TO DRESS IN panties and lingerie. Looking for guys who like the same and need to be serviced orally or other. Kink OK too. Looking for some fun. D/D-free, very clean and discreet. 6039

www.7Dpersonals.com

just friends

women seeking...

BOOT CAMP! OVERWEIGHT F, 25 YO, seeks exercise partners. The more the merrier. Men and women welcome to meet mornings/evenings. Exercise, support, conversation, laughs. Who knows, maybe enlightenment? You are kind, seriousminded about losing weight and getting fit. 6518

CHARMING, FEMININE, BRAINY 30something NS, BIF ISO other feminine NS BIF to share honest friendship and meet occasionally for good wine, full-body massages and.... Sorry, boys! 6306

IT TAKES A VILLAGE. GWM WILLING TO donate for lesbian/CU. Involvement level negotiable. I am educated, drug-free and HIV -. Let’s chat! 6469

DESIRE A GOOD BM, 42-54 YO. I WANT it all. Life is strange and hectic. I want crazy love. Make it all worth while. 6296

men seeking...

19 YO F W/MODERATE HIKING EXPERIence seeks persons to accompany me on a thru-hike of Appalachian Trail. Start in Georgia in April. 6373

LET’S TALK, MAN-TO-MAN: TOOL BELTS, rugged chest. 43 YO, 5’9”, 175 lbs., hung. Get the respect you don’t get at home. Private, discreet. Only for real men. 6550

FTM AND WIFE SEEK SIMILAR CU AND FTMs for friendship and socializing in Burlington area. 30-something parents of young children especially sought. 6364

GWM, 33 YO, 5’9”. 160 LBS. SEEKING very attractive, masculine guys in need of hot man-to-man fun and complete oral service. I’ll provide a place to meet. BIcurious, S and MA guys a big +. Absolute discretion assured. 6549

looking for

XXX

action:

couples seeking... CANDY SHOP HAS OPENINGS FOR F w/sweet tooth. M, 30 YO, well hung, F, 26 YO, very attractive. Looking for F to join us for fun in the candy shop. All F welcome to call. 6504 CU SEEKING BIF FOR ADULT FUN. WE have lots of toys and a place to play. D/D free a must. 6500 MACU LOOKING FOR OTHER CU’S IN THE Burlington/Colchester-area for friendship and more, if possible. Me: BI. Him: S. If interested, leave us a message. 6402 BICU ISO BIF OR BIM FOR INTIMATE encounters. 18-45 YO, looks not important, sexual desire a must. NS, light drinkers OK. 27 YO F, + size. 33 YO M, nice package. 6371 CU SEEKING BIF FOR THREESOMES. M, 30 YO, is hung very well and F, 26 YO, very attractive. Would like wild F who has a few extra pounds or less, no heavies. We want to please and be pleased! 6357 ADVENTUROUS INTERRACIAL CU SEEKS shaved BIF to join our adventures. Her: sexy, outgoing, green-eyed BBIW. Him: charming, slim, handsome, dark-eyed. 6278 STABLE, SECURE, FUN-LOVING CU searching for fun-loving BIF. Any age. Both 39 YO. He is a white-collar prof. She is a homemaker. We are very open to everything you can imagine or desire. 6198

SWM, 50S, ISO CU FOR ADULT FUN. Can video and watch on TV after. 6506 SWPM, 30 YO, SEEKING FREAKY CHICKS for fetish fun. I’m promising discreet BDSM play. We’ll take turns on top. No intercourse and no strings attached. D/D free. Safe, same and consensual. I have the gear if you have the interest. 6379 ATTRACTIVE, LAID-BACK PROF. SEEKING women for pampered, sensual massage. Goes beyond the clinical focus on major muscle groups to include more sensitive and sensual areas. No fee, tip or reciprocity expected or requested. Safe, discreet, respectful. Day/night. 6365 SUITABLE FOR FRAMING? TOUGH LOVE provided. Mid 30s, SWM in Burlington looking for consenting victim(s) for LTR or kinky play. Very experienced, toys galore, fantasies fulfilled. Safe, sane, consensual. Limits respected. Boundaries pushed. Up for a chat? 6361 NICE, SEMI GOOD-LOOKING PWMAM looking forward to great times w/attractive, fun-to-be w/mistress who rarely says “no”. For expenses paid midweek trips: sailing in VI, skiing out west and jaunts to Montréal. 6359 BOTTOM BOY, 44 YO, SLIM, HEALTHY, into oral, rimming, bare backing, groups, Polaroids, videos, lingerie, B & D, exhibitionism, voyeurism, golden showers, ATM. ISO hard guys into any or all of the above. Prefer top M. No strings. Lamoille or Chittenden county. 6325 WICCA M, 55 YO, ISO YOUNG, AVAILABLE, happy Wicca woman for love, friendship and family. Let’s try to master love together, no better goal exists. Blessed be. 6305


SEVEN DAYS | march 09-16, 2005

GWM, 33 YO, LOOKS 24 YO, SEEKING masculine, attractive M in uniforms, especially cops, military and all of you hot UPS and FedEx guys to offer great, full oral service. Absolute discretion. MA guys a +. No one over 40 YO. 6270 LOOKING FOR WOMEN WHO ENJOY receiving oral sex. No strings, just trying to get better at it. Age and size not important. Clean and discreet. 6210 SHAW’S PARKING LOT: APPROX. 3 months ago. You jiggled nicely over to see my dog. I would like to see Leaver contact your dog, also and much more. Leave contact info. 6200 SWM, 27 YO, SLIGHTLY UNATTRACTIVE, vegetarian. Black hair, brown eyes, mole above upper lip. ISO two attractive BIcurious SF, vegetarians w/strong work ethic and need to stay fit, 25-30 YO for possible LTR. 6187 WM, 40 YO, CLEAN, FIT, ACTIVE, SANE. Needs some winter-loving. Looking for a meaningless one-night stand to fulfill nature’s calling. No strings. Pure pleasure. 6215 WM, 40 YO, CLEAN, FIT, ACTIVE, SANE. Needs some winter-loving. Looking for a meaningless one-night stand to fulfill nature’s calling. No strings. Pure pleasure. 6215 BIM, CLEAN, SAFE, DISCREET ISO M INshape, under 40 YO and hung. To service orally. One or more is OK. Like being humiliated and ordered to service you on my knees, naked. I do swallow. Interested, call. 6185 SWGM, 46 YO, 6’1”, 190 LBS. HAZEL eyes, brown hair. ISO 18-30 YO college guys. Love to rim, bottom, swallow, etc. Like to watch TV, music, movies, bowling, etc. Into LTR. All calls are answered. 6174 SBWM, 35 YO, BI, FIT, CLEAN-SHAVEN, 5’10”, 170 lbs. Looking for young, fit, hot guy for friendship and discreet, hot sex. Somewhat new to scene. Love to give oral and bottom. 6170 WANT TO HAVE AN AFFAIR, ONE-NIGHT stand or fantasy acted out? I will do what your M won’t, give me a try. 6050 FRENCH MAID WANTED. MUST CONFORM to uniform and strict code of conduct. Inspections will be frequent and thorough. Need not be French. 6040 ATTRACTIVE WM ISO SEXY F WHO NEEDS a good spanking for a good-looking, wellendowed, fun guy. Let’s explore your secret fantasy. Any age or race. Discretion assured. 6038

N

SWM, 5’10”, 150 LBS. ISO SUBMISSIVE F for physical bliss. Not a freak, just I just like it. I’m white, but like salt, I go good w/pepper. So age/race not important. 6034

i spy

I SPY MY MARDI GRAS BUDDY W/A brand new mohawk. Hope we can stay in touch after all the current drama. 6556

I SPY A CUTE CIRCUS PERFORMER. YOUR fabric act is always so captivating, as is your amazing personality. I enjoy our time together and can’t wait for California! Woooo! 6555

I SPY CHEAP MO-FO’S WHO DON’T TIP. All of us in the bar and restaurant industry work for $3/hour. Most of the time you are rude and impatient. If you can’t afford to tip, stay home. 6507

SCOTT: MET YOU AT SMUGGS, 2/13. YOU: great smile and long black hair. You said you go to St. Mike’s. We got along so well, I said I’d remember your number but didn’t. Wanna meet up for another run? 6553

I SPY PEOPLE TRAINING FOR THE VC Marathon and want company. Late morning weekday runs or anytime weekends, 8-9 min. miles on shorter runs and 9-10 min. miles on long runs. I am a SWF, 25 YO. Your age/sex unimportant. 6505

VAST TRAIL IN WORCHESTER WOODS, 3/1, 4:30 p.m. Snowy, cross-country ski day. We exchanged few, but friendly words. You: very sweet and down-toearth. Looking for a ski buddy? Coffee sometime? 6547

SMUGGS, 2/23. YOU WERE THE BEAUTIFUL brunette in the cafeteria w/young daughter and M “friend”, having an early lunch. I was seated across from you w/a friend and his daughter. I’m dying to meet you. 6503

2/26, CHURCH STREET MARKET PLACE. You: attractive M, dark hair, maybe glasses, standing outside Urban Outfitters w/pole taking down beads from trees after Mardi Gras. Looked like you were having fun. Me: 40s, thin, light brown hair, blue eyes. 6546

JENNEY: MAYBE YOU GOT A NEW PHONE number? It was nice to see you at Rî Ra again after a few months. Too bad we didn’t get to chat. You still spark my curiosity. Want to try it again? 6502

I SPY AT SUGAR SNAPS THE BEST SMILE I’ve seen since moving to Burlington. 2/25, we almost crashed. You: NH plates. Me: big truck. I apologized and you smiled, made my heart do a flip. 6544 YOU: ONE REALLY HOT DADDY, WHOM I am fortunate enough to live below. I just wanted you to know that you have had my heart since hello. Tea sometime? Of course, in public. I would not control myself otherwise. 6543 LOVEY PANTS: HONEY, YOU ARE MY SHINing star, don’t you go away. 6540 NECTARS, MARDI GRAS: VERY CUTE GIRL w/a trucker hat. Me: guy you danced w/and took my pearl beads! I believe you owe me a number. 6517 YOU SAY YOU WANT TO SEE OTHER people, so I scramble to prove I’m worth even the crashes, but you’re already 1000s of miles away. As I hug your brown/black dog, thinking I will always, always love you. 6516 I SPY AN UPPER-MIDDLE CLASS JERK who stole my coat, fleece, hat and mittens at the Led Lo/Co show. May karma catch up to you ASAP. 6515 BACON IN A BOTTLE, NECI, 6 P.M. WE tipped our parted lips, the dark lacquer of liquor matched your cute black glasses. I’ll be your smokey dish if you’ll be my writer’s helper. 6514 MY SPECIAL SOMEONE THAT BRIGHTENS my day. I know you are reading this. Keep pushing me to be my best. I apologize for not removing the ad. I love you and your elbows and chewing on your kneecaps! 6512 HEY, FAT FISH: I’M YOUR FAVORITE because I bring the hot chicks. We get along so well, it makes me glad to know you aren’t the psycho type. Thanks for letting me sit on your shoulder. I love you! 6510 I SPIED A KEANU REEVES BEHIND THE sushi bar at Matterhorn, 2/26. I enjoyed your eyes and your smile. Do you ever get on the dance floor? From 2nd place Tshirt winner and 2nd place Best Dancer. 6509

