Seven Days, November 16, 2016

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CUSTOMER APPRECIATION EVENT

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Small Business Saturday

Free Winter Movie Series

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26 • ALL DAY

TUESDAYS • 7 :30 PM THE PARAMOUNT THEATRE

Support your local businesses this season!

Santa’s Arrival, Tree Lighting & Movies

CELEBRATE HOLIDAYS

THE

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26 DEPOT PARK • 6 :30 PM Help us light up downtown’s first planted Christmas tree then meet Santa at The Paramount Theatre where we’ll be screening a double feature of Alvin & The Chipmunks: A Chipmunk Christmas and A Charlie Brown Christmas at 7 PM.

IN DOWNTOWN RUTLAND

Dec 13: SCROOGED • Dec 20: ELF Dec 27: THE MIGHTY DUCKS

Evening Holiday Shopping Nights THURSDAYS, DECEMBER 15 & 22 Participating shops will be open until 8 PM!

Meet Santa at Wonderfeet Kids’ Museum SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17 • 2-5 PM

Bring the kids and the camera!

Play the Go Rutland Pop-in Shop Contest & you could win over $500 in prizes!

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THE LAST WEEK IN REVIEW NOVEMBER 9-16, 2016 COMPILED BY SASHA GOLDSTEIN, MATTHEW ROY & ANDREA SUOZZO

emoji that

‘NOW WHAT?’

B-E-R-N-I-E

More than 18,000 Vermont voters wrote Bernie Sanders in for president on their Election Day ballots. Oh, and his book is out.

10,000

That’s how many turkeys Orwell’s Stonewood Farm can sell this Thanksgiving — about 7,000 fewer than normal because fowl cholera has wiped out thousands of birds. The disease isn’t transmissible to humans.

TOPFIVE

MOST POPULAR ITEMS ON SEVENDAYSVT.COM

DEAN’S DECISION

CHARLOTTE SCOTT

Protestors at City Hall Park on Friday

PLATTER

COMPILED BY KEN PICARD

FUGITIVE COLLARED

WIND BLOWS

Voters in Grafton and Windham rejected a proposed turbine project, and Phil Scott was elected gov. Solar panels, anyone?

Here’s a tail of dogged determination. Jackie Stone was driving to Newington, Conn., after closing down her vacation home in Sutton last week when she fell asleep and veered off the road. “˜ e next thing I know, there are trees and rocks in front of me,” she recounted. Although she wasn’t hurt badly in the crash, her 10-month-old puppy, Maxwell, dashed off into the woods. “So many people stopped on the road to help find him,” she says, including one woman who searched for two days. A state trooper returned to the crash scene the following day and found the tuckered-out pooch. “We were very, very lucky,” a relieved Stone said. “It’s a good lesson: Never give up hope.”

5. “Who’s ˜ at Roadside Elvis in Addison County?” by Ken Picard. Ever driven through Bristol and noticed a guy who looks suspiciously like the King? ˜ is is his story.

tweet of the week: @the_kochalka I did my best to reassure all the little refugee kids at school this morning that we love them, and Vermont loves them. #btv FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @SEVEN_DAYS OUR TWEEPLE: SEVENDAYSVT.COM/TWITTER

SEX TRAFFICKING DOESN’T PAY

A federal judge in Burlington sentenced Diheim Young, 32, of Brooklyn, N.Y., to 12 years in prison for engaging in years of sex and drug trafficking in the Rutland area. Authorities say that between 2012 and 2015, Young used at least five women as drug mules to transport heroin and crack cocaine between New York City and Rutland. He got them hooked on the drugs and used their addiction as a way to force them into prostitution. Prosecutors say that Young confiscated the women’s cellphones and IDs and held them captive in a Brooklyn apartment. ˜ e deviant drug dealer would sexually and physically assault the women if they tried to escape or refused to engage in commercial sex acts.

LAST SEVEN 5

a sampler of citizen shenanigans

Residents in Massachusetts and Maine voted to legalize recreational marijuana. Can we beat New Hampshire?

4. “˜ e Numbers: Scott Nabs Decisive Win, But Voters’ Message Mixed” by Paul Heintz and Andrea Suozzo. Last Tuesday, Vermonters proved again that they’re reliable ticket splitters.

SEVEN DAYS

Po-Po

Saturday marked the opening of Vermont’s 16-day deer rifle hunting season — but by 10 a.m. Sunday, two of the casualties were human. ˜ e first, Patrick Dixon, 47, of West Chazy, N.Y., shot himself in the foot at about 6:50 a.m. while hunting with family and friends in Vershire, Vermont State Police said. ˜ en, at approximately 10 the same morning, an unidentified 15-year-old hunter stood up from a stump he was sitting on, fumbled his rifle and also shot himself in the foot. Only one such shooting happened during all of last season. “We don’t call them ‘accidents’ anymore,” noted Mark Scott, director of wildlife at the Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department. “Usually when we do our investigation, it’s carelessness, negligence or just making a bad decision … Almost every incident can be prevented.”

CONTACT HIGH

3. “Live Coverage of the 2016 Vermont Election” by Seven Days staff. We kept Vermonters posted on the Election Night results.

11.16.16-11.23.16

FOOT FAULTS

undocumented farm workers, reported taking calls from anxious families. One woman was hesitant to send her kids to school. At the University of Vermont, Hayley Wheelwright explained, “We were kind of too young to really grasp 9/11 and what it meant for the country, and now we’re faced with a similar situation of just feeling really lost.” Isaac Lee, a freshman from Essex, stood outside the Bailey/Howe Library with a handmade sign that read: “Stand Together Love Will Prevail.” Vermonters demonstrated in Burlington City Hall Park last Friday, with some 200 people chanting, “Love trumps hate!” ˜ at same day, Khan was at the Islamic Society of Vermont in Colchester, musing about fruits and nuts sent there by well-wishers. During prayers that afternoon, Imam Islam Hassan urged congregants to be productive citizens. “Do not leave your country out of fear of someone so insignificant,” he said. Read the full posts at sevendaysvt.com.

2. “Media Note: Four Reporters, Producers Leaving WCAX” by Paul Heintz. ˜ e TV station is losing some of its top talent.

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

Farhad Khan’s 8-year-old daughter posed a tough question the morning after Americans elected Donald Trump to be the next U.S. president: “Dad, now what?” she asked. “I gave her a hug and assured her that it’s going to be OK,” said Khan, president of the Islamic Society of Vermont. “We’ve been through this before.” Our reporters headed into the community after the presidential election to interview students, Muslims, immigrants, migrant activists, feminists and other Vermonters who might be feeling insecure about living in a Trump-led country. Rita Neopaney, a Bhutanese woman who works at the Association of Africans Living in Vermont, told a reporter that clients there were confused and fearful. ˜ e day before, Neopaney had excitedly recounted to Seven Days how thrilled she had been to cast her first vote in an American election. “I would say that everyone is sad and worried about the future,” said Jacob Bogre, AALV’s executive director. Staffers at Migrant Justice, which advocates for

Former governor Howard Dean wants back in as the Democratic National Committee chair. Heeeyah!

1. “Sanders Breaks His Silence on Trump’s Election” by Sasha Goldstein. ˜ e day after the election, Sen. Bernie Sanders weighed in on Donald Trump’s win.


Homeownership is a

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KELLY A. DEFORGE Senior Mortgage Loan Originator NMLS: 103643

SLIDEY SENSE. E D I T O R I A L / A D M I N I S T R AT I O N Co-owners/founders

Pamela Polston & Paula Routly

publisher/Coeditor Paula Routly assoCia te publisher/Coeditor Pamela Polston assoCia te publishers

Don Eggert, Cathy Resmer, Colby Roberts news editor Matthew Roy assoCia te editor Margot Harrison deputy news editor Sasha Goldstein assist ant editor Meredith Coeyman st aff writers Mark Davis, Alicia Freese, Terri Hallenbeck, Katie Jickling, Rachel Elizabeth Jones, Ken Picard, Kymelya Sari, Molly Walsh, Sadie Williams politiCal editor Paul Heintz MusiC editor Dan Bolles assist ant MusiC editor Jordan Adams food writer Hannah Palmer Egan Calendar writer Kristen Ravin diGital Content editor Andrea Suozzo senior MultiMedia produCer Eva Sollberger MultiMedia journalist James Buck business ManaGer Cheryl Brownell benefits & opera tions Rick Woods CirCula tion ManaGer Matt Weiner CirCula tion deputy Jeff Baron proofreaders Carolyn Fox, Elizabeth Seyler speCialty publiCa tions ManaGer Carolyn Fox Musher Rufus DESIGN/PRODUCTION Crea tive direCtor Don Eggert art direCtor Rev. Diane Sullivan produCtion ManaGer John James st aff photoGrapher Matthew Thorsen desiGners Brooke Bousquet,

30 Kimball Avenue, Suite 200, South Burlington, VT ublocal.com • 802.652.2985 kdeforge@unionbankvt.com

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Kirsten Cheney, Charlotte Scott, Richele Young diGital produCtion speCialist Bryan Parmelee SALES/MARKETING Colby Roberts direCtor of sales senior aCCount exeCutive Michael Bradshaw aCCount exeCutives

Julia Atherton, Robyn Birgisson, Michelle Brown, Logan Pintka MarketinG & events ManaGer Corey Grenier Classifieds & personals Coordina tor Ashley Cleare 4/5/16 2:56 PM sales & MarketinG assist ant Kristen Hutter

6 FEEDBACK

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11.16.16-11.23.16

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CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Luke Baynes, Justin Boland, Alex Brown, Liz Cantrell, Julia Clancy, Erik Esckilsen, Kevin J. Kelley, Rick Kisonak, Jacqueline Lawler, Amy Lilly, Gary Lee Miller, Suzanne Podhaizer, Jernigan Pontiac, Robert Resnik, Julia Shipley, Sarah Tuff Dunn, Molly Zapp CONTRIBUTING ARTISTS Harry Bliss, Caleb Kenna, Matt Mignanelli, Marc Nadel, Tim Newcomb, Susan Norton, Oliver Parini, Sarah Priestap, Kim Scafuro, Michael Tonn, Jeb Wallace-Brodeur

All the lines you love... La Mer Natura Bissé Bobbi Brown Trish McEvoy Laura Mercier SkinCeuticals

C I R C U L AT I O N : 3 6 , 0 0 0 Seven Days is published by Da Capo Publishing Inc. every Wednesday. It is distributed free of charge in Greater Burlington, Middlebury, Montpelier, Northeast Kingdom, Stowe, the Mad River Valley, Rutland, St. Albans, St. Johnsbury, White River Junction and Plattsburgh. Seven Days is printed at Upper Valley Press in North Haverhill, N.H. DELIVERY TECHNICIANS Harry Applegate, Jeff Baron, Joe Bouffard, Pat Bouffard, Caleb Bronz, Colin Clary, Donna Delmoora, Dan Egan, Matt Hagen, Paul Hawkins, Nat Michael, Bill Mullins, Dan Nesbitt, Ezra Oklan, Dan Thayer, Josh Weinstein With additional circulation support from PP&D. SUBSCRIPTIONS 6-Month 1st Class: $175. 1-year 1st Class: $275. 6-Month 3rd Class: $85. 1-year 3rd Class: $135. Please call 802.864.5684 with your credit card, or mail your check or money order to “Subscriptions” at the address 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.

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FEEDback READER REACTION TO RECENT ARTICLES

BETTER WITH BERNIE

[Re Off Message: “Sanders Breaks His Silence on Trump’s Election,” November 9]: I had hoped for “revolutionary” change as much as white, male, unemployed coal miner from West Virginia. Thanks to blind support for Hillary Clinton, we have elected a racist and demagogue. We had another option in Sen. Bernie Sanders — a man I’ve watched for more than 30 years, who is honest as the day is long and has not changed his positions based on what folks want to hear. Elitists like Sen. Patrick Leahy supported Clinton (and the whole malodorous Clinton and Democratic National Committee machine) before Bernie even announced his campaign for president. Bernie received 86 percent of the primary vote in Vermont; so much for representative democracy. The DNC and Clinton machine railroaded Bernie. Leahy has been in office far too long; our founding fathers never imagined or encouraged career politicians. Senator, it is time for you to beat it on down the line. Others, like former governor Madeleine Kunin, supported Clinton for primarily one reason: She is a female. How will president-elect Donald Trump empower women? Kunin’s efforts helped elect Trump. Time for Democrats and the DNC to take the high road and work with the elected Republican leadership, just like

TIM NEWCOMB

they wanted the Republicans to work with President Barack Obama. Kunin and Leahy: Respectfully, please heed the advice of a recent Nobel Prize winner: Your old road is Rapidly agin’. Please get out of the new one If you can’t lend your hand For the times they are a-changin’ Stephen Znamierowski

COLCHESTER

REMEMBER MEMORIAL!

[Re “Moran on Main? Officials Seek Solutions for Memorial Auditorium,” September 21; Soundbites: “242 Main Announces Last Show,” October 19]: With 242 Main, a national landmark, Burlington has something unique and purposeful for its younger citizens to benefit from as they learn important lessons about being self-confident, having a voice, recognizing they’re part of a community and participating in art. It’s a rare and necessary resource for youth, many coming from backgrounds that make 242 a critically important positive formative experience. As a city, we can stand up to say we value that. The future of Memorial Auditorium is a blank book. No plan exists yet to repair, replace or redevelop it. It’s an opportunity for us all to choose — as a community — to combine many of our social and economic


MATTHEW THORSEN

WEEK IN REVIEW

I am perplexed by our portrayal. I certainly support people finding spiritual fulfillment where they will, as long as it does no harm to others. There is room for all types of Judaism in this town, but if we are pitted against one another or offhandedly disparaged, harm will certainly be the result.

Memorial Auditorium

needs and work together to achieve them in a place that shines with the diversity and creative perseverance we’re capable of. We have the chance to choose to value art, our youth and our place in history enough to include them while we expand commerce, housing and revenue through the redevelopment of Memorial. There’s no reason we would choose not to, beyond preferring expediency over our deeply felt community values that have improved the lives of Burlington kids for 30 years. All we have to do — as voters, parents, young adults, engaged citizens — is to want to preserve a cinder-block hall with more historic and cultural relevancy than anything else Burlington has built in the last 30 years. James Lockridge

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ALPINE

[Re “A View From the Cockpit,” October 1184 Williston Road, S. Burlington, VT. SHOP /AlpineShopVT 19]: Really? Are we kidding? Everyone Ride Bike Ski Swim Tennis Style knows that the purpose of locating the F-35s at Burlington airport is so that Sens. Bernie Sanders and Patrick Leahy can Untitled-34 1 11/15/16 1:35 PM continue to receive large campaign contributions from the military-industrial complex. Are we now saying that the reason for locating the F-35s in Burlington is to deliver a rain of bombs on the people of North Korea? From Vermont, with love? What alternate universe are we living in? We can also understand that the fighter pilots so admired by the author support policies that will let them play with the world’s most expensive and exclusive perLocally Owned Since 1994 sonal electronic devices. But the author and the pilots appear to be oblivious to No Storefront. Inventory is now located at owner’s home in Winooski. Books are organized the dinosaur in the room. If, as they say, and accessible with plenty of seating. this weapons delivery system can actually avoid all Korean defenses, is it unreasonCall/email for able to assume that, by the same logic further information & and using similar technology, the North appointment Koreans and the Chinese and the Israelis and the Russians and the Yemenis and the Saudis and the Iranians and the Pakistanis north.books@comcast.net and everyone else will be able to develop similar systems that will circumvent our own defenses? 12v-northcountrybooks111616.indd 1 11/14/16 11:50 AM We are on a clear express track — still, and perhaps close to the gruesome end — toward the mutually assured destruction of the species. V

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SEVEN DAYS

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11.16.16-11.23.16

Louis “Mannie” Lionni

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82 S. Winooski Ave., Burlington, VT Open 7am - 11pm every day (802) 861-9700 www.citymarket.coop

FEEDBACK 7

Two Mondays ago began the Jewish holiday of Simhath Torah, and I found myself with my family, surrounded by friends, singing and dancing with the Torah — the scroll of the first five books of the Old Testament — accompanied by an accordionist and kids playing every percussion instrument known to humankind. My children were fascinated as Rabbi Amy pointed out various “highlights” of Jewish history in the unfurled Torah scroll which stretched around the room, supported by loving hands, young and old. This was just one evening in the life of Ohavi Zedek synagogue, which has been my spiritual home for 16 years. In Molly Walsh’s article “Jewish Genesis: A New Congregation Is Born in Burlington” [October 26], I struggled to recognize my congregation. While it was clearly Walsh’s goal to profile a new congregation, it came across more as a “compare and contrast” between the old and the new. (As many times as Ohavi Zedek was referenced, no one there was contacted for the article.) As I read, I imagined other readers inferring that Ohavi Zedek is socially regressive, stodgy or irrelevant. I think of my progressive friends, my innovative rabbi, my diverse and dynamic synagogue community, and

Sharon Panitch

fresh


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DECEMBER 1 Thursday at 7:30 pm Nebraska Theatre Caravan

A Christmas Carol

8 Thursday at 7:30 pm

Vienna Boys Choir

JANUARY

12 Sunday at 7 pm

3 Tuesday at 7:30 pm

Cirque Mother Africa Le Patin Libre

Vertical Influences

42nd Street

14 Saturday at 8 pm

31 Friday at 7 & 9:30 pm

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Upright Citizens Brigade

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The Opulence of Integrity

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8 Saturday at 8 pm New Voices Series

18 Saturday at 8 pm New Voices Series

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Ballaké Sissoko & Vincent Segal 25-26 Sat. at 8 pm & Sun. at 2 pm

Borromeo Quartet Hosted by Soovin Kim Beethoven String Quartet Op. 127

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MARCH 10 Friday at 8 pm

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and Migmar Tsering 22 Saturday at 8 pm

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MAY 10 Wednesday at 7:30 pm Broadway National Tour

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19-20 Fri. & Sat. at 7 & 9 pm

Adele Myers and Dancers

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1 Saturday at 7 & 9:30 pm

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SEVEN DAYS

The Too Real Tour 27 Monday at 7:30 pm Broadway National Tour

13 Friday at 8 pm

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contents

LOOKING FORWARD

NOVEMBER 16-23, 2016 VOL.22 NO.10

If you’re feeling that our bubble just cracked, know this: Vermonters are good with duct tape. Seriously, life goes on, and so do we. Meantime, our annual Winter Preview Issue reminds us that the season brings cheer as well as chill. We find plenty of WALL-CLIMBING fun at the Stowe Adventure Center and tell you when, where and why to watch the women’s alpine WORLD CUP at Killington this month. We meet the man who DRIVES THE SLEIGH at Shelburne Farms and the guy who invented a FAT-BIKE SKI. Finally, we check in with FORECASTERS to see if the sky will let it snow, let it snow, let it snow. Let’s go play, everybody.

NEWS 14

Why Many Northeast Kingdom Voters Chose Trump

ARTS NEWS 22

BY MARK DAVIS

16

FEATURES 32

BY RACHEL ELIZABETH JONES

Growing Pains: Burlington Progressives Clash Over Development

24

BY ALICIA FREESE

18

Search for Love in the Digital Age Prompts an Art Installation Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire Inspires a Contemporary Art Book

BY SADIE WILLIAMS

Old Hands or ‘Fresh Eyes’? Building a Scott Administration, Job by Job

24

At Johnson State College, an Exhibition Takes On Racism

BY SARAH TUFF DUNN

34

Weather or Not

Winter Preview: ‚ e bumpy science of predicting snow days BY KEVIN J. KELLEY

37

Rocking a Winter Wonderland

Winter Preview: Familyfriendly après-ski options at Stowe’s new Adventure Center

BY RACHEL ELIZABETH JONES

BY TERRI HALLENBECK

20

Slope Hopes

Winter Preview: ‚ e women’s alpine skiing World Cup slides into Killington

BY SARAH TUFF DUNN

Excerpts From Off Message

38

BY SEVEN DAYS STAFF

VIDEO SERIES

Skiing on Wheels

Winter Preview: Brooke Scatchard brings the fat-bike ski to winter sports BY KATIE JICKLING

40

COLUMNS + REVIEWS

FUN STUFF

SECTIONS

CLASSIFIEDS

12 26 29 43 65 69 74 80 89 11 21 48 61 64 74 80

Fair Game POLITICS Drawn & Paneled ART Hackie CULTURE Side Dishes FOOD Soundbites MUSIC Album Reviews Art Review Movie Reviews Ask Athena SEX The Magnificent 7 Life Lines Calendar Classes Music Art Movies

Drag ’n’ Sleigher

Winter Preview: Meet the man behind the horses that pull Shelburne Farms’ winter sleigh

30 83 84 84 84 84 85 85 86 86 86 87 88

vehicles housing services homeworks buy this stuff music, art legals fsbo crossword support groups calcoku/sudoku puzzle answers jobs

C-2 C-2 C-2 C-3 C-3 C-3 C-3 C-4 C-5 C-6 C-7 C-8 C-9

COVER IMAGE BRENDAN TOTTEN

BY KEN PICARD

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Stuck in Vermont: Travelers at Burlington International Airport got a surprise last weekend when students from the University of Vermont's dance program busted a move with a flash mob in the check-in area.

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LOOKING FORWARD

the

MAGNIFICENT MUST SEE, MUST DO THIS WEEK

SATURDAY 19

Literary Leader Beth Jacob Synagogue closes the book on a monthlong celebration of the author whose stories inspired the Broadway musical Fiddler on the Roof with a showing of the 2011 documentary Sholem Aliechem: Laughing in the Darkness. Film aficionado Rick Winston leads a discussion following this cinematic profile of one of the founding fathers of modern Yiddish literature. SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 55

COMPI L E D BY KRI ST E N RAVI N

SUNDAY 20 SATURDAY 19

BIRDS OF PREY Fledgling ornithologists take a gander at the raptors that build their nests at Shelburne Farms during Hawks, Owls & Falcons! ˜ is indoor program gives kids and adults the opportunity to come face-to-face with these winged wonders and learn what makes each species special. Now, that’s worth crowing about. SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 50

Taking a Stand On the home page of the International Transgender Day of Remembrance website is a long list of individuals who were killed this year in acts of antitransgender violence. ˜ eir names will ring out at the Pride Center of Vermont’s Transgender Day of Remembrance vigil, complete with an open mic, community art, a ceremony, a special speaker and more. SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 57

MONDAY 21

Mightier Th ˜ an the Sword Whether the 2016 presidential election has left you at a loss for words or with lots to say, you may fi find camaraderie with the Mountainclature League of Poets. In an open gathering at Montpelier’s Kellogg-Hubbard Library, poets from all backgrounds share works of verse and discuss ways in which wordsmiths can harness the power of the pen to address hate and bigotry. SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 57

Last Hurrah

SATURDAY 19

SEE INTERVIEW ON PAGE 64

On the Rise Geometry Lesson One photo in Laetitia Soulier’s exhibition “Fractal Architectures” provides an aerial view of what appears to be the interior of a two-level home. A pair of feet sticking out from under the dwelling’s loft reveals the structure as a hyperrealistic, toy-size model. ˜ e French photographer presents this study in scale, shapes and patterns in two chapters at Hanover, N.H.’s Hood Downtown. SEE REVIEW ON PAGE 74

MAGNIFICENT SEVEN 11

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ONGOING SEVEN DAYS

Built in 1913 as an extension of the Socialist Labor Party Hall store, Barre’s Union Cooperative Bakery supplied the area’s granite workers with sustenance. Locals converge for Dine & Dance to Raise the Dough to support the building’s restoration and transformation into a woodfired-baking learning center. Slices from fi Montpelier’s Woodbelly Pizza and tunes by Green Mountain Swing keep spirits high.

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“This might be their perfect send-off,” writes met“˜ alinjection.net of the Dillinger Escape Plan’s 2016 face melter Dissociation. ˜ e boundary-pushing band’s sixth and fi final release showcases the quintet’s penchant for folding various styles — jazz fusion, anyone? — into its mathcore foundation. Seven Days’ Dan Bolles chats up the guys ahead of their show at Club Metronome in Burlington.

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THURSDAY 17


FAIR GAME

NOVEMBER SPECIAL

P

Won Way

erhaps the only thing worse than modern campaign reporting is 1 large 1-topping pizza, 2 liter Coke product, postelection analysis. For the past 1 dozen boneless or regular wings week, the same sages who misread the electorate throughout the 2016 presidential race have been busily explain2 large, 1-topping pizzas & 2-liter Coke product ing what we all missed. Thanks, guys. There’s been plenty of that in Vermont, Plus tax. Pick-up or delivery only. Expires 11/30/16. too. Those who weeks ago thought our Limit: 1 offer per customer per day. hotly contested gubernatorial contest was too close to call are now claiming that 973 Roosevelt Highway Republican governor-elect PHIL SCOTT’s 52 Colchester • 655-5550 to 43 percent victory over Democrat SUE www.threebrotherspizzavt.com MINTER was “inevitable.” Everything Scott did was brilliant, our local sages tell us, while every decision Minter made was 12v-threebros1116.indd 1 10/24/16 11:10 AM fatally flawed. Me? I try like hell to avoid predictions because I know I’m usually wrong — even after the outcome is clear. So rather than sum up Vermont’s 2016 gubernatorial TH election in one tidy narrative, I thought I’d pose a few questions — and answer them as best I can:

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I know you said you wouldn’t sum up the race “in one tidy narrative” — whatever that means — but I don’t have time to read the rest of this column, so can you please sum it up in one tidy narrative? Sure! I thought you’d never ask. Throughout the fall, I vacillated between two competing theories. A: In a presidential election featuring DONALD TRUMP, Vermont’s unusually high turnout would carry down-ballot Democrats, Minter included, across the finish line. And B: As in every open gubernatorial election since 1962, Vermonters would pick their next governor from the party out of power — in 10:32 AMthis case, Scott. The results suggest that Theory B was a better bet. After six years of Democratic rule, perhaps it was time for the pendulum to swing the other way.

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So what happened to ƒ eory A? Turnout was, indeed, high. More than 320,000 Vermonters cast a ballot, according to the Secretary of State’s Office — second only to the nearly 327,000 who voted in 2008. And Vermonters voted overwhelmingly for Democratic presidential nominee HILLARY CLINTON. Trump’s 29.8 percent in Vermont appears to be his worst showing in the country. But Vermonters, as they often do, eagerly split their tickets. Of the 185 towns and cities that backed Clinton, 132 also supported Scott. Got any other brilliant theories? Yes, in fact. It’s a tired cliché, but 2016 was indeed the year of the outsider. Sure,

9/6/16 2:27 PM

OPEN SEASON ON VERMONT POLITICS BY PAUL HEINTZ

Scott’s been in office for 16 years, but he’s never had a lick of power. Montpelier Democrats were the establishment — and plenty of Vermonters seemed willing to blow it up. “This was a year of rewarding rhetoric and strong positions, not a record of accomplishment and competence,” says one wise Democrat, arguing that the theory helped explain Sen. DAVID ZUCKERMAN’s (P/D-Chittenden) primary-election victory over House Speaker SHAP SMITH (D-Morristown). So it was “inevitable” that Scott would win? Um, no. As Scott campaign adviser JASON GIBBS puts it, “If there was a political headwind that we didn’t face, I don’t know what it was.” That may be an exaggeration, but Gibbs has a point. Scott’s name appeared on the ballot in the most liberal state in the country, just below the least popular GOP presidential

I THINK PEOPLE WERE LOOKING FOR SOMEBODY WHO THEY FELT

THEY COULD TRUST. D OU G RAC I N E

nominee in party history. A deeply popular president and vice president campaigned for his opponent — as did Sen. BERNIE SANDERS (I-Vt.), fresh off his own run for president. And because Sen. PATRICK LEAHY (D-Vt.) was up for reelection, the Vermont Democratic Party was flush with cash and talent. In other words, Scott couldn’t afford too many mistakes. Like, what kind of mistakes? Scott’s most brilliant move was his public condemnation of Trump, long before the orange-hued menace won the Republican nomination. And unlike many of his peers, Scott stuck to his guns — avoiding the waffling that may have doomed Sen. KELLY AYOTTE (R-N.H.). “He affirmed in the eyes of a lot of Vermonters that he was the type of New England Republican that he was campaigning to be,” says Democratic operative BILL LOFY, who advised the pro-Minter super PAC Our Vermont. “It made it more difficult to nationalize this election.” Why couldn’t Sanders save Minter? That Vermont’s junior senator won 5.6 percent of the presidential vote when he wasn’t even on the ballot shows just

how popular Sanders is in his home state. According to one Republican involved in the gubernatorial race, “The only time we got nervous was when they brought out the big guns.” But Sanders’ magic touch isn’t necessarily transferable. Just ask Democrat MATT DUNNE, who got walloped in the gubernatorial primary despite mimicking the senator’s every move. What voters seem to appreciate about Sanders is his authenticity — and only the candidate himself or herself can provide that. “All of our decisions were guided by the idea that whatever we do should be guided by who [Scott] is as an individual,” Gibbs says. “Ultimately, that made the authenticity of the campaign far greater than a campaign that is micromanaged around polling data and overproduced in a theatrical sense.” So was Minter just a bad candidate? No. For a politician who had never run for office outside her tiny House district, Minter more than held her own. She was solid on policy, stayed on message, raised money like a champ and maintained her composure even when the death of five local teens in October rocked her family and community. Also, remember when Minter clobbered Dunne and fellow Democrat PETER GALBRAITH in the Democratic primary? My, you people have short memories! Ah, now you’re saying she was the best candidate ever. No. Minter was overly scripted and struggled to connect with regular voters. She had plenty of policy prescriptions, but what exactly was her message? Wait a second. ƒ at sounds like what everyone’s saying about Clinton. Aren’t you just being sexist? Quite possibly. As Gov. PETER SHUMLIN told Vermont Public Radio this week, there’s a reason no woman has ever won the presidency and only one has served as governor of Vermont: “We hold them to a different standard when we’re hiring a chief executive.” Speaking of Shumlin, wasn’t it his fault that Minter lost? I mean, there’s a reason the Republican Governors Association spent millions on television advertisements linking Shumlin’s former transportation secretary to her “mentor,” as the bobblehead ads put it. “People have a pretty negative view of the incumbent governor,” says DOUG RACINE, a Minter supporter and two-time Democratic gubernatorial candidate who


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served in — and was fired from — the Shumlin administration. “I think people were looking for somebody who they felt they could trust.” Wasn’t this all about name recognition? Perhaps. Prior to 2016, Scott had won three statewide elections and five Senate races in populous Washington County. Minter? Four House races. How, then, to explain Zuckerman’s victory over three-time statewide Republican nominee RANDY BROCK? Unlike Brock, the lieutenant governor-elect loves nothing more than pressing the flesh — and he’s been at it for a long time. “If you really look at the two winning candidates and the two losing candidates in each race, Phil and I have either been serving or getting to all corners of the state for many more years than either of our opponents,” Zuckerman says.

POLITICS

So did Scott win a “mandate” for his economic agenda, as he claimed last week? Voters clearly sent a message that they wanted Scott to govern, but they otherwise picked Democrats. The party picked up two more seats in the Senate and held on to its strong majority in the House. “I think one can read too much into Phil’s election,” Speaker Smith says. “It may be as simple as, he’s been on the statewide scene for years. People know him and are comfortable with him and decided they’d give him a shot.”

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Well, I’m just glad little old Vermont runs its elections the old-fashioned way — with a high-minded debate focused on the issues. Nice try. Scott and Minter may choose to remember the race that way, but this was actually a proxy war between corporatefunded super PACs run by the RGA, the Democratic Governors Association and a horde of special-interest groups. Vermont’s legislative races remain small-town affairs, but its gubernatorial and U.S. Senate races went national a long time ago. The final count will surely show that this was the most expensive election in state history — brought to you by selffunding millionaires, California donors and generous corporate treasuries. The nasty and misleading TV ads they financed did nothing to elevate the debate. So, please, spare me the Vermont exceptionalism.

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defend dissent and gird against the spread of state-sponsored truthiness. Here at Seven Days, we have spent the past five years growing our newsroom into one of the finest in the state. We are now in the midst of another expansion, hiring new reporters, new editors and — wait for it — a new political columnist. Last month we brought on staff writer KATIE JICKLING — a former freelancer for the Herald of Randolph, Valley News and VTDigger.org — to cover Chittenden County. She’ll replace staff writer ALICIA FREESE, who is joining TERRI HALLENBECK in our Statehouse bureau. We also welcomed back KYMELYA SARI, a 2015 graduate of the Columbia Journalism School and former reporting fellow for Seven Days. Her coverage of Vermont’s growing New American community has already proved indispensable in the dawning of the Age of Trump. SASHA GOLDSTEIN, a former breaking news editor for the New York Daily News, joined the staff in June. In the newly created position of deputy news editor, he is working alongside news editor MATTHEW ROY to wrangle our growing team. CANDACE PAGE, a 32-year veteran of the Burlington Free Press, has been working for Seven Days as a freelance editor since May. She will now play a more formal role, helping me direct our legislative and political coverage. Finally, after four and a half years writing this political column, I plan to surrender Fair Game at the end of the year. My hope is to trade the day-to-day hustle of the political beat for more in-depth investigative reporting at Seven Days — and to seek out the big stories that, too often in Vermont, go under-covered. This column will be in good hands. After a long search, we have hired veteran journalist and prolific blogger JOHN WALTERS to become the paper’s fourth political columnist since the late, great PETER FREYNE. A veteran of New Hampshire Public Radio and Montpelier’s the Bridge, Walters is probably best known to Vermonters as a blogger for Green Mountain Daily and, more recently, his own site, the Vermont Political Observer. Walters will bring to Seven Days an engaging voice, sharp instincts and a provocative approach to political coverage. He will chart his own course in these pages, but I trust that he will deliver the journalistic rigor and independent analysis our readers have come to expect. Walters will start contributing next month to our news and politics blog, Off Message, and take over the column in January. Hallenbeck will cover Fair Game for the next couple of weeks while I’m on vacation. I’ll return in December for a few final columns before the end of the year. As Sanders might say: The struggle continues. m

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LOCALmatters

Why Many Northeast Kingdom Voters Chose Trump B Y M A R K D AV I S

SEVENDAYSVT.COM 11.16.16-11.23.16 SEVEN DAYS 14 LOCAL MATTERS

DON WHIPPLE

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he regulars in the tiny dining room attached to Bob’s Quick Stop in Irasburg said that Bernard Peters was the best person to explain how Donald Trump won the presidency. Aside from his time fighting in the Vietnam War, Peters, 70, has always lived in Albany or adjacent Irasburg. He is proud that his education occurred entirely in a one-room schoolhouse through the eighth grade. Peters keeps a close eye on politics — local and national — and believed his vote for Trump was going to help his hometown. “I keep hearing on TV, ‘The uneducated people are for Trump,’” said Peters, who sported a low-sitting baseball cap and a bushy gray beard last Thursday at Bob’s. He had just bought scratch-off tickets and coffee at the register. “Are you saying only smart people voted for Hillary, and people who voted for Trump are idiots? Anything Trump said, they said he didn’t know what he was talking about. And all of it came true.” On Election Day, 56 percent of Vermont voters chose Hillary Clinton to be their next president, and the Green Mountain State was the first the Associated Press called for her — just before the polls closed. Thirty percent voted for Trump. He won in clusters of towns in northern Franklin County, central Rutland County and around Barre. Vermont’s most ardent Trump-loving town was tiny Searsburg, near the Massachusetts border, which gave him 61 percent of its vote. But the biggest swath of red on Vermont’s postelection map was exactly where anyone who follows Vermont politics would have guessed: in Essex, Caledonia and Orleans counties, the storied Northeast Kingdom in Vermont’s top right-hand corner. In the days after Trump’s victory, Seven Days spoke with supporters and opponents alike to find out why he was popular there. Their answers were as varied and contradictory as Trump’s statements have been during the past year. “The people in Chittenden County don’t think the same way we do,” Peters said. “There’s a lot more money down there. They’re not used to doing things the way we grew up. Their idea of not a lot of money is $70,000. They don’t know what struggle is. I think that’s what happened. People have had it.” He continued: “Even though he’s a

POLITICS billionaire, Trump could relate to the working person. He didn’t struggle himself, but probably he knows what it’s like.” The story of the NEK’s economic decline has almost become a cliché: mills and factories shuttered, dairy farms consolidated, talented young people who flee at the first chance. While in the rest of Vermont, residents fought against Walmart, those in the NEK welcomed the superstore with open arms. Locals eagerly remind visitors that the Kingdom is home to communities that didn’t get electricity until the early ’60s. Historically, the region has suffered the highest unemployment and the lowest population growth in Vermont. The state’s unemployment rate is 3.4 percent. It’s 4.8 percent in Orleans County, 5.4 percent in Essex County and 4.1 percent in Caledonia County.

Bernard Peters

For many, the explanation for the NEK’s preference for Trump starts here. “It’s partly a vote of desperation,” said Irasburg novelist Howard Frank Mosher, the Kingdom’s foremost chronicler and a fierce Trump opponent. “The great problem we are facing and have been for decades is unemployment and underemployment. People are desperate and feel almost any change has got to be an improvement. I also think people in the Kingdom are notoriously independent-minded, and they pride themselves, almost to the point of selfdelusion, on that. The idea of a candidate who had none of the establishment support delighted them.” Good job opportunities are few and far between: There’s North Country Hospital in Newport and some state government work. The Ethan Allen furniture manufacturing plant in Orleans is holding on, though it doesn’t employ nearly as many as it once did. For many locals, options are

limited to logging or working on one of the remaining dairy farms or, as some interviewed said, getting assistance through programs such as Social Security Disability Insurance. But while many lament the economic conditions, Bob’s Quick Stop is coming off a very good year, according to longtime employee Holly Lefebvre. Like most of her customers, Lefebvre is an ardent Trump supporter who felt that he would be good for the region. “Everybody is very happy about it, because Donald Trump is more for our people instead of helping everybody else,” said the thirtysomething cashier. But Lefebvre’s view of the Kingdom’s economy is more positive than Mosher’s. She pointed out that in nearby Derby, the Walmart has been searching for employees for months. “It’s not that there’s not work here; it’s that many people don’t want to work. I know kids who get out of high school with food stamps.” She


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Was racism a factor that drove attributed Trump’s success to his stance on guns and dismissed his “grab voters here to support a candidate them by the pussy” remark as over- who supported sealing borders, keepblown locker room talk that “all men” ing Muslims out and expanding stopand-frisk policies? engage in. Racism occasionally rears its head Scott Wheeler, a Derby resident and editor of Vermont’s Northland in the region, just as it does elseJournal, a monthly magazine that where in Vermont. Earlier this year, examines the region’s history, also a Craftsbury resident came home to dismissed the economic concerns as find a dead and bloodied black cat a motivating factor. The area is tradi- had been left near a Black Lives tionally conservative, Wheeler said, Matter sign. and many people simply voted for Mosher recalled a dance near his their party. home that he and his wife attended “The only people who talk about four years ago. An escaped neighboreconomic desperation are the people hood hound, with its leash dangling who don’t live here,” around its neck, crashed Wheeler said. “I’m not the party. saying everything is rosy, A member of the band, but most of the people Mosher recalled, stepped here are happy. The only up to the microphone and time we read about how exclaimed: “Hey look at bad things are is when that — somebody’s niggerit’s outsiders looking in, catcher has gotten loose!” because people don’t The Moshers immediunderstand our way of ately left. But no one else life. I think what a lot of protested, he said. The people did is, they at least party went on. respected Trump because “I’m afraid to this day you could see his flaws. it’s characteristic of the He didn’t even try to attitude in the Northeast GARY ST EVENS cover his flaws.” Kingdom,” Mosher said. A devoted NEK histo“There’s a lot of latent rian, Wheeler jokingly offered a novel racism, and it’s a half-step away from theory to explain Trump’s support in being a really dangerous and active the region: Trump’s first wife, Ivana, racism.” spent a few years in the 1970s as a ski Of course, no one who voted for instructor at Jay Peak. Trump told Seven Days that race had Two days after the election, plenty anything to do with it. And many of of signs for governor-elect Phil Scott the same NEK towns that backed and local legislators still dotted the Trump, including Mosher’s Irasburg, NEK landscape. But Trump signs overwhelmingly supported Barack were scarce in towns such as Irasburg, Obama in both 2008 and 2012. Barton, Orleans and Lowell. Did many Peters said his vote was about the of his supporters, as some on the left jobs that he believes business-savvy have suggested, simply not want to Trump will soon bring the area. draw attention to themselves? What about the women and minorA Trump flag flew from a tree in ities who are scared by what Trump the front yard of a home in Irasburg. has said? What about his temperaWhen Seven Days knocked, a woman ment? What about his authoritarian in her fifties answered the door, and instincts? reluctantly chatted for a minute. She In a narrow store aisle, Peters declined to give her name. spent 20 minutes trying to respond to Her No. 1 reason for voting Trump? each query. “Immigration,” she said through her “I don’t think there’s much to it, porch door. really,” Peters said. “The president Albany resident Gary Stevens had doesn’t push the buttons. It’s got to another theory about why his neigh- go through a lot of people. Now that bors preferred Trump over Clinton. he’s president, he’s trying. He could “A lot of people said they wouldn’t have been mean to Hillary during his vote for her because she’s a girl,” speech, and he was a gentleman. And Stevens said. he has a lot of people around him to “They’re just mad, I guess. I don’t help tone it down. People are getting know. They didn’t like the black way too scared.” m guy and they don’t like a woman, and the Republicans didn’t give them Contact: mark@sevendaysvt.com, @Davis7D or 865-1020, ext. 23 anyone else.”

Local love.


LOCALmatters

Growing Pains: Burlington Progressives Clash Over Development B Y ALI CI A FR EESE

SEVENDAYSVT.COM 11.16.16-11.23.16 SEVEN DAYS 16 LOCAL MATTERS

TIM NEWCOMB

T

ed Wimpey left Athens, Ga., for Burlington, Vt., in the late 1980s because the city’s socialist mayor, Bernie Sanders, intrigued him. He quickly fell in with a nascent political party called the Progressives. Nearly three decades later, Wimpey announced that he was severing ties with the group. “I now categorically reject and deny an[y] such association. I am an independent progressive pure and simple,” he wrote in a brief Facebook post earlier this month. His decision is especially surprising because his wife is the highest-ranking Progressive official in Burlington — city council President Jane Knodell. Wimpey, who works as a housing advocate, later explained to Facebook friends: “The effectively anti-development position of the Party with regard to the Burlington Town Center development is the final straw for me.” Progressives were divided in the heated, preelection debate over how to redevelop Burlington’s outmoded mall. Knodell, former Burlington mayor Peter Clavelle and former city councilor Brian Pine actively encouraged local residents to pass two ballot items that clear the way for developer Don Sinex to build up to 14 stories and for the city to restore two streets and improve others using $21.8 million in tax increment financing. Last Tuesday, a majority of Burlington voters agreed with them — but it wasn’t a landslide. Opponents, including the leader of the local party chapter, have signaled they won’t give up trying to stop the project. It’s been a months-long battle. In August, Burlington Progressives issued a blistering statement that listed 22 grievances against it. Titled “Burlington Is Still Not for Sale,” it accused the city of ignoring public input and caving to the developer’s demands. Burlington Progressive Party chair Charles Winkleman later appeared in a newspaper ad against the project, paid for by the Coalition for a Livable City, a network of activists that has led the opposition movement. Progressive Councilor Max Tracy tried unsuccessfully to pass an amendment that would require Sinex to make 25 percent of the project’s housing affordable — 5 percent more than

required. That other Progressives were willing to accept anything less has “been a real disappointment to me,” he said. Tracy suggested there’s a “generational” component to the divide on this particular issue between old-guard pro-growth Progs from the Clavelle era and newer recruits such as himself, Winkleman and Burlington City Councilor Selene Colburn “who have been, for the most part, opposed.” Colburn voted against the zoning change and in favor of the TIF request. Sara Giannoni voted for both ballot items but also expressed concern about insufficient affordable housing. One exception to Tracy’s theory is Steve Goodkind, who came to work for Sanders in 1981 and ran for mayor on the Progressive ticket last year. A loud voice for the Coalition for a Livable City, the former public works director has criticized the scale and design of the mall project and suggested the increase in downtown office space would have a detrimental environmental effect by bringing more commuters into the city. Although Knodell endorsed Goodkind when he ran for mayor, now she’s supporting the efforts of Mayor Miro Weinberger and Democratic councilors. “I think people within the Progressive Party agree on the … importance of

addressing income inequality and making sure we have an economy that works for everyone, but what this project is flushing out is, we have different views on how to get there,” said Knodell. “As a Progressive, I’ve tried to make the case to other Progressives that this project is good for working people because of the permanent affordable housing and also because of the construction … and other jobs.” Sinex plans to build 274 housing units. Burlington’s zoning ordinance requires 20 percent, or about 55 units, to be affordable. At the city’s request, he’s agreed to pay construction workers a livable wage, although no similar guarantee applies to any permanent positions associated with the development. Knodell said she voted against Tracy’s amendment to raise the requirement to 25 percent because she was concerned it would kill the project and no new affordable units would be built. Allowing the project to go forward will spur economic activity and expand the city’s tax base, benefiting all residents, she argued. Pine, a former Progressive city councilor and former housing director for Burlington’s Community & Economic Development Office, said increasing the housing supply should help reduce real estate costs across the income spectrum. Clavelle, who recently returned to

Burlington after a five-year stint abroad in Albania, made the case that dense downtown development is more in line with the party’s commitment to protecting the environment. “Growth and development in the city makes much more sense than developing the cornfields and cow pastures,” he said, adding that, “Some of us feel that development that is sustainable is in everybody’s interests.” This is not the first time Progressives have clashed over growth. “When it comes to development issues, Progressives have never spoken with one voice,” said Pine. When Sanders was mayor, he supported the infamous Alden Plan — which would have put condos and a hotel on the waterfront — to the dismay of some Burlington lefties. The plan failed in a 1985 citywide vote. Clavelle, who succeeded Sanders, found resistance from within his own party when in 2000 he put forth his Legacy Action Plan — a municipal blueprint that would serve as a precursor to PlanBTV. One of the plan’s most controversial proposals was to make Burlington bigger through “carefully planned growth,” meaning more people and more development. Knodell, who helped write the plan, often calls herself a “Peter Clavelle Progressive” — a nod to their shared interest in promoting development. One significant difference between the debate then and now: “That was just an abstract plan; this could actually happen,” said Knodell. “The fact that everyone is not marching in lockstep is fine, but the fact that the debate has been as testy as it has been, I think, is unfortunate,” said Clavelle. Accusations flew the week before Election Day. Knodell ripped the Coalition for a Livable City after VTDigger.org ran a story about alleged campaign finance violations committed by the group’s political action committee. “It is unacceptable that the Coalition for a Livable City is violating Vermont campaign finance law and has left the public with no way of knowing what private or political interests are fueling their well-funded campaign of distortions and misinformation,” she wrote. The PAC’s treasurer? Goodkind. He said he was puzzled and disappointed by the public rebuke from a fellow Prog, whom he considers a friend.


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POLITICS On November 4, Tracy, Colburn and independent councilor Sharon Bushor put out a letter saying the zoning change “emerged from a process void of compromise” and “will lower the percentage of affordable housing that developers are required to build.” Knodell shot back with a Front Porch Forum post forcefully contesting both points. She is also critical of the city Progs’ decision to issue a statement, which was made after a vote by the steering committee.

WHEN IT COMES TO DEVELOPMENT ISSUES, PROGRESSIVES HAVE NEVER SPOKEN WITH ONE VOICE. BRIAN PINE

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Wimpey claims Tracy’s demands are unreasonable and have the same effect as being antidevelopment. Either way, it’s clear that a particular group of Progressives has a higher threshold for supporting development. State party director Emma Mulvaney-Stanak isn’t worried. “I think what that shows is great democracy and diversity of opinion within the party structure,” she said. Progs have weathered more contentious disagreements in the past, she said — on local issues such as Burlington Telecom and statewide ones like ridgetop wind turbines. MulvaneyStanak, a Burlington resident, voted “no” on both redevelopment questions, largely because she thought the city administration gave too much deference to the developer and too little to the public. Progressives currently have four members on the Burlington council. When the two independents and one Republican vote with them, the eclectic coalition can overpower the five Democratic councilors. But if the dispute among Progs persists, it could create fissures in their unified front. There should be a strong incentive for the party to reunite: The council has yet to finalize the “community benefits” that Sinex will provide as part of the project. And it still needs to sign a development agreement with Sinex. Knodell said she hopes to negotiate for more workforce housing. “There are still a lot of ways to maximize public good for the project,” noted Colburn. In the coming months, the council is also expected to review Burlington’s inclusionary zoning ordinance, which requires developers to build units for low-income residents. Those who argue that the rules are too onerous will almost certainly push to relax them. “It’s going to be really important for us to come together in order to advocate for strong inclusionary zoning,” said Giannoni. Where all The Great Furniture Is If history is any indication, unani1515 SHELBURNE RD • 863-1165 • SHOP TODAY. CLOSED SUNDAYS. mous agreement is unlikely. The party’s latest internecine dustup “is not the first ★ TOWNANDCOUNTRYVT.COM time, and it won’t be the last time, that Progressives have disagreed about how POSITION AVAILABLE: to best manage growth and developVisit FURNITURE our storeSALES at AND DESIGN ment in Burlington,” Colburn said. m Town and Country Furniture is in search of additional sales and design help. This is a great opportunity to work in a fun and creative atmosphere selling furniture in a higher end store. Furniture retail experience is preferred. Contact: alicia@sevendaysvt.com This is a year round position (not temporary) for an individual who enjoys and interacts well with customers. Professional appearance, engaging personality, and a sense of humor a plus. Part time (3-4 days), including 2v-townandcountry110916.indd 1 11/4/16 3:09 PM Saturdays. Hours are 10am-5pm. Please apply in person with resume at Town and Country Furniture, 1515

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“Because the party took a position, the division within the party is very evident,” said Knodell, who had expressed support for the project before the statement came out. Pine also said he was “uncomfortable with the statement” because he worried it would “have the effect of potentially alienating not only Progressives, but I think it would put the party at odds with the consensus of Burlington.” Wimpey is one of those alienated Progs. “There is a growing knee-jerk antidevelopment reaction building, and it’s cast in terms of the little guy against the big capitalist developer, so it looks like a Progressive position,” Wimpey said during an interview last week. “To me, it’s more of a Progressive position to support dense development.” He added, “The Progressive leadership are maybe beginning to marginalize themselves,” which might make it harder for the party to retake the mayor’s office. Knodell hasn’t ruled out a future run. Tracy says the opposition has been unfairly characterized as antidevelopment, arguing that he and others would have supported the mall redevelopment if Sinex had been willing to make concessions such as increasing the affordable housing.

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18 LOCAL MATTERS

SEVEN DAYS

11.16.16-11.23.16

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Far left: Gov. Peter Shumlin and governor-elect Phil Scott

Old Hands or ‘Fresh Eyes’? Building a Scott Administration, Job by Job B Y T ER R I HA LLEN BEC K

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ast Thursday, governor-elect Phil Scott and Gov. Peter Shumlin convened for a half-hour, allthis-will-soon-be-yours meeting. Asked afterward for one piece of advice the departing governor had for him, Scott revealed: “the importance of hiring good people.” Selecting scores of employees became Scott’s main task the day after voters promoted the Republican lieutenant governor to Vermont’s top job. He has eight weeks to decide who will help him run state government starting January 5. Fewer than 24 hours after the election, Scott’s transition team had a website, transition.vermont.gov, that was accepting résumés and suggestions from the public. Hundreds of applications have already come in, according to Jason Gibbs, a transition team member. The buzz is intense: Just what will a Scott administration look like?

During a press conference the day after he prevailed over Democrat Sue Minter, the 58-year-old excavation company executive said he was looking “outside the box” for his cabinet members. “Being a Republican isn’t a litmus test,” he insisted. Yet Scott’s first move that day was to appoint three men who served as high-level aides to former Republican governor Jim Douglas to lead his transition team. This week he took a two-day trip to an Orlando meeting of the Republican Governors Association. Those two moves didn’t exactly send a signal of nonpartisanship. Tim Hayward, once Douglas’ chief of staff, is leading the transition. Gibbs, who served as spokesman to the former governor and then commissioner of the Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation, is Hayward’s assistant. Neale Lunderville is heading up Scott’s budgetplanning committee after serving as

secretaries of administration and transportation under Douglas. Those familiar names caught the attention of Rep. Chris Pearson (P-Burlington), who won election last week to the state Senate. “My fear is that he will really mirror the Douglas administration; he’s already leaning in that direction,” said Pearson, who recalled persistent budget battles with the last Republican governor. “My hope is that he picks a cabinet that reflects his more moderate nature. I think he’s proven to be somebody who appreciates the challenges of working Vermonters.” After his meeting with Shumlin, Scott walked down State Street in Montpelier back to his transition office, accompanied by Hayward, Gibbs and his new state police security. Though he was operating on just a few hours of postelection sleep, the governor-elect had a spring in his step

and confidence that came with having just learned that voters really do like him. A passing driver honked in support. Scott showed no sign that he’s overwhelmed by the task ahead — being in charge of nearly 8,000 executive-branch employees and building the fiscally responsible budget he promised voters. The time frame is short, so Scott needs experienced people to get started, Gibbs explained. Douglas suggested he’s wise to hire some of his own former staff. “I had a very good team,” he said. But Douglas, Gibbs and Scott himself predicted that the new administration would be a hybrid. While “I think we share the same vision of trying to have an effective government,” Scott said, “this is a Scott administration, and we want to think outside the box. I think we’re different.” Scott said he would likely appoint not only former members of the Douglas administration, but also those who worked for Shumlin and former governor Howard Dean. “There will absolutely be a lot of new talent, new ideas, new perspectives in this administration,” Gibbs said. Scott may be the first governor since former farmer George Aiken, who served from 1937 to 1941, to come from a world where people don’t wear suits. Those watching closely say they expect his administration will be more reflective of his Barre blue-collar roots. “It wouldn’t surprise me if we see people from … backgrounds that aren’t normally people you expect in state government,” said House Speaker Shap Smith (D-Morristown), who advised Minter’s campaign. Smith pointed to two people Scott appointed to help him recruit staff: Rep. Laura Sibilia (I-Dover), who works for Southeastern Vermont Economic Development Strategies, and Debbie Winters, owner of Firetech Sprinkler in Colchester. “Those are people who are outside the box,” Smith said. “I think Phil, as a businessperson, is looking for people who are oriented to that area — who are not politicians,” said Senate Minority Leader Joe Benning (R-Caledonia). Lunderville said different political views won’t be a disqualifier, either. “It’s OK if they supported Sue Minter in the election,” he said. “The question is, can they help us move the state forward?” “Governor-elect Scott is going to be looking for fresh eyes,” predicted Betsy Bishop, president of the Vermont Chamber of Commerce and Douglas’ former deputy chief of staff. “I see him reaching deep into the young-professional community.” It’ll be important, too, for Scott to find someone with broad knowledge of health care policy, she said. Presidentelect Donald Trump’s vow to toss out the


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IT’S OK IF THEY SUPPORTED SUE MINTER IN THE ELECTION. THE QUESTION IS, CAN THEY HELP US MOVE THE STATE FORWARD?

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LOCAL MATTERS 19

too, of state officials Scott should hang on to, including Transportation Secretary Chris Cole and Health Commissioner Harry Chen. “I hope people like that get a nod,” she said. Benning chimed in: Keep Michael Snyder, commissioner of the Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation. When Shumlin was scouting for staff, he looked to the legislature. Will Scott? The Republican minority doesn’t have many senior legislators to spare. Dave Bellini, president of the Vermont State Employees’ Association, urged Scott not to rely heavily on legislators, ex-legislators or political favor seekers. “If you’re going to be in charge of Human Services, you ought to know human services. Let’s get people with credentials and expertise,” he said, arguing that Shumlin appointed too many “political pals.” Scott’s appointments will shape what kind of relationship he builds with the legislature. By the end of his eight years in office, Douglas had increasingly testy dealings with the heavily Democratic majority in the Senate and House. Along with the same-sex marriage bill, he vetoed the budget bill in 2009; lawmakers overrode that one, too. Scott said at his first postelection press conference that he expects he will get along fine with the legislature. He spent 10 years in the Senate and the last six presiding over the chamber as lieutenant governor. “I can find ways to work with everyone,” he promised. Scott said voters sent him a mandate that fiscal issues are the priority. That’s one area where the governor and lawmakers might feel friction, as in the Douglas era. Scott has said he’ll limit state budget growth to match increases in Vermonters’ incomes or inflation. Given state salary contracts and other expenses, he realistically cannot do that without cuts. Lunderville, who spent last Friday poring through the Shumlin administration’s budget documents, said the governor-elect has asked him not to look for cuts. “We’re looking where we can innovate and modernize state government,” he said. “We want to look at places to propose investments.” Aside from the budget, lawmakers might differ with Scott over other issues. Some will support gun-control legislation; others will want marijuana legalization after Massachusetts voted for it last week. Scott has said he’d veto the former and wait on the latter. Benning said he thinks Scott will navigate those differences with the same approach he’s used as lieutenant governor — with a coffee machine in his office, dispensing free joe to lawmakers of all stripes. Said Benning: “Every legislator has felt free to have a cup.” m

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Affordable Care Act means the new governor has to be ready to react to healthpolicy curveballs, Bishop noted. What about her? Bishop said she hadn’t thought about working in the Scott administration. “Phil Scott needs to look for really talented people,” she said. Is she talented? “I certainly do have talents.” Two of Scott’s three transition team leaders have already indicated they aren’t interested in long-term jobs in the administration. Lunderville said he’s happy as general manager of the Burlington Electric Department. Hayward, who worked for Douglas and Republican governor Richard Snelling, has no plans to come out of retirement to work in Scott’s administration, according to Gibbs. Gibbs, on the other hand, appears likely to play a significant role in the administration. He was a volunteer senior adviser to Scott’s election campaign and speaks for the transition team. “The governorelect and I have talked about roles I might play,” Gibbs said. “He has not made any decisions.” Gibbs said the first hires could be announced by week’s end. Regardless of how many former Douglas staffers end up on the new governor’s payroll, Montpelier lobbyist Kevin Ellis said he considers Scott “a more modern guy than Jim Douglas.” “He would not N EA L E have vetoed the gayL U ND ER V I LLE marriage bill,” Ellis said, referring to Douglas’ 2009 veto that the legislature overrode by a one-vote margin. “That’s a huge difference.” Ellis said he will be watching to see if Scott comes through with unexpected appointments. “He needs to go find them,” Ellis said. Ellis threw out names, without knowing whether the people were available, interested or could be persuaded to leave higher-paying gigs. Green Mountain Power CEO Mary Powell would make a good secretary of administration, he offered. Scott would be wise to keep some of Shumlin’s staff, Ellis said, naming Administration Secretary Trey Martin as a good communicator. House Majority Leader Sarah Copeland Hanzas (D-Bradford) offered a short list,


EXCERPTS FROM THE BLOG

SEVENDAYSVT.COM 11.16.16-11.23.16 SEVEN DAYS 20 LOCAL MATTERS

Rutland Mayor: Refugee Plan Unchanged by Trump’s Election

Vermont’s Senate Democratic caucus unanimously nominated Sen. Tim Ashe (D/P-Chittenden) to serve as president pro tempore Monday evening, all but ensuring his election in January as the next leader of the state Senate. The 39- ear-old economics instructor from Burlington is set to succeed Sen. John Campbell (D-Windsor), who is retiring after six years at the helm. “One of the reasons we all run for office in the first place, I think and I hope, is that we really want to change the world. I mean, that’s really what this is about,” Ashe told his colleagues at the Statehouse meeting. A once-crowded field of contenders e entually winnowed to just Ashe and Sen. Claire Ayer (D-Addison), who both spent the fall courting colleagues in their home districts. At Monday’s meeting, Ayer told her fellow Democrats that she had decided to drop out of the race “because it was clear I wasn’t going to win tonight.” Instead, the 68-year-old retired nurse from Addison made a last-minute attempt to depose Sen. Dick Mazza (D-Grand Isle) as the third member of the Committee on Committees. In that position, which the 77-year-old grocer has held for some two decades, Mazza joins the lieutenant governor and president pro tem in doling out all Senate committee assignments. Ayer noted that if Mazza, a Colchester resident, kept the job, all three members of the Committee on Committees would be men from Chittenden County. In a secret ballot, senators voted 14 to 8 to keep Mazza on the job. The appointments of Ashe and Mazza wi l require majority votes in the 30-member Senate come January.

Rutland Mayor Chris Louras risked his political career on a controversial proposal to welcome 100 Syrian refugees to his longstruggling city. He’s spent most of the past year beating back fierce opposition and nativist rhetoric from his critics. Despite president-elect Donald Trump’s victory after a campaign in which he vowed

Disclosure: Tim Ashe is the domestic partner of Seven Days publisher and coeditor Paula Routly.

PAUL HEINTZ

Sen. Bill Doyle

Bill Doyle Seeks Recount in Washington County Senate Race

MARK DAVIS FILE: CALEB KENNA

Senate Democrats Nominate Tim Ashe for President Pro Tempore

MATTHEW THORSEN

PAUL HEINTZ

Sen. Tim Ashe, center

to bar Muslim immigrants from entering America, Louras said he and his allies are proceeding apace. Louras is coordinating with the Vermont Refugee Resettlement Program and a local volunteer group, Rutland Welcomes, to prepare for the initial wave of refugees from war-torn Syria. They are expected to arri e in mid-December or January. The bulk of the refugees are expected in the spring and summer, Louras said. “All of us are continuing as if there’s been no change,” Louras, a Republican-turnedindependent, said. “We’ve got no indications that the New Americans will not be arriving. We’re absolutely cognizant of the fact that things could change, but it’s not impacting things [now].” VRRP is hiring local staff and scouring Rutland for office space, Louras said. The State Department approved Rutland as a refugee relocation site in late September. The five-term mayor, who faces reelection in March, said that while he was shaken by Trump’s win, he took some solace in the fact that Rutland, which often leans conservative, gave Trump only 38 percent of its vote. “From my perspective, that’s a repudiation of his own position on refugee resettlement,” Louras said, noting that he voted for Hillary Clinton, the first time he has ever selected a Democrat for president. Louras said he has not seen an increase in complaints or opposition to refugee resettlement in Rutland since Trump’s win.

Rutland Mayor Chris Louras

After 47 years in office, Sen. Bi l Doyle (R-Washington) fell 191 votes shy of reelection last Tuesday. Now the 90-year-old political science professor is asking for a recount. Doyle has held the Senate seat since 1969. Official Election Day results show that Doyle came in fourth in a race for three Washington County Senate seats. Sens. Ann Cummings, a Democrat, and Anthony Pollina, a Progressive/Democrat, won reelection. Democrat Francis Brooks, a former state representative and Statehouse sergeant-at-arms, finished just ahead of the nonagenarian Doyle. “It’s pretty close,” said Doyle. “I just think that in general a recount is worth going through.” Doyle, who has been physically slowed by age, said he campaigned as much as ever. He worries voters confused him with Mike Doyle, who also appeared on the ballot as a Republican candidate in the Washington County Senate race. Mike Doyle is no relation to Bill Doyle, though the two are friends. Asked about the possibility that his political career might be over after more than four decades, Bill Doyle didn’t rule anything out. “I have the opportunity to run in two years. I’d have to think about that,” he said. At least one House race is also being contested. Rep. Larry Fiske (R-Enosburg Falls) filed for a recount in his race for reelection in the Franklin-7 district. Results show him 15 votes behind former Rep. Cindy Weed, a Progressive/Democrat. The results of that recount will be announced November 21 at the Franklin County Courthouse.

TERRI HALLENBECK


lifelines

OBITUARIES, VOWS, CELEBRATIONS

OBITUARIES

Marilyn Mason DeWees 1930-2016, STOWE

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where she became a longtime fan and supporter of the Stowe community and Lamoille County. She was the business manager of the Stowe Reporter for 30 years; a Stowe High School booster; a member of the Stowe Community Church, where she volunteered as aŸSundayŸschool teacher and youth leader; worked part-time at Wood ‘N Wicker and Lasak Silver; and became an eventual active member of the Elmore United Methodist Church. After Bill died, Marilyn’s greatest joy came from gathering and chatting with folks in and around her community, as she never met a stranger. Marilyn and her best pals, Maureen Urell and Kathy Raijki, spent every evening together laughing and kibitzing about the latest and greatest. She also loved visiting and hanging out with Holly in the sunny Southwest and following Rusty’s shows all over Vermont and New England, where she often ad-libbed back and forth with Rusty from her audience seat. Her latest show-business credit was writing and starring in a television ad for Aubuchon Hardware that is presently running. Funeral services will be held Saturday, November 19, at 11 a.m at the Stowe Community Church. Faith Funeral Home is assisting with arrangements. A private interment will be at the convenience of the family in the Wheeler Cemetery in Morrisville. Online condolences may be made by visitingŸfaithfh.net. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to Lamoille Home Health and Hospice, 54 Farr Avenue, Morrisville, VT 05661.

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LIFE LINES 21

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Marilyn Mason DeWees, 86, died peacefully in her home in Stowe on Saturday, November 12, 2016. Marilyn was born May 8, 1930, in Philadelphia, the daughter of Philip Mason and Wilma Eschelman Resh Mason. She is survived by her daughter, Holly DeWees of Albuquerque, New Mexico; her son, Rusty DeWees of Elmore; her niece, Linda Pancio of Philadelphia and Linda’s family; Bruce, Lauren, Danielle and Jim and Linda DeWees Wesler and Donna DeWees of Pennsylvania; along with the many friends whom she cherished. Marilyn was predeceased by her husband of 51 years, William (Bill) DeWees, in 2005 and her beloved cats, Henry, Harold, Herbie and Charlotte. Marilyn moved to Stowe with her husband, Bill, and children, Holly and Rusty, in 1968,

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Search for Love in the Digital Age Prompts an Art Installation B Y RA CHEL ELI ZA BET H JONES

11.16.16-11.23.16 SEVEN DAYS

“Prince Charming Has a Foot Fetish”

metropolis sparked the photo series “Prince Charming Has a Foot Fetish.” The two shared approximately 5,000 messages over a three-month period, Mitchell reveals, during which he revealed his sexual proclivity for feet. In six photographs taken of Mitchell by

Christy Mitchell

MATTHEW THORSEN

22 STATE OF THE ARTS

ART

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HRISTY MITCHELL opened Burlington’s S.P.A.C.E. GALLERY in 2009, and every November since 2012 she has mounted her own solo show. Sandwiched between the annual “Art of Horror” group show and holiday-centric displays of affordable works, her exhibitions are unabashedly personal. This year, with “IRL” (“in real life”), Mitchell smartly digs into the world of online dating as a straight female, using a variety of media to process her encounters. Experiences limited to the internet and those taken to the next level meet in this exhibition. Mitchell’s seven distinct bodies of work comment on the broader experiences of women seeking male partnership in the digital age. But they also have an inherently place-based component, since Mitchell lives and works — and therefore sets her Tinder location — in Burlington. “Tinder has a different application here than in New York City,” Mitchell says. The nuances of online dating in a rural area shine through in “Photo Friendly,” a series of framed images gleaned from user profiles and screenshots from singles platforms Tinder and OkCupid. Vermont users are no doubt familiar with seeing their faces in Tinder’s graphic epicenter accompanied by the text “There’s no one new around you.” Mitchell has placed her own small screenshot within the multiphoto frame. Urban women are less likely to see that message — or so many photos of men posing with fish. Vermont Tinder is rampant with those images, Mitchell says — as if fishing were a de rigueur display of manliness here. A cluster of heart-shaped brass frames within “Photo Friendly” offers up such fishy screenshots. “Twenty percent of [their] profile is a fish,” Mitchell comments, “which says, Love me with this fish. He comes with the fish.” In some parts of Vermont, Burlington included, setting one’s Tinder distance preferences to the maximum 100-mile radius means getting “access” to site members in Montréal. For Mitchell, a digitally initiated friendship with a man in the Québec


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photography of couples and groups smiling in various locations — with a puppy in bed, having drinks at a bar. When you press a photo’s corresponding button, a computer voice reads messages that Mitchell — or, in one case, her friend — received on dating platforms. These range from relatively innocuous lines about sushi to words of male frustration or sexual lo ca l, f re s h , o rig in a l aggression, such as STOREWIDE “Let me lick. Let me lick. Let me lick. Let me lick.” “Wash That Man Right Out” encapsu1076 Williston Road, S. Burlington lates the understated 862.6585 humor of surrealist OPEN EVERY DAY | 658-4050 www.windjammerrestaurant.com 115 college st, burlington objects in a way reminiscent of Swiss artist Méret Oppenheim’s 11/11/16 Untitled-2 12:30 PM 1 10/7/16 iconic 1936 “Object,”8V-marilyns111616.indd 1 a fur-covered teacup saucer and spoon. For “Wash,” Mitchell replaced the cord and speaker of an old-fashioned rotary phone with a long braid of synthetic blond hair and a Lucite showerhead. The piece is named for the 1949 song “I’m Gonna Wash That Man Right Outa My Hair,” written by Rodgers and Hammerstein for the Broadway musical South Pacific. Some visitors, Mitchell says, have seen in the piece a gesture toward the “synthetic communication that we’re getting these days.” She notes that as she constructed the exhibition, her own online dating shifted to a process of “research and documentation.” By entwining her art practice and her romantic life, Mitchell has created a space for herself and others to consider the gender roles, rituals and vulnerabilities, new and old, that have emerged on the digital dating frontier. What is love, anyway? It’s hard to say, but Mitchell offers this: “Love in the HURRY OFFER EXPIRES 11/28 digital age is very difficult.” Order Online or in store | Use coupon code: holidaycards25

HUMOR IS A CRUCIAL ELEMENT OF THE EXHIBITION, BALANCING A SENSE OF FRUSTRATION WITH A HEALTHY APPRECIATION FOR THE ABSURD.

