occupation - The Commons
Transcription
occupation - The Commons
Your membership in Vermont Independent Media can make this the best free newspaper you’ve ever paid for. See page C3. FREE R D NEWSPAPE NEW ENGLAN SOCIATION & PRESS AS www.commonsnews.org Brattleboro, Vermont Wednesday, October 12, 2011 • Vol. VI, No. 40 • Issue #122 W ind h am C ounty ’ s A W A R D - W I N N I N G , I ndependent S ource f or N ews and V iews News Bellows Falls occupation shelter gets set for the season Walking into an bRATTLEbORO Memories of the birth of the Latchis page A2 But some area residents want it relocated elsewhere Listing of area shelters, food shelves By Allison Teague page A4 The Commons JAMAICA Temporary bridge opens a week early page A5 VERNON VY refueling work begins page A5 Voices VIEWPOINT Olga Peters/The Commons Brattleboro resident Shoshana Rihn was one of 20,000 demonstrators who marched in New York on Oct. 5 as part of the ongoing Occupy Wall Street protest. W e’re the 99 percent, and so are you!” Protesters, including a contingent from Windham County, chanted these words as they marched from Zuccotti Park to Foley Square in New York City on Oct. 5. An estimated 20,000 Occupy Wall Street protesters and members of dozens of labor union members stood together in New York City’s government district to speak out against an economic system that they believe benefits few while leaving the majority of Americans high and dry. What started as barely 2,000 people protesting on Wall Street on Sept. 17 has boiled over into more than 60 other cities and towns, including Brattleboro this weekend. But, as the Occupy Wall Street protest grows people ask, where will this movement take us? Special Focus, section B. Fish hatchery program is a failure page C1 vtdigger.org The Arts JAZZING IT UP Sports SOCCER Donors to Vermont Independent Media receive The Commons in the mail. Visit http://donate.commonsnews.org. change service requested P.O. Box 1212, Brattleboro, VT 05302 www.commonsnews.org PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID BRATTLEBORO, VT 05301 PERMIT NO. 24 page B4 Vermont Independent Media Nelini Stamp, center, calls out instructions to marchers. Olga Peters/The Commons JAMAICA—Rep. Oliver Olsen, R-Jamaica, announced last week that he will not be running for his seat in 2012. Olsen, 35, has been an outspoken and articulate critic of several Shumlin administration proposals, and he is described even by Democrats as a “rising star.” A year after winning his first election bid last fall, however, Olsen has decided to forgo a second race. It’s becoming increasingly difficult, Olsen said, to take care of his young family and pursue his professional career while serving four months a year in the Legislature. Olsen manages a consulting practice for RightNow Technologies, a software service company based in Bozeman, Mont. “I’m grateful that we have a n see olsen, page A3 A web of knowledge Students learn about spiders through environmental education program By Thelma O’Brien Wildcats cope with loss of their home field State rep says he won’t run for second term By Anne Galloway page C1 page d1 n see SHELTER, page A4 Jamaica Republican Olsen cites pressure of commitment State’s new energy plan is vague Workshop puts new life into old hymns BELLOWS FALLS—As housing issues rise in Windham County in the wake of Tropical Storm Irene, and Vermonters prepare for winter, residents have again lodged complaints that it is inappropriate to locate an overnight homeless shelter within the village. The Greater Falls Warming Shelter (GFWS) is preparing for its second year at the location beneath Athens Pizza at 83 Westminster St.. However, the Zoning Board and Planning Commission must decide soon whether to issue a permit to reopen the shelter by Nov. 1, if the owner, Alpha G LLC, agrees to the board’s stipulations for opening. Village residents went before a joint meeting of the Zoning and Planning boards last month, citing alleged nightly disruptions from outdoor lighting, smoking outside in the parking lot, audible use of foul language, and the involvement of the Bellows Falls Police at least 20 times over the four months that the shelter was open last season. Further fact gathering, a site inspection and meeting were set for discussion on Oct. 5 in Bellows Falls. However, GFWS Committee Chair Louise Luring told the board the person acting as agent for the owner “could not be found” that night. The zoning board felt it was important that the owner of the building be present to answer “crucial questions regarding concerns and requests raised by abutters.” The Commons V ERNON—Fourth grade students, a volunteer, a teacher, and a reporter at Vernon Elementary School now know a lot more about some spiders common to New England than they used to, as well as some of their webs, their bodies, their diets, and the adaptations they’ve developed to survive in their environment, thanks to programs created by the Four Winds Nature Institute in Chittenden. During a training for this detailed spider program, the trainer, the volunteer, and the reporter spent a little time outdoors and in no time found four of the webs common to this region on the shrubs and in the interstices of plants and of manmade structures. First, there was the funnel web, an asymmetrical horizontal sheet with a silken tube at the back. The web catches insects, and the spider, hiding in the tube, waits to feel the vibrations and then darts out. The spider delivers a paralyzing bite and drags the insect back to the funnel for immediate or delayed snacking. Grass spiders are funnel-web creatures found often in this region, mostly outdoors and rarely inside. They are generally brownish or grayish with light and dark stripes near the head, and they’re about three-quarters of an inch long. They’re called grass spiders because they usually construct their webs in tall grass, heavy ground cover, and in the branches of thick shrubs. Some other webs include the ubiquitous and dust-collecting cobweb, hanging from everywhere; the gossamer sheet web on the grass; and the orb web, the most recognizable of all the webs, with a round, compartmentalized shape. Four Winds delineates five broad natural concepts for volunteer teachers to follow in Thelma O’Brien/The Commons their presentations: patterns of Vernon Elementary student Maggie Lonardo n see spiders, page A3 cautiously examines a spider. PAID ADVERTISING • TO PLACE YOUR AD, CALL (802) 246-6397 OR VISIT WWW.COMMONSNEWS.ORG BRILLIANCE Paying Cash for Gold & Silver! 56 Elliot St.,Brattleboro 802-254-4460 YOUR MESSAGE COULD BE HERE! Contact us by Fri. 802-246-6397 or [email protected] Space is limited Mattress & Furniture sale! PLOTKIN’S FURNITURE 93 Park Ave, Keene, NH 603-352-4334 plotkinfurniture.com NOW ONLINE joycemarcel.com CHECK IT OUT! DANSKO THE SHOE TREE Main St. Brattleboro 802-254-8515 Announcing NEW ENGLAND FABRICS 77 Anniversary Sale! th 20% Off all Fabric See our ad inside! 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Sa. 9:30-4 ~LAND~ Except. est. hse. site w/ driveway, perc test & ex. solar exp., ovrlking beaut. strm. Only 3 mi. to village. 8 + acres. $98,500 Owner/Broker 802-869-2100 October 14, 15 & 16 Red Sox 2012 Tickets! I RECYCLE CYCLES Buying, Repairing & Selling Used Bicycles 150 bike shop Quality bikes on sale now! $265 of Vera Bradley Bags! Giveaways for Young and Old DonatED BIkES nEEDED! 802-376-0517 • 802-869-1150 ANGER, RESENTMENT, ANXIETY, DEPRESSION Therapy/Counseling Individuals & Couples GOT BED BUGS? Deborah Lowery, M.A. Center for Personal Growth 802-254-1253 Tired of Multiple Chemical Treatments? Thermal Remediation One TreatmentGuaranteed! Pestpatrolvermont.com 802-254-5149 NEWS A2 139 Main St. #604, P.O. Box 1212 Brattleboro, VT 05302 (802) 246-6397 fax (802) 246-1319 www.commonsnews.org Office hours by appointment 9 a.m.–5 p.m., Monday–Friday EDITORIAL Jeff Potter, Editor — Randolph T. 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T h e C ommons BR AT TLEBORO A rich legacy for Latchis 73 years after its grand opening was delayed by a hurricane, theater deals with aftermath of another epic storm By Fran Lynggaard Hansen The Commons B RATTLEBORO— “We were all aware of the history of the hurricane of 1938 and the Latchis Theatre, and yet we assumed that something like that could never happen today,” said Gail Nunziata, managing director for the Brattleboro Arts Initiative and the Latchis Corporation. “But, of course, we were wrong,” she said.“Because it did happen to us.” The Great New England Hurricane of 1938 swept Brattleboro off its feet the very day the grand opening of the Latchis Theatre was to have taken place. One of the hallmarks of that storm was that it moved so quickly up the coast that it arrived without warning, making any kind of preparation or notification impossible. Conversely, when Tropical Storm Irene arrived on Aug. 28, it came without surprise. But what was unexpected this time was the extent of flash flooding that accompanied Irene’s high winds and heavy rains. The Latchis building was one of those most deeply affected in downtown Brattleboro. “We’re looking at least half a million dollars worth of damage. Flood insurance likely won’t cover even half of it, but we’re at the very beginnings of that process and are still hopeful,” said Nunziata. Demetrius (Jim) Latchis was 7 years old when his family was preparing the grand opening of the theater that was created in memory of his grandfather, Demetrius P. Latchis. He doesn’t remember the day the hurricane arrived. “I was named for my grandfather, though he died when I was two in 1932. I have no memory of him. But the stories, there are plenty of stories about him,” he said with a smile as he chomped on his cigar. According to his grandson, Demetrius Latchis came from a mountain village in Kastanitsa, Greece to Brattleboro in 1901. A majority of the Greeks whom he knew were immigrating to American cities to work in the shoe factories. Demetrius had a different idea. His plan was to come to Vermont and sell fruits and vegetables from a push cart. “Why are you going to Vermont, selling fruit to farmers?” his grandson said people asked him at the time. They thought it was like trying to sell ice cream to the Eskimos.” A determined Demetrius arrived and rented a room in Hinsdale, N.H. “He used to walk,” says Latchis, “and walk and walk.” Later, Latchis said, “he was able to purchase a horse-drawn wagon, but he started out walking. His legs pretty much gave out on him when he turned 60, years later.” Demetrius Latchis walked to Brattleboro from Hinsdale, with his push cart to purchase his goods directly off the trains. Another day, he would walk to Northfield, Mass., and still another day to Chesterfield, N.H., the toughest day of all because of the hills involved. A few years later, he was able to bring his two eldest sons, Peter and Spiro, over from Greece. It took many years, but eventually the family was able to purchase a home in Brattleboro which housed four boys, three girls, and their parents. The family was happy to be all together once more. Latchis grew his business for 20 years until he had enough money to purchase the property at the corner of Flat and Main streets in 1921. He built his first theater behind the corner block, despite the fact that he had never even seen a moving picture. He then moved his fruit and vegetable business from the Park Building, which occupied the land where the Brattleboro Food Co-op is currently constructing, to his own block. With the Latchis Fruits & Vegetables Shop