ERIN FROM MIDDLEBURY: 12/12, HIGHER Ground. Dark Star. You came alone but I found you. I bought you a beer, you gave me a cigarette. Four of us hung out, you left early. Me: Plattsburgh. Your turn to find me. 6501 2/21, MEXICALLI, WILLISTON: I NOTICED you checking yourself out in the mirror, but I wish I was the one you were checking out. You: North Face hat, eyebrow ring, metro sexual. Me: SWF, 20s, ready to make XXX salsa w/you. 6497 I SPY A WIFE-TO-BE, NOT SURE WHO YET, but she’s 30ish, attractive, self-supporting and loves to be ild, crazy, reckless and be interested in good times. I’m attractive, sexy and addicted to thrills. Can you keep up? 6496 ARIEL, WAITRESS AT LINCOLN INN. MISS your pretty smile, your beautiful face. You are very kind, happy, smart, gorgeous. Being next to you, I turn to mush. I would love to take you out, whatever you desire. Please call. 6495 SEAN FROM IBM: WE DATED AT VTC, Brian’s old roommate. I miss you, think of you all the time. Call me, S. 6494 WE TALKED FOR 6-MONTHS AND YOU gave me hope. High school sweethearts we always will be. It’s hard to forget first loves. I still love you and always will. I know in my heart we will be together again. 6493 VALENTINE’S DAY: UNCOMMON GROUNDS, 5:30 p.m. We were sitting at the end of the shop. You: M, studying w/a friend. Me: M, sitting w/SM friend. You described the paintings as “whimsical.” I might say the same of you. Coffee? 6489 BOOKSTORE GIRL: I BOUGHT A BOOK just to have the excuse to say “hi” and exchange eyes. I’m glad we both survived the daring dairy feast the previous night. Be well and drink your egg nog. 6488 PRETTY, BIRTHDAY GIRL AT THREE Tomatoes on 2/01, wearing a blue shirt and black skirt and glasses, getting gift at table from two friends. I would really like to get to know you better 6487

RYAN AT THE COMMUNITY HEALTH Center. You told me about the freshies at Jay and I was too shy to ask if you wanted to go w/me. I was the hypochondriac w/a headache. Let’s ride some time soon. 6485 MIKA FROM CHAMPLAIN COLLEGE: WE met on the lift twice, but missed you on Friday nights at Bolton Valley. If we can’t share a chair, how about a coffee? 6483 2/17, NECTAR’S TRIVIA NIGHT. YOU: hottie on team “Platinum” w/dark hair. Me: playing solo every Thursday, can I join you next week? I’m really good at the human body questions! 6482 YOUR SECOND YOGA CLASS EVER, SHORT, silvery hair, 2/17 Burlington Yoga. We talked in the hall. May I set you up with my friend? I have a feeling you’d like her. I’m taken but have a good guy-eye. 6481 2/19, AKES. YOU: TALL W/BROWN CORduroy jacket. Me: short, greenish blue sweater, jeans. I like your style, except for the ring on a very important finger. Was it just for show? I’m interested and curious. 6479 135 PEARL: I SPY THE MOST SUPER FUN DJ in town! You make weekends fun again! You truly are precious! 6478 NORTHWEST: DETROIT TO BURLINGTON, 2/17. Water tower software girl, wondering if you were able to shake that cold? Didn’t want to wait till spring to see you again. 6476 2/20, I SPY TWO GIRLS IN A WHITE FORD. We were in a green Focus. We exchanged glances then waves on Shelburne Rd. on the way back into Burlington. Maybe we four can catch a movie. 6475 I SPY TWO KINDHEARTED GUYS ON N. Winooski. Thank you for pushing my car out of my snowed in parking space. 6474 I SPY THE ONE WHO found my black wallet. There is a reward for its safe return. 6471 A RED TRUCK W/ALASKA PLATES, NO shocks and a curly-haired gypsy driver who doesn’t mind getting her hands dirty. Don’t go to Mass, stay and play w/me! 6467 YOU: BEARDED CHEF W/NECK TATTOOS working at Flatbread. After watching you while I ate my meal, I couldn’t stop thinking about you. Maybe you could tend my oven some night. 6466 YOU: READING ATLAS SHRUGGED AT COFfee place. I asked you for the time. Irritating guy imposed, moved your bag and sat down. I wanted to tell him to leave you to your sweet lonesome. You’re great. 6465 FROM THE YOUNG M ACROSS THE BAR that bought you a drink at Flatbread. Confused at first, but after a wave, a smile and a few KaChoos, you dropped $20 on our meal. Does this mean you’re my sugar daddy? 6461

FOR FREE

7Dpersonals 31B

YOU: ARABIAN HP NERD W/GREAT DIMples. Me: swearing that you can walk underneath the Winooski Falls. How about we run away together? 6459 BEHIND THE DESK AT BPD: YOU WERE on desk duty the times I’ve been in, this a few times. Again on 2/18, when my friend got herself in trouble. Really, I’m a good girl. Single? Married? Interested? How about coffee? 6458 I SPY A HANDSOME TAUREAN FROM THE coast of Maine who stole my heart on Halloween. You had me at the first hug! Noonie’s right, there is no one you like you. 6454 DORSET ST. HANNAFORDS, 2/20. YOU: guy in brown carpenter pants, blue (Patagonia?) fleece, ski hat. Me: girl in jeans, black fleece, blondish shoulder length hair. We were shopping the same aisles. Care to compare lists? 6453 WAC PEOPLE CELEBRATING WIMMIN! Tuesday, March 8. Meet me at the Vagina door. Beyonce, can you handle it? 6452 CITY MARKET, 2/19: YOU LET ME GO ahead of you in line and I bought sorbet for breakfast. We only talked for a little while, but you made me smile. Care to meet at the co-op again for lunch? 6450 KEY WEST WEEK. TAXI TO AIRPORT. I enjoyed our talk about Key West past. How about an update over coffee, wine and/or dinner. 6398 TO THE PERSON WHO I-SPYED THE police officer at the Town Center. Box 5747. Who are you spying? Police and security want to know. 6396 LANGDON ST. CAFE GODDESS: SERVE ME up some of those deloncious treats from your decidedly leftist pirate’s den! Mmm! You are so ridiculously sweet, maple sugar dumplin’ caramelicious honey cakes! 6394 REDNECK GIRL ON HER 4 WHEELER IN Mallets Bay. Me- young guy watching the ice races when you smiled going past. I’m from the south and new to VT, wanna save a horse and ride a cowboy? 6393 LA PRIMERA VEZ NO TUVE LA VOZ PARA decirte sobre tu belleza. Ahora tengo la voz pero no puedo porque somos amigos. Nuestras almas bailaban cuando besabamos y estaban como uno cuando hacamos el amor. Te amo, duende de helado. 6392 I SPY A TURTLE WITH GORGEOUS AND filthy tortoise eyes schussing her ninja masked way into my heart. Join me in a long future of blue ribbon, beets, Bentley fur, and bizarro roommates. I’ll drive, you navigate. 6390 I SPY A BEAUTIFUL, STRONG, INTELLIGent Scorpio OT who is also the bestest roommate, coworker and girlfriend ever! I am so blessed to have you in my life, even if I don’t remember to tell you so all the time! 6388

QUEEN ELIZABETH OF NIMES: PISCEAN sister. I see you traveling, leather coat clad, wineries in your wake, gnomes in every corner, British boys battling for your attention, teaching wee kiddos and having the time of your life! 6384 Page 1

TO THE “ANONYMOUS” VPB BUS BOY: I love you and that’s all that matters! Whoever wrote that obviously doesn’t know you. I got your back! 6460

YOU: CUTE BLONDE WORKING AT BEN and Jerry’s in Williston. You made me a Phish Food shake and put5x3-planetrock030205 such a big smile on my face, call me sometime. 6486

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6:41 PM

HPLANET ROCKH FULL BAR H GENTLEMEN’S CLUB H ADULT STORE PRESENTS

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employment@sevendaysvt.com

DISPLAY ADS: $19.75/col. inch.

LI N E ADS: 75¢ a word.

7D EMPLOYMENT UPDATED EVERY WEEKDAY ONLINE AT 7DCLASSIFIEDS.COM

Where the Good Jobs are… DAILY!

R e s e r ve yo u r a d o n l i n e a t 7 D c l a s s i f i e d s . c o m o r c a l l M i c h e l l e B ro w n a t 8 0 2 . 8 6 5 . 1 0 2 0 X 2 1 . PPNNE’s mission is to provide, promote and protect voluntary choices about reproductive health for all. Help communities improve opportunities for youth through AmeriCorps VISTA. The Vermont Out-Of-School Time (VOOST) A*VISTA Program places A*VISTA members at nonprofit organizations to help communities build and sustain high quality opportunities for youth. During a one-year service commitment, A*VISTA members develop innovative programs, recruit and train volunteers, strengthen operating systems, develop resources, and increase youth and community participation. Benefits include the following: bi-weekly living allowance; health benefits plan; $4725 education award or $1200 cash stipend; childcare assistance, if eligible; and comprehensive training. Opportunities are available in Burlington, Essex Junction, Montpelier, Newport, and Vergennes. Please respond by March 16th to:

Matt Stewart VOOST A*VISTA Team Leader Vermont Out-of-School Time A*VISTA Program Phone: (802) 229-9151 • Email: serveVTyouth@adelphia.net

7Dclassifieds.com

BENEFITS ADMINISTRATOR Seeking a full-time (37.50 hours/weekly) Benefits Administrator to manage benefits program for 250+ employees in three states. Some payroll responsibilities, as well. Successful candidate will have 2-4 years experience managing employee welfare plans, paid time-off programs, and other benefits. Thorough understanding of compliance issues is required, including HIPAA, COBRA, FLSA, ERISA, etc. Planned Parenthood offers a supportive, teamoriented work environment, competitive salary, and an opportunity to help maintain the mission of one of the most trusted organizations in reproductive health care. Please respond with resumé, cover letter, and salary requirements by March 18th to hresources@ppnne.org or:

HR Manager Planned Parenthood of Northern New England 183 Talcott Road, Suite 101 Williston, Vermont 05495 Proud to be an Equal Opportunity Employer

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of Northern New England

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Howard Community Services

DEVELOPMENT & ADMINISTRATIVE COORDINATOR Stowe Land Trust is seeking a highly motivated professional for the flexible part-time (30hr.) position of Development and Administrative Coordinator. Candidate will join an interesting, dynamic, and growing conservation organization with a 2-person staff. Responsible for managing the annual appeal campaign, maintaining the donor database, upkeep of files, timely output of donor acknowledgement letters, membership reporting, and assisting with the identification and solicitation of businesses and corporations. The successful candidate will take the lead on at least two major fundraising events per year, including design and coordination of materials, solicitation of donor support, event registration, and volunteer coordination. Position requires a demonstrated ability to manage all administrative functions to ensure smooth and efficient operations, including receptionist duties, bookkeeping, accounting, and taking of meeting minutes. Other responsibilities: product research, securing quotes from vendors, ordering merchandise, coordination of bulk mailings, updating the website, assistance with the preparation of the annual report, and other duties as assigned. REQUIREMENTS: Bachelor’s degree preferred. A minimum of three years experience in development and/or nonprofit sector is required. Must have excellent organizational and interpersonal skills and telephone demeanor (ability to communicate professionally and effectively with project partners and donors), be detail-oriented with the ability to prioritize, problem solve, and multitask. Excellent business writing skills and the ability to communicate ideas succinctly. Candidate must be comfortable with word processing, design and fundraising/database software. Professional experience in conservation, law and/or real estate a plus. SALARY/BENEFITS: Flexible 30 hr/week with occasional evening or weekend hours. Hourly rate commensurate with experience. An opportunity exists for increased hours aligned with successful fundraising efforts. Health options available; sick, vacation and holiday benefits provided. Qualified candidates should submit a letter of interest, resumé and references by April 1, 2005 to: Heather Furman, Executive Director, P.O. Box 284, Stowe, Vermont 05672; or via email to info@stowelandtrust.org, or fax to (802) 253-2642. For more information, please visit www.stowelandtrust.org

A Division of the Howard Center for Human Services 102 S. Winooski Ave. Burlington, VT 05401 www.howardcenter.org

Training Specialist Position is 10 hours per week with a vivacious 41-year-old woman living independently in Burlington who needs assistance with independent living skills including cooking, cleaning and organizing. Afternoon hours are preferred, but the schedule is negotiable. Person is required to assess situational tasks and assist the client in addressing those tasks with innovative approaches. Applicants should have a good sense of humor and a calm demeanor. Contact Jim Hessler at 660-0172 for more information and an application.

Employment Consultant Full-time position providing support and expertise to numerous clients with developmental disabilities who are seeking and maintaining employment. Duties include assessment of employment skills, job search & placement, job training and on-going support. Must have good communication and judgment skills as well as reliable transportation. Temporary with potential to become permanent. Send resumé and cover letter to Karen Hussey or email KarenH@HowardCenter.org.

Respite Providers Support providers are needed to provide supports to individuals with developmental disabilities. Howard Community Services acts as a listing agency. After the screening process is complete, providers are listed out to consumers and others on their team that will employ providers. Various opportunities are available that offer a flexible schedule and skill-building challenges. Hours and locations vary. Contact Kathy at 802-865-6173 for more information. ***EOE/TTY Individuals with disabilities encouraged to apply *** Visit our website at www.howardcenter.org


employment@sevendaysvt.com

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EMPLOYMENT The Employment Source for Educators

ADMINISTRATIVE POSITIONS SOUTH BURLINGTON SCHOOL DISTRICT SVD5599 Asst. Superintendent for Admin. Services

SVD5663 Tchr. of English Lang. Learners Porters Point School SVD5665 Librarian SVD5667 School Nurse (RN) Union Memorial School SVD5614 Building Nurse

SOUTH BURLINGTON SCHOOL DISTRICT

CHITTENDEN CENTRAL SU

SVD5606 Admin. Asst. to the School Board SVD5602 Sub Bus Drivers SVD5603 Sub Food Services Workers South Burlington High School SVD5707 High School Baker F H Tuttle Middle School SVD5648 Building Custodian SVD5645 Salad Bar Prep Central School SVD5601 Paraeducator

Westford Elementary School SVD5541 Principal

ADDISON CENTRAL SU

ADDISON NORTHEAST SU Beeman Elementary School SVD5683 Principal K-6

FRANKLIN CENTRAL SU SVD5380 Administrative Asst. B.F.A. St. Albans SVD5336 Principal (9-12)

TEACHING & STAFF POSITIONS BURLINGTON PUBLIC SCHOOLS SVD5464 Bus Driver SVD5696 English as a Second Lang. SVD5701 Strings Music Teacher Burlington High School SVD5700 Reading Teacher SVD5702 Science Teachers (2) H.O. Wheeler SVD5699 0.4 FTE Special Educator Champlain Elementary SVD5698 Speech Lang. Path. Edmunds Middle School SVD5703 Boys & Girls Lacrosse Coaches (2) SVD5508 Soccer Coach - Boys Essential Early Education SVD5550 Indiv. Student Asst. - 10 hrs/wk Lawrence Barnes SVD5697 Gr. 1 & 2 Teachers (2)

COLCHESTER SCHOOL DISTRICT SVD5613 SPED Instr. Asst./Tutor Colchester Middle School SVD5674 Track & Field MS Coach Colchester High School SVD5658 Spanish Teacher

SVD5624 EEE Paraprofessionals (2) SVD5441 Part-time ESL Instructor Middlebury Union Middle School SVD5545 Science Teacher Salisbury Community School SVD5652 One-on-one Paraprofessional

FRANKLIN CENTRAL SU SVD5494 SLP Paraprofessionals SVD5705 Speech & Lang. Ther. – Antic. ‘06 Fairfield Center School SVD5706 .4 Preschool Teacher – Antic. ‘06 SVD5418 Speech/Lang. Path. 05/06 SY

FRANKLIN WEST SU Bellows Free Academy Fairfax SVD5617 LT Sub Special Educator

BARRE SU Barre City Elem. & Middle School SVD5473 LT Sub Grade 2 Teacher SVD5472 LT Sub Physical Ed Spaulding HS & Barre Tech Ctr. Campus SVD5671 Math - LT Sub SVD5605 Physical Science Teacher

CHITTENDEN EAST SU SVD5688 Kindergarten Teacher - Antic. SVD5687 Reading/Math Res. Tchr. - Antic. SVD5618 Behavior Specialist SVD5619 Educational Evaluator SVD5690 Evening Custodian SVD5620 Instructional Asst. SVD5621 Instructional Asst.

CHITTENDEN CENTRAL SU Essex High School SVD5684 Latin Teacher - Antic. SVD5685 Spanish Teacher - Antic. Westford Elementary School SVD5586 Microcomputer Specialist Center for Technology, Essex SVD5471 Human Services Instructor SVD5694 Ophthalmic Med. Asst. Tchr. - Antic. SVD5693 Professional Foods Tchr. - Antic.

CHITTENDEN SOUTH SU Williston School District SVD5675 Middle Level Science Teacher SVD5596 MS Math Teacher Shelburne Community School SVD5670 Paraeducator SVD5275 PT High Needs Special Educ. Para. Champlain Valley Union High School SVD5609 Art Teacher - 1 Year Only SVD5608 Mathematics SVD5562 Part-Time COTA position

RUTLAND CITY PUBLIC SCHOOLS Northeast Primary SVD5568 Gr. 1 Teacher SVD5570 Gr. 2 Teacher SVD5571 Reading and Enrich. Tchr. SVD5567 SPED Teacher Northwest Primary SVD5531 Special Educator, LT Sub SVD5566 Speech/Lang. Path. Rutland Intermediate School SVD5575 Gr. 4 Teacher SVD5574 Gr. 6 Teacher SVD5572 School Counselor SVD5573 SPED Teacher (2) Rutland Middle School SVD5577 French Teacher (Dual Cert. Prfd.) SVD5578 Ind. Arts/Technology Educator SVD5579 Social Studies Teacher - Antic. SVD5576 Spanish Teacher (Dual Cert. Prfd.) Rutland High School SVD5582 English Teacher - Antic. SVD5581 Mathematics Teacher SVD5580 Science Teacher Stafford Technical Center SVD5583 Coop Education Instructor SVD5679 Public Safety Svcs: Law Enforc. Instr. Longfellow Administration SVD5564 Music Teacher (1 yr., 2 locations)

Here's how it works: Go to SchoolSpring.com • Enter job number • View job description • Apply on-line


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7D CLASSIFIEDEMPLOYMENT Corrections Mental Health

OFFICE MANAGER/PERSONAL ASSISTANT needed for small architectural firm. Smart, organized, interested, flexible, motivated, funny, responsible, discreet and professional. Proficiency with MS Office Suite, QuickBooks and Macintosh a plus. Creative environment, diverse work and flexible part/possible full-time hours.

Licensed Mental Health Clinician

sought for part-time position at Dale Women’s Correctional facility in Waterbury, VT. Provide assessment, individual and group therapy. Foster and participate in multidisciplinary treatment approach and continuous quality improvement. Competitive salary.

Full-time Summer Teacher To begin July 5th through July 29th, 2005.

Part-time Spanish Teacher

Send resumé with cover letter to:

Email cover letter and resumé to: Marion Watson at fmjer29v11@aol.com

To begin immediately.

Please contact Sadie Khouri at 802-865-3347 The International Children’s School, Inc. 1 Executive Drive, South Burlington, VT 05403

GKW WORKING DESIGN • PO BOX 1341 • STOWE, VT 05672

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TOWN MANAGER

RETAIL COORDINATOR PART-TIME

Putney, Vermont U.S. Smokeless Tobacco Brands Inc. is a leading consumer products manufacturer of premium smokeless tobacco products including Copenhagen and Skoal. We currently have an opportunity available for a part-time Retail Coordinator to service accounts in the Montpelier – Central, VT area.

The Town of Putney, Vermont (population 2,700) is accepting applications for a Town Manager. Located in southeastern Vermont, Putney is a lively rural community that offers a high quality of life to both residents and visitors alike. Visit www.putney.net for more information.

As a Retail Coordinator, you will be responsible for placing point-ofsale material, removing returned goods and improving our product positioning in retail accounts. You will also conduct adult consumer sampling and may place promotional displays.