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“IRL” by Christy Mitchell, through November 26 at S.P.A.C.E. Gallery in Burlington. spacegalleryvt.com

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local photographer LUKE AWTRY — whom she also met on Tinder — she cleverly melds her own search for romance with the story of Cinderella. For the photographs, Mitchell used fishnet stockings, a no-frills blue dress and a pair of aptly named Public Desire clear plastic boots (aka glass slippers) as props. In some photos, she places herself in an ambiguous, attic-like space, confined like the Cinder girl. The underlying sentiment that modern love is no fairy tale is cleverly subverted by the suggestion that a fairy tale is also no fairy tale. Waiting to be “rescued” by love may be boring, high heels make your feet hurt, and Prince Charming may have unexpected tastes. Mitchell writes in her exhibition text: “In this case, the real Prince Charming can be perceived as the artist herself, creating an internal dialog of what it means to be desired and finding love within her own mind and creative meanderings.” As a viewer takes in the “Prince Charming” series, the 15-foot-wide projection “Photobooth Façade” plays on a loop on the gallery’s blank wall. Hundreds of Mitchell’s computer selfies fly by, from sultry, red-lipsticked poses to full-on goofball faces. Of the hundreds, Mitchell reports, she put only 10 into play on her dating profiles. The piece speaks to the often funny, vulnerable and embarrassing reality of self-creation and curation when one is looking for love. Humor is a crucial element of the exhibition, balancing a sense of frustration with a healthy appreciation for the absurd. In “IRL,” Awtry captures Mitchell in the “bar scene,” smoking and wearing a gorilla mask. “Little Black Book” is a “talking photo album” issued by RadioShack circa 2005, which Mitchell has filled with upbeat stock


Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire Inspires a Contemporary Art Book B Y S A D I E W I LLI A M S

O

n First Night in Montpelier some 20 years ago, local artist DELIA BELL ROBINSON made a friend who would become one of her most compelling subjects. Peter, who prefers not to reveal his last name, is the focus of her recently published art book A Shirtwaist Story. In it, Robinson explores Peter’s tragedy-fraught family history through the stories he has told her over the course of their friendship. She focuses primarily on tales of his grandfather, one of the owners of the infamous Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in New York City. The textile business caught fire in 1911; locked in rooms on upper floors, 146 workers died in one of the deadliest industrial disasters in U.S. history. With such dark subject matter, it’s hard to imagine Robinson creating anything but a dour condemnation of Peter’s wealthy family and the price they allowed others to pay for their profit. But the 71-year-old Montpelier artist isn’t in the business of judgment. Rather, she has crafted a visual narrative,

ART

with a dash of poetic prose, that is both a compelling account of the tragedy and a window into Peter’s inherited sense of guilt and how it shaped him. The book, which includes 148 color prints, has been nominated for a 2016 Jewish Book Council award. Burlington-based FOMITE PRESS released A Shirtwaist Story last month. But the story had been germinating since Robinson met Peter on that fateful New Year’s Eve. That night, they ducked into Ben & Jerry’s for hot cocoa and began the process of getting to know each other. As their encounters continued, Robinson says, she felt compelled to document Peter’s tales. She would run home to paint and draw on the pages of an old book, fittingly called Peter. (Its title character was a little English boy who travels through time, much as Robinson’s story hops between past and present.) The images Robinson drew from Peter’s life are colorful ruminations on his wealthy upbringing: taking French lessons, riding his bike through Central Park, standing in the elevator with actress Grace Kelly.

It wasn’t until 2001, when the last survivor of the fire died, that Peter revealed his family secret. Robinson recalls that she found him slumped over a cup of coffee at a local shop, despondent. He told her his grandfather was one of the factory owners, a discovery that drastically changed the tone of Robinson’s artistic reflections. “I became haunted [by his story],” the artist says. As Robinson started researching the fire, her paintings grew darker. Her glimpses of factory life were peppered with facts about wages and workers — Triangle Shirtwaist was a sweatshop, as the tragic circumstances of the fire revealed. She made portraits of the women — mostly immigrants — who died. Two of them were just 14 years old. One of Robinson’s paintings depicts

Portrait of an unknown factory worker

a woman’s skirt and feet as she stands on a window ledge, about to jump to her death — as so many did. Another shows protesters fighting for labor rights after the fire. The paintings that make up the last 15 pages of the book show the unflinching faces of women who died, dark portraits that tug the reader deeper into the story. Assembling the book took Robinson a long time, she says, in part because

11.16.16-11.23.16 SEVEN DAYS 24 STATE OF THE ARTS

Earlier this week, Johnson State College sophomore BRITTNEY MALIK recited “Let America Be America Again,” a poem written by Langston Hughes in 1935. Her reading was staged to mark the opening of the new collaborative exhibition “Awaken” at the JULIAN SCOTT MEMORIAL GALLERY. Ignited by the police-shooting deaths of Philando Castile and Alton Sterling, Underhillbased artist and recent JSC graduate SABRINA LEONARD began organizing the exhibition in July. ˜ e show is meant to honor and memorialize “all the black lives oppressed and terrorized by slavery, Jim Crow segregation, lynching, mass incarceration and systemic racism.” “O, let America be America again— / ˜ e land that never has been yet— / And yet must be — the land where every man is free,” wrote Hughes. “[˜ e poem] makes so much sense now, like it was written now,” Malik tells Seven Days by phone. She got involved after seeing posters that Leonard had posted around campus in October, which featured in large bold letters a quote from Michelle Alexander, author of ˜ e New Jim

Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness: “Something more is required of us now.” Below was an invitation to “End your silence and take action and accountability by collaborating with us.” It was accompanied by exhibition info and Leonard’s email address. “I was definitely on board the moment I saw the poster,” Malik says. “I haven’t seen a lot of that kind of movement building near me in northern Vermont.” Leonard was not inundated with emails from enthusiastic collaborators. “I was hoping for a lot of emails and a lot of interest, and it didn’t really happen,” she says. So the project became “much more grassroots, [with] people pulling from their networks.” ˜ e central element of the exhibition is a massive “Mourning Cloth” made of pillowcases that have been deconstructed, dyed black and resewn together. Leonard, whose work as a sculptor frequently incorporates deconstruction, found objects and stitching, decided to use pillowcases after reading Ta-Nehisi Coates’ Between the World and Me. In the

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AT JOHNSON STATE COLLEGE, AN EXHIBITION TAKES ON RACISM

ART “Mourning Cloth” by Sabrina Leonard

book, Leonard says, Coates writes “so often of being asleep and dreaming” in relation to American racism. Leonard’s sister-in-law, SARA BAER FARRELL, took to Facebook to solicit donations of pillowcases from friends and family. ˜ e final cloth is made from 70 to 100 pillowcases, most mailed in from eight states — and some, Leonard says, “dropped off on porches” locally. After the cases were deconstructed and dyed, community members helped assemble the piece with sewing machines in the gallery space. When

the show comes down, the cloth will be rehung indefinitely in the college’s library. Leonard also reached out online to black female artists who have been vocal about their experiences as women of color and the significance of #BlackLivesMatter. On view are two abstract oil paintings by Bay Area artist A’Driane Nieves and collages by New York artist Christa David. In her “Speak Up” video for BonBon Break magazine, Nieves describes her three young African American sons to viewers, and


THE PAINTINGS THAT MAKE UP THE LAST 15 PAGES OF THE BOOK

SHOW THE UNFLINCHING FACES OF WOMEN WHO DIED.

she never intended to publish it. “I didn’t ever want to do anything that would hurt him,” she says of Peter. “He never looked at it; he never wanted to see what I was doing. [And] I felt very protective of his rights to this story.” Eventually, her paintings came to the attention of author and Fomite coowner MARC ESTRIN, several of whose novels Robinson has illustrated. Estrin encouraged her to publish, so Robinson asked Peter for his permission. He said no. A few years later, after his parents had died, he reversed his stance. With Estrin’s help, Robinson merged her disparate works into a cohesive narrative that, through Peter’s storytelling, takes the reader through the causes and repercussions of the fire. Those repercussions are both historical and personal. Toward the end of the narrative, after Robinson has delved into the history of the fire and the

ensuing public awareness of Triangle’s workplace conditions, Peter’s story re-emerges. We find that, in the face of immense guilt, he has turned to art. “Peter grew into a thoughtful, adult creator of intelligent, provocative art,” Robinson writes. “His work reconfigures objects, often inverts the concept of camouflage, and highlights the artifice of disguise. A sofa with pillows made of stone. A maple tree wearing the bark of a birch … Amazing sketchbooks bursting with drawings, allowing him to discuss things that cannot otherwise be said.” In essence, Robinson adds layers of humanity to both the tragedy and Peter’s telling of it. Her portraits of factory workers bring “the emotions of the past back to life,” as she puts it. Peter’s story adds another layer of complexity by keeping the history alive, bringing it into the present through his emotional and familial attachment to it. “I still feel very protective of it,” Robinson says of the book. “It was nice for me to tell a story I cared about.” That story addresses labor conditions, family burdens placed on children and, perhaps most importantly, “how we learn to speak in our own voice, despite those burdens,” she says. m

INFO A Shirtwaist Story by Delia Robinson, Fomite Press, 158 pages. $25. fomitepress.com, delia-robinson.com

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issues a plea for visitors, including their safety. “Has this concept of Other ‘dreaming’ shaped components of the promotional the installation imagery of our state include wall-hung of Vermont? Why or mirrors bearing why not?” controversial Leonard notes that phrases such as her neighbor brought “I don’t see color, her young son, who just people.” The was adopted from SABRINA L EONARD names of African Ethiopia, to meet the Americans killed local state trooper by police are projected on one of the — “so that he would know [her son] gallery walls — and on the bodies belonged there … even in Vermont, on of viewers as they pass through the our idyllic dirt road,” she says. space. “Those names are now on ou,” “I’m super-happy that Sabrina says Leonard. decided to do this,” Malik says. “It’s Visitors to “Awaken” also hear an important to know, as a black woman audio component, which was compiled in America, that there are people of different races out there that want to by PETER REYNOLDS ALSEN of Winooski’s help the movement that we’re trying BLiNDoG Records. It includes the to have.” Trayvon Martin 911 call, Eric Garner gasping, “I can’t breathe,” and an RACHEL ELIZABETH JONES excerpt of ’60s activist Angela Davis speaking about violence. “I want to make this symbolic, but INFO still very real, commitment to waking up,” says Leonard. “Awaken,” on view through November 20 at Julian Scott Memorial Gallery, Johnson Printed handouts distributed at State College. jsc.edu the gallery entrance ask questions of

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HACKIE

M

A VERMONT CABBIE’S REAR VIEW BY JERNIGAN PONTIAC

Lone Wolf He was also a Pentecostal minister, so it was a super-strict upbringing, like, no TV or movies. Of course, every Saturday night he’d be hanging out at the bar at the bowling alley. The hypocrisy made me nuts.” “Is the farm still in the family, still in operation?” “Yeah, two of my older brothers run it.” “You didn’t want to stay in the family business?” “Well, I got into manufacturing crystal meth when I was 14. I got busted at 17 and did seven years in a few prisons, the bulk of

THE MAN WAS BURSTING WITH SOME SORT OF INTENSE ENERGY, AND I WANTED TO KNOW HIS STORY. the time at Attica, which is high security. I was released in 2012.” “What was prison like?” “Nobody fucked with me, if that’s what you’re asking. I got a black belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu. I’ve competed on the MMA circuit. My record’s 13 and 1.” In Charlotte, the outgoing ferry was departing just as we arrived. The woman in the booth said the schedule was off owing to high winds; out on the lake, swirling whitecaps backed up her assertion. I paid the fare and pulled into the first position in Lane 1, cutting the engine. Though it was windy, the sun shone brightly — all in all, a welcoming autumn afternoon. I stepped out to wander around the dock, and Caleb joined me. His anger at having been booted out of the hospital and forced to leave his pregnant partner seemed to have dissipated. I was actually enjoying his company.

I wrapped my head around that slice of information and asked, “Where did you two meet?” “I was traveling in the Southwest three summers ago and stopped into a tobacco shop, and Grace was this beautiful girl behind the counter, all in the traditional Native clothes. Her parents owned the store. I asked her if she’d like to go out with me, maybe to a restaurant. She looked at me strange and said, ‘What would I eat?’ She had, like, no experience with outside culture, life off the rez. “We fell in love, and she took me to meet her father to get his blessing on our getting married. He asked her, she later told me, if I was a ‘lone wolf.’ He then spoke to me in English and told me that I had the warrior spirit. Before we got married, there was a ceremony where I was actually given the Indian name ‘Lone Wolf’ and a headband with three feathers. Two were turkey feathers, which stands for love and loyalty. The

third feather — I’m not sure what bird it’s from — was my destiny, which was as a warrior.” The ferry ride was exhilarating. We were positioned at the front of the boat, and the windshield kept getting sprayed with lake water as the square-shaped hull pounded the waves. I asked Caleb what he did for work, and he explained that he managed a couple of his mother’s rental properties in Saranac, in one of which he, Grace and the kids lived. An hour and a half later, we reached his home, a shabby ranch house in what seemed to be an older neighborhood, just off the main drag. “Seems like a nice place,” I said as we pulled into the dirt driveway. “It’s all right,” Caleb replied, “but we want to move back to the Navajo reservation. We couldn’t before, but now that we’re having this kid together, I’m allowed to live there.” “That’s what you both want?” “More than anything. When I met Grace and her people, it was like finding the missing jigsaw piece in my life. From that day, I completely gave up the drugs — selling ’em, taking ’em, you name it. I love nature, and I completely love the lifestyle on the rez. Grace’s dad told me it was my destiny to live among the Navajo people, and I believe it.” What a tumultuous life, I thought as we said our goodbyes. But just maybe the Native American wisdom that has graced his life will continue to heal his broken warrior spirit, making him whole and healthy. As Caleb walked toward the door, I called to him from my open window. “Hey, Lone Wolf.” He turned back to me and smiled, and I said, “Good luck to you and all your people. And also — peace and love.” m All these stories are true, though names and locations may be altered to protect privacy.

INFO Hackie is a twice-monthly column that can also be read on sevendaysvt.com. To reach Jernigan, email hackie@sevendaysvt.com.

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a. Yeah, it’s Caleb. You won’t believe it — they put a notrespass order on me, and the hospital security guards made me leave. I was being stupid, and they said I was acting threatening to the nurses … No, I’m in a cab right now and should be back to Saranac in a couple hours.” Caleb, my customer, was talking to his mother on his cellphone from the shotgun seat of my taxi. I had just picked him up at the University of Vermont Medical Center for transport back to his home in Saranac Lake. “Yeah, Grace is feeling better,” he continued. “They did tests and the baby is fine, and they’re probably gonna release her in a day or two. They say she’ll still be able to have the birth back home.” He said goodbye to his mom and clicked off. “Well, I fucked up,” he said — perhaps to me, perhaps to himself. “But Grace is gonna be fine, and that’s all that matters.” I was sure he meant it, yet, glancing to my right, I could tell he was still angry. His body remained coiled, and his jaw muscles pulsated. The man was compact and wiry, with a brick-red beard and matching short-cropped hair. It’s not a great leap to imagine why the hospital people felt threatened, I thought. The trip to Saranac was going to take a good two hours, including a ferry ride from Charlotte to Essex. That’s a lot of time to be sitting a scant two feet from a seemingly volatile person. For my own well-being, I wanted to engage him, to establish human contact. “So, did you grow up in upstate New York?” I asked, casually but with genuine interest. The man was bursting with some sort of intense energy, and I wanted to know his story. “Yeah, 30 miles outside of Binghamton, in the town of Delancey. My father had a dairy farm, and I was one of 12 children.

Hanging out in the open-walled brochure booth, I asked Caleb if this was his first child. “Not exactly,” he replied. “I have six others with my first wife. I know, I know — I look too young. But I have a set of triplets, then the twins, and the youngest is a single. They’re all under the age of 8. Multiple births run in my family.” “How did that happen, if you don’t mind me asking? I mean, being in jail and all?” “Conjugal visits. Anyway, the mother took off, and now I’m raising all of them with Grace, plus major help from my mother. All the kids are now bilingual, ’cause Grace speaks to them in Navajo. She’s a full-blooded Indian. Sometimes I’ll come into the room and Grace and one of ’em will be talking in her language, and I’ll ask what they’re talking about. Grace will laugh and say, ‘You don’t want to know.’”


THE STRAIGHT DOPE BY CECIL ADAMS

Dear Cecil,

Out of the thousands of different ungulate species on this planet, horses are among the very few that have neither horns nor antlers. Obviously the development of such bony headwear conveyed a distinct evolutionary advantage to the other fleet-footed herbivores, so how did horses manage to evolve and survive without them? Cowboy Ken same ancestor, it appeared, had also evolved into a lot of other things including dolphins, meaning the ungulate concept had to expand beyond hoofs, and even feet. Later, DNA research revealed genetic similarities between seemingly unlike species, scrambling classification systems still further; elephants and manatees, once counted among the ungulates, got bumped into a more distant grouping. The experts are still arguing about what species go where (one genome-based proposal from 2006 put horses in a group with cats, dogs and bats), but the current understanding says deer and antelopes are more closely related to whales than they are to horses. But save the whales for another day; for now we’ll stick with true ungulates, planteating quadrupeds with hoofs or something like them. These are grouped into two orders, the artiodactyls and the perissodactyls, that have evolved in parallel for more than 50

million years. Artiodactyls have an even number of toes (think cloven hoofs); they include sheep, goats, cows, deer and antelopes — that is, basically all the horned creatures you can think of — but also pigs, hippos, camels and llamas, and a few others. Perissodactyls, with an odd number of toes, fall into three subgroups: horses and their cousins, the asses and zebras; tapirs, which don’t have horns either; and rhinoceroses. So the question isn’t why horses don’t have horns, but instead why, unlike their closest relatives, rhinos do. Let’s go way, way back to Cambaytherium thewissi, a mammal whose fossilized remains, disinterred in India in 2014 and dated at 55 million years old, are thought to be the closest we’ve yet seen to the perissodactyls’ common ancestor. This pig-size beast had five toe-like appendages per foot, no hoofs, and — sorry to disappoint anyone still holding out hope for evidence of ancient

SEVEN DAYS 30 STRAIGHT DOPE

eventually became the horse we recognize today, as the need to escape carnivores rewarded more streamlined hoofs and a longer stride. Whatever other obvious benefit they confer — African rhinos are huge and mean enough that they have no natural predators — horns play a notable role when rhinos, largely solitary otherwise, convene for courtship and mating; the males’ horns are used not so much to lure the ladies (as with deer) but to use in sparring with rivals. Horses, by contrast, have evolved to live in herds, with well-defined hierarchies governing mating. Natural selection didn’t always go easy on horses. They died out in North America before being reintroduced in domesticated form by Europeans, and it’s hard to see how horns would have helped them survive the food shortages brought about by climate change in the late Pleistocene era. Back here in the present, humans have become a factor in the ongoing development of rhinos, whose horns continue to attract the poachers that have already wiped out certain subspecies. A hornless rhino, you have to think, might have a better shot at survival.

INFO

Is there something you need to get straight? Cecil Adams can deliver the Straight Dope on any topic. Send questions to Cecil via straightdope.com or write him c/o Chicago Reader, 350 N. Orleans, Chicago 60654.

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W

hoa up there, Ken. Yes, horses are ungulates — literally, hoofed mammals — and so are all those horn- and antler-bearing herbivores you’re picturing. But past that, you’re on the wrong trail. Plenty of ungulates besides horses don’t have horns, dozens of species historically classified as ungulates don’t even have hoofs, and horses aren’t as closely related to many of their horned kin as one might think, to look at them. When 19th-century taxonomists were sorting out the animal kingdom, they tossed horses into the biological order Ungulata along with the cattle, deer, et al. on the not-crazy assumption that their hooves (ungulae, in Latin) and overall leg structure were evidence of kinship. But the fossil record soon complicated matters. Paleontologists did discover evidence of a common ancestor for all critters with hoofs or hooflike nails — but that

unicorns — no horn. Sometime after that, horses and rhinos parted ways. Early rhinos thrived in a variety of hornless forms, resembling modern tapirs or hippos or pudgy horses. Some grew to immense proportions (15-plus feet tall, 20 tons), the better to browse on tree leaves, until elephants edged them out of their habitat. The rhinos that ultimately made the cut stayed closer to the ground, ate grass and, along the way, developed one or more horns. Unlike the headgear of the even-toed ungulates, rhino horns sprout from just above the nose rather than from the sides of the forehead and consist solely of keratin, the stuff that makes up fingernails and sheathes the bony core inside the horns of cattle, antelopes, etc. (Antlers are constructed along different lines: They’re all bone and grow in a single two-sided unit from the front of the head.) Meanwhile, the proto-horse called eohippus was making its way through the wild. This guy was around 2 feet tall with some complicated stuff going on down at the extremities: four toes on the front feet, three on the hind feet, each toe ending in its own small hoof. Once out on the plains, its descendants

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COURTESY OF CHANDLER BURGESS/KILLINGTON RESORT

Slope Hopes

˜ e women’s alpine skiing World Cup slides into Killington BY S AR AH TUF F D UNN

32 FEATURE

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Killington Resort

K

illington is, hands down, Vermont’s rowdiest ski town. But it’s about to get its wool socks knocked off when the women’s alpine skiing World Cup hits the resort on November 26 and 27. “This is huge for us to have such an event here,” says Chuck Hughes, the chief of course, of the two-day race officially known as the Audi FIS Ski World Cup and nicknamed the “White Circus.” “It’s going to blow people away.” How so? Imagine busloads of skiracing fans churning up Interstates 89 and 91 from New Hampshire, New York and beyond, filling the stands with nearly 15,000 cowbell-clanging spectators. Throngs will stream through the streets, while nightclubs will host international-level revelry. Maryland jam band O.A.R., meanwhile, has added Killington to its national tour and will play a free concert on Saturday afternoon. “We are going to be amazed by the numbers of people coming to watch,” says chief of race Ted Sutton. “We’ve all been waiting 25 years for this to happen, and it’s finally here.”

While 55 percent of the ski racers are from the East Coast, according to Sutton, New England hasn’t hosted an alpine World Cup since 1991, when New Hampshire’s Waterville Valley saw American Julie Parisien win the giant slalom. Stratton staged a World Cup in 1978, but this is the first time Killington has prepared for the event. Getting the venue ready for some 90 athletes from 27 countries involves countless hours of snowmaking, with guns every 25 feet, and placing 400 feet of netting. More than 120 people are working around the clock. “The scariest thing about this race for all of us, probably even more so for the athletes,” says Sutton, “is that this course has never been raced on before. It’s been challenging for course setters, who can normally go in with a general idea of where gates should be placed on the course. But, in this case, it’s all new to everybody.” After Black Friday will come White Circus Saturday and Sunday at Killington. On Superstar, a trail with a 1,199-foot drop, alpine superstars such as Americans Lindsey Vonn, Julia Mancuso and Mikaela

THIS IS

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FOR US TO HAVE SUCH AN EVENT HERE.

C H UC K H UGH E S Snowmakers at Killington


What you drive reflects what drives you. Shiffrin, along with Swiss champion Lara Gut, will compete in giant slalom (faster and wider turns around 46 to 58 gates with panels) and slalom (tighter, more technical turns around 40 to 60 pole-like gates). Each event includes two runs, and the woman with the fastest combined time wins. “It’s definitely going to raise the level of excitement and interest in world-class ski racing,” says Hughes, a longtime ski coach who also serves as the development program director and events manager for Killington Mountain School. “And we hope to be able to do a great job so as to continue to get the World Cup back at Killington.” Where’s the best place to watch? The ticketed grandstands are sold out, but spectators can still nab a free viewing spot at the base. “The festival expo village at the K-1 Base Area is your best bet,” says Michael Joseph, Killington’s communications manager. “Racers will be accelerating down the final Superstar pitch into the finish line. Plus, we’ll have a huge TV wall set up so you can see the upper portion of the race courses. And, of course, you’ll be in prime position once O.A.R. begins their free concert Saturday.”

Sutton explains that the base area beats higher vantage points because it offers views of the most interesting — and most challenging — third of the course, of which the steepest point is 45 degrees. “It’s going to be incredible to see right from the parking lot,” he says. Regardless of who wins, plenty of celebratory beer will flow in a public tent during the day, and the World Cup Official Post Party will take place at the Wobbly Barn. There, Après Ski With Tony Lee Thomas at 6 p.m. will give way to JJ Rupp at 9 p.m. and DJ Prime at 11:30 p.m. Autograph signings, ski academy and college alumni parties — and probably more wings than you can throw a snowball at — will round out the scene around Killington. Can’t make it all the way to the Big K? More than 60 countries will broadcast the event to 2.1 million viewers worldwide, and you can catch World Cup action on NBC while you tuck into turkey leftovers.

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FEATURE 33

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Weather or Not ˜ e bumpy science of predicting snow days B Y KEVI N J. KEL L EY

three times in the past seven months. And other powerful atmospheric forces — the North Atlantic Oscillation, for example — can affect Vermont’s snowfall independently of what’s happening off the coast of Chile. Factoring in all the available data, NOAA offers a 50-50 long-range outlook for New England. It might be snowier and colder than usual during the next three months … or it might be drier and warmer.

“Precipitation,” Leonard adds in an email, “is much harder, if not impossible, to predict correctly.” A single big snowstorm can push a seasonal forecast off its mark, he notes. “Having said that,”

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The Weather Channel, which has developed its own computer modeling, comes to a conclusion similar to NOAA’s. “For the Northeast,” says Weather Channel meteorologist Dan Leonard, “we feel that the winter will be a changeable one with periods of cold intermixed with periods of warmth. In the end, we expect temps to average out close to normal.”

LUKE EASTMAN

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hen Mike Wing predicts seasonal snowfall amounts, he pays no attention to the North Atlantic Oscillation, the likelihood of a weak La Niña, or the increasingly sophisticated computer modeling of the National Weather Service and other long-range forecasters. Instead, Wing, who runs the snowmaking operation at Sugarbush Resort, looks at the height of hornets’ nests. This fall, he says, “I’ve seen some as high as 14 feet off the ground. Other years, they’ve been as low as three feet.” A greater height could presage a particularly snowy winter, Wing suggests, because hornets want to prevent their queen’s eggs from being smothered. How can hornets calculate snow depth far in advance of the first flake’s fall? “I don’t know,” Wing responds with a laugh. “I’m just saying.” Farmers’ Almanac echoes the hornets’ buzz. First published in 1818, the periodical predicts an exceptionally snowy winter for New England in its 2017 edition. “It’s good fun,” WCAX-TV meteorologist Nick Borelli says of the compendium’s apocryphal claim. “But there’s no basis for it at all.” Borelli and the rest of the Channel 3 weather crew don’t put much faith in computer-generated longrange forecasts, either. “It’s such an inexact science,” Borelli says. The National Weather Service makes deep dives into oceans of data to come up with seasonal temperature and precipitation projections for regions of the United States. Gaps in those data mean that “errors get amplified,” Borelli points out. Still, months-ahead forecasts formulated by teams of heavily credentialed researchers aren’t mere guesswork. The federal government’s meteorology agency predicted last year that, owing to the El Niño effect, the northeastern U.S. winter was likely to be warmer and drier than normal. Which, to the chagrin of Vermont ski resorts and their customers, was exactly how it turned out. For this winter, Borelli says, “there’s no clear signal” on which to base New England snowfall predictions. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the weather service’s parent agency, reports that a La Niña phenomenon has gotten under way. This cooling of surface temperatures in the eastern Pacific — the opposite of what happens in El Niño — can result in above-average precipitation in the northern tier of states. NOAA expects the current iteration of La Niña to be weak and short-lived, but skiers and riders shouldn’t make frowny faces just yet. The weather service has revised its assessment of La Niña


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other big ski areas in Vermont rely on Vazzano in deciding whether, when and where to fire their guns. “We make our entire snow plan based on what he says,” Sugarbush’s Smith reports. While of great value to Vermont’s ski industry, Vazzano’s short-term forecasts are “not perfect,” notes John Hammond, vice president for mountain operations at Sugarbush. But they’re reliable enough, he adds, to allow his resort “to make more accurate business decisions” regarding snowmaking, which is a costly undertaking. “Tony presents a forecast with three-hour increments by elevation that enables us to be proactive rather than reactive,” Hammond says. Vazzano’s own business rests, accordingly, on the accuracy of his snowmaking forecasts. “It’s above average,” he says. “There’s a lot of competition in this field, and the resorts keep using my service year after year.” On balance, then, the long-range forecasts for the coming snow year are iffy. But the bigger-picture predictions are grim, with a high degree of certainty. According to all reputable climate chroniclers, the past month was the third-hottest October on record for the lower 48 states as a whole. Some 7,000 warmth records were set in localities around the country, compared with 508 record-cold readings for particular days of the month. That heat-up continues an alarming trend long under way in the U.S. and most of the world. The United Nations’ World Meteorological Organization said last week that a detailed analysis of global climate shows 2011 to 2015 to be the hottest five-year period since the start of reliable worldwide temperature measurements in the late 19th century. There’s every indication that 2016 will lengthen this climb, the UN continued. Sea levels are rising, glaciers are retreating and snow cover throughout the northern hemisphere is shrinking. Also, Donald Trump just got elected president of the world’s second-biggest (after China) source of carbon pollution. To climatologists, that’s not a good sign. So when it comes to Mad River Glen and all the other Vermont resorts, the best advice is to ski them while you can. m

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Leonard continues, “there is some evidence to suggest a drier-than-normal winter for the Northeast, thanks to a persistent northwesterly flow.” Another bummer of a winter, then, for all of Vermont’s snow lovers? Not necessarily. Steady winds from the northwest, the Weather Channel weatherman cautions, “could favor the typical westfacing, up-slope mountains with more snow than normal even if storms are weaker/fewer than normal.” So crosscountry skiers might find lots to love in Underhill State Park and similarly situated play places. When long-range forecasts do call for northern New England to be buried by blizzards, “we get all excited,” says Sugarbush owner Win Smith. “But realistically, no, we don’t put a lot of faith in those forecasts.” Killington spokesman Michael Joseph says that his resort’s decision makers “keep the far outlook in the back of our minds, but snowmaking planning is based on much shorterrange forecasts.” Enter Tony Vazzano. A meteorologist who studied at Lyndon State College, Vazzano is the go-to guy for a dozen ski resorts in Vermont, as well as a few more in New Hampshire and Maine. He’s been providing the statistical bases for snowmaking choices for 40 years through his forecasting company, North Winds Weather. “Some of the long-range stuff is getting better,” Vazzano allows. And, he suggests, it’s safe to predict this winter will be snowier than last, simply because the 2015-16 winter was such a bear. “It’s almost a given that this year will be better,” Vazzano reasons. But prophesying entire seasons is not where it’s at for his one-man operation based in Sandwich, N.H. “I’m big on what will happen the next five days, and especially the next 48 hours,” Vazzano says. He bases these short-term forecasts on temperature, humidity and wind readings from monitoring devices at the top, bottom and middle of ski mountains. Those data, combined with inputs from the National Weather Service, enable Vazzano to make predictions specific to resorts and to their topographical gradations. It takes a few hours to gear up the snowmaking apparatus, so Killington, Sugarbush and almost all the

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FILE: JEB WALLACE-BRODEUR

Rocking a Winter Wonderland

Family-friendly après-ski options at Stowe’s new Adventure Center BY S AR AH TUF F D UNN

I

Two hours of climbing, including equipment and instruction, costs $26 for ages 12 and under, $30 for 13 and up. Private lessons are available, too. “We’re introducing the sport to a lot of people who’ve never tried it before,” Davis said. “So we’ve set a variety of different routes — very easy routes for neverevers and challenging routes for more experienced climbers.” Dillon, my daughter, managed to scramble up Elephant Head in less time than it took me to whip out my iPhone for an Instagram shot. She was motivated not only by a sense of competition with her 8-year-old brother, Harper, but also by the instructor’s encouraging words: “Don’t slow down! You got this! You can do this! Keep bringing your feet up!”

PEOPLE COME IN, AND THEY CAN’T BELIEVE IT. P E TE R D AVIS

Learn more at stowe.com.

FEATURE 37

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For his part, as soon as Harper finished one route, he was off to try another. A rapidly growing third grader, he often complains of hunger pangs, but Stowe Rocks kept his mind elsewhere. Had we needed more fuel, however, the Canteen upstairs would have come to the rescue. There, chefs hand-toss pizza pies such as the Big Pig, with meatballs, hot Italian sausage and ground beef; and the Off-Piste Pesto, with artichoke hearts, sun-dried tomatoes, olives and goat cheese. The Canteen also offers strombolis, salads, subs and frosted brownies to take the edge off a chilly day on Mount Mansfield and Spruce Peak. In addition to Stowe Rocks, the Adventure Center now houses Stowe’s Ski & Snowboard School. The adjacent Canteen can accommodate 420 kids and instructors sitting down for lunch at the same time. “There are very few purpose-built centers of this size in our business,” said

Stowe marketing and communications director Jeff Wise of the family-focused venue. “Stowe Rocks allows multiple generations to continue their active day together, while the Canteen provides great family food and drink.” Wise added that the Adventure Center hosts kids’ programs such as Climb Time — supervised evening activities that enable parents to enjoy some alone time. The Adventure Center is heated and cooled entirely with geothermal energy. A large-scale mural by Geoff McFetridge, former art director for underground Beastie Boys magazine Grand Royal, uses animal caricatures to highlight local points of interest. Visitors can peruse artifacts from Vermont’s early skiing history in a Vermont Ski and Snowboard Museum installation. If those visitors don’t own outdoor equipment, no problem: The Adventure Center also includes a Gear Zone rental area, a retail space, a concierge call center, a movie theater and a daycare center. The resort is doing its best to provide one-stop shopping for nearly every recreational need. It may also be trying to persuade people never to leave. The ice-skating rink right outside hosts broomball on Thursdays and offers free lessons for kids on Fridays. The resort has performances lined up this winter, too: For example, Olympic medalist Nancy Kerrigan will appear in a preholiday skating exhibition on December 17 and 18. I know Stowe’s fabled Front Four will still call my name this winter. But other adventures might, too. When my kids clambered off the Adventure Center’s climbing wall and pleaded, “Can we try it again?” my answer was easy: yes.

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

A climber at Stowe Mountain Resort’s new Adventure Center

’ll never forget my first look, circa 1986, at Stowe Mountain Resort’s most famous feature: the fabled Front Four trails of National, Goat, Liftline and Starr. I was quaking in my rear-entry ski boots as a young girl. But my daughter, now 9, will have a different memory. She’ll never forget her first look at the resort’s 40-foot-high Elephant Head Tower, riddled with handholds and footholds. It’s as artificial as the Front Four are natural, but both are equally gnarly attractions. “People come in, and they can’t believe it,” said Peter Davis. He’s the specialized recreation manager at Stowe Rocks, part of the sprawling new $25 million Adventure Center that’s redefining how skiers and riders spend their off-slope time at the resort. “It really is the gateway to adventure at Stowe,” he added. During my family’s recent visit to the resort, we watched couples and groups of buddies gear up for the ZipTour Adventure and TreeTop Adventure. Those attractions have since shut down for the winter, but what remains open is just as lofty: a 30,000-square-foot lodge with big wooden ceiling beams, buzzing with winter activities. The Elephant Head Tower, named for a nearby outdoor climbing cliff at Smugglers’ Notch, serves as the centerpiece of Stowe Rocks’ climbing facility, which features nearly 50 routes on 20-odd top-rope stations. Auto-belays — devices that take up the slack for a climber, eliminating the need for a partner — allow the Adventure Center to accommodate slews of climbers. Kids as young as 18 months have taken to the wall, according to Davis.


MATTHEW THORSEN

38 FEATURE

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Brooke Scatchard

Skiing on Wheels Brooke Scatchard brings the fat-bike ski to winter sports B Y KAT IE JI CKL I NG

B

rooke Scatchard unveils his pièce de résistance unceremoniously, with hardly a nonchalant wave. His fat-bike ski has been 15 years in the making; now it leans inconspicuously in the corner of the University of Vermont’s machine shop, waiting for a few final tweaks — and snowfall. This is the 13th and final iteration of Scatchard’s invention, a mountain bike with the typical oversize tire in the rear and a removable ski in the front. The five-pound aluminum attachment can replace the front wheel and brake on any fat bike. The wide ski allows the cycle to “float on the snow,” Scatchard says, and maintain control through turns. Over the years, he has shaped and reshaped the curvature of the ski, added

pivots, streamlined the design and adjusted the suspension. Soon the members of UVM’s Instrumentation & Model Facility will run a stress-strain analysis to address any weak points in the design. Meanwhile, Scatchard is developing a marketing strategy and seeking investors and a regional manufacturer for the product. Each fat-bike ski attachment, he anticipates, will sell for about $875. The 34-year-old Morristown resident has received two patents for his creation, which won an award in the October Pitch It, Fab It! competition at the Generator maker space in Burlington. “He’s just a really knowledgeable entrepreneur,” says Lars Hasselblad Torres, Generator’s executive director, of Scatchard. “He has a well-defined

problem and a well-articulated solution. It’s not a whim, a lark.” Scatchard’s idea isn’t entirely novel. An online search of bike skis (or the more common term “ski bikes”) yields dozens of models: contraptions with two or three skis, with bike tires or tracks; models for sitting or standing or downhill skiing; and motorized versions. But his product, Scatchard insists, is different. It’s the only ski-bike design, to his knowledge, that has just one ski and can navigate both cross-country ski trails and downhill slopes. And, he adds, it works better. “It’s the feeling you want riding a bike,” he says. “I’m fulfilling needs that other people aren’t meeting.” For Scatchard, the fat-bike ski is a combination of art, science, calling and career. It’s the product of single-minded

doggedness and an instinct for the needs and interests of the mountain-biking community. He believes his design represents a new wave for winter enthusiasts and stands in the vanguard of Vermont’s outdoor recreation scene. That confidence may seem at odds with Scatchard’s unassuming persona. He’s not a natural salesman. He understates almost everything and shies away from the limelight. He habitually ruffles his mop of auburn hair as he pauses to collect his thoughts, resulting in a slightly scruffy appearance. In the UVM shop, when asked to pose for a photo, Scatchard throws a leg over the seat of his bike ski. His face assumes an expression of concentration. Even surrounded by machinery, he’s on a bike and in his element. That focus becomes even more evident in the videos on the product’s website, created by Scatchard’s friend and business partner Dan Kirk. On camera, it’s clear that Scatchard manages his bike with an agility and grace that are difficult for some of us on two feet. In videos scored to upbeat rock, he hurtles through winter forests with joyous audacity, navigating tree-lined trails and plunging through deep powder. And he’s not above the occasional display of gaudy flair, flying over jumps and sending cascades of snow into the air as he speeds through turns. “When you tell someone about [the fat-bike ski], they’re like, ‘That’s pretty neat,’” says Kirk. “When you show them a video, they … get out their checkbook.” Scatchard’s prototype will make an appearance in the snow-sports adventure film Warren Miller’s Here, There & Everywhere, which will screen at Middlebury’s Town Hall Theater on November 30 and December 1 and at the Flynn Center for the Performing Arts in Burlington on December 2. And, most importantly to the inventor, his design will head into production by the end of this winter. If anyone knows the bike market in Vermont, it’s Scatchard. The Charlotte native has spent the better part of his life in the mountain-bike community. Scatchard fell into the sport at age 11, influenced by a mountain-biking uncle. Soon after he began racing at 14, he was recruited for the Cannondale Headshok development racing team. Each winter, Scatchard competed on Champlain Valley Union High School’s Nordic skiing team to get in shape for mountain biking, then waited anxiously for the snow to melt so he could get back out on the trails.


For his senior project, Scatchard embarked on a model of what would become his first fat-bike ski, which he dubbed “bikes on snow.” Initially, his interest in the project stemmed from “winter boredom and wanting to ride my bike,” he says. Scatchard spent his free afternoons in the CVU metal shop, staying late when his teacher would allow it. That year he constructed a prototype and applied for his first patent on the model before he graduated from high school in May 2000. While attending UVM, Scatchard raced his mountain bike semi-professionally and worked at bike shops. He volunteered for Fellowship of the Wheel, Chittenden County’s chapter of the Vermont Mountain Bike Association. After graduating in 2005 with a degree in geography, he continued to pursue mountain biking for both livelihood and leisure.

FOR SCATCHARD, THE FAT-BIKE SKI IS

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Now, Scatchard and his girlfriend, Mariah Keagy, own and run their own trail-design company, Sinuosity. Together they have designed and built nearly 40 trail projects across Vermont and New Hampshire. All the while, Scatchard has been refining the fat-bike ski, funding the project himself. He follows what he calls an “iterative trial and error” process. In practice, that means spending long hours tinkering in his basement and toting a couple of wrenches on every test ride. Some initially tepid responses to the product left Scatchard discouraged and nearly ready to throw in the towel. But then, in early 2015, he raced his bike in Stowe after a snowstorm. “Everyone was crashing all over the place,” he recounts. “You couldn’t

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ride in a straight line.” It was all the motivation he needed to continue his work. Scatchard has tapped into a zealous audience and a burgeoning mountain-bike industry. Vermont currently boasts about 800 miles of mapped trails; in-the-know locals make use of hundreds more, according to Tom Stuessy, executive director of the Vermont Mountain Bike Association. That’s about 25 percent more trails than when Stuessy started at VMBA in late 2012. The number of the organization’s volunteer-led chapters has doubled over the same period, and membership has more than tripled. Winter fat-bike riding is on the rise, too. The phone calls Stuessy fields most frequently during the winter, he says, are from bikers seeking recommendations for fat-biking trails. And, he notes, the pastime has fostered a culture of innovation. “Every time you look at the mountain-biking sport, people are looking down the road,” Stuessy says. Innovation doesn’t necessarily lead to profits. But Scatchard remains convinced he’s created a product that will sell. Last year, he competed with his bike ski in the Fat Bike World Championships in Crested Butte, Colo. (That’s where Miller filmed him flying through fresh powder.) Scatchard only placed 20th, but after the race, he says, fellow contestants were lining up to try out his rig. Meantime, videos on YouTube and fatbikeskis.com have garnered more than 750,000 views, says Kirk. The nascent company’s email list includes interested customers from as far away as Switzerland, Scandinavia and Russia. In fact, Scatchard’s biggest worry is keeping up with what he sees as the potential demand. Scatchard has the work ethic, persistence and relationships to make his design succeed, according to Kirk. “Brooke’s given so much to the biking scene in Vermont,” he says, “[and] he’s been able to leverage some of those connections to get the word out. If anyone can do it, he’s the one.” m

11/11/16 3:57 PM


COURTESY OF MARSHALL WEBB/SHELBURNE FARMS

Drag ’n’ Sleigher Meet the man behind the horses that pull Shelburne Farms’ winter sleigh BY KEN PICAR D

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Pat Palmer with two of his Percherons

P

at Palmer isn’t an especially chatty fellow, not at first, anyway. Like many native Vermonters of his generation — the 69-year-old grew up on a chicken farm in New Haven — he’s economical with his words and not inclined to chitchat. But join Palmer in his barn — or better yet, on one of his horsedrawn winter sleigh rides — and ask about his draft horses, and he warms up faster than a mug of mulled cider. Come late December and the requisite snowfall, Palmer is the guy who runs the sleigh rides at Shelburne Farms, which continue each weekend until mid-March. He’s been doing it for more than 20 years now — whenever there was snow on the ground. But Palmer doesn’t describe the job as “work.” For him, dashing through the snow-covered woods and fields of the sprawling estate is about as good as it gets. Palmer still lives in New Haven, with his wife, Cathy, on their 55-acre Thornapple Farm. A farrier’s daughter who grew up around horses, she learned from an early age how to read the animals

and their ailments. When Palmer travels to a horse auction, he says, he always brings Cathy to help him evaluate the animals before he makes a purchase. “Every horse has a hole in him somehow,” he says, and adds with a smile, “just like people.” Currently, Palmer owns four draft horses, including one he bought two weeks ago in Topeka, Ind. Whatever “holes” they may have aren’t evident to this reporter during a recent visit to the horse barn. Palmer works exclusively with Percherons, which are among the largest of draft-horse breeds. His biggest measures 18 hands high at the shoulders, or six feet, and weighs more than 2,000 pounds. All four of Palmer’s horses, whose markings range from snow-white to “fleabitten” gray to jet-black, are as docile as they are powerful. To demonstrate, he steps into the stall of Jake, an 11-year-old speckled gray gelding, and gently tugs on the animal’s front left leg. The horse obediently lifts it to reveal a hoof and horseshoe of about

the circumference of a dinner plate. The horseshoe is lined with Borium, a superhard metal product that farriers use for added traction on pavement. That’s because, in addition to running the winter sleigh rides, Palmer uses his horses to do residential trash collection several days a week in Bristol and Middlebury. He first got interested in draft horses several decades ago, Palmer says, because he planned to use them for logging — a project that proved unsuccessful. For a time, the Palmers offered trail rides on their property, but they eventually decided it was too risky putting strangers with little to no riding experience on horseback. “No matter how good the horse is, sometimes the personalities just don’t click,” Palmer explains. “Giving sleigh rides, I have control of the horses, and people just go along for the ride.” His horses have been hauling local trash for 19 years, nearly as long as they’ve been pulling sleighs. Palmer got into the former business after reading

about an Oregon man who expanded his conventional trash-hauling business in an unconventional way. One summer, when Palmer’s business had grown large enough to require a second truck, he tried using a pair of draft horses instead. Then Palmer learned that Bristol’s new town manager didn’t want his road crew doing residential garbage collection anymore and had put the town’s sanitation contract out to bid. Intrigued by the prospect of using his horses, Palmer submitted a bid and won the contract. Today, he picks up trash at about 200 homes in Bristol and, since May 2015, another 250 in Middlebury. Each route takes him about a day to complete. Is there any advantage to hauling trash with horses instead of trucks? “Other than being fun?” Palmer asks with a chuckle. “You save money. I can do it cheaper than anybody else.” Palmer points out that his first trash wagon, which he purchased almost 20 years ago, cost him just $3,000 and is still going strong; his new one, which


he uses in Middlebury, cost $15,000. By comparison, a standard packer garbage truck costs $130,000 to $140,000 and has a life expectancy of 10 years. These days, Palmer leaves one wagon in Bristol and the other in Middlebury, then carts his horses over via trailer in the morning. Though the garbage route is Palmer’s bread and butter, over the years he’s also been hired to bring the bride and groom to and from wedding ceremonies

herself. “It was absolutely fantastic,” she recalls. Then, about six years ago, Cross called Palmer a week before Shelburne Farms’ annual Winterfest and offered to help with the sleigh rides. He agreed. “It was colder than cold, but we had so much fun,” she recalls. “After a couple of trips around the farm, I don’t think he ever touched the lines again. He let me drive the whole time.”

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Over the years, Palmer estimates he’s taught 20 to 25 young people how to drive draft horses, mostly by allowing them to join him on his trash pickup route. Usually they’re teenagers, though he has taught kids as young as 10. Despite years of running the same routes over and over again at Shelburne Farms, Palmer says the sleigh rides haven’t lost their charm. He generally takes passengers through the Farms’ Church Woods and back, almost always a windy ride. Along the way, they may spot deer, which seem to have grown accustomed to the horse team. “Even though we have bells, sometimes the deer will stand 10 feet inside the woods and watch us go by,” Palmer says. Palmer occasionally does moonlit sleigh rides, too, on which he points out the constellations to passengers. “I don’t know if he’s giving them correct information,” says Cross, “but he says it so believably that you think you’ve learned something.” “People often say, ‘Poor you. You’re out here all day,’” Palmer observes. “But if you’re dressed for it, you’re fine.” A stiff wind often blows in from Lake Champlain, and he advises potential riders to dress even more warmly than they think they should. Palmer himself can bundle up a little less. He designed and built his sleigh so he drives standing, and maintaining his balance keeps him warm. “I just love it,” Palmer says. “Best job in the world.” m

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Contact: ken@sevendaysvt.com

INFO Winter sleigh rides leave Shelburne Farms’ Welcome Center every half hour from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., beginning December 23 (weather dependent). $8-10; children 2 and under free. Registration: 985-8686. vthorsedrawnservices. com, shelburnefarms.org

FEATURE 41

in a stylish horse-drawn carriage. In his capacity as a sleigh driver, he notes, he’s also facilitated plenty of weddings. “I get a lot of guys who will propose to their girlfriends on the sleigh,” Palmer reports. “I bet I’ve had 25 or 30 people [do so] over the years.” One year around Valentine’s Day, he recalls, a man hired him to stay and give a private sleigh ride after the regular day at Shelburne Farms had ended. Palmer’s customer spent the entire afternoon arranging bagged candles in the snow along the sleigh route. Palmer told his curious passengers that the mood lighting was for a fellow who intended to request his girlfriend’s hand in marriage. “One girl says, ‘Well, if she says no, I’ll say yes!’” Palmer recalls. Palmer occasionally offers two-mile sleigh rides on his own property in New Haven. Like the rides at Shelburne Farms, these take about a half hour. “Then we give them a hot chocolate back in the house and warm ’em back up,” he says. Palmer’s enthusiasm for his animals is contagious, as evidenced by the number of local draft-horse drivers who credit him with getting them started. For some young sleigh riders, an interest in the equine begins with his invitation to take the reins. “There have been so many young people — like, kids 10 years old — who get off the sleigh and are in seventh heaven because they were able to drive the team,” says Jean Cross. An employee of Shelburne Farms, she also serves as treasurer of the Green Mountain Draft Horse Association. “That’s how he got me,” she adds. As Cross explains, one summer about 10 years ago, she was watching Palmer mow a field with a draft horse. She was too shy to ask if she could try it, but Palmer noticed her interest and immediately invited her to hop aboard and take the reins. Because the mower had just one seat, Cross drove the team all by


food+drink

Infallible Feasts Lessons from a chef on how to avoid a disastrous holiday meal BY SU ZAN NE PODHAIZE R

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Have and Maintain the Right Equipment Peeling four potatoes with a dull peeler isn’t that big a deal. But peeling 40 potatoes with a dull peeler is. So make sure you’ve got a good one! I’ve tried four or five, and the best by far is the Oxo Good Grips Pro Y-Peeler with replaceable blades. Other go-to pieces of equipment in my holiday kitchen are a food mill (for removing the peels from cranberry sauce, making perfectly smooth mashed potatoes and similar tasks); an immersion blender (for puréeing soups and emulsifying salad dressings); INFALLIBLE FEASTS

42 FOOD

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y worst Christmas was the one when I spent hours painstakingly crafting a chestnut, mascarpone and truffle pasta filling from a recipe in The French Laundry Cookbook.. I stretched my pasta dough too thin, and the delicious, pricey mixture spurted out into the cooking water. I wept. Scratch that: I sobbed. On another memorable holiday, I proudly unwrapped my first goose in preparation for a highheat roasting, only to find it covered in pinfeathers. Four hours later, I was still hunched over that foul fowl with a pair of greasy tweezers. My ex had snuck off to the basement to get stoned. The rest of the family was hangry. (This incident is why, when I later became a goose farmer, we gave each bird the postmortem avian equivalent of a Brazilian wax.) It wasn’t until I opened my own restaurant, Salt, that I realized holiday cookery is similar to working in a restaurant kitchen, in that both involve larger quantities, careful timing and a fairly extreme ability to multitask. Restaurant cooking gave me the knowledge and skills I needed to pull off family feasts with aplomb. Winter is coming, and not everybody has the option of apprenticing themselves to a chef in preparation for the holidays, but I’m happy to pass on what I’ve learned. Here are seven tips for making sumptuous meals without the suffering.

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GOODS in January. Open on weekends, the tiny storefront parlays Ekasala’s 30 years of baking experience into fresh-baked breads, baguette sandwiches and pastries such as croissants, cinnamon rolls, fruit Danishes and galettes. Up at the resort, new options at the Burke Mountain Hotel &

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town has casual fare covered, too. In September, LINDA STEVENS and JOHNNY LOTTI opened CAFÉ LOTTI in an 1863 church in the village. Wake up with a pre-ski espresso or nitrogenated cold-brew, both made with creamy Malabar Gold espresso from Californiabased Josuma Coffee. To eat, baristas prepare breakfast wraps and sandwiches using bagels from LYNDONVILLE BAGEL DEPOT; the shop also buys pies, scones, cupcakes and other sweets

In early September, Texas transplants began serving “Tex-Asian” cuisine at TABLE 19 RESTAURANT & BAR in Proctorsville, just down the mountain from Okemo Mountain Resort. What exactly is “TexAsian”? “It’s actually our favorite things from both cuisines,” explains business manager JOE EVANS. He co-owns the spot with his wife, chef KATHRYN EVANS, who learned Southeast Asian cookery while living in Myannmar. In a glass-walled kitchen, she mingles stir-fried yakisoba noodles and Vietnamese bánh xèo with smoky Texas-style brisket, fried chicken, cowboy beans and collards. Live music makes the joint jump on weekends.

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In Japan, skiers warm their bellies at ramen trucks and stands that set up shop slope-side and in resort parking lots. Here in Vermont, MOMO and JORDAN ANTONUCCI brought that tradition to Jay Peak two winters ago when they opened their MISO HUNGRY ramen truck just down the mountain in Jay village. This season, the couple will move their operation to Jay Peak Resort and serve noodle bowls and other Japanese snacks from a retired tram car just above the Tram Haus Lodge. The Antonuccis did not return calls by press time, but their website confirms the move: “The rumors are true,” reads a recent blog post about the tram-car ramen. “The stoke is at an all-time high.”

In the Mad River Valley, Sugarbush Resort is wrapping up major renovations at its Glen House mid-mountain lodge, according to resort communications vice president Candice White. At a new wooden bar in the restaurant upstairs — which the resort has renamed WALT’S, after Mount Ellen ski-area founder Walt Elliott — skiers and riders will be able to sip craft cocktails and Vermont beers and recharge their batteries with gourmet grilled-cheese sandwiches. Untitled-70 One cradles CABOT cheddar, local bacon and guacamole; another, VERMONT CREAMERY goat cheese, figs and caramelized onions.

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food+drink Infallible Feasts « P.42 a sieve (for fixing gravy that’s full of lumps); and nice sharp knives. If you suspect your knives are losing their edge, you’re almost certainly right. Call your local kitchen store and inquire about sharpening, which is always a worthwhile investment. (While you’re there, see about getting some of the other items on this list.) Then there are the little things: Do you have enough big mixing bowls? Otherwise, you may find yourself stirring so carefully, while flour inevitably powders the counter and your pants. Do you have enough spoons for the soup? What about a couple of extra wine glasses, in case some break? (Some always break.) Count. Plan. Visit the thrift store. Have more than you need.

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Don’t Put Off Menu Planning The earlier you know what you’re making, the easier it will be to gather your ingredients and tools and to make adjustments when you discover you can’t get that fancy local meat item you were counting on. To plan your menu, first pick a protein. Consider choosing something slightly out of the ordinary, such as lamb, a standing rib roast or a goose. If the price of top-quality cuts puts you off, remember that braising — cooking in liquid, covered, at a low oven temperature — turns even the cheapest hunks of meat into tender, flavorful delights. Next, consider seasonal side vegetables. On any given cold-weather holiday, I’ll default to squash, potatoes and Brussels sprouts. Roasted whole carrots are elegant and lovely, especially if you can get multicolored bunches. Cabbage is inexpensive and hearty and can be sexed up with cream, blue cheese, toasted walnuts, herbs and a few grinds of black pepper. Finally, pick some “gold star” ingredients to sprinkle into the mix. These are the things that make meals feel sumptuous and decadent. • Rich dairy items, such as butter, heavy cream, cream cheese and mascarpone • Booze. Mixed into desserts or added to sauces, port, Madeira, sherry or brandy makes any dish more festive. • Warm spices. Who doesn’t associate

the aromas of cinnamon, ginger and allspice with the holidays? Then there’s nutmeg, a crucial ingredient in everybody’s favorite ‘nog. • Mushrooms. Eschew the white buttons in favor of crimini, or splurge on oyster or lobster mushrooms. • Elegant alliums. Supplant or supplement mundane yellow onions with picturesque cipollini, leeks and shallots. • Shellfish. Oysters and scallops, in particular, feel celebratory. If you’re buying New England seafood, we’re heading into the best time of the year for both. Once you have a sense of the ingredients you want to use, start to assemble them into appetizers and sides. Mix up flavors and textures. If you’re not sure how to go about that, buy The Flavor Bible: The Essential Guide to Culinary Creativity, Based on the Wisdom of America’s Most Imaginative Chefs, by Karen Page and Andrew Dornenburg. Whether you celebrate in religious or secular fashion, this is one bible that should come in handy.

Make a Prep List and Start Cooking Early In a restaurant kitchen, you can’t just fly by the seat of your ugly, elastic-waistbanded chef pants. You have to make a prep list — a detailed accounting of all the stuff you need to do to feed the people the things. The more experienced you are in the kitchen, the sparser your prep list can be. If you’re less comfortable at the stove, detail the hell out of it. Instead of “Mince shallots, 5 m.,” you can write, “Peel and cut up those oniony looking things (don’t forget to use the chef knife, not the paring knife), 20 minutes, 11:14 a.m.” Once you have your list, decide if you can do any cooking tasks the day before — or even earlier. Cranberry sauce and desserts can be made ahead. So can vegetable or meat stock to be used in gravies and other sauces. Bread can be cubed for stuffing and left out to dry, the better to absorb pan drippings. If you don’t have to do something à la minute, as we say

in the biz, it’s better to do it early. This also gives you a chance to try out fancier items with a backup plan, in case they don’t work out. Pâté, anybody? Likewise, if you’re brining or doing a dry rub on your holiday meat (or tofu, if you swing that way), you may want to do that several days in advance.

Learn to Cut Up a Bird Unless you’re a vegetarian, knowing how to turn a raw or cooked chicken or turkey deftly into a pile of wings, drumsticks, thighs, breasts and bones is incredibly useful. Find a video on the internet, take a cooking class, or just spend some quality time with a sharp knife and a poultry carcass.

RESTAURANT COOKING GAVE ME THE KNOWLEDGE

AND SKILLS I NEEDED TO PULL OFF FAMILY FEASTS WITH APLOMB.

Buy Yourself Time With Hors d’Oeuvres and a Cheese Plate Appetizers are the key to keeping the ravenous hordes from invading your kitchen and sating themselves on your ingredients. Serve some. If you have treats that can be put out cold or at room temperature, you won’t be stealing precious burner space from other parts of dinner. The best way to gain culinary time? A cheese plate. It can be simple — a bargain-basement block of cheddar and some crackers — or it can be an extravagant combo of artisan cheeses, nuts, spiced honey, dried fruits and pickled things. Plus, if people fill up on cheese, there will be more leftovers for you.

Relax Cooking for a bunch of people can be intense, and we all want to do a good job of it. But, after many years, I realized that if I didn’t accept help with an ambitious menu, I might find myself crying over my half-baked cream puffs at an hour when everybody would rather be in bed than eating dessert. As I told the staff at my restaurant, “We’re just cooking for people, not performing surgery.” Rolling with the punches is essential.

The body of the bird will tell you where to cut — look for lines of demarcation. Fat deposits often occur around joints, and I seek them out when I’m butchering. Wiggle different bits to see where they move.

Delegate With Care Which of your relatives are speedy and efficient? Ask them to peel and dice. Those who don’t have culinary chops can stir pots, pick the leaves off herbs and wash things. If Aunt Mindy is a dreamy perfectionist, have her set the table. You know who always offers to help. Decide in advance how you’d like to utilize their particular skill sets.

To that end, pick dishes you feel confident about, sprinkled with little dollops of special holiday goodness. Try one or two new things that excite you. Stay organized, and clean as you go. (Or, better yet, get somebody else to clean as you go.) And most of all, remember that joy and harmony are your real goals — far more important than perfectly crisped turkey skin. Contact: podhaizer@sevendaysvt.com


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“We collect all rinse water and spent grains,” he says. The brewery then trades the resulting feed to two area farms, VERMONT ORGANICS RECLAMATION in St. Albans and JONES FAMILY FARM in Hyde Park, in exchange for local vegetables, beef and pork for the smoker. The trio hopes to grow more produce, including hops, in raised beds in the green space around the brewery and restaurant. The goal, says Joyce, is to keep as many ingredients from Vermont, specifically from St. Albans, as possible. “We’d love to see St. Albans be that next spot, like Pine Street [in Burlington] or Waterbury,” David says, referring to the burgeoning brewpub scenes in both. “Absolutely, St. Albans can handle it.”

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FOOD 45

St. Albans is slowly becoming a hub for beer and barbecue. This past September, 14TH STAR BREWING began supplementing its brews with an in-house barbecue joint called SMOKIN’ BUTTS BAR-B-Q. Come spring 2017, the town center will get another craft brewery and fully loaded smoker. Meet MILL RIVER BREWING. The new business will move into a former Hands On Car Wash site at 10 Beauregard Drive this December. It’s the brainchild of a family team: brothers DAN and DAVID FITZGERALD will run the brewing side, while JOYCE FITZGERALD, David’s wife, will be the primary owner and driving force behind the brewery’s 48-plus-seat barbecue restaurant. David and Dan got into brewing in 2013, they say, after an all-grain brewing

seminar at CRAFT BEER CELLAR in Waterbury. A member of a family of professional caterers, Joyce was already well versed in food production; that same year, she began cultivating her interests in barbecue and smoking. “When the guys and I started talking about a brewery, we knew we wanted to have food in the mix,” she says. “Partly for responsibility’s sake, partly because food is a gathering place.” Mill River Brewing will start with a sevenbarrel brewing system, with growler fills and on-site pints to go with Joyce’s smoked ribs and brisket. The cozy postand-beam spot will have bar seats and tables, plus an attached sit-down barbecue restaurant and a seasonal 50-seat biergarten. David also trains ice cream makers at BEN & JERRY’S; one of the biggest similarities between crafting Chubby Hubby and Mill River beer, he notes, is both businesses’ attention to environmental responsibilities.

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Drowning It Out The 2016 election results ca led for a drink S TO RY AND P H O TO S BY H ANNAH PAL ME R E GAN

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W

ednesday, November 9, 6:30 a.m.: I woke up bleary-eyed after a long night spent watching election results. Though I’d missed Donald Trump’s victory speech, I’d read that Hillary Clinton had conceded the race, though she’d won the popular vote. Like millions of Americans, I struggled to process this improbable outcome. My husband went to the kitchen to make coffee. I stayed in bed and reached for my phone: Would we see a recount, like in 2000 when George W. Bush eclipsed Al Gore in similar fashion? No, we wouldn’t, the major newspapers said. It was over. Do I still need to work for a living? I wondered. Maybe our president-elect would work such immediate wonders on the economy that I could collect terrific sums of money by lying in bed and looking pretty. I was sure I could lie in bed for a very long time. Looking pretty? Maybe a stretch. Alas, I had to be in Colchester — an hour and a half away — in two hours. I’d agreed to speak to an English class at Saint Michael’s College, where students were writing restaurant reviews to hone their skills in verbal persuasion. Their professor had asked me to discuss how I’d become a food writer. They’d question me about working as a real, live grown-up journalist. I couldn’t tell them that my highest aspiration at the moment was to become a bed ornament. I sat up, placed my feet on the floor and stood up. I pulled a bathrobe off the bedpost, swung it over my shoulders and walked with determination to the liquor cabinet in the next room. I opened the cupboard and stared inside. Do something, my brain said. My hand reached for the nearest bottle — Chartreuse. Using a secret recipe, monks have made this emerald-green tonic in a remote valley in France for nearly 300 years. I turned the bottle in my hand, imagining such a life. Drink it, my brain ordered. My fingers unscrewed the cap and tipped the vessel to my lips. A deep gulp flooded my senses with licorice and herbs. The liqueur

Sticky bun and Negroni Popper at Monarch & the Milkweed

warmed me, relaxing my body from the inside out. My mind calmed enough to get dressed. I armored myself in a long wool cape with an oversize hood. I got in my car and drove north. In class, many of the students looked as bewildered as I felt. But our conversation — about eating critically, and writing through a subjective experience without getting too personal — seemed like a welcome distraction to all. After class, still hiding under the hooded cape, I drove toward my office in Burlington’s South End. In Winooski, I paused for pedestrians at the bottom of the traffic circle. In profile, the young woman looked to be African, or at least of African descent. Her face was wide and round and framed by a close-fitting head scarf that flowed to a loose cowl over her winter jacket. Her skin was as dark as raw umber. Behind her, an older man — also black — crossed slowly, aided by a cane. I let myself wonder what the election’s outcome might mean to them. Were they thinking about it right now, as I was? Booze. More booze. The self-preserving side of my brain chimed in: And probably something to eat. I climbed the hill into Burlington and detoured to City Market/Onion River Co-op. For once, the co-op parking fairies

smiled on me. A genius grocery list began to take form in my head: tea, Vermont corn tortillas… I grabbed the tea and wandered past the dairy and meat. I paused at the beer cooler. Cans of Goodwater Brewery’s Hoppy Side of Pale. Been meaning to try that, I thought, and grabbed a sixer. Then, What’s this barrel-aged amber

AS I SAT THERE DRINKING THAT TINY, BITTER COCKTAIL

24 HOURS LATER, THOSE PICTURES SEEMED A WORLD AWAY. mead from Groennfell Meadery? Sounds neat — I’ll take it. I lingered over choosing four bottles of wine. That Côtes du Rhône looked nice — especially for the low price — and the on-sale Rioja with the screaming, wildhaired woman on the label was totally speaking my language. I was thankful that the cashier seemed unfazed by selling a basketfull of booze to a woman in a red, hooded cloak at 10:30 a.m. on a Wednesday. I left feeling fortified against whatever

would come but also defeated that I’d have to wait to drink my purchases. Where to get a cocktail at this hour? A few weeks ago, Monarch & the Milkweed began serving sticky buns starting at 7:30 a.m. daily. And, thanks to the café’s counter-service format, ordering, paying and receiving could occur in a single transaction. I’d barely have to talk to anyone. Inside the restaurant, a glass case held miniature cakes and sweets glazed with icing, doughnuts spangled with colored sprinkles and, thank God, sticky buns. “May I have a sticky bun?” I asked the long-haired twentysomething at the register. “Of course,” he said. “Anything else?” “Where are your cocktails?” I turned over the postcard menu. “There,” he said, pointing toward the bottom of the page. I couldn’t stomach a Bloody Mary. And I would have preferred to throw a glass of Champagne at the wall than to drink either of the menu’s twinkle-toes cava cocktails. “I’ll take a Negroni Popper,” I said. The listed ingredients were standard Negroni — strong booze, vinous booze, bittersweet booze. I was willing to gamble $5 on whatever the “popper” part was. Counterman slid a prim sticky bun onto a plate. Behind him, a woman placed a little glass on the counter, then pulled what looked like an old-fashioned medicine bottle from the cooler. I guessed that the red liquid in the bottle was my drink. I picked it up and wandered to one of the marble tables against the restaurant’s south wall. With some effort, I sidled onto the banquette. I brought the bottle to my lips. When it hesitated to pour, I upended the drink into the glass. The miniature beverage was cold and bitter and perfect. My fingers uncoiled the outer layer of the sticky bun and pulled away beads of crystalline cream-cheese glaze and placed them on my tongue to melt. Then the pastry: butter-crisp crunch, cinnamony sweetness, not heavy. The petite,

More food after the classifieds section PAGE 47


MS. KITTY IS A

PHOTO COURTESY OF KELLY SCHULZE/MOUNTAIN DOG PHOTOGRAPHY

PRONATURE PAL! Ms. Kitty AGE/SEX: 5-year-old spayed female ARRIVAL DATE: August 18

Her adoption fee is being paid for by Pronature Holistic, and her new family will receive a $50 gift card to Pet Food Warehouse and six months of free Pronature cat food!

Humane

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REASON HERE: Ms. Kitty was a stray. SUMMARY: Look at Ms. Kitty! Isn't she pretty? ˜ is friendly gal was a stray who wandered into

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DOGS/CATS: Ms. Kitty has no known experience living with cats or dogs. Visit HSCC at 142 Kindness Court, South Burlington, Tuesday through Friday from 1 to 6 p.m., or Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Call 862-0135 for more info.

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CARS/TRUCKS 2004 TOYOTA COROLLA SILVER Has both cassette & CD players. Very reliable, maneuverable & fun car to drive. Inspected April 2016 w/ no issues. 83,000 miles. 802-865-6479.

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BURLINGTON 2-BR TOWNHOUSES Stainless steel appliances & granite countertops. Community gardens, river views, covered bike storage & underground parking. Adjacent to nature/running trails & basketball/ tennis courts. bayberry commonsapartments. com, 355-7633.

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ENOSBURG Spacious living area in a lovely farmhouse shared w/ a couple in their 60s. $500/mo (all inc). Private BA. Must be pet-friendly. NS. 863-5625 or homesharevermont.org for application. Interview, references, background checks required. EHO.