and the theater doing well, Latchis opened a soda fountain, where he sold candy and made his own chocolates. Eventually, he moved that business to the corner of Elliot and Main streets. It was still in operation when Jim Latchis was in high school in the late 1940s. Beverages from the soda fountain were “a much different thing than the soda that we drink today,” Latchis remembered. “They had far less sugar and you could add all kinds of flavors to them. They were a real hit with the teenagers,” he said. Eventually, the family began to expand their theater and hotel businesses all over New England. Demetrius Latchis has been described as an affable man who was interested in public affairs and enjoyed the friendship of his family, who worked actively in his businesses. By the time of Courtesy of the Brattleboro Historical Society Mural painter Louis Jambor works on one of his creations at the Latchis Theatre in 1938. his death, he owned six theaters. By 1938, the family owned 14. “We ran the theatre in the old Brattleboro Town Hall,” Latchis said. “We also owned a couple of theaters in Keene. The Colonial Theatre was originally built as a playhouse, but then the movie business started coming on strong. “People didn’t want to see plays anymore; they wanted film. My father and his brother Peter purchased it and showed movies there instead. They kept it as it was originally. I always marveled at what a wonderful condition it was in. They owned a second theatre in Keene, not 300 feet from the Colonial as well,” he said. Silent films were popular right up until 1927, when the first “talkies” were shown, he said. The most successful years for the Latchis family business followed the golden age of Hollywood. In the 1930s, America was still recovering from the Great Depression. People were out of work and went to the movies as an inexpensive treat to forget their troubles for an hour or two. Tickets were inexpensive, a dime or 15 cents. Feel-good movies were always in vogue, and comedies. After their father’s death, Peter and Spiro Latchis decided to take down the buildings and replace them with what they called “a town within a town.” The new hotel building would be art deco in design, and featured not only a hotel and several eateries, but also a brand new theater in honor of their SPONSOR A PAGE Your donation of $50 pays to print a single page of The Commons. This contribution helps us publish a larger newspaper with more news, and we acknowledge these donations on the bottom of a page. Please specify how you would like to be credited, or whether you wish to donate in honor of or in memory of another person. Mail your donation, or contribute online at http://donate. commonsnews.org. :(12)+(/'4 as low as DISTRIBUTION The Commons distributes 5,900 copies per issue to almost every Windham County town weekly. Get in touch if you would like us to consider adding your business. 3.50% (3.50% ) FIXED RATE SINCE SOME HAVE ASKED... APR Despite our similar name, The Com mons is not affiliated with Vermont Commons, a statewide journal that is strongly linked with a movement advocating Vermont’s secession from the United States. t;&30%08/1":.&/5 for eligible borrowers t:&"35&3.with zero points t163$)"4&-0"/40/-: (no re• nancing) t3&%6$&%$-04*/($0454 by up to $625 on the property transfer tax VIM’S MISSION To create a forum for community partic ipation through publication of The Commons and Commonsnews.org; to promote local, independent journalism in Windham County; and to promote civic engagement by building media skills among Windham County residents through the Media Mentoring Project. 8*5)3"5&4 5)*4-08 *54"(3&"5 5*.&50#6: BOARD OF DIRECTORS Barbara S. Evans, Barry Aleshnick, Alan O. Dann, Dan DeWalt, Peter Seares, Bob Rottenberg, Curtiss Reed Jr., Jane Noyes. ————— Without our volunteers, this newspaper would exist only in our imaginations. Special thanks to: Editorial support: Joyce Marcel, Christopher Emily Coutant, Rachel Cohen-Rottenberg, Chris Pietrak Operations support: Simi Berman, Chris Wesolowski, Diana Bingham, Jim Maxwell, Bill Pearson, Menda Waters • Wednesday, October 12, 2011 Opening doors to home ownership since 1974. Contact Vermont Housing Finance Agency call: 1-800-339-5866 or visit: www.vhfa.org ???"@ABC"DEF ! " # $ % & ' ( #) * + , ( --( . / # + * / 0 Rates subject to change. Eligibility requirements and restrictions apply. Courtesy of the Brattleboro Historical Society The original Latchis Theater at the corner of Main and Flat streets. This building was torn down to make way for the current Latchis complex, which opened with great fanfare in 1938. father’s legacy. It would be the largest theater in the tri-state area with seats for 1,200 people. The building would be fireproof, and the theatre and public areas would have an ancient Greek theme. Peter and Spiro Latchis had previously been pleased with the work of an artist, Louis Jambor, who painted their father’s portrait. They asked him to come to Brattleboro from New York City to paint the interior of the theater. A native of Hungary, born in 1884, Jambor gave an interview in which he described running away from home at a tender age to enroll in the Academy of Art in Budapest. His father had wanted him to be an architect. He then studied in Munich and Dusseldorf in Germany. From there, after earning many prizes for his artwork, Jambor returned to Budapest. By 1922, his work well received, he came to visit the United States out of “extreme exhaustion.” His idea was to stay for three months to rest, but he found enough opportunities that he decided to remain in the country. His murals were found in hotels and churches of the day. Jambor painted 26 murals alone at the Hotel New Yorker. He painted the proscenium in the Atlantic City auditorium and in churches from Buffalo, N.Y., to Rhode Island, to Connecticut. He went on to paint the illustrations for the 1947 edition of the novel Little Women. Today, Jambor’s artwork fetches high prices at auction. Jambor liked that the Latchis brothers wanted to build the theater as much for beauty as they did for business. He chose visual motifs inspired by two Greek myths, Apollo on one side of the theater and Baccus on the other. The Brattleboro Daily Reformer was filled with three pages of descriptions of the interior of the theater and its accompanying lobby and public rooms. For months, Jambor worked quietly and alone inside the theater, climbing up and down the many ladders he needed to paint the ceiling and the high walls. He mixed beeswax with the paint to give it a watercolored look and extra staying power. It is unknown how much Please support The Commons Community Let our Advertisers and Sponsors know you saw them in damage to the building arose from the Hurricane in 1938, but the grand opening was rescheduled and held 14 days later. The theater had the first runs of The Wizard of Oz and Gone with the Wind, and later Casablanca and The Sound of Music. Those were not the films that interested Jim Latchis. “There was too much Bette Davis there for me, so I went to the Town Hall to see the westerns,” he said with a chuckle. By the 1950s, television became the thing to watch and the movie theaters suffered. Some wondered if the age of film was gone. Competition among theaters was high. “We had a theater in Claremont, N.H., that was the biggest one we owned. That one had tough times. A competitor moved in right next door. Professional thugs came in and were hired to destroy it. We all thought that it was paid for by the competitors. It was wrecked and had to be torn down after that,” said Latchis. Eventually, it became too expensive to show one movie in a theater. Multiplexes became the way to bring more people to more movies. Jim’s son Spiro joined him in running the family business and did the renovations to add more theaters to the building, which brought the public back to the Latchis in a big way. “I’ve watched the movie business all of my life. It was really enjoyable in those early days. We had big bands, vaudeville acts on the stage. Rudolf Serkin played a concert every year and we packed the house with his fans,” said Latchis. Seventy-three years after the delayed opening of the theatre due to weather, the Latchis is set to reopen again this Friday. “We can’t thank our local subcontractors enough,” says Nunziata. “They’ve all done a wonderful job. There is still much to do, but we are so excited to reopen.” Nunziata said the hotel was closed the whole month of September and half of October, missing the fall foliage wave of tourism entirely, “a big hit.” “But beyond the financial issues, it was a morale hit too,” she said. “We just love to have the hotel bustling and full of people.” T h e C ommons NEWS • Wednesday, October 12, 2011 A3 Thelma O’Brien/The Commons Thelma O’Brien/The Commons Vernon Elementary students Christopher Truncale and Daniel Amidon examine Vernon Elementary student Aliyah Kimball makes a paper spider. a spider. n Spiders similarities, cycles of nature, structure and function (adaptation), ecosystem and earth, and the environment. Within those concepts, volunteers can teach 14 subjects, from rocks and minerals to insect life cycles to traveling seeds to predators and prey. The concept chosen applies for the entire year. Volunteer teacher Beverly Current, a busy swimming coach and teacher, had spiders as her subject (under the structure and function/adaptation rubric) to teach the 21 fourth graders at Vernon Elementary School. She first taught the Vernon class in 1987, when her daughter was in kindergarten, and she’s been doing it ever since. It was raining the day of the class, so there was no going outside. The class began with the “Olympic Puppet Show,” created by the institute and performed by five class members who had first practiced. The puppets were paper spiders attached to string and sticks which could be manipulated up and down. They chat with a woodchuck. The objective of the show is to introduce general information about spider adaptations and other information in story form, such as: spiders are not insects (they are arachnids); they have two body parts, the head (or cephalothorax) and the abdomen; and they have eight legs and spinnerets, organs on from section front the abdomen from which silk is extruded. In most cases, spiders have eight eyes, each one performing a supporting function. They have fangs and jaws and pedipalps (feelers), organs that differ in shape in male and female spiders. All spiders can produce silk but only some spin webs; others catch their prey by hunting. Sometime spiders are called web builders and wanderers. Web spinners may use their silk for many things: as snares, to wrap eggs, to subdue their prey, to sew leaves together to form a shelter, to trap air in a bubble to form an underwater diving bell. Non-web builders may use silk strands sometimes for nest building under leaves, for navigating, or for leaving trails. (So the next time you’re wondering how spiders get from one place to another, remember that.) Some spiders can walk on water, facilitated by their extra hairy legs. When the puppet show is over, out come the spiders in about eight glass jars with perforated lids and, in this case, spiders caught by Current. She tells the children to study the spiders and not to upend the jars. “It’s okay to be afraid, but it’s not okay to scream or drop the jars,” she said. One child said, “I don’t feel good now.” Another was really scared, and she disappeared behind a wall in the classroom. Toward the end, she sat in a chair away from the tables