The manager is responsible for the daily operations of the town, manages a $1.5 million budget and 14 employees, and reports to a three-member select board. Candidates should have excellent interpersonal skills, work well with volunteer boards and commissions, and have working knowledge of municipal government; experience with public budgeting, planning and zoning, and/or community development preferred.

A high school diploma is required. Previous merchandising and selling skills in a consumer product environment are preferred. Strong communication and organizational skills are essential. An automobile, valid driver’s license and auto insurance coverage are required. You must be at least 18 years of age.

Bachelor’s degree in relevant field and three years municipal management experience, or equivalent combination of experience and education required; Master’s preferred. Hiring range is $45,000 - $53,000, DOQ. Full job description available at www.vlct.org under classifieds. Please send resumé and cover letter to:

Putney Manager Search, VLCT 89 Main Street, Suite 4 Montpelier, VT 05602

For confidential consideration, please send a resumé to: USSTB Sales Manager, 967 Hill Street Extension, Berlin, VT 05602. Equal opportunity employer M/F/D/V. www.ustinc.com

EOE

j

Resumé review will begin March 28, 2005.

.com

MARKETING PROJECT SPECIALIST Stowe, Vermont Primary Characteristics: Work closely with Sr. Marketing Manager to develop and implement integrated marketing plans for EverBank’s affiliate and direct marketing channels. Specifically: • Assist Marketing Manager in the creative development and execution of marketing initiatives, including inserts, print advertising, and direct mail. • Assist in interactive marketing functions, including search engine marketing, email marketing and online advertising. • Coordinate the scheduling of affiliate-related conferences and special speaking events. • Regularly measure, monitor, analyze and communicate marketing results. • Work with media vendors (print, online, direct mail) to ensure successful (on time and on budget) project completion. • Support all new product and/or distribution expansion strategies. • Ensure marketing deliverables adhere to all corporate brand strategies, messages and guidelines. Minimum Qualifications: • Proven ability to execute tactical marketing campaigns in a fast-paced environment. • Excellent communication skills with solid writing, editing, design skills and presentation abilities. • Project management expertise with strength in managing implementation plans and timelines. • Ability to track/analyze marketing campaign results and development of strategy implications. • Strong interpersonal skills and a dedicated team player. • Advanced working knowledge of Word, Excel and PowerPoint. Training and Experience: • Bachelor’s degree in marketing or related field. • 3 to 5 years of marketing experience that includes communications design and campaign implementation • Interactive Marketing Experience a plus! • Experience in the financial services industry is preferred.

To apply today, send resumé and brief cover memo to luis.delvalle@everbank.com. No calls please. Only qualified candidates will be contacted.

Stowe-based Inntopia is a leading provider of travel reservation technology to the destination travel market, with an emphasis on technology products for the snowsports industry. We are experiencing high demand for our products, and are looking to fill the following positions:

DOCUMENTATION SPECIALIST Prepare and maintain system and user documentation for the Inntopia Reservation System. Translate business specifications into system documentation. Plan, write and maintain user manuals, including online help screens. Experience in the travel/hospitality industry a plus. Please include writing samples with resumé.

HELP DESK Support specialist for the Inntopia Reservation System. Ideal candidate must be tech savvy, but is patient with those who are not. Familiarity with hotel and/ or central reservation systems and operations a plus. Familiarity with the Internet and attention to detail are a must.

PART-TIME BOOKKEEPER Detail-oriented individual experienced in accounting/bookkeeping to handle accounts receivable, accounts payable, and collections. Specific responsibilities include preparing bank deposits, posting customer payments to accounts receivable and preparing payments to vendors and other business partners. Knowledge of the Internet, QuickBooks and MS Office. 25 hours per week, flexible schedule.

NET DEVELOPER Help expand our ground-breaking application using sophisticated Web/ Database tools. Provide .NET programming for an n-tier Web application with complex user interfaces and many complex SQL Server 2000 stored procedures. You will work independently and as part of a team helping migrate to a complete .NET environment. Qualified candidate has at least one year of experience using ASP.NET (VB or C#), XML, XSL, XLST, Stored Procedures, and at least four years of Microsoft development experience using ASP and SQL Server. Experience with Web services and/or the travel industry a plus.

Inntopia provides a casual and user-friendly work environment, competitive wages and outstanding benefits.

EMAIL RESUMÉ TO JOBS@INNTOPIA.COM


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EMPLOYMENT T he Ne w Sch ool of Mont p elie r

BARTENDING SCHOOL n Hands-on Training n National Certification n Job Assistance

PARAPROFESSIONALS

∂ (Fu ll - and Part-tim e)

to work one-on-one with our uniquely terrific students. Year-round school with school vacations. Competitive wage and benefit package. Training and continuing education provided. Five years work experience and some college preferred, not required. Criminal record checks conducted. Send resumé, cover letter and names of three references by March 4th (no phone calls, please) to:

1-888-4drinks

www.bartendingschool.com

EARLY CHILDHOOD: We are looking for a mature, warm, flexible professional to join our team of toddler program facilitators. Full-time position, Monday through Friday. Please send your resumé to: The PlayCare Center P.O. Box 166, Richmond, VT 05477 or call Crystal at 434-3891 for more information. EOE

Online @ 7Dclassifieds.com

New School R ecru iting 7386 Rout e 100B More town, V T 05660

DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR Dynamic and growing membership organization seeks experienced fundraiser to direct all membership and donor services and raise funds. The Director of Development will work with an active Board, major donors, membership and the Executive Director, and be supported with administrative staff and a skilled donor software manager. Qualified candidates will have several years of proven experience in membership development and event planning, grant writing, volunteer coordination, media and public relations. The successful candidate will be dedicated to developing resources to meet our social justice mission, and conversant in community development and affordable housing strategies. Must be energetic, productive and well organized. Highly competitive compensation package including ongoing professional development, health insurance benefits and generous leave. BCLT is an equal opportunity employer committed to diversity. Salary commensurate with experience. Competitive compensation package includes excellent health and vacation benefits. Please send resumé and cover letter to Brenda Torpy, Executive Director, BCLT, P.O. Box 523, Burlington, VT 05402, by 4:00 p.m., Monday, March 21, 2005.

Resource Development Specialist The Child Care Support Services at the Family Center of Northwestern Vermont is seeking a Resource Development Specialist. This is a full-time position supporting caregivers in Franklin and Grand Isle Counties who care for children at risk of abuse and neglect.The specialist will review case plans with service coordinators, visit and assist childcare providers in designing child-focused activities that will support the case plan and present regularly scheduled evening workshops for caregivers. BA in Early Childhood Education or equivalent required. Send letter of interest and resumé to address below.

Community-based Life Skills Support Worker Recovery-oriented mental health program seeks dynamic, flexible team player to provide skills of daily living in community settings. Position requires a willingness to work in various settings with individuals with major and persistent mental illness, as well as individuals in recovery from Traumatic Brain Injury. Responsibilities include providing assistance with activities of daily living, such as shopping, transportation, accompaniment to scheduled activities and appointments. Candidates should have a desire to assist others, be recovery focused, be compassionate and have a nonjudgmental attitude. Ability to work both independently and in a collaborative team environment. Associate’s degree in the Human Service field and/or relevant experience required. Please send letter of interest and resumé to address below.

Adult Community Support Worker Recovery-oriented mental health program seeks dynamic, flexible team player to provide community support services to individuals with severe and persistent mental illness. Responsible for delivering services in a variety of community-based settings related to: supportive counseling and symptom management, activities of daily living, social and interpersonal skills development, money management and advocacy. Ability to work both independently and in a collaborative team environment a must. Applicants must have the ability and willingness to provide transportation for clients. Knowledge of both substance use and the criminal justice system a plus. Experience a plus, however not required. Bachelor’s degree in the Human Services field and/or relevant experience required. Please send letter of interest and resumé to the address below.

Outpatient Therapist Interested in being part of a group that includes a supportive team of therapists, coverage of your after hours emergencies and the efficient billing staff? Northwestern Counseling and Supportive Services is a progressive community mental health center serving Franklin and Grand Isle Counties. We are currently seeking two licensed therapists who have experience treating children, adolescents, adults and families for the following positions: • Full-time Therapist: This fee-for-service position has excellent individual earning potential and a complete benefits package. After school and some evening hours are priorities, but otherwise the schedule is flexible. • Part-time Therapist: Licensed therapist willing to work late afternoons and evenings on a contract fee-for-service basis with excellent individual earning potential. Flexibility in scheduling appointments and must be willing to participate in group supervision meetings. Send resumé and cover letter to address below.

107 Fisher Pond Rd., St. Albans, VT 05478 • E.O.E.


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7D CLASSIFIEDEMPLOYMENT MANAGER POSITION The VCME seeks a part-time Manager with flexible hours. Pay: $13,000-15,000/year depending on experience. Duties include office administration, concert production, publicity, fund-raising and volunteer recruitment. Must have excellent communication skills (oral and written) and be well organized. Should be proficient at Microsoft Office and familiar with QuickBooks or other financial software. Musical knowledge a plus.

INVENTORY MANAGER

Social Services – Spectrum

Full-time. Must be able to lift 40 lbs. Must be able to work independently; ability to sell jewelry is a must. Website experience a plus. Retail experience required. Benefits available. Apply within.

Full-time. Provide short and long-term support, crisis intervention, advocacy, substance abuse work for homeless and runaway youth. MSW/MA required. Letter/resumé to:

CASE MANAGER

(in the Burlington Town Center, downstairs)

EB Spectrum One Stop 177 Pearl St. Burlington, VT 05401

IMPORTER OF SILVER JEWELRY & GIFTS

TRADEWINDS IMPORTS 49 CHURCH ST., BURLINGTON, VT

Email cover letter and resumé to clarcell@vcme.org.

EOE

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CLINTON COMMUNITY COLLEGE

STUDENT SUPPORT SERVICES COUNSELOR Clinton Community College announces an immediate vacancy for a Student Support Services Counselor responsible for a variety of activities to help promote student success and retention, including but not limited to personal counseling/ crisis resolution, academic advisement, transfer counseling, student development workshops, supervision of counseling interns, and providing campus-wide education on alcohol and other drug issues. Some evening and weekend hours, as needed. The successful candidate shall possess a Master’s degree in counseling or social work. Experience with alcohol and drug counseling and counseling college-aged students preferred. Good communication skills, demonstrated ability to maintain confidentiality and work with a diverse student population is required. Minimum starting salary of $34,500 is complemented by an excellent benefits package. Applicants who do not meet the minimum qualifications as stated are encouraged to put in writing precisely how their background and experience have prepared them for the responsibilities of this position and by providing appropriate references. Exceptions to the degree requirements may be made for compelling reasons. Review of applications will begin on March 28, 2005, and continue until the position is filled. Submit letter of interest, resumé, CCC Application Form (available at www.clinton.edu), unofficial transcripts, and the name, address and phone number of three current references to:

Human Resources Officer, Clinton Community College 136 Clinton Point Drive, Plattsburgh, New York 12901 Clinton Community College, a member of the State University of New York System, is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer and complies with ADA requirements. Consistent with the Americans with Disabilities Act, applicants needing reasonable accommodations during the employment process should advise HR as necessary.