MILTON BURLINGTON, Room to rent, 12x12 PINECREST AT ESSEX BAYBERRY COMMONS ft. w/ closet. Heat & SDIreland-Sm.ClassyDisplay081716.indd 8/22/16 1:51 PM 1 9 Joshua Way, Essex New 1- & 2-BR flats, electricity incl. Kitchen Junction. Independent 9’ ceilings, exterior privileges. W/D. $125/ senior living. 1-BR unit porches/patios. Walk to week. 488-4839. avail Dec. 1. $1,135/ public transportation, mo. Incl. all utils. & shops, dining, universiROOM FOR RENT, underground parking. ties & more. 1 free mo. AVAIL. NOW $2,400/MO. UPDATED NS/pets. Must be 55+ w/ lease! bayberry Monkton farmhouse on 3-BR 2005 SAAB 9-3 AERO years of age. rrappold@ commonsapartments. 20 acres, all amenities Newly renovated $3,900. 5-speed coburnfeeley.com, com, 355-7633. incl., garden space, Burlington home avail. manual. Great car, 872-9197. 13.5 miles to I-89. Start for 6 mo.-1 year lease well maintained, BURLINGTON, UPPER $400/mo. 453-3457. starting now! $400 flat runs beautifully. 210 SHELBURNE RD. SHELBURNE monthly rate for utils.! horsepower, turbo, lots TOWNHOUSE Beautiful Victorian BURL 2-BR COTTAGE Call Emily Aloi at CBHB, of features. 101,800 2-BR, rear deck, full 2 story, 2-BR, 1-BA. lg-valleypainting112614.indd 11/24/14 1 12:11 PM 12/1 ONE 802-503-1150. miles. Call or text Mike, cellar. W/D hookups. Gas HDWD. Separate dining Private building. 802-238-7734. heat. No pets. Available room, foyer, on bus line. HDWD, ceiling fans. Full 2-BR, BURL, HEAT INCL. Dec. 1. Rent $1,050/mo. Parking, NS/pets. Some kitchen, BA, gas range. Stand-alone, spacious 2015 DODGE RAM 2500 Call 802-373-0325. utils. incl. Walk to lake W/D hookups. Fenced TRADING LABOR FOR apt. avail. Dec. 1. 6.7L Cummins turbo and colleges. $1,495/ yard. NS. Street parking. HOUSING Recently renovated. Pet diesel engine w/ only STUDIO DOWNTOWN mo. 476-4071. Walk downtown. New Essex ski coach friendly. Heat/HW incl. 16,263 miles. Short Two-room studio w/ Pets OK. $1,675/mo. seeks a home. Skills I Located downtown. bed, king cab. Detailed small kitchen, small BURLINGTON: 31 HYDE 802-999-5360. possess: small auto, Coin-op W/D. Private ST. & serviced. Willing to LR/BR, BA. Off-street tractor mechanics; storage cage & garage Avail. now. Medium-size parking, laundry w/ deliver. Contact Matt at BURLINGTON 1- & 2-BR welding; carpentry; parking incl. $1,500/ 3-BR condo. 1.5-BA, DW, 941-704-1878. in the building. Close APTS. farm operation; etc. Call mo. Contact Christine W/D, parking, low utils. to downtown, Battery W/D in each unit, air Jon at 585-298-3425 or at 802-651-6888 or CASH FOR CARS $1,500/mo. No dogs. Park, bike path. On conditioning, stainless jonathanignatowski@ cgolden@neddere.com. Any car/truck 862-7467. Park Street. $725/mo. steel appliances, gmail.com. 2000-2015, running No utils. incl. Please BURLINGTON 1-BR APT. granite countertops. DORSET COMMONS or not! Top dollar for call Lisa to view at Community gardens, $800/mo. Bright. APARTMENTS used/damaged. Free 802-324-3008. elevators, adjacent to Close to colleges, Convenient location. nationwide towing! Call children’s playground. fully furnished, large Spacious. Lots of now: 888-420-3808. TAFT FARM SENIOR Your dream apartment! deck. New North End closet space. Full-size LIVING COMMUNITY (AAN CAN) bayberrycommons neighborhood near kitchen appliances. 10 Tyler Way, Williston. apartments.com, bike path & lake, 3 Coin-op laundry in the Independent senior CHEVROLET FULL-TIME OFFICE 355-7633. miles from downtown. TRAILBLAZER LT building. Carport. Pool. living. Avail. Dec. 1. 1-BR, SUBLET Electric incl. No pets. Like-new SUV. No dogs. Come visit us! 1-BA, $1,110/mo. Incl. all Well-established BURLINGTON 1899 Avail. now. Contact 802-281-3872. 802-864-7766, info@ utils & cable. Garage women’s psychotherapy VICTORIAN thomasbusiness dorsetcommons.com, parking optional. NS/ practice has a full-time Large 1-BR apt., charmagency@comcast.net 435 Dorset Street, So pets. Must be 55+ sublet avail. Jan. 1 in ing, original restored for online application. Burlington. years of age. jfloyd@ beautiful downtown HDWD, residential, Paula, 864-0838. coburnfeeley.com, Burlington office suite. Shelburne St. Close ESSEX JCT. 879-3333. Licensed clinicians, to Lake Champlain, BEACON ROW Clean 1-BR + den. 2nd complementary UVM, medical center. TOWNHOUSES floor, full BA, range, WINOOSKI: COZY practitioners inquire at Off-street parking. We Pick Up Beacon Row stove, refrigerator, DW, 1-BR. Maple St. 651-7528, mannyln@ NS, no pets. $975/mo. Townhouses. 2-BR, Convenient to gmail.com. & Pay For Junk 2-BA, enclosed garage & 476-4071 (o), 793-0767 coin W/D, off-street parking. Sorry, no pets. downtown Winooski. (c). Automobiles! storage. Flexible lease Lease, dep. $975/mo.+ Rinnai + electric heat. OFFICE/RETAIL SPACE option. $500 off 1st mo. AT MAIN ST. LANDING utils. 878-2825. Parking. Trash pickup. w/ 1-year commitment. on Burlington’s waterNS, no pets. $950/mo. $1,725/mo. + gas & front. Beautiful, healthy, HOUSE FOR RENT + utils. 802-310-2204, electric. Call Karen, affordable spaces for Charming 2-BR, ledthab@aol.com. Route 15, Hardwick 802-865-1109, ext. 3. your business. Visit 1.5-BA. $1,450/mo. + 802-472-5100 mainstreetlanding.com utils. Garden space & & click on space avail. backyard. NS, pets OK 3842 Dorset Ln., Williston Melinda, 864-7999. & allowed w/ approval. 802-793-9133 Please call 802-3130BURLINGTON 5717 if interested. Avail. Seeking a female houseJan. 1, 2017. mate to share a home w/ a professional in her sm-allmetals060811.indd 7/20/15 1 HOUSING 5:02 PM EQUAL law. Our readers are hereby informed ALL AREAS: 60s who loves biking, OPPORTUNITY that all dwellings, advertised in this ROOMMATES.COM yoga and art. $475/ All real estate advertising in this newsnewspaper are available on an equal Lonely? Bored? Broke? mo. all incl. No pets. paper is subject to the Federal Fair opportunity basis. Any home seeker Find the perfect Furnished BR. Shared Housing Act of 1968 and similar Verwho feels her or she has encountered roommate to compleBA & kitchen. 863-5625 mont statutes which make it illegal to discrimination should contact: ment your personality & or homesharevermont. advertise any preference, limitations, lifestyle at roommates. org for application. or discrimination based on race, color, HUD Office of Fair Housing com! (AAN CAN) Interview, references, religion, sex, national origin, sexual 10 Causeway St., orientation, age, marital status, Boston, MA 02222-1092 background checks handicap, presence of minor children (617) 565-5309 required. EHO. bayberrycommons 3-BR NOW, HEATED 3-BR now, use as 2- or 3-BR. $1,450/ mo. Heated, you pay utils., prime area in Burlington, Vt. 802-3188916, 802-238-0004.

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CLASSIFIEDS KEY appt. appointment apt. apartment BA bathroom BR bedroom DR dining room DW dishwasher HDWD hardwood HW hot water LR living room NS no smoking OBO or best offer refs. references sec. dep. security deposit W/D washer & dryer

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BIZ OPPS AIRLINE CAREERS BEGIN HERE Get started by training as FAA-certified aviation technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance, 800-7251563. (AAN CAN) PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? Call us first. Living expenses, housing, medical & continued support afterward. Adoptive family of your choice. Call 24-7. 877-362-2401. (AAN CAN) PAID IN ADVANCE! Make $1,000 a week mailing brochures from home! No experience required. Helping home workers since 2001! Genuine opportunity. Start immed.! incomestation.net. (AAN CAN)

CLEANING GREEN CLEANING SERVICES Cleaning, sorting & organizing so you can relax & enjoy the holidays. We use only green cleaning products. References available. 802-730-4050.

SOMETHING SEW RIGHT Professional clothing alterations since 1986. Creative, quality work from formal wear to leather repairs. New location: 248 Elm St., 2nd floor, Montpelier. 229-2400, pmorse52@ live.com.

COUNSELING COUNSELING FOR ADULT/TEEN Donna E. Lemay, LICSW, relocated to area. I have been a therapist for 15 years. I offer counseling in anxiety, depression, grief/loss, PTSD & stress management. Accept most insurances including Medicaid & Medicare. 802-2748755 (Williston office).

EDUCATION SUCCEED IN COLLEGE & CAREER From high school to career, we help students: get better results, save more, earn more, and return more on their educational investment! 802-985-5581; website: cesuccess.org.

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802.355.7633

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BROWSE THIS WEEK’S OPEN HOUSES: sevendaysvt.com/open-houses NEED A GETAWAY?

SO BURLINGTON NEIGHBORHOOD

GEORGIA | 393 FERRAND ROAD #A | #4503828

Relax the summer away in this seasonal cottage retreat on direct lake front. Two bedroom camp has all you need to refresh and return to the sun and fun. Huge multi-leveled deck was made for entertainment and enjoying the amazing sunsets. $145,000

Julie Lamoreaux 846.9583 JulieLamoreaux.com

ENTERTAINMENT BINGO FUN! Chittenden Housing Corp sponsors 2 weekly bingo sessions at Broadacres Bingo in Malletts Bay, Colchester. Sessions are: Tue. & Sat., 6:15 p.m. for warm-ups, & regular games at 7 p.m. Regular games guaranteed to pay $150, Jackpot guaranteed to pay $400 (both increase as crowd does). Large variety of pull tabs — progressive up to $5,000. Call 802860-1510 for directions.

HEALTH/ WELLNESS

HOME/GARDEN ELECTRONICS HONEY-DO HOME MAINTENANCE All jobs lg. or small, home or office, 24-hr. service. A division of Sasso Construction. Call Scott today! Local, reliable, honest. All calls returned. 310-6926. RENT A PLAYER Need a hand with yard work, heavy lifting or getting those last cords of wood stacked before the snow flies? If your project is big or small, let BFA Fairfax High School Baseball Players help you, while you help them raise money to travel to Florida for Spring Training in April 2017. For only $15/hour, your mundane chores will be done and you will have helped offset the cost of this trip. Your tax deductible contribution will be greatly appreciated! Contact Gigi Chapman: 802-999-5489 or email gigi.chapman@ge.com to reserve a Bullet Baseball player today!

SHURE FP33 AUDIO FIELD MIXER ˛ e Shure FP33 is a 3-input, 2-output, portable stereo mixer that is designed for remote audio recording. $600. Bill Kinzie at 802-238-7028.

FIREWOOD FREE SUGAR WOOD W/ PURCHASE Vermonters get a half-cord of seasoned sugar wood free w/ purchase of a Sapling backyard evaporator during November! Details at vtevap.com, info@vtevap.com and 802-552-8499.

FURNITURE SANTI BAR STOOL, WALNUT & CREAM 18.5”Lx20”Wx3944.25”H. Seat height: 27.5-32.75”. Originally $109.95 each. 4 chairs avail. $50/chair or $175/all 4. Info: rick@ sevendaysvt.com.

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WANT TO BUY ANTIQUES Furniture, postcards, pottery, cameras, toys, medical tools, lab glass, photographs, slide rules, license plates & silver. Anything unusual or unique. Cash paid. Dave, 859-8966.

MUSIC music

INSTRUCTION

846.9575 LipVT.com

BASS, GUITAR, DRUMS, VOICE LESSONS & MORE! Learn bass, guitar, drums, voice, flute, sax, trumpet, production and beyond with some of Vermont’s best players and independent instructors in beautiful, spacious lesson studios at the Burlington Music Dojo on Pine St. All levels & styles are welcome, including absolute beginners! Gift certificates available. Come share in the music! burlingtonmusicdojo.com, info@ burlingtonmusicdojo. com, 540-0321. BEGINNER GUITAR LESSONS Great for kids. Plenty of experience in the area. Great refs. Find ad online & reply online. 646-600-8357. GUITAR INSTRUCTION Berklee graduate w/ 30 years’ teaching experience offers lessons in guitar, music theory, music technology, ear training. Individualized, step-by-step approach. All ages, styles, levels. Rick Belford, 864-7195, rickb@rickbelford.com. GUITAR LESSONS W/ GREGG All levels/ages. Acoustic, electric, classical. Patient, supportive, experienced, highly qualified instructor. Relax, have fun & allow your musical potential to unfold. Gregg Jordan, gregg@ gjmusic.com, 318-0889. GUITAR INSTRUCTION All styles/levels. Emphasis on developing strong technique,

thorough Untitled-26musicianship, 1 personal style. Paul Asbell (Unknown Blues Band, Kilimanjaro, UVM & Middlebury College faculty). 233-7731, pasbell@paulasbell. com.

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CREATIVE SPACE ARTIST STUDIOS AVAILABLE Artist studios/work spaces for rent. Very reasonable rates. Util. incl. Wi-Fi. Shelburne Pond Studios. Contact Katharine Stockman, kastockman@aol.com or text 802-999-4394. References required.

ACT 250 NOTICE MINOR APPLICATION #4C1106-2 10 V.S.A. §§ 6001 - 6093 On May 27, 2016, O’Brien Home Farm, LLC, 1855 Williston Road, South Burlington, VT 05403 and O’Brien Family Limited Liability Company, 1855 Williston Road, South Burlington, VT 05403 filed application #4C1106-2 for a project

generally described as the subdivision of two existing lots into eight lots. No construction was proposed in this application. ˛ e Project is located along Kennedy Drive between Kimball Avenue, Old Farm Road and VT Route 116 in South Burlington, Vermont. On November 9, 2016, the Applicants revised their application to include a request for review under Criterion 9(B) (Primary Agricultural Soils). ˛ ere is still no construction proposed. Due to the change in scope, we are re-noticing the Project for public review and comment. ˛ e District #4 Environmental Commission is reviewing this application under Act 250 Rule 51 — Minor Applications. Copies of the application and proposed permit are available for review at the South Burlington Town Office, Chittenden County Regional Planning Commission Office, and the office listed below. ˛ e application and a draft permit may also be viewed on the Natural Resources Board’s web site (www.nrb.state. vt.us/lup) by clicking on “Act 250 Database” and entering the project number “4C1106-2”. No hearing will be held and a permit may be issued unless, on or before December 1, 2016, a person notifies the Commission of an issue or issues requiring the presentation of evidence at a hearing or the Commission sets the matter for hearing on its own motion. Any hearing

request must be in writ-4:34 PM 6/6/16 ing to the address below, must state the criteria or subcriteria at issue, why a hearing is required and what additional evidence will be presented at the hearing. Any hearing request by an adjoining property owner or other interested person must include a petition for party status. Prior to submitting a request for a hearing, please contact the district coordinator at the telephone number listed below for more information. Prior to convening a hearing, the Commission must determine that substantive issues requiring a hearing have been raised. Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law will not be prepared unless the Commission holds a public hearing. If you feel that any of the District Commission members listed on the attached Certificate of Service under “For Your Information” may have a conflict of interest, or if there is any other reason a member should be disqualified from sitting on this case, please contact the district coordinator as soon as possible, no later than prior to the response date listed above. Should a hearing be held on this Project and you have a disability for which you are going to need accommodation, please notify us by December 1, 2016. Parties entitled to participate are the Municipality, the Municipal Planning Commission,

LEGALS »

CLASSIFIEDS C-3

ANDY’S MOUNTAIN MUSIC Affordable, accessible instruction in banjo, guitar, mandolin, and more. All ages/skill levels/interests welcome! Supportive, professional teacher offering references, results, convenience. Andy Greene, 802658-2462; guitboy75@ hotmail.com, andysmountainmusic.com.

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PSYCHIC COUNSELING Psychic counseling, channeling w/ Bernice Kelman, Underhill. 30+ years’ experience. Also energy healing, chakra balancing, Reiki, rebirthing, other lives, classes, more. 802-899-3542, kelman.b@juno.com.+

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SHAMANIC HEALING Shamanic Reiki healing. Crossing over the dead. Extractions. House and land clearing. Readings and divination. Power animal retrievals. Personal medicine bags. I come to you or Skype or phone. Call 518-260-9901.

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SOUTH BURLINGTON | 46 BUTLER DRIVE | #4516867

Well-maintained Butler Farms home on .48 acre lot with mature trees for privacy. Sunny kitchen with granite counters, family room with hardwood floor and fireplace Private master suite plus 3 guest bedrooms. Basement with access to garage. Back deck overlooking huge fenced yard. Price Reduced! $435,000

REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONALS: List your properties here and online for only $45/week. Submit your listings by Mondays at noon to homeworks@sevendaysvt.com or 802-865-1020, x37.


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BEAUTIFUL HISTORIC SCHOOLHOUSE

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The Old illage School in Wells River holds 2 apartments and 4 businesses. It’s a solid income property in great condition. Very motivated to sell! $180,000. OldVillageSchool.com

FSBO-Webb110916.indd 1

[CONTINUED] the Regional Planning Commission, affected state agencies, and adjoining property owners and other persons to the extent they have a particularized interest that may be affected by the proposed project under the 10 criteria. Non-party participants may also be allowed under 10 V.S.A. Section 6085(c)(5).

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Dated at Essex Junction, Vermont this 15th day of November, 2016. By: /s/Stephanie H. Monaghan Stephanie H. Monaghan District #4 Coordinator Natural Resources Board 111 West Street Essex Jct., VT 05452 802-879-5662 stephanie.monaghan@ vermont.gov BURLINGTON DEVELOPMENT REVIEW BOARD TUESDAY DECEMBER 6, 2016, 5:00 PM CONTOIS AUDITORIUM, CITY HALL, 149 CHURCH STREET, BURLINGTON, VT PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE 1. 16-1400LL; 80 Colchester Ave (I, Ward 1E) Francis von Turkovich Appeal of an administratively approved lot line adjustment for 80 Colchester Ave, 27 Fletcher Place, and 49 Fletcher Place. 2. 17-0363CA; 485 Colchester Ave (NMU, Ward 1E) Stephen and Sharon Litwhiler Appeal of a zoning permit for an as-built site improvements such as parking layout, retaining wall, dumpsters, and walkways. Amends zoning permit 93-313.

3. 17-0548CU; 85 Lakeview Terrace (RM, Ward 3C) Jovial King Conditional use review of a change of use from an accessory apartment to B&B use. Plans may be viewed in the Planning and Zoning Office, (City Hall, 149 Church Street, Burlington), between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Participation in the DRB proceeding is a prerequisite to the right to take any subsequent appeal. Please note that ANYTHING submitted to the Planning and Zoning office is considered public and cannot be kept confidential. ° is may not be the final order in which items will be heard. Please view final Agenda, at www.burlingtonvt.gov/ pz/drb/agendas or the office notice board, one week before the hearing for the order in which items will be heard. NOTICE OF LEGAL SALE View Date: 11/24/16 Sale Date: 11/25/16 Ariel Otero Unit #173 Easy Self Storage 46 Swift South Burlington, VT, 05403 802-863-8300 STATE OF VERMONT CALEDONIA UNIT, CIVIL DIVISION VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT DOCKET NO: 147-6-13 CACV CITIFINANCIAL, INC. v. GARY R. MCGINNIS AKA GARY MCGINNIS AND HEATHER M. MCGINNIS AKA HEATHER MCGINNIS OCCUPANTS OF 323 MAIN STREET, ST. JOHNSBURY, VT MORTGAGEE’S NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE OF REAL PROPERTY UNDER 12 V.S.A. sec 4952 et seq.

contained therein in 11/3/16 FSBP-Crane110916.indd 1:19the PM further1 aid of this deIn accordance with scription. Judgment Order and ˛ Decree of Foreclosure Terms˛of˛sale:˛Said entered March 25, 2016 premises will be sold in the above captioned and conveyed subject to action brought to foreall liens, encumbrances, close that certain mortunpaid taxes, tax titles, gage given by Gary R. McGinnis and Heather M. municipal liens and asMcGinnis to CitiFinancial, sessments, if any, which take precedence over Inc., dated July 7, 2006 the said mortgage above and recorded in Book described. 316 Page 426 of the land records of the Town of TEN THOUSAND St. Johnsbury, of which ($10,000.00) Dollars of mortgage the Plaintiff the purchase price must is the present holder, for be paid in cash, certified breach of the condicheck, bank treasurer’s tions of said mortgage or cashier’s check at the and for the purpose of foreclosing the same will time and place of the be sold at Public Auction sale by the purchaser. ° e balance of the at 323 Main Street, St. purchase price shall be Johnsbury, Vermont on paid in cash, certified November 29, 2016 at check, bank treasurer’s 2:45 pm all and singular or cashier’s check within the premises described thirty (30) days after the in said mortgage, date of sale. To wit: ° e mortgagor is ALL THAT CERTAIN PARentitled to redeem the CEL OF LAND IN TOWNSHIP OF ST. JOHNSBURY, premises at any time prior to the sale by payCALEDONIA COUNTY, ing the full amount due STATE OF VT, AS MORE under the mortgage, FULLY DESCRIBED IN including the costs and BOOK expenses of the sale. 254 PAGE 76 ID# 011148004, BEING Other terms to be anKNOWN AND DESIGnounced at the sale. NATED AS BEING ALL AND THE SAME DATED : October 21, 2016 LAND AND PREMISES AS By: /S/ William CONVEYED TO LEON W. Dziedzic, Esq. BRYER AND BETTY M. William Dziedzic, Esq. BRYER BY EXECUTOR’S Bendett and McHugh, PC DEED OF ALLAN H. 270 Farmington Ave., ROBINSON, EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE OF ELLEN Ste. 151 Farmington, CT 06032 B. ROBINSON, DATED SEPTEMBER 21, 1953 AND RECORDED IN BOOK STATE OF VERMONT 106 AT PAGE 31 OF THE ESSEX UNIT, CIVIL ST. DIVISION JOHNSBURY LAND VERMONT SUPERIOR RECORDS. COURT DOCKET NO: 39-10-14 BEING THE SAME EXCV PROPERTY CONVEYED BANK OF AMERICA, N.A. BY FEE SIMPLE DEED v. FROM LEON W. BRYER JAMES THERRIEN AND and BETTY M. BRYER TO CAROLYN THERRIEN GARY R. MCGINNIS and A/K/A CAROLYN MESHEATHER M. MCGINNIS SINA , DATED 05/19/2000 RECORDED ON 05/22/2000 OCCUPANTS OF 144 HALL STREAM ROAD, IN BOOK 254, PAGE 76 BEECHER FALLS, VT IN CALEDONIA COUNTY RECORDS, STATE OF VT. MORTGAGEE’S NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE Reference is hereby OF REAL PROPERTY made to the above UNDER 12 V.S.A. sec 4952 instruments and to the et seq. records and references

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In accordance with the WIFE DATED 08/16/2005, 2:02 PM Judgment Order and De- 11/7/16 AND RECORDED cree of Foreclosure en08/17/2005 IN BOOK 51, tered February 23, 2016 PAGE 512 OF THE ESSEX n the above captioned LAND RECORDS AND IN action brought to foreSAID DEED DESCRIBED close that certain mortAS FOLLOWS: gage given by James ° errien and Carolyn A CERTAIN PARCEL OF ° errien a/k/a Carolyn LAND, WITH THE BUILDMessina to Mortgage INGS AND IMPROVEElectronic Registration MENTS THEREON, Systems, Inc., as nomiKNOWN AS 144 HALL nee for Quicken Loans STREET ROAD, BEECHER Inc., dated October 31, FALLS VILLAGE IN THE 2008 and recorded in TOWN OF CANAAN, Book 56 Page 360 of COUNTY OF ESSEX AND the land records of the STATE OF VERMONT, Town of Canaan, of which DESCRIBED AS FOLmortgage the Plaintiff LOWS, VIZ: is the present holder, by virtue of an Assignment BEING ALL AND THE of Mortgage from (1) SAME LANDS AND Mortgage Electronic PREMISES, WITH THE Registration Systems, BUILDINGS AND IMInc., as nominee for PROVEMENTS THEREON, Quicken Loans Inc. to AS CONVEYED TO BAC Home Loans ServicCHARLES O. STEVENS, ing, LP f/k/a Countrywide II AND SHIRLEY T. Home Loans Servicing, STEVENS BY EXECULP dated November TOR’S DEED OF PHILIP 3, 2009 and recorded E. THERRIEN, EXECUTOR in Book 57 Page 450 OF THE ESTATE OF EDNA and an Assignment of M. THERRIEN, DATED Mortgage from (2) BAC FEBRUARY 14, 2000 Home Loans Servicing, AND RECORDED IN THE LP f/k/a Countrywide TOWN OF CANAAN LAND Home Loans Servicing, RECORDS IN BOOK 44, LP to Bank of America, PAGE 64, SAID LANDS N.A. dated April 2, 2012 AND PREMISES ARE and recorded in Book DESCRIBED THEREIN 60 Page 240 of the land AS FOLLOWS; “BEING records of the Town of ALL AND THE SAME Canaan for breach of LANDS AND PREMISES, the conditions of said TOGETHER WITH ALL mortgage and for the BUILDINGS AND IMpurpose of foreclosing PROVEMENTS LOCATED the same will be sold at THEREON, AS CONVEYED Public Auction at 144 TO EMILE THERRIEN Hall Stream Road, Village AND EDNA THERRIEN AS of Beecher Falls, Town JOINT TENANTS (EMILE of Canaan, Vermont on THERRIEN HAVING December 1, 2016 at PREDECEASED EDNA 11:30 am all and singular THERRIEN) BY THE the premises described WARRANTY DEED OF in said mortgage, EDNA GIROUX AND LEON F. GIROUX DATED APRIL To wit: 25, 1945 AND RECORDED TAX ID NUMBER(S): IN BOOK Q AT PAGE 25 U06005 OF THE CANAAN LAND RECORDS. LAND SITUATED IN THE CITY OF BEECHER FALLS COMMONLY KNOWN IN THE COUNTY OF ESAS: 144 HALL STREAM SEX IN THE STATE OF VT RD, BEECHER FALLS, VT 05902 BEING ALL AND THE SAME LAND AND PREMReference is hereby ISES AS CONVEYED TO made to the above JAMES THERRIEN AND instruments and to the CAROLYN MESSINA BY records and references WARRANTY DEED OF contained therein in CHARLES O. STEVENS, further aid of this deII AND SHIRLEY T. STEscription. VENS, HUSBAND AND ˛

Terms˛of˛sale:˛Said premises will be sold and conveyed subject to all liens, encumbrances, unpaid taxes, tax titles, municipal liens and assessments, if any, which take precedence over the said mortgage above described. TEN THOUSAND ($10,000.00) Dollars of the purchase price must be paid in cash, certified check, bank treasurer’s or cashier’s check at the time and place of the sale by the purchaser. ° e balance of the purchase price shall be paid in cash, certified check, bank treasurer’s or cashier’s check within thirty (30) days after the date of sale. ° e mortgagor is entitled to redeem the premises at any time prior to the sale by paying the full amount due under the mortgage, including the costs and expenses of the sale. Other terms to be announced at the sale. DATED : October 27, 2016 By: /S/ Rachel Jones, Esq. Rachel K. Jones, Esq. Bendett and McHugh, PC 270 Farmington Ave., Ste. 151 Farmington, CT 06032 STATE OF VERMONT FRANKLIN UNIT, CIVIL DIVISION VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT DOCKET NO: 129-4-16 FRCV HOMEBRIDGE FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC. v. MECHELLE PALMER A/K/A MECHELLE M. PALMER, MICHAEL PALMER A/K/A MICHAEL R. PALMER AND THIBAULT MEADOWS HOMEOWNER’S ASSICATION, INC. OCCUPANTS OF 3 ETHEL COURT, ST. ALBANS, VT AMENDED SUMMONS & ORDER FOR PUBLICATION THIS SUMMONS IS DIRECTED TO: Mechelle

Palmer a/k/a Mechelle M. Palmer 1. YOU ARE BEING SUED. ° e Plaintiff has started a lawsuit against you. A copy of the Plaintiff’s Complaint against you is on file and may be obtained at the office of the clerk of this court, Franklin Unit, Civil Division, Vermont Superior Court, 17 Church Street, St. Albans, Vermont. Do not throw this paper away. It is an official paper that affects your rights. 2. PLAINTIFF’S CLAIM. Plaintiff’s claim is a Complaint in Foreclosure which alleges that you have breached the terms of a Promissory Note and Mortgage Deed dated January 18, 2013. Plaintiff’s action may effect your interest in the property described in the Land Records of the Town of St. Albans at Volume 276, Page 162. ° e 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 Franklin, State of Vermont. 3. YOU MUST REPLY WITHIN 41 DAYS TO PROTECT YOUR RIGHTS. You must give or mail the Plaintiff a written response called an Answer within 41 days after the date on which this Summons was first published, which is November 9, 2016. You must send a copy of your answer to the Plaintiff or the Plaintiff’s attorney, VALERIE A. FINNEY, Esq. of Bendett and McHugh, PC, located at 270 Farmington Avenue, Ste. 151, Farmington, CT 06032. You must also give or mail your Answer to the Court located at 17 Church Street, St. Albans, Vermont 4. YOU MUST RESPOND TO EACH CLAIM. ° e Answer is your written response to the Plaintiff’s Complaint. In your Answer you must state whether you agree or disagree with each


SEVENDAYSVT.COM/CLASSIFIEDS paragraph of the Complaint. If you believe the Plaintiff should not be given everything asked for in the Complaint, you must say so in your Answer. 5. YOU WILL LOSE YOUR CASE IF YOU DO NOT GIVE YOUR WRITTEN ANSWER TO THE COURT. If you do not Answer within 41 days after the date on which this Summons was first published and file it with the Court, you will lose this case. You will not get to tell your side of the story, and the Court may decide against you and award the Plaintiff everything asked for in the complaint. YOU MUST 6. MAKE ANY CLAIMS AGAINST THE PLAINTIFF IN YOUR REPLY. Your Answer must state any related legal claims you have against the Plaintiff. Your claims against the Plaintiff are called Counterclaims. If you do not make your Counterclaims in writing in your answer you may not be able to bring them up at all. Even if you have insurance and the insurance company will defend you, you must still file any Counte claims you may have. LEGAL AS7. SISTANCE. You may wish

to get legal help from a lawyer. If you cannot afford a lawyer, you should ask the court clerk for information about places where you can get free legal help. Even if you cannot get legal help, you must still give the court a written Answer to protect your rights or you may lose the case.

M. Palmer, if an address is known.

ORDER

STATE OF VERMONT LAMOILLE UNIT, CIVIL DIVISION VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT DOCKET NO: 159-6-07 LECV BANK OF NEW YORK, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE CERTIFICATEHOLDERS CWALT, INC. ALTERNATIVE LOAN TRUST 2006OC6 MORTGAGE PASSTHROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-OC6 v. DONNA LYNN PELLEGRINI AND WALKER CONSTRUCTION, INC. OCCUPANTS OF 301 SLEEPY HOLLOW ROAD, JOHNSON, VT

The Affidavit duly fil in this action shows that service cannot be made with due diligence by any of the method provided in Rules 4(d)-(f), (k), or (l) of the Vermont Rules of Civil Procedure. Accordingly, it is ORDERED that service of the Summons set forth above shall be made upon the defendant, Mechelle Palmer a/k/a Mechelle M. Palmer, by publication as provided in Rule[s] [4(d)(l) and] 4(g) of those Rules. This order sha l be published once a week for 3 weeks beginning on November 9, 2016 in the Seven Days, a newspaper of the general circulation in Franklin County, and a copy of this summons and order as published shall be mailed to the defendant Mechelle Palmer a/k/a Mechelle

Dated at St. Albans, Vermont this 31st day of October, 2016. /s/ Michael J. Harris Presiding Judge Franklin Unit, Civil Division

MORTGAGEE’S NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE OF REAL PROPERTY UNDER 12 V.S.A. sec 4952 et seq. In accordance with the Judgment Order and Decree of Foreclosure entered January 16, 2008 in the above cap-

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tioned action brought to foreclose that certain mortgage given by Donna Lynn Pellegrini to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., dated April 27, 2006 and recorded in Book 111 Page 482 of the land records of the Town of Johnson, of which mortgage the Plaintiff is the present holder, by virtue of an Assignment of Mortgage from Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. to Bank of New York, as Trustee for the Certificateholders CWALT, Inc. Alternative Loan Trust 2006-OC6 Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-OC6 dated June 20, 2007 and recorded in Book 116 Page 387 of the land records of the Town of Johnson for breach of the conditions of said mortgage and for the purpose of foreclosing the same will be sold at Public Auction at 301 Sleepy Hollow Road, Johnson, Vermont on December 13, 2016 at 1:30 PM all and singular the premises described in said mortgage, To wit:

Being a part of the same land and premises conveyed to Marquis E. Houle by Warranty Deed of Ted Stepanek and Sharron Stepanek Mason, dated September 20, 1995 and recorded in Book 74, Pages 402-403 of the Johnson Land Records. Said land and premises are depicted on a certain survey map entitled “A Theodolite & E.D.M. Survey and Subdivision of Lands Belonging to Marquis S. Houle, Johnson, Vermont, Scale 1”=50’” prepared by Gove Land Surveyors, Inc. as follows: Lot 2 Being a parcel of land consisting of 3.28 acres of land, or less, and beginning at a point marked by an iron pin, which point marks the northeastern most corner of the property herein conveyed and the southeasternmost corner of Lot 1; Thence proceeding along the boundary line of Lot 1 and Lot N 38° 31’ 58” W a distance of 290.05 feet to an iron pin in the ground; Thence proceeding along the boundary line of Lot 12 and Lon N. 38° 31’ 58” W a distance of 304.312 feet to an iron pin in the ground; Thence proceeding along

Open 24/7/365. Post & browse ads at your convenience. the boundary line of Lot 1 and Lot N 38° 31’ 58” W a distance of 107 feet to an unmarked point in the center of the Lamoille River; Thence turning and proceeding along the centerline of Lamoille River in a general southwesterly direction a distance of 243 feet along the centerline of the Lamoille River to an unmarked point; Thence turning and proceeding S 390 02’ 55” E a distance of 114 feet along the boundary line of Lot 2 and Lot 3 to a point marked by an iron pin set in the ground; Thence turning and proceeding 8.39 02’ 55” E a distance of 240.43 feet along the boundary line of Lot 2 and Lot 3 to a point marked by an iron pin set in the ground; Thence turning and run ning S 39° 02’ 55” East a distance of 232.00 feet along the boundary line of Lots 2 and Lots 3 to a point marked by an iron pin set in the ground, which point marks the southeasternmost corner of the property herein conveyed and the northeasternmost corner of Lot 3; Thence turning and pro ceeding N 59° 25’ 54” E a distance of 141.82 feet to an iron pin found in the

ground on the northerly boundary of a 50’ right of way in favor of Edigio; Thence proceeding N 59° 24’ 15” W a distance of 82.10 feet to the point and place of beginning. Menaing and intending to mortgage Lot 2 of the same premises conveyed to the herein named mortgagor(s) by deed recorded with Johnson Town Office Land Records in Book 121, Page 96. Reference is hereby made to the above instruments and to the records and references contained therein in further aid of this description. Terms of sale: Said premises will be sold and conveyed subject to all liens, encumbrances, unpaid taxes, tax titles, municipal liens and assessments, if any, which take precedence over the said mortgage above described. TEN THOUSAND ($10,000.00) Dollars of the purchase price must be paid in cash, certified check, bank treasurer’s or cashier’s check at the time and place of the sale by the purchaser. The balance of the purchase price shall be

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paid in cash, certified check, bank treasurer’s or cashier’s check within thirty (30) days after the date of sale. The mo tgagor is entitled to redeem the premises at any time prior to the sale by paying the full amount due under the mortgage, including the costs and expenses of the sale. Other terms to be announced at the sale. DATED : November 8, 2016 By: /S/ Rachel K. Jones, Esq. Rachel K. Jones, Esq. Bendett and McHugh, PC 270 Farmington Ave., Ste. 151 Farmington, CT 06032 NOTICE: THE LAW FIRM OF BENDETT & MCHUGH, PC IS A DEBT COLLECTOR AND IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION WE OBTAIN WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. IF YOU HAVE PREVIOUSLY RECEIVED A DISCHARGE IN BANKRUPTCY WHICH DISCHARGED THIS DEBT, THIS CORRESPONDENCE IS NOT AND SHOULD NOT BE CONSTRUED TO BE AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT, BUT

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SEVENDAYSVT.COM 11.16.16-11.23.16 SEVEN DAYS CLASSIFIEDS C-5


[CONTINUED] ONLY ENFORCEMENT OF A LIEN AGAINST PROPERTY STATE OF VERMONT LAMOILLE UNIT, CIVIL DIVISION VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT DOCKET NO: 51-3-15 LECV BAYVIEW LOAN SERVICING, LLC v. AUDRA ALLEN, DANIEL BURGESS, CHESTNUT HILL MORTGAGE & REALTY, INC., VINCENT DERICO, BRICE SIMON, FISCHER SKIS US LLC, MIEKO COCHRAN, REBECCA LEBOVICH, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY-INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE AND VERMONT DEPARTMENT OF TAXES OCCUPANTS OF: 580 MOUNTAIN ROAD, UNITS 4-9, STOWE VT

C-6 CLASSIFIEDS

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11.16.16-11.23.16

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

MORTGAGEE’S NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE OF REAL PROPERTY UNDER 12 V.S.A. sec 4952 et seq. In accordance with the Judgment Order and Decree of Foreclosure entered January 28, 2016 in the above captioned action brought to foreclose that certain mortgage given by Audra Allen and Daniel Burgess to InterBay Funding, LLC, dated June 21, 2005 and recorded in Book 612 Page 151 of the land records of the Town of Stowe, of which mortgage the Plaintiff is the present holder, by virtue of an Assignment of Mortgage from InterBay Funding, LLC to Bayview Loan Servicing, LLC dated June 21, 2006 and recorded in Book 680 Page 95 of the land records of the Town of Stowe, for breach of the conditions of said mortgage and for the purpose of foreclosing the same will be sold at Public Auction at 580 Mountain Road, Units 4-9, Stowe, Vermont on November 30, 2016 at 10:00 a.m. all and singular the premises described in said mortgage, To wit: Being all and the same lands and premises conveyed to Audra Allen and Daniel Burgess by

Warranty Deed of Bruce D. Bell and Leslie Gauff, dated June 20, 2005 and recorded at Book _____, Page ______ of the Stowe Land Records; the conveyed premises are more particularly described as follows: Being Tibbets House Condominium Apartments 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9, together with the percentages of ownership interest in the Tibbets House Condominiums complex appurtenant to said condominium units, as established by the Declaration of Tibbets House Condominium dated December 30, 1983 and recorded in Book 110 at Pages 561570 of the Stowe Land Records (all recording references hereinafter are to the Stowe Land Records), as amended by Amendment dated July 13, 1987 and recorded in Book 144 at Pages 24-47, and as further amended by Correction of the Addendum to Exhibit A and B to the Amendment to the Declaration of Tibbits House Condominium Certificate dated December 28, 1989 and filed in the Condominium Files of the Stowe Land Records, together with the Certification Re: Betty L. Biedermann d/b/a Tibbits House Association with Bruce D. Bell and Leslie Gauff dated October 11, 1994 and recorded in Book 288 at Pages 143-144, and as further amended by Amended and Restated Declaration of Tibbets House Condominiums dated December 30, 1999 and recorded in Book 395 at Pages 124-153, including the Exhibits appended thereto and the Floor Plans, Site Plan, and other documents referred to therein. ° e Premises consist of all and the same land and premises conveyed to Bruce D. Bell andLeslie Gauff by the following six Warranty Deeds: APARTMENT 4. Warranty Deed from David M. Bisbee and Tamara Bisbee dated May 7, 1999 and recorded in Book 378 at Pages 238-239. APARTMENT 5. Warranty Deed from David M. Bisbee and Tamara Bisbee dated May 7, 1999 and recorded in Book 378 at Pages 240-241. APARTMENT 6. Warranty Deed from Betty L. Biedermann, d/b/a Tibbets House Associates dated April 26, 1994 and recorded in Book 279 at Pages 333-336.

APARTMENT 7. Warranty Deed from Betty L. Biedermann, d/b/a Tibbets House Associates dated April 26, 1994 and recorded in Book 279 at Pages 337-340. APARTMENT 8. Warranty Deed from Betty L. Biedermann, d/b/a Tibbets House Associates dated April 26, 1994 and recorded in Book 279 at Pages 341-343. APARTMENT 9. Warranty Deed from Betty L. Biedermann, d/b/a Tibbets House Associates dated April 26, 1994 and recorded in Book 279 at Pages 344-347. Reference is hereby made to the above instruments and to the records and references contained therein in further aid of this description. Terms˛of˛sale:˛Said premises will be sold and conveyed subject to all liens, encumbrances, unpaid taxes, tax titles, municipal liens and assessments, if any, which take precedence over the said mortgage above described. TEN THOUSAND ($10,000.00) Dollars of the purchase price must be paid in cash, certified check, bank treasurer’s or cashier’s check at the time and place of the sale by the purchaser. ° e balance of the purchase price shall be paid in cash, certified check, bank treasurer’s or cashier’s check within thirty (30) days after the date of sale. ° e mortgagor is entitled to redeem the premises at any time prior to the sale by paying the full amount due under the mortgage, including the costs and expenses of the sale. Other terms to be announced at the sale. DATED : October 21, 2016 By: /S/ William Dziedzic, Esq. William Dziedzic, Esq. Bendett and McHugh, PC 270 Farmington Ave., Ste. 151 Farmington, CT 06032 STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT CHITTENDEN UNIT PROBATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. 1188-8-16 In re the ESTATE OF BARRY J. GADHUE NOTICE TO CREDITORS To ° e Creditors Of: Barry J. Gadhue late of Shelburne, Vermont

I have been appointed to administer this estate. All creditors having claims against the decedent or the estate must present their claims in writing within four (4) months of the date of the first publication of this notice. ° e claim must be presented to me at the address listed below with a copy sent to the Court. ° e claim will be barred forever if it is not presented within the four (4) month period. Dated: November 3, 2016 Signed: /s/ ° omas A. Little Signature of Fiduciary Print name: ° omas A. Little, Esq. Address: c/o Little & Cicchetti, P.C. P.O. Box 907 Burlington, VT 054020907 Telephone: 802-8626511 Email: tlittle@ lclawvt.com Name of Publication: Seven Days Publication Date: November 16, 2016 Address of Court: Chittenden Unit Probate Court PO Box 511 Burlington, VT 054020511 STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT CHITTENDEN UNIT PROBATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. 1354-916 CNPR IN RE THE ESTATE OF IRIS M. MUGGENTHALER LATE OF SHELBURNE, VERMONT NOTICE TO CREDITORS To the creditors of the Estate of Iris M. Muggenthaler, late of Shelburne, Vermont. Malcolm Frampton has been appointed as Executor to administer this estate. All creditors having claims against the decedent or the estate must present their claims in writing within four (4) months of the first publication of this notice. ° e claim must be presented to me at the address listed below with a copy sent to the Court. ° e claim may be forever barred if it is not presented as described above within the four (4) month period. Date: 11/14/2016 /s/ John H. Draper John H. Draper, IV, Esq.

Attorney for Malcolm Frampton, Executor of the Estate of Iris M. Muggenthaler Paul Frank + Collins P.C. One Church Street, P.O. Box 1307 Burlington, VT 054021307 (802) 658-2311 Name of Publication: Seven Days P.O. Box 1164 Burlington, VT 054021164 Publication Date: 11/16/16 Address of Probate Court: Vermont Superior Court Probate Division, Chittenden Unit 175 Main Street, P.O. Box 511 Burlington, VT 05402

support groups VISIT SEVENDAYSVT. COM TO VIEW A FULL LIST OF SUPPORT GROUPS AHOY BREAST CANCER SURVIVORS Join our floating 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 & its health-giving, life-affirming qualities. Any age. No athletic experience needed. Call Penni or Linda at 999-5478, info@ dragonheartvermont. org, dragonheartvermont.org. AL-ANON For families & friends of alcoholics. For meeting info, go to˛vermontalanonalateen.org˛or˛call 866-972-5266. ALATEEN GROUP New Alateen group in Burlington on Sundays from 5-6 p.m. at the UU building at the top of Church St. For more information please call Carol, 324-4457. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS Daily meetings in various locations. Free. Info, 864-1212. Want to overcome a drinking problem? Take the first step of 12 & join a group in your area.

ALL CANCER SURVIVORS Join the wellness classes at Survivorship NOW, created by cancer survivors for survivors of all cancers. Benefi ts from lively programs designed to engage and empower cancer survivors in our community. Email: info@ survivorshipnowvt.org. Call Chantal, 777-1126, survivorshipnowvt.org. ALTERNATIVES TO SUICIDE Alternatives to Suicide is a safe space where the subject of suicide can be discussed freely, without judgment or stigma. ° e group is facilitated by individuals who have themselves experienced suicidal thoughts/ feelings. Fletcher Free Library, 235 College St., Burlington. Group meets weekly on ° ursdays, 1-2:30 p.m. Info: makenzy@ pathwaysvermont.org, 888-492-8218 x300. ALZHEIMER’S ASSOCIATION SUPPORT GROUP ° is caregivers support group meets on the 3rd Wed. of every mo. from 5-6:30 p.m. at the Alzheimer’s Association Main Office, 300 Cornerstone Dr., Suite 128, Williston. Support groups meet to provide assistance and information on Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias. ° ey emphasize shared experiences, emotional support, and coping techniques in care for a person living with Alzheimer’s or a related dementia. Meetings are free and open to the public. Families, caregivers, and friends may attend. Please call in advance to confirm date and time. For questions or additional support group listings, call 800-272-3900. ALZHEIMER’S ASSOCIATION TELEPHONE SUPPORT GROUP 1st Monday monthly, 3-4:30 p.m. Pre-registration is required (to receive dial-in codes for toll-free call). Please dial the Alzheimer’s Association’s 24/7 Helpline 800-272-3900 for more information. ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE & DEMENTIA SUPPORT GROUP Held the last Tue. of every mo., 5:30-7:30 p.m., at Birchwood Terr., Burlington. Info, Kim, 863-6384.

ARE YOU HAVING PROBLEMS W/ DEBT? Do you spend more than you earn? Get help at Debtor’s Anonymous plus Business Debtor’s Anonymous. Sat., 10-11:30 a.m., Methodist Church at Buell & S. Winooski, Burlington. Contact Brenda, 338-1170. BABY BUMPS SUPPORT GROUP FOR MOTHERS AND PREGNANT WOMEN Pregnancy can be a wonderful time of your life. But, it can also be a time of stress that is often compounded by hormonal swings. If you are a pregnant woman, or have recently given birth and feel you need some help with managing emotional bumps in the road that can come with motherhood, please come to this free support group lead by an experienced pediatric Registered Nurse. Held on the 2nd and 4th Tuesdays of the month, 5:30-6:30 p.m. at the Birthing Center, Northwestern Medical Center, St. Albans. Info: Rhonda Desrochers, Franklin County Home Health Agency, 527-7531. BEREAVEMENT/GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP Meets every other Mon. night, 6-7:30 p.m., & every other Wed., 10-11:30 a.m., in the Conference Center at Central Vermont Home Health & Hospice in Berlin. ° e group is open to anyone who has experienced the death of a loved one. ° ere is no fee. Info, Ginny Fry or Jean Semprebon, 223-1878. BRAIN INJURY SUPPORT GROUP IN ST. JOHNSBURY Monthly meetings will be held on the 3rd Wed. of every mo., 1-2:30 p.m., at the Grace United Methodist Church, 36 Central St., St. Johnsbury. ° e support group will offer valuable resources & info about brain injury. It will be a place to share experiences in a safe, secure & confidential environment. Info, Tom Younkman, tyounkman@vcil.org, 800-639-1522. BRAIN INJURY ASSOCIATION OF VERMONT Montpelier daytime support group meets the 3rd˛° u. of the mo. at the Unitarian Church ramp entrance, 1:30-2:30 p.m. St. Johnsbury support group meets the 3rd Wed. montly at the Grace United

Methodist Church, 36 Central St., 1:00-2:30 p.m.˛ Colchester˛ Evening support group meets the 1st Wed. monthly at the Fanny Allen Hospital in the Board Room Conference Room, 5:30-7:30 p.m. Brattleboro meets at Brooks Memorial Library on the 1st ° u. monthly from 1:15-3:15 p.m. and the 3rd Mon. montly from 4:15-6:15 p.m. White River Jct. meets the 2nd Fri. montly at Bugbee Sr. Ctr. from 3-4:30 p.m. Call our helpline at 877-856-1772. BURLINGTON AREA PARKINSON’S DISEASE OUTREACH GROUP People with Parkinson’s disease & their caregivers gather together to gain support & learn about living with Parkinson’s disease. Group meets 2nd Wed. of every mo., 1-2 p.m., continuing through Nov. 18, 2015. Shelburne Bay Senior Living Community, 185 Pine Haven Shores Rd., Shelburne. Info: 888-763-3366, parkinsoninfo@uvmhealth. org, parkinsonsvt.org. CELEBRATE RECOVERY Overcome any hurt, habit or hangup in your life! ° is confidential 12-Step recovery program puts faith in Jesus Christ at the heart of healing. We offer multiple support groups for both men & women, such as chemical dependency, codependency, sexual addiction & pornography, food issues, & overcoming abuse. All 18+ are welcome; sorry, no childcare. Doors open at 6:30 p.m.; we begin at 7 p.m. Essex Alliance Church, 37 Old Stage Rd., Essex. Info: recovery@essexalliance.org, 878-8213. CELEBRATE RECOVERY Celebrate Recovery meetings are for anyone with struggles with hurt, habits and hang ups, which includes everyone in some way.˛ We welcome everyone at Cornerstone Church in Milton which meets every Friday night at 7-9 p.m. We’d love to have you join us and discover how your life can start to change. Info: 893-0530, Julie@ mccartycreations.com. CELIAC & GLUTENFREE GROUP Every 2nd Wed., 4:30-6 p.m. at Tulsi Tea Room, 34 Elm St., Montpelier. Free & open to the public! To learn more, contact Lisa at 598-9206 or lisamase@ gmail.com.


SEVENDAYSVT.COM/CLASSIFIEDS CODEPENDENTS ANONYMOUS CoDA is a 12-step fellowship for people whose common purpose is to develop healthy & fulfilling relationships. By actively working the program of Codependents Anonymous, we can realize a new joy, acceptance & serenity in our lives. Call for time and location. Tom, 238-3587, coda.org.

DECLUTTERERS’ SUPPORT GROUP Are you ready to make improvements but fi d it overwhelming? Maybe two or three of us can get together to help each other simplify. 989-3234, 425-3612. DISCOVER THE POWER OF CHOICE! SMART Recovery welcomes anyone, including family and friends, affected by any kind of substance or activity addiction. It is a science-based program that encourages abstinence. Specially trained volunteer facilitators provide leadership. Sundays at 5 p.m. at the 1st Unitarian Universalist Society, 152 Pearl St., Burlington. Volunteer facilitator: Bert, 399-8754. You can learn more at smartrecovery. org.

COMING OFF PSYCHIATRIC MEDICATION MUTUAL SUPPORT GROUP Through sharing experiences and resources, this group will provide support to individuals interested in coming off psychiatric medications, those in the process of psychiatric medication withdrawal or anyone looking for a space to explore their choices around psychiatric DIVORCED OR medication use. The SEPARATED? group is also open to Come join this 13-week those supporting an class sponsored by individual in psychiatric Essex Alliance Church, medication withdrawal. starting Sept. 25, 5:305:15-6:15 p.m. every 7:30 p.m. at Bluewater other Monday (beginCenter Conference ning 1/25/2016), Room, 145 Pine Haven Pathways Vermont, Shores Rd., Shelburne. 125 College St., 2nd It is a support group floor, Burlington. for men and women, Contact: Cameron consisting of video Mack cameron@ seminars and discuspathwaysvermont.org sion led by people who or 888 492 8218enclosed x 404. understand what you Using the math operations

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are experiencing. Cost: $25. To register and for more info contact Sandy, 989-4081. DOMESTIC & SEXUAL VIOLENCE WomenSafe offers free, confidential support groups in Middlebury for women who have experienced domestic or sexual violence. Art For Healing. Six-week support group for people who have experienced domestic or sexual violence. Childcare provided. Please call our hotline, 388-4205, or email am@womensafe.net for more information. DOMESTIC VIOLENCE SUPPORT Steps to End Domestic Violence offers a weekly drop-in support group for female identified survivors of intimate partner violence, including individuals who are experiencing or have been affected by domestic violence. The support group offers a safe, confidential place for survivors to connect with others, to heal, and to recover. In support group, participants talk through their experiences and hear stories from others who have experienced abuse in their relationships. Support group is also a resource for those who as guide, fillnext areaunsure of their

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step, even if it involves remaining in their current relationship. Tuesdays, 6:30-8 p.m. Childcare is provided. Info: 658-1996.

G.Y.S.T. (GET YOUR STUFF TOGETHER) GYST creates a safe & empowering community for young men & youth in transition to come together with one commonality: learning to live life on life’s terms. Every Tue. & Thu., 4 p.m. G.Y.S.T. PYNK (for young women) meets weekly on Wed., 4 p.m. Location: North Central Vermont Recovery Center, 275 Brooklyn St., Morrisville. Info: Lisa, 851-8120.

FCA FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP Families coping with addiction (FCA) is an open community peer support group for adults 18 & over struggling with the drug or alcohol addiction of a loved one. FCA is not 12-step based but provides a forum Complete the following

Sudoku

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No. 454

SUDOKU

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Difficulty: Medium

BY JOSH REYNOLDS

DIFFICULTY THIS WEEK: HH

Fill the grid using the numbers 1-6, only once in each row and column. The numbers in each heavily outlined “cage” must combine to produce the target number in the top corner, using the mathematical operation indicated. A onebox cage should be fi led in with the target number in the top corner. A number can be repeated within a cage as long as it is not the same row or column.

Place a number in the empty boxes in such a way that each row acrosss, each column down and each 9-box square contains all of the numbers one to nine. The same numbers cannot be repeated in a row or column.

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INTERSTITIAL CYSTITIS SUPPORT GROUP Interstitial cystitis (IC) is recurring pelvic pain, pressure or discomfort in the bladder & pelvic region & urinary frequency/urgency. This is often misdiagnosed & mistreated as a chronic bladder infection. If you have been diagnosed or have these symptoms, you are not alone. We are building a Vermontbased support group & welcome you to email bladderpainvt@gmail. com or call 899-4151 for more information. KINDRED CONNECTIONS PROGRAM OFFERED FOR CHITTENDEN COUNTY CANCER SURVIVORS The Kindred Connections program provides peer support for all those touched by cancer. Cancer patients as well as caregivers are provided with a mentor who has been through the cancer experience & knows what it’s like to go through it. In addition to sensitive listening, Kindred Connections provides practical help such as rides to doctors’ offices & meal deliveries. The program has people who have experienced a wide variety of cancers. For further info, please contact sherry. rhynard@gmail.com. LGBTQ SURVIVORS OF VIOLENCE SafeSpace offers peer-led support groups for survivors of relationship, dating, emotional &/or hate violence. These groups give survivors a safe & supportive environment to tell their stories, share information, & offer & receive support. Support groups also provide survivors an opportunity to gain information on how to better cope with feelings & experiences that surface because of the trauma they have experienced. Please call SafeSpace 863-0003 if you are interested in joining. MALE SURVIVOR OF VIOLENCE GROUP A monthly, closed group for male identified survivors of violence including relationship,

sexual assault, and discrimination. Open to all sexual orientations. Contact 863-0003 for more information or safespace@pridecentervt.org. MARIJUANA ANONYMOUS Do you have a problem with marijuana? MA is a free 12-step program where addicts help other addicts to get & stay clean. Ongoing Tue. at 6:30 p.m. and Sat. at 2 p.m. at Turning Point Center, 191 Bank St., suite 200, Burlington. 861-3150. THE MEMORY CAFÉ The Memory Café is where people with memory loss disorders and their care partners can come together to connect and support one another. Second Saturday of each month, 10-11:30 a.m. Montpelier Senior Activity Center, 58 Barre St., Montpelier. Info: 223-2518. MYELOMA SUPPORT GROUP Area Myeloma Survivors, Families and Caregivers have come together to form a Multiple Myeloma Support Group. We provide emotional support, resources about treatment options, coping strategies and a support network by participating in the group experience with people that have been though similar situations. Third Tuesday of the month, 5-6 p.m. at the New Hope Lodge on East Avenue in Burlington. Info: Kay Cromie, 655-9136, kgcromey@aol.com. NAMI CONNECTION PEER SUPPORT GROUP MEETINGS Bennington, every Tue., 1-2:30 p.m., CRT Center, United Counseling Service, 316 Dewey St.; Burlington, every Thu., 3-4:30 p.m., St. Paul’s Cathedral, 2 Cherry St. (enter from parking lot); Montpelier, every Fri., 2-3:30 p.m., Another Way, 125 Barre St.; Newport, first Wed. of the month, 6-7:30 p.m., St. Mark’s Church, 44 2nd St.; Rutland, every Sun., 4:30-6 p.m., Rutland Mental Health Wellness Center, 78 S. Main St.; St. Johnsbury, every Thu., 6:30-8 p.m., Unitarian Universalist Church, 47 Cherry St. If you have questions about a group in your area, please contact the National Alliance on Mental Illness of Vermont, program@

SUPPORT GROUPS »

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HELLENBACH CANCER SUPPORT Call to verify meeting place. Info, 388-6107. People living with cancer & their caretakers convene for support.

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SEVEN DAYS

5 Difficulty - Hard

HEARTBEAT VERMONT Have you lost a friend, colleague or loved one by suicide? Some who call have experienced a recent loss and some are still struggling w/ a loss from long ago. Call us at 446-3577 to meet with our clinician, Jonathan Gilmore, at Maple Leaf Clinic, 167

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HEARING VOICES GROUP This Hearing Voices Group seeks to find understanding of voice hearing experiences as real lived experiences which may happen to anyone at anytime. We choose to share experiences, support, and empathy. We validate anyone’s experience and stories about their experience as their own, as being an honest and accurate representation of their experience, and as being acceptable exactly as they are. Weekly on Tuesday, 2-3 p.m. The Wellness Coop, 279 North Winooski Ave., Burlington. Info: 802-777-8602, abby@ pathwaysvermont.org.

North Main St. All are welcome.

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GRIEF & RECOVERY SUPPORT GROUP 1st & 3rd Wed. of every mo., 7-8 p.m., Franklin County Home Health Agency (FCHHA), 3 Home Health Cir., St. Albans. 527-7531.

puzzle by using the numbers 1-9 only once in each row, column and 3 x 3 box.

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G.R.A.S.P. (GRIEF RECOVERY AFTER A SUBSTANCE PASSING) Are you a family member who has lost a loved one to addiction? Find support, peer-led support group. Meets once a month on Mondays in Burlington. Please call for date and location. RSVP graspvt@gmail.com or call 310-3301.

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for those living this experience to develop personal coping skills & draw strength from one another. Weekly on Wed., 5:30-6:30 p.m. Turning Point Center, corner of Bank St., Burlington. (Across from parking garage, above bookstore). thdaub1@gmail.com.

FAMILY AND FRIENDS OF THOSE EXPERIENCING MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS This support group is a dedicated meeting for family, friends and community members who are supporting a loved one through a mental health crisis. Mental health crisis might include extreme states, psychosis, depression, anxiety and other types of distress. The group is a confidential space where family and friends can discuss shared experiences and receive support in an environment free of judgment and stigma with a trained facilitator. Weekly on Wednesdays, 7-8:30 p.m. Downtown Burlington. Info: Jess Horner, LICSW, 866-218-8586.

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Open 24/7/365.

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SEVENDAYSVT.COM

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SEVENDAYSVT.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

Post & browse ads at your convenience. L. Guyette RN, MS, ACNS-BC, 274-4990, vmary@aol.com.

19, or email our victim advocate at advocate@ sover.net.

QUEEN CITY MEMORY CAFÉ ˜ e Queen City Memory Café offers a social time & place for people with memory impairment & their fiends & family to laugh, learn & share concerns & celebrate feeling understood & connected. Enjoy coffee, tea & baked goods with entertainment & conversation. QCMC meets the 3rd Sat. of each mo., 10 a.m.-12 p.m. ˜ ayer Building, 1197 North Ave., Burlington. 316-3839.

STUTTERING SUPPORT GROUPS If you’re a person who stutters, you are not alone! Adults, teens & school-age kids who stutter & their families are welcome to join one of our three free National Stuttering Association (NSA) stuttering support groups at UVM. Adults: 5:30-6:30, 1st & 3rd Tue. monthly; teens (ages 13-17): 5:30-6:30, 1st ˜ u. monthly; school-age children (ages 8-12) & parents (meeting separately): 4:15-5:15, 2nd ˜ u. monthly. Pomeroy Hall (489 Main St., UVM campus. Info: burlingtonstutters.org, burlingtonstutters@ gmail.com, 656-0250. Go Team Stuttering!

QUEER CARE GROUP ˜ is support group is for adult family members and caregivers of queer, and/or questioning youth. It is held on the 2nd Monday of each month from 6:30-8 p.m. at Outright Vermont, 241 North Winooski Ave. ˜ is group is for adults only. For more information, email info@outrightvt. org. QUIT TOBACCO GROUPS Are you ready to be tobacco free?˝ Join our FREE fi ve-week group classes facilitated by our Tobacco Treatment Specialists.˝ We meet in a friendly, relaxed atmosphere.˝ You may qualify for a FREE 8-week supply of nicotine replacement therapy. Contact us at (802)-847-7333 or QuitTobaccoClass@ UVMHealth.org.

SEX & LOVE ADDICTS ANONYMOUS 12-step recovery group. Do you have a problem w/ sex or relationships? We can help. Ralph, 658-2657. Visit slaafws. org˝or saa-recovery.org for meetings near you. SEXUAL VIOLENCE SUPPORT HOPE Works offers free support groups to women, men & teens who are survivors of sexual violence. Groups are available for survivors at any stage of the healing process. Intake for all support groups is ongoing. If you are interested in learning more or would like to schedule an intake to become a group member, please call our office at 864-0555, ext.

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Using the enclosed math operations as a guide, fill the grid using the numbers 1 - 6 only once in each row and column. No. 454

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SEVENDAYSVT.COM

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SCLERODERMA FOUNDATION NEW ENGLAND Support group meeting held 4th Tue. of the mo., 6:30-8:30 p.m. Williston Police Station. Info, Blythe Leonard, 878-0732.

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PROSTATE CANCER SUPPORT GROUP Held every 2nd Tue. of the mo., 6-8 p.m. at the Hope Lodge, 237 East Ave., Burlington. Newly diagnosed? Prostate cancer reoccurrence? General discussion and sharing among survivors and those beginning or rejoining the battle. Info, Mary

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OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS Do you promise you’ll only have one more but then you eat the whole bag? Have you tried every diet possible and nothing works? ˜ ere is hope. Come to an Overeaters Anonymous meeting and find out about a 12 step program of recovery. ˜ ere is a solution! Turning Point Center, 191 Bank Street, Suite 200, Burlington. Weekly on ˜ ursdays, 7 p.m. Info:

PEER ACCESS LINE Isolated? Irritable? Anxious? Lonely? Excited? Bored? Confused? Withdrawn? Sad? Call us! Don’t hesitate for a moment. We understand! It is our choice to be here for you to listen. Your feelings do matter. 321-2190. ˜ u., Fri., Sat. evenings, 6-9 p.m.

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NAR-AON BURLINGTON GROUP Group meets every 2nd and 4th Monday of the month at 7 p.m. at the Turning Point Center (small room), 191 Bank St., Burlington. ˜ e only requirement for membership is that there be a problem of addiction in a relative or friend. Info: Amanda H. 338-8106.

PARKINSON’S DISEASE OUTREACH GROUP ˜ is group meets on the second Tuesday, 10-11:30 a.m. of the month at Pillsbury Homestead Senior Community Residence at 3 Harborview Rd., St. Albans in the conference room next to the library on the first floor. Wheelchair accessible. Info: patricia_rugg18@ comcast.net.

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OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS 12-step fellowship for people who identify as overeaters, compulsive eaters, food addicts, anorexics, bulimics, etc. Tue., 7 p.m., St. James Episcopal Church, 4 St. James Place, Essex Jct. All are welcome; meeting is open. Info: Felicia, 777-7718.

OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS (OA) Meetings in Barre Tue. 5:30-6:30 p.m. and Sat. 8:30-9:30 a.m., at the Episcopal Church of the Good Shepherd, 39 Washington St. Info, Valerie 279-0385.˝Meetings in Burlington ˜ urs. 7:30-8:30 a.m., at the First United Church, 21 Buell St. Info, Geraldine, 730-4273. Meetings in Johnson occur every Sun., 5:30-6:30 p.m., at the Johnson Municipal Building, Rte. 15 (just west of the bridge). Info, Debbie Y., 888-5958. Meetings in Montpelier occur every Mon., 5:30-6:30 p.m. at Bethany Church, 115 Main St. Info, Joan, 2233079. Steps to Food Freedom Meetings in Morrisville occur every Sat., 10-11 a.m., at the First Congregational Church, 85 Upper Main St. Contacts: Anne, 888-2356. Big Book Meetings in Morrisville occur every Tue., 6 p.m. at the North Central Recovery Center (NCVRC), 275 Brooklyn

OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS 12-step. Sat., 9-10 a.m. Turning Point Center, 182 Lake St., St. Albans. Is what you’re eating, eating you? We can help. Call Valerie, 825-5481.

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NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS is a group of recovering addicts who live w/ out the use of drugs. It costs nothing to join. ˜ e only requirement for membership is a desire to stop using. Info, 862-4516 or cvana.org. Held in Burlington, Barre and St. Johnsbury.

OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS Do you worry about the way you eat? Overeaters Anonymous may have the answer for you. No weigh-ins, dues or fees. Mon., 5:30-6:30 p.m. Temple Sinai, 500 Swift St., S. Burlington. Info: 863-2655.

St. Info: Debbie, 888-5958.

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NAMI FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP Brattleboro, 1st Wed. of every mo., 6:30 p.m., 1st Congregational Church, 880 Western Ave., West Brattleboro; Burlington, 3rd Wed. of every mo., 6 p.m., Community Health Center, Riverside Ave., Mansfield Conference Room; Burlington, 2nd & 4th Tue. of every mo., 7 p.m., HowardCenter, corner of Pine & Flynn Ave.; Berlin, 4th Mon. of every mo., 7 p.m. Central Vermont Medical Center, Room 3; Georgia, 1st Tue. of every mo., 6 p.m., Georgia Public Library, 1697 Ethan Allen Highway (Exit 18, I-89); Manchester, 4th Wed. of every mo., 6:30 p.m., Equinox Village, 2nd floor; Rutland, 3rd Mon. of every mo., 6 p.m., Rutland Regional Medical Center, Leahy Conference Ctr., room D; Springfield, 3rd Wed. of every mo., 6:30 p.m.,

Elise, 302-528-6672. OA Big|Book Solution Group of Burlington.

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namivt.org or 800639-6480. Connection groups are peer recovery support group programs for adults living with mental health challenges.

NORTHWEST VERMONT CANCER PRAYER & SUPPORT NETWORK A meeting of cancer patients, survivors & family members intended to comfort & support those who are currently suffering from the disease. 2nd ˜ u. of every mo., 6-7:30 p.m., St. Paul’s United Methodist Church, 11 Church St., St. Albans. Info: stpaulum@myfairpoint.net. 2nd Wed. of every mo., 6-7:30 p.m. Winooski United Methodist Church, 24 W. Allen St., Winooski. Info: hovermann4@comcast. net.

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HCRS (café on right far side), 390 River St.; St. Johnsbury, 4th Wed. of every mo., 5:30 p.m., Northeastern Vermont Regional Hospital Library, 1315 Hospital Dr.; White River Junction, last Mon. of every mo., 5:45 p.m., VA Medical Center, William A. Yasinski Buidling. If you have questions about a group in your area, please contact the National Alliance on Mental Illness of Vermont, info@namivt. org or 800-639-6480. Family Support Group meetings are for family & friends of individuals living mental illness.

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SUICIDE SURVIVORS SUPPORT GROUP For those who have lost a friend or loved one through suicide. Maple Leaf Clinic, 167 N. Main St., Wallingford, 446-3577. 6:30-8 p.m. the 3rd Tue. of ea. mo. SUICIDE HOTLINES IN VT Brattleboro, 257-7989; Montpelier (Washington County Mental Health Emergency Services), 229-0591; Randolph (Clara Martin Center Emergency Service), 800-639-6360. SUPPORT GROUP FOR FAMILY, FRIENDS AND ALLIES OF TRANSGENDER ADULTS We are the parents of an adult transgender woman. While we celebrate the emergence of her authentic self, we find we have many questions to explore with others on this path with their loved ones. We meet the 4th ˜ ursdays of the month,˝5 p.m.˝Pride Center of VT. Please join us!˝margie@pridecentervt.org,˝802-860-7812 SUPPORT GROUP FOR WOMEN who have experienced intimate partner abuse, facilitated by Circle (Washington Co. only). Please call 877-5439498 for more info. SURVIVORSHIP NOW Welcome, cancer survivors. Survivorship NOW has free wellness programs to empower cancer survivors to move beyond cancer & live life well.˝Regain your strength & balance. Renew your spirit.˝Learn to nourish your body with exercise

Extra! Extra! ˜ ere’s no limit to ad length online.

& nutritious foods. Tap in to your creative side. Connect with others who understand the challenges you face. Go to˝survivorshipnowvt. org today to sign up. Info,˝802-7771126,˝info@ survivorshipnowvt.org. SURVIVORS OF SUICIDE — BURLINGTON Who: Persons experiencing the impact of a loved one’s suicide. When: 1st Wed. of each mo., 6-7:30 p.m. Location: Comfort Inn, 5 Dorset St., Burlington. Facilitators: Myra Handy, 951-5156 or Liz Mahoney, 879-7109. Request: We find it important to connect with people before their first meeting. If you can, please call one of the facilitators before you come. ˜ ank you! SURVIVORS OF SUICIDE If you have lost someone to suicide and wish to have a safe place to talk, share and spend a little time with others who have had a similar experience, join us the 3rd ˜ u. at the Faith Lighthouse Church, Rte. 105, Newport (105 Alderbrook), 7-9 p.m. Please call before attending. Info: Mary Butler, 744-6284. THE COMPASSIONATE FRIENDS Burlington Chapter TCF meets on the 3rd Tue. of ea. mo. at 7 p.m. at 277 Blair Park Rd., Williston; for more info, call Dee Ressler, 598-8899. Rutland Chapter TCF meets on the 1st Tue. of ea. mo. at 7 p.m. at Grace Congregational Church, West St., Rutland; for more info, call Susan Mackey, 446-2278. Hospice Volunteer Services (HVS) also serves bereaved parents w/ monthly peer support groups, short-term educational consultations & referrals to local grief & loss counselors.˝HVS is located in the Marble Works district in Middlebury.˝Please call 388-4111 for more info about how to connect w/ appropriate support services. TOGETHER IN RECOVERY Community members with a friend or family member affected by Opioid use are invited to come for support, discussion and encouragement. Chittenden Clinic, 75 San Remo Dr., So. Burlington. Every third Tuesday of the month, 5:30 p.m. Info: 488-6456, jspagnuolo@ howardcenter.org.


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ATTENTION RECRUITERS: POST YOUR JOBS AT: PRINT DEADLINE: FOR RATES & INFO:

SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POSTMYJOB NOON ON MONDAYS (INCLUDING HOLIDAYS) MICHELLE BROWN, 802-865-1020 X21, MICHELLE@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

YOUR TRUSTED LOCAL SOURCE. SEVENDAYSVT.COM/JOBS Bolton Valley Ski Resort is now hiring for the season. Full and Part time positions, all departments.