and studied a drawing of a spider. Another young girl was also afraid at first and became very pale. By the time the class was over, she was actually sitting at a table and handling a spider jar. The class was relatively subdued, and, even when the spiders came out, most of the kids were contemplative. Some studied the spiders intently and commented on their size or color. After studying the spiders and passing the glass jars around, each child was given a felt board and a packet of felt cutouts of spider body parts to create a spider on the basis of what they’d observed. Most of them placed the eight legs on the larger abdomen, as most people would, and were quick to correct that when asked to take another look to find out where the legs really belonged — on the cephalothorax. Another task tested one’s ability to detect vibrations. A wooden square with long strings attached was placed in the center of a table. Each person took a string and one student, the designated spider, whose eyes were covered, had to detect where a deliberate vibration was coming from. Two more tests included “spider truth or fiction” and “sharing a web,” in which a ball of yarn was rolled among a circle of eight to ten children until a tangled n Olsen citizen legislature, it brings our government much closer to our communities and the people we represent, however it does make it very challenging for a large segment of Vermonters to serve,” Olsen said in an interview. “There’s a whole segment of folks who have the responsibilities of raising a family and maintaining a career who don’t have the financial resources to take four months away from professional life.” Olsen and his wife, Peggy Thelma O’Brien/The Commons Vernon Elementary student Sam Fontaine examines a spider. cobweb was created. Four Winds Nature Institute describes itself as “a nonprofit organization advancing the understanding, appreciation, and protection of the environment through community-based natural science and research.” An outgrowth of the Vermont Institute of Natural Science Environmental Learning for the Future, or ELF, programs, Four Winds has been independent from VINS for five years. The institute has devised a series of nature programs appropriate for elementary schools that include detailed information and materials and training for volunteers who deliver the programs to classes. Individual schools may buy the programs for varying fees. Nine elementary schools in the Windham Central and Windham Southeast supervisory unions have purchased the programs, according to Lisa Purcell, director of Four Winds. They include Vernon, Putney, Guilford, Green Street, and Academy in Windham Southeast Supervisory Union, and Townshend, NewBrook, and Wardsboro in Windham Central Supervisory Union. The institute recommends that each school provide eight workshops per school year, and smaller schools are encouraged to share workshops. More information can be found online (www.FWNI.org). from SECTION FRONT Floume, have two young sons, Ethan, a 2-year-old who has cerebral palsy, and 11-month-old Karsten. Ethan’s medical condition necessitated a month-long stay in the hospital right after Olsen’s election last year. “Every family has its own challenges, but when you have a family member with complex medical needs it puts additional demands on your time, and that’s a big factor in my decision,” Olsen said. Republican Gov. James Douglas named Olsen to the post in 2010 after Rick Hube, the longtime representative of the Windham-BenningtonWindsor-1 district, died in office. Olsen serves on the powerful House Ways and Means Committee, and he frequently (and openly) clashed with Democrats. He most notably led the fight against a cash for tax credit proposal from the Shumlin administration for the Clean Energy Development Fund. Olsen said supporters and detractors have mistakenly assumed he had bigger political ambitions. “I enjoy serving in the House, and I have never had any intention of serving in any other capacity, including leadership,” Olsen said. “I have a busy professional career outside my political life. Anyone who wants to aspire to higher office has to be committed to a career in politics or be retired — that’s not where my heart is at. I enjoy serving my district.” October 15 Saturday, 10am to 4pm T he Grammar School campus will transform into a medieval village as it hosts its 24th Annual Medieval Faire. Enjoy the village as King Arthur and his royal court preside over games, feasts, and peasant frivolity. Admission is FREE. All-day or individual game & ride passes are available. The Grammar School 69 Hickory Ridge Road South, Putney, VT I91 Exit 4/5N, follow Faire signs to School Apple pie workshop offered at Scott Farm DUMMERSTON — An heirloom apple pie workshop with Laurel Roberts Johnson will be held on Saturday, Oct. 15, from 10 a.m.-1 p.m., at the Scott Farm on Kipling Road. Laurel Roberts Johnson was the owner of the Queen of Tarts Old-Fashioned Bakery and former pastry chef at the award winning Restaurant du Village, both located in Chester, Conn. She is known for her seasonal pies, simple old fashioned desserts and unique cookies and studied Baking and Pastry Arts at the Culinary Institute of America. Participants will learn how to prepare flakey pie dough and effortlessly roll out pie crust using the right recipe and technique. Pies will be prepared and baked, using heirloom apples from Scott Farm. The $40 price of this workshop includes the pie you bake, the dough you make, and a take-home tote of heirloom baking apples. Reservations are requested, Contact Kelly Carlin by email ([email protected]) or call 802-254-6868. A nyone can count the seeds in an apple, but only God can count the number of apples in a seed. —Robert H. Schuller info: 802-387-5364 or visit www.thegrammarschool.org Townshend, VT • www.gracecottage.org Did You Know...? Cottage’s digital practitioners imaging GraceGrace Cottage’s medical department open to all provide annualisphysical exams required for: • X-ray, CT often scan, ultrasound, bone density Walk-ins M-F 7 am – 6:30Sports pm; ER 24/7 ••Camp • College • School Programs • Any physician’s order & more insurance accepted Call 802-365-4331 • Walk-ins encouraged rarely aAccepted wait! New patients welcome • Most–Insurance Call 802-365-3625 for more information JMP Trucking & ExcavaTing, LLc COMPLETE SITE, UTILITY & SEPTIC CONSTRUCTION Complete Site Rehab – Electrical Trenching – High Pressure Water Jetting/ Pipe Camera – Municipal & Residential Water Services – Sewer, Septic Service Repairs/ New – Driveways, House/Mobile Home Lots – Culverts, Ditching, Concrete Flat Work – Insured For Town & State Right-of-Way Work – Asphalt Repair and Prep for Paving – Commercial/Residential Snow Plowing – Sanding/Salting – Emergency Service is Available – Free Estimates, Satisfaction Guaranteed – Jason M Perry 274 Picknell Rd, Westminster, VT [email protected] 802--463-3038 Home 802-376-7448 Cell Available Pets for Adoption Windham County humane SoCiety Make a friend for life 916 West River Road, Brattleboro, VT 802-254-2232 View all at: wc hs4 pets.org Hi everybody! My name is Lazarus and I’m just the sweetest little boy you’ll ever meet. I came to the WCHS as a stray and am looking for a new home now. I absolutely love people and would do great in a home with other cats. I haven’t met any dogs yet, but they probably wouldn’t phase my confident self. I should also only be place in a home with kids 10+. I can’t wait to go to my new home! Is that home yours!? Meet Cody! Cody is a little spitfire of a terrier mix who would love a home with action, fun and playtime! Cody has a great sense of humor too and besides keeping you active, he will have you laughing at his adorable doggie antics! He does well with other dogs but will most likely not be a good fit with cats. He would do best with children 8 and up as he is still learning about gentle play with people. Stop by and play a game of fetch with Cody! Hi there! My name is Rocket and I came to the WCHS as a feral kitten some months ago. I grew up on my own so I wasn’t used to human contact. It was very scary! I’ve come a long way though, and now I am starting to trust the people around me who can be slow and patient with me. My new family will have to work at getting me adjusted to my new home, but I am very sweet and it will all pay off in the end. I Because I grew up with other cats, I would love to go to a home with another cat and I could learn to trust people even more from them. They can be my role model! I haven’t met any dogs yet, but with a slow introduction I’m sure we could make friends. Kids 12+ would be best for me. I sure hope someone will give me a chance at a normal life...and soon! My name is Saucy and I am a sassy Lab mix lady who loves me some cuddle time! I also am quite an explorer and I love to check out new places and trails. I enjoy training and I am smart, smart smart! I have been learning sits, downs and different tricks at a furious pace. Please come in and see me- I can into the shelter as a stray I am hoping to leave with a wonderful new home! This space is graciously sponsored by: 648 Putney Road Brattleboro, VT 802.257.3700 OSHA / MSHA Training coMPLianT Fully Insured • Presby CertIFIed one sto p co u n tr y p et.co m 149 Emerald St Keene, NH 603.352.9200 NEWS A4 T h e C ommons • Wednesday, October 12, 2011 BELLOWS FALLS/ROCKINGHAM n Shelter Consequently, the board made the decision for a second continuance until Oct. 21, stating that “none of us want this to be continued indefinitely.” In response to Luring’s difficulty getting the landlord for the shelter to a meeting, in what may be the first time ever — “I’ve been on this board 8 years and I’ve never had occasion to use this,” DeRoscha said — the Zoning Board and Planning Commission opted to use their power to subpoena the Alpha G LLC owner to get their questions answered. However, DeRoscha said that if the Alpha G representative is willing to sign a letter stipulating that he agrees to a three-point list of changes that include an entry into the building for shelter users other than the one they used last year, an extension of existing fencing, and maintaining a natural screen provided by trees and shrubbery, the board would accept that communication in lieu of the owner’s presence. “I don’t want to keep continuing this. It’s getting cold out there. I want people to have a place to stay,” board member Robert DeRoscha said. Riverside Apartment residents signed a petition for the opportunity to have a representative address the board with their from SECTION FRONT concerns. Board members told the residents that their concerns were not within the zoning board’s purview. Chair Alan LaCombe also clarified concerns expressed at the Oct. 5 meeting, saying it was clear that some “facts” had been reported erroneously, but “now that we have those facts, [they] will be thoroughly reviewed” by the committee. Chroma issues a challenge While the shelter issues play out before the zoning board, Chroma Technology of Rockingham recently issued a challenge to other town businesses to contribute money to keep the shelter open this winter. “We are asking businesses and community partners to match Chroma’s pledge to match the first $2,500 of the total funds received by the Nov. 1 deadline,” explained Maggie Kelly, a Chroma employee and member of the GFWS board. “It’s discouraging that the need may be even greater this year,” said Luring. “We’ve seen a big increase in those asking for the food resources of Our Place, which we’re extrapolating to