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ECRWSS PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. POSTAGE PAID DENTON PUBLICATIONS/ NEW MARKET PRESS PO Box 338 Elizabethtown NY 12932 Postal Patron

June 11, 2016

Published by New Market Press, Inc.

Serving more than 30,000 Readers Weekly

USAF Band SNAPSHOT WITH A CANDIDATE to visit Vergennes By Lou Varricchio lou@addison-eagle.com

Jeffrey Castonguay

Winooski man vanished near Route 7 RUTLAND — On June 2, Vermont State Police reported that Jeffrey Castonguay, 58, of Winooski, was riding on a white scooter with another motorcyclist on Route 140 in Wallingford. The motorcyclist turned onto Route 7, but Castonguay —on the scooter—stayed straight and continued travelling east on Route 140. The motorcyclist tried to locate Castonguay, but was not able to. State Police troopers patrolled numerous nearby roads and tried to call Castonguay, but no contact was made. Castonguay has numerous health issues and there is concern for his safety, according to the VSP. At this time, police said that it is unknown what the make/model of the scooter is, or if it is registered. If anyone has information on the location of Castonguay, or notices a white scooter they are asked to call VSP Rutland at 802-773-9101.

VERGENNES — The United States Air Force brings music to my ears. For some, this “music” may be the sound of America’s ambassadors-in-blue, the USAF Thunderbirds, or, the takeoff roar of Vermont Air Guard jets at the Burlington International Airport. While all that’s exciting to both see and hear, for me it’s the Air Force’s tradition of band and orchestra music, including a roster of hundreds of well known (and not so well known) civilian and military tunes—from Glenn Miller to Rogers and Hammerstein. As I recall, the last visit of an Air Force band to our region was a concert at Castleton University a few years ago. Now Air Force band fans in Vermont are in for a rare treat, again, this year. The USAF sponsors many top-notch CONTINUED ON PAGE 15

Middlebury resident Farhad Khan is proud of his family’s photograph with 2016 U.S. Presidential candidate Bernie Sanders. The snapshot was taken in front of the Town Hall Theater in downtown Middlebury. Khan, a successful businessman, is owner of Middlebury’s One Dollar Market, located at 198 Court St. near the Hannaford Brothers Supermarket. Until 2015, the 74-year-old Sanders had been the longest-serving “independent” in U.S. congressional history. He joined with the Democrats in 2015 to prepare for the run for the White House. Photo provided

Rutland facing backlash over refugee settlement More than one-third of resettled refugees test TB positive statewide By Bruce Parker Vermont Watchdog Report

One hundred refugees may be placed in Rutland, where Mayor Chris Louras is facing a backlash from residents for hiding the city’s resettlement plans from the public. Pictured: A community tuberculosis treatment supporter overseas supervises a patient taking her daily medication.

MONTPELIER — Data from the Vermont Department of Health show that more than one-third of refugees resettled in Vermont test positive for tuberculosis. Since 2013, about 900 refugees admitted to the Green Mountain State have been tested for tuberculosis, a potentially fatal infectious disease affecting the lungs. Of that number, 318 refugees, or 35.4 percent, tested positive. Watchdog.org obtained the health data following reporting by Stateline that the disease may be making a comeback in the United States. CONTINUED ON PAGE 18


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