PSYCHOTHERAPIST

Opening for licensed Join our Nursing Team. Our Lady of Providence is a 46-bed, Please apply online at boltonvalley.com or stop up. psychotherapist conveniently residential-care facility, located in Winooski. We offer flexible located in downtown Burlington, schedules. Full and part-time, every other weekend. Day and Job fairs will be held at the Base Lodge overlooking City Hall Park. Join an evening shifts. Must enjoy working with the elderly. EEOE. 11/5, 11/19 from 10am-2pm. experienced and long established Please send resumes to: group of independent practitioners. Kim Ebel, Director of Health Services, Solid reputation with a variety kebel@ourladyofprovidence.org. of clinical practice skills. Suite of offices with pleasant waiting area. Reasonable rent and expenses, 2v-OurLadyofProvidence110916.indd 1 11/7/16 2h-Bolton102616.indd 11:41 AM 1 10/20/16 available full-time or shared Town of Milton part-time, starting January 2017. Join a hard-working and dynamic If interested, please send a letter of interest and resume to: Doug Bugbee, LICSW, LADC Dolan House 156 College Street, Suite 201 Burlington, VT 05401

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11/11/16

Brewery Assistant Family-owned microbrewery seeking an energetic new team member. From production to delivery we need someone who is able and willing to assist where necessary. Duties include but are not limited to cleaning brewery equipment, operating a small bottling line, delivering product to accounts (1-2 days/week) and assisting with brewing process as needed. An attention to detail and a good attitude are a must. 32+ hours/week. Monday-Friday and occasional Saturdays. Competitive pay. Applicant must be 21+, be able to pass background check/drug test. Send resumes to: danfoley13@icloud.com

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Administrative Assistant

Appletree Bay Property Management is seeking a full time Administrative Assistant to join our outstanding team of approximately 10 people. The Administrative Assistant will directly assist staff and clients. The 1:45 PMAdministrative Assistant must possess a can-do attitude, be professional, and possess all required skills. RESPONSIBILITIES • Administrative and operational duties (answering phones, greeting and assisting clients, opening mail, filing, managing office supplies, supervising accurate file system). • Control of correspondence, clerical, and typing duties. • Ability to do basic website maintenance (programming experience not required). • Provide ad hoc support to staff as needed. REQUIREMENTS • 5 plus years in office support/ management • Personable attitude and superior ability to interact with staff and customers • Technologically savvy, must have ability to use Microsoft Office Suite of software. • General knowledge of billing and accounts receivable preferred. • Excellent written and verbal communication skills required. Send resumes to:

patrick@appletreebay.com

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Join us and become…

MORE THAN A BARISTA: Full-time

COUNTER PERSON

(includes weekend shifts)

We offer competitive pay and great benefits. Contact Hannah at redhenbuyer@gmail.com or 223-5200 x19. WE ARE SEEKING A

BREAD DELIVERY PERSON

We have a 4 days per week (Fri.-Mon. approx. 32 hrs. total) position available at our bakery in Middlesex for someone who enjoys early mornings, working with the public, and driving around our beautiful state. Competitive wages, benefits (and bread perks!). Contact Randy at randy@redhenbaking.com Or (802) 223-5200 x12

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team dedicated to delivering a high level of service to the people of Milton, a growing community in Chittenden County.

SENIOR TECHNICIAN The Town of Milton Water/ Wastewater Division of Public Works is hiring a Senior Technician. This position performs duties in the operation and maintenance of the municipal water and wastewater treatment facilities. The Town seeks a seasoned technician and leader with at least five years of experience in the field to join our collaborative team. Starting compensation will be $17.00 - $22.00 per hour based on experience and qualifications. Required are the possession of a Vermont Class 2-DM Pollution Abatement Facility Operator Certification, a Vermont Class D Water Distribution System Operator Certification and a CDL. The Town of Milton offers a generous benefits package. Visit miltonvt.org for more information about this position and how to apply. The Town of Milton is an equal opportunity employer.

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11:43 AM

Located in beautiful Plainfield, VT, we have three position openings in our Library department and one opening in our Facilities department.

TECHNICAL SERVICES COORDINATOR Full time, benefit-eligible

INSTRUCTIONAL TECHNOLOGIST Part time

RESIDENCY LIBRARY ASSISTANT Part time, residency position

OVERNIGHT SECURITY GUARD Part time, temporary position Position descriptions and application instructions are available here: goddard.edu/aboutgoddard/employmentopportunities/

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11/14/16 11:33 AM


ATTENTION RECRUITERS:

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POST YOUR JOBS AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/JOBS FOR FAST RESULTS, OR CONTACT MICHELLE BROWN: MICHELLE@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

11.16.16-11.23.16

EXCITING NURSING OPPORTUNITIES IN SOUTH BURLINGTON!

Recreation Program Manager

$1,000 Sign-On Bonus Offered for FULL TIME AND PART TIME ONLY!!!

The City of St. Albans seeks a team player to serve as the Program Manager in the Recreation Department. This position is responsible for inspiring public confidence through the delivery of top notch recreation programs for all ages. Core responsibilities include program development and management, department operations, and recruitment, training, and supervision of seasonal staff. This position reports to the Recreation Director.

BONUS OFFERED IF HIRED BY DECEMBER 31, 2016!!! Centurion, a partnership between MHM Services and Centene Corporation, is a leading provider of health care services to correctional facilities nationwide. Centurion of Vermont is proud to be the provider of health care services to the Vermont Department of Corrections. We invite you to learn more about the environment that is often referred to as “nursing’s best kept secret”…Correctional Nursing.

The anticipated hiring range is between $47,000 and $55,000 based on qualifications and experience. The benefit package includes a defined benefit retirement plan; health, dental, and vision insurance; and a family friendly workplace.

We are currently seeking Vermont licensed Registered Nurses, Licensed Practical Nurses and Licensed Nursing Assistants to provide nursing care in a correctional health care setting. Full Time, Part Time and Per Diem shifts available at our Chittenden Regional Correctional Facility in South Burlington, VT.

A complete job description can be found on the City’s website at stalbansvt.com. To apply please send a resume and cover letter to Kelly Viens, Recreation Director at k.viens@stalbansvt.com.

We offer competitive compensation and a comprehensive benefits package for FULL TIME including:

Resume review will begin on Monday, November 21. Position open until filled.

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10/31/16 10:37 AM

Accounts Payable Assistant We have an immediate opening for an Accounts Payable Assistant in your area. The successful candidate should possess 1-3 years of accounting experience and exceptional computer and customer service skills. Ability to meet the required work schedule is a primary function this position. Familiarity with construction is preferred. This position is part-time with the potential to grow to full-time for the right candidate. If you would like to become part of our growing construction company, please fax, email or send your resume to the address below. A full job description is available on our website at dewcorp.com. DEW Construction Corp. 277 Blair Park Road, Suite 130 Williston, VT 05495 Attn: Human Resources Department Email: careers@dewcorp.com Fax: 802-872-0707 We are an EOE. All qualified applications will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender, identity, or national origin.

Health, dental, vision, life and disability insurance

Health savings account with matching employer contributions

20 paid days off plus 8 paid holidays

401(k) retirement plan with employer match

Career development benefit

Flexible spending accounts for health and dependent care

Wellness activity subsidy

Access to corporate discount programs

Requirements for Registered Nurses and Licensed Practical Nurses are current license in VT, experience in med/surg or correctional environment preferred, but willing to train. The Licensed Nursing Assistant must be a graduate of a Licensed Nursing Assistant program and have an active VT Nursing Assistant License. Must be able to pass background investigation and obtain agency security clearance.

Interested candidates, please email resumes to kelli@mhmcareers.com or fax 888-317-1741; mhm-services.com FOR MORE INFORMATION ON SHIFTS, PLEASE CALL KELLI AT 866-616-8389. EOE 10v-MHMServices111616.indd 1

New, local, scam-free jobs posted every day!

11/14/16 2:54 PM

sevendaysvt.com/classifieds


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LNA to LPN Scholarship Program Grow your career with Kindred Transitional Care and Rehabilitation at Birchwood Terrace! Birchwood Terrace is looking for a few great LNAs who want to make a difference each day in the quality of life of our residents. As an LNA you would be part of a great collaborative team whose energy, creativity, and communication are valued and rewarded. We believe in your quality of life, so you will find our culture provides ongoing opportunities to grow (full reimbursement of qualified individuals to become a LPN via Vermont Technical Program or tuition assistance available).

To learn more about this opportunity, please send your resume to Sue.Fortin@Kindred.com or contact Sue at 802-863-6384.

KindredCareers.com EOE. M/W/V/D. Drug Free Workplace

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Spectrum is looking for a Restorative Practices Counselor. This position is responsible for the implementation of restorative practices, including providing direct restorative services to staff, students, & families, and to providing coaching and technical support to school staff in the successful implementation and practice restorative justice at Burlington High School. For further details about this position and how to apply, please visit our website at spectrumvt.org.

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Collaborative Solutions Corporation is a non-profit organization which operates Intensive Residential Recovery programs to adults recovering from mental illness. Our programs are beautifully situated in rural, aesthetically pleasing surroundings that include a historic former inn and a bed and breakfast converted to Community Recovery Residences with picturesque views of the outdoors. Our community based, specialized programs are located in Williamstown and Westford, VT, and are the ideal place to work if you enjoy helping others discover and develop their greatest potential, combined with a desire to work with like-minded people.

Nurse Manager

Lead Vehicle Processor

We’re looking for a person to provide day-to-day supervision of the vehicle placement process in GNG’s Burlington, VT office. The Lead Vehicle Processor coordinates all aspects of disposition of donated vehicles. Must have working knowledge of automotive technology and a valid driver’s license. If you enjoy being part of a fastmoving team, email a resume and cover letter to nhjobs@ ascentria.org.

Administrative Assistant

We’re looking for someone with superior customer service and attention to detail. The Admin Assistant supports donors, clients, customers and internal staff by performing a wide range of office activities accurately and in a timely manner. Must have a valid driver’s license. If you enjoy being part of a fast-moving team, email a resume and cover letter to nhjobs@ascentria.org.

Ready To Go Drivers

We’re looking for personable drivers to safely transport our clients and their children. Positions available in Burlington and Morrisville. Must have a valid driver’s license and clean driving record. Email a resume and cover letter to nhjobs@ ascentria.org. These are great opportunities to work in a meaningful environment empowering others. Ascentria Care Alliance is an equal opportunity employer.

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We are seeking a creative, enthusiastic, energetic and self-directed individual to oversee our Nursing program and services. Our Nurse Manager will provide professional nursing services to residents including providing direct nursing services, overseeing provision of care in line with treatment plans, administering medications as prescribed and providing clear & concise documentation. Our Nurse Manager will also provide administrative supervision and oversight to our nursing staff and will ensure adequate nursing coverage at all sites. The schedule for this position is Monday through Friday with a flexible & varied daily schedule to provide best support to our Nursing staff and residents.

Requirements The ideal candidate would possess the ability to effectively communicate with all levels of staff and with residents and their families as well as professionals in the medical and mental health fields. Individuals with a holistic view of wellness are encouraged to apply. Travel between sites is required.

Benefits At Collaborative Solutions Corporation, all full-time positions are offered appealing health/ dental/vision plans with a matching 403b retirement plan, plus other company-paid benefits such as short and long term disability insurance and life insurance policies. We also offer a generous time off policy & mileage reimbursement.

Education Candidates should have an R.N. with current Vermont license and a minimum of 2 years’ experience as a Registered Nurse with current psychiatric and medical experience. Lori Schober Oszterling, Operations Officer LoriS@cscorp.org Collaborative Solutions Corporation P.O. Box 69, Montpelier, VT 05601

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JOIN THE GOOD NEWS GARAGE TEAM!

11/14/16 4:23 PM

Providing Innovative Mental Health and Educational Services to Vermont’s Children & Families.

Residential Counselor Positions NFI Vermont NFI Vermont, a leader in specialized trauma & adolescent development, is hiring for full time residential counselors. Residential counselors provide various levels of supervision & support based on the treatment needs of residents & program focus. The ideal candidates would have a Bachelor’s degree in social work or related field along with superior interpersonal skills, ability to function well in a team atmosphere & experience working with adolescents struggling with emotional/behavioral difficulties. Positions may include evening, nights & weekends. Competitive wages, training opportunities, flexible work schedules & family oriented culture. Excellent benefits with tuition reimbursement offered for 30 or more hour employees. Allenbrook is a co-ed community based group home for teens. Qualified candidates will have experience working in residential care or parenting their own children & managing a household (cooking, maintenance, gardening, etc.) Please email resume & cover letter to jennifersnay@nafi.com. Group Home provides assessment & stabilization services to males & females, ages 13-18. Please e-mail cover letter & resume to jenniferheintz@nafi.com.

11/4/16 3:49 PM


ATTENTION RECRUITERS:

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POST YOUR JOBS AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/JOBS FOR FAST RESULTS, OR CONTACT MICHELLE BROWN: MICHELLE@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

11.16.16-11.23.16

PART-TIME

Field Producers Lake Champlain Access Television (LCATV) is seeking motivated professionals with a passion for community media to join our team as a part-time Field Producers. Responsibilities include capturing high quality video and audio of community events, concerts, and meetings in Chittenden, Franklin, and Grand Isle Counties, and occasional post-production of projects. Requirements include excellent communication skills, a high level of self motivation and creative problem solving ability, video production experience, the ability to transport audio/video equipment and remain in a stationary position, and a valid driver’s license. This is a part-time position that requires evening and some weekend work with a starting hourly rate of $15.00.

Clinical Operations Coordinator, Invest EAP

If interested, please send your résumé to buddy@lcatv.org. NO PHONE CALLS, PLEASE. LCATV is an Equal Opportunity Employer and does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, gender, sexual orientation, national origin, age, disability, citizenship, genetic information, veteran status, or other category protected by state and/or federal laws.

11/11/16 WASHINGTON WEST SUPERVISORY UNION

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SUBSTITUTES NEEDED Washington West Supervisory Union, comprised of Crossett Brook Middle School, Fayston Elementary School, Harwood Union Middle/High School, Moretown Elementary School, Thatcher Brook Primary School, Waitsfield Elementary School, and Warren Elementary School, has a shortage of substitutes, and we encourage you to work for us as a substitute for all non-administrative positions in the schools. Our schools have wonderful staff and students, a great learning environment, and have the best interests of students as a top priority. We pay $100 per day. You can obtain an application on wwsu.org on the Home page under Quick Links (sub information and application). If you need more information, please contact Laura Titus at 496-2272, ext. 111 or ltitus@ wwsu.org.

Assist with oversight of clinical operations for Invest EAP (http://investeap.org), a statewide non-profit Employee Assistance Program promoting workplace health and wellbeing. Invest EAP has a large team of licensed counselors providing short-term counseling and resources to over 160,000 working Vermonters. The position provides oversight for incoming calls to EAP including how calls are processed, organizational consultation to managers and supervisors and coordination of the clinical response to critical incidents. The position will provide management of service delivery to business accounts and coordinate relations with contracted counselors who provide direct EAP services. Opportunities for growth and promotional opportunities. Requirements

Masters degree and experience in organizational development, counseling or closely related field. Clinical license preferred but not required.

Organizational Relations Manager, Invest EAP Workplace health and wellness Dynamic position managing multiple state-wide projects and relationships with or-

ganizational leaders for Invest EAP (http://investeap.org), a statewide non-profit promoting workplace health and wellbeing. This position is responsible for building relationships, monitoring and ensuring program quality, coordinating team projects, educating colleagues and members, organizing business meetings, developing promotional trainings and materials as well as serving as a lead presenter at conferences. Requirements

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11/4/16 3:01 PM

Custodian Full-Time

This service position performs a variety of custodial, floor maintenance, light maintenance and repair duties under general supervision throughout the Wake Robin campus, common areas, independent living units, and health center. A minimum of one year of hands-on experience as custodian/ housekeeper or an equivalent combination of education and experience is required. If you have high standards of service and a strong desire to learn, please email hr@wakerobin.com or fax your resume with cover letter to: HR, (802) 264-5146.

Position requires an experienced professional who is a self-starter, able to engage oth-

ers, skilled at prioritization, organized, confident, articulate, persistent and savvy. Our team is seeking someone who identifies solutions, build consensus, solicits feedback and can execute an implementation plan. Must be confident with learning new technologies and be familiar with MS Office software. Background in public health, counseling or social work is desirable. Based in Burlington with some state-wide travel.

Apply

Please apply through Career Builders by clicking link under Employment Opportunities at http://vabir.org. Deadline is November 28.

WAKE ROBIN IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER. Untitled-28 1

10/27/16 3:35 PM


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Ca r i n g P e o P l e Wa n t e d

Analyst/Programmer We are seeking an experienced Analyst/Programmer to join our professional team. Position requires strong analytical and problem solving skills, knowledge of Microsoft SQL, .NET, C# and HTML coding, and understanding of networked and virtual environments. The primary responsibility of this position will be maintaining and supporting our applications development environment. The successful candidate will have a Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science, five or more years of related technical experience, or an equivalent combination of education and experience. Requires excellent communication and organizational skills; ability to work independently; and proven analytical/ methodical thought process. We offer a challenging position in a professional working environment with a very competitive salary and excellent benefits. Qualified candidates are encouraged to submit in strict confidence a resume with cover letter to: Union Mutual Attn: Human Resources P.O. Box 158 Montpelier, VT 05601-0158

Home Instead Senior Care, a provider of non-medical companionship and home helper services to seniors in their homes, is seeking friendly, cheerful, and dependable people. CAREGivers assist seniors with companionship, light housekeeping, meal preparation, personal care, errands, and more. Part-time, flexible scheduling, including: daytime, evening, weekend and overnight shifts currently available. No heavy lifting.

Executive Assistant BURLINGTON, VERMONT

The University of Vermont Medical Center is looking for a highly qualified Executive Assistant to support the VP of Human Resources and the VP of Quality and Operational Effectiveness. Experience supporting senior level executives strongly  preferred. Extensive experience with complex scheduling, meeting  preparation, creating and editing documents, including meeting minutes, required. Apply online at: Attention to detail, ability to build relationships within the  www.homeinstead.com/483 organization and across the network and a high level of professionalism and poise required. Only online applications will be accepted please visit the  following link: http://bit.ly/2fA1ktq 2V-homeinstead-060513.indd 1 5/31/13 11:37 AM 

Career Specialist

Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability, or protective veteran status.

Or submit to resumehr@umfic.com.

UVMHealth.org/MedCenterCareers 5v-UnionMutual111616.indd 1

Stone Environmental, Inc. is proud to employ some of the best scientists, engineers, modelers, and project managers in our field, and we want to talk to you! We are seeking a talented designer with a passion for both web/user interface design and user experience development. This person will collaborate, and effectively communicate, with team members such as developers, other designers, and project managers. The candidate will support web application and tool development projects within the Applied Information Management (AIM) group at Stone, a team of diverse, highly motivated environmental scientists, engineers, GIS specialists, and application developers. All candidates MUST complete an application form and have a Bachelor degree or higher in computer science, graphic design, or related field. Two or more years of commercial software design experience. Please visit our website stone-env.com for a full job description and how to apply. Deadline for Submissions is November 30th, 2016

Editor/Graphics Specialist

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WEB APPLICATION DESIGNER

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11/10/16 2:23 PM

Tetra Tech ARD seeks a strong full-time Editor/Graphics Specialist (EGS) to join its Burlington team. With headquarters staff, the EGS spearheads the development and production of USAID and other donor proposals, reports, case studies, and/or multimedia products from inception to distribution. The successful candidate must have 3 years of prior EGS-related work, ideally for USG procurements. Excellent attention to detail and technical editing and graphics skills are critical for this fast-paced position. Must haves include minimum of a Bachelor’s degree in journalism, communications, or a related field; deadline orientation; and strong cross-cultural and organizational skills. • Live in Burlington and work in international development. • Employ your editing, graphic design, and organizational skills for the greater good. • Collaborate with development professionals around the world. Apply on our U.S. Careers page at careers.tetratechintdev.com. Please indicate where you saw Tetra Tech ARD’s ad. Applications that do not meet the minimum requirements will not be considered. No calls.

Upper Valley Services of Bradford is currently recruiting a full time, benefited career Specialist, to provide career coaching to individuals with intellectual disabilities in their community. Qualified candidates will have the ability to develop strong interpersonal relationships with individuals served, the Orange County business community, and demonstrate creativity that supports people to develop and achieve their career goals. If you are looking for a position that positively impacts our community and promotes diverse opportunity for all members of our community, apply today! Please send your resume to Upper Valley Services at 267 Waits River Rd. Bradford, VT 05033, or call (802) 222-9235 to complete an application. Background checks, valid driver’s license with a reliable vehicle and valid insurance required.


ATTENTION RECRUITERS:

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POST YOUR JOBS AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/JOBS FOR FAST RESULTS, OR CONTACT MICHELLE BROWN: MICHELLE@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

11.16.16-11.23.16

Infusion Nurse Educator The VNA of Chittenden & Grand Isle Counties provides compassionate, community-based care through a range of innovative programs that span a lifetime. The Infusion Nurse Educator provides clinical expertise, education and training in infusion therapies and venipuncture to the VNA’s nursing staff. This key position on our education team is responsible for coordinating quarterly training opportunities, yearly staff development and administering infusion competencies. Strong communication skills, leadership and passion for teaching are essential to this role. National certification is preferred but not a requirement. The VNA will support the certification process for the hired candidate. To apply and learn more about the VNA’s mission & culture of collaboration, please visit: www.VNACares.org/nursing-careers

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Zoning Administrative Officer The Towns of Hinesburg and Richmond are partnering to recruit for a Zoning Administrative Officer (up to 20 hours per week for each town, for a combined 40 hours). Full job descriptions for each town are posted at richmondvt.gov under “Documents” and at hinesburg.org/employment.html.

TUTORS

Please email cover letter, resume, and three current references by Wednesday, November 23, 2016, to both Richmond Town Manager Geoffrey Urbanik at townmgr@gmavt.net and Hinesburg Town Administrator Trevor Lashua at tlashua@hinesburg.org. Please direct any questions to Geoffrey Urbanik (802-434-5170) or Trevor Lashua (802-482-2281 ext. 221).

11/14/16 4t-TownofHinesburg111616.indd 10:56 AM 1

Join a Growing Local Tutoring Service!

Walker Tutoring is looking for experienced tutors in math, science, and test prep. Visit walkertutoringservices.com/jobs/ for more details.

11/14/161t-WalkerTutoringServices111616.indd 11:06 AM 1

11/14/16 1:09 PM

Director of Marketing and Communications You’re all about mission. Like us. VSAC is totally focused on helping young people and adults succeed in life beyond high school. You have honed your marketing skills, especially your digital marketing skills, for the past five or ten years and are ready to take on a bigger, more diverse management role. We need you to help lead us into the digital future. We’re growing our portfolio of savings and loan products, and are on the verge of launching a new website and a re-energized social media program. Maybe you’ve worked in higher education or at a digital ad agency for a college or university client. Review the job description online at vsac.org (Jobs at VSAC). Then tell us why we should consider hiring you in 500 words or less. Submit your persuasive letter and resume online at vsac.org. VSAC offers a dynamic, professional environment with competitive compensation and generous benefits package. Apply online at vsac.org no later than December 2, 2016. VERMONT STUDENT ASSISTANCE CORPORATION PO Box 2000, Winooski, VT 05404 EOE/Minorities/Females/Vet/Disabled www.VSAC.org

From seasonal work to lasting rewards. Where are you headed? If you’re ready for seasonal work and maybe even something more — well, the smarter route is at UPS. And when the season is done? You’ll have cash in your pocket, and, as part of our growing, dynamic Fortune 50 organization, you might just find the kind of permanent opportunities that will keep your career moving in the right direction.

UPS is NOW HIRING throughout Vermont! Seasonal Driver Helpers

No License Required | Driver picks you up at mutually convenient location | Work days with varying hours from 8:00 AM - 8:00 PM

Part-Time Package Handlers

Receive up to $25K in Education Assistance + up to $75 in Weekly Bonuses!

Package Delivery Drivers

Competitive Pay | No CDL Required 5v-VSAC111616.indd 1

Seasonal Tractor Trailer Drivers

11/14/16 11:04 AM

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-ing JOBS! follow us for the newest: twitter.com/SevenDaysJobs

Typically work nights, home every day

To apply now, visit jobs-ups.com/print or text “UPSJOBS” to 33588 *By participating, you consent to receive text messages sent by an automatic telephone dialing system. Consent to these terms is not condition of purchase. Message and data rates may apply. T&C Privacy Policy: www.SMS-terms.com

jobs-ups.com/print Text “UPSjobs” to 33588

UPS is an equal opportunity employer – race/color/religion/sex/national origin/veteran/disability/sexual orientation/gender identity.

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10/19/16 11:38 AM


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NEW JOBS POSTED DAILY! SEVENDAYSVT.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

C-15 11.16.16-11.23.16

Shared Living Provider Champlain Community Services

Open your home to an individual with an intellectual disability or autism. A generous stipend, paid time off (respite), comprehensive training & supports are available. We are currently offering variety of opportunities.

FULL & PART-TIME

Evening Nurses

For more information contact Jennifer Wolcott, jwolcott@ccs-vt.org or 655-0511 ext. 118. Champlain Community Services, 512 Troy Ave, Suite 1, Colchester, VT 05446, (802) 655-0511. ccs-vt.org

EOE

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11/14/16 1:17 PM

The Arbors at Shelburne has an immediate opening for full & part-time evening nurses with a

$4,000 SIGN ON BONUS We offer competitive salary with outstanding shift differentials. A competitive benefit package with tuition reimbursement and bonus opportunities in a team focused workplace.

MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES

Please submit a cover letter and resume via e-mail to: phurteau@benchmarkquality.com or stop in for an on-the-spot interview. Bill Davidson, RN, DNS Priscilla Hurteau, HR The Arbors at Shelburne 687 Harbor Road, Shelburne, VT. 05482 (802) 985-8600

Case Manager – Safe Recovery

Provide case management and specialized intervention services to people who inject drugs or who are at high risk of injection drug use. This includes assessment, service coordination, risk reduction knowledge and skill development. Minimum of high school diploma required. Hiring rate is $15/ hour. Job# 3340

Senior Clinician – Eldercare

This unique position combines a love of working with elders with a passion for clinical work and a chance to have some ownership over a small and special program. Provide mental health and substance abuse assessments and treatment to people over the age of 60 in their homes, in collaboration with the Agency on Aging and partners in the dynamic field of aging. Supervise a colleague, attend community meetings, and be a part of a strong group of adult outpatient clinicians where our clinical knowledge is shared and strengthened. LICSW and use of a personal vehicle required. This is a full-time, benefits-eligible position with a starting annual salary of $44,167.50 plus additional stipend of $2000 with active licensure. Job# 3515

A Benchmark Assisted Living Community, EOE

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Clinical Supervisor Act 1/Bridge

Compassionate. Committed. Creative. An agent for change. We are seeking these qualities as we interview for this new position. The Clinical Supervisor assists and supports the Program Coordinator in providing clinical and administrative oversight to the Act 1/Bridge program, a 24-7 substance abuse crisis detox and stabilization program. LADC is required with 3 years’ prior experience in the substance abuse field. Counseling, organizational, and crisis intervention skills also needed. FT. Job# 3537

CHILDREN, YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES Clinician – Early Childhood

Seeking experienced master’s-level clinician to join a dynamic team of early childhood mental-health professionals in partnering with young children, families, child care programs and community providers. Knowledge/experience in trauma-informed, strengths-based and culturally competent family work is a must. Commitment to home-based, family-centered work necessary. Reliable transportation and clean driving record required. Starting salary is $41,008.50. Job# 3521

For more information, please visit howardcentercareers.org. Howard Center offers an excellent benefits package including health, dental, and life insurance, as well as generous paid time off for all regular positions scheduled 20-plus-hours-per-week. Applicants needing assistance or an accommodation in completing the online application should feel free to contact Human Resources at 488-6950 or hrhelpdesk@howardcenter.org. 10V-HowardCenterFULLAGENCY111616.indd 1

11/14/16 12:49 PM

11/7/16 12:59 PM

The Upper Valley Haven, a private nonprofit human services organization in the Upper Valley, is seeking the following positions:

SERVICE COORDINATOR

Provide and coordinate outreach and supports to individuals and families who are experiencing homelessness. Flexible, energetic, creative team player will help families obtain and sustain permanent housing. Qualified candidates will have MSW, experience working with families experiencing poverty and homelessness. Full time position; some evening work is necessary. UVH offers competitive salary plus health and other benefits. Please email cover letter and resume to Renee Weeks at rweeks@uppervalleyhaven.org with the subject line “social worker.”

CLINICAL SUPERVISOR

The Upper Valley Haven is seeking qualified candidates who have the ability to create a safe, productive, trauma informed environment for guests and staff in our Shelter Services Program. Expertise in trauma-informed care, understanding of the complexities of living in poverty, motivational interviewing skills, knowledge of co-occurring mental health and substance use issues, knowledge and application of clinical supervision models. Flexible scheduling is required on call, evening and weekend work may be necessary. Must have a MSW and experience in collaborative team building and provision of clinical supervision. UVH offers a competitive compensation package as well as other benefits. Please email cover letter and resume to Renee Weeks at rweeks@uppervalleyhaven.org with the subject line “supervisor.”


ATTENTION RECRUITERS:

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POST YOUR JOBS AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/JOBS FOR FAST RESULTS, OR CONTACT MICHELLE BROWN: MICHELLE@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

11.16.16-11.23.16

Paralegal/ Executive Assistant Full-time professional wanted for Burlington or Vergennes office of a dynamic multistate commercial law firm focused on litigation and transactional matters. Candidates must have at least a four-year undergraduate degree and at least three years’ successful experience in the legal field is preferred. Candidates must have proven high-level writing and organizational skills. For more information, please visit the full position posting on our website: slglawfirm.com/ pages/careers.

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MDS Coordinator

FRONT DESK/ SCHEDULER Busy, mid-sized family practice is looking for a part time front desk/scheduler. This position is Monday in Scheduling; Wednesday and Friday, Front Desk; and Saturday/Sunday mornings, Front Desk. This position is approximately 32 hours per week. Experience with an electronic health record preferred. Must be detailoriented, dependable, and enjoy working with patients. Please send cover letter and resume to:

Full-Time

The MDS Coordinator is a Registered Nurse who is responsible for the timely and accurate completion of the MDS treatment assessment tool. This critical team member assures the delivery of high quality care by applying knowledge of age specific factors specific to geriatric residents (i.e. physical, cognitive, and socialization factors) in planning and tracking delivery of nursing care in our facility. The Coordinator maintains comprehensive knowledge of MDS regulations, and demonstrates expertise in item coding, RAPS, care planning, electronic submission, and compliance. This individual must be a Registered Nurse in the State of Vermont, with at least 2 years’ experience managing MDS compliance a similar facility. Interested candidates please email hr@wakerobin.com or fax your resume with cover letter to: HR, (802) 264-5146. WAKE ROBIN IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.

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11/14/16 2:42 PM

Cheryl McCaffrey, Practice Administrator, TCHC, 586 Oak Hill Road, Williston, Vermont 05495. No phone calls, please.

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Climate Economy Model Communities Program Director The Vermont Council on Rural Development is seeking a Climate Economy Model Communities Program Director to help Vermont communities advance economic opportunities while reducing their local carbon footprint. The Director will develop and coordinate services in at least two Vermont communities annually through a structured process that engages all residents and builds partnerships for implementation, as well as assist in fund development to ensure program sustainability. The successful applicant will be a team player with excellent communication, writing, and facilitation skills, an ability to grasp complex community and policy dynamics, and a strong sense of mission in service to Vermont communities. Professional salary based on skills and experience; attractive benefit package. Visit vtrural.org for the full job description. To apply, send resume and cover letter to nfo@vtrural.org by November 30th.

Vermont Council on Rural Development Unleashing the power of Vermonters to create a better future!

PROJECT MANAGER Vermont Information Technology Leaders, Inc. (VITL) is seeking a project manager for the successful planning and execution of health information technology, interface deployment and data quality projects related to the Vermont Health Information Exchange. This is a full-time permanent position. The ideal candidate will have a bachelor’s degree in computer science, information systems, or health care related field; a master’s degree is preferred, and requires five or more years of experience in large scale, cross-functional project management and system and software development lifecycles. Project Management Professional (PMP) (or equivalent) certification preferred or actively pursuing certification. A Six Sigma Black/Green Belt is preferred.

TECHNICAL SUPPORT SERVICES MANAGER Vermont Information Technology Leaders, Inc. (VITL) is seeking a technical support services manager to successfully provide front-line leadership for VITL’s technical support team, and for the hardware and software support needs of VITL staff. Additionally, the technical support services manager will work closely with VITL’s client services and operations teams, to ensure client satisfaction and successful long-term business relationships. This is a full-time permanent position. The ideal candidate will have a bachelor’s degree in business administration, computer science, engineering, health informatics or other related discipline, and five or more years’ experience in technical client support, proven people management leadership, system administration, desktop support or other related experience. For a detailed job description go to the Careers section on the VITL website at vitl.net/about/careers. To apply, please email a cover letter and resume to hr@vitl.net. NO PHONE CALLS, PLEASE. 9t-VITL111616.indd 1

11/11/16 1:48 PM


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C-17 11.16.16-11.23.16

WASHINGTON WEST SUPERVISORY UNION EDUCATIONAL DATABASE MANAGER /ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO THE OFFICE OF CURRICULUM AND ASSESSMENT Introduction: The Harwood Unified Union School District (Washington West Supervisory Union) in Waitsfield, Vermont, is an educational organization responsible for the management and operations of seven school sites, 370+ employees, approximately $38 million, and seven boards of directors. We are seeking an Educational Database Manager/Administrative Assistant to the Office of Curriculum and Assessment to work in our Central Office location. Summary and Goals: Provide direct management of the development, implementation and ongoing evaluation of database systems and applications used across the Supervisory Union, in collaboration with others and under the direction of the Director of Curriculum, Instruction and Assessment. Serve as a direct link between the Office of Curriculum, Instruction and Assessment and the District at large to develop efficient ways to collect, analyze and present local and state assessment data. Oversee and assist in the maintenance of accurate and updated student information and demographics. Effectively serve and assist the office of Curriculum, Instruction and Assessment by coordinating and performing a variety of key administrative, communication, organizational, and support functions. Qualification Requirements: To perform this job successfully, an individual must be able to perform each Essential Duty and Responsibility satisfactorily. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. Essential Duties and Responsibilities Involved (but not limited to) • In collaboration with others, serve as manager in the identification, implementation and ongoing evaluation of a variety of data systems. • Oversee the operations of the data management system, including collection, analysis and report generation. • Assist with the evaluation and adoption of any new systems or updates to existing database systems. • Work with the IT department and system vendors to ensure the integrity and timely collection, analysis and reporting of the data. • Formulate, implement and enforce proper data collection procedures; document procedures. • Work with administrators, registrars, IT staff and other users to ensure seamless connection between and among data systems, where applicable. • Establish data quality standards and work with others to ensure standards are met. • Provide training to district employees about the data system. • Work with school registrars and other database managers, programmers and IT staff to maintain accurate electronic student records as they relate to import/export functions of a student assessment data system. • Support users with problem-solving technical issues and understanding the data. • Identifies queries across the system that would be meaningful and useful to make instructional decisions and systems decisions. • Ensure compliance with FERPA regulations related to the student assessment system. • Oversee and assist in the creation and submission of required local, state and federal reports in compliance with established deadlines. • Access professional development to maintain and increase knowledge in the area of assessment plans and student outcomes. • Attend meetings and trainings related to student assessment and data management. • Develop and support the understanding of assessment information for administration, staff, parents and students; provide guidance regarding student data and assessment to administrators, teachers and other WWSU users. • Processes purchase orders for the Office of Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment • Assists with the management of grant funds; processes purchase orders; monitors financial statements outlining revenues and expenditures, and keeps the Director of Curriculum, Instruction, & Assessment and/ or project manager apprised of financial status of the grant funded 15t-WashingtonWestSU111616.indd 1

• •

programs on not less than a monthly basis; monitors fund expenditures and fund availability; determines proper account for payment; ensures expenditures are in keeping with the language of the grants; obtains expenditure authorization from Director of Curriculum, Instruction, & Assessment, etc. Manages the distribution, collection, and submission of standardized testing materials as needed. Assists with the coordination of staff professional development including inservice days, workshop, and courses

Other Necessary Functions • Follows all HUUSD (WWSU) and member district policies, procedures and standards • Performs all other duties as requested by Superintendent or Director of Operations and Finance Qualifications: To perform this job successfully, an individual must be able to perform each essential duty satisfactorily, in addition to the following: • Bachelor’s degree in business, education, technology, communications, computer science or other appropriate discipline plus two years of relevant data management and education experience, or a combination of education and experience from which comparable knowledge and skills are acquired. • Demonstrated competency in project management related to technology and/or data systems. • At least two years’ experience working with data and data bases, preferably within an educational environment. • A working knowledge of good educational practices relative to assessment, data collection & analysis, report design/generation and decision-making. • Knowledge of public education, data systems and data-driven decisionmaking. • Demonstrated competency in the professional use of the English language, both written and oral, and an ability to communicate to multiple users of a student assessment system. • Knowledge and ability to communicate with IT staff related to databases, report generation, import/export of data, as well as an ability to communicate with non-technical users of the system. • Ability to manage user/customer situations; responds appropriately to requests for service and assistance, supports users in problem solving technical issues. • Ability to work unsupervised and take responsibility for own actions, identify problems and provide solutions. • Demonstrated competency to work with data precisely and with attention to detail and accuracy, to monitor the efficacy of such work by conducting self-checks of different types of data to ensure accuracy. • Demonstrated competency in use of google applications, spreadsheets, databases, report generating tools, data systems, and other related technology tools; strives to continuously build knowledge and skills; shares expertise with others. • Understands professional and moral obligations to confidentiality; maintains confidentiality and models such behaviors with other users Salary and Benefits: The Educational Database Manager/Administrative Assistant to the Office of Curriculum and Assessment position is a full-time, year round position with a competitive hourly wage commensurate with experience, and includes all medical, dental, disability and life insurance, paid holiday, personal, vacation, and sick leave, in accordance with the HUUSD (WWSU) support staff policies. The position is expected to begin immediately. How to Apply: Please submit a cover letter, resume, copy of transcripts, and 3 letters of reference to Laura Titus, Administrative Assistant to the Superintendent, at ltitus@wwsu.org. Position open until filled. For more information on HUUSD (WWSU), please visit our website at www.wwsu.org. EOE 11/11/16 2:22 PM


ATTENTION RECRUITERS:

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POST YOUR JOBS AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/JOBS FOR FAST RESULTS, OR CONTACT MICHELLE BROWN: MICHELLE@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

11.16.16-11.23.16

General Manager CAR DETAILING BUSINESS

Marketing Manager (WAITSFIELD VT)

Are you a seasoned non-profit and/or career-changing professional seeking a challenging opportunity to positively impact homeless and at-risk teenagers and young adults? Do you have experience in a service driven industry? Are you commi ed to excellence? If you answered “yes,” then Spectrum Youth & Family Services wants you! Spectrum Youth & Family Services (www.spectrumvt.org), a non-profit leader recognized locally and nationally, is opening a social enterprise car detailing business which will operate as an independently-run youth training and development program. Spectrum is looking for a full-time General Manager who will be an exceptional leader and be responsible for the overall customer experience. The General Manager will oversee all operations of the business, including marketing, business development, staff training and development, superior customer service, profitability and youth outcomes, facility maintenance and business management. The General Manager will establish an environment of accountability and set a positive example for a itude, professionalism and work ethic.

Responsibilities include copy writing, graphic design for web and print, web page management, special offer marketing, and social media. Job requirements include knowledge of HTML, CSS, graphic design for print (including national magazines), copy-writing ability and experience. Must be willing to take initiative, work under a deadline, and work independently. Apple knowledge and/or interest is essential for this position. Position is based in Waitsfield, Vermont. Send Resume to jobs@smalldog.com

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Prioritize, Organize, & Jump In!

The duties of this position include:

Museum Services Manager

Provide leadership to staff through coaching and training

Manage the financial health of the business by increasing sales volume and by managing inventory and operating costs

Build and develop a winning team and be accountable for measurable outcomes

Create and manage work schedules

Set the example for exceptional customer service, including resolution of customer complaints

Utilize accounting and payroll so ware to operate a stand-alone business enterprise

Ready to advance your career in hospitality? Shelburne Museum has a fast paced, diverse position for someone with a strong desire to care for and preserve one of Vermont’s treasured institutions. We have 39 buildings on 45 acres that need a keen eye for details, the ability to prioritize and organize the work load, and the skills to jump in and get things done. Museum Services needs a strong manager who is also an efficient and hardworking member of the team. This is a full-time, year-round position with a full benefit package and generous leave policy. You must be available some evenings and weekends.

Implement internal controls over financial and operational activities

Ensure the facility, equipment and grounds are well-maintained

Assume other duties as assigned

For full job description and application instructions visit shelburnemuseum.org or email Human_Resources@shelburnemuseum.org

Three plus years of retail management experience is required. Auto detailing experience is a plus. Must have experience with managing profitability and reporting on operations. Must be able to motivate and inspire staff and be comfortable working with young people. Must communicate effectively with customers and at all levels within the organization.

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Position includes health, dental and vision insurance, life, long-term and short-term disability insurance, 403(b) retirement plan, flexible spending accounts, accrued vacation and sick time and EAP. Please email cover le er and resume to: framsey@spectrumvt.org with subject line reading “General Manager.” No phone calls, please. SPECTRUM IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER WE PLACE A HIGH VALUE ON WORKFORCE DIVERSITY PEOPLE OF COLOR¤ WOMEN¤ GAY¤ LESBIAN¤ BISEXUAL¤ AND TRANSGENDER PEOPLE ARE STRONGLY ENCOURAGED TO APPLY 10v-Spectrum111616.indd 1

New, local, scam-free jobs posted every day!

11/14/16 2:52 PM

sevendaysvt.com/classifieds

Prevent Child Abuse Vermont is seeking a Family Support Programs Coordinator for Washington, Orange, and Windsor Counties to develop and manage parent education and support groups. Based in Montpelier, the position involves some travel around the central region of Vermont. Duties include recruitment, training and supervision of volunteers and collaborating with community partners. Knowledge of child development and child abuse, love of parent education/support, and reliable transportation required. Bachelor’s degree in human services or related field required. Please send cover letter, resume and 3 references to: Prevent Child Abuse Vermont, Coordinator Search, PO Box 829, Montpelier, VT 05601 or email pcavt@pcavt.org. Website: pcavt.org. EOE


FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @SEVENDAYSJOBS, SUBSCRIBE TO RSS, OR CHECK POSTINGS ON YOUR PHONE AT M.SEVENDAYSVT.COM

NEW JOBS POSTED DAILY! 11.16.16-11.23.16

Development Director

TODDLER TEACHER POSITION AVAILABLE

We are looking for a responsible, creative, hardworking and professional preschool teacher for our licensed center located in Shelburne. The position is available in either our One-YearOld Room or Infant Room depending on the individual’s preference. We are a large program with approximately 75 children each day, open from 7 a.m-6 p.m. We offer paid holidays, paid vacation, dental and vision insurance, childcare benefits, and paid education benefits including CPR and first aid. Position is full-time with some flexibility for part time given the right candidate. Our ideal candidate for the position shall have the following: *College degree in Early Childhood Education or 12 credits in ECE with 3 years experience. A BA/BS in a related field will also be considered. Send resumes to: taby111@hotmail.com

Champlain Community Services

Community Inclusion Facilitators

Helen Day Art Center (Stowe) is hiring a full time, salaried Development Director. See helenday.com/careers for details.

CCS is a growing, not for profit human service organization with a strong emphasis on employee and consumer satisfaction. We are currently offering a benefitted part time inclusion support position and per diem shifts. This is an excellent job for applicants 1t-HelenDayArt111616.indd entering human services or for those looking to continue their work in this field. We would love to have you here during this exciting time of growth! If you are interested in joining our supportive team and making an impact on the lives of others, send your letter of interest and resume to Karen Ciechanowicz, staff@ccs-vt.org.

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11/11/16 11:20 AM

WANTED

one smart, passionate hospitality pro to help us continue to build Higher EOE Ground into the epicenter of live music in the northeast. 11/7/16 1:21 PM

ccs-vt.org

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SEVENDAYSVT.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

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REQUIRED PASSIONATE ABOUT MUSIC

Vermont Oxford Network is a worldwide community of nearly 1,000 neonatal intensive care units working together to improve medical care for the most vulnerable newborns. We are looking for a new team member to join our passionate, growing team in the fun and relaxed atmosphere of our offices in the heart of Burlington’s Pine Street innovation corridor.

Learning Management System (LMS) Registrar and Learner Support This position is responsible for the daily operations and growth of the Vermont Oxford Network’s Learning Management System (LMS). With direction from the Learning Systems Manager and the Director of Quality Improvement, this position will support the Vermont Oxford Network’s Quality Members by maximizing use of the LMS and related processes, and providing administrator and end-user technical support. This position will be required to manage registrations and enrollments to the LMS, provide implementation support, create technical requirements, draft system documentation, adding and updating content, reporting use statistics, customer support, and content editing. To apply, email a cover letter and resume to jobs@vtoxford.org with the job title in the subject line by November 15th. Full job description available at: public.vtoxford.org/about-us/jobs/

Wait Staff

PASSIONATE ABOUT MUSIC

Full-Time Openings

Wake Robin, Vermont’s premier continuing care retirement community, is adding Wait Staff in the Linden Health Center. This is a perfect opportunity for individuals who are former PCAs or have experience working with seniors. We seek individuals with the passion and drive to make every dining experience a meaningful one. Experience as a caregiver is preferred but not required. We will train applicants who demonstrate strong customer service skills and a desire to work with an active population of seniors.

Transportation Assistance Provided! Wake Robin offers a flexible schedule to match your goals. If interested, please email hr@wakerobin.com or fax your resume with cover letter to: HR, (802) 264-5146. WAKE ROBIN IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.

New, local, scam-free jobs posted every day!

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STRONG MANAGERIAL SKILLS FOCUSED ON TRAINING RATHER THAN ISSUING ORDERS

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5 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE OPERATIONALLY RESPONSIBLE FOR A VENUE DEALING WITH LOTS OF PEOPLE AT A TIME PASSIONATE ABOUT MUSIC EXPERIENCE WITH BUDGETING, PLANNING AND MANAGING PEOPLE TO A SUCCESSFUL END RESULT PASSIONATE ABOUT MUSIC

If you meet the requisite requirements, and are interested in hearing more, please send a cover letter and your resume to:”info @highergroundmusic.com

11/14/16 2:42 PM

sevendaysvt.com/classifieds


ATTENTION RECRUITERS:

C-20 11.16.16-11.23.16

Do you love to teach, play, learn and explore? If so, Pine Forest Children’s Center is looking for you! We are hiring a full-time

Preschool Teacher and Substitutes. Our early learning program provides high quality child care for diverse families of children 6 weeks through 5 years of age. We work in partnership with families, love to create dynamic learning environments and support children in exploring the world. Our ideal candidates will be motivated, responsible, and flexible team players that love working with young children and have taken some classes in early education. Please send resume, cover letter, and three letters of recommendation to Amy Ligay, Executive Director, Pine Forest Children’s Center, 208 Flynn Ave., Suite 2F, Burlington, VT, 05401. (802) 651-9455 or e-mail: amy@ thepineforest.org. EOE

The

State of Vermont

POST YOUR JOBS AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/JOBS FOR FAST RESULTS, For theBROWN: people…the place…the possibilities. OR CONTACT MICHELLE MICHELLE@SEVENDAYSVT.COM Vermont

Vermont Psychiatric The State of Vermont The State State of of Vermont Vermont The Care Hospital For the people…the place…the possibilities. Forthe thepeople…the people…theplace…the place…thepossibilities. possibilities. For Vermont Psychiatric Vermont Psychiatric Psychiatric Vermont Care Hospital Care Hospital Hospital Care Temporary Mental Health Specialist Vermont Psychiatric Care Hospital (VPCH) is seeking Temporary Mental Health Exciting Social Worker Position

Psychiatric Specialty Nurse Specialists toClinical join our team of dedicated professionals. At VPCH we are Exciting Social WorkerPosition Position Exciting Social Worker Vermont Psychiatric Care Hospital (VPCH), a 25-bed, state-of-the-art,

passionate NURSE and committed to the care of individuals with psychiatric disabilities. REGISTERED II Vermont Psychiatric CareHospital Hospital (VPCH), 25-bed,state-of-the-art, state-of-the-art, Vermont Care (VPCH), aa25-bed, progressive facility providing excellent care inPsychiatric a recovery-oriented, safe,

progressivefacility facilityproviding providingexcellent excellentcare carein inaarecovery-oriented, recovery-oriented,safe, safe, progressive

respectful environment, has an immediate opening for a social worker to join New Plan Implemented respectful environment, haswork animmediate immediate openingfor foras social workerto tojoin join respectful environment, has an opening aasocial aCompensation Temporaryclinical Mental Health Specialist you will collaboratively a worker ourAs multi-disciplinary treatment team. ourmulti-disciplinary multi-disciplinaryclinical clinicaltreatment treatmentteam. team. our

member of a multidisciplinary using practices to provide Vermont Psychiatric Care Hospital team, (VPCH), a 25evidence-based bed state-of-the-art, progressive facility This position involves significant collaboration with hospital staff of other patient-centered care. You will support the mission of VPCH to provide providing excellent care in a recovery-oriented, safe, respectful environment, has immediate This position involves significant collaboration with hospital staff ofother other This position involves significant collaboration with hospital staff of disciplines, and community providers involved in the formulation and excellent care a recovery-oriented, safe, respectful environment. openings for Psychiatric Clinical Specialty Nurses on all shifts. Whether you are a nurse disciplines, and community providers involved inthe the formulation and disciplines, and community providers involved in formulation and implementation of a in comprehensive treatment plan for patients. The ideal implementation of comprehensive treatment planfor forpatients. patients. The ideal seeking a will career or looking for a change where yousetting, can make in theThe changing implementation aacomprehensive treatment plan ideal candidate havepath experience in both a hospital andof community and a difference candidate will have experience inboth bothaahospital hospital andcommunity community setting, and candidate will have experience in and setting, and landscape of mental health care, there’s a rewarding opportunity at VPCH. This is an exciting have strong interpersonal and communication skills. Experience or interest This is an excellent opportunity for individuals with a Bachelor’s degree in havestrong strong interpersonal and communication skills. Experience orinterest interest have interpersonal communication skills. Experience or opportunity for experienced In addition to anand excellent benefits package, tuition in trauma-informed care or opennurses. dialogue appreciated. Licensure or Human Services or experience in a human services setting. intrauma-informed trauma-informed careor or open dialogue appreciated. Licensureor or in care dialogue appreciated. Licensure eligibility for licensure six months is assistance required. reimbursement and within loan repayment may beopen available for eligible applicants. eligibilityfor forlicensure licensurewithin withinsix sixmonths monthsisisrequired. required. eligibility

PROJECT MANAGER

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11/14/16 7:04 PM

Jvillage Network creates easy-to-update custom Web sites and engaging interactive tools to help Jewish organizations grow their membership communities. We are seeking an experienced Project Manager to join our Burlington-based team. The Project Manager is responsible for all aspects of client management, including client development, maintenance, and the day-to-day management of client projects. Candidate must have a college degree and at least 2 years of relevant experience, including experience working with Internet technologies, social media, database and content management systems, and e-communications.

Apply Online atfor www.careers.vermont.gov Applications will be accepted online. For and more or to apply, The salary range thisnot position is $48,713.60-$76,169.60 hasinformation full state The salaryrange range forthis thisNurse) position–Job $48,713.60-$76,169.60 andhas hasfull fullstate state Registered Nurse II (Psychiatric Clinical Specialty Opening The salary for position isisvia $48,713.60-$76,169.60 and employee benefit package. submit your cover letter and resume to Cheryl Mowel e-mail at ID# 619338 employeebenefit benefitpackage. package. employee

Forcheryl.mowel@state.vt.us more information, please contact Kathy Bushey at 802-505-0501 or For more information, contact Becky Moore at rebecca.moore@vermont.gov Kathleen.bushey@vermont.gov Formore moreinformation, information,contact contactBecky BeckyMoore Mooreat atrebecca.moore@vermont.gov rebecca.moore@vermont.gov For Apply online at www.careers.vermont.gov. Applyonline onlineat atwww.careers.vermont.gov. www.careers.vermont.gov. Apply Reference Job Opening ID# 618303 Reference JobOpening Opening ID# 618303 Reference Job ID# 618303 For questions related to your application, please contact the Department of Human Resources, For questions related to your application, please contact the Department of Human Recruitment Services, at 855-828-6700 (voice) orrelated 800-253-0191 (TTY/Relayplease Service). Thethe State of Forquestions questions related toyour yourapplication, application, please contact the Department ofHuman Human For to contact Department of Resources, Recruitment Services, at 855-828-6700 (voice) or 800-253-0191 (TTY/Relay Vermont offers an excellent total compensation package &Services, is an EOE. Resources,Recruitment Recruitment Services, at855-828-6700 855-828-6700(voice) (voice)or or800-253-0191 800-253-0191(TTY/Relay (TTY/Relay Resources, at

Service). The State of Vermont offers an excellent total compensation package & is an Service). The TheState Stateof ofVermont Vermontoffers offersan anexcellent excellenttotal totalcompensation compensationpackage package&&isisan an Service). Equal Opportunity Employer. EqualOpportunity OpportunityEmployer. Employer. Equal 7t-VtDeptHRrnII110916.indd 1

11/4/16 3:45 PM

Please send cover letter, resume, LinkedIn profile, and salary requirements to: careers@jvillagenetwork.com.

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Seven Days // 3.83" x 3.46" // BW // Jvillage Help Wanted - Project Manager

11/14/16 11:34 AM

SHARED LIVING PROVIDER Seeking a live-in Shared Living Provider to support a 30-year-old man who enjoys taking walks, playing music, helping others and participating in hands-on activities. This individual is seeking a roommate to share a furnished, centrally located home in Essex Junction. (2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, washer/dryer, off-street parking.) The right provider will have strong boundaries, clear communication, and the ability to provide ongoing supervision in support of building independent living skills. Ideal opportunity for a peer-aged professional or graduate student. Compensation: $40,000 tax-free annual stipend and generous respite budget. Available January 1st. Contact Lindsay at lreid@howardcenter.org or call (802) 488-6563.

STAFF ATTORNEY

Vermont Legal Aid seeks a full-time attorney to work with victims of crime in its Burlington, Vermont office. Responsibilities include coordination of activities under a grant intended to expand legal services to victims of crime in Vermont. Practice areas include: housing; benefits; abuse and other civil legal matters; representation of victims in criminal proceedings; and, outreach and community education initiatives. Applicants must have excellent written and oral skills and demonstrated experience in public interest law, civil rights law or legal services. Applicants must be admitted to practice in Vermont, eligible for admission by waiver, or willing to sit for the next examination. Some in-state travel required. Salary is $44,500 + D.O.E. with excellent fringe benefits. Send cover letter, resume, references, and writing sample as a single PDF with the subject line “VOCA Attorney Application 2016” by December 2, 2016 to Eric Avildsen, Executive Director, c/o Rose Wunrow (rwunrow@vtlegalaid.org). Please visit our website for further application instructions. VLA is an equal opportunity employer committed to building cultural competency in order to effectively serve our increasingly diverse client community. We encourage applicants to share in their cover letters how they can further this goal.

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11/14/16 12:27 PM

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FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @SEVENDAYSJOBS, SUBSCRIBE TO RSS, OR CHECK POSTINGS ON YOUR PHONE AT M.SEVENDAYSVT.COM

NEW JOBS POSTED DAILY! SEVENDAYSVT.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

MANAGING DIRECTOR

Seasonal Positions

We have immediate openings in our manufacturing department for long-term, full-time & part-time seasonal employment. We have other opportunities available throughout our company for days, early evening, and weekend shifts. No experience is necessary; we will train you.

INSTRUCTIONAL TECHNOLOGIST

Advise and support faculty in development of new teaching and learning strategies; plan design, and develop instructional technology projects; conduct and coordinate pilots of new technologies; collaborate with faculty in the design and development of online and blended courses; provide advanced level support and training on LMS tools; design and produce high quality digital learning objects.

Warehouse Manufacturing Customer service reps

Apply in person. 8 am to 5 pm 210 East Main Street, Richmond, VT 05477

Email resumes to

krista@leapsvt.com or call 879-0130. Come work 4t-Harringtons101916.indd 1

CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS - SCHOOL OF NURSING

Part-time clinical instructor positions available for teaching and supervising BSN students. Immediate needs, spring semester: obstetrics, mental health & pediatric care; for fall, medicalsurgical areas. Excellent compensation and faculty support, flexible hours 10-20 hours/week.

To apply for these and other great jobs: norwich.interviewexchange.com All candidates must be authorized to work for any U.S. employer. A post offer, pre-employment background check will be required of the successful candidate. Norwich University is an Equal Opportunity Employer and is committed to providing a positive education and work environment that recognizes and respects the dignity of all students, faculty and staff. Reasonable accommodations will be made for the known disability of an otherwise qualified applicant. Please contact the Office of Human Resources at nuhr@ norwich.edu for assistance.

11/14/16

at VPR, named by Vermont Business 10/17/16 1t-LeapsBounds110916.indd 12:49 PM Magazine as one of the best places to work in Vermont for the fourth year in a row!

Vermont Public Radio is looking for a rock star Facilities Assistant who is passionate about its mission. The successful candidate will be responsible for the upkeep of all the public and staff spaces and the overall appearance of its newly expanded facility. If you are detail oriented, proactive and enjoy working in an ever changing and fast-paced environment, this is the position for you. This is a full-time position and includes a full benefits package. Read the full job description & physical demands* on the Careers at VPR website page at vpr.net. *The physical demands described are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. VPR is a statewide network that is widely recognized for excellence in the public radio system. Diversity matters to us: we’re looking for applicants who will expand the perspectives and collective life 2:46 PM experience of our team.

follow us for the newest: twitter.com/SevenDaysJobs

No phone calls, please. To apply, please email your cover letter, resume and VPR job application (vpr.net/careers at VPR). Only applications received at careers@vpr.net will be accepted. An equal opportunity employer

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Middlebury Community Television is a public access cable station, committed to facilitating free speech, government transparency, and media literacy.

Facilities Assistant

-ing JOBS!

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11/11/16 2:24 PM

Hiring a Program Director to run one of our childcare teams, and teachers to join our growing childcare centers.

Provide support to an in-progress study, and potential campuswide implementation of mobile devices for all students and faculty. Integrating and supporting mobile devices within the University enterprise systems is the primary function. Must have a strong background in mobile device management and systems administration.

we’re

vermontseniorgames.org

PROGRAM DIRECTOR and TEACHERS

ITS PROJECT COORDINATOR

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Vermont Senior Games (VSGA) is hiring a part-time Managing Director to help plan, manage, and promote our games!

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Responsible for coordinating and organizing project activities, including planning and implementation, assessing needs, setting goals and objectives; tracking and ensuring each project is on schedule; tracking and managing change notices and change orders; and communicating project status.

MOBILE DEVICE & CLASSROOM SUPPORT TECHNICIAN

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The Production Coordinator oversees day-to-day operations of the studio and on-location recording and broadcast. S/he trains volunteer producers and camera operators. In addition, s/he maintains the MCTV website and related social media pages and channels. The position requires a techsavvy, communicative person who takes initiative and works well independently. The ideal candidate is familiar with fiel and studio video production, Macintosh operating system, and video related software. The position is 35 hours/ week and requires some night hours, with hourly rate $15-17. This position requires a successful background check. TO APPLY: Qualifie candidates should email a cover letter, resume, and three written letters of reference to Dick Thodal, Executive Director, Middlebury Community Television: dthodal@ middleburycommunitytv.org Learn more at: middleburycommunitytv. org/2016/11/09/were-hiring/ MIDDLEBURY COMMUNITY TELEVISION IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.

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ATTENTION RECRUITERS:

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POST YOUR JOBS AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/JOBS FOR FAST RESULTS, OR CONTACT MICHELLE BROWN: MICHELLE@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

11.16.16-11.23.16

ST. JOSEPH RESIDENTIAL CARE HOME PART-TIME, DAY EVENING AND PER DIEM

LNAs and Experienced Caregivers This is a great opportunity to work with caring adults while offering superior caregiving skills. The ideal candidate will have a LNA license. All positions require a high level of professionalism and a willingness to promote the vision, mission and values of the Home. These jobs offer competitive wages and benefits. Schedules are varied with some weekend shifts required. If interested, please send resumes to: mbelanger@vermontcatholic.org

We are seeking talented people who share our commitment of helping children to join our growing team. Our organization offers a comprehensive benefits package that includes Health, Vision, and Dental Insurance, Short and Long-Term Disability, Life Insurance, 401k, generous time off policies, employee discount program, and professional development to name a few.

Behavior Interventionists – Laraway School and Public School Based

Or mail to: Mary Belanger St. Joseph’s Residential Care Home 243 N. Prospect St., Burlington, VT 05401. (802) 864-0264

Training Provided – Individuals with relevant experience encouraged to apply! Provide daily educational and behavioral support to individual students in an alternative or public school setting. The Interventionist provides support in social, recreational, and daily living skills in school, community and outdoor education settings. Bachelor degree, or pursuing Bachelor Degree, ideally in human services preferred. Full time and part time opportunities available.

EEO

10/10/16 3:13 PM Special

Education Case Manager Provide case management for all aspects of a student’s services both special education and mental health while adhering to all state and federal regulations. This position supports the student, team, teachers and family in carrying out education and treatment goals. Special Education Licensure is required for this position and prior experience working with emotional and behavior disorders is preferred. This position will share time between our two School locations.

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Behavior Consultant Provide diverse therapeutic behavioral consultation and development of treatment programming to clients using methods and principles of Applied Behavior Analysis and Positive Behavioral Support. Provide consultation to treatment team related to overall service coordination and service delivery. BCBA preferred, but candidates will be considered with a Master’s degree in related field, experience with Functional Behavior Assessments, Behavior Support Plans, Applied Behavior Analysis, and have completed ABA 1 and 2. Supervision hours for BCBA provided. Full or part time flexibility.

OTHER EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES

Math Instructor

Elementary Teacher

J O B FAIR

Community Support Residential Support

Join us to learn about SugarbuSh jobS, meet hiring managers, and enjoy free refreShMeNTS compliments of Sugarbush Resort.

Sugarbush Resort

the schoolhouse

Sat., Nov. 19, 9 AM – 12 PM APPly FOR A jOB & Ski FREE FOR thE AFtERNOON! (beginning at 12:30 PM) EmploymEnt pErks include: • FREE Season Pass • Retail, Food & Beverage discounts • Vanpool Opportunities • and morE… Untitled-4 1

For more information and a list of current job openings, visit sugarbush.com or call 802-583-6380.

11/10/16 2:19 PM

Please visit our website laraway.org for additional information. Submit Letter of Interest, Resume, and 3 References or Inquiries to: Human Resources P.O. Box 621 Johnson, VT 05656 Phone: 635-2805 Fax: 635-7273 apply@laraway.org LYFS is an Equal Opportunity Employer 10v-LarawayYouth&Family111616.indd 1

New, local, scam-free jobs posted every day!

11/14/16 3:45 PM

sevendaysvt.com/classifieds


Rice Memorial High School FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @SEVENDAYSJOBS, SUBSCRIBE TO RSS,

NEW JOBS POSTED DAILY!

Northern Vermont's Catholic High School. (South Burlington, Vermont)

OR CHECK POSTINGS ON YOUR PHONE AT M.SEVENDAYSVT.COM

IS GROWING … JOB OPPORTUNITIES

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SEVENDAYSVT.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

11.16.16-11.23.16

Drop Out Prevention Counselor

Rice Memorial High School Northern Vermont’s Catholic High School

(South Burlington, Vermont)

IS GROWING … JOB OPPORTUNITIES CHECK OUT OUR WEBSITES: RMHSVT.ORG or VERMONTCATHOLIC.ORG

CHECK OUT OUR WEBSITES: WWW.RMHSVT.ORG or WWW.VERMONTCATHOLIC.ORG Job Openings: JOB OPENINGS:

Director of Enrollment & Marketing

Director of Enrollment & Marketing – Full Time position Development & Grant Manager – Part Time Full-time Accountant – Part Time

Development & Grant Manager

Part-time A vibrant community to become a part of !! Apply today!

Accountant Part-time

For further details about this position and how to apply, please visit our website at spectrumvt.org.

A vibrant community to become a part of!! Apply today! 5h-RiceMemorialHighSchool111616.indd 1

Spectrum Youth & Family Services is looking for a Drop Out Prevention Counselor. Under general direction, the Drop Out Prevention Counselor will assist in the development, implementation and monitoring of activities and services at school sites targeting drop-outs and a endance of students at risk of leaving school. The Drop Out Prevention Counselor will provide early identification of students at risk of failing or leaving school and apply appropriate interventions. Additionally, the Drop Out Prevention Counselor will serve as a resource and liaison between schools, home, law enforcement - School Resource Officer (SRO) and community agencies concerning pupil a endance related problems and issues and other related functions as directed. This position will focus on working with all youth; especially youth of color going through the restorative process and/or correction system and New American youth who need extra supports.

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11/14/16 2:17 PM

The New School of Montpelier

REAL ESTATE DEVELOPMENT UNDERWRITER

JOB FAIR

BURLINGTON

Wednesday, November 16 8:00 am - 8:00 pm At 7 Farrell Street in South Burlington

We have immediate openings for

CORRECTIONAL OFFICERS at the Chittenden Regional Correctional Facility If you’re interested in a career in criminal justice, you’ll be interested in: • Meeting the hiring managers • Q & A about Corrections Vermont’s Department of Corrections is one of the largest departments in state government and the career opportunities are excellent. Correctional Officers attend a paid 5-week training program at the Vermont Corrections Academy.

Join Housing Vermont’s team in Burlington as Real Estate Development Underwriter for its economic, community, and affordable housing development loan and investment programs. This position is responsible for reviewing, interpreting and performing due diligence of financial, market, industry, and social impact information; identifying key issues, trends, risks, mitigations, and drawing conclusions; preparing investment committee proposals; and assisting in the closing process. Requirements include 3+ years of underwriting, financial or credit analysis experience in multifamily or commercial real estate; valid driver’s license; proficiency in Microsoft Office with advanced excel skills; and Bachelor’s degree in finance, community development, business or related discipline. Knowledge of the Low Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) and/or New Markets Tax Credit (NMTC) programs is a plus.

We are a small, independent school serving unique children and youth. We are recruiting dedicated individuals to join our diverse staff in this exciting and challenging work. Positions start immediately.

Para-educator/ Student Supervisor This is a one-on-one paraeducator position supporting students in the development of academic, communication, vocational, social and selfregulation skills. Settings may include classroom, one-on-one environments and the community. Must possess good communication/ collaboration skills.

The successful candidate must have excellent analytical, written and oral communication, and math skills; a keen ability to set priorities, handle multiple tasks, and meet deadlines; a readiness to learn, and an excitement about the work of Housing Vermont and Vermont Rural Ventures. For a full position description, please email jobs@hvt.org. Please send resume, cover letter with salary requirements, and references to:

For more information, visit our website at http:// corrections.vermont.gov/ or apply online at www.careers.vermont.gov, Job Posting #619985 (Correctional Officer) or #619986 (Temporary Correctional Officer).

HOUSING VERMONT ATTN: BETH BOUTIN EMAIL: JOBS@HVT.ORG

An associate’s degree or five years’ experience after high school preferred. Candidates must have a valid driver’s license and reliable vehicle. Criminal record checks will be conducted for final candidates. Submit a resume to: The New School of Montpelier 11 West Street Montpelier, VT 05602 or email to: ddellinger@nsmvt.org

www.nsmvt.org

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

No phone calls, please! EOE

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ATTENTION RECRUITERS:

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POST YOUR JOBS AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/JOBS FOR FAST RESULTS, OR CONTACT MICHELLE BROWN: MICHELLE@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

11.16.16-11.23.16

COMMUNICATIONS AND MEDIA COORDINATOR

applicable state statutes. These regulations assure that raw milk offered for sale is produced in clean, properly constructed, safe conditions that should result in a safe, high quality product being offered to consumers.