WASHINGTON COUNTY M E N TA L H E A LT H Mental Health Counselor – Full-time Join an innovative treatment team providing assistance to an older woman in the process of recovery. The team is oriented to progress occurring within the context of positive relationship. This is a great opportunity for someone wanting to get some valuable training and a foot in the door in the helping profession. Duties include encouraging skill acquisition, promoting personal responsibility and providing assistance in building a meaningful life in the community. Some evening hours and one overnight weekly. Competitive salary and benefits. B.A., experience working with people and preferred. Creativity, willingness to work hard, commitment to the recovery model, ability to work well with a team and sense of humor required.

Behavioral/Social Skills Interventionist Provide direct supervision to youth in school setting. Implement behavioral plan, provide counseling in social, recreational and daily living skills in school and community settings. BA in human services, education or psychology. Only qualified applicants will receive a response. Valid driver’s license, good driving record and safe insured vehicle required. Send letter of interest and resumé to:

WCMHS, Personnel, PO Box 647, Montpelier, VT 05601 Contact: (802) 229-0591 • Fax: (802) 223-8623 personnel@wcmhs.org • www.wcmhs.org EOE

The Granite Group, the second largest Plumbing & Heating wholesaler in New England, has a position in our Burlington branch for a

Showroom Consultant This position is responsible for assisting our trade customers and their clients, as well as homeowners in making plumbing fixture decisions. You would be performing showroom sales including meeting, greeting and servicing showroom customers with top-flight service. To succeed in this role, you will need a desire to remain abreast of and become expert in the products lines displayed in the showroom. To be qualified for this position, you will need to possess stellar customer service skills to include oral and written communication skills, the ability to negotiate and resolve conflicts and above all, patience and a desire to serve the customer. Solid computer skills along with a good understanding of sales techniques are necessary. In addition, you must be willing to become a product expert and have the ability to multitask. Good math and analytical skills are a must. The Granite Group offers a competitive compensation and benefits package.

Please send your resumé to the attention of Bob Marshall, 180 Flynn Avenue, Burlington, VT 05401 or email your resumé to bmarshall@thegranitegroup.com.

New England Culinary Institute staff members thrive on the energy and excitement of being part of a leader in culinary education. Every staff member at NECI contributes to our students’ educational experience.

Restaurant Manager, Butler’s Inn at Essex The Butler’s Manager works with the Food and Beverage Director, Butler’s Lab Supervisor(s), Butler’s Chef and Inn at Essex management team to ensure maximum guest satisfaction, the creation of a quality educational environment, staff satisfaction and retention, and maximum profitability for Butler’s Restaurant. This position takes a lead role in teaching the Operations Management class, including curriculum development and timely evaluations of students. He/She ensures the hiring, training, and development of students and staff through supervision, teamwork and cooperation with the Lab Supervisor(s). He/She communicates high standards and holds people accountable. The Butler’s Manager evaluates business levels, developing and implementing plans for continuous improvement and growth and is part of developing and maintaining a culture that inspires pride and professionalism resulting in overall guest frequency and positive word of mouth. Qualifications include excellent communication skills, organization, and supervisory skills. Must have basic spirit and wine knowledge, and related experience. Will enjoy full benefits including vacation pay, health insurance, health club membership and 401K plan. Please send resumé and letter of interest to greatjobs@neci.edu or apply in person at 250 Main Street, Montpelier, Vermont. EOE

Share our passion for culinary arts? Visit www.neci.edu


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EMPLOYMENT Northeastern Family Institute

in Charlotte, off Route 7

b a s i c E Pa r t s

NFI, an expanding statewide mental health treatment system for children, adolescents and families, is seeking to fill the following positions:

Join our fun pack!

THERAPEUTIC CASE MANAGER

We need someone Monday thru Friday, hours 8:30am-5:30pm.

Northeastern Family Institute Community Alternatives Program located in St. Albans has an opening for a Therapeutic Case Manager. Responsibilities include treatment planning and service coordination, in-home work with children and biological, adoptive and foster families, as well as supervision of community skills workers and foster parents. Strong communication skills, attention to details and ability to set limits required. Come join a small close-knit team of dedicated children’s services providers. Previous work with children with emotional/ behavioral challenges desired. Master’s degree in a related field preferred.

We are distributors of hi-tech parts all over the world. In business 24 years and still having fun. Small company setting, 11 people. We’re human; we know we work ’cause we have to, so we try to keep that in mind. The sun does not rise and set on the company. Still it’s fun competing and beating the BIG GUYS!

If you are interested in this position call Marc Adams at 524-1700, or submit cover letter and resumé to Marc Adams, NFI-CAP 35 Catherine St., St. Albans, VT 05478.

Call for an appointment.

WAREHOUSE: Very small parts. Lots of detail. Good handwriting is essential.

(802) 425-5800

EOE

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LICENSED CHILDCARE COORDINATOR

SHARED LIVING PROVIDER A Division of the Counseling Service of Addison County, Inc.

Essex Junction Recreation & Parks

Shared Living Provider needed on weekends and during school vacations for engaging 18-year-old man with a developmental disability. This energetic and pleasant man enjoys poetry, music and physical activities such as swimming, hiking and sailing. Excellent tax-free compensation of $25,000 per year. Ongoing training and working within a dynamic and supportive team make this an exciting opportunity. Ideal candidate will reside in Addison County or northern Rutland County, be and able to provide a consistent and structured routine. Experience preferred, but not necessary.

We are looking for an individual to run our state-licensed after-school programs for students in grades K-3 for the 2004-2005 school year. The successful candidates must have a Bachelor’s degree in recreation, elementary education or related field plus two years of experience in youth service program management, or a combination of education and experience from which comparable skills and knowledge are acquired. Responsibilities shall include development and delivery of the after-school program, daily communication with parents and school faculty, supervision of staff, program purchasing, record keeping, childcare training, preparing weekly schedules and managing budget. All applicants must have ability to obtain Red Cross CPR and First-Aid certification. Pays $14.40 per hour, approximately 25-30 hours/week. Open until filled.

Community Associates, Jessica Lindert 802-388-4021

For additional information, please call 878-1375. For consideration, please send letter and resumé to:

EOE

Essex Junction Recreation and Parks 75 Maple Street Essex Jct., VT 05452

The

EOE

Counseling Service of Addison County

Vermont

“Come and help us take CSAC to the next level!”

ELECTRICIAN I Burlington Airport, Full-time This position is responsible for maintaining all electrical systems throughout the airfield, terminal and various properties owned by the airport. Vermont State Journeyman License required. Submit City of Burlington Application, cover letter and resumé by March 28, 2005.

CEMETERY MAINTENANCE WORKER Parks and Recreation, Full-time The individual chosen for this position is responsible for all landscaping, equipment maintenance, burial assistance, and building and monument repairs for three City Cemeteries. Minimum qualifications include, high school diploma or equivalent, one year experience in groundskeeping, proven background in the maintenance and repair of small engine motors, (e.g. two- and four-cycle engines), and ability to possess and maintain valid Vermont state driver’s license. Submit City of Burlington Application, cover letter and resumé by March 17, 2005.

RECYCLING TRUCK DRIVER Public Works, Full-time High school diploma or equivalent, valid Class B CDL and the ability to interact courteously with the public while completing job duties on time. Submit City of Burlington Application by March 17, 2005. The City offers a great benefits package including health and dental insurance, vacation and personal days. If interested in any of these job openings or for disability access information, or to request an application, contact Human Resources at (802) 865-7145 or 865-7142 (TTY). Human Resources Department, City Hall, Room 33, Burlington, VT 05401. Visit our website: www.hrjobs.burlington.vt.us. WOMEN, MINORITIES AND PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES ARE HIGHLY ENCOURAGED TO APPLY. EOE

The Counseling Service of Addison County is a nonprofit,community mental health and developmental disabilities agency serving the residence of Addison County, Vermont. CSAC is proud of its long standing reputation for excellent services to members of our community. CSAC employs nearly 260 people and we are looking to expand our team. For a complete list of “Job Opportunities” at CSAC visit www.csac-vt.org.

“JOB OPPORTUNITIES” Emergency Team Clinician – Master’s level mental health clinician to join our Emergency Team.Work two 12-hour days weekly; additional clinical hours in Adult Outpatient program available. Seeking candidate with crisis intervention experience, excellent clinical judgment and skills, resiliency, and a strong team orientation. Must live within thirty minutes of Middlebury. Knowledge of community mental health system and community resources a plus. Adult Outpatient Support Worker – Part-time position in Adult Outpatient Program providing community support services and related to mental health issues. Must have own transportation. BA in Human Services or related field preferred. Flexible hours! Community Skills Worker, 20-hours per week – Responsible for providing individualized community-based services to children with the goal of inclusion and successful functioning in school,home and community.Flexible after-school and evening hours.BA preferred plus good working knowledge of the needs and abilities of children with emotional and behavioral challenges. Regular Substitute, CA – This is a key program position providing substitute support to adults with developmental disabilities in the Middlebury area.The ideal candidate will be cross-trained with a wide variety of individuals, thus becoming a vital member of several dynamic teams. 37.5hr/wk. Personal care, medicine administration, ability to lift, as well as assisting with physical therapy and use of personal car required.Thorough and ongoing paid training guaranteed.Experience preferred but not required.Must be available to work overnights, weekends, and some holidays. Education requirements: HS diploma or equivalent, valid driver’s license & reliable vehicle. Comprehensive benefits package offered including health & life insurance, generous vacation plans & 403b. To apply to any of the “Job Opportunities” listed above you may choose to contact us by: • Email: hr@csac-vt.org • Postal: Send a resumé and cover letter to Human Resources, CSAC, 89 Main Street, Middlebury,VT 05753 • In Person: Application for employment can be picked up at either CSAC offices: 89 Main Street or 61 Court Street, in Middlebury,VT • Phone: Please contact Human Resources at (802) 388-6751.EOE


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7D CLASSIFIEDEMPLOYMENT Teaching Position

The Stern Center for Language and Learning is a non-profit educational center working to help all learners reach their potential.