mean there will be more people facing problems with housing this winter.” So far, Luring said, $500 has been matched. Several employees from Chroma also volunteer at the shelter. At least one, Nicholas Day, wonders about the community’s reluctance to lend a helping hand. “Nobody deserves to [sleep in the] cold for the night ...or freeze to death,” Day said. The residents he got to know were “grateful guests who got to sleep in a warm place” during cold winter nights. The shelter’s costs run around $30,000 to serve up to 14 people a night, according to Luring. Last year, the shelter served 45 people. The shelter opened three years ago when the director of a shelter in Brattleboro warned Selectboard member Ann DiBernardo that Rockingham would need to take care of its own homeless people for the upcoming cold season, as Brattleboro’s was at capacity. Daisy Chase said she was “glad the shelter was there” last winter in January when she broke up with her boyfriend and was left without a place to live. “It was great,” she said, “I didn’t have to sleep in a snow bank or in a tent.” Chase said she helped out at the shelter wherever and whenever she could “to give back.” “I helped unload trucks, and helped keep [the shelter] clean,” she said. She added that “this year, we’re going to assign chores on a rotation so everybody has a turn.” As often happens in life, “it was the same people doing the chores every night.” Chase has since found shelter with friends, and expects to have her own place soon. “We’re waiting to hear from the landlord,” she said, smiling. She is dealing with ongoing health problems that precipitated her breakup. “He didn’t want to take care of me when I was sick,” she said. “He told me to get out.” As Chase spoke, her new boyfriend stopped by to check in with her and confer about appointments they had for the afternoon, including one with Southeastern Vermont Community Action (SEVCA). Her trust and ease with him were reflected in her smile as they talked. Concerns in Athens assistance requests and were told how to correctly resubmit their applications online, one resident said there was a good possibility that “if it gets too cold this winter, we may need a place to take our kids.” She said she was glad the shelter would be there for them. Several families in an Athens trailer park are living in smelly, damp, and moldy mobile homes that are “unfit for our children to stay in,” she said, and say they would be very grateful to have “a place to get the kids out of the cold” this winter if it becomes necessary. Extensive flooding knocked most of the trailers off their pilings and twisted the flimsy homes so badly that water now leaks into the living space. “And we still have to pay rent,” one young mother said. “It stinks in there. It’s not good for our kids.” Her two children stay next door with her mother, while she stays in the trailer “because I don’t want people to think [our home is] abandoned and [what’s left is] up for grabs.” “I told my landlord this month’s rent might be late” because the family had to spend money replacing items lost in the flood for the kids, “not to mention the trailer is uninhabitable, but he said if I didn’t pay rent, I could expect to leave.” Asked if she had a place to go, she shook her head. “No,” she said. The conditions in the two trailers that sit side by side is horrendous, according to Lisa Pitcher, director of Parks Place Drop-In Center in Bellows Falls, who had seen them, but “the landlord refuses to do anything to help the tenants.” Pitcher said this family was one of many affected by the flood. “Some of them have been placed, but there are a lot out there still trying to figure what to do,” she said. “They think that because they still have a roof, they don’t need assistance.” When it starts getting cold, Pitcher said, reality will set in and “they are going to need a place to take shelter” from the cold overnight. ‘Secret Life of Bears’ presented at RFPL businesses and individuals donate items and services for both silent and live auctions. Tickets for the Empty Bowl are $30 and will be available at Village Square Booksellers in Bellows Falls, Real to Reel Video in Walpole or by calling Our Place at 463-2217. Following a meeting in Athens, where a FEMA offiBELLOWS FALLS — On cial answered residents’ ques- Wednesday, Oct. 19 at 7 p.m., tions following denial of their at the Rockingham Free Public Library, join Forrest Hammond, from Vermont Fish & Wildlife, for a talk about black bears in Vermont and the challenges they face, especially from future development in the state. The black bear is the smallest of the three bear species found in North America, and it’s the only bear we have in Vermont. These ShELTERS bears prefer wild areas and are relatively shy animals and seldom Location phone day & Time seen by people, though if natural First Baptist Church Overflow Shelter, 802-257-5415 5:30 p.m.–7 a.m., when Morningside is full (until the food supplies are low, you may Brattleboro end of March, depending on weather) Nov. 27- April. find them near your bird feeders or garbage cans. Hammond will discuss the Morningside Shelter, Brattleboro 802-257-0066 8 a.m.–11 p.m. role the public can play in pro(24 hours) tecting bear habitat and in determining how many bears exist Greater Falls Warming Shelter, Bellows Falls 802-376-4193 7 p.m. - 7 a.m., November through April. for the future. This program is free and open to the public. For more inforCOMMUNITY MEALS/fOOD ShELVES mation, call the library at 802463-4270 or visit www.rockingham. Location phone day & Time lib.vt.us. Agape Christian Fellowship, Brattleboro 802-257-4069 Soup kitchen: Sunday, 1:30–3 p.m. Food pantry: Thursday, 6:30–8 p.m. If you need food or shelter... Brattleboro Drop-In Center 14th annual Empty Bowl Dinner to benefit Our Place Brattleboro Senior Meals 802-257-5415 Food emergency: ext. 225 802-257-1236 Meals on Wheels 802-257-1236 Brigid’s Kitchen, Brattleboro 802-254-6800 Centre Congregational — Loaves and Fishes, Brattleboro 802-254-4730 Tuesday and Friday, 11:30 a.m. Community Bible Chapel 107 Atwood St. Brattleboro 802-254-2910 Tuesdays (except 1st) 9-12pm for seniors 12-3pm open for all. First Baptist Church — Grace’s Kitchen, Brattleboro Immanuel Episcopal Church, Bellows Falls Our Place Drop-In Center, Bellows Falls 802-254-9566 Wednesday, 5:30-6:30 p.m. Community breakfast, Sundays, 8:30–9:30 a.m. Monday 5 p.m., dinner. Weekdays: 8:30 a.m. - 4 p.m. Breakfast and lunch. Food shelf. Monday–Friday, 8a.m.–5 p.m. Monday–Friday, noon–12:30 p.m. Breakfast on Tuesdays, 7:45 to 8:15 a.m. (Suggested donation $6; $3.50 for people over age 60.) Deliveries to those 60 and older who are “food insecure” and unable to attend community meals. Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday, 11:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. 802-463-3100 802-463-2217 His Pantry, Sacred Heart St. Francis de Sales 238 West Main St. Bennington, VT Joan’s Food Pantry Methodist Church, Rt. 63, Chesterfield, NH 802-442-3141 603-363-8856 Saturday 9am - 1pm or by emergency Deerfield Valley Food Pantry 802-464-9675 802-368-2942 802-824-6453 Third Saturday, 9–11 a.m.; Thursday before the third Saturday, 1–3 p.m. Third Friday, 1–4 p.m. 802-874-7234 Last Wednesday of the month, 6-8 p.m. 802-387-2120 Tues 6-7, Sat 9-10 802-365-4348 Thurs (except 1st) 5-6:30pm Second Congregational Church UCC, Londonderry Jamaica/Wardsboro Community Food Pantry Putney Community Food Shelf 10 Christian Square, Putney VT Townshend Community Food shelf 60 Common Rd., Townshend, VT WINDOW & AWNING, LLC 185 Island Street, Keene 352-1932 www.carboneswindowandawning.com Design-a-Plate returns to Brooks library BRATTLEBORO — The 30th annual Design-a-Plate workshop will be held on Friday, Oct. 21, at Brooks Memorial Library. Stop in any time between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. to make a 10inch melamine plate, 20-ounce melamine bowl, or both. Each item costs $6. Cash and checks made out to Brooks Memorial Library are accepted. Plates and bowls will be ready for pickup in early December, just in time for holiday gift giving. Design-a-Plate is great for children of all ages and a fun measure of your child’s changes through the years. Some favorite design ideas include tracing your child’s hand and writing his/her name and the date; making a special plate for a family member or pet; or marking a special event of the past year. The workshop will be held in the Meeting Room on the top floor of Brooks Memorial Library. For more information, call the Children’s Room at 802254-5290, ext. 110, or visit www. brooks.lib.vt.us, and click on the Children’s Room. SWE E T C O R N PI C KE D DAI LY ! F a l l R a s pb e r r i e s & Peaches Brattleboro ~ Bellows Falls ~ Norwich Wilmington ~ Keene, NH Storm & Vinyl, Entry Systems New construction & Replacements New Screen & Glass Made Plex-e-Glas & Lexan • Decorative Glass PUTNEY — The October Senior Luncheon at the Putney Cares Activities Barn takes place on Tuesday, Oct. 25, at noon. On the menu this month is chicken stew, herb biscuits, pumpkin pie, and coffee and tea. Locally produced food is served whenever possible for these lunches. Call 802-387-5593 or email them at putneycares@svcable. net with your reservation, or if you would like to volunteer. Sponsored by Putney Cares Board and The Council on Aging. OUR OWN Publication of this list underwritten by Windows BELLOWS FALLS — Our Place Drop-in Center is now collecting bowls and auction items for its 14th annual benefit Empty Bowl dinner and auctions Sunday, Nov. 6, at Alyson’s Orchard in Walpole, N.H. “Gather and Share” is the theme of this year’s soup supper event that begins at 5 p.m. with an auction preview and social hour. A highlight of the event is each attendee’s selection of a handmade bowl to take home as a reminder of those who struggle to put food on the family table. Proceeds of the dinner go towards supporting the food programs of Our Place, which include a food shelf, a daily breakfast and lunch, and nutrition education. The oldest such event in the area, the Our Place Empty Bowl has been a major fundraiser for the food shelf and daytime shelter. Potters from all over the state have donated handmade bowls, and local restaurants and other food preparers have prepared soups and other food items for the event. In addition, local Senior lunch served at Putney Cares 1-800-222-6016 www.therichardsgrp.com Hybrid & Heirloom Tomatoes Apples & Fresh Cider Eggplant • Green Beans Red, Green, & Yellow Peppers Lettuce • Herbs • Potatoes The Tri-state region’s premier center for jazz. Pumpkins • Gourds • Winter Squash S a t u r d a y, M a r c h 1 3 t h a t 8 p M OUR OWN FRESH S a t u r d a y, M a r c h 1 3 t h a t 8 p M Saturday, October 15th at 8 pm Fresh Fruit Pies • Bread • Fudge Whirrr! The Music of Jimmy Giuffre Maple & Black Raspberry Creamies Whirrr! The Music of Jimmy Kenny Barron TrioGiuffre with The Harrison/Schuller with The Sextet Harrison/Schuller Sextet A Fine Selection of Local Cheeses at the Latchis Theater featuring Marty Ehrlich & Cameron Brown Fresh Cut Flowers • Corn Stalks featuring Marty Ehrlich & Cameron Brown An NEA Jazz Master, a living legend, Masterful improvising and killer arrangements Fall Mums one of the finest jazz pianists Masterful improvising and killer arrangements in the world. www.duttonberryfarm.com O P E N DA I LY 9 A M –7 P M 72 C otton M ill H ill B r attleBoro, Vt 05301 o ff e xit 1, i nterstate 91 www.vtjazz.org (802) 254-9088 Route 30, Newfane 802-365-4168 Route 9, West Brattleboro 