Tourism & Marketing: Director of Communications

Vermont Department of Health

The Division of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention at the Vermont During the training period, the work location will be based in Montpelier. The Department of Health has an opening for an individual who understands work for this position is primarily in Franklin County, VT. The duty station will behavior change marketing and communications. This individual will apply home based Department with a wide geographic which currently includes Franklin this skill set Experienced to work in health systems, community, school, and worksite professional sought to lead the be Vermont of area Tourism and Grand Isle counties and parts of Chittenden and Lamoille counties. The environments. Previous experience with social marketing in a public health & Marketing’s public and trade relations efforts. personThis in this mission-critical position should live withinposition the geographical area that is inspected environment is highly desirable. We are looking for an energetic, organized and (preferably Franklin County). This positionin may require out-of-state and is designed to generate positive tourism-related coverage of Vermont the collaborative individual to coordinate communications and outreach strategies overnight travel for training which would be reimbursed by state. Specialist I is that will support chronic disease and healthmarketplace. promotion activities. The Director of Communications is national and prevention international an entry level position and the employee will be expected to learn basic farm The ideal candidate will have knowledge of the principles and practices of responsible for the development and implementation ofinafirstproactive business inspection skills 6 months of employment. The FDA Farm Inspection social marketing and the ability to apply them to different environments. Course will beof required to advance to Specialist outreach consistent the goals the Department of II. This position is being Other required skills includeplan planning, developing andwith coordinating programs,and mission recruited at multiple levels. If you would like to be considered for both levels, and a demonstrated abilityand to communicate effectively to multiple audiences Tourism Marketing as well as maintaining consistent communications apply to each Job Opening. (Dairy Farm Specialist I, Job Opening # 620288; both orally and in writing, graphic design experience is a plus. Occasional Dairy Farm Specialist Jobtourism Opening # 620265). via social networking tools. This is responsible forII,all mediaFor more information, travel is required. The position will work with program staff, state position partners, contact Sue James at sue.m.james@vermont.gov. Reference Job ID # 620288 organizations, and committees. Projects will include diabetes prevention, relations in-state and out-of-state; press release development; pitching targeted & 620265. Location: Montpelier. Status: Full time. Application deadline: physical activity and nutrition, women’s health, and asthma prevention. Meeting tourism story ideas to regional and national media; development of press November 28, 2016. facilitation, research of public health best practice, and literature reviews will trips and management of media contact lists; and be involved, familiarization as will some administrative duties. Theitineraries; Vermont Department of Health is especially interested in candidates who can contribute to the support for Vermont’s international public relations initiatives. The Director department’s diversity and commitment to foster an environment of mutual Agency of Transportation will also collaborate with the Agencytoof Commerce team in thewho is passionate and respect, acceptance and equal opportunity. Applicants are encouraged VTrans has executive an opportunity for a professional include in their cover letter information how they will further this goal. and business knowledgeable recruitment about a wide range plan. of environmental development of aabout proactive travel trade This issues, and enjoys For more information, contact Julie Arel at 863-7269 or julie.arel@vermont.gov. collaborating with people, to lead the development and help implement the position will report to the Commissioner of Tourism & Marketing. Reference Job ID# 620238. Location: Burlington. Status: Full time. Application Agency’s environmental policies. The Senior Environmental Policy Analyst is deadline: November 22, 2016. responsible for analyzing the relationship between Vermont’s transportation Job Description: system and environmental issues as water energy, air quality, Candidates must: demonstrate strong oral and written skills; havesuch a BA in quality,of Experienced professional sought to lead the Vermont Department Tourism wildlife and Climate Change to develop policy recommendations that Public Relations related field; have minimum of fi ve years of relevant work & or Marketing’s public anda trade relations eff orts. This mission-critical position affect Agency activities and decision making. We are looking for a capable experience; demonstrate Vermont and Vermont’s tourism policy analyst who can evaluate and synthesize the implications of diverse, is designedknowledge to generateof positive tourism-related coverage ofindustry. Vermont in the Department of Vermont Health Access complicated and interrelated state and federal environmental initiatives, laws national international marketplace. The ofuseful Communications The Department of Vermont Health Access (DVHA)and is currently recruiting and regulations in a Director manner that is to VTrans practitionersis and external Resume, writing samples and a minimum of three references should be responsible for the and To implementation of engage a proactive business for the Director of Quality Improvement and Clinical Integrity. This development position partners. this end, you will actively VTrans staff, other state agencies manages a unit of 9 quality and staff. This position is responsible and external toCommunity identify, evaluate and implement of actions from submitted toclinical Kitty Sweet, Vermont Agency Commerce outreach plan consistent withof the goalsorganizations and and mission of the Department for policy development work for the Department of Vermont Health Access minimizing direct impacts of agency activities to supporting environmental Development, One National Life Drive, VTThe 05620-0501. In- communications andAnalyst out-ofTourism andofMarketing asMontpelier, well stewardship. as maintaining (DVHA) involving the development and implementation a coordinated quality Seniorconsistent Environmental Policy advises Agency networking tools. This position responsible for all tourism media managementstate programtravel for cross-functional performance improvement. Leads willvia be social required. Salary range: $45,000 -and $50,000. leadership isisoften the Agency’s designated representative on multi-state, performance improvement projects following the CMS protocols and and procures national and international and commissionspitching focused on transportation relations in-state out-of-state; press releaseboards development; targeted and manages external contracts. This position also oversees performance and and environmental issues. Other major duties include evaluating and tracking story ideas topsychiatric regional relevant and national media; development of press accountability for program operationstourism in clinical integrity--team care, state and federal legislation; drafting policy briefs, preparing familiarization trips and itineraries; ofonmedia contact and and inpatient oversight, autism services and the quality unit. Involvement in Quality plans, management and directing research environmental topics; lists; public outreach; Management discussions and decision, as they relate the Agency of Human some supervision of staff. Work initiatives. is performed withThe considerable latitude for support fortoVermont’s international public relations Director Services and the Medicaid Beneficiaries served. This position also has direct independent judgment under the direction of the Policy, Planning and Research will also collaborate of Commerce executive team in the oversight and management for authorization of services, working withwith the the Agency Bureau Director. ofbilling a proactive provider network around education ofdevelopment clinical standards and challenges travel trade and business recruitment plan. This You should have education and experience in a planning related field, and nuances. For more information, contact, amy.simons@vermont.gov or Commissioner of Tourism & Marketing. position will report to the biological-life or physical science, engineering, energy systems, environmental/ 241-0147. Reference Job ID# 620281. Location: Waterbury. Status: Full time/ natural resources or the law; experience with legislative processes; the ability Classified. Application deadline: November 20, 2016. analyze and synthesize data and policy analyses into understandable reports; Candidates must: demonstrateto strong oral and written skills; have a BA in the ability to facilitate and collaborate with a diverse group of customers and Public Relations or related field;partners; haveexcellent a minimum fivecommunication years of relevant verbal andof written skills and anwork inclination Agency of Agriculture, Food & Markets for inquisitive and critical thinking. The job is in Montpelier andindustry. requires experience; demonstrate knowledge of Vermont and Vermont’s tourism This position is an excellent way to be involved in the diversity of the VT dairy occasional travel in and out of state. For more information, contact Joe Segale industry. The successful candidate will inspect all dairy farms (cattle, goats, at 477-2365 or email joe.segale@vermont.gov. Reference Job ID 620335. Resume, samples and aLocation: minimum of three should be November 29, sheep), bulk milk tankers, and bulk milk haulers in writing assigned geographical Status: references Full time. Application deadline: Montpelier. area to assure their compliance with submitted the Pasteurized Milk Ordinance and other 2016.Agency of Commerce and Community to Kitty Sweet, Vermont

Job Description:

SENIOR ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY ANALYSIST

Tourism & Marketing: Director of Communications

DIRECTOR OF QUALITY IMPROVEMENT & CLINICAL INTEGRITY

DAIRY FARM SPECIALIST I/II

Development, One National Life Drive, Montpelier, VT 05620-0501. In- and out-of-

To apply, you must use the online job application at careers.vermont.gov. For questions related to your application, please contact the Department of Human Resources, state travel will be required. Salary range: $45,000 - $50,000. Recruitment Services, at 855-828-6700 (voice) or 800-253-0191 (TTY/Relay Service). The State of Vermont is an equal opportunity employer and offers an excellent total compensation package.

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More food before the classifieds section

PAGE 46

maple-kissed currants were better than the expected raisins. I nibbled the pastry between cocktail sips, slowly becoming less numb and discovering I was actually quite hungry. I devoured the bun’s warm and gooey insides in a few greedy bites. I scrolled through Instagram, craving contact with the outside world. But I still couldn’t face the real people around me, for reasons I didn’t understand. The app’s algorithm now filters images based on something other than chronology. So election-day posts — now 15 to 20 hours old — dominated

food+drink

On my way out of town that afternoon, I drove by the turn that would take me home. I reached the Winooski traffic circle, I parked on Main Street and walked into Misery Loves Co. I asked bartender Mike Dunn for a cocktail made with whiskey and Concord grape. “I just poured the last one,” he said, explaining that he’d run out of juice. “Can I make you a different whiskey cocktail?” Dunn’s smile told me he had one in mind. “That’d be great,” I said, happy to let him do the thinking. He strained my drink into a pressed glass coupe and placed it on the bar with-

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FOOD 47

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out a word. The glass was edged with cranberry dust, a tart and salty intro to a semisweet, rosy blend of bourbon, cranberry and herbal old-world aperitifs. Called Sassamanash, the drink’s name means “cranberry” in the Algonquin native tongue. Within minutes, the seats around me had filled, as friends washed away the day with cold beverages and oysters on ice. At the end of the bar I drank, feeling stealthy beneath my hooded cloak. The cocktail went down quickly. I was tempted to order another but abstained, facing a long drive home. Of course, I knew that soaking my sorrows in liquor wouldn’t resolve the pain I was feeling. Nor was it a viable long-term coping strategy. But on Wednesday, November 9, the whiskey helped. And, quiet in the company of strangers, I didn’t need to engage in conversation to feel less alone. m

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

my feed. I scrolled through photos of women I love dearly, who’d donned pantsuits and red lipstick to cast their votes. They beamed jubilant smiles into the camera, letting the world know they’d spoken. I’d posted a similar photo. Intellectually, I wasn’t enamored with either candidate. So I was surprised at how elated I felt after voting. Buoyed by the hope and pride I’d placed in my ballot, I’d snapped a picture to celebrate the moment. As I sat there drinking that tiny, bitter cocktail 24 hours later, those pictures seemed a world away. The black hole I’d felt in my rib cage earlier that morning returned. No time like the present to go to work. I gathered my things, steeled my upper lip and downed the remainder of my drink. Instead of the usual office chatter, the mood was subdued and somber, as if someone had died. I canceled my dinner plans in favor of heading home early. Tomorrow would be better — right?

le b 10 holesa rket in Platts W o c t s rma Co d Supe r o f a n Han


BODIES

calendar WED.16 art

DROP-IN QUILTING STUDIO: Adult and teen needle-and-thread enthusiasts work on patchwork projects. River Arts, Morrisville, 10 a.m.-noon. Donations. Info, 888-1261. LIFE DRAWING: Artists put pencil to paper with a live model as their muse. Bring personal materials. ˜ e Front, Montpelier, 6:30-8:30 p.m. $10. Info, 839-5349. ‘PAINTING THE MODERN GARDEN: MONET TO MATISSE’: Shown as part of Great Art Wednesdays, a documentary film gets to the root of some of history’s greatest representations of botanical plots. Town Hall ˜ eater, Middlebury, 11 a.m. $5-10. Info, 382-9222.

business

HOW WILL CHANGES IN EMPLOYMENT LAWS AFFECT YOUR BUSINESS?: Entrepreneurs take notes on the ways in which updated federal and state regulations apply to their enterprises. Ilsley Public Library, Middlebury, 8-9:30 a.m. $5; free for Addison County Chamber of Commerce members; preregister. Info, 388-7951. KELLEY MARKETING GROUP BREAKFAST MEETING: Professionals in marketing, advertising and communications brainstorm ideas for nonprofit organizations. Room 217, Ireland Building, Champlain College, Burlington, 7:45-9 a.m. Free. Info, 864-4067.

11.16.16-11.23.16

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

MEASURING YOUR MARKETING: Businessmen and -women look at data generated by online marketing tools to see if their promotional efforts are on the right track or falling flat. Waterbury Public Library, noon-1 p.m. Free. Info, 882-8191. MILK MONEY: INVEST LOCAL SERIES: Vermont entrepreneurs talk dollars and sense at a seminar focused on buying into area enterprises. Vermont State Employees Credit Union, Rutland, 5:30-7 p.m. Free. Info, 371-5162.

community

CURRENT EVENTS CONVERSATION: Newsworthy subjects take the spotlight in this informal and open discussion. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 11 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 878-4918. GREAT STREETS INITIATIVE: A team of city officials and designers builds upon plans for the construction and maintenance of a vibrant, walkable downtown area. Burlington City Hall Auditorium, 7-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 865-1794.

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passenger rail expansion. Hotel Coolidge, White River Junction, 6 p.m. Free. Info, 828-2942.

crafts

KNITTERS & NEEDLEWORKERS: Crafters convene for creative fun. Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 264-5660. KNITTING IN THE ROUND WORKSHOP: Circular needles in hand, fiber fanatics stitch a rolledbrim hat in a two-part workshop. Call for required materials. Jericho Town Library, 5:30-7 p.m. Free. Info, 899-4686.

dance

‘THE BRIGHT STREAM’: Members of the Bolshoi Ballet leap and bound across the silver screen in a broadcast performance of this laugh-outloud masterpiece driven by mistaken identity. Catamount Arts Center, St. Johnsbury, 7 p.m. $6-18. Info, 748-2600.

SEVEN DAYS

MOTION Fans of Fox’s “So You Think You Can Dance” may have seen AXIS Dance Company in two awe-inspiring televised performances in 2011 and 2012. Now, Vermonters have the chance to see the physically integrated ensemble in living color when it takes to the Flynn MainStage. Formed in 1987, the Oakland, Calif., group includes performers with and without disabilities pushing the boundaries of movement with postmodern choreography by Marc Brew and Joe Goode. Committed to community outreach and education, the company is making its Queen City performance accessible to all with a paywhat-you-can policy.

DROP-IN HIP-HOP DANCE: Beginners are welcome at a groove session inspired by infectious beats. Swan Dojo, Burlington, 6-7:30 p.m. $15. Info, 540-8300.

education

VERMONT CREATIVE LEARNING FORUM: Educators get schooled in using creative engagement as a catalyst to advance proficiency-based learning initiatives. ˜ e Woodstock Inn & Resort, 8:30 a.m.3:30 p.m. $40-345. Info, 595-0087.

etc.

AMERICAN RED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE: Healthy donors give the gift of life. United Church of Chelsea, 11:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Furnace Brook Wesleyan Church, Pittsford, 11:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 800-733-2767. CAREER SERVICES: A Community College of Vermont job-hunt helper assists employment seekers with everything from résumé writing to online applications. Winooski Memorial Library, 1-4 p.m. Free. Info, 655-6424. GIRLS’ RIDE OUT: WRENCH NIGHT: Femaleidentifying cyclists come first at a drop-in bike-repair shop where questions are welcome. Bike Recycle Vermont, Burlington, 6-9 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 863-4475. HIGH FIVE AWARDS: Special friends of the organization for kids and families get a pat on the back for their support. Autumnal drinks and hors d’oeuvres fuel the fun. King Street Center, Burlington, 5:30 p.m. Free. Info, 862-6736, ext. 100.

PUBLIC FORUM: ˜ e Vermont Transportation Board fields feedback on possible freight and WED.16

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List your upcoming event here for free! SUBMISSION DEADLINES: SPECIAL HOLIDAY DEADLINE: SUBMISSIONS FOR EVENTS TAKING PLACE BETWEEN NOVEMBER 30 AND DECEMBER 7 ARE DUE BY TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, AT NOON.

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FIND OUR CONVENIENT FORM AND GUIDELINES AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POSTEVENT. YOU CAN ALSO EMAIL US AT CALENDAR@SEVENDAYSVT.COM. TO BE LISTED, YOU MUST INCLUDE THE NAME OF EVENT, A BRIEF DESCRIPTION, SPECIFIC LOCATION, DATE, TIME, COST AND CONTACT PHONE NUMBER.

CALENDAR EVENTS IN SEVEN DAYS: LISTINGS AND SPOTLIGHTS ARE WRITTEN BY KRISTEN RAVIN. SEVEN DAYS EDITS FOR SPACE AND STYLE. DEPENDING ON COST AND OTHER FACTORS, CLASSES AND WORKSHOPS MAY BE LISTED IN EITHER THE CALENDAR OR THE CLASSES SECTION. WHEN APPROPRIATE, CLASS ORGANIZERS MAY BE ASKED TO PURCHASE A CLASS LISTING.

Show of Support From music to storytelling to comedy, Green Mountain State performers offer a little something for everyone while drumming up support for Montpelier’s Lost Nation Theater during the third annual LNT Aid. This year’s lineup features top-notch talent including singer-songwriter Jon Gailmor, bluesman Dave Keller, standup jokester Maggie Lenz, physical comedian Tom Murphy, singing storyteller George Woodard and all-around entertainer Rusty DeWees. A live-auction show by DeWees banks extra bucks for the theater, and bar service by Sweet Melissa’s keeps patrons of the arts in a giving mood.

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N O V E M B E R

LNT AID ˜ ursday, November 17, 7:30 p.m., at Montpelier City Hall Auditorium. $25. Info, 229-0492. lostnationtheater.org


Season’s Greetings Some would say it’s never too early to haul out the holly, deck the halls and rock around the Christmas tree. Those who just can’t wait to start jingling all the way can dive into the spirit of the season with Northern Stage’s production of the classic holiday play A Christmas Carol. Broadway veteran Bill Kux stars as Ebenezer Scrooge in this adaptation of Charles Dickens’ story of ghosts, greed and, ultimately, redemption and benevolence. As director Peter Hackett says in a press release, Dickens “believed that it was every person’s responsibility to watch out for his neighbor, because in the end we are, as human beings, all on the same journey.” Now, that’s what we call Christmas spirit.

NOV.18 | DANCE ‘A CHRISTMAS CAROL’ COURTESY OF DAVID DESILVA

AXIS DANCE COMPANY Friday, November 18, 8 p.m., at Flynn MainStage in Burlington. $15-40. Info, 863-5966. flynntix.org

Wednesday, November 16, through Saturday, November 19, 7:30 p.m.; Sunday, November 20, 2 p.m.; Tuesday, November 22, 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.; and Wednesday, November 23, 7:30 p.m., at Barrette Center for the Arts in White River Junction. See website for additional dates. $14-64. Info, 296-7000. northernstage.org

NOV.19 | MUSIC

Rays of Light

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MR. SUN Saturday, November 19, 7 p.m., at First Unitarian Universalist Society in Burlington. $20-25. Info, 434-4563. valleystage.net

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Four minds from three generations find common ground in the music of Mr. Sun. Seasoned and celebrated fiddler Darol Anger is joined by bass player Ethan Jodziewicz, guitarist Grant Gordy and mandolin master Joe Walsh, formerly of the bluegrass ensemble the Gibson Brothers, in a repertoire of American string band music. With each member of the Boston-based band bringing his experience to the table, the foursome strikes a chord with fans of swing, jazz and bluegrass sounds. The quartet picks and strums selections from its 2015 release The People Need Light, described by the Lonesome Road Review as “an album of masterfully played acoustic sounds.”

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NOV.16-20, 22 & 23 | HOLIDAYS


The 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th and 12th

Wonders of THE WORLD CABOT HOSIERY’S 37th ANNUAL FACTORY SOCK SALE!

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film

LAKE CHAMPLAIN INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL: Cinephiles screen a diverse selection of shorts and feature-length films from around the world. Strand Center for the Arts, Plattsburgh, N.Y., 7 p.m. $10; free for SUNY Plattsburgh students and kids 13 and under. Info, 518-563-1604.

food & drink

COMMUNITY DINNER: Neighbors link up over a holiday-themed meal. O’Brien Community Center, Winooski, 6-7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 655-4565.

Sat. & Sun. Nov. 12th & 13th and

COMMUNITY SUPPER: A scrumptious spread connects friends and neighbors. Bring a dessert to share. The ellness Co-op, Burlington, 5-5:45 p.m. Free. Info, 888-492-8218, ext. 300.

Sat. & Sun. Nov. 19th & 20th

PENNYWISE PANTRY: On a tour of the store, shoppers create a custom template for keeping the kitchen stocked with affordable, nutritious eats. City Market/Onion River Co-op, Burlington, 6:307:30 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 861-9753.

8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. MOST AT LAST YEAR’S PRICES 10% Off Any Purchase Over $100!

364 Whetstone Drive, Northfield, VT Take Doyon Road off Route 12 in Northfield, VT Turn right on Whetstone Drive to the top of the hill.

WED.16

MOVING PICTURES: FILMS ABOUT IMMIGRATION: Film fanatics take in tales of uprooted people. Call for details. Jaquith Public Library, Marshfield, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 426-3581.

“MORE SOCKS THAN YOU CAN SHAKE A STICK AT.”

Plenty of parking and foul weather tents!

calendar

MasterCard, Visa, Discover, American Express Accepted

802-444-1800

VERMONT FARMERS MARKET: Local products — think produce, breads, pastries, cheeses, wines, syrups, jewelry, crafts and beauty supplies — draw shoppers to a diversified bazaa . Vermont Farmers Food Center, Rutland, 3-6 p.m. Free. Info, 342-4727. WOODSTOCK FARMERS MARKET: Whether you’re a foodie or a newbie, delicious, local fare is accessible to all at a year-round emporium of prepared foods, baked goods, produce, seafood, meats and cheeses. Woodstock Farmers Market, 7:30 a.m.-7 p.m. Free. Info, 457-3658.

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PARLOR GAME NIGHT: Improv, theater and other types of diversions generate creativity, spontaneity and plenty of fun. Montpelier Senior Activity Center, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 223-2518.

health & fitness

EPIC MINDFULNESS MEDITATION: Guided practice and group conversation with Yushin Sola cultivate well-being. Railyard Apothecary, Burlington, 7:308:30 p.m. $14. Info, 299-9531. EVERY WEDNESDAY, EVERYONE TAI CHI: Beginners and longtime practitioners alike improve balance, posture and coordination through the Chinese martial art. Ascension Lutheran Church, South Burlington, 5-6 p.m. Donations. Info, 862-8866. GENTLE TAI CHI: Madeleine Piat-Landolt guides students in a sequence of postures with an emphasis on relaxation and alignment. Champlain Senior Center, McClure MultiGenerational Center, Burlington, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 658-3585. GINGER’S FITNESS BOOT CAMP: Students get pumped with an interval-style workout that boosts muscle strength, cardiovascular fitness, agili y, balance and coordination. Middlebury Municipal Gym, 7-8 a.m. $12. Info, 343-7160. INSIGHT MEDITATION: Attendees absorb Buddhist principles and practices. Wellspring Mental Health and Wellness Center, Hardwick, 5:30-7 p.m. Free. Info, 472-6694.

SEVEN DAYS

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THANKSGIVING

BRIDGE CLUB: Strategic players have fun with the popular card game. Burlington Bridge Club, Williston, 9:15 a.m. & 1:30 p.m. $6. Info, 872-5722.

LUNAR YOGA/PILATES: Students who identify as female empower and tone the feminine mind, body and spirit. Zenbarn Studio, Waterbury, 10:30-11:45 a.m. $10. Info, 779-0444.

KATHY & COMPANY FLOWERS 221 Colchester Ave. | Burlington | 863-7053 | kathycoflowers.com

MEDITATION & MOTION: Twenty minutes of seated meditation lead to personal movement practice guided by the body’s inner voice. The ellness Collective, Burlington, 10-11:30 a.m. $10-15; preregister. Info, jeremy@wellnesscollectivevt.com. MORNING FLOW YOGA: Greet the sun with a grounding and energizing class for all levels. The

Wellness Collective, Burlington, 10-11 a.m. $10. Info, 540-0186. NIA WITH LINDA: Eclectic music and movements drawn from healing, martial and dance arts propel an animated barefoot workout. South End Studio, Burlington, 8:30-9:30 a.m. $14; free for first-tim ers. Info, 372-1721. PERSONAL BEST RUNNER’S CIRCUIT: A smallgroup training class prepares athletes to meet their goals and avoid injury. Your Personal Best Fitness, South Burlington, 5:45-6:30 p.m. $15. Info, 658-1616. QUEEN ANNE’S LACE: A LOOK INTO NATURE’S CONTRACEPTIVE: Clinical intern Ayeen Telopa dives into the practical application of wild carrot in preventing pregnancy. Vermont Center for Integrative Herbalism, Montpelier, 6-8 p.m. $10-12; free for VCIH students; preregister. Info, 224-7100. RECOVERY COMMUNITY YOGA: Physical and mental strength improve as the result of a stretching session for all ability levels. Turning Point Center, Burlington, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 861-3150. R.I.P.P.E.D.: Resistance, intervals, power, plyometrics, endurance and diet define this high-intensi y physical-fitness program. No th End Studio B, Burlington, 6 p.m. $10. Info, 578-9243. TAI CHI FOR ALL: Shaina Levee instructs attendees wearing loose, comfy clothing in moving meditation. Jericho Town Library, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 899-4686. WEDNESDAY NIGHT SOUND BATH: Draw in the good vibrations of gongs, bowls and didgeridoos — a relaxing sonic massage to get you through the week. The ellness Collective, Burlington, 7:30-9 p.m. $15. Info, 510-697-7790. ZUMBA: Lively Latin rhythms fuel this dancefitness phenomenon for a l experience levels. Vergennes Opera House, 6 p.m. $10. Info, 349-0026.

holidays

‘A CHRISTMAS CAROL’: Northern Stage interprets this timeless holiday classic about Ebenezer Scrooge and a trio of ghosts. See calendar spotlight. Barrette Center for the Arts, White River Junction, 7:30 p.m. $14-64. Info, 296-7000.

kids

AUTHOR READING & CRAFT: Woolly Bear Winter writer Abbie Bowker reads and shares artwork from her 2016 title before leading a creative project for kids ages 3 through 9. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 3:30-4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6956. ONE-ON-ONE TUTORING: First through sixth graders get extra help in reading, math and science. Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 4-8 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 264-5660. PAJAMA STORY TIME: Tykes cuddle up in PJs for captivating tales, cookies and milk. Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 6:30-7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 264-5660. ‘PUSS IN BOOTS: OR HOW TO GET AHEAD IN THE WORLD’: Bald Mountain Theater presents a fast and fun adaptation of the story of a third son who inherits an extraordinary cat. Holley Hall, Bristol, 7 p.m. $10-40. Info, 767-4800. READING BUDDIES: Little pals meet with mentors to bond over books. Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 3:30-4 p.m. Free. Info, 264-5660. RICHMOND STORY TIME: Lit lovers ages 2 through 5 are introduced to the wonderful world of reading. Richmond Free Library, 10:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 434-3036. STORY TIME: Classic tales and new adventures spark imaginations. Phoenix Books Rutland, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 855-8078. STORY TIME & PLAYGROUP: Engrossing plots unfold into fun activities for tots up to age 6. Jaquith Public Library, Marshfield, 10-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 426-3581.


LIST YOUR EVENT FOR FREE AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POSTEVENT REGISTER EARLY

language

BEGINNER ENGLISH LANGUAGE CLASS: Students build a foundation in reading, speaking and writing. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7211. BEGINNER RUSSIAN CONVERSATION GROUP: Learn the basics of the Eastern Slavic tongue. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 6-6:45 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7211. INTERMEDIATE RUSSIAN CONVERSATION GROUP: Fine-tune your ability to dialogue in a nonnative language. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 6:45-7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7211.

talks

THE NEW CANCER CONVERSATION: A PANEL OF YOUNG ADULT CANCER SURVIVORS: Vocal individuals share stories to help others recognize early warning signs of cancer and other diseases. Dion Family Student Center, Saint Michael’s College, Colchester, 7-9 p.m. Free. Info, 654-2000.

TEDX BROWNELL LIBRARY: Curious minds watch TED Talk videos centered on the theme of “Connecting.” Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6955.

January 25, 2017, at the Sheraton Burlington Hotel and Conference Center, 8:00 am - 3:00 pm SPONSORED BY

DETAILS: howardcenter.org • 802.488.6912

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TIMOTHY JAMES: The folk musician muses on the 1968 Vermont drive-by shooting that compelled him to write the song “The Irasburg Affair.” Dorothy LA Alling Memorial Library, E RE ND Williston, 6:30 p.m. Free. A OF Y ES Info, 878-4918. U RT

Join us for his Vermont talk!

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LGBTQ GENDER-FREE SQUARE DANCE CLASS: Folks with a twinkle in their eye and in their toes bring a water bottle and a sense of humor to a stepping session for all abilities. No partner necessary. Social Hall, Ohavi Zedek Synagogue, Burlington, 7:30-9:30 p.m. $5-10; free for first timers. Info, dance@together.net.

montréal

‘PROM QUEEN: THE MUSICAL’: Ontario teenager Marc Hall’s real-life battle to bring his boyfriend to prom plays out onstage in a heartfelt new work. Segal Centre for Performing Arts, Montréal, QC, 8 p.m. $51-65. Info, 514-739-7944.

music

SONG CIRCLE: Singers and musicians congregate for an acoustic session of popular folk tunes. Godnick Adult Center, Rutland, 7:15-9:15 p.m. Donations. Info, 775-1182.

seminars

WEDNESDAY WORKSHOP: Lit lovers analyze works-in-progress penned by Burlington Writers Workshop members. 110 Main St., Suite 3C, Burlington, 6:30 p.m. Free; preregister at meetup. com; limited space. Info, 383-8104. WRITING CIRCLE: Prompts flow into a 30-min ute free-write and sharing opportunities in a judgment-free atmosphere. The ellness Co-op, Burlington, 4-5 p.m. Free. Info, 888-492-8218, ext. 303.

THU 17 7PM

BILL MARES & TODD HAIRE: MAKING BEER

SAT 19 4PM

JERRY THORNTON: FROM DARKNESS TO DESTINY Discover the wild, zany, and forgotten history of the New England Patriots.

SAT 26 2-4PM

THU.17 art

FIGURE DRAWING: Participants interpret the poses of a live model. Chaffee Art Center, Rutland, 6-8 p.m. $10-15. Info, 775-0062. SIP ’N’ PAINT WITH YASMEEN: Mocktails in hand, ladies bring their creativity to the canvas. Altus Healing Arts, Chelsea, 6-8 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 685-3138.

MON 28

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KATIE WEBSTER: MAPLE Enjoy free samples of delicious treats from the pages of Katie’s cookbook at this book signing and meet and greet. Free.

CIDER MONDAY

Stop by for a cup of fresh, hot cider! Free.

Burlington events are ticketed unless otherwise indicated. Your $3 ticket comes with a coupon for $5 off the featured book!

AT ESSEX November

business

CENTRAL VERMONT CHAMBER OF COMMERCE MIXER: Area professionals network over refreshments, door prizes and a raffle. No thfield Savings Bank, Barre, 5:15-7:15 p.m. $10-15. Info, 229-5711.

Join us for a delightful journey through the craft-brewing revolution of the last four decades.

MON 28

CIDER MONDAY

Stop by for a cup of fresh, hot cider! Free.

191 Bank Street, Downtown Burlington • 802.448.3350 21 Essex Way, Essex • 802.872.7111 www.phoenixbooks.biz

CALENDAR 51

WOMEN’S PICKUP BASKETBALL: Ladies dribble up and down the court during an evening of friendly competition. See meetup.com for details. Lyman C. Hunt Middle School, Burlington, 8-9:30 p.m. $3; $50 for season pass. Info, carmengeorgevt@gmail. com.

SLAM!: SPOKEN WORD POETRY: An open mic paves the way for a juried set at this word fest featuring high school jazz quartet Blue State. ArtsRiot, Burlington, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 540-0406.

AT BURLINGTON November

SEVEN DAYS

A COURSE IN MIRACLES: A monthly workshop based on Helen Schucman’s 1975 text delves into the wisdom found at the core of the world’s major religions. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Plattsburgh, N.Y., 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 518-645-1930.

PAINTED WORD POETRY SERIES: A program highlighting established and emerging New England poets features Tess Taylor. Fleming Museum of Art, University of Vermont, Burlington, 6 p.m. Regular museum admission, $3-10; free for members, faculty, staff and students. Info, 656-0750.

presents

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‘VERMONT HISTORY THROUGH SONG’: Accompanied by pianist Arthur Zorn, singer/ researcher Linda Radtke lends her voice to pieces from the Vermont Historical Society’s collection of sheet music. George Peabody Library, Post Mills, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 785-4361.

words

JANE SOBEL KLONSKY: A canine special guest joins the author for a talk on her book of photos and anecdotes, Unconditional: Older Dogs, Deeper Love. Woof! Phoenix Books Rutland, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 855-8078.

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

DAVID TORN: The former David Bowie sideman serves up a concert of solo electric guitar improvisations. Robison Hall, Mahaney Center for the Arts, Middlebury College, 8 p.m. Free. Info, 443-3168.

sports

Renowned speaker and best-selling author, Dr. Gabor Maté is highly sought after for his expertise on a range of topics from addiction to mind/body wellness.

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INTERMEDIATE/ ADVANCED ENGLISH LANGUAGE CLASS: Learners take communication to the next level. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7211.

includes registratio n, continental breakfast , and lunch.

A Day with Dr. Gabor Maté

NOAH AHLES: The lecturer navigates crisis map ping and the real-time gathering of data during a natural disaster or social conflict. Room 207, Bentley Hall, Johnson State College, 4-5:15 p.m. Free. Info, leslie.kanat@jsc.edu.

INTERMEDIATE-LEVEL SPANISH CLASS: Pupils improve their speaking and grammar mastery. Private residence, Burlington, 6 p.m. $20. Info, 324-1757.

$159

PRESENTS


WalkininTheir TheirShoes” Shoes” “A“AWalk DementiaSimulation Simulation Dementia

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STARTUP GRIND BURLINGTON: An evening centered on Vermont’s startup environment, funding options and methods for success features Skida founder Corinne Prevot. Karma Bird House, Burlington, 6-9 p.m. $5-10. Info, 435-1414.

community

BURLINGTON WALK/BIKE COUNCIL MEETING: Two-wheeled travelers get in gear to discuss ways to improve conditions for cyclists and pedestrians. Room 12, Burlington City Hall, 5:30-7 p.m. Free. Info, 864-9572. COMMUNITY DISCUSSION: Residents chew the fat over the values of space and community growth. The ellness Co-op, Burlington, 12:30-1:30 p.m. Free. Info, 888-492-8218, ext. 303. INFORMATIONAL SESSION: Those interested in home-sharing programs meet with staff to learn more. HomeShare Vermont, South Burlington, 1010:30 a.m. Free; preregister. Info, 863-5625.

First Tuesday of Every Month

crafts

First •Tuesday of will Every Month 6-7pm Refreshments be served 6-7pm • Refreshments will be served

BEESWAX CANDLE MAKING: Aspiring artisans roll colorful wick-and-wax creations. Fairfax Community Library, 6:30-7:30 p.m. Free; preregister; limited space. Info, 849-2420.

challenges of compromised vision, hearing and dexterity which all affect cognition.

MOUNT MANSFIELD SCALE MODELERS: Hobbyists break out the superglue and sweat the small stuff at a miniature construction skill swap. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 879-0765.

Allow our Certified Dementia Practitioners to take you through an experience to better Allow our Certified Dementiafor Practitioners to take you through an through experience create a positive environment those with dementia. We will guide you the to better create a positive environment for those Weallwill guide you through the challenges of compromised vision, hearingwith and dementia. dexterity which affect cognition.

Collaborating with Harvard Medical School and Brigham & Women’s Hospital Collaborating with Harvard Medical School and Brigham & Women’s Hospital Please RSVP to Cathy Stroutsos at 802-923-2513 Please RSVP to Cathy Stroutsos at 802-923-2513 Haven Shores | Shelburne, VT 185 185 PinePine Haven Shores Road |Road Shelburne, VT www. residenceshelburnebay.com www. residenceshelburnebay.com

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Great Food = Better Meetings

dance

CONTEMPORARY DANCE CLASS: Instruction for individuals of varying ability levels is tailored to each mover’s unique style. North End Studio B, Burlington, 6-7 p.m. $5; free for first-timers. Info, 863-6713. FOR REAL WOMEN SERIES WITH BELINDA: GIT UR FREAK ON: R&B and calypso-dancehall music is the soundtrack to an empowering stepping session aimed at confronting body shaming. Swan Dojo, Burlington, 5:30-7 p.m. $15. Info, bestirredfit ness@gmail.com.

etc.

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

DANCE, PAINT, WRITE: DROP-IN: Teens and adults create, connect, heal and grow through self-guided movement and art set to music. Expressive Arts Burlington, 10 a.m.-noon. $20; free for first-timers. Info, 343-8172. LNT AID: Rusty DeWees, Maggie Lenz, Tom Murphy and other local talents present a mix of music, comedy and storytelling to benefi Lost Nation Theate . See calendar spotlight. Montpelier City Hall Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. $25. Info, 229-0492. TURKISH CULTURAL PRESENTATION: Curious minds learn about the history, economy, educational system and cuisine of the country that straddles Europe and Asia. South Burlington Community Library, noon. Free; preregister. Info, info@tccvt.org.

Always fresh, plentiful and punctual. 11.16.16-11.23.16

THESNAPVT.COM

SEVEN DAYS 52 CALENDAR

HERMIT THRUSH TAP TAKEOVER: Suds lovers sip crisp pints of the hoppy session sour pale ale Athenaeum and other Hermit Thrush Brewing beers. The Archi es, Burlington, 4 p.m.-2 a.m. Free. Info, 448-4333. WOODSTOCK FARMERS MARKET: See WED.16.

games

CHITTENDEN COUNTY CHESS CLUB: Checkmate! Strategic thinkers make calculated moves as they vie for their opponents’ kings. Faith United Methodist Church, South Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 324-1143. POKÉMON LEAGUE: I choose you, Pikachu! Players of the trading-card game earn weekly and monthly prizes in a fun, friendly environment where newbies can be coached by league leaders. Brap’s Magic, Burlington, 5-8 p.m. Free. Info, 540-0498.

health & fitness

COMMUNITY MINDFULNESS: A 20-minute guided practice with Andrea O’Connor alleviates stress and tension. Tea and a discussion follow. Winooski Senior Center, 6:30-7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 233-1161. CORNWALL FITNESS BOOT CAMP: Interval training helps participants improve strength, agility, endurance and cardiovascular fitness. Cornwa l Volunteer Fire Department, 9-10 a.m. $12. Info, 343-7160. FIRE CIDER: Participants arm themselves against the cold season with an age-old tonic for immune support, digestion and energy. City Market/Onion River Co-op, Burlington, 6-7:30 p.m. $5-10; preregister. Info, 861-9753. FOOT-CARE CLINIC: Nurses from Franklin County Home Health Agency help patients care for their tootsies. Call for details. Various Franklin County locations. $20; preregister. Info, 527-7531. FORZA: THE SAMURAI SWORD WORKOUT: Students sculpt lean muscles and gain mental focus when using wooden replicas of the weapon. North End Studio A, Burlington, 6-7 p.m. $10. Info, 578-9243. MINDFULNESS MEDITATION: Seekers clear their heads, finding inspiration and creativi y. The Wellness Co-op, Burlington, noon-1 p.m. Free. Info, 888-492-8218, ext. 303. REIKI SHARE: Practitioners of the healing technique learn from their peers at a session aimed at sending energy into the world. JourneyWorks, Burlington, 6:30-9 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 860-6203. TAI CHI FOR WOMEN’S HEALTH: Moving and standing postures focus on the core, pelvic floo , back and legs. Pre- and postnatal participants are welcome. Zenbarn Studio, Waterbury, 5:30-6:15 p.m. $10. Info, 779-0444. YOGA: Sangha Studio instructor Teresa Wynne guides students who are in recovery in achieving inner tranquility. Turning Point Center, Burlington, 5-6 p.m. Free. Info, 448-4262.

‘TANNA’: A forbidden love affair jeopardizes an alliance between tribes in this award-winning 2015 drama enacted by members of the Yakel tribe. Film House, Main Street Landing Performing Arts Center, Burlington, 7 p.m. $5-8; free for Vermont International Film Foundation members. Info, info@vtiff.org.

holidays

‘TITUS’: Temperatures rise during this documentary by student Ross Henry examining the far-reaching effects of climate change in Alaska. Farrell Room, St. Edmund’s Hall, Saint Michael’s College, Colchester, 5-7 p.m. Free. Info, 654-2000. ‘TRUTH’: Robert Redford portrays journalist Dan Rather in this 2015 newsroom drama. Catamount Arts Center, St. Johnsbury, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 748-2600. 10/17/16 10:29 AM

COCKTAIL PARTY: Themed be erages please palates at a weekly sipping session complete with shuffleboard. Stonecutter Spirits, Middlebu y, noon-8 p.m. Cost of drinks; BYO food. Info, 388-3000.

film

LAKE CHAMPLAIN INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL: See WED.16, 6:30 p.m.

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food & drink

‘A CHRISTMAS CAROL’: See WED.16.

kids

BABY & TODDLER PLAYGROUP: Parents connect while kids up to age 3 enjoy toys, stories, challah and juice. Social Hall, Ohavi Zedek Synagogue, Burlington, 9:30-10:30 a.m. Free. Info, grace@ ohavizedek.org. ‘HENRY IV, PART I’: Hour-Glass Youth Theatre stages the bard’s historical tale of the unruly crown prince of Wales. Off Center for the Dramatic Arts, Burlington, 7 p.m. $5-30. Info, 238-5719. LEGO CLUB: Brightly colored interlocking blocks inspire developing minds. Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 4-5 p.m. Free. Info, 264-5660.


LIST YOUR EVENT FOR FREE AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POSTEVENT

LET’S TALK TURKEYS: Fans of feathered friends hit the trails to learn about these wild birds. Education Barn, Green Mountain Audubon Center, Huntington, 9-10:30 a.m. $8-10 per adult-child pair; $4 per additional child; preregister. Info, 434-3068. MUSICAL STORY TIME: Little ones keep the beat with rhythm instruments while Inger Dybfest strums the guitar. Pierson Library, Shelburne, 10:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 985-5124. PLAINFIELD PRESCHOOL STORY TIME: Tykes ages 2 through 5 discover the magic of literature. Cutler Memorial Library, Plainfield, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 454-8504. PRESCHOOL STORY TIME: Captivating narratives pave the way for crafts and activities for youngsters ages 3 through 6. Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 10:30-11 a.m. Free; preregister. Info, 264-5660. ‘PUSS IN BOOTS: OR HOW TO GET AHEAD IN THE WORLD’: See WED.16, Vergennes Opera House. READ TO A DOG: Book hounds ages 5 through 10 curl up with a good story and a furry friend. Fairfax Community Library, 3:15-4:15 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 849-2420. THURSDAY PLAY TIME: Kiddos and their caregivers convene for casual fun. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 11 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 878-4918.

language

FRENCH CONVERSATION: Speakers improve their linguistic dexterity in the romantic tongue. Bradford Public Library, 4 p.m. Free. Info, 222-4536. FRENCH THURSDAY: SOCIAL HOUR: Francophones fine-tune their French-language con ersation skills over cocktails. Bar, Bleu Northeast Seafood, Burlington, 5-7 p.m. $4; free for Alliance Française members. Info, info@aflc .org.

montréal

‘PROM QUEEN: THE MUSICAL’: See WED.16.

music

THE BAD PLUS: Jazz fans file in to hear the pow erhouse ensemble Rolling Stone magazine called “about as badass as highbrow gets.” FlynnSpace, Burlington, 7 & 9:30 p.m. $35. Info, 863-5966.

STOWE MIDDLE & HIGH SCHOOL MUSIC CONCERTS: Student musicians hit all the right notes in solos, duets and various small ensembles. Spruce Peak Performing Arts Center, Stowe Mountain Resort, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 760-4634.

seminars

NATURAL MARSHFIELD: Wildlife experts uncover the wonders of the local environment. Jaquith Public Library, Marshfield, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 426-3581.

sports

theater

‘AMERICAN SUNRISE/SUNSET’: Twenty four performers explore the current state of the country through song, story and gymnastics. Seeler Studio Theatre, Mahaney Center for the A ts, Middlebury College, 7:30 p.m. $6-12; limited space. Info, 443-3168. ‘CHOIR BOY’: Broadway veterans and New York theater artists take the stage to tell the story of two young black men vying for the lead spot in their school’s vocal ensemble. Briggs Opera House, White River Junction, 7:30 p.m. $18-30. Info, 457-3500. ‘CURTAINS’: A musical-theater-loving detective must crack the case when an untalented actress is slain during her opening night curtain call in this murder-mystery spoof. Burlington High School, 7-9 p.m. $8-25. Info, 864-8411. ‘GREASE’: Sandy and Danny find summer l ve in the famed musical about the students of Rydell High School. Vergennes Union High School & Middle School, 7-8:30 p.m. $10-12. Info, 877-2938. NATIONAL THEATRE LIVE: ‘A VIEW FROM THE BRIDGE’: Drama buffs head to the movies for a screening of London-based Young Vic’s production of Arthur Miller’s dark masterpiece. Woodstock Town Hall Theatre, 7 p.m. $10-20. Info, 457-3981

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NATIONAL THEATRE LIVE: ‘HAMLET’: Benedict Cumberbatch plays the eponymous prince in a broadcast production of Shakespeare’s tragedy. Palace 9 Cinemas, South Burlington, 2 & 7 p.m. $18. Info, 863-5966. ‘A WRINKLE IN TIME’: Mrs. Whatsit, Mrs. Who and Mrs. Which help a young girl battle forces of evil in Rutland High School Encore Theatres staging of Madeleine L’Engle’s science-fiction ad enture. Rutland High School, 7 p.m. $5-8; free for kids under 4. Info, 770-1134.

words

CATAMOUNT WRITERS PROJECT: Ideas make their way from the brain to the page in a creative workshop with storyteller Leah Carey. Catamount Arts Center, St. Johnsbury, 6-8 p.m. Free; preregister; limited space. Info, 748-2600.

FRI.18 business

BUSINESS PLAN WORKING SESSION: Drop-in sessions with the center’s staff and volunteers help aspiring entrepreneurs get quick answers to business questions. Center for Women & Enterprise, Burlington, 10 a.m.-noon. Free; preregister. Info, 391-4872.

Residential Compost Pick-Up Coming to St. Albans City in January 2017!

Donʼt want to throw food scraps in the trash but canʼt compost at home? Weʼll pick it up for you! $10/month! Hurry! We have limited space available on this pilot route.

COMMUNICATING FOR CHANGE: Rosemarie Rung shares her expertise with members of the Burlington business community at a professional development session. Center for Communication and Creative Media, Champlain College, Burlington, 9:30-10:45 a.m. $10-35. Info, 860-2727.

Go to nwswd.org to sign up or get more info. The Northwest Vermont Solid Waste Management District is your local municipal waste authority. We offer low-cost close-to-home waste recycling, composting, and disposal options.

For more info on waste, recycling, and composting at home, work, school, or events: FRI.18

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CALENDAR 53

BURLINGTON RUGBY FOOTBALL CLUB: Veterans and new players lace up for practices and games on mixed-gender teams. Bring personal cleats, a mouth guard and a water bottle. Fort Ethan Allen Athletic Fields, Colchester, 6-7:30 p.m. Free. Info, burlingtonrugbyevents@gmail.com.

TOM WISE: The author and activist sounds o f in “Fearing the End of Privilege: Race, Violence and National Politics.” Roy Event Room, Dion Family Student Center, Saint Michael’s College, Colchester, 7-9 p.m. Free. Info, 654-2000.

SEVEN DAYS

GET READY TO RAISE THE BIG MONEY: CAPITAL CAMPAIGNING BOARD LUNCH: Nonprofit leade ship and board members listen up as experienced development officer Roth . “T” Tall breaks down the basics of fundraising. Kirk Alumni Center, Middlebury College, noon-1:30 p.m. $20 includes lunch. Info, 862-1645, ext. 21.

RICHARD LANGDON: The biologist schools listeners on the origins of Vermont fishes. Jaquith Public Library, Marshfield, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 426-3581.

11.16.16-11.23.16

UNIVERSITY JAZZ ENSEMBLE: Alex Stewart directs student musicians in works by Ellington, Basie, Mingus and others. University of Vermont Recital Hall, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 656-3040.

LUNCH & LEARN: Daniel Bean captivates listeners with “What Was an Orphan Train?” Ohavi Zedek Synagogue, Burlington, noon. Donations. Info, 863-4214.

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

PIANO RECITAL: Students of Diana Fanning tickle the ivories. Robison Hall, Mahaney Center for the Arts, Middlebury College, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 443-3168.

talks


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ELECTION REVIEW/2017 LEGISLATIVE PREVIEW: Enterprisers find out what newly elected g vernment officials may ha e in store for businesses. Beaulieu Place Conference Rooms, Central Vermont Chamber of Commerce, Berlin, 7:30-9 a.m. $20-25; limited space. Info, 229-5711.

community

FEAST TOGETHER OR FEAST TO GO: Senior citizens and their guests catch up over a shared meal. Montpelier Senior Activity Center, noon-1 p.m. $7-9; preregister. Info, 262-6288. ‘HELLO FROM THE OTHER SIDE ... OF BURLINGTON’ PARTY: Yogis celebrate the studio’s newly opened second space with door prizes, tasty treats, music by DJ Jason Baron and bar service by Skinny Pancake. Sangha Studio, Old North End, Burlington, 8:30-10:30 p.m. Free; cash bar. Info, 448-4262.

crafts

FIBER ARTS FRIDAY: Grown-up yarn lovers get together for tea and casual project time. Pierson Library, Shelburne, 3-4 p.m. Free. Info, 985-5124. MAGGIE’S FIBER FRIDAY FOR ADULTS: Veteran knitter Maggie Loftus facilitates an informal gathering of crafters. Main Reading Room, Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 6maggie2@myfairpoint.net.

dance

AXIS DANCE COMPANY: Performers with and without disabilities explore the boundaries of movement through postmodern choreography. See calendar spotlight. Flynn MainStage, Burlington, 8 p.m. $15-40. Info, 863-5966. BALLROOM & LATIN DANCING: Learn new moves with Ballroom Nights, then join others in a dance social featuring waltz, tango and more. Singles, couples and beginners are welcome. Williston Jazzercise Fitness Center, lesson, 7-8 p.m.; dance social, 8-9:30 p.m. $10-14; $8 for dance only. Info, 862-2269.

SEVEN DAYS

11.16.16-11.23.16

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

ECSTATIC DANCE VERMONT: Jubilant motions with the Green Mountain Druid Order inspire divine connections. Auditorium, Christ Episcopal Church, Montpelier, 7-9 p.m. $10. Info, 505-8011. ENGLISH COUNTRY DANCE: Wendy Gilchrist and Val Medve lead casually dressed hoofers in the steps popular in the time of Jane Austen. Elley-Long Music Center, Saint Michael’s College, Colchester, 7-9:30 p.m. $10. Info, 899-2378.

etc.

AMERICAN RED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE: See WED.16, Northwestern Medical Center, St. Albans, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. South Royalton School, noon-5 p.m. Morrisville VFW Post, noon-6 p.m. CAREER SERVICES: See WED.16. PLANETARIUM DEMONSTRATIONS: Stars, planets and constellations come into view in the newly opened dome. Northcountry Planetarium, SUNY Plattsburgh, N.Y., 3, 3:45 & 4:30 p.m. Free; limited space. Info, 518-564-3168. SKI & SNOWBOARD SWAP: Winter athletes stock up on new and used outdoor gear at this benefit for Okemo Mountain School. Okemo Mountain Resort, Ludlow, 4-7 p.m. Free. Info, 228-1513.

film

LAKE CHAMPLAIN INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL: See WED.16. ‘MIGRATION’: Armchair adventurers follow Dukha reindeer herders on an arduous journey through Mongolia’s wilderness. Town Hall Theate , Middlebury, reception, 7 p.m.; film, 8 p.m. $20. Info, 382-9222.

54 CALENDAR

food & drink

BELLOWS FALLS FARMERS MARKET: A fresh-food marketplace serves up produce, meats and more. 33 Bridge St., Bellows Falls, 4-7 p.m. Free. Info, bellowsfallsmarket@gmail.com. COCKTAIL PARTY: See THU.17.

WOODSTOCK FARMERS MARKET: See WED.16.

games

BRIDGE CLUB: See WED.16, 9:15 a.m. CROSTIC TALK & COMMUNITY PUZZLE CONSTRUCTION: Rick Winston shares his knowledge with wordsmiths, who construct a puzzle to appear in the Times Argus this December. Jaquith Public Library, Marshfield, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 426-3581.

Peace & Justice Center, Burlington, 5-6 p.m. Free. Info, 863-2345, ext. 3.

‘CHOIR BOY’: See THU.17.

EARLY-BIRD MATH STORY TIME: Books, songs and games put a creative twist on mathematics. Community Room, Richmond Free Library, 11-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 434-3036.

‘GREASE’: See THU.17.

FALL CRAFT: Creative kiddos in grades 1 and up have fun with a seasonal project. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 3:30-4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6956. FAMILY MOVIE: Parents and tots break out the popcorn for an all-ages flick. Browne l Library, Essex Junction, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6956.

health & fitness

ACRO YOGA: Beginners bring a friend or come solo for this acrobatic practice utilizing counterbalance, weight stacking, alignment and cooperation. Zenbarn Studio, Waterbury, 5:156:45 p.m. $10. Info, 779-0444.

‘HENRY IV, PART I’: See THU.17. ‘INTO THE WOODS JR.’: Cinderella, Little Red Riding Hood and other fairytale characters appear in Stephen Sondheim’s mashup of childhood stories. Hinesburg Community School, 7-8:30 p.m. $6-8. Info, 482-2106.

ACUDETOX: Attendees in recovery undergo acupuncture to the ear to propel detoxification. urning Point Center, Burlington, 3 p.m. Free. Info, 861-3150.

MUSIC WITH ROBERT: Sing-alongs with Robert Resnik hit all the right notes. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 10:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 865-7216.

BEGINNERS’ TAI CHI: Interested individuals learn FRI.1 8 | FILM | ‘MIGRATION’ slow-set, tai chi gong, moving and standing postures, and basic techniques. Zenbarn Studio, Waterbury, 9-10 a.m. $10. PLAY GROUP: Crafts and snacks amuse young’uns Info, 779-0444. up to age 5. Doty Memorial Elementary School, FELDENKRAIS WITH GILLIAN FRANKS: A movement-centered class with instructions such as “Do less” and “Rest” renders participants rejuvenated. The ellness Collective, Burlington, 7-7:45 a.m. $10. Info, 540-0186.

Worcester, 9:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, moonsong148@ hotmail.com.

FITNESS FLOW YOGA: All types of athletes can build strength, increase flexibili y and prevent injuries with a moderate-to-vigorous vinyasa flo . Colchester Health & Fitness, 5:30-6:30 p.m. $15; free for members. Info, 860-1010.

SONGS & STORIES WITH MATTHEW: Matthew Witten helps children start the day with tunes and tales of adventure. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 10-10:45 a.m. Free. Info, 878-6956.

LAUGHTER YOGA: Breathe, clap, chant and giggle! Both new and experienced participants reduce stress with this playful practice. The ellness Coop, Burlington, 3-4 p.m. Free. Info, 888-492-8218, ext. 300. NATURAL IMMUNITY: Shona R. MacDougall shares methods for strengthening the body’s defense mechanisms through herbs and foods. Community Room, Hunger Mountain Coop, Montpelier, 6-7:30 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, info@hungermountain. coop. NIA WITH REBECCA: An expressive workout combining dance, martial arts and healing arts strengthens the mind, body and spirit. Shelburne Town Hall, 8:30-9:30 a.m. $16; free for first-timers. Info, 489-6701. RECOVERY COMMUNITY YOGA: See WED.16. REIKI: Touch activates the body’s natural healing abilities, aiding people in recovery. Turning Point Center, Burlington, 1 p.m. Free. Info, 861-3150.

holidays

‘A CHRISTMAS CAROL’: See WED.16. HOLIDAY CRAFT FAIR: Vendors show their talents with a wide variety of wares. Grace Congregational Church, Rutland, 4-7 p.m. Free. Info, 342-1272.

kids

ACORN CLUB STORY TIME: Little ones up to age 4 gather for read-aloud tales. St. Johnsbury Athenaeum, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 748-8291.

‘PUSS IN BOOTS: OR HOW TO GET AHEAD IN THE WORLD’: See WED.16, Spice Performing Arts Studio, Rochester.

TEEN ADVISORY BOARD: High school students create a moustache display for the teen room and indulge in National Candy Day. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 3-4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6956.

music

ATOS TRIO: The Berlin-based threesome charms classical connoisseurs with pitch-perfect playing at this University of Vermont Lane Series concert. University of Vermont Recital Hall, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $5-35. Info, 656-3131. BATTLE TRANCE: The genre-defying saxophone quartet performs selections from the recently released Blade of Love. Ruth Garbus opens. ArtsRiot, Burlington, 8:30 p.m. $15. Info, 540-0406.

‘CURTAINS’: See THU.17. ‘TWELVE ANGRY JURORS’: A dozen men and women must decide the fate of an accused murderer in a Lamoille County Players production. Hyde Park Opera House, 7-9:15 p.m. $12-18. Info, 888-4507. ‘A WRINKLE IN TIME’: See THU.17.

words

AUTHOR’S THEATER: Laura Palkovic presents a supernatural tale about the arrival of a dark stranger. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Plattsburgh, N.Y., 7 p.m. Free. Info, 518-561-6920. BROWN BAG BOOK CLUB: Readers voice opinions about Year of Wonders by Geraldine Brooks. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 12:301:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-4918. FRIDAY MORNING WORKSHOP: Wordsmiths offer constructive criticism on works-in-progress by Burlington Writers Workshop members. 110 Main St., Suite 3C, Burlington, 10:30 a.m. Free; preregister at meetup.com; limited space. Info, 383-8104.

SAT.19 art

FAIRY & DEMON DRAWING WORKSHOP: Artist Emily Anderson shares her pen-and-paper technique for banishing personal demons and celebrating uplifting thoughts. Bluebird Fairies, Burlington, 1-3 p.m. $10; preregister; limited space. Info, emily@bluebirdfairies.com. OPEN SPACE: AN IMPROVISATIONAL LABORATORY: Artistic students, faculty and community members try out ideas during an hour of silent experimentation, followed by an hour open to musicians. Mahaney Center for the Arts, Middlebury College, 1-3 p.m. Free. Info, 443-3168.

community

QUEEN CITY MEMORY CAFÉ: People with memory loss accompany their caregivers for coffee, conversation and entertainment. Tha er House, Burlington, 10 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 656-4220.

crafts

ART OF ZENTANGLE WORKSHOP: Participants pick up their pens and draw structured patterns on fabric bags. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Free; preregister; limited space. Info, 878-4918.

dance

CONTRA DANCE: A traditional social dance comes complete with music by Guiding Star Ramblers and calling by Nils Fredland. Capital City Grange, Berlin, 8-11 p.m. $5-9. Info, 249-7454.

GREEN MOUNTAIN COLLEGE & COMMUNITY CONCERT BAND: James Cassarino picks up the baton to direct students, faculty and community members in works by Vaughan Williams, Copland and Bernstein. Ackley Hall, Green Mountain College, Poultney, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 800-776-6675.

‘THEY CALLED US GYPSIES’: A family-friendly show shines a light on Middle Eastern and American belly dance. Lebanon Opera House, N.H., 7:30 p.m. $2530. Info, 603-448-0400.

GROUND WATER MAFIA: Heads bang to sludgy noisepunk from Nashville. Executive Disorder open. ROTA Gallery and Studio, Plattsburgh, N.Y., 7 p.m. $3-10. Info, rotagallery@gmail.com.

AMERICAN RED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE: See WED.16, Thatcher Brook Prima y School, Waterbury, 10 a.m.3 p.m. Berlin Mall, 11:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.

MARIE CLAIRE JOHNSON & BRETT HUGHES: The local favorites find sweet harmonies ver mellow guitar sounds to support King Street Center. Big Hat, No Cattle open. Williston Old Brick Church, 6-10 p.m. $12-14. Info, 862-6736.

talks

ANIME CLUB: Konnichiwa! Fans of the Japanese cartoon style geek out over shows, kawaii crafts and tasty treats. Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 4:30-5:30 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 264-5660.

ELDER EDUCATION ENRICHMENT SERIES: Geology professor Charlotte Mehrtens digs below the surface in “Earthquakes in Vermont.” Faith United Methodist Church, South Burlington, 2-3 p.m. $5. Info, 846-4835.

BOOK READING & SIGNING: Vermont author John Powell and illustrator Rob Blum think green with their book The Pitkin Kids Learn About Rec cling.

theater

‘AMERICAN SUNRISE/SUNSET’: See THU.17.

etc.

CATAMOUNT PIPE BAND OPEN HOUSE: Celtic culture comes to the fore through drum and pipe instruction, live music, refreshments and a Q&A. An afterparty at Positive Pie follows. Montpelier High School, 2-5 p.m. Free. Info, mollys33@gmail. com. CLOTHING SWAP!: Locals tap into the spirit of giving at an exchange of gently used threads, accessories and home décor. Sangha Studio, Downtown Burlington, 7:30-9 p.m. $5. Info, 448-4262. DINE & DANCE TO RAISE THE DOUGH: Storytelling, slices of Woodbelly Pizza and tunes from Green Mountain Swing spice up a spirited benefit for Rise Up Bakery. Old Labor Hall, Barre, 6-10 p.m. $10-25. Info, 479-5600.


HALL OF FAME FUNDRAISING SCHUSS SOIRÉE & SILENT AUCTION: Guests don vintage ski sweaters for a fun-fi led evening complete with dinner and the Vermont Ski & Snowboard Museum Hall of Fame induction ceremony. Stoweflake Mountain Resort & Spa, 5:30-9:30 p.m. $75. Info, 229-8665. INDEPENDENT COMMUNITY MEETING PLACE: Brainstorming leads to forming activity groups for hobbies such as flying stunt kites and playing music. Presto Music Store, South Burlington, 10 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 658-0030. MISS VERMONT USA & MISS VERMONT TEEN USA PAGEANT PRELIMINARY COMPETITION: Ladies vie for the chance to represent the state in nationally televised spectacles of beauty and talent. Spruce Peak Performing Arts Center, Stowe Mountain Resort, 8 p.m. $30-45. Info, 760-4634. SKI & SNOWBOARD SWAP: See FRI.18, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. TECH HELP: TRANSFERRING PICTURES FROM A CAMERA OR PHONE ONTO A COMPUTER: Electronic novices bring their questions to a hands-on help session. Fairfax Community Library, 9-11 a.m. Free; preregister. Info, 849-2420.

fairs & festivals

SUGARBUSH RESORT JOB FAIR: Outdoors lovers seek potential employment opportunities at the mountain vacation spot. Schoolhouse, Sugarbush Resort, Warren, 9 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 583-6380.

film

‘THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL’: Michael Rennie portrays an alien emissary who gives earthlings an ultimatum in this 1951 anti-war sci-fi classic shown on 16mm film. Newma Center, Plattsburgh, N.Y., 7 p.m. Donations. Info, serious_61@yahoo.com. LAKE CHAMPLAIN INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL: See WED.16, 11 a.m. ‘RIGHT NOW, WRONG THEN’: A film director fa ls for a fledgeling a tist in this acclaimed 2015 drama shown in Korean with English subtitles. Dana Auditorium, Sunderland Language Center, Middlebury College, 3 & 8 p.m. Free. Info, 443-3168.

food & drink

See for yourself at a FREE informational meeting.

Our no-pressure, no-obligation meetings are a great opportunity to get answers to your questions from an experienced MVP Medicare Products Advisor.

Date Date

Location

11/16 11/21 11/21 11/22 11/23 11/28 11/28 11/29 11/29 11/30

Barre Senior Center MVP Health Care–Williston MVP Health Care–Williston Howe Center/Franklin Conference Center Richmond Free Library MVP Health Care–Williston Richmond Free Library Ilsley Public Library–Middlebury Colchester High School Aldrich Public Library–Barre

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Monday – Friday, 8 am – 8 pm ET From October 1 – February 14, call seven days a week, 8 am – 8 pm TTY: 1-800-662-1220

A salesperson will be present with information and applications. For accommodations of persons with special needs at sales meetings, call 1-888-713-5536.

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The annual election period for MVP Health Care Medicare Advantage health plans is Oct. 15–Dec. 7, 2016. MVP Health Plan, Inc. is an HMO-POS/PPO/MSA organization with a Medicare contract. Enrollment in MVP Health Plan depends on contract renewal. This information is not a complete description of benefits. Contact the plan for more information. Limitations, co-payments, and restrictions may apply. Benefits, premiums and/or co-payments/ co-insurance may change on January 1 of each year. You must continue to pay your Medicare Part B premium. Y0051_3110 Accepted 09/2016

SEVEN DAYS

Visit MVPcanhelp.com

MIDDLEBURY FARMERS MARKET: Crafts, cheeses, breads, veggies and more vie for spots in shoppers’ totes. Mary Hogan Elementary School, Middlebury, 9:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. Info, middleburyfarmersmkt@yahoo.com.

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10:00–11:00 am 9:00–10:00 am 6:00–7:00 pm 11:00 am–12:00 pm 1:30–2:30 pm 9:00–10:00 am 2:00–3:00 pm 11:00 am–12:00 pm 5:30–6:30 pm 4:00–5:00 pm

Call 1-888-713-5536

COCKTAIL PARTY: See THU.17.

SAT.19

Time Time

Reserve a seat or arrange for a one-on-one consultation.

CHOCOLATE TASTING: With the help of a tasting guide, chocoholics of all ages discover the fla or profiles of four di ferent confections. Lake Champlain Chocolates Factory Store & Café, Burlington, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Free. Info, 864-1807.

ST. JOHNSBURY FARMERS MARKET: Growers and crafters gather weekly at booths centered on local eats. St. Johnsbury Welcome Center, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. Info, cfmamanager@gmail.com.

/ month

From lower rates to hearing aid discounts and a SilverSneakers® Fitness Program membership, MVP Health Care® has something for everyone.

BURLINGTON WINTER FARMERS MARKET: A bustling indoor marketplace offers fresh and prepared foods alongside crafts, live music, lunch seating and face painting. Davis Center, University of Vermont, Burlington, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. Info, burlingtonfarmersmarket.org@gmail. com.

NORWICH FARMERS MARKET: Farmers and artisans offer meats, baked goods and produce alongside handcrafted items. Tracy Hall, Norwich, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. Info, 384-7447.

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‘SHOLEM ALEICHEM: LAUGHING IN THE DARKNESS’: A monthlong celebration of the Jewish writer culminates in a screening of the acclaimed documentary of his life, complete with a discussion, dessert and coffee. Beth Jacob Synagogue, Montpelier, 7 p.m. $5; free for synagogue members. Info, 505-3657.

MVP has exciting Medicare plan options for you.

Plans start as low as


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VERMONT FARMERS MARKET: See WED.16, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. WOODSTOCK FARMERS MARKET: See WED.16.

games

POKÉMON TCG THEME DECK TOURNAMENT: Gamers give their all in a fun, casual competition with prizes. Brap’s Magic, Burlington, 3:30-7 p.m. $8. Info, 540-0498.

health & fitness

108 SUN SALUTES: Community members bring a mat, towel, water and mala for a contemplative morning of moving, breathing and chanting in unison. Sangha Studio, Old North End, Burlington, 10 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 448-4262. GINGER’S FITNESS BOOT CAMP: See WED.16, 8-9 a.m. PERSONAL BEST RUNNER’S CIRCUIT: See WED.16, 9-10 a.m. RECOVERY COMMUNITY YOGA: See WED.16, 10:45 a.m. R.I.P.P.E.D.: See WED.16, North End Studio A, Burlington, 9-10 a.m.

holidays

BURLINGTON CHORAL SOCIETY: Vocalists lend their powerful pipes to Bach’s Christmas Oratorio. Elley-Long Music Center, Saint Michael’s College, Colchester, 7:30 p.m. $10-25. Info, 863-5966. ‘A CHRISTMAS CAROL’: See WED.16. CHRISTMAS CUPBOARD CRAFT FAIR: Festive music fi ls the air as shoppers browse local foods, jewelry, gingerbread houses, quilts, photos and wooden treasures. Underhill I.D. Elementary School, Jericho, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. Info, 899-4865. CHRISTMAS IN THE BARN: Merrymakers get into the spirit of the holiday season by shopping for gifts and stocking stuffers, mingling, and munching on tasty treats. Fledermaus Teahouse, Johnson, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Free. Info, 635-7408.

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CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE: Festive families shake hands with vendors and snap photos with Santa from 12:30-2:30 p.m. Vintage Inspired Lifestyle Marketplace, Burlington, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Free. Info, 488-5766. CRAFT FAIR & HOLIDAY BAKE SALE: Homemade pies, breads and other baked goods vie for a spot on the Thanksgiving table. St. Franci Xavier School, Winooski, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Free. Info, 655-2600. HOLIDAY BAZAAR: Baked beans, mac and cheese, chili, and cornbread are on hand at this festive market featuring baked goods, crafts and whiteelephant gifts. Winooski United Methodist Church, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. Info, 879-0185. HOLIDAY CRAFT FAIR: See FRI.18, 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m. HOLIDAY SHOWCASE & CRAFT FAIR: More than 40 crafters set up shop at a benefit for school athletics and the Fairfax Food Shelf. Bellows Free Academy, Fairfax, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Donation of nonperishable food items. Info, 355-0832. HOLIDAY YARD SALE & CRAFT FAIR: Take home treasures fi l two floors of tables. Be lows Falls Moose Lodge, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Free. Info, 376-5292. MOCO HOLIDAY FARMERS MARKET: Local produce, meats, maple products, prepared foods and gift items catch shoppers’ eyes. Morrisville Food Co-op, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. Info, markets@morrisvillecoop. com. ORCHARD VALLEY’S HOLIDAY MARKET: Crafts, books, body-care products, soups and snacks make for a fruitful shopping experience. College Hall, Vermont College of Fine Arts, Montpelier, 10:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Free. Info, 456-7400. PITTSFORD HOLIDAY CRAFT SHOW: Two floors of vendors boast a wide variety of goods. Big-ticket raffles round out the fun. Lothrop Elementa y School, Pittsford, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Free. Info, 483-6351. POEMS ON GRATITUDE & THANKSGIVING: Typewriter in tow, poet Julia Shipley helps

customers craft custom notes expressing thanks. Bridgeside Books, Waterbury, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. Info, 244-1441.

kids

AIKEN K-12 MAKER FAIRE & ENGINEERING CHALLENGE: Tech-savvy tinkerers share innovative feats of music, science and engineering. Davis Center, University of Vermont, Burlington, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. Info, 656-3392.

Life. ArtsRiot, Burlington, 8:30 p.m. $12-15. Info, 540-0406. BLUEGRASS GOSPEL PROJECT: Stunning vocals and acoustic instrumentation inform an eclectic mix of folk, pop and bluegrass. Vergennes Opera House, 7:30 p.m. $18-20. Info, 877-6737. GRUP ANWAR: A series showcasing local New American musicians features a suite of original Arabic music compositions. Tashi Sherpa opens. FlynnSpace, Burlington, 8 p.m. $15. Info, 863-5966.

‘CINDERELLA, THE MUSICAL’: Very Merry Theatre interprets the classic fairy tale of evil stepsisters, glass slippers and finding Prince Charming. Waterbury Public Library, 1-2 p.m. Free. Info, 244-7036.

MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE COMMUNITY CHORUS: Students, faculty and staff join local singers in a program of thanksgiving. Robison Hall, Mahaney Center for the Arts, Middlebury College, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 443-3168.

FAMILY GAME AFTERNOON: Leisurely games of chance and brain-busting battles of wit entertain kids and their caregivers. Pierson Library, Shelburne, 1:30-4 p.m. Free. Info, 985-5124.

MR. SUN: Players from three generations band together to perform lively American string music from 2015’s The People Need Ligh . See calendar spotlight. First Unitarian Universalist Society, Burlington, 7-9 p.m. $20-25. Info, 434-4563.