The Stern Center for Language and Learning is a non-profit educational center working to help all learners reach their potential.

We have an opening for a

We have an immediate opening for a

Communications Associate

who will be responsible for advancing our image and identity through media relations, graphic design for printed materials and website, database management and special community relations projects. The ideal candidate will have strong oral and written communication skills, be detail oriented, organized, and a team-player committed to the Stern Center’s mission. Deadline for applications March 14 or until position is filled

Long-term Substitute Teacher

for our Enrichment Center for Young Children at our Williston location. The ideal candidate will have a Masters Degree in Elementary Education, Special Education, and/or Speech/Language Pathology. She/he will also be a team-player committed to providing individualized, explicit instruction in a nurturing, enriched classroom setting for children 5-8.

Please send resume and cover letter to: Mary Allen Stifler, VP for Program Administration Stern Center for Language and Learning 135 Allen Brook Lane, Williston, VT 05495

Stern Center for Language and Learning Attention: Sally Conant, Program Director sconant@sterncenter.org ~ fax: 802-878-0230 www.sterncenter.org ~ phone: 802-878-2332

www.sterncenter.org

COUNTER POSITIONS AVAILABLE • Starting at $8.00/hour + tips • Dependability a must Contact us at

802.233.9562 Please ask for Tad, our manager.

m BAGEL MARKET 30 Susie Wilson Rd. Essex, VT 05401

artisan VEgan cookies BAKERS NEEDED! We’re looking for hard working people who are available year-round. Experience is a plus, but not absolutely necessary. We offer living wages, benefits, and a fun place to work. To apply, call us for directions to our bakery in Waitsfield.

802-496-6390 Learn more about us at www.lizlovely.com

TIFIE ER

D

Resumes accepted immediately by e-mail or fax to:

Full-time & Part-time

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CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE Independent insurance agency located in Barre is seeking a full-time personal insurance customer service representative. Position involves service and sale of home, auto and related insurance. Prior insurance experience very desirable. Requires excellent communication, typing and writing skills.

EMPLOYEE BENEFITS CUSTOMER SERVICE & SALES SUPPORT REPRESENTATIVE Also in Barre, this position involves service and sales support for group life, health and other employee benefits products. Prior health insurance experience very desirable. Requires excellent communication, typing and computer skills.

GRADUATE STUDY IN EDUCATIONAL LEADERSHIP The University of Vermont is recruiting qualified candidates for admission to the M.Ed and Certificate of Advanced Graduate Study programs in Educational Leadership. Students may elect concentrations that prepare them for positions as Leaders in Public Schools (principals and teacher leaders), Nonprofit or Private Educational organizations, and Human Service Agencies.

Send resumé in confidence to:

Contact: Roman Vogel Email: rgvogel@uvm.edu Phone: 656-2936 TDD: 656-8499 Fax: 656-2702

Steven Shea, President Paige & Campbell, Inc. PO Box 469 Barre, VT 05641

PAIGE & CAMPBELL, Inc. Serving Vermonters since 1906 Offices in Barre, Bradford, Bristol and Waitsfield

GRADUATE STUDY IN SPECIAL EDUCATION The University of Vermont is recruiting qualified candidates for admission in M.Ed. and Certificate of Advanced Graduate Study programs. Students may elect concentrations that prepare them for positions as a Special Education teacher, Consulting Teacher, Early Childhood Special Education Teacher, Intensive Special Education Instructor, or combined Special Education/Reading Teacher.

Contact: Roman Vogel Email: rgvogel@uvm.edu Phone: 656-2936 • TDD: 656-8499 Fax: 656-2702

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

The University of Vermont is an Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer

The University of Vermont is an Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer

MECHANICAL SYSTEMS TECHNICIAN I VSC Grade 9, Full-time Represented Staff Position Johnson State College is seeking a Mechanical Systems Technician I for our second shift, (Tuesday-Friday, 1PM to 9PM and Saturday, 9AM to 4PM). A high school education, plus six to eight years of relevant technical training/experience, or a combination of education and experience from which comparable knowledge and skills are acquired. Broad base and in-depth knowledge and skills related to electrical or plumbing/heating system installation, maintenance and repair. Good general knowledge and skills related to other mechanical systems, functions, and building construction and repair. A post-offer, pre-employment physical and a motor vehicle record review are required. Learn more about Johnson State College by visiting our website at

http://www.johnsonstatecollege.edu. Applications will be accepted until the position is filled. Send application/resumé (including contact information for two references to):

Director of Physical Plant Johnson State College 337 College Hill Johnson, VT 05656 JOHNSON STATE COLLEGE IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

Technology Support Specialist Vermont League of Cities & Towns VLCT has an immediate, entry-level opportunity for a technical person to provide support for software, hardware, network and communications systems. Candidates should possess strong customer service, problem solving and research skills. Position requires Associate’s or Bachelor’s degree in computer technology or related field (or equivalent experience) plus minimum 1-2 years experience providing hardware, application installation and user support in a Windows/MS Office environment. Expertise in Windows 2000 Pro, Adobe applications, and Linux and Windows network administration helpful. Position reports to the Information Systems Administrator. VLCT offers a hiring range of $25,801—$32,251, exceptional benefits and an enjoyable office environment in downtown Montpelier. Interested candidates should email cover letter, résume and list of three references to jobsearch@vlct.org with TSS as subject. EOE i Applications accepted until filled.


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EMPLOYMENT Immediate part-time (20 hours/week) openings with flexible hours available for

Cook/Counter person

STEP UP

EXPERIENCED MEDICAL

for Women,

TRANSCRIPTIONISTS

Farm-based, take-out restaurant and catering company seeks an experienced person to join our growing business.

a trades training program teaching women skills in electrical, plumbing, welding and carpentry, is now accepting applications for its Burlington class starting April 4, 2005. Get 9 weeks of hands-on training and ongoing job search support.

Work in local office only, not in home. Mail resumé to: MPM P.O. Box 930 Colchester,VT 05446 Fax resumé to: (802) 878-2692

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Apply in person at Sugarsnap 505 Riverside Avenue Burlington, VT

Call 1-800-639-1472 or 878-0004 ext. 108 at Northern New England Tradeswomen for more info and to register for an interview.

• ASSISTANT

INNKEEPER

to learn our entire process of great bread production. Work 4-5 nights a week, starting at 12pm midnight. Punctuality an asset.

To place an employment ad call Michelle Brown 865-1020 x 21

Full-time

• HOUSEKEEPER

Northeastern Family Institute

Weekends only

For an interview, call 802-865-3440 and leave a message.

Email resumé to: Info@willardstreetinn.com

Don't miss out.

CALL Jocelyn at 802-651-8710

Opportunity doesn't knock every day you know!

or drop resumé off at 349 South Willard Street.

Stewart Bakery

SEVEN DAYS

Need to place an employment ad? Call Michelle Brown 865-1020 x 21 e

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Need to place an employment ad? Call Michelle Brown 865-1020 x 21

We’re seeking Topnotch Talent! We are accepting applications at Stowe’s only four-star, preferred Hotel & Resort:

Community Inclusion Positions Available 16.5 hours per week, Monday through Thursday, supporting two young gentlemen with developmental disabilities in the community.

29 hours per week, Monday through Friday, supporting two individuals in community settings assisting them in developing new relationships, supporting them at work and acquiring independent living skills. •

20 hours per week, supporting a young woman in the community and in her job setting.

Please mail or email your resumé to:

512 Troy Avenue, Suite 1 Colchester, VT 05446 staff@cvsvt.org.

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Shared Living Providers We are seeking a dedicated individual or couple interested in sharing their home with a woman, supporting her at home and in the community. If you are interested in joining our person-centered team, developing positive relationships, and supporting this individual in achieving her goals and dreams, we encourage you to apply. CVS will provide a generous tax-free stipend, a comprehensive training package, and ongoing supports. Experience working in the field of developmental disabilities preferred. Please contact Laura Walker for more information.

CVS 655-0511 lwalker@cvsvt.org

The Rutland Herald has an immediate opening for a city editor. We are seeking an experienced editor to direct and coordinate a staff of eight reporters and three photographers. These include a small staff in our Southern Vermont bureau. Enthusiasm and ability to motivate and inspire are a must. Knowledge of Vermont is a plus. Duties include assigning stories, guiding reporters on story selection and direction, brainstorming with reporters for ideas, assigning photos, editing stories, and deciding on story/ photo placement. Applicants should have strong editing skills and be familiar with Associated Press style. Applicants may be given an editing test. Daily newspaper experience is strongly recommended. This is a full-time position with benefits. Please send resumé to:

john.dolan@rutlandherald.com or mail to: Rutland Herald, c/o John Dolan PO Box 668, Rutland, VT 05702-0668

WILLARD STREET INN

Bread Baker

City Editor

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RESERVATIONS SALES AGENT LAUNDRY DRIVER PM LOBBY ATTENDANT COSMETOLOGIST NIGHT SPA CLEANERS DAY SPA CLEANER SPA ATTENDANTS BELL CAPTAIN BELL STAFF BANQUET SERVER DISHWASHERS LINE COOK AM HOST AM BUSSER AM SERVER MAINTENANCE WORKERS

Topnotch offers competitive wages, duty meals, health and life insurance options, health club access and opportunity for personal and professional growth.

Call 802-253-6420 or email your resumé to hr@topnotchresort.com

NFI, an expanding statewide mental health treatment system for children, adolescents and families, is seeking to fill the following positions:

ASSISTANT DIRECTOR The Community Based Services Program (CBS) is seeking applicants for an Assistant Director Position. CBS provides intensive mental health services to youth and families in Chittenden County. The person hired will be responsible for assisting in the fiscal, clinical and administrative areas of program management and will demonstrate strong leadership skills.This is an excellent opportunity to join a growing team dedicated to providing excellent care in the community to children, youth and families. Master’s degree in social work or a related field and license-eligible preferred. Please submit cover letter and resumé by March 25th to:

NFI Vermont Attn: CBS Program Director 30 Airport Road South Burlington, VT 05403 EOE To place an employment ad call Michelle Brown 865-1020 x 21

RNS AND LPNS NEEDED Central Vermont Home Health & Hospice, one of the largest home health agencies in Vermont, has immediate openings for caring and energetic nurses. Join our team of home-care professionals in the country’s fastest growing health-care field – and share our commitment to excellence in preserving the independence, dignity, and well-being of Central Vermonters and their families. Applicants must be licensed in the State of Vermont, be able to work independently and have reliable transportation. CVHHH offers professional challenge and growth for the following positions: • Full- and part-time RNs and a full-time LPN to work in our Home Care program to provide skilled nursing care in a home setting. 2 years med-surg experience preferred. • Part-time RN to work in our Maternal Child Health program. Experience with Pediatric or OBS experience preferred. • Temporary part-time RN or LPN to work with our Hi-Tech team. 2 years med-surg experience with knowledge of hi-tech skills preferred. • Full-time Psychiatric RN to work in our Home Care program. Must have 3-5 years experience in mental health nursing and solid med/surgical skills. ANA Psych. Certification preferred.

