20131102 addisoneagle

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November 2, 2013

Conflictof interest vote fails: Select Board hears complaint By Lou Varricchio newmarketpress @denpubs.com MIDDLEBURY Ñ Not all was chocolates and roses in Addison CountyÕ s shire town of Middlebury last month. Tensions between some residents and members of the Middlebury Select Board resulted in a testy “conflict of interest” vote held Oct. 14 At the Middlebury Select Board meeting last week, members heard a vociferous complaint which was signed by five Middlebury residents; their names were released. The citizen complaint suggested that Select Board members Victor Nuovo and Susan Shashok had a “conflict of interest” regarding approval, between the town and Middlebury College, of the so-called Term Sheet relating to the Town Offices-Recreation Facilities Project. Board approval had been made Oct. 8. According to the Oct. 14 public meeting report filed by Town Manager Kathleen Ramsay, Ò After reviewing the Board’s conflict of interest policy in consultation with Town Attorney Benj Putnam, the five members of the Board that were not the subjects of the complaint (Dean George, Nick Artim, Gary Baker, Craig Bingham and Travis Forbes) voted on whether Nuovo and Shashok had conflicts of CONTINUED ON PAGE 12

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College suspends student memorial vandal

FACULTY ARTISTS

By Elicia Mailhiot

newmarketpress@denpubs.com MIDDLEBURY Ñ The Middlebury College student who removed 3,000 flags from the college’s Sept. 11, 2001 memorial has been suspended from the institution for a year. On Sept. 24, the college Community Judicial Board met to consider disciplinary charges brought against the student following the vandalism. The statement provided by Middlebury College did not name the student, although Anna Shireman-Grabowski had identified herself on the MiddBeat blog following the incident. The board determined Shireman-Grabowski to be responsible for violating several college policies. These include General Conduct Standards,

Middlebury College faculty members will present the Affiliate Artist Collaborative Concert, an eclectic concert featuring genres from blues to classical, jazz to bluegrass, and rock to bagpipes, on Saturday, Nov. 2, 8 p.m., at Mahaney Center for the Arts Concert Hall. The event is sponsored by the Department of Music and is free to the public. Call 802-443-3168 for more details.

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Photo by Brett Simison

A Veterans Day salute to Brig. Gen. Sherman Gage, Ret. By Lou Varricchio newmarketpress@denpubs.com SO. BURLINGTON — In the hit 1954 Hollywood musical film “White Christmas,” actors Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye sing a tribute to a fictional World War II general played by Dean Jagger. After the war, Jagger’s character retires to Vermont where he is nearly forgotten until his Army buddies plan a big Christmas reunion at the generalÕ s Pine Tree, Vermont, retreat. While Brigadier Gen. Sherman J. Gage, 91, of Vermont is neither forgotten nor an actual World War II general (he was promoted to the rank of brigadier general during the Vietnam War era), he began his storied military career first in the U.S. Army Air Corps—and later in the Vermont National Guard—during the time of the Korean War. “I was born Oct. 8, 1922 in Waterbury,” Gage said, “and I had never flown in an airplane until I was drafted in 1943 and began cadet training in the USAAC in Eagle Pass, Texas.” Serving in the military is a part of the Gage family’s long history. There are famous Gages in military service dating back to the American Revolution. And Gage’s father, Harris Gage, died in his 80s at the Bennington Veterans Home in 1975; he had been a distinguished World War I veteran. Brigadier Gen. Sherman Gage, Ret., at home in South Burlington. Photo by Lou Varricchio

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