FAMILY WORKSHOP: QUILTING THE BLUES: Crafters create mixed-media pieces using materials such as paper, denim and lyrics while listening to blues music. Catamount Outback Artspace, St. Johnsbury, 10 a.m.-noon. $15; preregister. Info, 748-2600, ext. 108. FAMILY YOGA CLASS: Caregivers get in on the fun in a Spark Youth Yoga class combining poses, group games and exercises to calm the mind. North End Studio B, Burlington, 4:30-5:30 p.m. $10-20. Info, 238-5619. HAWKS, OWLS & FALCONS!: Fans of feathered fliers meet li e birds of prey and learn about their unique characteristics. McClure Education Center, Shelburne Farms, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. $5-6. Info, 985-8686. ‘HENRY IV, PART I’: See THU.17, 2 p.m. INTERNATIONAL GAMES DAY: Players meet for friendly competitions. Fairfax Community Library, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. Info, 849-2420.Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 1-4 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6956. ‘INTO THE WOODS JR.’: See FRI.18, 2:30-4 & 7-8:30 p.m. ONE-ON-ONE TUTORING: See WED.16, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. ‘PUSS IN BOOTS: OR HOW TO GET AHEAD IN THE WORLD’: See FRI.18, 2 & 7 p.m. SATURDAY DROP-IN STORY TIME: A weekly selection of songs and narratives engages all ages. Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 10 a.m.10:30 p.m. Free. Info, 264-5660.

RICHARD GIVEN: Pianist Paul Carlson accompanies the virtuosic trumpeter. United Community Church North Building, St. Johnsbury, 7:30 p.m. $10; free for students. Info, 748-2600.

outdoors

FALL BIRD MONITORING: Experienced ornithology enthusiasts bring binoculars and keep an eye out for winged wonders. Green Mountain Audubon Center, Huntington, 8-10 a.m. Donations. Info, 434-3068. WAGON RIDE WEEKENDS: A seasonal celebration comes complete with narrated horse-drawn hay rides and themed activities. Billings Farm & Museum, Woodstock, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $4-14; free for kids under 3. Info, 457-2355.

seminars

INTRODUCTION TO MICROSOFT WORD: Toolbars, menus and icons, oh my! A computer whiz teaches techniques such as copying, pasting and formatting text and pictures. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 10:30 a.m.-noon. Free; preregister. Info, 865-7217. NAMI MENTAL ILLNESS & RECOVERY WORKSHOP: Students at this National Alliance on Mental Illness seminar brush up on effective treatments, services, coping strategies, crisis prevention and more. Brandon Congregational Church, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 876-7949. A TIMELINE OF QUÉBEC RESEARCH: John Fisher shares his top 20 sources for family-tree factfinding. ermont Genealogy Library, Fort Ethan Allen, Colchester, 10:30 a.m.-noon. $5. Info, 310-9285.

THE SWING PEEPERS: Youngsters pitch in as the playful pair performs goofy, improvisational songs. ArtisTree Community Arts Center & Gallery, South Pomfret, 10-11 a.m. Donations. Info, 457-3500.

VCAM ORIENTATION: Video-production WHOLE-BOOK hounds master basic APPROACH STORY TIME: concepts and nomenclaE SA S T.19 U Tykes learn how words, pictures HO | HO ture at an overview of VCAM PEN LIDAYS | CHRISTMAS O and book design work together to facilities, policies and procedures. complete a narrative. Phoenix Books VCAM Studio, Burlington, 11 a.m. Free. Info, Essex, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 872-7111. 651-9692. YOUNG WRITERS WORKSHOP: Author Doug Wilhelm helps wordsmiths unlock the three secrets sports of writing in an interactive live-stream workshop. TURKEY TROT: Beautiful scenery and a homemade St. Johnsbury Athenaeum, 10 a.m. Free. Info, lunch reward runners and walkers of all ages. 745-1393. Westford Elementary School, 8:30 a.m.-1 p.m. $1215. Info, 878-5804.

montréal

‘PROM QUEEN: THE MUSICAL’: See WED.16.

music

APEX ENSEMBLE: Mind, body and soul are energized as the horn-driven group interprets songs from Stevie Wonder’s Songs in the Key of

theater

‘AMERICAN SUNRISE/SUNSET’: See THU.17, 2 & 7:30 p.m. ‘CHOIR BOY’: See THU.17, 2 & 7:30 p.m. ‘CURTAINS’: See THU.17.

‘GREASE’: See THU.17, 3-5:30 p.m. NATIONAL THEATRE LIVE: ‘FRANKENSTEIN’: Benedict Cumberbatch and Jonny Lee Miller alternate roles as Victor Frankenstein and his creation in a broadcast production directed by Danny Boyle. Town Hall Theate , Middlebury, 7 p.m. $10-17. Info, 382-9222. ‘TWELVE ANGRY JURORS’: See FRI.18. ‘A WRINKLE IN TIME’: See THU.17.

words

JERRY THORNTON: The spo ts writer scores a touch down with his 2016 page turner From Darkness to Dynasty: The First 40 ears of the New England Patriots. Phoenix Books Rutland, noon. Free. Info, 855-8078. Phoenix Books Burlington, 4 p.m. $3; limited space. Info, 448-3350. POETRY EXPERIENCE: Rajnii Eddins facilitates a poetry and spoken-word workshop aimed at building confidence and de eloping a love of writing. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 1-3 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7211.

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community

COMMUNITY MINDFULNESS WITH THE CENTER FOR MINDFUL LEARNING: Peaceful people gather for guided meditation and interactive discussions. Burlington Friends Meeting House, 5-7 p.m. $10. Info, assistant@centerformindfullearning.org.

etc.

BURLINGTON FALL BRIDAL SHOW: Brides-to-be pile into photo booths, sample apps and mingle with industry professionals. Champlain Room, Champlain College, Burlington, 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. $6-7. Info, 459-2897. GLOBAL DAY OF JEWISH LEARNING: All are welcome to examine Jewish texts as part of a worldwide event centered on the theme “Under the Same Sky: The Ea th is Full of Your Creations.” Temple Sinai, South Burlington, 4-6 p.m. Free. Info, 862-5125. MISS VERMONT USA & MISS VERMONT TEEN USA PAGEANT FINAL COMPETITION: Onstage interviews, a swimsuit competition and an evening gown competition determine which promising contestants will serve Vermont for a year. Spruce Peak Performing Arts Center, Stowe Mountain Resort, 2 p.m. $45-60. Info, 760-4634. SKI & SNOWBOARD SWAP: See FRI.18, 9 a.m.-1 p.m.

film

‘BIG NIGHT’: Two brothers make a last-ditch effort to save their failing Italian restaurant in this 1996 drama. Chandler Center for the Arts, Randolph, 6:30 p.m. $9. Info, 728-6464. LAKE CHAMPLAIN INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL: See WED.16, 11 a.m.

food & drink

BEER BRUNCH: Imbibers indulge in a four-beer tasting flight and an early-a ternoon meal of local fare while Seth Yacovone Band brings on the guitarheavy blues. Upper Pass Beer Company, Tunbridge, noon-4 p.m. $25; limited space. Info, upperpassbeer@gmail.com. WOODSTOCK FARMERS MARKET: See WED.16, 8 a.m.-6 p.m. NORTHFIELD FARMERS MARKET: A gathering place for local farmers, producers and artisans offers fresh produce, crafts and locally prepared foods. Plumley Armory, Norwich University, 11 a.m.2 p.m. Free. Info, northfieldfarmersmarke vt@ gmail.com

games

GAMES PARLOUR: Strategic thinkers bring favorite tabletop competitions to play with others. Champlain Club, Burlington, 2-8 p.m. $5. Info, orsonbradford@gmail.com. POKÉMON LEAGUE: See THU.17, noon-5 p.m.


LIST YOUR EVENT FOR FREE AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POSTEVENT

health & fitness

sports

DYNAMIC QIGONG: Breathing, stretching and meditative motions enhance health and wellbeing. Charlotte Congregational Church, 5-6:30 p.m. $10-15. Info, 238-2637.

talks

CHAKRA CHOCOLATE FLOW: Sweet treats reward those who engage in a sensation-based flow focused on the sacral chakra with Caitlin Downey. Sangha Studio, Old North End, Burlington, 7:30-9 p.m. $15-20. Info, 448-4262.

HANDSTANDS, ARM BALANCES & PARTY TRICKS: TAKE 2!: Adventurous yogis delve into a full-length flow with pauses to break down impressi e poses such as crow, side crow and astavakrasana. Sangha Studio, Downtown Burlington, noon-2 p.m. $20-25; preregister. Info, 448-4262.

WOMEN’S PICKUP SOCCER: Swift females of varying skill levels shoot for the goal. For ages 18 and up. Rain location: Robert Miller Community & Recreation Center. Soccer fields, Leddy Park, Burlington, 6-8 p.m. Free; $3 for rain location. Info, carmengeorgevt@gmail.com.

theater

MORNING FLOW YOGA: See WED.16.

‘CHOIR BOY’: See THU.17, 5 p.m.

NIA WITH SUZY: Drawing from martial, dance and healing arts, sensory-based movements push participants to their full potential. South End Studio, Burlington, 9-10 a.m. $14. Info, 522-3691.

‘TWELVE ANGRY JURORS’: See FRI.18, 2-4:15 p.m.

ZUMBA FITNESS: High-spirited students dance toward health in an easy-to-follow fitness program set to red-hot international music. North End Studio A, Burlington, 9 a.m. $8-10. Info, 777-7032.

There are so many reasons to come to St. Johnsbury. These are just a few…

ROWLAN BRICKEN: Current issues of free speech and patriotism during wartime resonate in “Patriotic Dissent or Treason — Vermont & the War of 1812.” Ethan Allen Homestead Museum, Burlington, 2-3 p.m. Free. Info, 865-4556.

CALEDONIA COUNTY FARMERS MARKET

MON.21

CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE: See SAT.19, noon-4 p.m.

THE MOUNTAINCLATURE LEAGUE OF POETS: Writers from all backgrounds make their voices heard by sharing original works and discussing ways to combat bigotry and hate. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, 5-6 p.m. Free. Info, mountainclature@gmail.com.

kids

dance

holidays

‘A CHRISTMAS CAROL’: See WED.16, 2 p.m.

‘PUSS IN BOOTS: OR HOW TO GET AHEAD IN THE WORLD’: See FRI.18, 2 p.m.

language

ADULT CONTEMPORARY DANCE: A weekly class crescendos with expressive phrases of movement. North End Studio B, Burlington, 10-11:30 a.m. $12. Info, 863-6713.

SPANISH GROUP CLASSES: Students roll their Rs while practicing en español. New Moon Café, Burlington, 2:45-4:30 p.m. $15. Info, maigomez1@ hotmail.com.

CONTACT IMPROV DANCE: Movers engage in weight sharing, play and meditation when exploring this style influenced y aikido and other somatic practices. Aikido of Champlain Valley, Burlington, 7:30-9:30 p.m. $4. Info, 864-7306.

TRANSGENDER DAY OF REMEMBRANCE: A candlelit vigil honors the memory of those whose lives were cut short by hate crimes and social prejudices. Pride Center of Vermont, Burlington, 2-4 p.m. Free. Info, 860-7812.

‘PROM QUEEN: THE MUSICAL’: See WED.16, 7 p.m.

music

CAPITAL CITY CONCERTS: A professional orchestra of Vermont musicians hits all the right notes in “A Feast of Suites.” Smilie Auditorium, Montpelier High School, 3 p.m. $15-25. Info, info@capitalcityconcerts.org.

MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE COMMUNITY CHORUS: See SAT.19, 3 p.m.

outdoors

WAGON RIDE WEEKENDS: See SAT.19.

seminars

fairbanksmuseum.org A celebration of friends with wings, fur, tails or hooves. Hosted On by Discover December 10, St. Johnsbury and the Dog Celebrate season in Mountain with help from community sponsors.

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etc.

AMERICAN RED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE: See WED.16, Irasburg Town Hall, 2-7 p.m.

SOCIAL GATHERING: Those who are deaf or hard of hearing or want to learn American Sign Language get together to break down communication barriers. The No th Branch Café, Montpelier, 4-6 p.m. Cost of food and drink. Info, 595-4001.

CINÉ SALON: REDISCOVERING ARTHUR LIPSETT: Short works by the Canadian filmmaker include his unique collage technique and inventive found footage. Mayer Room, Howe Library, Hanover, N.H., 7 p.m. Free. Info, 603-643-4120. VERMONT READS MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE SERIES: Imaginations set sail during a screening of part two of the PBS miniseries “Chasing Shackleton.” Milton Public Library, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 893-4644.

games

BRIDGE CLUB: See WED.16, 7 p.m.

MON.21

CIRCUS SMIRKUS 11/19 7:30 P.M. July 2 & 3 ANA D’LEON & STEVE HARTMANN CRAFT BEER

LOCAL FOOD

VERMONT SPIRITS

Vermont’s home-grown circus brings talent and tumbling to 12/3 8:30 COMEDY SHOWCASE St. Johnsbury’s Green DETAILS AT KINGDOMTAPROOM.COM Mountain Mall. Events throughout town, all day long! 11/26 7:30 P.M. NOT QUITE DEAD

film

MAGIC: THE GATHERING — MONDAY NIGHT MODERN: Tarmogoyf-slinging madness ensues when competitors battle for prizes in a weekly game. Brap’s Magic, Burlington, 6:30-10 p.m. $8. Info, 540-0498.

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397 RAILROAD STREET, ST. JOHNSBURY, VT Tue-Thu: 4-10 pm Fri-Sat: 12 pm-12 am | Sun: 12-8 pm

EVENING CONCERTS AT COURTHOUSE PARK Visit June 20 - August 22 discoverstjohnsbury.com 7:30pm - 8:30pm

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Full details at DiscoverStJohnsbury.com

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for more information and events

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Featuring the St. Johnsbury Band,

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SEASONAL OILS: A MAKE-AND-TAKE CLASS: Participants produce personal rollers with peppermint, clove, white fi , eucalyptus and other essential oils. Sangha Studio, Old North End, Burlington, 4:30-5:45 p.m. $15-20. Info, 448-4262.

www.catamountarts.org/exhibitions

SALSA MONDAYS: Dancers learn the techniques and patterns of the salsa, merengue, bachata and cha-cha. North End Studio A, Burlington, 12v-catamountarts111616.indd 1 fundamentals, 7 p.m.; intermediate, 8 p.m. $12. Info, 227-2572.

BECOMING A FATHER: Dads-to-be share hopes and fears about starting a family. Aldrich Public Library, Barre, 6-8 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 595-7953.

VERMONT’S MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY

PETS ON PARADE Open daily 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. June 18 1302 Main Street, St. Johnsbury VT

SEVEN DAYS

MILONGA: Movers and shakers join Tango Norte for an Argentine social dance. Lesson, 3 p.m.; dance, 4-7 p.m. ArtisTree Community Arts Center & Gallery, South Pomfret, 3-7:30 p.m. $10-22. Info, 457-3500.

DOG MOUNTAIN

November 30, 2016 - January 2, 2017

11.16.16-11.23.16

LIVE! ON STAGE: JONATHAN RICHMAN: Drummer Tommy Larkins keeps the beat while the Modern Lovers songster sings and plays guitar at a partially seated show. ArtsRiot, Burlington, 8 p.m. $17-20. Info, 540-0406.

Stephen Huneck, Heaven, Woodblock print, Courtesy of Dog Mountain, St. Johnsbury, VT.

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

montréal

The largest farmer’s market in Caledonia County, this is where Museum members you’ll find the freshest produce, BETTER ANGELS OF OUR NATURE make us smile. STEPHEN HUNECK AT live music and lots of fun. Catamount Arts Main Gallery

ADULT AERIAL DANCE CONDITIONING: With or without previous experience, folks forge strength, grace and confidence in the ai . North End Studio B, Burlington, noon-1 p.m. $15. Info, 863-6713.

DIMANCHES FRENCH CONVERSATION: Parlez-vous français? Speakers practice the tongue at a casual drop-in chat. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 4-5:30 p.m. Free. Info, 363-2431.

lgbtq

Saturdays, 9am-1pm Downtown St. Johnsbury

activism


UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT PREGNANCY STUDY Researchers at the Vermont Center on Behavior and Health are looking for women who are currently pregnant to participate in a study on health behaviors and infant birth outcomes. This study involves: 9 short appointments (approximately 20 minutes each) Flexible scheduling, including weekend and evening appointments

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health & fitness

CLEARING THE SUBCONSCIOUS KUNDALINI YOGA SERIES: Students cast off negativity during this awareness-based practice with Sukhpran Kaur. Railyard Apothecary and Yoga Studio, Burlington, 7-8:30 p.m. $14. Info, 318-6050. MORNING FLOW YOGA: See WED.16. NIA WITH SUZY: See SUN.20, 7 p.m. PERSONAL BEST RUNNER’S CIRCUIT: See WED.16.

Compensation $700

R.I.P.P.E.D.: See WED.16, North End Studio A, Burlington.

2 Free Ultrasounds

RECOVERY COMMUNITY YOGA: See WED.16.

If interested, please visit our website to complete the recruitment questionnaire: http://j.mp/1yLwkLO

VERMONT CENTER FOR INTEGRATIVE HERBALISM STUDENT HERB CLINIC: Third- ear interns evaluate individual constitutions and health conditions. Burlington Herb Clinic, 4-8 p.m. $5-10; preregister. Info, info@vtherbcenter.org.

FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL 802-656-3348 OR VISIT FACEBOOK.COM/UVMMOM

ZUMBA: See WED.16.

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$1 OFF ENTRY WITH THIS AD

kids

BABY LAP TIME: Babes up to 24 months experience color, sound and movement through stories, songs, bounces and rhymes. Richmond Free Library, 10:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 434-3036. KIDS’ AERIAL FABRIC DANCE CLASS: Adventurous youngsters ages 7 through 12 learn to hang, climb and spin on silks in a high-flying class for a l experience levels. North End Studio B, Burlington, 3:15-4:15 p.m. $15. Info, 863-6713. ONE-ON-ONE TUTORING: See WED.16, 6-8 p.m. ‘PETER RABBIT’: Beatrix Potter’s characters come to life during a special story time. South Burlington Community Library, 10 a.m. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 863-5966. ROBIN’S NEST NATURE PLAYGROUP: Outdoor pursuits through fields and forests captivate ykes up to age 5 and their parents. North Branch Nature Center, Montpelier, 9:30-11:30 a.m. Donations. Info, 229-6206. ‘STAR WARS’ CLUB: May the force be with you! Fans of George Lucas’ intergalactic epic bond over common interests. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 4:30-5:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6956.

PRESENTS:

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

STORY TIME & CRAFTS WITH CAITLIN: Engaging plots complement seasonal creative projects. Pierson Library, Shelburne, 10:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 955-5124. TEENS’ & TWEENS’ AERIAL FABRIC DANCE CLASS: Adolescents use suspended silks to integrate ground and sky with seamless transitions. North End Studio B, Burlington, 4:15-5:15 p.m. $15. Info, 863-6713.

fine craft & art show

language

11.16.16-11.23.16

ADVANCED-LEVEL SPANISH CLASS: Language learners perfect their pronunciation with guest speakers. Private residence, Burlington, 5-6:30 p.m. $20. Info, 324-1757.

montréal

‘PROM QUEEN: THE MUSICAL’: See WED.16, 7 p.m.

music

SEVEN DAYS

DARK STAR ORCHESTRA: The se en-member band takes Grateful Dead fans young and old on a trip with a concert experience to remember. Paramount Theatre, Rutland, 8 p.m. $35-40. Info, 775-0903.

58 CALENDAR

sponsored by:

November 18–20, 2016 Sheraton Hotel, Burlington, VT

GUITAR CLASS: Notes ring out at a six-string lesson for folks in recovery. Instruments are available. Turning Point Center, Burlington, 2 p.m. Free. Info, 861-3150.

Friday 10–8, Saturday 10–6, Sunday 10–5

MONDAY NIGHT COMMUNITY KIRTAN: Instruments are welcome during call-andresponse chanting of mostly Sanskrit mantras in the bhakti yoga tradition. Sacred Mountain Studio, Burlington, 7:30-9 p.m. Donations. Info, bpatoine@ aol.com.

www.vermonthandcrafters.com 800-373-5429

SAMBATUCADA! OPEN REHEARSAL: Newbies are invited to help keep the beat as Burlington’s Untitled-27 1

11/15/16 11:31 AM

Brazilian-style street-percussion band sharpens its tunes. Instruments are not required. 8 Space Studio Collective, Burlington, 6-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 862-5017.

seminars

SHIFTING WORKSHOP: Cyclists bring their bikes for a lesson on changing gears. Bike Recycle Vermont, Burlington, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 863-4475.

sports

PICKUP DODGEBALL: Coed groups of adult players drop in and heave balls at the competition. Orchard School, South Burlington, 7-8 p.m. $5. Info, 324-3036.

talks

CURT GERVICH, KRISTEN KIMBALL & RACEY BILLINGHAM: The speakers sow seeds of knowl edge with “Growing Food, Farms and Community: The State of Sustainable Farming in the Adirondacks.” 30 City Place, Plattsburgh, N.Y., 5:30 p.m. Free. Info, 518-564-5279.

theater

MONDAYS AT THE IMPROV: Emerging entertainers express themselves through theater games and acting techniques for onstage and off. The Wellness Co-op, Burlington, 3-4 p.m. Free. Info, 999-7373.

words

THIRD MONDAYS OPEN-GENRE WORKSHOP: Penmen and -women zero in on elements of craft in works of fiction, nonfiction and poe y submitted by Burlington Writers Workshop Members. 110 Main St., Suite 3C, Burlington, 6:30 p.m. Free; preregister at meetup.com; limited space. Info, 383-8104.

TUE.22 art

HEALING ARTS FOR WOMEN: Creative sessions encourage recovery through games, expression, movement and companionship among survivors of trauma. Gifford Medical Center, Randolph, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 685-3138.

business

RENTAL INCOME SEMINAR: Those seeking fina cial freedom and security get wise to the ways of real estate investment. Preferred Properties, South Burlington, 6-7 p.m. Free. Info, 318-7654.

community

FEAST TOGETHER OR FEAST TO GO: See FRI.18. TUESDAY VOLUNTEER NIGHTS: Helping hands pitch in around the shop by organizing parts, moving bikes and tackling other projects. Children under 12 must be accompanied by an adult. Bike Recycle Vermont, Burlington, 5-8 p.m. Free. Info, 264-9687.

crafts

OPEN CRAFT NIGHT: Creative sparks fly in the studio as attendees whip out woven wall hangings and crochet, knitting and sewing projects. Nido Fabric & Yarn, Burlington, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 881-0068.

dance

BEGINNER WEST COAST SWING & FUSION DANCING: Pupils get schooled in the fundamentals of partner dance. North End Studio B, Burlington, 8-9 p.m. $11-16. Info, burlingtonwestie@gmail.com. INTERMEDIATE & ADVANCED WEST COAST SWING: Fun-loving folks learn the smooth, sexy stylings of modern swing dance. North End Studio A, Burlington, 7-9 p.m. $11-16. Info, burlingtonwestie@gmail.com.


WINTER IS HARD…

LIST YOUR EVENT FOR FREE AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POSTEVENT

SWING DANCING: Quick-footed participants experiment with different forms, including the Lindy hop, Charleston and balboa. Beginners are welcome. Champlain Club, Burlington, 7:30-9:30 p.m. $5. Info, 448-2930.

etc.

AMERICAN RED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE: See WED.16, American Legion Hall, Newport, 11:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Hardwick Knights of Columbus, 12:30-5:30 p.m. Wallingford Memorial Rotary Club, 1-6 p.m.

film

‘GRAND HOTEL’: Greta Garbo graces the silver screen in this black-and-white picture portraying a motley group of individuals in a posh Berlin hotel. Catamount Arts Center, St. Johnsbury, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 748-2600. KNIGHTS OF THE MYSTIC MOVIE CLUB: Cinema hounds view campy features at this ode to offbeat productions. Main Street Museum, White River Junction, 8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 356-2776. ‘THE WIZARD OF OZ’: Theres no place like home! Judy Garland takes viewers on a journey down the yellow brick road in this time-tested classic. Film House, Main Street Landing Performing Arts Center, Burlington, 7-10 p.m. Free. Info, 540-3018.

WINTER IS HARD…

holidays

‘A CHRISTMAS CAROL’: See WED.16, 11 a.m. & 7:30 p.m.

kids

FAMILY YOGA DANCE: The oung and the young at heart move and groove in a personalized class. Zenbarn Studio, Waterbury, 6-6:45 p.m. $10. Info, 779-0444. LEGO CHALLENGE: Burgeoning builders tackle construction tasks with colorful blocks. St. Johnsbury Athenaeum, 3 p.m. Free. Info, 748-8291. PRESCHOOL MUSIC: Melody makers ages 3 through 5 sing and dance into the afternoon. Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 11:30 a.m.noon. Free. Info, 264-5660. READ TO DAISY: Budding bookworms join a friendly canine for ear-catching narratives. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 3:15-4 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6956.

SPANISH MUSICAL KIDS: Amigos ages 1 through 5 learn Latin American songs and games with Constancia Gómez, a native Argentinian. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 11-11:45 a.m. Free. Info, reference@burlingtonvt. gov.

WOODSTOCK FARMERS MARKET: See WED.16.

games

BRIDGE CLUB: See WED.16, 7 p.m.

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health & fitness

STORY TIME FOR BABIES & TODDLERS: Picture books, songs, rhymes and puppets arrest little tykes’ attention. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 9:10-9:30 a.m. Free. Info, 878-6956.

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BRANDON FITNESS BOOT .2 K 0 |M EB CAMP: Hop to it! Get fit with US AL IC FC O | CA strength, endurance, agility STORY TIME FOR E SY PITA U RT L CITY and coordination exercises. Otter C ON CERT S | C O PRESCHOOLERS: Picture books, Valley North Campus Gym, Brandon, songs, rhymes and early math tasks work 5:30-6:30 p.m. $12. Info, 343-7160. youngsters’ mental muscles. Brownell Library,

FITNESS AT ANY AGE: Strength, agility, coordination and heart-healthy exercises are modified for folks of all ability levels. Charlotte Senior Center, 9:15-10 a.m. $10. Info, 343-7160. FOOT-CARE CLINIC: See THU.17. GENTLE DROP-IN YOGA: Yogis hit the mat for a hatha session led by Betty Molnar. Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 4:30-5:30 p.m. Free. Info, 264-5660. NIA WITH REBECCA: See FRI.18.

TAI CHI CLASS — YANG STYLE: Beginners master basic postures and strengthening and balancing exercises. Sacred Mountain Studio, Burlington, 6-7:30 p.m. $15. Info, 847-814-9503.

ZUMBA WITH ALLISON: Conditioning is disguised as a party at this rhythm-driven workout session. Swan Dojo, Burlington, 7-8 p.m. $10. Info, 227-7221.

EVENTS EVENTS ON ON SALE SALE NOW! NOW THIS WEEK Tanna - Presented by Main Street Landing & VTIFF

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, MAIN STREET LANDING PERFORMING ARTS CENTER FILM HOUSE, BURLINGTON

Essex Junction, 10-10:45 a.m. Free. Info, 878-6956. TODDLER STORY TIME: Good listeners up to 3 years old have fun with music, rhymes, snacks and captivating tales. Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 10:30-11 a.m. Free; preregister. Info, 264-5660. VACATION MOVIE: Popcorn and beverages accompany a popular film. Browne l Library, Essex Junction, 2:30-4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6956.

language

BEGINNER-LEVEL SPANISH CLASS: Basic communication skills are on the agenda at a guided lesson. Private residence, Burlington, 6 p.m. $20. Info, 324-1757. ‘LA CAUSERIE’ FRENCH CONVERSATION: Native speakers are welcome to pipe up at an unstructured conversational practice. El Gato Cantina, Burlington, 4:30-6 p.m. Free. Info, 540-0195. PAUSE-CAFÉ FRENCH CONVERSATION: Frenchlanguage fanatics engage in dialogue en français. Light Club Lamp Shop, Burlington, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 363-2431.

THIS WE E K

Battle Trance

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, ARTSRIOT, BURLINGTON

Xylouris White

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, ARTSRIOT, BURLINGTON

TUE.22

SELLING TICKETS? • • • • •

Fundraisers Festivals Plays Sports Concerts

• • • •

No cost to you Local support Built-in promotion Custom options

CONTACT US:

‘PROM QUEEN: THE MUSICAL’: See WED.16.

ELECTRIC HOT TUNA: The Jefferson Airplane offshoot doles out American blues and roots music. Spruce Peak Performing Arts Center, Stowe Mountain Resort, 8 p.m. $20-65. Info, 760-4634.

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10, ARTSRIOT, BURLINGTON

WE CAN HELP!

montréal music

Paint Cabaret

Wyld Lyfe: A Benefit Concert for 350VT

• 865-1020, ext. 22 • tickets@ sevendaysvt.com

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, ARTSRIOT, BURLINGTON

CALENDAR 59

TREAD & SHED: Active bodies take to treadmills and elliptical machines for a motivating group workout. Your Personal Best Fitness, South Burlington, 6-7 p.m. $15. Info, 658-1616.

PET FRIENDLY

465 Quarry Hill Road | South Burlington, VT 05403 | residencequarryhill.com

SEVEN DAYS

PEACEFUL WARRIOR KARATE: Martial-arts training promotes healthy living for those in recovery. Turning Point Center, Burlington, 1 p.m. Free. Info, 861-3150.

PET FRIENDLY

465 Quarry Hill Road | South Burlington, VT 05403 | residencequarryhill.com Call 802-652-4114 to schedule your visit!

11.16.16-11.23.16

FITNESS FLOW YOGA: See FRI.18, 6:30-7:30 p.m.

BUT WE MAKE IT EASY!

Without the threat of slippery driveways, snow, and ice, the winter will simply fly by! Pack a bag

and let us the take care of the needs you Without threat of cooking, slipperyhousekeeping, driveways, laundry snow, and andany ice,support the winter willmay have so you can feel free to safely turn yourStay attention to new hobbies and interests. Introducing our Winter Program simply fly by! Pack a bag and let us take care of the cooking, housekeeping, Without the threat slippery driveways, snow, andhave ice, the fly by!toPack a bag laundry and anyofsupport needs you may sowinter you will cansimply feel free safely 802-652-4114 to schedule your and let us take care ofCall the cooking, housekeeping, laundry and any visit! support needs you may turn your attention to new hobbies and interests have so you can feel free to safely turn your attention to new hobbies and interests.

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

FELDENKRAIS: AWARENESS THROUGH MOVEMENT: Whether you consider it relaxing exercise or active meditation, this experience can reduce pain and increase mobility. Bring a blanket and wear warm, cozy clothes. Sacred Mountain Studio, Burlington, 9:30-10:30 a.m. $15; free for first-timers. Info, 735-3770.

Introducing our Program Introducing ourWinter WinterStay Stay Program

READ TO WILLY WONKA THE CHOCOLATE LAB: Kiddos cozy up for story time with the library’s furry friend. Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 4-5 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 264-5660.

food & drink

DE-STRESS YOGA: A relaxing and challenging class lets healthy bodies unplug and unwind. Balance Yoga, Richmond, 5:45-7 p.m. $14. Info, 434-8401.

BUT WE MAKE IT EASY!

SEVENDAYSTICKETS.COM

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Memory care and more... Memory care and more…

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GREEN MOUNTAIN CHORUS: Vocalists with and without experience get in harmony for a holiday chorus that will perform at a Christmas concert and informal local events. St. Francis Xavier School, Winooski, 7-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 505-9595.

WOODSTOCK FARMERS MARKET: See WED.16.

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BRIDGE CLUB: See WED.16. E.

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Call Carrie Shamel to schedule a visit. 802-872-1700 Call Carrie Shamel to schedule a visit. 6 Freeman Woods, Essex Jct., VT802-872-1700 6 Freeman Woods, Essex Jct., VT www.springvillageessex.com www.springvillageessex.com

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Let Us Take the the Journey With You! Let Us Take Journey With You!

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9/22/16 1:36 PM

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health & fitness

EPIC MINDFULNESS MEDITATION: See WED.16.

early DEADLINES

NOV. 30 ISSUE

m

LUNAR YOGA/PILATES: See WED.16.

sports

R.I.P.P.E.D.: See WED.16.

Retail Advertising Wednesday, 11/23, at noon 802-864-5684 Calendar Events & Art Listings (11/30-12/7) Tuesday, 11/22, at noon sevendaysvt.com/postevent 11/7/16 3:26 PM

MORNING FLOW YOGA: See WED.16. NIA WITH LINDA: See WED.16. PERSONAL BEST RUNNER’S CIRCUIT: See WED.16. RECOVERY COMMUNITY YOGA: See WED.16. TAI CHI FOR ALL: See WED.16.

BURLINGTON RUGBY FOOTBALL CLUB: See THU.17.

WEDNESDAY NIGHT SOUND BATH: See WED.16.

talks

ZUMBA: See WED.16.

ROBERT KEST: “The Lived Body” delves into the psychology of the human form as it relates to mindfulness, movement and character. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, 6-7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 229-6989.

theater

STUNT NITE: Rice Memorial High School students give it their all performing four musical comedies. Break a leg! Flynn MainStage, Burlington, 4 & 8 p.m. $17-19. Info, 863-5966.

words

BERNIE SANDERS: SOLD OUT. The former presidential candidate addresses his hometown audience in an interview-style discussion of his book Our Revolution: A Future to Believe In. First Unitarian FP-0000400445.INDD Universalist Society, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $34-40. Info, 448-3350.

PROOF CREATED AT: 8/29/2016 2:27 PM PROOF DUE: NEXT RUN DATE: 09/25/16 SIZE: 4 col X 10.25 in

INSIGHT MEDITATION: See WED.16.

MEDICARE & YOU: AN INTRODUCTION TO MEDICARE: Members of the Central Vermont Council on Aging clear up confusion about the application process and plan options. Central Vermont Council on Aging, Barre, 3-5 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 479-0531.

O.K. WITH CORRECTIONS BY:_________________________________________

PLEASE READ CAREFULLY • SUBMIT CORRECTIONS ONLINE

11.16.16-11.23.16

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

PROOF O.K. BY: __________________________________________________

SEVEN DAYS

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TE FA XYLOURIS WHITE: Voice, drums R| YO ST U N T NIT E | C O U R TE S and lute combine in a concert by one EVERY WEDNESDAY, EVERYONE TAI CHI: of the best-loved artists on Crete. Marisa See WED.16. Anderson opens. ArtsRiot, Burlington, 8:30 p.m. GENTLE TAI CHI: See WED.16. $10-12. Info, 540-0406. GINGER’S FITNESS BOOT CAMP: See WED.16.

seminars

60 CALENDAR

VERMONT FARMERS MARKET: See WED.16.

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life care

COMMUNITY SUPPER: See WED.16.

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UNITED CHURCH OF UNDERHILL BELL CHOIR: Hymns, classical works and modern arrangements carry through the air in “Ringing Seasons of the Church Year.” The Cathedral Church of St. Paul, Burlington, noon-1 p.m. Free; bring a bag lunch. Info, 864-0471.

food & drink

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• Large, sunny private or shared suites • Large, sunny private or shared suites • Tranquil garden court yards and patios • Tranquil garden court yards and patioscare • Person centered • Person centered care • Staff experienced with memory care • Staff experienced with memory care • Short term respite stays • Short term respite stays • Aging in place, including end of life care • Aging in place, including end of

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RUTLAND DEATH CAFÉ: Men and women discuss issues related to the end of life. Pyramid Holistic Wellness Center, Rutland, 7-9 p.m. Free; donations accepted. Info, 353-6991.

OPEN JAM SESSION: Musicians follow the flow and explore sound together. Th Wellness Co-op, Burlington, 3-4 p.m. Free. Info, 888-492-8218, ext. 303.

to those who need a high level of care.

ADVERTISER: WOODBINE SENIOR LIVING SALES PERSON: FP0009 PUBLICATION: FP-GLOSSY MODULAR

weaning and healthy eating habits. Aikido of Champlain Valley, Burlington, 9:30 a.m. Free. Info, 985-8228.

FALL LITERATURE READING SERIES: Ambitious readers discuss selected chapters of William Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom! 110 Main St., Suite 3C, Burlington, 6:30 p.m. Free; preregister at meetup.com; limited space. Info, 383-8104.

WED.23 art

LIFE DRAWING: See WED.16.

holidays

‘A CHRISTMAS CAROL’: See WED.16, 7:30 p.m.

kids

LEGO FUN: Tinkerers in grades K and up create unique structures with geometric pieces. Youngsters under 5 require parental supervision. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 3-4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6956. ONE-ON-ONE TUTORING: See WED.16. RICHMOND STORY TIME: See WED.16. STORY TIME: See WED.16. STORY TIME & PLAYGROUP: See WED.16.

language

BEGINNER ENGLISH LANGUAGE CLASS: See WED.16. BEGINNER RUSSIAN CONVERSATION GROUP: See WED.16. INTERMEDIATE RUSSIAN CONVERSATION GROUP: See WED.16. INTERMEDIATE-LEVEL SPANISH CLASS: See WED.16. INTERMEDIATE/ADVANCED ENGLISH LANGUAGE CLASS: See WED.16.

lgbtq

LGBTQ GENDER-FREE SQUARE DANCE CLASS: See WED.16.

crafts

montréal

dance

seminars

KNITTERS & NEEDLEWORKERS: See WED.16.

DROP-IN HIP-HOP DANCE: See WED.16.

etc.

AMERICAN RED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE: See WED.16, VFW Post 792, Montpelier, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Bristol St. Ambrose Parish, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. University of Vermont Medical Center, Burlington, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. CAREER SERVICES: See WED.16. NURSING BEYOND A YEAR MEETUP: Breastfeeding parents connect over toddler topics such as

‘PROM QUEEN: THE MUSICAL’: See WED.16.

WINTER BIKING WORKSHOP: Those who wish to cycle year-round learn the ins and outs of staying safe, warm and comfortable on two wheels. Bike Recycle Vermont, Burlington, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 863-4475.

sports

WOMEN’S PICKUP BASKETBALL: See WED.16.

words

WRITING CIRCLE: See WED.16. m


CLASS PHOTOS + MORE INFO ONLINE SEVENDAYSVT.COM/CLASSES

classes THE FOLLOWING CLASS LISTINGS ARE PAID ADVERTISEMENTS. ANNOUNCE YOUR CLASS FOR AS LITTLE AS $13.75/WEEK (INCLUDES SIX PHOTOS AND UNLIMITED DESCRIPTION ONLINE). SUBMIT YOUR CLASS AD AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POSTCLASS.

agriculture GROWING HIGH BIONUTRIENT FOOD: ˜ is two-part workshop is for gardeners, homesteaders and farmers who want to grow higher-quality crops with better taste, pest and disease resilience, longer shelf life, and higher levels of nutrients. Presented by Dan Kittredge of the Bionutrient Food Association in partnership with the Vermont Community Garden Network. Scholarships available. Nov. 19 & Mar. 18. Cost: $200/2 full days; scholarships available. Location: Montpelier City Hall, 39 Main St., Montpelier. Info: Bionutrient Food Association, Vermont Community Garden Network, 861-4769, jess@vcgn.org, bionutrient.org/workshops.

astrology

threading a sewing machine, adjusting tension and more. Ages 9-13. Sun., Nov. 20, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Cost: $53/1 3-hour class; materials incl. Location: Nido Fabric and Yarn, 209 College St., Suite 2E, Burlington. Info: 881-0068, info@nidovt.com, nidovt.com. LEARN TO SEW SERIES AT NIDO: Take our two-part Learn to Sew series beginning Mon., Dec. 5, with Learn to Sew I. Learn machine basics and fundamental sewing techniques. Follow up with our Learn to Sew II class, Mon., Dec. 19, to continue building your sewing repertoire. Leave with finished projects and inspiration. Register today! Mon., Dec. 5 & Dec. 19, 6-9 p.m. Cost: $106/2 3-hour classes; materials incl. Location: Nido Fabric and Yarn, 209 College St., Suite 2E, Burlington. Info: 881-0068, info@ nidovt.com, nidovt.com.

ASTROLOGY AT RAILYARD: Planetary Gods and Goddesses Coloring Book talk with author Kelley Hunter on new planets, Dec. 4, 1-3 p.m. Astrology Meetup first ˜ u. of every month starts Dec. 1, 7-8:30 p.m. See website for schedule. Location: Railyard, 270 Battery St., Burlington. Info: Railyard, 3186050, railyardyoga@gmail.com, railyardapothecary.com.

ADULT: MIXED-LEVEL WHEEL: Instructor: Rik Rolla. A mixedlevel wheel-throwing class to help students brush up on basic techniques. You set your own pace and get guided instruction and demos. Finished pieces are fired in our electric oxidation kiln. 8 Wed., 6-8 p.m., Jan. 25-Mar. 15. Cost: $335/person; member discount avail. Location: ˜ e Shelburne Craft School, 64 Harbor Rd., Shelburne. Info: 985-3648, info@theshelburnecraftschool. org, theshelburnecraftschool.org. GARDEN BASKET MAKING: Learn the art of basket weaving. Create a harvest basket (14” Lx11” Wx10” H w/ handle) for yourself or to give as a gift! Sat., Dec. 3, 9 a.m.-noon. Cost: $50/person. Location: Gardener’s Supply Burlington Garden Center, 128 Intervale Rd., Burlington. Info: 660-3505. LEATHER BRACELETS: Participants will learn how to create leather bracelets using

DSANTOS VT SALSA: Experience the fun and excitement of Burlington’s eclectic dance community by learning salsa. Trained by world-famous dancer Manuel Dos Santos, we teach you how to dance to the music and how to have a great time on the dance floor! ˜ ere is no better time to start than now! Mon. evenings: beginner class, 7-8 p.m.; intermediate, 8:15-9:15 p.m. Cost: $12/1-hour class. Location: North End Studios, 294 N. Winooski Ave., Burlington. Info: Jon Bacon, 355-1818, crandalltyler@hotmail. com, dsantosvt.com. LEARN TO DANCE W/ A PARTNER!: Come alone or come with friends, but come out and learn to dance! Beginning classes repeat each month, but intermediate classes vary from month to month. As with all of our programs, everyone is encouraged to attend, and no partner is necessary. Private lessons also available. Cost: $50/4week class. Location: Champlain Club, 20 Crowley St., Burlington. Info: First Step Dance, 598-6757, kevin@firststepdance.com, firststepdance.com.

drumming DJEMBE IN BURLINGTON & MONTPELIER!: Learn drumming technique and music on West African drums! Drums provided! Burlington Beginners Djembe, Wed., 5:30-6:20 p.m.: come this week! $48/4 weeks; $15/drop-in. Montpelier Beginners Djembe, ˜ u., 7-8:20 p.m. (no class Nov. 24), $54/3 weeks; $22/walk-ins. Six-person minimum required to run most classes; invite friends! Please register online or come directly to the first class. Location: Taiko Space, 208 Flynn Ave., Suite 3G, Burlington; Capital City Grange, 6612 Rte. 12, Berlin. Info: 999-4255, burlingtontaiko.org. KIDS’ AND PARENTS’ WORLD DRUMMING IN BURLINGTON & MONTPELIER!: Tue. Taiko in Burlington (ages 6 and up), 4:30-5:20 p.m., $40/child or $72/ parent-child for 4 weeks; Wed. Djembe in Burlington (ages 6 and up), 4:30-5:20 p.m., $40/ child or $72/parent-child for 4 weeks;. Montpelier: ˜ u., 3:304:20 (ages 3-5) and 4:30-5:20 (ages 6 and up), $36/child or

TAIKO DRUMMING IN BURLINGTON & MONTPELIER!: Study with Stuart Paton of Burlington Taiko! Burlington Beginner/Recreational Class, Tue., 5:30-6:20 p.m., $48/4 weeks. Accelerated Taiko Program for Beginners, Mon. & Wed., 6:308:20 p.m., $120/5 classes; Nov. 14, $120/5 classes (no class Nov. 23); Dec. 5, $144/3 weeks. Six-person minimum required to run most classes; invite friends! Please register online or come directly to the first class. Location: Taiko Space, 208 Flynn Ave., Suite 3G, Burlington; Capital City Grange, 6612 Rte. 12, Berlin. Info: 9994255, burlingtontaiko.org.

Helen Day Art Center

WINTER LANDSCAPE IN WATERCOLOR: Focus on the New England countryside in winter with an emphasis on light, shadow, values and composition. All levels welcome. Instructor Robert O’Brien. Sat., Dec. 3, 9:30 a.m.-4 p.m. Cost: $110/person; $85/ members. Location: Helen Day Art Center, 90 Pond St., Stowe. Info: 253-8358, education@ helenday.com, helenday.com.

jewelry HOLIDAY JEWELRY GIFT MAKING: Do you love to make gifts for people but just don’t have the tools to do it right? I will teach you basic metalworking skills, and you will leave with a set of forged earrings, pendant and hammered ring. Metal will be provided. Sat., Dec. 3, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Cost: $125/5 hours of class time + materials. Location: My studio, address provided upon registration, S. Burlington. Info: Courtney Reckord Jewelry, Courtney Reckord, 310-7858, cwreckord@gmail.com, courtneyreckord.com.

language LEARN SPANISH & OPEN NEW DOORS: Connect with a new world. We provide high-quality affordable instruction in the Spanish language for adults, students and children. Travelers’ lesson package. Our 10th year. Personal instruction from a native speaker. Small classes, private lessons and online instruction. See our website for complete information or contact us for details. Location: Spanish in Waterbury Center, Waterbury Center. Info: 585-1025, spanishparavos@gmail.com, spanishwaterburycenter.com.

CHANGE YOUR LIFE: Come to Wu Xing Chinese Martial Arts. Join other thoughtful, intelligent adults to learn and practice tai chi, kung fu, and Chinese internal and physical exercises. Maximize your mental tranquility and clarity, physical health and fitness, and self-confidence. Our classes are for people who never thought this would be for them. Fri., 6-7 p.m. & 7-8 p.m.; Sat., 11 a.m.-noon & noon-1 p.m.; Tue., 6-7:30 p.m. Cost: $15/1-hour class; $50/mo. (incl. all classes offered); $5/trial class. Location: 303 Flynn Ave., Burlington. Info: Wu Xing Chinese Martial Arts, 355-1301, info@wxcma.com, wxcma.com. VERMONT BRAZILIAN JIUJITSU: Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu is a martial arts combat style based entirely on leverage and technique. Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu self-defense curriculum is taught to Navy Seals, CIA, FBI, military police and special forces. No training experience required. Easy-to-learn techniques that could save your life! Classes for men, women and children. Students will learn realistic bully-proofing and self-defense life skills to avoid them becoming victims and help them feel safe and secure. Our sole purpose is to help empower people by giving them realistic martial arts training practices they can carry with them thoroughout life. IBJJF & CBJJ Certified Black Belt 6th Degree Instructor under Carlson Gracie Sr.: teaching in Vermont, born and raised in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil! A five-time Brazilian National Champion; International World Masters Champion and IBJJF World Masters Champion. Accept no Iimitations!. Location: Vermont Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, 55 Leroy Rd., Williston. Info: 598-2839, julio@ bjjusa.com, vermontbjj.com.

meditation LEARN TO MEDITATE: ˜ rough the practice of sitting still and following your breath as it goes out and dissolves, you are connecting with your heart. By simply letting yourself be, as you are, you develop genuine sympathy toward yourself. ˜ e Burlington Shambhala Center offers meditation as a path to discovering gentleness and wisdom. Shambhala Café (meditation and discussions) meets the first Saturday of each month, 9 a.m.noon. An open house (intro to the center, short dharma talk and socializing) is held on the third Sunday of each month, noon-2 p.m. Instruction: Sun. mornings, 9 a.m.-noon, or by appt. Sessions: Tue. & ˜ u., noon-1 p.m., & Mon.˜ u., 6-7 p.m. Location: Burlington Shambhala Center, 187 S. Winooski Ave., Burlington. Info: 658-6795, burlingtonshambhalactr.org.

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ADULT: ALTERNATIVE FIRING: Instructor: Rik Rolla. ˜ e class will explore form, function, color and glazes. It will offer hands-on experience with firing techniques and utilize our brand new raku kiln. ˜ e gas reduction kiln and electric kiln will also be available. Basic wheel-throwing skills are encouraged but not required. 10 Mon., 6-8 p.m., Jan. 9-Mar. 20; no class Jan. 16. Cost: $405/person; member discount avail. Location: ˜ e Shelburne

ADULT: HAND-BUILDING: Instructor: Sarah Ahrens. Beginner students, as well as advanced, come together in creating hand-built sculptural forms in clay. With guidance from the instructor, students design and build projects based on individual interest, utilizing various ceramic construction techniques and surface treatments. Students will use the electric oxidation kiln. 8 ˜ u., 10 a.m.-noon, Jan. 19-Mar. 16; no class ˜ u., Mar. 2. Cost: $335/person; member discount avail. Location: ˜ e Shelburne Craft School, 64 Harbor Rd., Shelburne. Info: 985-3648, info@ theshelburnecraftschool.org, theshelburnecraftschool.org.

DANCE STUDIO SALSALINA: Salsa classes, nightclub-style, group and private, four levels. Beginner walk-in classes, Wed., 6 p.m. $15/person for one-hour class. No dance experience, partner or preregistration required, just the desire to have fun! Drop in any time and prepare for an enjoyable workout. Location: 266 Pine St., Burlington. Info: Victoria, 598-1077, info@salsalina.com.

martial arts

SEVEN DAYS

KIDS LEARN TO SEW: Learn how to use a sewing machine while making a fun project. By the end of class, participants will sew a pillowcase with a secret pocket out of fabrics of their choice. Learn sewing basics including

ADULT: ADVANCED OIL PAINTING: Instructor: Sage Tucker-Ketcham. Designed to help traditional oil painters develop their skills to make more dynamic and complex oil paintings. Students will focus on developing a series of work and learn from demos and discussions about professional practice. Previous experience in oil painting is necessary to attend this course. 10 ˜ u., 1-3 p.m., Jan. 19-Mar. 23. Cost: $310/person; member discount avail. Location: ˜ e Shelburne Craft School, 64 Harbor Rd., Shelburne. Info: 985-3648, info@theshelburnecraftschool. org, theshelburnecraftschool.org.

ADULT: BEGINNER WHEEL: Instructor: Rik Rolla. ˜ is course is great for beginners looking to learn the fundamentals of basic wheel-throwing techniques. You will learn how to center, throw, trim and glaze. After crafting your pottery on the wheel, Rik will guide you to create finished pieces for the electric oxidation kiln. Winter 2017: 8 Fri., 10 a.m.-noon, Jan. 27-Mar. 17. Cost: $335/person; member discount avail. Location: ˜ e Shelburne Craft School, 64 Harbor Rd., Shelburne. Info: 985-3648, info@ theshelburnecraftschool.org, theshelburnecraftschool.org.

dance

$69/parent-child for 3 weeks (no class Nov. 24): Five-person minimum required to run most classes; invite friends! Please register online or come directly to the first class. Location: Taiko Space, 208 Flynn Ave., Suite 3G, Burlington; Capital City Grange, 6612 Rte. 12, Berlin. Info: 9994255, burlingtontaiko.org.

11.16.16-11.23.16

KIDS’ HOLIDAY SEWING WORKSOPS: Looking for a kids’ class full of creativity, making and fun? Nido’s Kids’ Holiday Sewing Workshops offer beginners the basics of sewing while constructing fun projects. Learn how to thread/use a sewing machine and create basic stitches to craft holiday gifts from zipper pouches to bracelets and accessories. Ages 9-13. Sun., Dec. 4, 11 or 18, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Cost: $58/1 3-hour class; materials incl. Location: Nido Fabric and Yarn, 209 College St. Suite 2E, Burlington. Info: Nido Fabric and Yarn, 881-0068, info@nidovt. com, nidovt.com.

985-3648

ADULT: BEG.-INT. WHEEL: Instructor: Rik Rolla. ˜ is course is for beginner to intermediate students looking for fundamentals and techniques in wheelthrowing. ˜ ere are demos and one-on-one time. ˜ e gas reduction kiln and electric oxidation kiln are available, as well as an option to explore other available firing methods. 8 Tue., 10 a.m.-noon, Jan. 24-Mar. 14. Cost: $335/person; member discount avail. Location: ˜ e Shelburne Craft School, 64 Harbor Rd., Shelburne. Info: 985-3648, info@ theshelburnecraftschool.org, theshelburnecraftschool.org.

scraps of leather. You’ll have time to create something for yourself and gifts for your friends and family. Sun., Dec. 4, 10 a.m.-noon. Cost: $25/person. Location: Gardener’s Supply Burlington Garden Center, 128 Intervale Rd., Burlington. Info: 660-3505.

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

craft

theshelburnecraftschool.org

Craft School, 64 Harbor Rd., Shelburne. Info: 985-3648, info@ theshelburnecraftschool.org, theshelburnecraftschool.org.


CLASS PHOTOS + MORE INFO ONLINE SEVENDAYSVT.COM/CLASSES

classes THE FOLLOWING CLASS LISTINGS ARE PAID ADVERTISEMENTS. ANNOUNCE YOUR CLASS FOR AS LITTLE AS $13.75/WEEK (INCLUDES SIX PHOTOS AND UNLIMITED DESCRIPTION ONLINE). SUBMIT YOUR CLASS AD AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POSTCLASS.

MEDITATION

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pregnancy/ childbirth

tai chi SNAKE-STYLE TAI CHI CHUAN: Ł e Yang Snake Style is a dynamic tai chi method that mobilizes the spine while stretching and strengthening the core body muscles. Practicing this ancient martial art increases strength, flexibility, vitality, peace of mind and martial skill. Beginner classes Sat. mornings & Wed. evenings. Call to view a class. Location: Bao Tak Fai Tai Chi Institute, 100 Church St., Burlington. Info: 8647902, ipfamilytaichi.org.

yoga EVOLUTION YOGA: Evolution Yoga and Physical Ł erapy offers

NOON COMMUNITY YOGA CLASSES: We offer three weekly lunchtime Community Yoga classes, 12:15-1:15 p.m. Tue.: Hatha Flow w/ Carolyn Crotty; Wed.: Katonah Yoga w/ Lauren Godes; and Ł u.: Hatha Flow w/ Adam Bluestein. Yoga for every body, every level, only $6. Quality, friendly classes in a welcoming, nonintimidating, noncompetitive environment. Come practice with us! weekly ongoing. Cost: $6/1-hour class. Location: South End Studio, Burlington. Info: 540-0044.

HONEST YOGA: Honest yoga offers practices for all levels. We just expanded to have two practice spaces! Your children can practice in one room while you practice in the other. No need for childcare. Yoga and dance classes ages 3 months and up. Brandnew beginners’ course: Ł is includes two specialty classes per week for four weeks plus unlimited access to all classes. We have daily heated and alignment classes kids classes in yoga and dance, pre- and postnatal yoga. We hold yoga teacher trainings at the 200- and 500-hour levels, as well as children and dance teacher training courses. Daily classes & workshops. $50/new student (1 month unlimited); $18/ class; $140/10-class card; $15/ class for student or senior; or $110/10-class punch card; $135/ mo. adult memberships; $99/ mo. kid memberships. Location: Honest Yoga Center, 150 Dorset

Refresh your reading ritual. Flip through your favorite local newspaper on your favorite mobile device.

RAILYARD YOGA AND DANCE: Welcome! Clearing Subconscious Series with Kundalini Yoga: Mon. in Nov., 7-8:30 p.m. with Sukhpran Kaur. Kundalini Yoga for Deep Sleep with Mansukh Kaur: Dec. 10, 10 a.m.-noon. New class, Subtle Series for Healing with Jessica Miller: Mon. 11-12:15 p.m. through Dec. 12. Life Force Dance: Fri., 5-6 p.m. with Silvia. See website for schedule. Location: Railyard Yoga Studio, 270 Battery St., Burlington. Info: Railyard Yoga Studio, 318-6050, railyardyoga@gmail.com, railyardapothecary.com.

GROW

(And yes, it’s still free.)

SEVEN DAYS

11.16.16-11.23.16

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

PRENATAL METHOD STUDIO: Prenatal and postnatal yoga and barre classes. Yoga for Fertility Class Series. Childbirth Education Series and weekend intensives. Yoga Alliance Registered Prenatal Yoga Teacher Training Program. Infant CPR. Empathy circles, infant massage and new mothers’ groups. Supporting women and their partners in the management and journey of pregnancy and childbirth. Every day: lunchtimes, evenings & weekends. Cost: $15/1-hour prenatal or postnatal yoga class. Location: Prenatal Method Studio, 1 Mill St., suite 236, at the Chace Mill, Burlington. Info:

829-0211, beth@prenatalmethod. com, prenatalmethod.com.

St., Blue Mall, next to Hana, South Burlington. Info: 497-0136, honestyogastudio@gmail.com, honestyogacenter.com.

yoga classes for everyone from beginner to expert. Choose from a wide variety of drop-in classes, series and workshops in Vinyasa, Kripalu, Core, Gentle, Vigorous, Yoga on the Lake, Yoga Wall, Ł erapeutics, and Alignment. Become part of our yoga community. You are welcome here. Cost: $15/class; $140/10-class card; $5-10/community classes. Location: Evolution Yoga, 20 Kilburn St., Burlington. Info: 8649642, evolutionvt.com.

62 CLASSES

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music

˜ e Dillinger Escape Plan

not exactly the most mass-marketable music.

Exit Strategy After 20 years, the Dillinger Escape Plan make their getaway B Y D AN BOL L ES

64 MUSIC

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SEVENDAYSVT.COM

I

t’s rare that we’re given the op- with the sludgy fury of hardcore. It’s a portunity to end something — a re- bracing, brutal style that relies as much lationship, a job, an artistic pursuit on teeth-rattling crunch as calculated — in the way it deserves. Sometimes sonic dissonance and rhythmic fuckery. messy ends are the result of an outside DEP’s legacy is one of innovation. And force such as a cheating lover or an also utter madness at their live shows. unexpected trauma. Sometimes it’s the Seven Days recently spoke by phone result of hanging on too long and failing with founding guitarist Ben Weinman. to recognize it. Either way, all things DEP play on Thursday, November 17, at must end eventually. And it’s rarer still Club Metronome in Burlington. to terminate a good SEVEN DAYS: So thing before it turns … what the hell, bad. man? Such is the case BEN WEINMAN: with the Dillinger [Laughs.] Well, it’s Escape Plan. After B E N WEIN MAN , GU ITARIS T gonna be 20 years a nearly 20-year in a couple months, run, the New Jersey man. That’s a long group is calling quits following the conclusion of its cur- time, you know? I’ve said it before, but rent tour. DEP are touring in support of there has got to be a point when it ends. their latest, and last, album, aptly titled Everything has to end. And we really Dissociation. The record puts a cap on a want to be in control of it and do it right, career that has established them as one make sure that we’re doing it while we’re of the most influential — and notorious on top of our game and feel excited and — American hardcore bands of their inspired. generation. [The end of the band] has given evFormed in 1997, DEP — as well as erything a lot more meaning, for sure. bands such as Deadguy and Converge, Just doing another tour cycle for another among others — are generally acknowl- record is always exciting. But it kind of edged as the progenitors of mathcore. lacks purpose other than, “This is what That genre subset combines the techni- we do.” So it seems like everything has cal precision and wizardry of prog rock more meaning now.

WITH DILLINGER,

EVERY RUMOR IS TRUE.

SD: Being able to arrive at that decision on your own terms must feel good, because that’s not often the case for most bands. BW: Yeah. You see bands that kind of just dwindle away and then break up until they feel they can pack rooms again. We’re packing rooms now. So it doesn’t have to be some kind of a gimmick. It really just is making a record and touring in support of it. But we know it will boil down to an end. SD: Looking back on the band, what are you most proud of? BW: Just that we managed to be relevant and grow continually, slowly over time and completely outside of trends or whatever else was going on. So many things come and go. I started this band before the internet was a huge part of everything. So to see all of this happen and stay relevant and continue to put out music that I think feels fresh and important is something I’m really proud of. SD: You talked about trends. I think a lot of people would point to Dillinger as trendsetters. BW: Well, if we’re a trend, I think the music industry is in for more of a recession than it already is. We’re

SD: I guess I meant that on more of a niche level. BW: It’s interesting. I do talks on art business and the music business often. And one of the examples I give is that a band like Dillinger has always been honest. And because of that, we’ve been able to go on our own trajectory and keep slowly rising and continuing, while so many other bands and artists keep spiking up and down. We may never be as big as those other bands were at one point. But we’ve been able to make a career and continue to grow, literally. Our past two albums were our most successful. And that’s something that speaks volumes. SD: It’s certainly a more sustainable model. Do you have thoughts or hopes for what the legacy of Dillinger will be? BW: I think the fact that, most likely, someone in a thousand years will hear a Dillinger song somewhere. That’s pretty crazy to me. Making something out of nothing is why I do it. Taking air and turning it into a tangible thing that people have and listen to, that’s super magical. So the thought of someone being able to hear Dillinger Escape Plan at some point way in the future is crazy. Who knows what it will sound like to them? But I certainly think that we’re a band that continues to be opening a door in some way, at a time when there is really a lot of that happening. So, hopefully, that’s something that stays imprinted on us as part of our legacy. SD: Do you have any regrets about the band? BW: That’s hard to say. Everything that happens brings you where you are. There have been a lot of hard times. But I don’t regret any of it. I’ve had a really hard but kickass, interesting life. SD: What are your post-Dillinger plans? BW: That might speak more to regret. This is the end point of our young lives, where we still want to do these things EXIT STRATEGY

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GOT MUSIC NEWS? DAN@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

Boomslang

FRI 11.18

104.7 The Point Welcomes

Kat Wright & The Indomitable Soul Band Renegade Groove

THU 11.17

S

UNDbites

The Soundbites and the Fury

Self Portrait

SAT 11.19

104.7 The Point Welcomes

SAT 11.19

Parsonsfield

SUN 11.20

Zoë Keating

Assembly of Dust Todo Bien

Kelly Ravin

B Y DAN BO L LE S

in exceedingly short supply this week. But I’ve found that it exists, at least in small doses, if you know where to look. I have found solace in an old friend’s kitchen, discussing politics while she fed her young son and patiently attempted to coax the word “Dada” out of him — he’s kinda stuck on “Mama” at the moment, but he’s trying. I’ve found it in a long talk with my father, a man whose compassion and intellect I profoundly admire. I have found it in my dear, elderly dog, who rests his head gently on my lap as I

WED 11.30

William Fitzsimmons

WED 11.30

Lost Nation Brewing Welcomes

THU 12.01

99.9 the Buzz 99 cent Low Dough Show featuring

FRI 12.02 SAT 12.03

Quadra

Phil Abair Band, Mr. French

Laura Burhenn (of The Mynabirds)

Turkuaz, The New Mastersounds

Judah & the Lion Scissorfight

Backwoods Payback, Hey Zeus, Thunderhawk

Ripe, Lawrence

JUST ANNOUNCED — 1.20 Brickdrop, Swimmer 1.21 Rocketsled 3.14 Galactic 4.05 Andrew McMahon In The Wilderness 1214 Williston Road, South Burlington 802-652-0777 @higherground @highergroundmusic

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WIZN Welcomes

SEVEN DAYS

SOUNDBITES

SAT 11.26

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write this, as he has for most of the columns I’ve penned over the years. I have found it in the warm embrace of another dear friend on a cold night in a South End parking lot while Patsy Cline played somewhere in the distance. I found it playing Farkle with my goofy nephews, who are somehow way better at that old bar dice game than a 4- and 7-year-old should be. And I have found it in music and in our local music community. In times of cultural crisis, we often turn to artists, if not for answers then for compassion, understanding and a sense of belonging. That’s true on a large scale — look back no farther than the music, film and literature of the Vietnam War era, for example. But it’s true close to home, too. It’s not hyperbole to suggest that our local artists will play a critically important role, serving as an emotional foundation and moral compass, for the months and years ahead. Take, for example, the work of JEFFREY ELLIS, aka MYCELIUM MC. For several years now, the local poet and rapper has organized a monthly-ish event called Word!Craft. Held in various locations around the state, the series is intended as an inclusive celebration of words, both written and spoken. It features poets, rappers

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

I’ll be honest: It feels a little — OK, a lot — disingenuous to go about business as usual this week. Like I imagine many of you are, I’m having a hard time ginning up enthusiasm for doing … well, much of anything, least of all writing the typical jokey Soundbites column. What I want to do is rant and rave. Or cry and go back to bed. I’ve been searching for solace amid the long, looming shadow of DONALD TRUMP’s America. That’s been

The John Kadlecik Band


SEVENDAYSVT.COM

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SEVEN DAYS

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103.1 & 107.7 THE UPPER VALLEY

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S

UNDbites

GOT MUSIC NEWS? DAN@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

LOUNGE

THIS WEEK

CO NT I NU E D F RO M PAG E 6 5

MATTHEW THORSEN

Kat Wright

I can imagine her feelings because, as the writer of that story, I felt somewhat embarrassed myself. Not because Wright and her band were undeserving of the spotlight. But because it seemed FORTUNE frivolous to focus on music when so FEIMSTER many were suddenly experiencing real fear and pain. NEXT WEEK But here’s the thing — and I direct FRI 25 | SAT 26 | 27 this at Wright as much as everyone else: I have heard from numerous people, in person and online, who genuinely appreciated seeing her beaming face everywhere last week, especially given [RATED R] the tumultuous backdrop. One friend BIG JAY told me, “Seeing such a bright and OAKERSON beautiful person every time I went to the grocery store were about the only TUES | $4 DRAUGHT / CLASSES times I’ve smiled this week.” WED & SUN | STANDUP / OPEN MIC Just wait until you get a load of THURS | IMPROV COMEDY their new record, which comes out this Friday, November 18, the same day the band plays the Higher Ground Ballroom in South Burlington. I can tell you it’s next to impossible to listen to By My (802) 859-0100 | WWW.VTCOMEDY.COM Side and not feel at least a little better 101 main street, BurlingtoN about the world. It’s a beautiful and affirming record, and it couldn’t come at a better time. Untitled-1 1 11/14/16 10:23 AM I write all of this not to suggest that things are going to be OK. For one thing, I don’t know that to be true. Instead, it’s my hope that by offering a few samples of good things happening in our community — musical and otherwise — it might provide some small shred of ILLADELPH, JM FLOW, HISI, MGW AND solace. MANY LOCAL AND NATIONAL ARTISTS. As Leonard Cohen put it: “There is a COMING SOON: SOVEREIGNTY crack in everything. That’s how the light NOW CARRYING PAX 2, gets in.” AS WELL AS PUFFCO,

ORDER YOUR TICKETS TODAY!

BLAZE INTO

AUTUMN AND MAGIC FLIGHT

11.16.16-11.23.16

Listening In A peek at what was on my iPod, turntable, eight-track player, etc. this week. Follow sevendaysvt on Spotify for weekly playlists with tunes by artists featured in the music section.

SEVEN DAYS

LEONARD COHEN, Songs of Love and

Hate LEON BRIDGES, Coming Home A TRIBE CALLED QUEST, We Got It

From Here … Thank You 4 Your Service PHIL OCHS, I Ain’t Marching Anymore MILES DAVIS, Kind of Blue

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shared many times over on social media by those desperately looking for some way to help. The letters began arriving early this week. “And there are lots of joyful tears,” says Gustafson. But as Gustafson points out, there are refugee students and students of color in every school in the city — and all over the state — all of whom need our support. If you’re so inclined, you are encouraged to send letters to Dan Bolles, c/o Seven Days, 255 S. Champlain St., Suite 5, Burlington, VT 05401, and Gustafson will distribute them to schools in Burlington. Outside the Burlington area, you could also contact your local school to ask what you can do to offer your support. But art and action don’t need to be explicitly political to have great power. And here I’m thinking of one KAT WRIGHT. The rosy leader of the INDOMITABLE SOUL BAND was the subject of last week’s Seven Days cover story. We didn’t plan it this way — in fact, we ran the story a week early due to a scheduling quirk. But it did not go unnoticed in our office that, on the day after America would ostensibly elect its first woman president, our cover would picture a strong, passionate and talented young local woman. We thought it would be a stroke of serendipity. We were wrong. Typically, when your band is featured on the cover of this paper, it’s cause for celebration. But I can only imagine Wright’s pride was dimmed, if not outright shattered, by seeing her face on newsstands around the state while so many around us despaired.

FRI 18 | SAT 19

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

and writers of all backgrounds and abilities coming together to share their thoughts, experiences and art. Though it’s not part of the Word!Craft series, this Friday, November 18, Ellis has organized an event with similarly supportive aspirations: Central Vermont Stands With Standing Rock. The alcohol-free show takes place at Christ Episcopal Church in Montpelier and features a wide array of activities and entertainment, from acupuncture and massage to a water ceremony and an ecstatic dance. The evening closes with appearances by some of the state’s finest conscious hip-hop artists: BOOMSLANG, SELF PORTRAIT, expat COLBY STILTZ, the ECOTONES and FOREST GRAY. Proceeds from the event will be sent to companies that are building yurts at the Standing Rock reservation in North Dakota. Ellis and co. will also accept donations to help with travel costs for those looking to join the pipeline protests there. Additionally, they’ll accept warm clothing, canned food and dry goods to aid local First Nation citizens. You can find evidence of artists’ impact on our community in subtler ways, as well. Take, for another example, SWALE’s AMANDA GUSTAFSON. When she’s not co-fronting one of Burlington’s most admired bands, she’s a teacher at a local elementary school with a significant refugee population. The day after the election, she invited her friends on social media to mail letters and drawings of support to her students, many of whom now fear for their future and safety here. It was a small but powerful gesture. And it was

LEARN LAUGH

9/5/16 10:35 AM


music

CLUB DATES NA: NOT AVAILABLE. AA: ALL AGES.

WED.16

CLUB METRONOME: Sleepy & Boo, Phatrix, Justin R.E.M., Haitian (house), 10 p.m., $10.

burlington

JUNIPER: Zach Nugent (acoustic rock), 9 p.m., free.

HALFLOUNGE SPEAKEASY: The Green Mountain Boys (folk), 7 p.m., free. Aquatic Underground DJs (trap, house), 10 p.m., free. JP’S PUB: Pub Quiz with Dave, 7 p.m., free. Karaoke with Melody, 10 p.m., free.

LIGHT CLUB LAMP SHOP: The Mixer: (improvised music and dance), 6 p.m., free. The Sway (indie rock), 8 p.m., free. Lamp Shop A Go Go, 9:30 p.m., free. Taka (vinyl DJ), 11 p.m., free.