If interested, please contact our Human Resources Department by calling 802-224-2233, fax 802-223-2861, or apply online at www.cvhhh.org. EOE


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7D CLASSIFIEDEMPLOYMENT Outdoor Jobs:

The Vermont Youth Conservation Corps is hiring Crew Members ages 16-24 to work on backcountry trail crews and in Vermont State Parks. We will be in Burlington at the UVM, Waterman Building, Rm. 501, March 14th at 6:00 pm.

Attend this event to find out more about these jobs and to apply, or visit www.vycc.org. 1-800-639-8922.

WANTED: Jericho Center

live-in caregiver for easygoing, elderly disabled woman. 2 days/week. Must have homecare/nursing skills. Lifting/transfer required. Very nice setting. Wages $300 for 2 days. Need substitutes and weekend care.

COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE Experienced professional team member needed to take charge of property management and assist with leasing and tenant relations for our company-owned properties. Experience with commercial real estate and building maintenance required. Please send resumé to:

South Burlington Realty Company PO Box 2204 South Burlington, VT 05407

Call Peter 802-899-4008 eves/weekend.

7Dclassifieds.com

7Dclassifieds.com

D ISCOVER THE B ENEFITS … The Essex Parks and Recreation Department is accepting applications for summer employment for the following positions:

• Assistant Pool Manager • Front Desk at Sand Hill Pool • Camp Counselors • Indian Brook Park Attendant • Park Maintenance • Office Administrative Assistant

Positions will remain open until filled. EOE Applications and job descriptions are available on the Town’s website www.essex.org or at the Parks and Recreation Office at 81 Main Street, Essex Junction. For more information call 878-1342.

Howard Center for Human Services Community Support Clinician: Full-time position available to support persons with psychiatric disabilities in Chittenden County. Work as part of a multidisciplinary team providing creative problem solving, advocacy, resource development, case management, counseling and crisis support. Direct services to clients, families and the community. BA or Master’s degree in human services field and experience with persons with serious and persistent mental disorders preferred. Please submit resumé to:

Terrence Hayden LICSW 300 Flynn Avenue Burlington, VT 05401 Individuals with disabilities encouraged to apply. EOE/TTY.

Exciting Opportunities from...

P.J. Bushey Landscaping and Garden Center East Wallingford, VT 05742

The search is on for the best! P.J. Bushey’s new management team is looking for team players to join our team of professionals. All levels of experience are encouraged to apply today.

Positions available in all divisions: • Landscape construction/maintenance foremen • Landscape construction/maintenance laborers • Stone masons • Equipment operators • Retail sales and plant care associates

Top Pay and Benefits to the Qualified!

We make a difference in health care. So can you! Make a difference as a Licensed Nursing Assistant. Train with Professional Nurses Service.

CLIENT SERVICES ASSISTANT

Professional Nurses Service is offering a Licensed Nursing Assistant training class starting on May 2, 2005. *Being a student in this class is not contingent upon becoming an employee.

Resolution, Inc. an e-commerce customer care and fulfillment services company is seeking a highly organized, computer-literate person with administrative experience to assist our Client Services Team. Attention to detail a must. Candidates should have 2-4 years administrative experience, preferably with a marketing focus, knowledge of the Microsoft Office applications and be able to work in a fast-paced environment. Full benefits package offered.

Apply today at our garden shop located on Route 103 in East Wallingford, Vermont, or send us your resumé by fax or mail.

To learn more or register, call Priscilla today!

Phone: 802-259-2542 • Fax: 802-259-3311 Email: busheyland@aol.com

802-655-7111 or 1-800-446-8773

Building Vermont dreams...from the ground up.

EOE

Northeastern Family Institute

Seeking counselors to work at our Shelburne House program, located in Williston. Work with a talented team in a fast-paced environment. Experience working with children with emotional and behavioral challenges desired. Responsibilities include: counseling youth, ADL (activity, daily learning), hygiene & living skills, and assisting in treatment and discharge planning. This is a full-time position with a competitive salary.

19 Gregory Drive South Burlington, VT 05403 ATTN: VP – Client Services www.resodirect.com email: jobs@resodirect.com

FRANKLIN COURT MANAGER

Northeastern Family Institute, a private, nonprofit mental health organization, has an opening in their day treatment school in St. Johnsbury.

RESIDENTIAL COUNSELORS

Please send cover letter and resumé by 3/16/05 to:

Entry-level Graphic Designer Full-time position to manage and serve as Clerk of Vermont District Court and Family Courts in St. Albans. Successful applicant will possess excellent management, organizational and interpersonal skills. Minimum experience: Bachelor’s degree and proven experience in management and supervision. Salary: $1,242 per week. Excellent benefits. Application and recruitment notice with minimum qualifications may be obtained from the Franklin District/Family Court, 36 Lake Street, St. Albans, VT, the Office of the Court Administrator or at www.vermontjudiciary.org. Applications due Friday, March 18, 2005 at:

Come join the creative, dynamic team at NFI. Call Nathan Camfiord today at 288-9710 or email your resumé to: nathancamfiord@nafi.com.

OFFICE OF THE COURT ADMINISTRATOR 109 STATE STREET MONTPELIER, VT 05609-0701 (802) 828-3278 • TTY (802) 828-3234

EOE

The Vermont Judiciary is an equal opportunity employer.

A leader in custom lapel pin manufacturing is looking for a part-time (20-25 hours) entry-level Graphic Designer. Successful candidate must be proficient in Adobe Illustrator and have knowledge of Photoshop. Candidate must be able to work in a very fast-paced environment. We are looking to fill this position quickly. Please email resumé, cover letter and any samples in original file format to Steve Grimm at steveg@pincrafters.com or mail to: PinCrafters Attn: Steve Grimm 45 Kilburn Street Burlington, VT 05401


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EMPLOYMENT The following positions are open at the Vermont Treatment Program for Sexual Abusers. • Clinician Director, six years experience in sex offender residential treatment required. • Forensic Evaluator, experience in the assessment of sex offenders required. • Therapists for community-based treatment programs. Must be licensed and experienced.

Contact Tammy Smith at (802) 651-1663. Application deadline 3/25/05.

Online @ 7Dclassifieds.com

b a s i c E Pa r t s GREAT SALES JOB MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN: Full-time, immediate opening. Must be able to work flexible hours, have a valid driver’s license and good driving record. Must have experience in general maintenance skills: electrical, plumbing, carpentry, mechanical. Must enjoy working with the public & have a friendly, professional attitude. We offer year-round employment, competitive wage and benefits. Interested applicants can apply in person to: Best Western Hotel 1076 Williston Road South Burlington, VT 05403

Jackpot

Online @ 7Dclassifieds.com

Join our fun group in the Charlotte, VT office. We know that we all work ’cause we “have to,� so we try to recognize that in our attitudes. Our company has 5 sales people, 2 of whom have been here 12+ years! Start training to help our customers with electronic components (little parts) in a NON-technical way. They buy from us ’cause they have to buy it somewhere! If you speak any foreign language(s) that COULD be very helpful. Hours are 8:30 to 5:30. First 2 months of training are in the warehouse. Salary plus commission, humane vacation policy. Profit sharing.

Check out www.basicEparts.com., then call 425-5800 for appointment & interview.

Online @ 7Dclassifieds.com

MUSEUM WEEKEND ATTENDANT Brought to you by

SEVEN DAYS EMPLOYMENT EOE

WASHINGTON COUNTY M E N TA L H E A LT H

MENTAL HEALTH COUNSELOR #820: Provide direct care to consumers in crisis who would generally receive services in a hospital environment. Duties include: counseling, treatment planning and implementation, and assisting consumers in carrying out life commitments during this difficult time. Responsible for doing related tasks, which provide for a safe environment. BA in related field preferred.

to provide visitor services at museum and store in Montpelier. Includes greeting and information, sales through cash register, monitoring security and some light maintenance. Work two weekends out of three. $7/hour, starts immediately. Send letter and resumĂŠ to:

Weekend Attendant Search, VHS 60 Washington Street Barre, VT 05641 Call 479-8500 or visit www.vermonthistory.org/jobs for full job description.

Online @ 7Dclassifieds.com

Only qualified applicants will receive a response. Valid driver’s license, good driving record and safe insured vehicle required. Send letter of interest and resumÊ to:

healthcare Opportunities

WCMHS, Personnel PO Box 647 Montpelier, VT 05601 Contact (802) 229-0591 • Fax: (802) 223-8623 personnel@wcmhs.org • www.wcmhs.org

Sign-On Bonus!

Online @ 7Dclassifieds.com

You can earn competitive wages with excellent benefits, including tuition reimbursement, flexible scheduling, 401(k) company matching retirement program, and much more. Come join our new team!

The Vermont Youth Conservation Corps is seeking an accomplished professional with exceptional strategic, communication and leadership skills. A sense of urgency in regards to the importance of creating quality leadership and service opportunities for youth, optimism, humor, and passion for the VYCC’s mission will be essential. In 2005, VYCC celebrates its 20th anniversary, completes its first capital campaign of $3.7 million, and moves into its new Education & Training Center at the West Monitor Barn in Richmond. The VYCC currently has an operating budget of $1.8 million and receives five applications for every youth position available.

Go to www.vycc.org for detailed job description. The VYCC is proud to be an AmeriCorps program!

FULL TIME Windows & Doors By Brownell is looking for team players with excellent carpentry skills and experience to join our company installing Marvin Windows and Doors. Applicant should be detail and customer service oriented. These positions offer competitive wages, benefits, and the ability to work with a great team. Qualified individuals should stop by and pick up or complete an employment application or call Skip at 862-4800.

800 Marshall Avenue Williston, VT 05495

Online @ 7Dclassifieds.com

$4,000 for RNs $3,000 for LPNs $2,000 for LNAs

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PTs: Per Diem, 3-11 RNs: Full-time, 3-11/11-7 LPNs: Full-time, 3-11/11-7 LNAs: Full-time, all shifts Evening Cook: Full-time

Director of Advancement:

TRIM CARPENTERS

On-site ChildCare! We offer a highly subsidized on-site childcare, with extended evening hours.