802-254-0254 Routes 11/30, Manchester 802-362-3083 T h e C ommons NEWS • Wednesday, October 12, 2011 A5 VY begins refueling, maintenance outage VERNON—Control room operators began removing the Vermont Yankee nuclear power station from service on Saturday night to begin its 29th refueling and maintenance outage. The refueling, which will cost $92 million, including labor, maintenance and fuel, involves replacing about one-third of the plant’s fuel rods, or about 116 assemblies. Fuel rods must be replaced every 18 months, and spent fuel rods are stored at the plant. Workers will also perform various maintenance activities, tests, and inspections on plant equipment that runs throughout the operating cycle. Nearly 1,000 additional workers will be brought in from around the country, according to a press release from the plant’s owner, Louisiana-based Entergy Corp. Plant officials said the shutdown marks “the completion of Whitingham Historical Society to hold annual meeting WHITINGHAM — The Whitingham Historical Society will hold its annual meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 18, at 7 p.m., in the Jacksonville Municipal Center. Howard Coffin, well-known Vermont author and historian of the Civil War, will present a program called “Vermont and the Civil War.” As our nation marks the 150th anniversary of the beginning of that war, Vermont families recall stories of their forebears who fought at Gettysburg and other famous battlegrounds, of triumphs and disasters, and hardships borne by families at home in Vermont. Anyone who has diaries, letters or records that shed light on Vermonters’ roles in the war effort and sites in Vermont where supporting activities were carried out, is urged to bring them to share at the meeting. The program has been designated a Vermont Humanities Council event. All are welcome, admission is free and the building is handicapped-accessible. Refreshments will be served. For more information, call Betsy McKinley at 802-368-2376. African supper in West Brattleboro raises funds for youth trip the plant’s 29th operating cycle in which the plant again demonstrated its value as a safe and reliable electricity supplier to New England consumers.” But, depending on the outcome of a lawsuit now in U.S. District Court, it could be the last refueling cycle for the 38-year-old plant. Attorneys for Entergy filed suit against Vermont in federal court in April. The corporation claimed the state’s regulation of VY infringed on the authority of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) as the sole regulator of nuclear safety. Entergy purchased the 38-year-old nuclear plant in Vernon in 2002. The plant needs a federal-issued license and a state-issued Certificate of Public Good (CPG) to operate in Vermont. VY’s current federal operating license expires March 2012. In March, the NRC renewed the license so the plant can run until 2032. Last year, however, under Act 160, the state Senate voted 26-4 to deny VY a CPG hearing, effectively closing the plant’s docket before the PSB. During trial testimony last month in Brattleboro for the federal lawsuit, the state’s legal team claimed that a host of different concerns unrelated to nuclear safety issues — such as a deep mistrust of Entergy and misstatements by employees about the existence of underground pipes that leaked tritium into groundwater — motivated the Legislature to vote against VY’s continued operation. Entergy made the decision to go ahead with the refueling despite U.S. District Judge J. Garvan Murtha’s ruling in July to deny the corporation a preliminary injunction to keep VY open while the lawsuit wends its way through the federal court system. In his ruling, Murtha wrote that Entergy failed to make the case that it would suffer irreparable harm if it had to delay the refueling outage while waiting for the case to be resolved. Murtha wrote that the decision to refuel is “a business decision made very difficult by the uncertainties of litigation.” It is not, however, harmful, he wrote, “if Entergy prevails on the merits, or it is not a cognizable injury if Vermont’s statutes are upheld. This may present a dilemma, but it does not constitute irreparable harm that can be resolved by a preliminary injunction.” Company officials sought the preliminary injunction because they said they didn’t want to buy more fuel unless they could use it. The decision to go ahead with the refueling was seen as a sign that Entergy believes it has a good chance of winning the lawsuit, either on pre-emption grounds or on the merits of the case. If Entergy wins on a factual or pre-emption basis, and the court grants a permanent injunction, then the state can appeal the case at the Second Circuit Court in New York City. Temporary bridge on Route 30 now open AOT also reopens segment of Route 100 in Readsboro JAMAICA—The Vermont Agency of Transportation (AOT) opened a temporary bridge on Oct. 7 along Route 30 in Jamaica Village. The new structure restores the community’s vital traffic link north towards Manchester and Route 7, and south toward Brattleboro and Interstate 91. The bridge was originally scheduled to open on Oct. 15, but construction crews were able to accelerate work so that it could be ready in time for the Columbus Day weekend. Route 30 was severed when Tropical Storm Irene washed away a nearly 150-foot-long bridge on the site. Local traffic was able to detour around the washed-out bridge location, but the detour was not suitable for commercial vehicles or other large vehicles like motor coaches or RVs. The temporary bridge allows all vehicles weighing up to 80,000 pounds to use Route 30 without restriction. The bridge was one of four state highway bridges in the town closed by the storm. The only impediment remains along Route 100, where the agency is erecting a temporary bridge scheduled to open later this month. AOT also announced late last week that the 4-mile stretch of Route 100 that runs from Readsboro to Heartwellville has been reopened. This segment of Route 100, which connects Route 100 to Route 8, reopens the primary route between the Deerfield Valley and North Adams, Mass. AOT officials warn that parts of that route remain gravel and more work will be needed before the road is returned to normal. Construction crews remain out in force throughout stormdamaged areas in southern Vermont, doing work such as paving, repairing guard rail, unplugging culverts, and conducting a host of other highway repairs. Questions regarding stormdamaged roads and bridges related to Tropical Storm Irene can be answered by calling AOT’s Irene Storm Center at 1-800-Vermont. People may also visit the AOT website (www. aot.state.vt.us), where they can sign up for travel updates for their mobile phone, and follow Frank Fedele/U.S. Army Corps of Engineers the agency’s progress on both One of the three state highway bridges in Jamaica damaged by the powerful Facebook and Twitter. flooding from Tropical Storm Irene. Governor: Oct. 22 is ‘Vermont Clean Up Day’ Gov. Peter Shumlin has deShumlin said Clean Up Day a project in one of the affected who lost their homes and belong- Up Day projects, much as they clared Oct. 22 the first-ever will signal an aggressive single- communities, or organize a vol- ings get reestablished. do for the anti-litter Green Up ‘Vermont Clean Up Day’ in- day push for financial donations unteer effort in your town if you “The last several weeks have Day event. He said the need for WEST BRATTLEBORO — spired by the generosity of for Irene recovery, coordinate are aware of a need. In addition shown that we Vermonters have help providing everything from All Souls Unitarian Universalist Vermonters helping the state re- volunteers with communities to volunteer labor, skilled la- a natural instinct to help our food to furniture, to mucking Church is hosting an East cover from Tropical Storm Irene. that need help cleaning up from borers such as plumbers, elec- neighbors,” said Lt. Gov. Phil out basements and clearing deAfrican Supper on Saturday, Modeled on its springtime sis- the storm, and allow people to tricians, and heavy equipment Scott. “This statewide clean up bris, and much more has never Oct. 15 at 6 p.m. as a fund- ter event – Green Up Day – the donate to specific families who operators who are willing to do- day will lend some organizational been greater. Since raiser for the Brattleboro Area newly created Clean Up Day will were impacted by Irene. In funate their time on this one day support to help those who have “I hope that all Vermonters Interfaith Youth Group’s mission ensure all Vermont families and ture years, the event will become needed. the greatest need. With just a will participate in this special 194are 6 trip to Kenya next spring and as a communities impacted by the a way to help all Vermonters in • Donate to a specific need for few weeks left before winter, day in at least one way – or bet55prepare Depotfor St.theBrattleboro, VT family through the we need to make every helping ter yet, all three ways,” Shumlin memorial for Wangari Maathai, storm are prepared for the up- need coming a Vermont Siexchange” nce the founder of the Green Belt coming winter season. winter. or through hand count." said. “If we all lend a hand and (802) 254-5755“goods19 46 Movement in Kenya, who died “I want to start by saying For Vermont Clean Up Day your local volunteer coordinator Shumlin said he hopes busi- do a little it will mean a lot to of cancer on Sept. 25 at age 71. thank you for everyone’s out- 2011 on October 22nd, there or food shelf. This list and your nesses, communities, individuals, those in need.” your year… 55 Depot St.Cut Brattleboro, VTcosts The group had been planning pouring of support, incredible will be threeenergy ways people canthis local coordinators will match schools and other groups will enSi nc to meet for the third time with generosity and patience(802) at this 254-5755 help. visiting www.vtcleanup. needs with goods to help families thusiastically participate in Clean e byByinstalling something more 1946 Maathai during their April 2012 difficult time,” Shumlin said, org, you can: efficient. Call Merrill trip. Maathai the Nobel at a RichmondVT kick-off • Make a monetary dona- Gas! 55won Depot St. speaking Brattleboro, Cut your costs this year… Peace Prize in 2004 for her work event with organizers andenergy voluntion to the VT Disaster Relief Since (802) in connecting environmental ac- 254-5755 teers involved in Irene cleanup Fund or other charity of your 1946 something 55“None Depot St.installing Brattleboro, VT Detailsmore byus tivism with human and social jus- work. of imagined the choice. for organizaSi nce (802) 254-5755 tice and world peace and inspired magnitude of damage Vermont tions involved inVent the relief and DirectGas! 1946 Direct Vent efficient. Call Merrill woman around the world to plant would sustain but all of us knew rebuilding effort can be found Convection Heater more than 30 million trees to that rains eased, the web. 