JUNIPER: Tyler Mast and Paradise Divide (jazz), 8:30 p.m., free.

MANHATTAN PIZZA & PUB: Muddy Ruckus, Clever Girls, Ben Voske (Americana), 10 p.m., free.

LIGHT CLUB LAMP SHOP: Jesse Dee Residency (soul), 9:30 p.m., free. Film Night: Indie, Abstract, Avant Garde, 10 p.m., free.

NECTAR’S: Seth Yacovone (solo acoustic blues), 7 p.m., free. Blues for Breakfast, 9 p.m., $7. RADIO BEAN: Friday Morning Sing-Along with Linda Bassick & Friends (kids’ music), 11 a.m., free. Scott Card (jazz), 7 p.m., free. Luis Mojica, the Dustbowl Faeries (avant-pop, ethereal folk), 8 p.m., free. Vinegar Mother (progressive soul), 10 p.m., free. Smalltalker (soul), 11:30 p.m., free.

MANHATTAN PIZZA & PUB: Open Mic with Andy Lugo, 9 p.m., free. NECTAR’S: Vinyl Night with DJ Disco Phantom (vinyl DJs), 6 p.m., free. Waltz Wednesday featuring Jiggawaltz, Drunk & In the Woods. S.O.B Mobile (rock), 9 p.m., free/$5. 18+. RADIO BEAN: Joe Holt (folk), 7 p.m., free. Nikolaides Shafron Sullivan Trio (jazz), 8 p.m., free. Daniel Rahily with Ty Cicia and Jesse Rosenfiel (blues, rock), 10 p.m., free. RED SQUARE: The Eames Brothers (blues, rock), 7 p.m., free. SIDEBAR: Ethan Snyder Presents (jazz), 9 p.m., free. D Jay Baron (hip-hop), 10 p.m., free. THE SKINNY PANCAKE (BURLINGTON): Josh Panda’s Acoustic Soul Night, 8 p.m., $5-10 donation. VERMONT COMEDY CLUB: Girl Crush Comedy Showcase, 9 p.m., donation.

SEVEN DAYS

11.16.16-11.23.16

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

chittenden county

HIGHER GROUND SHOWCASE LOUNGE: The Stray Birds, Anthony da Costa (Americana), 7:30 p.m., $10/12.

barre/montpelier

BAGITOS BAGEL AND BURRITO CAFÉ: Papa Graybeard Blues, 6 p.m., free. THE SKINNY PANCAKE (MONTPELIER): Cajun Jam with Jay Ekis, Lee Blackwell, Alec Ellsworth & Katie Trautz, 6 p.m., $5-10 donation. SWEET MELISSA’S: Wine Down with D. Davis (acoustic), 5 p.m., free. John Lackard’s Blues Jam, 8 p.m., donation. WHAMMY BAR: Open Mic, 7 p.m., free.

stowe/smuggs

CORK WINE BAR & MARKET OF STOWE: George Walker Petit (jazz), 8 p.m., free. MOOGS PLACE: Lesley Grant (Americana), 8 p.m., free.

68 MUSIC

middlebury area

FRI.18 // KEVIN BLOOM AND THE STATIC CIRCUS [EXPERIMENTAL]

End Transmission Local signal tweaker and sound augmenter

KEVIN BLOOM AND THE STATIC CIRCUS

processed into beautiful oblivion. Additional analog sounds are layered atop these lost radio fragments, creating an alien, psychedelic atmosphere. Catch Kevin Bloom and the Static Circus on Friday, November 18, at Battery Street Jeans in Burlington with locals GNOMEDAD and IVAMAE. (Hot tip: Bloom is getting ready to hit the road as tour manager for local roots-rock duo Dwight & Nicole. So this is one of the last chances to see KBatSC before an indefinite hiatus.)

northeast kingdom PARKER PIE CO.: Trivia Night, 7 p.m., free.

outside vermont MONOPOLE: Open Mic with Lucid, 10 p.m., free.

NAKED TURTLE: Jay Lesage (acoustic), 5:30 p.m., free. OLIVE RIDLEY’S: The Latin Funk Thugte (funk, Latin), 7 p.m., free. So You Want to Be a DJ?, 10 p.m., free. THE SKINNY PANCAKE (HANOVER): Bow Tha er (folk-rock), 7:30 p.m., free.

THU.17

burlington

CHURCH & MAIN: Cody Sargent Trio (jazz), 8 p.m., free. CLUB METRONOME: The Dillinger Escape Plan, o’brother, Car Bomb, Cult Brother (mathcore), 7 p.m., $20/22.

51 MAIN AT THE BRIDGE: Blues Jam, 8 p.m., free.

DRINK: BLiNDoG Records Acoustic Sessions, 5 p.m., free.

CITY LIMITS: Karaoke, 9 p.m., free.

FINNIGAN’S PUB: Craig Mitchell (funk), 10 p.m., free.

HATCH 31: Bristol Folk Session, 6 p.m., free.

RED SQUARE BLUE ROOM: D Jay Baron (house), 9 p.m., $5.

is deftly skilled in the art of sonic collage. His work is largely composed of AM radio samples, which are filtered and

TWO BROTHERS TAVERN LOUNGE & STAGE: Trivia Night, 7 p.m., free. Open Mic Night, 9 p.m., free.

HALFLOUNGE SPEAKEASY: Half & Half Comedy (standup comedy), 8 p.m., free.

HIGHER GROUND SHOWCASE LOUNGE: The John Kadlecik Band (jam), 8:30 p.m., $15/20.

LIGHT CLUB LAMP SHOP: Victor Jara Tribute Band, 8 p.m., free. DJ Disco Phantom (eclectic dance), 9:30 p.m., free.

MONKEY HOUSE: Anthill Presents Third Thursda (hip-hop), 9 p.m., $3/8. 18+.

NECTAR’S: Trivia Mania, 7 p.m., free. The Blind Owl Ban (bluegrass), 10 p.m., $5/10. 18+. RADIO BEAN: Kristi Blow (singer-songwriter), 7 p.m., free. Shane Hardiman Trio (jazz), 8:30 p.m., free. Sabouyouma (West African, jazz, funk), 11 p.m., free. RED SQUARE: Blue Fox & the Rockin Daddys (blues), 7 p.m., free. D Jay Baron (hip-hop), 10 p.m., free. RED SQUARE BLUE ROOM: DJ Cre8, 10 p.m., free. RÍ RÁ IRISH PUB & WHISKEY ROOM: DJ KermiTT (top 40), 10 p.m., free. SIDEBAR: Kelly Ravin (country), 7 p.m., free. DJ Steal Wool and Matt Hagen (eclectic), 10 p.m., free. VERMONT COMEDY CLUB: Short Jam (improv), 6:30 p.m., free. Napoleon (improv), 7:30 p.m., $5. Daily Grind (improv), 8:30 p.m., $5.

chittenden county BACKSTAGE PUB: Trivia, 9:30 p.m., free.

ON TAP BAR & GRILL: Jenni & the Jazz Junketeers, 7 p.m., free. PENALTY BOX: Karaoke, 8 p.m., free. SUGAR HOUSE BAR & GRILL: Country DJ, 9 p.m., free.

barre/montpelier

BAGITOS BAGEL AND BURRITO CAFÉ: Art Herttua and Ray Caroll (jazz), 6 p.m., free. LA PUERTA NEGRA: The DuPont Brothers (folk), 9 p.m., free. THE SKINNY PANCAKE (MONTPELIER): Al Teodosio and Friends (jazz), 6 p.m., free. SWEET MELISSA’S: BYOV Thursday , 3 p.m., free. Duroc (rock), 8 p.m., donation. WHAMMY BAR: Jenn and John (folk), 7 p.m., free.

stowe/smuggs

champlain islands/northwest

TWIGGS — AN AMERICAN GASTROPUB: TNT Comedy Thursdays with Suzan Ambrose and Annie Russel (standup, open mic), 7 p.m., free.

northeast kingdom PARKER PIE CO.: Fiasco, 7:30 p.m., free.

outside vermont MONOPOLE: Cliff Reynolds (acoustic), 10 p.m., free.

NAKED TURTLE: Turtle Thursday with 95 riple X (pop), 9 p.m., NA. OLIVE RIDLEY’S: Karaoke with DJ Jon Berry, 9 p.m., free.

RUBEN JAMES: DJ Cre8 (hip-hop), 10 p.m., free. SIDEBAR: Catcall (folk), 7 p.m., free. Fattie B (hip-hop), 10 p.m., free. THE SKINNY PANCAKE (BURLINGTON): The Stash! Band (bluegrass), 8:30 p.m., free. THE TAP ROOM AT SWITCHBACK BREWING: Folks Up In Treetops (Grateful Dead tribute), 6 p.m., free.

chittenden county

BACKSTAGE PUB: Acoustic Happy Hour, 5 p.m., free. Karaoke with Jenny Red, 9 p.m., free. HIGHER GROUND BALLROOM: Kat Wright & the Indomitable Soul Band, Renegade Groove (soul, R&B), 8:30 p.m., $16/18. MONKEY HOUSE: Thunder Kittens (groove), 5 p.m., $5. Dirty Blondes, SuGar (rock), 8:30 p.m., $3/8. 18+. ON TAP BAR & GRILL: Mitch and Friends (folk, rock), 5 p.m., free. Lokey, 5 p.m., free. The Tricksters (rock), 9 p.m., free. PARK PLACE TAVERN: Bill (rock), 9:30 p.m., free.

FRI.18

barre/montpelier

burlington

ARTSRIOT: Battle Trance (experimental), 8:30 p.m., $15.

middlebury area

BATTERY STREET JEANS: Gnomedad, Kevin Bloom and the Static Circus, Ivamae (groove, experimental), 7 p.m., $5 donation.

CITY LIMITS: Throttle Thursday with DJ Gold, 9 p.m., free.

RÍ RÁ IRISH PUB & WHISKEY ROOM: Supersounds DJ (top 40), 10 p.m., free.

THE SKINNY PANCAKE (HANOVER): Kelly Ravin (folk), 7:30 p.m., free.

MOOGS PLACE: Open Mic, 8 p.m., free.

TWO BROTHERS TAVERN: DJ Da.Root (hits), 9 p.m., free.

RED SQUARE: Shrimptunes (rock), 5 p.m., free. The High Breaks (surf), 7 p.m., $5. Craig Mitchell (house), 11 p.m., $5.

BLEU NORTHEAST SEAFOOD: Audrey Bernstein (jazz), 8:30 p.m., free.

STONE CORRAL BREWERY: Shane Murley (rock), 7 p.m., free.

CHARLIE-O’S WORLD FAMOUS: Blue Fox (blues), 6 p.m., free. Abby Jenne and the Hard Livers, Eric Nassau featuring Alanna Grace Flynn (soul, rock), 9 p.m., free. ESPRESSO BUENO: Stroke Yer Joke (open mic, standup), 8 p.m., free. LA PUERTA NEGRA: Joe Moore (jazz), 6 p.m., free. Standup FRI.18

» P.70


GOT MUSIC NEWS? DAN@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

REVIEW this Tyler Daniel Bean, On Days Soon to Pass

he’s managed to objectify his struggles and encase them in a nine-track offering of gloomy “heavy indie.” Elements of metal, shoegaze and hard rock paint a bleak tapestry of inner turmoil. Days has a fuller, more realized sound than its more raw full-length predecessor, 2012’s Longing. This is not to say that Days isn’t quite raw itself, because it is. Perhaps Bean’s strong backing band helps to create the rich

atmosphere. Vocalist Jess McDermott, of the similarly angsty band the New & Very Welcome, sings nearly all of her backing vocals in unison with Bean’s. She remains his lingering shadow throughout, an echo of the dark thoughts that haunt him. The Coydogs’ Shannon Stott-Rigsbee’s violin is eerie and funereal, adding refinement to songs that often border on sludgy. The dark onslaught begins moments after hitting play on the opening track, “Archibald Street.” Like a death march, distorted guitars and militant drums escort Bean, and the listener, to the edge of composure within seconds. Trembling, Bean sings, “Just hoping it gets better / does it ever get better?” The sentiment is somewhat on the nose, and it’s rooted in pure truth. Those who suffer from depression would gladly give up everything to hear

a reply to that perennially unanswered question. “Willow I” and “Willow II” are a combined dark ode to Bean’s dearly departed dog, Willow. On part one, his inclinations are made explicit: “My body / I don’t want it anymore.” On part two, he’s still in mourning: “And I pet her / And I tell her / Without you / I can’t make sense of my life.” The track builds to a cacophonous, wall-of-sound climax. For all of the doom and gloom on Days, it seems that Bean is finding ways to deal. The album title itself suggests that, even when things are miserable and the sun hides behind a thick layer of gray, the day will pass. And that can be enough to keep us going. On Days Soon to Pass is available on Friday, November 18, at tylerdanielbean. bandcamp.com.

are one such band carrying the tiedyed flag onward, as evidenced by their recently released self-titled EP. But by skewing hard toward funk and, at times, even jazz, the septet reveals ambition beyond regurgitating tired jam templates. Front woman Emily Jane Haley sings with weathered beauty; her distinctive timbre steers less

dynamic songs away from cliché. Along with the horn section of Will Pearl, Sonja Poirier and Brad Schauerman, Haley helps elevate the band above its occasionally generic sound. Skill abounds on the EP. Arrangements are tight and the production adequately captures the band’s full sound as well as Haley’s voice. Rarely do Drunk & In the Woods sound like a band without aim. They know exactly what they are: a rollicking live act that can get the fans dancing. They’ve strived to put that sound and energy on record. The problem is that much of the music here could be heard coming from a thousand summer festival stages. For every highlight such as “Metaphysical Funk,” with its Sun Ra horn vibes and Henry Clark’s snarling electric mandolin, there are songs such as “Goeie Klank” and “Dead

Battery.” Just as things start to get interesting, the band devolves into so much noodling, you think you’re in a ramen restaurant. That frustration is amplified by the efficient excellence of “Don’t Fade Away,” the EP’s standout and closing track. Here the band moves effortlessly into smooth funk, sensuously grooving under Haley’s melody as she sings, “You are the one thing that has got to stay / don’t fade away, not tonight.” Moments such as these elevate the band out of conformity and allow us to see Drunk & In the Woods’ potential. Here’s hoping they continue moving in that direction. Drunk & In the Woods’ selftitled EP is available now at drunkandinthewoods.bandcamp. com. The band plays on Wednesday, November 16, at Nectar’s in Burlington.

(SKELETAL LIGHTNING/TOR JOHNSON RECORDS, CD, LP, DIGITAL DOWNLOAD)

We are rapidly approaching winter’s dark onset. To sleep in on a Saturday morning in January is to lose half a day. Seasonal affective disorder will take its inevitable, annual hold. Though it’s a dark time, spring promises a way out for the light deprived. But the coming year remains dark for those who suffer from depression year-round. Burlington’s Tyler Daniel Bean is one such sufferer. His struggles with depression are well-documented on his most recent LP, On Days Soon to Pass. He’s even come close to giving up on life entirely. But rather than fully succumbing to his internal darkness,

Drunk & In the Woods, Drunk & In the Woods

(SELF-RELEASED, DIGITAL DOWNLOAD)

sevendaysvt.com

3D!

MUSIC 69

J

Say you saw it in...

NOW IN

SEVEN DAYS

YOU A VT ARTIST OR BAND? SEND US YOUR MUSIC! DIGITAL: MUSIC@SEVENDAYSVT.COM; GET YOUR MUSIC REVIEWED: ARE SNAIL MAIL: MUSIC C/O SEVEN DAYS 255 S. CHAMPLAIN ST., SUITE 5, BURLINGTON, VT 05401

11.16.16-11.23.16

CHRIS FARNSWORTH

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

There was a time not that long ago when Burlington and the surrounding music scene was firmly encrusted in granola. Following the 1990s indierock bloom, Deadheads and Phish fans spread like wildfire, staking their claim to the Queen City’s genre throne. (Said throne exists. It’s made from thousands of guitars and turntables stuck together, à la the Iron Throne from “Game of Thrones.”) Eventually, the scene opened up and moved back toward eclecticism. But the ghosts of those days linger on stages all around the city and state. Jam music still holds a firm influence on the local scene, in Burlington and beyond. Johnson’s Drunk & In the Woods

JORDAN ADAMS


music FRI.18

CLUB DATES

NA: NOT AVAILABLE. AA: ALL AGES.

« P.68

Comedy, 8 p.m., free. DJ BAY 6 (dance party), 9:30 p.m., free.

High Strung

ZOË KEATING knows how to set a mood

SWEET MELISSA’S: Honky Tonk Happy Hour with Mark LeGrand, 5:30 p.m., donation. Cookie’s Hot Club (gypsy jazz), 9 p.m., $5.

— and that mood is somber. The

WHAMMY BAR: Chad Hollister (rock), 7 p.m., free.

of the oddball cello-rock band

stowe/smuggs

MOOGS PLACE: Run For the Roses (rock, jam), 9 p.m., free. RIMROCK’S MOUNTAIN TAVERN: DJ Rekkon #FridayNightFrequencies (hip-hop), 10 p.m., free. RUSTY NAIL: MSP Films Premiere ‘Ruin and Rose’ (ski movie), 5:30 p.m., $15.

middlebury area

51 MAIN AT THE BRIDGE: Left Eye Jump (blues), 8 p.m., free.

classical cellist was once a member Rasputina. She’s scored television programs, such as A&E’s adaptation of the French series “The Returned.” She’s toured with Amanda Palmer, Marilyn Manson and Siouxsie Sioux. Keating’s solo work is haunting and hypnotic, creating rhythm and depth

CITY LIMITS: Twist of Fate (rock), 9:30 p.m., free.

with little more than her cello. In

rutland/killington

her live performances, she uses

COMEDY CENTRE COMEDY CLUB: Fortune Feimster (VCC’s 1st Birthday!) (standup), 7 & 9:30 p.m., $20/25.

looping technology to create her

northeast kingdom

Sink in with Zoë Keating on Sunday,

JASPER’S TAVERN: Raized on Radio (rock), 9:30 p.m., $5.

outside vermont

own symphony-size cello section. November 20, at the Higher Ground Ballroom in South Burlington.

MONOPOLE: Ampervene (progressive rock), 10 p.m., free. MONOPOLE DOWNSTAIRS: Happy Hour Tunes & Trivia with Gary Peacock, 5 p.m., free. OLIVE RIDLEY’S: All Request Night with DJ Skippy (hits), 10 p.m., free. 4T-ArtisanVape110916.indd 1

Ours:

500 songs

2587 & Counting!

THE SKINNY PANCAKE (HANOVER): Greg Hall and the Barnhouse Band (folk, country), 8 p.m., free.

SAT.19

burlington

ARTSRIOT: Apex Ensemble Interprets Stevie Wonder’s Songs in the Key of Life, 8:30 p.m., $12/15. BLEU NORTHEAST SEAFOOD: Tiffany Pfeiffer (jazz), 8:30 p.m., free. CLUB METRONOME: Green Mountain Cabaret Presents the 10 Year Itch: Decades of Decadence (burlesque), 7 p.m., $15/20. Retronome With DJ Fattie B (’80s dance party), 9 p.m., free/$5. JP’S PUB: Karaoke with Megan, 10 p.m., free. JUNIPER: J&M Boutique (alt-pop), 9 p.m., free. LIGHT CLUB LAMP SHOP: Bird Full of Trees (Americana), 7 p.m., free. Cricket Blue (folk), 9 p.m., free. Taka (vinyl DJ), 11 p.m., free. MANHATTAN PIZZA & PUB: Ladies Drink Free (post-funk), 10 p.m., free.

11.16.16-11.23.16

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

Their Playlists:

11/8/16 2:20 PM

NECTAR’S: The Whiskey Gees (acoustic rock, blues), 7 p.m., free. Bella’s Bartok, Mal Maiz (vaudevillian folk-punk), 9 p.m., $5. RADIO BEAN: Eric Sommer (Americana), 8 p.m., free. The Whiskey Gees (acoustic rock, blues), 9:30 p.m., free. Revibe (jam, funk), 11:30 p.m., free.

SEVEN DAYS

RED SQUARE: Sweet William and Sugar Cone Rose (swing), 5 p.m., free. Rebel Alliance (reggae, rock), 7 p.m., $5. Mashtodon (hip-hop), 11 p.m., $5. RED SQUARE BLUE ROOM: DJ Raul, 6 p.m., $5. DJ Reign One (EDM), 11 p.m., $5. RÍ RÁ IRISH PUB & WHISKEY ROOM: Mashtodon (hip-hop), 10 p.m., free. RUBEN JAMES: Craig Mitchell (house), 10 p.m., free. SIDEBAR: Gordon Goldsmith (folk), 7 p.m., free. DJ Rekkon (hip-hop), 10 p.m., free.

70 MUSIC

THE SKINNY PANCAKE (BURLINGTON): Greg Hall and the Barnhouse Band (folk, country), 8 p.m., free. Untitled-16 1

9/16/16 10:33 AM

SMITTY’S PUB: Chris & Erica (rock, country), 8 p.m., free.

chittenden county

BACKSTAGE PUB: Cyn City (rock), 9 p.m., free. HIGHER GROUND BALLROOM: Assembly of Dust, Todo Bien (Americana), 7:30 p.m., $15/18. HIGHER GROUND SHOWCASE LOUNGE: Parsonsfield, Ke ly Ravin (alt-folk), 8:30 p.m., $10/12. MONKEY HOUSE: Tigerman WOAH, the Mallet Brothers Band (alt-country), 8:30 p.m., $5/10. 18+. ON TAP BAR & GRILL: Last Kid Picked (rock covers), 9 p.m., free. PARK PLACE TAVERN: Karaoke, 9:30 p.m., free. STONE CORRAL BREWERY: The Hubcat (acoustic rock), 7 p.m., free. SUGAR HOUSE BAR & GRILL: DJ Steve B (top 40), 9:30 p.m., free.

barre/montpelier

BAGITOS BAGEL AND BURRITO CAFÉ: Irish Session, 2 p.m., donation. ESPRESSO BUENO: Worst. Song. Ever. (competition), 8 p.m., $5. SWEET MELISSA’S: Jeff Salisbury Band (blues), 9 p.m., $5. WHAMMY BAR: Cookie’s Hot Club (gypsy jazz), 7:30 p.m., free.

stowe/smuggs

MOOGS PLACE: Tim Brick (Americana), 9 p.m., free.

middlebury area

51 MAIN AT THE BRIDGE: The Good Pa ts Band (funk, soul, jazz), 8 p.m., free. BAR ANTIDOTE: Folks Up In Treetops (Grateful Dead tribute), 8:30 p.m., free. CITY LIMITS: City Limits Dance Party with DJ Earl (top 40), 9:30 p.m., free. TWO BROTHERS TAVERN: Toast (rock), 9 p.m., $3.

rutland/killington

COMEDY CENTRE COMEDY CLUB: Fortune Feimster (VCC’s 1st Birthday!) (standup), 7 & 9:30 p.m., $20/25.


Free Special Event

Red Hot DIY Demo: Hot Sauce! Saturday 11/19 11AM - 2PM

l ff Al ts! O 15% utrien dN iqui

SUN.20 // ZOË KEATING [NEO-CLASSICAL]

L

SUN.20 // ZOË KEATING [NEO-CLASSICAL]

Green State Gardener

northeast kingdom

barre/montpelier

outside vermont

SWEET MELISSA’S: Kelly Ravin (country), 6:30 p.m., donation. Live Band Karaoke, 8:30 p.m., donation.

OLIVE RIDLEY’S: Strange Brew (rock), 10 p.m., free.

outside vermont

JASPER’S TAVERN: Good Time Music DJ (hits), 9 p.m., free.

MONOPOLE: Gowanus (jam), 10 p.m., free. THE SKINNY PANCAKE (HANOVER): Abigail Lapell and Dana Sipos (folk-noir), 7 p.m., free.

SUN.20 ARTSRIOT: Jonathan Richman featuring Tommy Larkins on the Drums (rock), 8 p.m., $17/19. NECTAR’S: Mi Yard Reggae Night with DJs Big Dog and Jahson, 9:30 p.m., $3.

OLIVE RIDLEY’S: Open Mic Night, 7 p.m., free. THE SKINNY PANCAKE (HANOVER): Bluegrass Brunch, noon, free.

MON.21 burlington

JP’S PUB: Dance Video Request Night with Melody, 10 p.m., free.

RADIO BEAN: Mary McGinniss & the Selkies (hillbilly Acadian jazz), 11 a.m., free. Pete Sutherland and Tim Stickle’s Old Time Session (traditional), 1 p.m., free. Songwriter Sessions, 4 p.m., free. Jo Henley (rock, country), 7 p.m., free. Cassidy Rain (acoustic folk, blues), 8 p.m., free. Henry Finch (jazz, blues), 9 p.m., free. Greg Hall and the Barnhouse Band (folk, country), 11 p.m., free.

JUNIPER: Trivia Night, 7 p.m., free.

chittenden county

HIGHER GROUND BALLROOM: Zoë Keating (neo-classical), 8 p.m., $20/25. MONKEY HOUSE: Come to Grief, Green Bastard, Peasants, Tar, Wolfhand (metal), 7:30 p.m., $5/10. 18+. PENALTY BOX: Trivia With a Twist, 4 p.m., free.

MANHATTAN PIZZA & PUB: Karaoke, 9 p.m., free. NECTAR’S: Seven Leaves, Jeddy, Kudu Stooge (rock, jam), 9 p.m., free/$5. 18+. RADIO BEAN: AliT (pop), 7 p.m., free. Alex Ishkov (folk), 8 p.m., free. Week Bitch (alt-pop), 9 p.m., free. Latin Sessions with Mal Maiz (cumbia), 9:30 p.m., free.

What if we told you that you could share your jokes with the world?

RED SQUARE: Mashtodon (hip-hop), 8 p.m., free. SIDEBAR: Family Night (jam), 9 p.m., free. THE SKINNY PANCAKE (BURLINGTON): Comedy & Crêpes (standup), 7 p.m., free.

chittenden county

BACKSTAGE PUB: Open Mic, 9:30 p.m., free. MONKEY HOUSE: Kelly Ravin (country), 6 p.m., free.

barre/montpelier

CHARLIE-O’S WORLD FAMOUS: Trivia, 8:30 p.m., free.

MON.21

SPEAKING OF COMEDY...

check out the “Parmelee Post” online. It’s a new humor column on local news that hasn’t happened yet.

No, we’re not kidding. Each week, we’ll publish one joke submitted by a comic on our arts blog, Live Culture. So, what are you waiting for? TO SUBMIT, GO TO: SEVENDAYSVT.COM/JOKE.

» P.72 4t-joke.indd 1

10/4/16 8:19 PM

MUSIC 71

SUGAR HOUSE BAR & GRILL: Vermont’s Next Star (open mic), 8 p.m., free.

LIGHT CLUB LAMP SHOP: Lamp Shop Lit Club (open reading), 8 p.m., free.

SEVEN DAYS

VERMONT COMEDY CLUB: Good Clean Fun (improv), 5 p.m., free. Indie Night (improv), 7 p.m., free. Acting Out: Open Mic (standup), 8 p.m., free.

Calling All Jokers!

11.16.16-11.23.16

THE SKINNY PANCAKE (BURLINGTON): Bluegrass Brunch Scramble, noon, $5-10 donation.

11/15/16 10:35 AM

HALFLOUNGE SPEAKEASY: Family Night (open jam), 10:30 p.m., free.

THE OLDE NORTHENDER PUB: Open Mic, 7 p.m., free.

SIDEBAR: SideBar Sundays (eclectic), 6 p.m., free. Mittletöner (house), 10 p.m., free.

Untitled-22 1

388 Pine St. Burlington

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

burlington

(802) 540 - 2097

BAGITOS BAGEL AND BURRITO CAFÉ: Bleecker & MacDougal (folk), 11 a.m., free.


music MON.21

CLUB DATES NA: NOT AVAILABLE. AA: ALL AGES.

« P.71

stowe/smuggs

MOOGS PLACE: Seth Yacovone (solo acoustic blues), 7 p.m., free.

northeast kingdom

PHAT KAT’S TAVERN: Jay Natola (solo guitar), 9 p.m., free.

TUE.22

burlington

ARTSRIOT: Xylouris White, Marisa Anderson (world, traditional), 8:30 p.m., $10/12. THE GRYPHON: P’tit Trio (jazz), 8 p.m., free. JP’S PUB: Open Mic with Kyle, 9 p.m., free. LEUNIG’S BISTRO & CAFÉ: Mike Martin (jazz), 7 p.m., free. LIGHT CLUB LAMP SHOP: Ver Sacrum (freak-folk), 8 p.m., free. Navytrain (rock), 9:30 p.m., free. MANHATTAN PIZZA & PUB: Ana D’Leon (singer-songwriter), 9:30 p.m., free. NECTAR’S: Dead Set (Grateful Dead tribute), 10 p.m., $3/5.18+. RADIO BEAN: Stephen Callahan Trio (jazz), 6:30 p.m., free. Honky Tonk Tuesday with Eric George & Friends, 10 p.m., $3. RED SQUARE: Karaoke with D Jay Baron, 7 p.m., free. SIDEBAR: Seth Yacovone (blues), 6 p.m., free. Ron Stoppable (hip-hop), 10 p.m., free. THE SKINNY PANCAKE (BURLINGTON): Jazz Night, 7 p.m., free.

chittenden county

72 MUSIC

SEVEN DAYS

11.16.16-11.23.16

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

MONKEY HOUSE: Mr. Doubtfire, Suburban Samurai, Let’s Go! (punk), 8:30 p.m., $5/10. 18+. ON TAP BAR & GRILL: Trivia with Top Hat Entertainment, 7 p.m., free.

LA PUERTA NEGRA: Salsa Lessons with Dsantos, 6:30 p.m., $12. SWEET MELISSA’S: Bruce Jones (Americana), 5 p.m., donation. Open Mic, 7 p.m., donation.

stowe/smuggs

MOOGS PLACE: Jim Charonko (Americana), 7:30 p.m., free.

middlebury area

TWO BROTHERS TAVERN LOUNGE & STAGE: Karaoke with Roots Entertainment, 9 p.m., free.

outside vermont

OLIVE RIDLEY’S: Trivia Night, 7 p.m., free. THE SKINNY PANCAKE (HANOVER): Michael Caduto — for Kids! (music and stories), 4 p.m., free.

WED.23 burlington

JP’S PUB: Pub Quiz with Dave, 7 p.m., free. Karaoke with Melody, 10 p.m., free. LEUNIG’S BISTRO & CAFÉ: George Petit Trio (jazz), 7 p.m., free. LIGHT CLUB LAMP SHOP: Film Night: Indie, Abstract, Avant Garde, 10 p.m., free. Justin Panigutti (acoustic rock), 10:30 p.m., free. MANHATTAN PIZZA & PUB: Open Mic with Andy Lugo, 9 p.m., free. NECTAR’S: Vinyl Night with DJ Disco Phantom (vinyl DJs), 6 p.m., free. Waltz Wednesday featuring Jiggawaltz, Ampevene (rock), 9 p.m., free/$5. 18+. RADIO BEAN: Erik Sievert (acoustic), 8 p.m., free. Joe Goodrow Trio (blues-rock), 10 p.m., free.

SIDEBAR: Ethan Snyder Presents (jazz), 9 p.m., free. Fatty Shay and Friends (mashup), 10 p.m., free.

It’s Magic

THE SKINNY PANCAKE (BURLINGTON): Josh Panda’s Acoustic Soul Night, 8 p.m., $5-10 donation.

inspired songs. After fronting the Modern Lovers through the ’70s and ’80s,

VERMONT COMEDY CLUB: Next Gen Showcase (standup), 9 p.m., free.

barre/montpelier

THE SKINNY PANCAKE (MONTPELIER): Cajun Jam with Jay Ekis, Lee Blackwell, Alec Ellsworth & Katie Trautz, 6 p.m., $5-10 donation.

Richman crystallized his solo sound on his 1992 album I, Jonathan. The album includes Richman’s biggest hit, “I Was Dancing in the Lesbian Bar.” In 1998, he and drummer TOMMY LARKINS gained widespread attention for their unconventional role as the Greek chorus in the Farrelly brothers film There’s Something About Mary. Richman has released scads of albums since and is still rocking out at age 65. He plays with Larkins on Sunday, November 20, at ArtsRiot in Burlington.

CORK WINE BAR & MARKET OF STOWE: George Walker Petit (jazz), 8 p.m., free. MOOGS PLACE: Christine Malcolm and David Langevin (Americana), 8 p.m., free.

middlebury area

CITY LIMITS: Karaoke, 9 p.m., free. HATCH 31: Bristol Folk Session, 6 p.m., free. TWO BROTHERS TAVERN LOUNGE & STAGE: Trivia Night, 7 p.m., free. Open Mic Night, 9 p.m., free.

northeast kingdom

PARKER PIE CO.: Trivia Night, 7 p.m., free.

outside vermont

MONOPOLE: Open Mic with Lucid,, 10 p.m., free.

barre/montpelier

RED SQUARE BLUE ROOM: DJ KermiTT (hits), 11 p.m., free.

OLIVE RIDLEY’S: So You Want to Be a DJ?,, 10 p.m., free.

RÍ RÁ IRISH PUB & WHISKEY ROOM: Rowan (celtic), 7 p.m., free.

THE SKINNY PANCAKE (HANOVER): Bow Th ° ayer (folk-rock), 7:30 p.m., free.

SD: So, you won’t be pursuing any other musical projects? BW: I don’t know. Right now I kind of see myself walking away into the sunset and disappearing.

charming the pants off his audiences with quirky, proto- and post-punk-

stowe/smuggs

NAKED TURTLE: Jay Lesage (acoustic), 5:30 p.m., free.

before that’s it, we’re old. So I think early on after this is about not having regrets, being able to say, “I did all that.” But maybe also being able to have a family, find adventures. There are all kinds of things I want to do that I haven’t had the opportunity to do, based on the busy lifestyle that Dillinger has brought me.

has been

WHAMMY BAR: Open Mic, 7 p.m., free.

RED SQUARE: Sammich (funk, jam), 7 p.m., free. Mashtodon (hip-hop), 11 p.m., free.

Exit Strategy « P.64

JONATHAN RICHMAN

SWEET MELISSA’S: Wine Down with D. Davis (acoustic), 5 p.m., free. UMLAUT (Tex-Mex kraut-rock), 8 p.m., donation.

WATERWORKS FOOD + DRINK: Trivia Night, 7 p.m., free.

CHARLIE-O’S WORLD FAMOUS: Godfather Karaoke, 9:30 p.m., free.

Since the early 1970s,

SD: Last question: What is the craziest thing that you’ve seen Greg Puciato do onstage? BW: It’s so weird. People notice things that happen in a video or a picture, but crazy stuff has been happening since day one, before Greg was even in this band. It’s almost like you join the band and it just takes you. Dillinger has a life of its own. I remember at the beginning, we were playing small places, coffee places. This old dude was playing Scrabble and an old singer ran out and jumped on the table and destroyed the Scrabble game.

SUN.20 // JONATHAN RICHMAN WITH TOMMY LARKINS [ROCK]

There was a ceiling that caught on fire. Lots of things have caught on fire. And when Greg joined, it just continued. So every night is crazy. People see things on video, but none of those things on video are probably as crazy as the other nights. Obviously, Greg taking a shit onstage at Reading Festival was pretty gnarly. That doesn’t happen every day. But is that crazy? I don’t know. We’ve gotten in full fistfights onstage. But the truth is, there are always rumors about bands. You hear about these legendary shows before the internet where there was, like, a riot. But there probably was not

a riot. It was probably two kids that got arrested. But it was like a game of Telephone, and by the time the story got from one coast to the other, it was this insane, exaggerated thing. With Dillinger, every rumor is true. Every story is true, and it’s usually under-exaggerated. It was actually probably worse.

INFO ˜ e Dillinger Escape Plan with o’brother, Car Bomb and Cult Brother, ˜ ursday, November 17, 7 p.m., at Club Metronome in Burlington. $20/22. 18+. clubmetronome.com


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1

11/15/16

2:46 PM

VENUES.411 BURLINGTON

STOWE/SMUGGS AREA

CLAIRE’S RESTAURANT & BAR, 41 Main St., Hardwick, 472-7053 CORK WINE BAR & MARKET OF STOWE, 35 School St., Stowe, 760-6143 MATTERHORN, 4969 Mountain Rd., Stowe, 253-8198 MOOGS PLACE, Portland St., Morrisville, 851-8225 PIECASSO PIZZARIA & LOUNGE, 899 Mountain Rd., Stowe, 253-4411 RIMROCKS MOUNTAIN TAVERN, 394 Mountain Rd., Stowe, 253-9593 THE RUSTY NAIL, 1190 Mountain Rd., Stowe, 253-6245 STOWEHOF INN, 434 Edson Hill Rd., Stowe, 253-9722 SUSHI YOSHI, 1128 Mountain Rd., Stowe, 253-4135 SWEET CRUNCH BAKESHOP, 246 Main St., Hyde Park, 888-4887

MAD RIVER VALLEY/ WATERBURY

Up-Close

RUTLAND AREA

HOP’N MOOSE BREWERY CO., 41 Center St., Rutland 775-7063 PICKLE BARREL NIGHTCLUB, Killington Rd., Killington, 422-3035

CHAMPLAIN ISLANDS/ NORTHWEST

BAYSIDE PAVILION, 15 Georgia Shore Rd., St. Albans, 524-0909 CHOW! BELLA, 28 N. Main St., St. Albans, 524-1405 SNOW SHOE LODGE & PUB, 13 Main St., Montgomery Center, 326-4456

UPPER VALLEY

BREAKING GROUNDS, 245 Main St., Bethel, 392-4222

with

Sled Dogs

October Siberian Sled Dogs Saturday, Nov. 26 11 a.m., 12:30 p.m., & 2 p.m.

NORTHEAST KINGDOM

BIG JAY TAVERN, 3709 Mountain Rd., Montgomery, 326-6688 COLATINA EXIT, 164 Main St., Bradford, 222-9008 JASPER’S TAVERN, 71 Seymour La., Newport, 334-2224 MARTELL’S AT THE FOX, 87 Edwards Rd., Jeffersonville, 644-5060 MUSIC BOX, 147 Creek Rd., Craftsbury, 586-7533 PARKER PIE CO., 161 County Rd., West Glover, 525-3366 PHAT KATS TAVERN, 101 Depot St., Lyndonville, 626-3064 THE PUB OUTBACK, 482 Vt. 114, East Burke, 626-1188 THE STAGE, 45 Broad St., Lyndonville, 427-3344 TAMARACK GRILL, 223 Shelburne Lodge Rd., East Burke, 626-7390

OUTSIDE VERMONT

MONOPOLE, 7 Protection Ave., Plattsburgh, N.Y., 518-563-2222 NAKED TURTLE, 1 Dock St., Plattsburgh, N.Y., 518-566-6200. OLIVE RIDLEY’S, 37 Court St., Plattsburgh, N.Y., 518-324-2200 PALMER ST. COFFEE HOUSE, 4 Palmer St., Plattsburgh, N.Y. 518-561-6920 THE SKINNY PANCAKE, 3 Lebanon St., Hanover, N.H., 603-277-9115

a m PS Register for

The Big Freeze: The Survival and Science of Cold Dec. 27 - 30

MUSIC 73

BIG PICTURE THEATER & CAFÉ, 48 Carroll Rd., Waitsfield, 496-8994 THE CENTER BAKERY & CAFÉ, 2007 Guptil Rd., Waterbury Center, 244-7500

51 MAIN AT THE BRIDGE, 51 Main St., Middlebury, 3888209 BAR ANTIDOTE, 35C Green St., Vergennes, 877-2555 CITY LIMITS, 14 Greene St., Vergennes, 877-6919 HATCH 31, 31 Main St., Bristol, 453-2774 TOURTERELLE, 3629 Ethan Allen Hwy., New Haven, 453-6309 TWO BROTHERS TAVERN LOUNGE & STAGE, 86 Main St., Middlebury, 388-0002

SEVEN DAYS

ASIAN BISTRO, 25 Winooski Falls Way #112, Winooski, 655-9800 BACKSTAGE PUB, 60 Pearl St., Essex Jct., 878-5494 GOOD TIMES CAFÉ, Rt. 116, Hinesburg, 482-4444 HIGHER GROUND, 1214 Williston Rd., S. Burlington, 652-0777 HINESBURGH PUBLIC HOUSE, 10516 Vt., 116 #6A, Hinesburg, 482-5500

BAGITOS BAGEL AND BURRITO CAFÉ, 28 Main St., Montpelier, 229-9212 CAPITAL GROUNDS CAFÉ, 27 State St., Montpelier, 223-7800 CHARLIE-O’S WORLD FAMOUS, 70 Main St., Montpelier, 223-6820 ESPRESSO BUENO, 248 N. Main St., Barre, 479-0896 GUSTO’S, 28 Prospect St., Barre, 476-7919 KISMET, 52 State St., Montpelier, 223-8646 LA PUERTA NEGRA, 44 Main St., Montpelier, 613-3172 MULLIGAN’S IRISH PUB, 9 Maple Ave., Barre, 479-5545 NORTH BRANCH CAFÉ, 41 State St., Montpelier, 552-8105 POSITIVE PIE, 20 State St., Montpelier, 229-0453 RED HEN BAKERY + CAFÉ, 961 US Route 2, Middlesex, 223-5200 THE SKINNY PANCAKE, 89 Main St., Montpelier, 262-2253 SWEET MELISSA’S, 4 Langdon St., Montpelier, 225-6012 THREE BEAN CAFÉ, 22 Pleasant St., Randolph, 728-3533 WHAMMY BAR, 31 W. County Rd., Calais, 229-4329

MIDDLEBURY AREA

11.16.16-11.23.16

CHITTENDEN COUNTY

BARRE/MONTPELIER

CORK WINE BAR & MARKET, 40 Foundry St., Waterbury, 882-8227 HOSTEL TEVERE, 203 Powderhound Rd., Warren, 496-9222 PURPLE MOON PUB, Rt. 100, Waitsfield, 496-3422 THE RESERVOIR RESTAURANT & TAP ROOM, 1 S. Main St., Waterbury, 244-7827 SLIDE BROOK LODGE & TAVERN, 3180 German Flats Rd., Warren, 583-2202

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

242 MAIN ST., Burlington, 8622244 AMERICAN FLATBREAD, 115 St. Paul St., Burlington, 861-2999 ARTSRIOT, 400 Pine St., Burlington, 540 0406 AUGUST FIRST, 149 S. Champlain St., Burlington, 540-0060 BARRIO BAKERY & PIZZA BARRIO, 203 N. Winooski Ave., Burlington, 863-8278 BENTO, 197 College St., Burlington, 497-2494 BLEU NORTHEAST SEAFOOD, 25 Cherry St., Burlington, 854-4700 BREAKWATER CAFÉ, 1 King St., Burlington, 658-6276 BRENNAN’S PUB & BISTRO, UVM Davis Center, 590 Main St., Burlington, 656-1204 CHURCH & MAIN RESTAURANT, 156 Church St. Burlington, 540-3040 CLUB METRONOME, 188 Main St., Burlington, 865-4563 THE DAILY PLANET, 15 Center St., Burlington, 862-9647 DOBRÁ TEA, 80 Church St., Burlington, 951-2424 DRINK, 133 St. Paul St., Burlington, 951-9463 THE FARMHOUSE TAP & GRILL, 160 Bank St., Burlington, 8590888 FINNIGAN’S PUB, 205 College St., Burlington, 864-8209 THE GRYPHON, 131 Main St., Burlington, 489-5699 HALFLOUNGE SPEAKEASY, 136 1/2 Church St., Burlington, 865-0012 JP’S PUB, 139 Main St., Burlington, 658-6389 JUNIPER, 41 Cherry St., Burlington, 658-0251 LEUNIG’S BISTRO & CAFÉ, 115 Church St., Burlington, 8633759 LIGHT CLUB LAMP SHOP, 12 N. Winooski Ave., Burlington, 660-9346 MAGLIANERO CAFÉ, 47 Maple St., Burlington, 861-3155 MANHATTAN PIZZA & PUB, 167 Main St., Burlington, 864-6776 MUDDY WATERS, 184 Main St., Burlington, 658-0466 NECTAR’S, 188 Main St., Burlington, 658-4771 RADIO BEAN, 8 N. Winooski Ave., Burlington, 660-9346 RASPUTIN’S, 163 Church St., Burlington, 864-9324 RED SQUARE, 136 Church St., Burlington, 859-8909 RÍ RÁ IRISH PUB, 123 Church St., Burlington, 860-9401 RUBEN JAMES, 159 Main St., Burlington, 864-0744 SIGNAL KITCHEN, 71 Main St., Burlington, 399-2337 SIDEBAR, 202 Main St., Burlington, 864-0072 THE SKINNY PANCAKE, 60 Lake St., Burlington, 540-0188 SPEAKING VOLUMES, 377 Pine St., Burlington, 540-0107 THE TAP ROOM AT SWITCHBACK BREWING, 160 Flynn Ave., Burlington, 651-4114 VERMONT COMEDY CLUB, 101 Main St., Burlington, 859-0100 THE VERMONT PUB & BREWERY, 144 College St., Burlington, 865-0500

JAMES MOORE TAVERN, 4302 Bolton Access Rd. Bolton Valley, Jericho,434-6826 JERICHO CAFÉ & TAVERN, 30 Rte., 15 Jericho, 899-2223 MONKEY HOUSE, 30 Main St., Winooski, 655-4563 OAK45, 45 Main St., Winooski, 448-3740 ON TAP BAR & GRILL, 4 Park St., Essex Jct., 878-3309 PARK PLACE TAVERN, 38 Park St., Essex Jct. 878-3015 ROZZI’S LAKESHORE TAVERN, 1022 W. Lakeshore Dr., Colchester, 863-2342 SHELBURNE VINEYARD, 6308 Shelburne Rd., Shelburne, 985-8222 STONE CORRAL BREWERY, 83 Huntington Rd., Richmond, 434-5767 SUGAR HOUSE BAR & GRILL, 733 Queen City Park Rd., S. Burlington, 863-2909 WATERWORKS FOOD + DRINK, 20 Winooski Falls Way, Winooski, 497-3525


art

Art Squared “Laetitia Soulier: ˜ e Fractal Architectures,” Hood Downtown B Y MEG B R A ZIL L

“˜ e Matryoshka Dolls”

11.16.16-11.23.16 SEVEN DAYS 74 ART

PHOTOS COURTESY OF HOOD DOWNTOWN

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

L

aetitia Soulier’s richly detailed color photographs inaugurate the Dartmouth College Hood Museum of Art’s new gallery space, the Hood Downtown, on Main Street in Hanover, N.H. The French artist’s exhibition is the first of 10 that will be shown during the museum’s three-year closure for expansion and renovation. Soulier’s photographs are full of intrigue and never what they seem to be. What they actually are and how they were made are for inquisitive viewers to discover. If “Laetitia Soulier: The Fractal Architectures” sounds like a riddle, it is. The photographs show a world that doesn’t exist, although real people and real objects occupy it. Born in 1978 in Bordeaux, France, Soulier earned undergraduate and graduate degrees in art, another degree in philosophy, and a second master’s in photography and studio lighting. She currently lives in New York City and exhibits her work internationally. Her Hood Downtown show includes seven large-scale photographs and scale models from two series, “The Matryoshka Dolls” and “The Square Roots.” The former employs Russian nesting dolls as inspiration and source material. Soulier has created a pattern of matryoshka shapes of various sizes based on fractals, which repeat seemingly to infinity. That pattern even reappears in the form of wallpaper on the gallery walls; the repetition is both mesmerizing and disorienting.

“Self-Portrait”

For her photographs, Soulier first handcrafts models, which she uses as “sets.” She then incorporates children into these small environments. Far too big for the sets, they appear to be young giants, or larger-than-life lords of the manor. Both children in these photos are 8 years old, the age when the imaginary begins to take a backseat to logic and reality. Soulier perhaps intends their presence as a metaphor for growing up and leaving childhood behind. The results of this mind-bending manipulation are huge photographs — 40 by 80 inches each — unlike anything viewers have seen before. Granted, M.C. Escher’s mathematically inspired

woodcuts and lithographs may come to mind. So might the logical yet fantastical narratives of authors Lewis Carroll (Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland) and Jonathan Swift (Gulliver’s Travels). With few exceptions, Soulier created all the pieces that compose her miniature sets. She uses traditional craft techniques, such as steam-bending wood to create curved wooden chair backs and a circular stairway. Once she has photographed her tableaux, she dismantles the sets. Soulier often reuses pieces such as a spinning wheel or a wall clock, but each photograph requires the construction of an entirely new set — a tiny environment with its

“˜ e Square Roots”


ART SHOWS

NEW THIS WEEK chittenden county

REVIEW

THE RESULTS OF THIS MIND-BENDING MANIPULATION ARE HUGE PHOTOGRAPHS

UNLIKE ANYTHING VIEWERS HAVE SEEN BEFORE.

barre/montpelier

herself a photographer, and the making of all the pieces that go into it is just a means to an end.” The set pieces that Soulier does not construct include small trees, vines and other leafy plants. A full-scale dresser in “Self Portrait” is another exception. This photograph is an anomaly — not part of the matryoshka series, but about it. Soulier appears on a set with red-andwhite matryoshka wallpaper. That wallpaper is pulled back to reveal another reality — a scene filled with scaffolds, pipes, tripods and a camera. Like the Wizard of Oz, she has come from behind the scenes to stand before the audience. She is both the photographer and the subject. Soulier challenges our eyes, our brains and even our sense of what is real. The persistence of that questioning — what is true, what is false? — grips us long after we exit through the gallery’s glass doors and back into the real world. m

f ‘CELEBRATE!’: Annual local arts celebration featuring a wide variety of art and crafts created by more than 75 SPA member artists. Reception: Saturday, November 19, 4-6 p.m. November 17-December 30. Info, 479-7069. Studio Place Arts in Barre.

INFO

randolph/royalton

“Laetitia Soulier: The Fractal Architectures, through December 11 at the Hood Downtown in Hanover, N.H. hoodmuseum.dartmouth.edu

stowe/smuggs

CRAFT VERMONT: Vermont Hand Crafters showcases the work of state artists and artisans in this annual shopping event. Sheraton Hotel & Conference Center, South Burlington, Friday, November 18, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.; Saturday, November 19, 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; and Sunday, November 20, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. $8 for three-day pass; $5 for Sunday only; free for children under 12. Info, 872-8600. LEGO CONTEST & EXHIBIT: A display of original Lego constructions by community members. Reception and awards ceremony: Friday, November 18, 5 p.m. Brattleboro Museum & Art Center, November 18-20. Info, 257-0124.

f ERIC TOBIN & MARILYN JAMES: “Two Views of Vermont,” interpretations of the local landscape. Reception: Saturday, November 19, 5-7 p.m. November 19-December 31. Info, 253-1818. Green Mountain Fine Art Gallery in Stowe.

LIFE PAINTING SESSION: Join Billy Brauer to draw and paint from live models, who generally hold one pose for two hours. BYO materials; all media welcome. T.W. Wood Gallery, Montpelier, Thursda , November 17, 7-9 p.m. . $12. Info, 839-5349.

middlebury area

OPEN HOUSE: ‘FREAKS, RADICALS AND HIPPIES’: Explore the exhibition and hear a talk from Grace Gershuny, organic agriculture pioneer and author of the newly released book Organic Revolutionary: A Memoir of the Movement for Real Food, Planetary Healing, and Human Liberation. Wednesday, November 16, 6-8 p.m. Info, 479-8500. Vermont History Center in Barre.

f JACKSON GALLERY HOLIDAY SHOW: Unique and affordable works made by 22 regional artists. Reception: Saturday, November 19, 5-7 p.m. November 19-December 31. Info, 382-9222. Jackson Gallery, Town Hall Theate , in Middlebury.

northeast kingdom

f ‘PORTRAIT OF A FOREST: MEN AND

MACHINE’: An exhibition of contemporary photographs by Weybridge photojournalist George Bellerose, shown alongside archival photographs and commentary from the logging and forest products community. Reception: Friday, November 18, 5-7 p.m. November 16-December 31. Info, 334-1966. MAC Center for the Arts Gallery in Newport.

HOLIDAY MARKET: Annual event featuring a wide array of gifts made by local artists and artisans. November 17-December 21. Info, 4310204. Chandler Center for the Arts in Randolph.

f MITCH AND ANNE BECK: “Paper Menagerie,”

an exhibition of mixed-media collages, including some on repurposed wooden instruments. Reception: Sunday, November 20, 2-4 p.m. November 18-January 13. Info, 889-9404. Tunbridge Public Library.

OPENING LECTURE: ‘HARD-EDGE COOL’: Curator Carolyn Bauer introduces this new exhibition and discusses the midcentury prints of the Routhier Collection. Pizzagalli Center for Art and Education, Shelburne Museum, Saturday, November 19, 2-4 p.m. Free with museum admission. Info, 985-0881. STUDIO SALE: CAROL MACDONALD: Th Vermont artist invites the public to view and shop her monoprints and limited-edition prints, sketchbooks and journals, cards, gift tags, raku clay birds, and a sneak preview of very recent work. Carol MacDonald Studio, Colchester, Saturday, November 19, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., and Sunday, November 20, 1-4 p.m. Info, 862-9037. STUDIO SALE: KATE LONGMAID: The Shelburn artist welcomes the public to shop original paintings and drawings, limited edition giclée prints, note cards and gift cards, Eco Buddha Bags, and holiday specials. Kate Longmaid Studio, Shelburne, Saturday, November 19, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Info, kate@katelongmaid.com.

paintings by the late South Strafford artist, who passed away while preparing her final sho . Reception: Wednesday, November 16, 5:30-7 p.m. November 16-December 16. Info, 603-7954909. Long River Gallery & Gifts in Lyme, N.H.

burlington

ART EVENTS

ART HOP GROUP SHOW: An exhibition featuring works by more than 30 local artists. Through N vember 30. Info, 651-9692. VCAM Studio in Burlington.

ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION: Celebrate the gallery’s seven-year anniversary with Vermont artists, unique gifts and a complimentary wine tasting from Vergennes Wine. Creative Space Gallery, Vergennes, Saturday, November 19, 5-8 p.m. Info, 877-3850.

THE ART HOP WINNERS’ CIRCLE: Selected works highlight winners John Douglas, Larry Bissonnette, Cara Lai FitzGibbon and People’s Choice winner Robert Gold. Through N vember 30. Info, 859-9222. SEABA Center in Burlington. CAROLINE BICK: Photographs by the University of Vermont studio art major. Through December 31. Info, 865-6227. Uncommon Grounds Coffee and Tea in Burlington.

BURLINGTON SHOWS

» P.76

ART 75

CERAMICS SALE FUNDRAISER: Ceramics made by JSC students and members of the public at the annual Throw-a-Thon are available fo purchase, with proceeds benefiting Operation Smile. Dewey Community Center, Johnson State College, Wednesday, November 16, 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Info, 635-1664.

‘ACROSS THE LAKE’: An exhibition of works by alumni of Plattsburgh State University. Through N vember 29. Info, 922-3915. RL Photo in Burlington.

SEVEN DAYS

ONGOING SHOWS

f DEBORAH FRANKEL REESE: Exhibition of oil

11.16.16-11.23.16

outside vermont

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

own narrative. In conversation at the gallery, Hood curator and director John Stomberg described the artist’s method as “telling stories with some of the same objects, but rearranging them.” Soulier’s work is so well executed that she makes it look easy. In reality, her process is exceedingly labor intensive. “There is nothing harder to do than make something look accidental,” Stomberg commented. “She considers

‘HARD-EDGE COOL: THE ROUTHIER COLLECTION OF MID-CENTURY PRINTS’: A survey exhibition of hard-edge or geometric abstract works on paper, from 1930s modernism to the postmodern era of the 1980s, including works by Josef Albers, Wassily Kandinsky, Ellsworth Kelly, Sol LeWitt, Frank Stella and Sophie Taeuber-Arp. November 19-January 22. Info, 985-3346. Pizzagalli Center for Art and Education, Shelburne Museum.

CONVERSATION WITH CREATIVES: Mingle with creative types at this event sponsored by the Vermont chapter of the American Institute of Graphic Arts. At 6:30 p.m., Emily Blistein, owner of Middlebury boutique Clementine, will discuss merchandising and successfully marketing to retailers. Muddy Waters, Burlington, Thursda , November 17, 5:30 p.m. Info, communications@nhvt.aiga.org.


art BURLINGTON SHOWS

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CHRISTY MITCHELL: For her solo show “IRL,” the artist takes the leap from speaking to strangers online to meeting “in real life,” and documents the process through photography, video, collage and mixed-media compositions taken from the computer screen. ˜ rough November 26. Info, 578-2512. ˜ e S.P.A.C.E. Gallery in Burlington. ‘DIRECTORS’ DIGRESSIONS’: An exhibition of works presented by two prominent Vermont arts leaders: Janie Cohen, director of the Fleming Museum of Art, and Sara Katz, assistant director of Burlington City Arts. ˜ rough November 26. Info, 652-4510. Amy E. Tarrant Gallery in Burlington. DOK WRIGHT: “Sammada Photographs,” large-scale images on canvas. ˜ rough December 31. Info, 8642088. Artspace 106 at the Men’s Room in Burlington. ‘GAME PROGRAM’: Works by alumni in game art, design, programming and production work featuring concept art, playable game media, panel discussions and workshops. ˜ rough December 8. EBEN MARKOWSKI: “Gravity,” a life-size steel sculpture of a female Asian elephant inspired by the tragedy of the global ivory trade. ˜ rough December 10. JOE MANLEY: “Plug/Unplug,” an exhibition of the Champlain game design professor’s clustered ceramic wall sculptures, brought to life by digital projection mapping. ˜ rough December 10. Info, cthompson@champlain.edu. Champlain College Art Gallery in Burlington. FRANK DEANGELIS: “Atrocities,” works by the artist who began painting just seven months ago. ˜ rough November 26. Info, 578-2512. ˜ e Backspace Gallery in Burlington. HOLIDAY MARKET: A selection of artwork and handmade gifts for the holiday season. ˜ rough January 4. Info, 777-7777. ONE Arts Center in Burlington. INNOVATION CENTER EXHIBITION:

Works curated by SEABA in a variety of mediums. First floor: Kelley Taft, Kristen Watson, Littlest Penguin Photography, Rae Harrell, Robert Gold and Stephen Zeigfinger; second floor: Amanda Vella, Janet Bonneau, John Metruk, Marilyn Barry and Pete Boardman; third floor: Donna Bister, Gaal Shepherd, Nicole Colella, SRMPhotography and Terry L. Mercy. ˜ rough November 30. Info, 859-9222. ˜ e Innovation Center of Vermont in Burlington. KATHARINE MONTSTREAM: “Snow Daze,” new snowscape paintings in watercolor and oil. ˜ rough December 1. Info, 862-8752. Montstream Studio in Burlington. ‘KEN RUSSACK: URBAN STUDIES 101’: Oil paintings on canvas of buildings and houses of Burlington’s neighborhoods. ˜ rough December 2. Info, 8645884. Karma Bird House Gallery in Burlington. KIRSTEN HURLEY: “Death,” an exhibition of paintings and hanging sculptural ornaments by the Vermont artist. ˜ rough December 6. Info, 865-6223. Battery Street Jeans in Burlington. LONGINA SMOLINSKI: “Reflection,” new work that presents the artist’s emotions through color while reflecting on the beauty of Vermont landscapes. ˜ rough December 4. Info, 999-4848. Brickwork Art Studios in Burlington. MARC FONTAINE: “45 Years Later,” an exhibition of photos representing the artist’s return to photography. Info, 540-8333. Sequoia Salon in Burlington.

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‘SARGENT TO BASQUIAT: UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT ALUMNI COLLECTIONS’: An exhibition of works on loan that span the late 19th to the early 21st centuries and represent some of the most influential styles of the last 130 years. ˜ rough December 16. Info, 656-8582. Fleming Museum of Art, University of Vermont, in Burlington. STEVE SHARON: Paintings by the local artist. ˜ rough December 31. Info, 859-9222. ˜ e Gallery at Main Street Landing in Burlington. VERMONT WATERCOLOR SOCIETY: ˜ e BurlingtonSt. Albans hub of the statewide art organization shows new works by members. ˜ rough November 30. Info, 859-9222. Art’s Alive Gallery @ Main Street Landing’s Union Station in Burlington.

‘OF LAND & LOCAL: WATERSHED’ AT BCA: ˜ e fourth iteration of the annual exhibition features new site-specific and place-based works relating to the Vermont landscape, presented by Shelburne Farms and Burlington City Arts. Exhibiting artists include Sean Clute, Cameron Davis, Al Larsen,

‘GREEN: A FINE ART PHOTOGRAPHY

‘THE BLUES’: Exhibition of works incorporating the color blue. ˜ rough December 31. Info, 899-4936. Jericho Town Hall. EXHIBITION’: An exhibition of images incorporating the color that we associate with money, the environment, aliens, revitalization and rebirth, juried by Sarah Elise Abramson. Reception: Sunday, November 20, 3 p.m. ˜ rough December 4. Info, 777-3686. Darkroom Gallery in Essex Junction.

‘Surface Expressions’

‘GROUP OF THREE’: An exhibition of the plein air oil paintings of Barbara Greene and Susan Larkin, and the watercolor paintings of Maurie Harrington. ˜ rough November 20. Info, 899-3211. Emile A. Gruppe Gallery in Jericho.

chapter of the Surface Design

JOHN BRICKELS: An exhibition of new architectural clay works by the Essex Junction artist. ˜ rough November 27. Info, 985-9511. Rustic Roots in Shelburne.

of

the

Vermont

Association show works in this

group

exhibition

at

the Chaffee Art Center in Rutland. From knit sculpture to weavings to fiber collage, diversity of the textile arts in

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THE POPPYCLOCK COLLECTIVE: Collaborative mixed-media works by Burlington artists Haley Bishop Rockwood and DeAnna Kerley. ˜ rough November 30. Info, 658-6016. Speeder & Earl’s Coffee, Pine Street, in Burlington.

chittenden county

the exhibition represents the

SEVEN DAYS

‘OUT OF DARKNESS TOWARDS LIGHT’: New mixed-media works by Lily Hinrichsen and Karla Van Vliet, each depicting their journey from the mysteries of darkness to the illuminations of light. ˜ rough December 31. Info, lilyhinrichsen@gmail. com. Flynndog in Burlington.

MATT DOUGLAS: “Pets in Tiny Hats,” a series of screen prints that explore the contrast between domesticated companions and small headgear. ˜ rough November 30. Info, 651-4114. ˜ e Tap Room at Switchback Brewing in Burlington.

Members

Vermont. Artists include Judy Dales, Rosalind Daniels, Linda Finkelstein,

Elizabeth

Fram,

Marilyn Gillis, Eve JacobsCarnahan, Marya Palinkas,

Ruby

Lowe, Kathryn

Leslie, Almuth Price,

Janet Ressler, Leslie Roth, Sharon Webster and Betsy Wing. Through December 9. Pictured: “The Committee Process,” knit sculpture

76 ART

Rachel Moore, Michael Zebrowski, John Douglas, Casey Blanchard, Galen Cheney, Mark Reamy and Gail Salzman. ˜ rough January 14. Info, 865-7166. BCA Center in Burlington.

by Jacobs-Carnahan.

TANYA CHALY: “Complex Contingencies,” an exhibition of “forensic suites” of detailed and individually framed drawings of biodiversity by the New York artist. Upon close inspection, the works reveal pathologies, disease, parasitic infestations and mutations. ˜ rough December 9. Info, bcollier@ smcvt.edu. McCarthy Arts Center Gallery, Saint Michael’s College, in Colchester.

barre/montpelier

‘BIG ART, BOLD VISION’: An exhibition curated by Janet Van Fleet featuring enlargements of works by 16 artists in mall windows. Artists include Rosalind Daniels, Anna Dibble, Janet Fredericks, Jessa Gilbert, Steven P. Goodman, Wendy James, Mark Lorah, Mickey Myers, Maggie Neale, Elizabeth Nelson, Adelaide Murphy Tyrol, Arthur Schaller, Jayne Shoup, David Smith, Kathy Stark and Frank Woods. ˜ rough November 26. Info, janetvanfleet@ fairpoint.net. Berlin Mall. DARYL BURTNETT: “SCARS,” photographs documenting the degradation and repair of a particular highway underpass. ˜ rough November 20. Info, 224-6878. Local 64 in Montpelier. ‘FREAKS, RADICALS & HIPPIES: COUNTERCULTURE IN 1970S VERMONT’: An exhibition that explores the influx of people and countercultural ideas to the state, from communes to organic agriculture, progressive politics to health care reform, alternative energy to women’s and gay rights. ˜ rough December 30. $5-20. Info, 479-8500. Vermont Heritage Galleries in Barre. ‘IN PRAISE OF WATER’: Goddard College artists approach the theme of water from multiple

perspectives: aesthetic, ecological, social, political, spiritual and contemplative. Artists include Richard Ambelang, Susan Buroker, Kate Egnaczak, Dan Goldman, Tom Hansell, Seitu Jones, Phillip Robertson, Cynthia Ross, Sharon Siskin, Ruth Wallen and Nanci Worthington. ˜ rough April 9. Info, 322-1604. Goddard Art Gallery, Pratt Center, Goddard College, in Plainfield. IRIS GAGE: Handcrafted botanical art by the apothecary owner. ˜ rough December 31. Info, 223-0043. Grian Herbs Apothecary in Montpelier.

MARY ADMASIAN: “Shadowlands,” an exhibition of paintings, small sculptures and assemblages. Photo ID required for entry into the gallery. Reception: Friday, December 2, 4:30-7 p.m. ˜ rough December 30. Info, 828-5657. Governor’s Gallery in Montpelier. MICHAEL STRAUSS: “Making ˜ ought Visible,” an exhibition of paintings in watercolor, oils, acrylic, pastel and ink by the Vermont artist and University of Vermont instructor, who investigates drawing and painting as a form of problem-solving. Reception: Friday, December 2, 6-8 p.m. ˜ rough January 13. Info, 262-6035. T.W. Wood Gallery in Montpelier. ‘SHEDDING LIGHT ON THE WORKING FOREST’: An exhibition of paintings by visual artist Kathleen Kolb and poetry by Verandah Porche. ˜ rough December 31. Info, 828-0749. Vermont Supreme Court Gallery in Montpelier. ‘SHOW 13’: An exhibition of recent works by the 15 artist members of the collective gallery. ˜ rough November 26. Info, 272-0908. ˜ e Front in Montpelier.

stowe/smuggs

‘AWAKEN’: A collaborative installation memorializing those killed and terrorized by slavery and racism in the United States, created by JSC alumna Sabrina Leonard with students, faculty and community members. ˜ rough November 18. Info, 635-1224. Julian Scott Memorial Gallery, Johnson State College. GOWRI SAVOOR: “Where Do We Go From Here?” works that explore how humans map, chart and document their environment to better understand the planet and define geographic and cultural identities. ˜ rough November 19. Info, 635-2727. Red Mill Gallery in Johnson. KENT SHAW: “Retro Looks,” an exhibition of works by the Elmore photographer. ˜ rough January 3. Info, 888-1261. Morrisville Post Office.

mad river valley/waterbury

JUDY DODDS: A retrospective exhibition featuring works in a variety of mediums, including hand-dyed and woven fabric, appliqué and quilted wall hangings, and hooked rugs by the octogenarian artist. ˜ rough December 30. Info, 496-6682. Vermont Festival of the Arts Gallery in Waitsfield. MICHELLE TURBIDE: “Fragments,” a collection of colorful acrylic paintings featuring narratives inspired by nature and dreamscapes. ˜ rough December 1. Info, 244-6606. Waterbury Congregational Church.

middlebury area

‘BLOOM AND DOOM: VISUAL EXPRESSIONS AND REFORM IN VIENNA 1900’: Exhibition of works by Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele and other members of the Viennese Secession, which illuminate how these individuals rejected the traditional academic system and turned to new means of expression. ˜ rough December 11. Info, 443-3168. Mahaney Center for the Arts, Middlebury College. MIKA INGERMAN: “Primped and Pugnacious: A Fusion of Fish and Fashion,” a multimedia series by the Burlington illustrator that explores male bio-ornamentation and the aesthete’s experience. ˜ rough November 30. Info, 453-3280. ˜ e Bristol Bakery and Café. ‘PERSONAL NARRATIVE’: An exhibition juried by photographer Susan Burnstine featuring images that represent an exploration of self through symbolism, metaphor and personal stories. ˜ rough November 25. Info, 388-4500. PhotoPlace Gallery in Middlebury.


ART SHOWS

CALL TO ARTISTS ARTSCONNECT @ CATAMOUNTARTS JURIED SHOW: The second annual juried show is juried by Fleming Museum curator Andrea Rosen. Artists may submit up to fi e works in any medium created within the last fi e years for opportunities to win cash prizes ($100-500) and a Catamount Arts membership (value $50). Selected work will be on exhibit January 14 to March 12. Deadline: November 28. Catamount Arts Center, St. Johnsbury. Info, 748-2600, ext. 101.