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Call kara for an interview: 802-658-4200 or fax your resumĂŠ to: 802-863-8016, 300 Pearl Street, Burlington, VT 05401.

Burlington

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Health & Rehabilitation Center EOE


42B

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march 09-16, 2005

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SEVEN DAYS

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employment@sevendaysvt.com

7D CLASSIFIEDEMPLOYMENT CASE MANAGER experienced with autism, to supervise young adults in building life skills 2-4 hours a week. $20-25 hourly depending upon experience.

Childcare Teachers

full/part-time, 2 large centers, team approach. Benefits.

Call 482-2525 or 879-2736

Call Kathy, 864-4103.

38 CHURCH STREET BURLINGTON, VT 05401 802-862-5126

WE ARE LOOKING FOR RESPONSIBLE, OUTGOING, PERSONABLE INDIVIDUALS FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS:

FULL-TIME SALES ASSOCIATE (POTENTIAL ASSISTANT MANAGER)

PART-TIME SALES ASSOCIATE EXCELLENT PAY!

GREAT ENVIRONMENT!

APPLY IN PERSON OR FAX RESUMÉ TO: BOBBIE JO ROBY AT 802-862-3711.

Toddler Teacher The Growing Place is searching for an experienced Toddler Teacher. Degree/CDA preferred. The right person will have a great sense of humor, love to laugh and play and be willing to further their education and knowledge. Please call 802-879-2525 or send resumĂŠ to: kimax6@verizon.net

WANTED!

GRANT WRITER

to work on commission for a small, 501 c 3 nonprofit, independent school serving grades 7-12 in Franklin County.

We focus on encouraging youth to achieve academic success, promote physical wellbeing, and develop a personal sense of “Who am I, what do I believe, and why?� Please email ataschool@surfglobal.net for more info.

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PER DIEM CRISIS CLINICIAN Seeking Master’s level mental health clinician for mobile psychiatric crisis team. Services are provided to adults in the community, office or over the phone. Must be flexible and have ability to cover all shifts. ResumÊ by 3/18/05 to:

Jim Huitt Howard Center for Human Services 300 Flynn Avenue Burlington, VT 05401 We welcome and encourage minorities, women and people with disabilities to apply. EOE/TTY


employment@sevendaysvt.com

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SEVEN DAYS

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march 09-16, 2005

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43B

EMPLOYMENT PARK&SHUTTLE

Order Taker/Dispatcher – Full or part-time.

WAREHOUSE POSITIONS

Shift Manager – Call Frank, 865-3663.

Peregrine Outfitters, an outdoor equipment and accessory distributor currently has openings for positions in the warehouse. The positions offer flexible work schedules, purchase of outdoors products at cost and a team-motivated environment.

Burlington International Airport

Cashier/Valet Parkers Now hiring full-time 8am - 4pm & 4pm - 12am. Clean driving record required. Come in person weekdays 8am - 4pm 481 White St., So. Burlington, VT 05407

Drivers – Full/part-time flexible hours, no side work, geat earning potential.

Please apply in person, M-F, 9am - 6pm at:

Apply in person at Four Star Delivery 128 North Street Burlington, VT 05401

25 Omega Drive Williston, VT

Employment Tip of the Week Brought to you by BestJobsUSA.com

When AT & T used to say, “Reach out and touch someone,” they could not have envisioned how the Internet would revolutionize communications. As more and more organizations monitor their employees’ electronic activities, be aware that inappropriate use or misuse of email or Internet usage could lead to a suspension or ultimately your dismissal.

(Formerly known as VT City Marathon organization)

Interim Registration Director:

Immediate opening for qualified candidate. Event management background preferred. Strong management, communication and organizational skills required. An understanding of database programs and Microsoft Excel needed. MUST be a teamoriented, people person. Hours: 20-40 per week until June 17th. Send resumé by March 14th to

andrea@vcm.org or mail to:

RunVermont 1 Main Street, Suite 305 Burlington, Vermont 05401

SALES MANAGER: Full-time, immediate opening in busy sales dept, must have a minimum of 5 years of hospitality sales experience. Ideal candidate enjoys selling, is results-oriented, professional in demeanor and able to work flexible hours. Must have strong communication skills, be self-motivated and well organized. We offer a competitive compensation package and benefits.

Interested applicants should send resumé to: Jeanette Fournier, HR Mgr. Best Western Windjammer Inn & Conference Center 1076 Williston Road, South Burlington, VT 05403 email: jeanette@windjammergroup.com

Howard Center for Human Services Administrative Program Assistant: Responsibilities include providing front desk reception and general office duties, as well as comprehensive administrative support to staff within various departments of the administration division. Excellent organization and communications skills; knowledge of MS Word and Excel; and ability to manage multiple tasks required. 37.5 hours per week. Send cover letter and resumé by March 18, 2005 to:

Cheryl Couture The Howard Center for Human Services 208 Flynn Avenue, Suite 3J Burlington, VT 05401 cherylc@howardcenter.org. Individuals with disabilities encouraged to apply. EOE/TTY.

BUSY MONTPELIER FLOWER SHOP in search of full-time, reliable and energetic help. We are looking for an upbeat, team player with good customer service skills. No experience necessary. Come see us at 27 State St. for an application. CARPENTER AND HELPER WANTED: For full-service general contracting company. Good attitude a must! 802899-3994. CENTRAL VERMONT EXPANDING CONSTRUCTION Company in search of a working lead concrete superintendent, for residential concrete foundation installations. This is a state-of-theart, new division, ground floor opportunity with unlimited potential. Must be well organized with attention to schedule, budget and details. Estimating abilities a plus. Knowledge of contract requirements, construction sequencing, methods and materials required. Generous compensation and benefits. Fax resumé in confidence to 802-496-2212.

CLEANING PERSON: Please be honest, dependable, trustworthy and hardworking. Part-time, 3-4 days/wk. 8-11 a.m. Exciting position! Find money on the floor! Climb the corporate ladder? Please apply in person: Vermont Pub and Brewery, corner of College and St. Paul St., Burlington. Ask for Steve P. DO YOU LOVE KIDS? Get paid to play and sing! Teaching kids (0-5) and their parents how to have fun through play! Perfect job for a mom or energetic college student! Gymboree is in Williston! vtgymboree@ yahoo.com or 802-660-2474! $10/hour, part-time. 8 a.m. 3 p.m. M-F. ENERGETIC, OUTGOING FITNESS STAFF needed to assist in sales and marketing, also much daily cleaning a must and possible maintenance involved. Part-time. Some fitness experience a must. 288-9612. FLOWER SALES, PLANT MAINTENANCE AND NURSERY WORK: Sales training provided. Honest, hardworking, motivated individuals only. Organic, refreshing environment. Oakwood Farms, Essex Junction. Please call Rosemary, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m., 878-7587.

PACKING/SHIPPING position available. Must be able to lift up to around 40 lbs and must possess basic computer skills. Join our team in providing custom products and apparel to clients like MTV, Pepsi, Magic Hat and B&J’s. Great work environment. Benefits include health, vacation, holiday pay and 401 K. Apply at Select Design, 208 Flynn Ave., Burlington. PHONE SURVEYORS: No sales! Casual, friendly work environment. We pay $8/hour + bonus incentives. Hours needed: Monday Thursday, afternoons or evenings. If you are friendly, reliable and want to make some extra money, we are looking for you. 657-3500, ask for Shane. RECEPTIONIST WANTED: MF, noon - 6:30 p.m. for busy dog care facility. Must be reliable, computer literate, have great customer service skills and be comfortable w/dogs of all sizes. Also looking for weekend Kennel Manager. Email cover letter w/salary expectations and resumé to tschey3@msn.com or pick up application at The Crate Escape, Inc., 1108 W. Main St., Richmond. 434-6411.

assistance with collections, maintenance of financial data bases, assistance with financial/ administrative functions of company. Solid computer skills. Selfstarter with high degree of accuracy and timeliness. Independent thought and ability to work in fastpaced atmosphere necessary. Experience a plus. Good benefits.

KAS, Inc. PO Box 787 Williston, VT 05495 info@KAS-consulting.com fax: 802-383-0490

or email to:

4 employment

FINANCIAL/ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT – A/P, A/R,

SALES, PART-TIME: Local upscale caterer seeks parttime sales professionals who have a few extra hours each week to do commission-only sales. Great pay! Great company! Great opportunity for growth for the right person. Email cover letter, resumé and 3 references to thelittlefeast@adelphia.net or fax to 866-623-7259. THE OFFSET HOUSE is currently looking for a CSR in the Mailing division. Must be able to multitask, take charge of client services, have computer skills and the ability to work in a fastpaced environment. Please apply at: 89 Sandhill Rd., Essex, VT or send resumé to: PO Box 8329, Essex, VT 05451 Attn: Shane. Or shane@offsethouse.com. Great benefits package that includes medical/dental, 401K plan and vacation.

KAS is an equal opportunity employer. Come grow with us.

WANTED: COMMUNICATION TECHS: Do you install and troubleshoot telephone equipment? Do you handle outside plant? Do you pull, terminate and test cable and fiber? Do you work on data networks, security cameras or other low voltage equipment? If you can do any of the above jobs then we would like to talk to you about joining our team. Good wages, good benefits and great people to work with. Confidentiality guaranteed. Hurry, openings won’t last long and work is waiting. Please call 865-2666 or 888-577-0036. WELL-ESTABLISHED PHYSICAL THERAPY practice in the Burlington area seeks Office Manager with experience in health care office management for newly developed full-time position. Candidates sought will be well organized, solution-oriented in a team environment with good leadership and interpersonal skills. Health care experience is required. Send resumé and cover letter to Dee Physical Therapy, 23 San Remo Dr., Suite 101, South Burlington, VT 05403.

WOODBURY COLLEGE a progressive adult education institution, is seeking a Program Coordinator/ Administrative Assistant to provide support to faculty and students and implement and manage program activities. This position requires a Bachelor’s degree; ability to work collaboratively as well as individually and to manage multiple projects; experience in higher education setting preferred. Great work environment and benefits! Flexible schedule. Please send resumé to Woodbury College, Job Search, 660 Elm Street, Montpelier, VT 05602. WORK SMARTER, NOT HARDER! Will train motivated individuals. Call 270-9267779 box 4761 for immediate information. WOULD YOU LOVE TO WORK with food in a friendly deli environment? Then come and see us at The Old Brick Country Store, Ferry Road, Charlotte where we are looking for a full-time person beginning 4/1/05. 425-2421.



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