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What about The Vermont Fatherhood Initiative will host its first statewide conference on Responsible Fathering at the Vermont Statehouse on Tuesday, Nov. 1, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. A brochure/registration form can be found at this link; www.vnacares. org/fatherhood. The conference will feature keynote speaker John Laing. He is a father, businessman, and consultant to the Massachusetts Department of Children and Families. Welcoming the assembled will be Gov. Peter Shumlin and Vermont Supreme Coury Chief Justice Paul Reiber. The day will include workshops for fathers and those serving fathers and families in Vermont. The Vermont Fatherhood Initiative is a fledgling group of dedicated volunteers made up of parents, professionals and concerned citizens who believe fathers count and that responsible fathering is an essential part of healthy child development. Organizers say the event is a way to come together to talk about how to strengthen families by uplifting fatherhood. The body of research documenting the benefits of responsible fathering shows: • When fathers are positively involved, younger children display increased exploration of the world around them and greater tolerance of stress and frustration. • Older children display increased academic performance. • With increased non-custodial father engagement, children in foster care return to kin more often, foster care stays are shorter and fewer, and there are fewer child abuse/neglect allegations. • Delinquent behaviors lessen proportionate to how much time non-custodial father spends with the youth. • On the other side, children in fatherless homes are five times more likely to be in poverty, and three times more likely to be incarcerated. The short term goals of the VFI are to map current services across Vermont, identify best practices and initiate strategies to foster the propagation of more services for fathers that promote greater positive involvement and more responsible fathering. For more information about the event, contact state Rep. Mike Mrowicki at mmrowicki@ leg.state.vt.us. Got an opinion? (Of course you do! You’re from Windham County!) Got something on your mind? Send contributions (500 words or fewer strongly recommended) to [email protected]; the deadline is Friday to be considered for next week’s paper. When space is an issue, we give priority to words that have not yet appeared elsewhere. vance of its 25th anniversary elebration in 2012, the AIDS Project of Southern Vermont (APSV) is seeking photographs, artifacts, and memories created over the years. Former Board members, volunteers, clients, and staff are particularly invited to go through albums and files and send along any pictures, posters, and other print and electronic depictions of APSV’s important work in the community. 1-3 minute video clips of people sharing experiences and memories for use in stories they’ll be sharing via public access TV, community radio, and the web. Taking this opportunity to self-assess, APSV also is seeking feedback from all community members about the value of the organization’s various programs and services. The APSV Board of Directors is interested in how people value their work, both as it affects individuals as well BRATTLEBORO—The Brattleboro Recreation & Parks Department offers the following programs this fall. If more information is needed, or if any special needs are required, call 802-254-5808, or stop by the Recreation & Parks Department office at the Gibson-Aiken Center, 207 Main St. Baton twirling classes • Baton twirling classes will be held at the Gibson-Aiken Center on Thursdays, beginning on Oct. 20, for eight weeks, from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. The cost of the eightweek program is $55 for residents and $70 for non-residents. Baton twirling is great for improving hand-eye coordination, self confidence, rhythm, teamwork and ambidexterity. Classes are open to girls and boys ages 3 and up. All students are invited to participate in performances such as local parades and shows. Class instructors are Lynda Lawrence, who is the director of the Brattleboro Area Baton Twirlers, and assistant instructor Alison Cornellier. Exotic Thai Cuisine The Far East Just Got a Little Closer! 7 High Street Brattleboro, VT (802) 251-1010 ThaiBambooVT.com )))*+,-./0,0$-&1213*'&3" !"#$#%$&"'(" "3%,('")45"#( /)#'0'-$"1(2#)'',"2%#%( !"#$%&'()*+,'(-".#&/&01(.(&%&23#%4/'(3#%5/*"#(%4(.*+,'("*+6.'/%&( .&*(,/'"#.67(8"#5/6"8(8""98(.('".6:"#('%(3#%5/*"(;<=-(/&8'#+6'/%&( 4#%$(>"0/&&"#(':#%+0:(.*5.&6"*(6,.88"8('%(.#".(;&0,/8:(,.&0+.0"( ,".#&"#8?((( @:/8(3.#'2'/$"(3%8/'/%&(%44"#8("A6",,"&'(>"&"4/'8(.&*(3./*('/$"(%44( !/8/'(BBB?5'.*+,',".#&/&0?%#0(4%#($%#"(/&4%#$.'/%&?( C"8+$"(D".*,/&"E(=6'%>"#(FG1(HIFF((((;J+.,(=33%#'+&/'7(;$3,%7"#( Finnell Roofing LLC Shingles Slate Rubber Metal Residential/Commercial Insured www.finnellroofing.com 802.257.0841 eat. sleep. records. (not necessarily in that order) IN THE MOMENT RECORDS NEW, USED & COLLECTIBLE VINYL LP’s It’s not too late! Pre-buy your heating oil NOW at the Pre-buy price of $3.549 per gallon 6023 US Route 5 • Westminster VT 05158 802-722-3331 877-722-3331 Toll Free Allen Bros Oil is a Full Service/24 Hour company Call for our low cash price • 100 gallon minimum Toddler – Preschool Lead Teacher Looking for a full-time enthusiastic team player to join our inclusive, NAEYC-accredited early education center. Qualifications include a Bachelor’s degree or higher, early education or related field preferred. For more information visit our website at www.winstonprouty.org. Interested candidates should send a letter of interest, resume and names of three references by October 17, 2011 to: Alissa Bourque, The Winston Prouty Center 20 Winston Prouty Way Brattleboro, VT 05301 [email protected] Fax 802-258-2413 No phone calls please. EOE their HIV Prevention programs for gay and bisexual men and for women at risk? The survey — to be completed anonymously — is available online at http:// www.surveymonkey.com/s/ VM9BPB2, or in print format by calling Karen at 802254-4444. The first analysis of results will be done in early November, so it community members are asked to complete the survey by Nov. 1. Recreation & Parks Dept. lists programs Open Gym and Game Room • The Open Gym and Game Room will begin Oct. 17 and last through April 28, 2012. The weekly schedule is as follows: Monday: 3-5 p.m. for grades K-6, Tuesday: 2:45-5 p.m. for grades 7-12, Wednesday: 3-5 p.m. for grades K-6, Thursday: 2:45-5 p.m. for grades 7-12, Friday: 3-5 p.m. for grades K-6, Saturday: 1-4 p.m. for grades 7-12 and adults. When there is no school, Open Gym is from 1:30-5 p.m. for all ages. This is a free, supervised program and a great way to spend time after school. Come and play with your children, or leave them in the care of the Recreation & Parks staff. The gym is closed Sundays and some holidays. Open Gym is for recreation basketball, so sneakers must be worn on the gym floor. The Game Room is open for bumper pool, foosball, ping pong, and air hockey. Other activities during Open Gym include a homework and snack area, arts and crafts, board games, Chess, Legos, and books. Fitness bootcamp !"#$%&'()*+,'(,")#&-&.( an online survey where people can quickly answer a few questions and give them ideas about our work. What is most important to you about the Project? Is it that they are a resource for people living with HIV/AIDS and making sure they have access to such resources as medical care and housing? Is it their collaboration with the Vermont Foodbank in providing free meals, meats, vegetables, dairy products and 143 MAIN ST BRATTLEBORO, VT 8 0 2-2 5 7- 8171 itm@ sover.net w w w.inthemomentrecords.com WE BUY VINYL LP’s, 45’s & 78’s • Another session of Brattleboro Bootcamp begins on Oct. 17. Brattleboro Bootcamp is a community-based, high energy workout and wellness program that specializes in rapid fat loss, muscle toning, sports improvement, stress management, and a food plan for life. All fitness levels are welcome. Each training will be taught by local fitness expert Trisha Selbach, CPT. Fitbody online nutrition/ coaching with Lisa Dumont, BSc. CPT. The program will be offered Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from 6:15-7:15 a.m. at the Gibson-Aiken Center for ages 17 and up. This session will go for 13 weeks. The cost is $297 for residents (unlimited sessions) and $317 for non-residents. A drop-in session costs $15. Chess Club per night. Game boards will be improving balance without havprovided. ing to learn a set of forms. The T’ai Chi Ch’uan course Kung Fu begins with basic opening and • Running Fist Kung Class stretching exercises (Qi Gong) begins Oct. 17. The program is necessary to obtain full benefit of being held at the Gibson-Aiken T’ai Chi Ch’uan practice. From Center in the Blue Room on the preparatory exercises the Monday and Wednesday eve- class moves into the study of the nings from 6 to 8 p.m. You may Yang style long form of T’ai Chi register at any time and join the Ch’uan. The class includes corclass. rect body alignments, balanced Sifu Lew Henderson, the in- movements and martial applicastructor, has studied martial arts tions of the forms. for 37 years, and is also a Charter ChiMotion will be offered Member of the American Tuesdays from 5:30-6:30 p.m., Federation of Martial Arts. while T’ai Chi Ch’uan will be ofRunning Fist Kung Fu is an fered Tuesdays from 6:45-7:45 eclectic style of Kung Fu that is p.m. Both classes take place at taught through a series of con- the Gibson-Aiken Center. The cepts rather than a technical cost of each program is assessed approach of martial arts. This ap- monthly: $60.00 for residents proach ensures that the student and $80.00 for non-residents. can easily adapt to the variables The instuctor, Joey Carroll, of a given situation. The goal has been studying T’ai Chi is to help the student develop Ch’uan and Qigong for over 20 spiritually, mentally, and physi- years. For more information, cally so that he or she can read- contact Carroll at 802-380-9170. ily adapt to many challenges of everyday life. Adult co-ed The classes are run as month- volleyball to-month lessons and are $85 per • Adult co-ed volleyball will be month for residents and $105 offered on Thursday evenings for non-residents. Classes run at the Gibson-Aiken Center, through the end of April 2012. second floor gym, from 6 to 8 For information and registra- p.m. Mike White will provide tion, contact Henderson at 802- instruction for the eight-week 365-4514 or RunninFstMonk@ program. This session will beaol.com. gin on Oct. 20 and run Dec. 15. The cost of the session is $20 for Tai Chi Brattleboro residents and $40 for C h i M o t i o n & T ’ a i C h i non-residents. Ch’uan begins Tuesday, Oct. White will give guidance and 18. ChiMotiton is an exercise instruction throughout the length routine based on the core body of the program. The program mechanics, energies and move- is for all levels of players who ments of T’ai Chi Ch’uan and want to gain knowledge, experiQigong. It’s an easy, fun way to ence and improve on their game. learn how to move and breathe in Sneakers must be worn in order a natural, healthy manner while to participate. Girls on the Run Vermont seeks coaches for Spring 2012 season • The Chess Club will meet in the Gibson-Aiken Center Senior Center on Wednesdays, from 6-9 VERNON—If you could help p.m., beginning Oct. 19, and gonot just one girl, but 15 young ing until April 18, 2012. This program is for ages 16 girls, gain a stronger sense of and up. The cost is $1 per person identity, greater self-acceptance, a healthier body, and an understanding of what it means to be part of a community in just a few hours a week, would you? Girls on the Run Vermont is 802-258-3962 seeking volunteer coaches at new and established sites throughout the state to run its 10-week proBook Book Your Your ASPHALT TARAND & STONE DRIVEWAYS Paving Projects gram — no prior coaching or PAVING, TAR Paving ASPHALT DRIVEWAYS &&STONE NOW! WALKS Projects running experience is required, ASPHALT, CONCRETE & Commercial/Residential NOW! GRANITE CURBING and training will be provided. FREE ESTIMATES - Septic Systems Up to 12 new communities and Commercial/Residential - Utility & Road Construction - General Sitework FREE ESTIMATES schools may establish sites for Septic Systems David Manning the 2012 season. 