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‘BLIND COLLABOR-DATE’: Creatives of all types are invited to this mixer, in which artists, performers and technicians will be randomly paired for a 12-week exploration in creative chemistry. “Collabor-daters” will present their progeny at a February 11 Valentine’s show. Interested artists should email rosestreetgallery@hotmail.com with interest and preferred medium(s). Deadline: November 18. Rose Street Artists’ Cooperative and Gallery, Burlington. ‘FOLLOWING THE RULES/BREAKING THE RULES’: Seeking art in any medium by local artists for an upcoming show juried by Glen Coburn Hutcheson, Kathleen Kolb and Tom Slayton. The theme is: “We live by rules. Some rules are personal; some are societal; others are merely artistic.” Works must be made within the last fi e years. Deadline: December 30. T.W. Wood Gallery, Montpelier. $25 for three submissions; $10 for each additional. Info, 262-6035. GINGERBREAD CONSTRUCTION COMPETITION: Gingerbread enthusiasts of all ages and abilities are invited to submit a structure relating in some way to the theme “animal kingdom.” Entries outside of the theme are welcome and included. Family and group entries are welcomed. Professional chefs may participate, but their creations will not be included in the judging. No kits allowed. Submitted creations will be on display December 14-23. Deadline: December 10, 3 p.m. Chaffee Art Center, Rutland. $15. Info, 775-0356. ‘IT’S THE LITTLE THINGS’: Seeking photography of life’s “little” moments for an upcoming exhibition to be juried by Denise Letendre Bach, Lowell Snowdon Klock and Norma Montaigne. Deadline: December 2. Compass Music and Arts Center, Brandon. Info, 247-4295. JEWELERS AND FUNCTIONAL ARTISTS: Seeking work by local artists and artisans for the upcoming holiday season. Interested artists should email photos of work and/or a link to their website to thebuzz@ thehivevt.com. Deadline: December 1. The Hive, Middlesex. Info, 595-4866. ‘KALEIDOSCOPE’: Established and emerging artists are invited to submit one or two pieces of twodimensional artwork in any medium for an upcoming exhibition scheduled for January through March. The work must reflect whatever kaleidoscope means to the artist, and it must be able to be hung on a wall. Registration deadline: December 16. Jericho Town Hall. Info, 878-8887; blgreene@myfairpoint.net. ONE HOLIDAY MARKET: Seeking local Burlington artists and artisans who would like to showcase their work at this November and December market. Items should be priced $100 and under and will be sold for a 40 percent commission. Interested artists should email oneartsgallery@gmail.com with a few images of work and price points. Drop-off deadline: November 20, noon-5 p.m. ONE Arts Center, Burlington. ‘ROUND & AROUND’: Seeking art in a variety of mediums that pays homage to circles, spheres and endless loops. Deadline: December 10. Studio Place Arts, Barre. Free for members; $10 nonmembers. Info, 479-7069.

SOMETHING FOR

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SMALL WORKS EXHIBITION: Seeking work for an upcoming, nonjuried exhibition open to all artists and mediums. All work must measure 12 inches or smaller in all directions, before framing. $5 entry fee per submission. Deadline: November 29. The S.P.A.C.E. Gallery, Burlington. Info, 578-2512; spacegalleryvt.com. TEACHING ARTISTS: Across Roads Center for the Arts seeks artists looking to share their knowledge with a central Vermont audience through ongoing workshops. Deadline: December 31. Grange Hall, Waterbury Center. Info, 244-4168; info.acrossroads@gmail.com.

WINTER DANCE GALA: Seeking original contemporary choreography for dance event at Lost Nation Theater on February 3 and 4. Submissions should include choreographer name, contact information, bio, title, short description and video sample of of piece, list of dancers, and a link to past works. Also include a statement of willingness to share event administrative tasks. Deadline: November 18, 6 p.m. Lost Nation Theate , Montpelier. Info, hannasatt@gmail.com.

‘SEVEN ARTISTS FOR OUR SEVENTH BIRTHDAY: A SMALL WORKS SHOW’: Works on view from Amy Brnger, Irma Cerese, Michael Egan, CJ Hockett, Sara Katz, Hannah Sessions and Patty Sgrecci. Through December 31. Info, 458-0098. Edgewater Gallery at Middlebury Falls.

upper valley

‘WOODEN WONDERS’: Celebrating Vermont’s history as a wood manufacturer, this exhibition features a variety of historical toys. Through January 14. Info, 388-2117. Henry Sheldon Museum of Vermont History in Middlebury.

GUEST ARTISTS: The gallery welcomes master knitter Rachel Kahn, illustrator Zoë Tilley Poster, polymer clay jeweler Mindy Jackson-Jefferys and woodworker Detlev Hundsdorfer. Through December 31. Info, 235-9429. Collective — the Art of Craft in Woodstock.

rutland/killington

f ‘SURFACE EXPRESSIONS’: Fourteen Vermont members of the international Surface Design

MARGARET JACOBS: “Lost and Found,” an exhibition of sculpture honoring Native American symbols and spirituality, made from materials including deer hair, porcupine quills and leather. Through November 30. Info, scavenger.gallery@gmail.com. Scavenger Gallery in White River Junction.

UPPER VALLEY SHOWS

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ART 77

‘THE SPIRIT OF THE SEASON: MY FAVORITE THINGS’: Artist guild members share works, including framed original art, giclée prints, jewelry, wood, clay, mixed media and glass, as well as handmade ornaments. Through Janua y 31. Info, 247-4956. Brandon Artists Guild.

‘DINOSAUR REVOLUTION’: An interactive maze and hands-on learning experience that investigates all things dinosaur. Through January 1. Info, 649-2200. Montshire Museum of Science in Norwich.

SEVEN DAYS

Association present works in fibe , textiles and mixed media in two and three dimensions. Reception: Friday, November 18, 5-7 p.m. Through December 9. Info, 775-0356. Chaffee Art Center in Rutland.

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‘POST POP: PRINTS OF KEITH HARING’: An exhibition of select, limited-edition prints on loan from the Keith Haring Foundation. Through December 11. Info, 443-3168. Middlebury College Museum of Art.

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‘UNDER CONSTRUCTION’: Seeking wall-based and sculptural works, as well as artist books, with a particular emphasis on unusual or nontraditional materials, for a springtime exhibition exploring the processes of building and design. Deadline: January 27. Studio Place Arts, Barre. Free for members; $10 nonmembers. Info, 479-7069.

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art

ART SHOWS

60-minute film followed by a discussion with Vermont based Art Collector Mark Waskow. Additional panelists to be announced.

Vermeer JoeTim’s Manley What changes between plugged and unplugged? Toward this question, the artist and game design professor

presentsMarch his dual lifecycle “Plug/Unplug” at the Champlain College Art Gallery in Burlington. Since opening with a reception 18, exhibition 7:00 pm on November 10, the show has featured ceramic wall-mounted “nodules.” On Friday, November 18, Manley will host a second opening,

Inventor Tim Jenisonbyseeks todigital understand painting this time “plugging in” the installation activating projections ofthe tiny screens onto the sculptures. Manley began this work

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techniques used byartist Dutch Vermeer. in the spring while he was a visiting at the Master University Johannes of Colorado Boulder. He intends to examine “our increasingly complex interactions and relationships with screens — both on and off.” Through December 10. Pictured: unplugged installation view.

80-minute film followed by a discussion with dug Nap and Val Hurd. ‘X-RAY VISION: FISH INSIDE OUT’: A traveling artist. Through N vember 26. Info, 767-9670. UPPER VALLEY SHOWS « P.77 SARAH SMITH: An exhibition featuring the results of the artist’s self-imposed challenge to draw and post one drawing every day for a year. Through November 30. Info, 356-2776. Main Street Museum in White River Junction. pm

Handmade Nation april 15, 7:00

SCULPTUREFEST 2016: “Grounding” features works by 17 regional artists in this annual outdoor sculpture show. Another portion of the exhibition, on nearby Posner Road, features Judith Wrend and Joseph Chirchirillo, along with more than 20 other sculptors. Through N vember 16. Info, 457-1178. King Farm in Woodstock.

exhibition from the Smithsonian Institution featuring 40 large-scale digital prints of X-rays of several species of fish. Through June 1. Info 748-2372. Fairbanks Museum and Planetarium in St. Johnsbury.

brattleboro/okemo valley

‘FROM LUMINOUS SHADE’: Painter Margaret LOUIS C. CHAP: A retrospective exhibition of A documentary about contemporary independent craft Lampe Kannenstine, poet Guiseppe Ungaretti commercial art, paintings and other works by the and translator Ann McGarrell take viewers on a late Stockbridge artist. Through Februa y 18. Info, in America following thejourney rise from of despair D.I.Y. and the new wave to renewal, as they mourn 763-7094. Royalton Memorial Library in South untimely passing of their sons. Throug of art, craft, and design. the Royalton. January 8. Info, 257-0124. Brattleboro Museum &

SUE SCHILLER & NANCY WIGHTMAN: “It Takes

Art Center.

Printmaking Studio in White River Junction.

Ruskin’s work as a departure point for contextualizing contemporary renderings of landscapes and nature. Works are by Joseph Beuys, Katherine Bradford, Christo, Gustave Courbet, Naoya Hatakeyama, Anselm Kiefer, Raymond Pettibon, Gerhard Richter, Thomas Ru f, Ai Wei Wei, David Wojnarowicz and more. This show also se ves as the world debut of Sternfeld’s 2016 film London Bridge. Through N vember 27. Info, 952-1056. Hall Art Foundation in Reading.

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TWO RIVERS PRINTMAKING: Hand-pulled prints by studio members that explore ambition and redemption, and the magic and passion of Macbeth and A Christmas Carol. Through December 31. Info, 295-5901. Barrette Center for the Arts in White River Junction.

BENJAMIN N. BARNES: “New Turf, Old Haunts,” an exhibition of recent paintings depicting scenes of St. Johnsbury. Through N vember 19. Info, 502-748-0158. Northeast Kingdom Artisans Guild 11/15/16 1:33 PM Backroom Gallery in St. Johnsbury.

LOCAL

and say you saw it in...

KYLE GRAY: Photographs taken around the world. Through December 20. Info, 525-3366. Parker Pie Co. in West Glover. THE MANDALA PROJECT: Visionary artwork by the late Martha Stringham Bacon. Through N vember 20. Info, 334-1966. MAC Center for the Arts Gallery in Newport. ‘MIRROR/MIRROR’: An exhibition reflecting upon the looking glass and all that it contains, from telescopes to magic tricks, disco balls to dentistry, fashion to psychotherapy, myth to superstition. Through May 1. Info, 626-4409. The Museum o Everyday Life in Glover.

VISUAL ART IN SEVEN DAYS:

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SEVEN DAYS

‘THROUGH THE EYES OF LITTLE VILLAGE’: Landscapes of the Upper Valley by members of the artist group Odanaksis (Abenaki term for “little village”): Jo Tate, Susan Rump, Jonathan Rose, Anne Rose, Anne Hartmann, Anne Webster Grant, Helen Elder, Alexandra Corwin, Becky Cook and Gail Barton. Through December 10. Hartland Public Library.

northeast kingdom

SHOP

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BRENDA GARAND: “Touching at a Distance,” sculptures and paintings made with cold-rolled steel, flood cla , wool from the Johnson Woolen Mills, porcupine quills, walnut ink and black felt paper. Through Janua y 15. Info, 498-8438. White River Gallery at BALE in South Royalton.

outside vermont 60-minute film followed by a discussion with Moe O’Hare. ‘LANDSCAPES AFTER RUSKIN: REDEFINING THE ‘ARTISTS OF THE MOHAWK HUDSON REGION’: etchings, collagraphs and 3D multiplate prints. SUBLIME’: An exhibition curated by American artist Additional panelists to be announced. Eightieth annual exhibition, featuring 126 works Through N vember 30. Info, 295-5901. Two Rivers Joel Sternfeld, who uses Victorian scholar John

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BigTown Gallery in Rochester.

‘WALKING DOHA’: Photographs of Doha, Qatar, by Maria French. Through November 30. Info, maria@mariadayphotography.com. School for International Training Graduate Institute in Brattleboro.

manchester/bennington

‘HARMONIC RESONANCE: RETURN TO THE MYTHIC’: Works by Terry Hauptman and Hugh Joudry. LUIGI LUCIONI: “Within the Birch Grove,” oil paintings and etchings by the late Italian-born artist. Through December 11. Info, 362-1405. Elizabeth de C. Wilson Museum, Southern Vermont Arts Center, in Manchester. WINTER MEMBER SHOW: Affordably priced paintings and photography by local artists. Through January 1. Info, 362-1405. Yester House Galleries, Southern Vermont Arts Center, in Manchester.

randolph/royalton

‘TOWARD FORM’: Drawing, painting and collage works by Marcy Hermansader, Rick Skogsberg and Laurie Sverdlove, respectively. Through N vember 19. BHAKTI ZIEK: “Lexicon,” a solo exhibition of works by the Randolph-based weaver and fiber

ART LISTINGS AND SPOTLIGHTS ARE WRITTEN BY RACHEL ELIZABETH JONES. LISTINGS ARE RESTRICTED TO ART SHOWS IN TRULY PUBLIC PLACES.

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by 106 regional artists. Guest curated by Michael Oatman. ‘TRANSFORMING THE HYDE: THE FEIBES & SCHMITT GIFT’: An exhibition featuring works from the newly accessioned 160-piece collection donated by Werner Feibes and the late James Schmitt. The show expands the museums focus to include postwar nonobjective and abstract art. Through December 31. Info, 518-792-1761. The de Collection in Glens Falls, N.Y. ‘SHE PHOTOGRAPHS’: An exhibition featuring 70 works by 30 contemporary women photographers, including Nan Goldin, Catherine Opie, Kiki Smith and Marnie Weber. Through Februa y 19. ‘THE BLACK SUN OF MELANCHOLY: MONSTERS OF THE UNCONSCIOUS, FROM GOYA AND BLAKE TO REDON AND MUNCH’: Drawings and lithographs by 16 romantic artists who delved the depths of their imaginations to evoke strong feelings in the beholder. Through December 11. Info, 514-285-1600. Montréal Museum of Fine Arts. DIANNE SHULLENBERGER: An exhibition of works by the Vermont artist.Through December 31. Info, vtdianne@hotmail.com. Dartmouth-Hitchcock in Lebanon, N.H. ‘INNER SOUL: THE SCULPTURAL WORK OF LAWRENCE J. NOWLAN JR’: Figurative works by the late sculptor. Through December 31. Info, 603-448-3117. AVA Gallery and Art Center in Lebanon, N.H. LAETITIA SOULIER: “The Fractal Architectures,” an exhibition of works by the contemporary French photographer. Through December 11. Info, 603-646 2426. Hood Downtown in Hanover, N.H. m

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movies Peter and the Farm ★★★★

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his most unusual movie opens with a drive down a road in Springfield, Vt. The frame is filled with majestic mountains and foliage fit for a postcard. It could be footage for a tourism department TV spot — only our destination isn’t some visitor-friendly paradise but one man’s private hell. Welcome to Mile Hill Farm. Its owner is the subject of this awardwinning documentary from director Tony Stone (Severed Ways). From the moment we arrive on the 187-acre property, Peter Dunning addresses the camera. Over the course of one year — which Maxwell Paparella has masterfully edited into 92 often-mesmerizing minutes — the farmer tells his story. In this chapter of his life, the organic farm is virtually a one-man operation. Dunning proves to be anything but a traditional talking head. Stone and his crew scramble to keep up with the 68-year-old as he performs an endless cycle of demanding duties and chores. We pick up bits and pieces of Dunning’s autobiography between scenes of him slaughtering a lamb, slopping hogs, reaching deep into a cow to facilitate a birth, plowing, planting, repairing machines. “I care more about the farm than me,” he states. As the

facts of his life are revealed, the sentiment takes on dark ramifications. Why is the farm a one-man operation? Where is everybody? Dunning bought the place in 1978, when he was 33. A painting major who minored in sculpture, he had a wife and the romantic notion that they’d farm half the year and make art the other half. They had children, and the dream seemed within reach. Then a grisly power-saw accident nearly severed Dunning’s hand. He was left with a gnarled paw and the realization that his days as an artist were over. His days as an angry alcoholic, though, were only beginning. Over time, his behavior drove his family away. Dunning is not your father’s farmer. A fair poet and something of a philosopher, he’s fascinating company — even when, in the dead of winter, he confesses to getting up twice a night to chug rum to keep the DTs at bay. When an off-camera voice suggests rehab, Dunning replies that it’s either that “or hanging from the bathroom door ... I’m living in hell.” By the end of the movie, however, Dunning has succumbed to neither of those fates. The viewer is left with questions about how the filmmaker found this singular subject, how much of what we see is at

GRIM REAPER Tony Stone’s latest is a character study of a troubled Vermont homesteader who looks back on his life with a mixture of dark humor and deep regret.

least in part a performance, and what’s become of Dunning since shooting wrapped. As far as I know, this is the only review to provide answers. Research turned up a Q&A with Stone taped last April, following a screening of the film at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. We learn that Stone has known Peter since the former was 9 (his parents discussed art with Dunning at the Brattleboro Farmers Market). In fact, Dunning acted in Stone’s 2009 movie Out of Our Minds. “He’s a performer,” Stone says with a smile. The most unexpected revelation: Stone didn’t propose making the documentary to Peter. Peter proposed it to him. He pitched him on

documenting his suicide. “Friends say he’s always cried wolf,” Stone admits. For the tale of a tortured soul, the film has a surprisingly happy real-life ending. Dunning has gone from bit player to star of an acclaimed motion picture. In an even less likely twist of fate, the man who once dreamed of being an artist has made it to MOMA after all. He attended the tony showing at the prestigious venue. Don’t cry for Peter Dunning. The fact is, he hasn’t been this happy in decades. Not much chance of him buying the farm. RI C K KI S O N AK

80 MOVIES

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Arrival ★★★★★

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liens have landed — or, rather, simply appeared — at 12 spots across the globe. They aren’t smashing cities or shooting ray guns, but they haven’t yet clarified their intentions not to do so. As linguistics professor Louise Banks (Amy Adams) stands in her classroom watching cable news go berserk, director Denis Villeneuve doesn’t show us what she’s seeing. Instead, he holds the camera on her face, letting us watch her process. To Louise, who moves through the world as if life has already battered her, the aliens’ arrival is less a disaster than an opportunity. That shot is indicative of the approach that the Québec-born director (Prisoners, Sicario) takes throughout this brainy science-fiction film. We don’t get a good look at an alien craft until Louise arrives at one in Montana, having been enlisted by the U.S. government to attempt communication with the occupants. We see the craft’s interior through her eyes, too, in a masterfully paced scene that mixes the wonder of Close Encounters of the Third Kind with the crushing dread and disorientation of a horror film. While computer effects are used more sparingly here than in most Hollywood SF, the aliens never feel less than, well, alien. That’s a problem for the world’s governments, which must solve the enigma of this arrival as markets tumble and terrified Earthlings loot stores and hoard canned goods. If the aliens come in peace, why can’t they just say so?

WRITING ON THE WALL Adams finds alien communication difficult to decipher in Villeneuve’s heady, challenging sci-fi flick.

With the help of physicist Ian Donnelly (Jeremy Renner), Louise soon learns that the aliens converse not in sounds but in starkly beautiful pictographs that reflect a view of the world radically different from our own. Deciphering those messages will change her on a fundamental level — and, in the process, change our view of her story. Based on a short story by Ted Chiang, Arrival sneakily revisits some of the motifs and tactics of Villeneuve’s 2013 art-house flick

Enemy. (That strange film featured surreal images of giant spiders looming over Toronto; in Arrival, the aliens are towering heptapods.) Arrival is a far more accessible watch than Enemy. But viewers who expect an action-driven blockbuster like Gravity or The Martian may be disappointed, even though it shares those movies’ procedural approach to their genre. While Louise does have to race against a ticking clock — the threat that world lead-

ers will decide to attack the newcomers — the focus here is on communication, not survival. Instead of explosions, be prepared for lots of shots of Adams and Renner poring over screens and symbols. A better point of comparison might be Contact, or even 2001: A Space Odyssey — films that used alien encounters to invite us to bend our heads around the paradoxes of being human. Villeneuve doesn’t always integrate the more conventional action elements of Arrival successfully with its headier, weird ones, and some viewers may leave feeling let down by the lack of a traditional climax. For those who feel the emotional weight of Louise’s story, however, Arrival pays off in a big way. Adams makes us believe in her character’s need to communicate with these unknown life forms, and the script fully justifies the film’s tight focus on her personal journey. This is not just one more movie about a sadsack protagonist finding redemption by using her expertise to save others. Rather, it’s about how finding common ground with others can change our view of ourselves forever, in ways both wonderful and tragic. Whether or not you find that message a tad optimistic for this point in history, Arrival rewards close viewing and open eyes. Suspend your disbelief at key moments, and it may just sweep you into its moody, elegiac thrall. MARGO T HARRI S O N


MOVIE CLIPS

NEW IN THEATERS BILLY LYNN’S LONG HALFTIME WALK: In this drama from director Ang Lee, based on Ben Fountain’s novel, a young soldier (Joe Alwyn) is fêted as a hero on his return from Iraq but lacks the words to describe what he’s experienced in battle. With Kristen Stewart, Garrett Hedlund and Chris Tucker. (110 min, R. Essex, Majestic)

BOO! A MADEA HALLOWEENH1/2 Tyler Perry returns to his wig and dress to play the irascible title character, who finds herself dealing with a l manner of creeps on an eventful Halloween night in her latest comedy. With Cassi Davis and Patrice Lovely. Perry also directed. (103 min, PG-13) CERTAIN WOMENHHHH Kelly Reichardt (Meek’s Cutoff) directed this adaptation of three short stories by Maile Meloy, about women facing challenges in small-town Montana. Michelle Williams, Kristen Stewart and Laura Dern star. (107 min, R; reviewed by M.H. 11/9)

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DENIALHHHH1/2 In this fact-based drama, Rachel Weisz plays a historian who must prove the Holocaust happened in court after a denier (Timothy Spall) sues her for libel. With Tom Wilkinson. Mick Jackson (The Bodyguar ) directed. (110 min, PG-13; reviewed by R.K. 11/2)

BLEED FOR THIS: Miles Teller plays champion boxer Vinny Pazienza in this fact-based tale of his injury and comeback. Aaron Eckhard and Katey Sagal also star. Ben Younger (Boiler Room) directed. (116 min, R. Essex, Palace) THE EDGE OF SEVENTEEN: A high schooler (Hailee Steinfeld) deals with the awkwardness of her BFF dating her older brother in this coming-of-age comedy-drama from first-time feature director Kelly Fremon Craig. With Haley Lu Richardson and Kyra Sedgwick. (104 min, R. Essex, Majestic) FANTASTIC BEASTS AND WHERE TO FIND THEM: In this prequel of sorts to the Harry Potter series, writer Newt Scamander (Eddie Redmayne) explores New York’s underworld of witches and wizards in 1926. With Katherine Waterston, Alison Sudol, Johnny Depp and Colin Farrell. (133 min, PG-13. Big Picture, Bijou, Essex, Majestic, Marquis, Palace, Paramount, Roxy, Stowe, Welden) MOONLIGHT: This acclaimed drama from director Barry Jenkins (Medicine for Melancholy) tells the story of a young African American growing from boy to man in a rough part of Miami. Mahershala Ali, Sharif Earp and Duane Sanderson star. (111 min, R. Roxy, Savoy)

NOW PLAYING THE ACCOUNTANTHH1/2 Ben Affleck plays a math savant who cooks books for criminals in this crime drama from director Gavin O’Connor (Warrior). With Anna Kendrick and J.K. Simmons. (128 min, R; reviewed by M.H. 10/19)

H = refund, please HH = could’ve been worse, but not a lot HHH = has its moments; so-so HHHH = smarter than the average bear HHHHH = as good as it gets

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THE GIRL ON THE TRAINHHH An alcoholic commuter wonders if the solution to a missing persons case lies in her fractured memory in this adaptation of Paula Hawkins’ best-selling thriller. With Emily Blunt, Haley Bennett and Rebecca Ferguson. Tate Taylor (The Hel ) directed. (112 min, R; reviewed by M.H. 10/12) HACKSAW RIDGEHHH1/2 Mel Gibson directed this war-drama biopic about a World War II medic (Andrew Garfield) who was the first Conscientiou Objector to receive the Medal of Honor. With Sam Worthington, Luke Bracey, Vince Vaughn and Teresa Palmer. (131 min, R) THE HANDMAIDENHHHH An heiress’ new maid is actually part of a plot to steal her fortune in this adaptation of the novel Fingersmith, set in 1930s Korea and directed by Chan-wook Park (Oldboy). Min-hee Kim and Jung-woo Ha star. (144 min, NR) INFERNOHH The saga of The Da Vinci Code continues as “symbologist” Robert Langdon (Tom Hanks) finds clues to his own missing memories in the works of Dante. Ron Howard directed the globe-trotting thriller based on Dan Brown’s novel. With Felicity Jones and Irrfan Khan. (121 min, PG-13)

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JACK REACHER: NEVER GO BACKHH1/2 Tom Cruise once again plays Lee Child’s crime-solving ex-military man: This time, hes on the run and investigating a government conspiracy. With Cobie Smulders and Aldis Hodge. Edward Zwick (Pawn Sacrific ) directed. (118 min, PG-13)

early

KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESESH1/2 A suburban soccer mom and dad (Zach Galifianakis and Isla Fisher) sample a life of adventure after a sex spy couple (Jon Hamm and Gal Gadot) moves next door. Greg Mottola (Superbad) directed the action comedy. (101 min, PG-13; reviewed by R.K. 10/26) A MAN CALLED OVEHHH1/2 In this adaptation of the best-selling Swedish comic novel, a cantankerous widowed retiree (Rolf Lassgård) develops an unexpected friendship with his new neighbors. Hannes Holm directed. (116 min, PG-13) MISS PEREGRINE’S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDRENHHH A boy discovers a mysterious orphanage full of children possessed of special powers in this fantasy adventure based on Ransom Riggs’ novel and directed by Tim Burton. Eva Green, Asa Butterfield and Samuel L. Jackson star. (127 min, PG-13) OUIJA: ORIGIN OF EVILHHH This prequel to horror flick Ouija takes place in 1967 and chronicles what happens when a family of con artists who fake seances gets hold of an all-too-real spirit communication device. With Elizabeth Reaser and Lulu Wilson. Mike Flanagan (Oculus) directed. (99 min, PG-13; reviewed by M.H. 11/2) NOW PLAYING

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MOVIES 81

RATINGS ASSIGNED TO MOVIES NOT REVIEWED BY RICK KISONAK OR MARGOT HARRISON ARE COURTESY OF METACRITIC.COM, WHICH AVERAGES SCORES GIVEN BY THE COUNTRY’S MOST WIDELY READ MOVIE REVIEWERS.

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DOCTOR STRANGEHHH1/2 The latest Ma vel Avengers universe flick introduces neurosurgeon Stephen Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch), who gains eldritch powers from his explorations of the metaphysical realm. With Chiwetel Ejiofor and Rachel McAdams. Scott Derrickson (Sinister) directed. (115 min, PG-13)

11.16.16-11.23.16

ARRIVALHHHH1/2 In this sci-fi mystery from director Denis Villeneuve (Sicario), Amy Adams plays a linguist who must find a way to communicate with aliens before their sudden, unexplained presence causes global war. With Jeremy Renner and Forest Whitaker. (116 min, PG-13; reviewed by M.H. 11/16)

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PETER AND THE FARMHHHH Shot near Springfield, Vt., director ony Stone’s documentary portrays a back-to-the-lander who struggles with inner demons as he practices a punishing rural lifestyle. (91 min, NR; reviewed by R.K. 11/16. Roxy)

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LOCALtheaters (*) = NEW THIS WEEK IN VERMONT. FOR UP-TO-DATE TIMES VISIT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/MOVIES.

Miss Vermont USA & Miss Vermont Teen USA Pageants November 19 & 20 Shut In

BIG PICTURE THEATER

48 Carroll Rd. (off Rte. 100), Waitsfield, 496-8994, bigpicturetheater.info

wednesday 16 — thursday 17 Doctor Strange *Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (Thu onl Middle School: The orst Years of My Life friday 18 — tuesday 22

Electric Hot Tuna Tuesday, November 22, 8pm

Doctor Strange (ends Sat) *Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find The Trolls

Rte. 100, Morrisville, 888-3293, bijou4.com

wednesday 16 — thursday 17 The Accountan Doctor Strange Shut In Trolls

82 MOVIES

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friday 18 — tuesday 22 Doctor Strange *Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find The Shut In Trolls

CAPITOL SHOWPLACE 93 State St., Montpelier, 229-0343, fgbtheaters.com

Friday, November 25, 3 & 7pm Kids free offer valid until 12/19

Arrival Doctor Strange (2D & 3D) Hacksaw Ridge Inferno Shut In

21 Essex Way, #300, Essex, 879-6543, essexcinemas.com

wednesday 16 — thursday 17

Saturday, December 3, 7pm

SprucePeakArts.org 802-760-4634 122 Hourglass Drive, Stowe

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wednesday 16 — tuesday 22

ESSEX CINEMAS & T-REX THEATER

Alasdair Fraser & Natalie Haas

Arrival *Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk *Bleed for Thi Doctor Strange (2D & 3D) *The Edge of Se enteen *Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (2D & 3D Hacksaw Ridge Shut In Trolls (2D & 3D)

MAJESTIC 10

190 Boxwood St. (Maple Tree Place, Taft Corners), Williston, 878-2010, majestic10.com

wednesday 16 — thursday 17

BIJOU CINEPLEX 4

Cirque Le Jazz

friday 18 — tuesday 22

The Accountan Arrival *Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk (Thu only Doctor Strange (2D & 3D) *The Edge of Se enteen (Thu only *Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (Thu only; 2D & 3 The Girl on the rain Hacksaw Ridge Inferno Jack Reacher: Never Go Back Shut In Trolls (2D & 3D)

11/14/16 5:02 PM

The Accountan Arrival Doctor Strange (2D & 3D) *Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (Thu onl The Girl on the rain Hacksaw Ridge Inferno Jack Reacher: Never Go Back Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children Ouija: Origin of Evil Storks Sully Trolls (2D & 3D) friday 18 — tuesday 22 The Accountan Arrival *Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk Doctor Strange (2D & 3D) *The Edge of Se enteen *Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (2D & 3D Hacksaw Ridge Trolls (2D & 3D)

MARQUIS THEATRE Main St., Middlebury, 388-4841, middleburymarquis.com

wednesday 16 — thursday 17 Doctor Strange Inferno friday 18 — tuesday 22 Doctor Strange *Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find The

MERRILL’S ROXY CINEMA

Denial Doctor Strange The Handmaide A Man Called Ove Queen of Katwe friday 18 — tuesday 22 Arrival Doctor Strange *Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (2D & 3D The Handmaide A Man Called Ove *Moonlight *Peter and the Farm **Theo Who Li ed (Tue only)

PALACE 9 CINEMAS

10 Fayette Dr., South Burlington, 864-5610, palace9.com

wednesday 16 — thursday 17 The Accountan Arrival Boo! A Madea Halloween Doctor Strange (2D & 3D) *Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (Thu onl The Girl on the rain Hacksaw Ridge Inferno Jack Reacher: Never Go Back Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children **National Theatre Li e: Hamlet (Thu only Shut In **Space Jam 20th Anniversary (Wed only) Trolls (2D & 3D) friday 18 — tuesday 22

*Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (Thu only; 3 Trolls (2D & 3D) friday 18 — tuesday 22 *Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (2D & 3D Trolls (2D & 3D)

THE SAVOY THEATER 26 Main St., Montpelier, 229-0509, savoytheater.com

wednesday 16 — thursday 17 Certain Women Snowden friday 18 — wednesday 23 Certain Women A Man Called Ove *Moonlight

STOWE CINEMA 3 PLEX Mountain Rd., Stowe, 253-4678. stowecinema.com

wednesday 16 Doctor Strange (2D & 3D) Hacksaw Ridge Jack Reacher: Never Go Back thursday 17 — tuesday 22 Doctor Strange (2D & 3D) *Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (2D & 3D Hacksaw Ridge

SUNSET DRIVE-IN

155 Porters Point Rd., Colchester, 862-1800. sunsetdrivein.com

Arrival *Bleed for Thi Doctor Strange (2D & 3D) *Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (2D & 3D The Girl on the rain Hacksaw Ridge Shut In Trolls (2D & 3D)

Closed for the season.

PARAMOUNT TWIN CINEMA

friday 18 — tuesday 22

241 North Main St., Barre, 479-9621, fgbtheaters.com

wednesday 16 — thursday 17 Doctor Strange (2D & 3D)

WELDEN THEATRE

104 No. Main St., St. Albans, 527-7888, weldentheatre.com

wednesday 16 — thursday 17 Doctor Strange Inferno (Thu only Trolls Doctor Strange (except Tue) *Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find The Inferno (except Tue) Trolls

222 College St., Burlington, 864-3456, merrilltheatres.net

wednesday 16 — thursday 17 Arrival Certain Women

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MOVIE CLIPS

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QUEEN OF KATWEHHHH Disney’s latest family film te ls the underdog story of teenage Ugandan chess champion Phiona Mutesi. With Madina Nalwanga, Lupita Nyong’o and David Oyelowo. Mira Nair (Monsoon Wedding) directed. (124 min, PG; reviewed by M.H. 10/5) SHUT INH Naomi Watts plays a widowed child psychologist who becomes convinced the spirit of a missing patient is haunting her in this psychological thriller from director Farren Blackburn (“The Fades”). With Charlie Heaton and Jacob Tremblay. (91 min, PG-13) SNOWDENHHH Director Oliver Stone presents his dramatized take on the saga of the whistleblower (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) who exposed the farreaching activities of the National Security Agency. With Shailene Woodley and Melissa Leo. (134 min, R) STORKSHHH In a world where storks deliver packages for an internet conglomerate, a bird attempts to revive the outdated practice of delivering a baby to a happy couple. Nicholas Stoller (Neighbors) and Doug Sweetland directed the family animation. (89 min, PG)

SULLYHHHHH Tom Hanks plays airline pilot Chesley Sullenberger, who successfully landed his disabled plane in the Hudson River, in this drama about the incident’s aftermath from director Clint Eastwood. With Laura Linney and Aaron Eckhart. (96 min, PG-13; reviewed by R.K. 9/14) TROLLSHHH When the shiny, happy Trolls are menaced by a race of pessimistic ogres, only a cheerful Troll princess (voiced by Anna Kendrick) and an anomalous Troll grouch (Justin Timberlake) can save them. Walt Dohrn and Mike Mitchell directed the DreamWorks family animation. (92 min, PG)

NOW ON VIDEO THE BEATLES: EIGHT DAYS A WEEK — THE TOURING YEARSHHHHH Director Ron Howard assembled this found-footage compilation that chronicles the band’s 250 shows between 1963 and 1966. (99 min, NR; reviewed by R.K. 9/28) FINDING DORYHHH1/2 Pixar’s animated sequel returns to the aquatic setting of Finding Nemo a year after the events of the first film, when the forgetful fish of the title decides to set off in search of her long-lost family. (103 min, PG; reviewed by M.H. 6/22) Untitled-20 1

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More movies!

Film series, events and festivals at venues other than cinemas can be found in the calendar section.

OFFBEAT FLICK OF THE WEEK B Y MARGOT HARRI SON

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Moonlight

This is our standard.

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This second m vie from director Barry Jenkins (Medicine for Melancholy) doesn't have a snappy concept or a "hook" on its side. Plain and simple, it's a drama about the boyhood and coming of age of a gay black man in Miami, with three actors portraying him at three different stages of life. But reviews of this character study have been rapturous, with many critics already placing it among the top 10 films of 2016. Th Boston Globe says you'll "walk out feeling dazed," and the New York Times calls Moonlight "a hard look at American reality and a poem written in light, music and vivid human faces." See it starting Friday at the Savoy Theater in Montpelier and Merri l's Roxy Cinemas in Burlington.

11.16.16-11.23.16

TREAT ROADS AS MERE SUGGESTIONS

Offbeat Flick of the Week: We pick an indie, foreign, cultish or just plain odd movie that hits local theaters, DVD or video on demand this week. If you want an alternative to the blockbusters, try this!

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FRAN KRAUSE

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Have a deep, dark fear of your own? Submit it to cartoonist Fran Krause at deep-dark-fears.tumblr.com, and you may see your neurosis illustrated in these pages.

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REAL FREE WILL ASTROLOGY BY ROB BREZSNY NOVEMBER 17-23

their hands.” You shouldn’t feel shame, the article said, if you’re enjoying a hoagie but suddenly feel an inexplicable yearning for a BLT or pastrami on rye. While I appreciate this reassuring counsel, I don’t think it applies to you in the coming weeks. In my opinion, you have a sacred duty to be unwaveringly faithful, both in your imagination and your actual behavior — as much for your own sake as for others’. I advise you to cultivate an up-to-date affection for and commitment to what you actually have and not indulge in obsessive fantasies about what-ifs.

SCORPIO OCT. 23-NOV. 21:

Does the word “revolution” have any useful meaning? Or has it been invoked by so many fanatics with such melodramatic agendas that it has lost its value? In accordance with your astrological omens, I suggest we give it another chance. I think it deserves a cozy spot in your life during the next few months. As for what exactly that entails, let’s call on author Rebecca Solnit for inspiration. She says, “I still think the [real] revolution is to make the world safe for poetry, meandering, for the frail and vulnerable, the rare and obscure, the impractical and local and small.”

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): The Onion, my favorite news source, reported that “It’s perfectly natural for people to fantasize about sandwiches other than the one currently in

liver the contents of this horoscope without a disclaimer. Unless you are an extremely ethical person with a vivid streak of empathy, you might be prone to abuse the information I’m about to present. So please ignore it unless you can responsibly employ the concepts of benevolent mischief and tricky blessings and cathartic shenanigans. Ready? Here’s your oracle: Now is a favorable time for grayer truths, wilder leaps of the imagination, more useful bullshit, funnier enigmas and more outlandish stories seasoned with crazy wisdom.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Kavachi is an underwater volcano in the southwest Pacific Ocean. It erupts periodically and, in general, makes the surrounding water so hot and acidic that human divers must avoid it. And yet some hardy species live there, including crabs, jellyfish, stingrays and sharks. What adaptations and strategies enable them to thrive in such an extreme environment? Scientists don’t know. I’m going to draw a comparison between you and the resourceful creatures living near Kavachi. In the coming weeks, I bet you’ll flourish in circumstances that normal people might find daunting. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Seventeenth-century British people used the now-obsolete word “firkytoodle.” It meant “cuddling and snuggling accompanied by leisurely experiments in smooching, fondling, licking and sweet dirty talk.” The coming weeks will be prime time for you to carry out extensive experiments in this activity. But here’s an interesting question:

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Here’s an experiment worth trying: Reach back into the past to find a remedy for what’s bugging you now. In other words, seek out an old, perhaps even partially forgotten influence to resolve a current dilemma that has resisted your efforts to master it. This is one time when it may make good sense to temporarily resurrect a lost dream. You could energize your future by drawing inspiration from possibilities that might have been but never were. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): By the time he died at the age of 87 in 1983, free thinker Buckminster Fuller had licensed his inventions to more than 100 companies. But along the way, he often had to be patient as he waited for the world to be ready for his visionary creations. He was ahead of his time, dreaming up things that would be needed before anyone knew they’d be needed. I encourage you to be like him in the coming weeks, Libra. Try to anticipate the future. Generate possibilities that people are not yet ripe to accept, but will eventually be ready to embrace. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “We all

have ghosts inside us, and it’s better when they speak than when they don’t,” wrote author Siri Hustvedt. The good news, Sagittarius, is that in recent weeks your personal ghosts have been discoursing at length. They have offered their interpretation of your life’s central mysteries and have provided twists on old stories you thought you had all figured out. The bad news is that they don’t seem to want to shut up. Also, less than 25 percent of what they have been asserting is actually true or useful. But here’s the fantastic news: Thoseghosts have delivered ev-

erything you need to know for now and will obey if you tell them to take an extended vacation.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): In the fil Bruce Almighty, Morgan Freeman plays the role of God, and Capricorn actor Jim Carrey is a frustrated reporter named Bruce Nolan. After Nolan bemoans his rocky fate and blames it on God’s ineptitude, the Supreme Being reaches out by phone. (His number is 716-776-2323.) A series of conversations and negotiations ensues, leading Nolan on roller-coaster adventures that ultimately result in a mostly happy ending. According to my reading of the astrological omens, you Capricorns will have an unusually high chance of making fruitful contact with a Higher Power or Illuminating Source in the coming weeks. I doubt that 716-776-2323 is the right contact information. But if you trust your intuition, I bet you’ll make the connection. AQUARIUS

(Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Some spiders are both construction workers and artists. The webs they spin are not just strong and functional, but also feature decorative elements called “stabilimenta.” These may be as simple as zigzags or as complex as spiral whorls. Biologists say the stabilimenta draw prey to specific locations, help the spider hide and render the overall stability of the web more robust. As you enter the web-building phase of your cycle, Aquarius, I suggest that you include your own version of attractive stabilimenta. Your purpose, of course, is not to catch prey, but to bolster your network and invigorate your support system. Be artful as well as practical. (Thanks to Mother Nature Network’s Jaymi Heimbuch for info on stabilimenta.)

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “Aren’t there parts of ourselves that are just better left unfed?” asked Piscean author David Foster Wallace. I propose that we make that one of your two keynotes during the next four weeks. Here’s a second keynote: As you become more and more skilled at not fueling the parts of yourself that are better left unfed, you will have a growing knack for identifying the parts of yourself that should be well-fed. Feed them with care and artistry!

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

ARIES (March 21-April 19): There is a 97 percent chance that you will not engage in the following activities within the next 30 days: naked skydiving, tightrope walking between two skyscrapers, getting drunk on a mountaintop, taking ayahuasca with Peruvian shamans in a remote rural hut or dancing ecstatically in a muddy pit of snakes. However, I suspect that you will be involved in almost equally exotic exploits — although less risky ones — that will require you to summon more pluck and improvisational skill than you knew you had.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): I hesitate to de-

Will the near future also be a favorable phase for record levels of orgasmic release? The answer: maybe, but if and only if you pursue firkytoodle as an end in itself; if and only if you relish the teasing and playing as if they were ultimate rewards and don’t relegate them to being merely preliminary acts for pleasures that are supposedly bigger and better. P.S. These same principles apply not just to your intimate connections, but to everything else in your life, as well. Enjoying the journey is as important as reaching a destination.

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ENERGETIC YET A SOFT LANDING Belly laughs and honesty are my quest. Petite and active, am drawn to the outdoors yet equally enjoy dinner out, a movie or a good book. Even if there is not a weak-in-the-knees spark, good conversation with a new acquaintance is fun! Aethereal, 61, l FUN, ACTIVE, KINDHEARTED I’m an upbeat, caring, thoughtful woman who loves her friends and family. I work out daily and love being outdoors (if it’s not too cold). I enjoy being active and like hiking and kayaking as well as shopping and eating out. I like being chill at home, too. Watching TV and talking with others sounds awesome! VTJourney, 46, l FUNNY, ADVENTURER, TRAVELER, LATINA I’m looking to meet people in Burlington. I’ll be there some days this November. Let’s go to a coffee shop or just walk around. BeckyMx, 32, l

88 PERSONALS

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SHY GIRL LOOKING FOR FUN I like going for hikes, reading, watching movies. I am honest and shy. I am slightly overweight. I am 5’6. I am kind. I am a fan of “Doctor Who” as well as other TV shows that I enjoy watching. Looking to have fun. Looking for friendship, dating or anything else you have in mind. SazarMoose, 23, l SASSY Oh, jeez. I am so delightful, it’s bursting at the seams. LOL. OK, on a serious note: My friends all tell me I am funny and a lot of fun to hang out with, for the most part. I like to do most anything. Not hard to please. realmenonly, 50 LOVING, HONEST, CARING Easygoing, likes walks, rides, visiting family/friends, four-wheeling, fishing, camping, beaches, music, a couple of drinks after work or on a weekend — don’t need to be out all night. Looking for a nice, honest, loyal man who is financia ly stable. Not into drama or games. NiceVTgal, 49, l EVER GRATEFUL I believe that the secret to happiness is being aware of, and grateful for, all that I already have. I’m looking for a partner who believes in keeping a balance between work and play; enjoys travel; stays moderately fit; and appreciates the simplest things in life, like a walk through Red Rocks Park or cooking dinner together in the evening. winter_wonderland, 50, l LOOKING FOR FUN PARTNER I’m a good catch; are you fishing? I’m positive, happy, cultured, educated and financia ly stable. Looking for same in a man. Would like to travel. activebarb, 67, l HAPPY, FUN AND SPONTANEOUS Enjoy traveling and volunteering; would love to have someone to join

me. I also like spending time at home cuddling up next to a fire. alks around town feel good, and it would be nice to have someone to talk and laugh with on those walks. Enjoy eating out, and a glass of wine relaxes me. I desire adventures. lovetotravel, 62 CONSCIOUS, ACTIVE, KIND, CURIOUS, REWILD Grateful Earth tender trying out city living after homesteading. While concerned about the sixth great extinction, rewild, work to decolonize and advocate for justice, I also revel in forest bathing, mountain hiking, canoeing, bicycling, dancing, ancient living skills and playing music. I am enjoying permaculturizing where I live while teaching, mentoring and researching. I am open to a sweet playmate. tendinghearth, 41, l COUGAR SEEKING MALE ENERGY Attractive, in-shape, independent cougar with a full and active life. Only thing missing is male energy! Looking for companionship and possible romance. Enjoy walking, snowshoeing, cross-country skiing, cooking, wine, traveling and more. vtgirl7, 61, l HAPPY, ACTIVE AND SLIGHTLY GEEKY I grew up thinking of myself as an athlete who was smart. As I’ve aged I realize I’m really a geek who is athletic. Enjoy a variety of creative activities, reading and spending time outside. I love Bloom County! Prefer to hang out with a few good friends. Looking for someone who can make me dissolve into laughter. 12skiVT, 53, l KINDHEARTED OUTDOOR ADVENTURER Love the outdoors, hiking, sailing, camping and traveling. Enjoy the arts, movies, theater and reading. I

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love to laugh. Looking for someone to share some adventures and laughs! Arts_and_Leisure, 56, l HAPPY PILGRIM SEEKING COMPANION I am a happy person who loves life. I value intelligence, character, a sense of humor and a sense of fun. I get outside as much as possible. I love to explore new places near or far. I am a widow, and I would love to find someone to be my companion on the journey. Camino17, 59, l CURIOUS, ENERGETIC, HAPPY Life has been one long, exciting adventure, and this former city girl has found her new life in Vermont as a “retired person” — not tiring. I’m a former artist, and now I write for a living. Would love to find an open-minded man who is healthy, active and still appreciates what’s good in the world. CLC, 71, l

MEN Seeking WOMEN

BIKING VT NIRVANA I am a kind and understanding person. I do my best to listen to the other person who accompanies me. My interests are in bicycling, crosscountry skiing, snowshoeing, hiking. I am looking for someone for dating that will turn into a LTR eventually. Independent films and attending li e music events. I can share your interest, too. I love animals, too. beman, 62, l LAUGH, LOVE, TRAVEL, 420, SNOWBOARD Always up for adventure! Honesty is key. Looking for mutual attraction and someone who wants to blaze, listen to music and hook up. Disease-free and respectful. I’m a nice guy until you get naked. ;). ridevt06, 28 LOOKING FOR FUN Giving this a try. Looking to meet someone for fun and see where it goes. Comrrad, 40 WANTS TO HAVE FUN I want a person who enjoys me for what I am: a hardworking guy who wants to enjoy life and no drama. Hdc2004, 54 SEER SEEKING INTUITIVE, IMAGINATIVE MINGLING Looking for good conversation and times hanging out and talking about everything from quantum holographic universe to UFOs and paranormal stuff. I love science, but I grew up in a haunted house, so I know there is more out there. I am a 49-y/o off-grid hardened native Vermonter who does holistic healing. LifepathWanderer, 28, l I’M A TRUE RENAISSANCE MAN! I strive to live life to its fullest. I am very much a Renaissance man with many interests and talents. I enjoy being outdoors and communing with nature, whether it be skiing or hiking, kayaking, cycling, etc. I love it all. I enjoy traveling to lands unknown and discovering what wonders are to be found, including the food! InkedGRNMTNBOY, 29, l

EDUCATOR MUSICIAN LOOKING FOR SOMETHING Trying to get out there again after a break to focus on myself. I’m not sure what to expect, but creating relationships with other people is the goal. I am a busy musician, so getting out on the town to meet people in the evenings is not always possible. Always up for a good conversation and good wine. Jauziemusician1983, 33, l BOLD BOHEMIAN I enjoy being active and outdoors in nature as much as possible. I like to be artistic and creative with my hands. I am not afraid to stand up for the things that I believe in, especially when it has to do with the natural environment or human rights. I look forward to meeting a lady who has similar interests. Content, 61, l ADVENTUROUS, SPONTANEOUS, ACTIVE Looking for someone to be adventurous with. Ideally a similar personality. Looking for someone laid-back and down-to-earth. I feel I am easy to get along with, and I love to cook. ishman, 42 TIME TO EXPERIMENT Hi there. I’m a 20-y/o college student at the University of Vermont. I want a sexual experience to write home about, and I’m willing to try anything. What have you always wanted to do? anonymousM, 20 LOVER OF BEAUTY, AND YOU? I value the depth of connection more than most anything, whether with nature, humans or just experiencing life. I have a great circle of family and friends and am ready to add a great romance to the works. I am athletic, attractive and young for my age. Love touch, physical affection, being playful and rich conversation. You? WarmBreezes, 60 RELAXED, ABLE AND READY Well now, here is an easygoing guy looking to find ad enture and fun, yet letting emotions have the lion’s share. I’m well-adjusted — well, I think so. I enjoy most anything, from clubbing to dining out to just fishing in the ri er. Let’s meet and start a new journey and adventure together. Share your interests with me. syncrowave, 60, l

OUR TEAMWORK MAKES THE DREAMWORK In the name and full presence of the Supreme Worshipful Master and all the Powers of Nature which are integral to life, understand that I, AAA, have taken ARH to be my loving wife and that she now appears before me (face-to-face) to happily receive her wedding ring that symbolizes our sacred union. So mote it be. Amen. Number1soulbrother, 34, l

WOMEN Seeking WOMEN LOVE, DESIRE, SPIRIT, GROWTH, FUN I am a very open-minded womon looking for other very open-minded womyn for friendship or friendship caught on fire (l ve). I have loads of experience. You don’t need experience, just an open mind. I’ll talk your ear off or chew on it if there’s a spark between us and turn that spark into a raging fire! polyspiritRU12, 53, l UKULELE RIOT GRRRL SEEKING CONNECTIONS Cute, totally open and authentic, ukulele-playing Riot Grrrl femme seeking meaningful connections of any form with other human souls. Total nerdy girl gamer. I love Riot Grrrl, roller derby, being creative, supercheesy horror movies, and being wined and dined. I’m a polyamorous, pan/demi-sexual submissive. My kinks include light bondage, BDSM, and exhibitionism. I’m all about the Oxford comma. xXRiotGrrrlXx, 44, l OVERLY NICE, HELPFUL AND CARING I graduated from high school. I’m a pre-K teacher at a daycare. I have brown hair, brown eyes. I’m 5’6. I’m on the bigger side. I’m looking for someone who will like me for who I am. I want to find someone who wi l like me for my looks and all. Looking4female, 31, l

MEN Seeking ME

LOOKING FOR FWB Just because I am disabled and have no teeth, I’m being true and honest, unlike most would. I’m a simple man, kind, good looking. Just looking for fun in the bedroom with benefits — friends, you know. vtbigbear, 50, l GENTLE MAN FULL OF LOVE Kind, gentle, giving, loving but lonely man. I live alone, in my small home, on the shores of beautiful Lake Champlain. Looking to share quality time with a man who likes to spend time together, whether that be at home or out on the town in Montréal. I love the village up there. Plattsburgh_60, 60, l

SEEKING LOVE IN WRONG AREA Hi, I’m Nicky. I’m 32 and unfortunately am single still. I have had multiple attempts at finding a girl in my compatibility section(s) but hereby give up on ladies and would rather date a transsexual person, likely one who is not a gold digger and who has their own income, aside from receiving occasional gifts from their other half/soul mate. nickynick3241484, 32, l

SENSITIVE, DISCREET, SEXY, JOCK LOVER College-educated attractive black man looking for intellectual guy who might want to try confidential t yst or longterm affair. Bisexual is fine if discretion is emphasized. SteBarbGuy, 73, l

HOLDING HANDS ON A BEACH Fun-loving, gentle, easygoing, gowith-the-flo , kind guy just loves to have fun and make you laugh, but at the same time enjoys quiet evenings at home and being with the kids. I’ll make the day an awesome day fi led with fun laughter. vermont72, 44, l

GENTLE, WARM, EASYGOING, LOVABLE Hi, I’m a gay white male with ataxia (I have no balance). I use a walker, but everything works fine. Most guys shy away, but your loss. Get to know me. onionman1, 60, l

COUNTRY LOVER Hi. I’m a white male getting long in the tooth, but I still like going out. Love to see you. whodunit, 71


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WOMEN Seeking?

SHY GIRL LOOKING FOR FUN I am shy and slightly overweight. I am looking for someone who doesn’t care that I am overweight. I am looking to have sex and to have fun. Willing to try new things. I am average looking. I have very low self-esteem. SazarMoose1, 23, l WHILE HE WATCHES — CUCKOLD Young couple (28F and 29M) looking for man to f**k me while boyfriend watches. Maybe he joins in. DD-free. No 420. Yes drinks. You are fit, handsome and dominant. Sweetsub, 28

LOOKING FOR FUN What is there to say? I’m looking for someone to have a good time with. Shade, 57, l GOOD ADULT FUN, FUN, FUN I travel quite a bit, but when home in Burlington I like to indulge in good food, good drinks, outdoor activities and, of course, some good, healthy adult fun. I am a bit kinky, almost always horny and a generous, respectful play partner. Colorado_Guy, 31 HOT SEX Looking for some sexual fun. 802funtime, 35

UNICORN LOOKING FOR SOME FUN Fit, fun female looking for some new experiences with a couple. Professional. Looking for it to be discreet and clean. jessicaRabbit, 29

STARVING IN CENTRAL VERMONT Simple and subtle guy turning a page in the book of life. Always had an appetite that hasn’t been matched. Hungry. Mtnman76, 33

RAINBOW UNICORN SEEKS EROTIC ADVENTURES In a loving, healthy, committed, open relationship, and seeking female playmates for myself and females or couples for my partner and me together. I value those with a great presence, honesty, openness, and a grounded sense of self spiked with laughter and lightheartedness! Open to diverse experiences. Respect, excellent communication skills and healthy boundaries are critical! STD-free only, please. mangolicious, 45, l

HORNY SEXPOT SWALLOWS I’m a gay male looking for men who want to be satisfied to their likeness. onionman60, 60, l

GIRLS JUST WANNA HAVE FUN Hey hey, I am just looking for someone to hang out with. Nothing too crazy, but I’m a lot of fun. Vonnie, 25, l

LOVE TO SWALLOW DICK JIZZ My downfalls are no teeth and I’m disabled, but know this: I know how to worship a man’s cock ‘til it will drive you so crazy you can’t stand it. I don’t bottom but will rim your ass. swallowyourmeat, 50, l

ADVENTUROUS, OPEN-MINDED STUD Very open-minded, adventurous, hung stud who knows how to use it! Looking for fun new experiences and am probably open to trying it. Am very confident and comfo table with who I am, and I bring a great energy wherever I go! MstrPorter, 30, l

CUM WITH ME Male, 5’11, 185 pounds, looking for bi or curious for erotic pleasure for phone fantasies. Love sub/dom role-playing. If a fit, possible rendez ous. platoo2, 55 SHORT-TERM FUN! Something missing? How about some conversation and/or physical touch or some some short-term sexual fun? Please be slender and no more than average in build. Please no hang-ups around sex. I’m looking forward to massaging those tension spots and brushing your beautiful hair. ThisIsDoabl , 52, l CASUAL FUN IN THE SUN New to this. Looking to find a cu vy cutie or a couple to play with. Very openminded and willing to experiment. 420 and light party-friendly. Would love to find the right woman to explore the world of BDSM with. Rfifi0 , 24, l SHARE SOME HEAT THIS WINTER? Looking to meet someone laid-back and easygoing for some passionate, exciting fun. I’d like to try new things and explore each other’s fantasies. melt4me, 27, l

2HOTLOVERS Committed couple looking for exciting times with other respectful and discreet people. We are new to this but by no means shy. Very open to different experiences and situations. She is a sexy, tall, athletic girl, and he is burly, handsome and well built. Looking for ongoing adventures with the right person(s). heyo112, 27, l PASSIONATE, EROTIC, FUN, SEXUAL COUPLE M/F couple looking for female(s) or other couples who enjoy adult playtime. We are a couple who enjoys each other’s bodies and want you to participate with us. We have lots of energy! No drama here. We just want to have fun. Knot_tee_couple, 55 HIPPIE LOVERS IN THE SUNSHINE Couple madly in love looking for a third person to join us in a casual evening of candlelit massage, lovemaking and body/soul appreciation. Let us cook you dinner, pour you a glass of wine, and we’ll see where it goes! stargazers, 23 DISCREET DEBAUCHERY We are a married couple who would like to find another like couple seekin discreet debauchery. Perhaps meet someplace for drinks and see if we share similar sexual interests. We are open to new adventures. Woman is bi, D cups, average body. Man is straight, very well endowed and thick. Let’s start with drinks and see where it goes! vtbeercouple, 40 YOUNG, OUTDOORSY, OPEN-MINDED! We are an outdoorsy young couple ready to explore more sexual experiences. We are interested in making sexual connections with a woman as well as couples play and MMF/FFM adventures! We love having sex out in the woods, by the river or atop a mountain. Let’s go camping and see how we can please each other! Bring your party tent! DiosaSabrosa, 29, l

Signed,

Dear Single Mom,

Single Mom

My stance is, if there’s any sexual activity going on between them, that would be illegal in many other states. At 16, your daughter is just old enough to give legal consent in Vermont. Sex or not, her relationship still sounds sketchy AF. The enormous responsibili y of parenting rests solely on your shoulders, and that’s not easy. Parenting a teen, especially, comes with a lot of What am I doing? moments. But you know what to do. Just like when your daughter was a baby and didn’t have the words to tell you what she needed, you knew. You used your instincts and listened with your heart. Your daughter probably needs you now — your gut is telling you so. It’s time to have a real heart-to-heart. You can’t force her to do, or stop doing, anything. But you can give her some facts. Like the fact that her relationship would be illegal in another state, and why those laws exist. (“To protect children and teens … from confusing and possibly abusive relationships with more powerful adults,” writes Slate.) And the fact that there’s a huge difference, emotionally and sexually, in those seven years between her and her boyfriend. And the fact that if she thinks her relationship should be a secret, then it’s not a healthy relationship. And a whole bunch of facts on sexual health and contraception. Be your best, most nonjudgmental self. Don’t lose your temper or try to control her. Don’t make her feel like she’s in trouble. Do be a voice of reason, a loving ear, a safe space. Invite her to tell you why she didn’t want you to know about her relationship. Help her see why staying with this guy isn’t in her best interest. Most of all, be strong and firm. Remind her that it is your job to help her be safe. Then do a l you can to keep her safe.

Yours,

Athena

Need advice?

You can send your own question to her at askathena@sevendaysvt.com.

PERSONALS 89

VIRGIN SEEKS FUN, BUXOM GODDESS Virgin seeking younger or older buxom women for FWB for any period of time. I’m clean, single, horny and I can travel. I’ll consider any offer. 802Hunk, 48

INTERESTED IN MEETING UP 46 y/o, fairly good-looking and in shape, 5’9, 156 pounds, brown hair, hazel green eyes, DD-free, 420 friendly. Very versatile. Open to just about anything and everything. Spike1, 47

KINKY COUPLE LOOKING TO SHARE As the title says, we are a kinky couple looking to meet another fun and adventurous couple to have fun with and share our bed. We are new to this, so we would be looking to meet for drinks first to see if theres chemistry and then let things go where they may. KinkyCoupleVt, 38

I was wondering what your stance is on a 16-year-old girl and 23-year-old guy dating. Recently I found out from my daughter’s friend that my daughter is seeing a man this old. I don’t know if I should stop her from seeing him or what. Please help this single mother.

SEVEN DAYS

TANTRA LOVER FROM RUSSIA I practice tantra. Looking for a partner or a couple to practice together the spiritual love! I’m open to a lot of new and interesting things. I’m a neat and nice-looking 28-y/o man. I was studying tantra and the art of tantric massage in India. dmitryfromrussia, 28, l

TALL KINK Looking to find some like-minded individuals. Triplea, 32

LOOKING TO HAVE NEW EXPERIENCES We are 46M/37F couple looking for others to enjoy. Both bi-curious. We are new to the swinging lifestyle and would like to expand on our sexually active lifestyle together. We are looking for bi or bi-curious females or couples for swapping or watching. If you think you could handle us, send us a message. sjdr7079, 37, l

Dear Athena,

11.16.16-11.23.16

VT FUN WITH LIKE PROFESSIONALS Seeking like-minded professionals around the Burlington area for fun, discretion and spice. Skihat, 40

HORNY, ORAL, AVERAGE COCK Late twenties with an average cock just looking to hook up with some hot women. Never done this before. Figured I’d try it out. Hotcock28, 28, l

HIGH-SEAS ADVENTURE Hi! We’re a couple in our mid-thirties setting sail on a new adventure, looking for a couple or woman to share some vanilla but delicious time with. We love mountains and the ocean. You: smart, political, sensual. Good food, good fun. Want to hop aboard? dorkyNsincere, 35, l

ASK ATHENA

SEVENDAYSVT.COM

MEN Seeking?

LOVE TO EAT Looking for playtime with the right plaything. Foreplay a must! Love to snuggle and roll around in bed. Also love sex outside! Let’s go on a hike sometime! Osprey16, 55, l

OTHERS Seeking?

Your wise counselor in love, lust and life


CUPCAKE DIRECTOR Not only could I do it barefoot in a snowstorm, but backward and blindfolded, too. Was the point the lengths I’d go to help or I’m so dopey I forgot my boots in the car, parked ... you know where. Thanks for the nicest thing ou’ve ever said, NGITC. Hey, when’s our next chance encounter or should I stop following you? When: Thursda , November 3, 2016. Where: on the highway and the rotary. You: Woman. Me: Man. #913743 ATMOSPHERE AT HIGHER GROUND You came up to me outta the blue, threw me a bit off balance. Kept asking who I was and pulled me close to dance. You came back around after I thought you left to get close for another song. I still missed getting your number. When: Thursda , November 10, 2016. Where: Higher Ground. You: Woman. Me: Man. #913742

you on Mt. Ellen. Gorgeous view, but I liked looking at you! When: Saturday, October 15, 2016. Where: Sugarbush. You: Man. Me: Woman. #913736

remember. It’s OK if you don’t. When: Thursda , November 3, 2016. Where: Price Chopper, Shelburne Road. You: Man. Me: Man. #913730

LOVE AND BUBBLEGUTS You came and changed my world in a matter of days. I have never felt anything as strong as the connection between us. The way ou look at me is magical. I continuously replay our weekend together in my head. I can’t wait to be in your arms again, because it’s my favorite place to be. When: Friday, November 4, 2016. Where: everywhere with me. You: Man. Me: Woman. #913741

PLAYIN’ GUITAR, ROUTE 15, WOLCOTT I was playing guitar on the side of the road, as I often do when my daughter is studying ballet there; I was playing “Wharf Rat” by the Grateful Dead and you drove by, honked, waved ... but as in “Castles Made of Sand” (Jimi Hendrix), you just kept right on going. Tell me it was real. When: Wednesday, November 2, 2016. Where: Route 15, Wolcott. You: Woman. Me: Man. #913735

HEADY SKINNY PANCAKE CRÊPE WIZARD Spotted you wearing a sexy orange sweatshirt, hair flowing down to our shoulders like Fabio. I want you to lay me down like you lay batter onto a hot griddle. Dominant looking for submissivetype man to role-play with NSA. ;) When: Monday, November 7, 2016. Where: UVM Skinny Pancake. You: Man. Me: Woman. #913740

BBB SPIN GIRL SATURDAY I recognized you at first, then an image popped into my head. You in your spin shorts! It’s been a long time, and when I saw you the second time, you caught me off guard. I was trying to speak and started to stammer. Kind of embarrassing. Anyway, you look fantastic! Sorry I didn’t stick around to talk. When: Saturday, November 5, 2016. Where: Bed Bath & Beyond. You: Woman. Me: Man. #913734

LATE SEPTEMBER RIDE HOME I gave you a lift from your friend’s house in the ONE to your house in the SE. We chatted about our new Hondas, road-tripping to NOLA with a stop in Nashville, living in Paris and how much we love Vermont but find the winter a drag. I am curious if you would like to continue the conversation sometime? When: Friday, September 30, 2016. Where: in a Honda CRV. You: Man. Me: Woman. #913729

SWEET GUY AT DUNKIN’ I have seen you several times now. You’re always smiling and bubbly. You had short grayish-black hair, Red Sox hat on, black coat and jeans. Got into a truck. Me: blond hair in ponytail. Had sweater and yoga pants. I want to get to know you better. What make and color was your truck? If you’re interested. When: Monday, November 7, 2016. Where: Dunkin’ Donuts. You: Man. Me: Woman. #913739

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PROSCIUTTO AND ROMANESCO I claimed my place in line at the deli only to be inspired to make some cruciferous sensation. After speaking, I felt compelled to ask you out. That day I was tired and di ty and cold. I’m sure I was a sight. But I can clean up. If you are single, let’s catch a bite. When: Monday, November 7, 2016. Where: City Market/Onion River Co-op. You: Man. Me: Man. #913738 TOMGIRL Sometimes it’s hard to slow down during the day, even to introduce myself. I was hoping to swing by to remedy that but haven’t made it yet. I like your silver and turquoise rings. Are they Navajo? When: Friday, October 14, 2016. Where: Tomgirl Juice. You: Woman. Me: Man. #913737 SKIRACK BABE You don’t work there anymore, but I thought for sure someone would have called you out. I spied

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SHAW’S 30-RACK You: standing in line at 5 p.m.-ish. You made a comment about hanging out with friends with a 30-rack and playing hockey. Me: I was dressed for the barn, with mud on my pants. I promise I clean up nice! Maybe I can come watch a hockey game. ;) When: Saturday, November 5, 2016. Where: Shaw’s, Colchester. You: Man. Me: Woman. #913733 HOLDING MY BREATH FOR YOU You are an underwater hockey player in mismatched socks and scrubs?! A beautiful woman regulated to dreams! I hear you can also do pelvic exams. I’d love to be your final test. When: Thursda , November 3, 2016. Where: medical library. You: Woman. Me: Woman. #913732 BUCHI KOMBUCHA AT HEALTHY LIVING To the yellow-raincoated, curly-blond-haired guy: Thanks for convincing me to buy the Buchi. Would you like to drink more over a hike? Maybe you’ll find this someda ... Until next time. ;) When: Thursda , October 27, 2016. Where: Healthy Living. You: Man. Me: Woman. #913731 SHELBURNE ROAD PRICE CHOPPER 11/3 Cashier Eric with the slightly different-colored blue eyes: Just wanted to say I thought you were sexy. Thats all. Me: Lucky 7s. You may or may not

I’ll‘ take ‘em!

MONTPELIER SHAW’S You: brown hair, wearing a headband, in the search for bread. You checked out next to me, sharing with the cashier that you were feeling “fantastic.” Me: in a blue wool button-down, whistling and singing at the end of a fine da . You look like you usually shop at the co-op. Wine or coffee soon? When: Tuesday, November 1, 2016. Where: Montpelier. You: Woman. Me: Man. #913728 FRIDAY 10/28 KOTO BIRTHDAY GIRLS We sat together around 8 to 9 p.m. We shared our birthday dinner. I had pink hair, if that helps, and you were a bubbly blonde who turned 33. I should’ve asked you for your info. We enjoyed meeting you and your friends. Would love to exchange info and maybe go out for a drink? When: Friday, October 28, 2016. Where: Koto, Burlington. You: Woman. Me: Woman. #913727 ‘I’VE EARNED MY SPOT’ Should’ve surrendered my space; I was hopeful they were leaving. Could’ve started a conversation, if I wasn’t awestruck every time I see you. Would’ve much rather preferred to spend my evening talking with you; my mission called for me to run. My attraction for you is visceral, complex and unending. Will you join me or just slay me? When: Friday, October 28, 2016. Where: in the red. You: Woman. Me: Man. #913726 ELIZABETH AKA BETSY I wish we had met later in life when I wasn’t so self-absorbed. Since you left I haven’t been able to get you out of my head, and it’s been years. I guess there’s always one in life who gets away. Hope our paths cross again. When: Monday, October 31, 2016. Where: nowhere and everywhere. You: Woman. Me: Man. #913724

MY SATURDAY GREENCAB DRIVER You went out of your way to bring me that awesome book, and it really made my day. I was so busy and surprised, and I wish I had said more to you. That was extremely charming and thoughtful. Thank ou so much for the book (I am actually reading it) and for being such an awesome driver! When: Saturday, October 29, 2016. Where: in a cab and at work. You: Man. Me: Woman. #913722 INSTANT ATTRACTION, MAPLE TREE PLACE I was going to a movie and stopped for dinner and drinks. Was immediately attracted to you. Noticed a ring, but it didn’t look like an engagement ring or wedding band. We talked a bit. You’re from Colorado and went to school in Connecticut. You waved as I was leaving. If you’re single and interested, let me take you out. When: Saturday, October 29, 2016. Where: Grazers. You: Woman. Me: Man. #913721 MUSHROOM POLENTA PIE In the bulk section. You were shopping for ingredients for polenta pie for your vegetarian mom. I was in your way, searching for a recipe on my phone. I apologized. You asked what I was making. I replied Snickers bars for Halloween. You said my recipe sounded better. How about you let me make you Snickers bars sometime? When: Saturday, October 29, 2016. Where: Healthy Living. You: Man. Me: Woman. #913720 PAMPERED PET ENCOUNTER, OCT. 29 I walked up to the store in the Ethan Allen Shopping Center to get my Orijen dog food. You were approaching from your white Ford SUV with your golden. I held the door open for you. Wished I’d had my pup with me to create a conversation. Interested in a doggy playdate? Grab a cup of coffee without the cute (dog) distractions? When: Saturday, October 29, 2016. Where: Pampered Pet Grooming, North Avenue. You: Woman. Me: Man. #913719 AROMA WOMAN IN BLACK You helped me pick out a gift for my sister. I had the brown leather satchel bag with Celtic patterns. We talked about desert juniper trees. I’m struck by your passion, wisdom and beauty. You didn’t have more time to talk, and I missed my opportunity to ask you out. Do you want to meet up sometime? When: Tuesday, October 25, 2016. Where: Lunaroma. You: Woman. Me: Man. #913718 NO. 8 A— Good to see you on the No. 8 Thursda . I was still smiling an hour later. Animated movie sometime? When: Friday, October 28, 2016. Where: No. 8. You: Woman. Me: Man. #913717

FPF comes through again!

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If you’ve been spied, go online to contact your admirer!

BAGEL MARKET, 10/31 To the woman who “cut” me in line: We chatted about coffee. I should’ve offered to take you to the coffee place next door, but I didn’t think you’d go. I regret it. Contact me so we can share a coffee and continue the chat. Message me the coffee I recommended (or as close as you can recall). When: Monday, October 31, 2016. Where: Bagel Market, Susie Wilson Road. You: Woman. Me: Man. #913723

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