103 Frost Place,Construction P.O. Box 276 Utility & Road Girls on the Run is the umBrattleboro, VT. 05302 Fax: 802-257-2617 General Sitework brella organization for two expeDavid Manning riential learning programs: Girls 103 Frost Place, Brattleboro, VT on the Run, for grades 3 through 5, and Girls on Track, for grades 6 through 8. The programs are offered during after school hours nationwide and incorporate training for a 3.1-mile run/ walk into self-esteem-enhancing, uplifting workouts. In addition, each group performs a community service project. Throughout, Girls on the Run encourages positive emotional, social, and physical development, together with the recognition that each girl is part of a larger community. Each site will be provided with a detailed curriculum. Each 90-minute lesson in the curriculum includes a “getting on board” exercise, a warm-up activity, a stretch routine with question and answer time, a workout with a team goal, a cool-down and stretch, and a closing cheer or words of encouragement. In 2011, some 2,400 girls around the state took part in the program. “When young girls are put in a comfortable environment, one where they feel safe and encouraged, they thrive,” said Nancy Heydinger, executive director of Girls on the Run Vermont. “This is what I see over and over in our participants. They see themselves succeed — by their own standards — and see themselves in a new light. Self-confidence drives so many other changes. A girl who believes in herself becomes more outgoing and more willing to take healthy risks.” In fact, a national impact evaluation study determined that the Girls on the Run curriculum positively affects participants’ selfesteem, body size satisfaction, and physical activity behaviors. One Vermont father said of his daughter’s experience with the program, “My daughter Sydney was so pleased that she ran the entire Girls on the Run 5k without stopping to walk. It is by far one of the proudest accomplishments in her young life. I feel strongly that because of GOTR, Sydney knows that if she puts her mind to it, she can do anything she wants.” And the mother of another participant said, “I was jumping up and down and crying as I watched her cross the finish line. Her coach and a classmate (who happens to be a very strong runner) stayed with her, encouraging her, the entire run. Molly has a new self confidence and ‘I can do it!’ outlook on life thanks to the Girls on the Run program.” Coaches come from a variety of backgrounds — teachers, nurses, guidance counselors, principals, paraprofessionals, parents and community members. A minimum of two coaches is needed at each site; individuals may serve in either a head or an assistant coach capacity. All coaches must attend a free training session. Coach training sessions will be held in various locations around the state and require pre-registration. An “early bird” training is scheduled for Saturday, Nov. 12, in Berlin; nine more trainings are slated for January and February. For detailed information about coaching, establishing a new site, or registering for a training, as well as a list of the 2011 site locations, visit www. girlsontherunvermont.org, or find them on Facebook. T h e C ommons NEWS • Wednesday, October 12, 2011 MILESTONES Births, deaths, and news of people from Windham County $119,000 Editor’s note: The Commons will publish brief biographical information for citizens of Windham County and others, on request, as community news, free of charge. Hinsdale, N.H. Died April 3 in Erving, Mass., after a long courageous battle with mental illness. Brother of Janelle Barrett, Trevor P. Lang, and Jacob M. Harris. Born in Keene, N.H., son of Sandra J. (Robarge) and Gene M. Lang, he graduated from Hinsdale High School, Class of 1997. He had worked for Erving Paper Co. as an oiler mechanic. He had also worked at the Vermont Bread Co. as a mechanic. He also served in the Army. He was an avid reader of literature, and loved all types of history. He enjoyed hiking the Long Trail and Appalachian Trail. He was talented with his hands, and would buy junked motorcycles and rebuild them to showroom condition. He liked to ride his bicycle and rode one time to Maine. He was an avid swimmer and loved to run. He was a complex man and gentle soul, with great love for his family. Memorial information : A memorial service was held Oct. 9 at Stonewall Farm in Keene. Donations to The National Alliance for the Mentally Ill/ New Hampshire (NAMINH) 15 Green St. Concord, NH. 03301. • A l i n e D i a n e Martin, 83, of Brattleboro. Died Oct. 3 at Brattleboro Memorial Hospital. Wife of the late Edward W. “Bub” Martin for 51 years. Mother of Diane Corey and her husband, Douglas, of Salisbury, Cindy Foster of Brattleboro, Richard Martin of Baltimore, Vt., and Dean Martin of Milton. Sister of Frank Bald of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., and Louis Bald of Bristol, Conn. Born at home on the family farm in Stanton, Quebec, the second to the youngest of 12 children to the late and Louise (Laventure) Bald, she was raised and educated in Stanton. A resident of Brattleboro for almost 60 years, she was a nurse’s aide at the former Linden Lodge Nursing Home, retiring in 1993 after 20 years of service. Previously, she performed private duty care in the Brattleboro area. She was steadfast in her walk of faith and her daily worship was important to her. She was a member of the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witnesses in Brattleboro. She enjoyed knitting, crocheting, her cats, and time shared with her family, especially her grandchildren. Memorial information : A memorial service was conducted Oct. 9 at the Kingdom Hall in West Brattleboro. Messages of condolence may be sent to Atamaniuk Funeral Home at www.atamaniuk.com. • Ja n e H wa P u (a l s o known as Ching Ying Pu), 97, of Brattleboro. Died Oct. 5 at Brattleboro Memorial Hospital. Wife of the late Hung-Ki Pu. Mother of Sung-Wen Chang, Ching-Wen Taylor, Robert and Glen Pu, and the late WeiWen Chang. Born in Guiyang, HS103A 28x28 Approx. 1531 sq. ft. Price Reduced to 99,000 $ • M o n a Amelia Duke, 82, a resident at • Corey M i c h a e l L a n g, 3 2 , of The Bedford Two-Story by Pennwest Obituaries Charlene Manor Nursing Home in Greenfield, Mass., and a former resident of Brattleboro. Died Oct. 5 at the Farren Care Center in Greenfield. Former wife of Alderic Bourbeau. Wife of the late Robert Duke. Mother of Stephen Bourbeau of Greenfield. Sister of David Markley, Judy Vidor, and the late Ronald Markley. Born in Veazie, Maine, daughter of the late Wilbur and Annie (Doane) Markley, she was raised and educated in Greenfield and was a graduate of Greenfield High School, Class of 1947. She was a faithful and devoted homemaker and mother whose life centered around her family. She played golf for many years and was a former member of the Brattleboro Country Club. She also enjoyed reading, jigsaw puzzles and classical music. Memorial information : Graveside committal services were held Oct. 7 in Meetinghouse Hill Cemetery in Brattleboro. Donations to Rescue Inc. P.O. Box 593, Brattleboro, VT 05302. Messages of condolence may be sent to Atamaniuk Funeral Home at www.atamaniuk.com. A7 Display Home Only Some Features • 5/12 Roof Pitch • 80# Roof Load • Rafters 16” On Center • Ice Shield • Prep for Hot Water Base Board Heat Stubbed through Floor • 90” Bay Window • (2) Additional Windows in LR • 29x40 Temp. Bath Window • Kitchen Design • Black Appliance Package • Drapery Throughout • Laminate Floor in Foyer • Vinyl Floor in Master Bath To order this home as shown (Includes delivery, crane, and set on your foundation) Fineline Homes The Housing Specialists Since 1969 Route 119, Hinsdale, NH - 603-256-3156 Hours: Mon. - Fri. 9 to 5; Sat. 9 to 4; Closed Sun. www.finelinehomes.net Courtesy photo Former state Sen. Robert T. Gannett of Brattleboro is the 2011 recipient of the Anna Marsh Award from the Brattleboro Retreat. Awards • The Brattleboro Retreat recently bestowed the 2011 Anna Marsh Award to former state Sen. Rober t T. Gannett . The Anna Marsh Award was established by the Brattleboro Retreat in 2009 to recognize individuals for their advocacy on behalf of people with mental illness. Gannett served on the Brattleboro Retreat Board of Trustees from 1967 to 1981. Gannett graduated from Harvard College in 1939 and Harvard Law School in 1942. He came to Brattleboro with his wife, Sarah Alden Derby Gannett, in 1946 after completing four years of military service in the Army. Guizhou, China, daughter of the late Wen-chi Hwa and Tsunlan Hsieh, she led a remarkable and sometimes adventurous life. She came from a well-known and respected Guiyang family, renowned for managing the salt monopoly first in Sichuan and then in Guizhou, establishing the Wentong Press (one of seven major presses in the nation), the Yongfeng paper mill, and developing the famous Maotai liquor distillery — used to this day in China to celebrate official and other important events. In 1944, as World War II was winding down, her husband, an educator, scholar and gifted linguist, left China for graduate study in the U.S. In 1949, with China in the turmoil of civil war, Mrs. Pu and her three daughters made their way to Hong Kong and from there took a ship to the United States to rejoin her husband in New York, who had by then become a Chinese-Russian translator for the United Nations. During these years, their two sons were born, and she devoted herself principally to raising their five children. After her husband retired, she moved to Brattleboro, where their son Robert and his family lived. They spent the rest of their lives enjoying life in Vermont and cooking wonderful feasts for their children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren whenever they visited. Memorial information : A private memorial service was held at the Atamaniuk Funeral Home on Oct. 8. Donations to Brattleboro Memorial Hospital or Brattleboro Area Hospice. • John Paul Suskawicz, 90, of Hinsdale, N.H. Died Sept. 30 at home. Husband of Felicia (Matuszewski) Suskawicz for 63 years. Father of Janice Nichols of Westbrook, Maine, and Donna Suskawicz of Boston. Brother of Paul, Jr., Alexander and Ignatius Suskawicz, and Ann Donley. Born in Hempstead, N.Y., son of Paul and Mary (Poly) Suskawicz, who immigrated to the United States from Russia. As a teenager during the Depression, he worked with the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) and traveled around the country working on construction projects, including the Surry Dam in New Hampshire. He enjoyed boxing and participated in the Golden Gloves Tournament at Madison Square Garden in He became a member of the Vermont state bar in 1947 and has been a practicing lawyer for more than 60 years. Gannett represented Brattleboro in the Vermont House of Representatives from 1953 to 1959, and Windham County in the Vermont Senate from 1973 to 1992. He has served as a corporator and past president of Brattleboro Memorial Hospital; director of National Life Insurance Co.; director of the United Way of Windham County; and trustee of the Vermont Community Foundation. In addition to his involvement with these and many other organizations, he has been an avid golfer, fisherman and fan of the Boston Red Sox. New York City. Served in the Navy during World War II in the South Pacific. He was a talented artist and, after the war, received a scholarship to attend the Vesper George School of Art in Boston. Marriage and family delayed his artistic pursuits, but he continued to paint throughout his life, and was well known for his paintings of local covered bridges and historic buildings. He worked for many years at the Hinsdale Paper Mill and later as a pressman at the Book Press in Brattleboro. He was a skilled gardener and produced a bountiful vegetable garden each year. He participated in the Brattleboro Farmers’ Market for many years. He also created a Christmas Tree farm and frequently donated Christmas trees during the holidays to families who were less fortunate. Throughout his life, he was a lover of nature and animals. M emorial information : Graveside committal rites with full military honors were held Oct. 6 at St. Joseph’s Cemetery in Hinsdale. Donations to Brigham House/ Zola Center for Persons with Disabilities, 20 Hartford St., Newton, MA 02461. Messages of condolence may be sent to Atamaniuk Funeral Home at www.atamaniuk.com. Births • In Brattleboro (Memorial Hospital), Sept. 27, 2011, a daughter, Lucy Elizabeth Nims , to Dawn (Descant) and Jonny Nims of Brattleboro; granddaughter to Ken and Lorraine Nims and Gene and Debbie Descant. • In San Francisco, Calif., Aug. 21, 2011, a daughter, Bryher Elowen Lake Burtis, to Jennifer Thomas and Patrick Burtis; granddaughter of Jack Thomas of Sanibel, Fla., and Richard and Irene Burtis of Brattleboro. A News Contest for Vermont Middle Schools This fall, Vermont middle schoolers are taking part in a statewide project to gather news in their communities and create their own ‘front page.’ It’s an exciting, community-focused project co-sponsored by VPT and newspapers across the state. Nov. 7-11 is “news gathering week,” so hurry! To get your middle school class involved: Visit: www.vpt.org email: [email protected] call: 800-639-3351 Hope to see your stories on the front page! Co-sponsored by VPT, The Commons, and newspapers statewide. A8 T h e C ommons • Wednesday, October 12, 2011 Windham Regional Career Center Community Education and Training Programs Fall 2011 MANUFACTURING Toolingu.com – On-Line Manufacturing Training Tuesday, November 8, 5:00 to 7:00, Instructor: Amy Anthony Come learn about Toolingu.com, the leading online training provider focused on the unique needs of manufacturers. Toolingu.com has developed an extensive catalog of manufacturing-specific content and innovative learning tools to help workers bolster their expertise and leverage their skills to succe ssfully compete in today’s economy. Toolingu.com trains workers through a range of carefully integrated online learning tools. The courses tie the online curriculum to matching hands-on tasks that put the theory into practice. Seats for this on-line program are $100 for a two month session with a possible extension, including any hands-on labs. Students work at their own pace at home and will come into the Career Center for handson labs a few times during the session. HEALTH CAREERS American Red Cross Licensed Nursing Assistant (LNA) Course starts Monday, October 24 through December 20, $1,525, Instructor: Stacy Chickering, LPN Classes will be held at the Windham Career Center. This course certifies nursing assistants for work in the healthcare environment. Successful completion of the course enables participants to take the state competency examination for state licensure. This 120 hour program includes classroom, laboratory, and clinical practicum. Certification in adult CPR and AED a re included in the LNA Program. Registration is required. Call 603- 313-3604 for additional information and registration. A limited number of partial scholarships are available for individuals currently working in the healthcare field through the Next Generation Grant from the Vermont Department of Labor. Call 802-451-3965 for more financial aid information. 802-451-3965 www.wrccvt.com Thriving With Adult ADHD Thursday, October 27, 6:00 to 9:00, 3 hours, $30, Instructor: Sue Venman Are you easily distracted, prone to mood swings and have problems with procrastination and disorganization? You may have Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). ADHD is more difficult to diagnose in adults. Symptoms are often disguised as difficulties in relationships, occupational underachievement and low frustration tolerance. It can be a frustrating disorder to live with – but you can learn to manage it successfully. In this informative course, Susan Venman, an ADHD coach and professional organizer, will talk about the keys to successfully managing your ADHD along with identifying ADHD in yourself and others; understanding what causes ADHD and how it is diagnosed; developing an 8-Step individualized program for managing ADHD; and addressing issues of procrastination, time management and disorganization. Organizing 1-2-3 Thursdays, November 3, 10 and 17, 6:00 to 8:00, 6 hours, $60, Instructor: Sue Venman Is your life buried under a mountain of mail? Does your to-do list look like a sad attempt at the great American novel? This 3-week course teaches you simple, straightforward strategies for de-cluttering and organizing your home and office. Sue Venman of Breathing Space: Home & Office Organizing (www.breathingspace.com) will offer steps to create a space that WORKS FOR YOU. We will deal with issues including handling paper, paring down rather than piling up, organizing other people, improving home and offic e layout and how to maintain the progress that you have made. Over 300 On-Line Courses!! Go to: www.wrccvt.com Click on On-Line Instruction Center on the left to view the entire catalog. CAREER TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT ON-LINE LEARNING COURSES ServSafe Certification Training for Food Service Workers Monday, November 7, 8:00 to 4:00, 8 hours, $65, Marlboro College Graduate Center, 28 Vernon Street, Brattleboro, VT. This is the National Restaurant Association Education Foundation certification training for food service workers. Learn knowledge and skills to prevent food and safety related incidents, improve food servi ce operations, and reduce risk and incidence of food borne illness. Certification testing is done at the end of class. This is a nationally recognized certification. A limited number of full scholarships are available for those individuals currently working in the healthcare field through the Next Generation Grant from the Vermont Department of Labor. Leadership Skills Development Series Fridays, November 4, 11 and 18, 8:00 to 4:30, 25.5 hours, $1,050 per person for the entire series includes materials Marlboro College Graduate Center, 28 Vernon Street, Brattleboro, VT. Leadership is the responsibility of everyone in an organization. This six-part series is designed to develop skills that will help make supervisors, managers, team leaders and those with cross-functional responsibilities more efficient and effective. These highly interactive sessions combine group discussions, activities and action planning to deliver training objectives. Each of these 6 units is approximately three and one-half hours long. They can be combined and structured in different configurations in order to best meet the needs of the participants. For this public offering in Brattleboro, the 6 units will be delivered over 3 day long sessions. The series includes: Essentials of Leadership; Building an Environment of Trust; Setting Performance Expectations; Coaching for Improvement; Reviewing Performance Progress; and Leading Change. The sessions will be facilitated by a certified Development Dimensions International member of the VTC-TED team. Windham Regional Career Center, in partnership with ed2go offers over 300 on-line learning courses. Our instructor-facilitated online courses are informative, fun, convenient, and highly interactive. Our instructors are famous for their ability to create warm and supportive communities of learners. It’s no wonder that many longlasting friendships have formed in our lively discussion areas. All courses run for six weeks (with a two-week grace period at the end).Courses are project-oriented and include lessons, quizzes, hands-on assignments, discussion areas, supplementary links, and more. You can complete any course entirely from your home or office, any time of the day or night. A sample of topics include: Accounting Fundamentals, QuickBooks 2010, Medical Terminology and Coding, Administrative Assistant, Digital Photography, Grant Writing, Graphic Design, Veterinary Assistant, Languages, Human Anatomy and Physiology, Math, Personal Development, Start Your Own Business, Creating a Busine ss Plan, PC Troubleshooting, Creating Web Pages, Effective Business Writing, Project Management Fundamentals, Introduction to PC Trouble Shooting, Buy and Sell on eBay, Test Prep, Java Programming and much more! CERTIFIED CAREER TRAINING PROGRAMS Windham Regional Career Center, in partnership with ed2go (formerly Gatlin Education Services), offers over 100 online open enrollment programs designed to provide the workforce skills necessary to acquire COMPUTER COURSES professional level positions for many in-demand occupations whether you are entering a new field or advancing your current career. The programs are designed by a team of professionals from each respective field, who work to provide you with an effective web-based learning experience. Instructors/mentors are actively involved in your online learning experience. They respond to any questions or concerns, as well as encourage and motivate you to succeed. Each program includes a set of lessons and evaluations; grades are a combination of the instructor/mentor’s evaluation of students’ work and computer graded tests. We know you’ll appreciate the quality as well as the convenience of anytime, anywhere learning! Wednesdays, October 26 to November 23, 6:00 to 8:00, 10 hours, $100, Instructor: Cheryl Coplan Learn the basics of using a computer - Windows, internet, e-mail, as well as exploration of common program features including editing, clipboards, toolbars, menus, images and other topics. This hands-on class is designed for individuals who are new to computers or for those who want to sharpen their computer skills. Class limited to 10 students. Sample Programs Include: Healthcare & Fitness; Business & Professional; IT & Software Development; Management & Corporate; Media & Design; Hospitality & Service Industry; Skilled Trades & Industrial; Sustainable Energy & Going Green; and Career On-Line High School. Computer Applications The Mystery of Excel Uncovered – Microsoft Excel Basics Mondays, October 24, 31, November 7, 14, December 5, 5:00 to 7:00, 10 hours, $100, Instructor: Cheryl Coplan Microsoft Excel is an electronic spreadsheet that runs on a personal computer. It is most useful for organizing data and performing mathematical calculations. This course will uncover the mysteries of rows, colum ns, formulas, workbooks vs. worksheets, as well as customizing charts and graphs. By the end of the course you will be able to work with your workplace or household budget and feel more comfortable working with data. Knowledge of navigating in a Windows environment is helpful. Class limited to 8 students. ✁ Community Education and Training Programs - Fall 2011 USE THIS FORM TO REGISTER FOR COURSES Creating a Google Website Mondays, October 24, 31, November 7, 21 and 28, 5:00 to 7:30, 12.5 hours, $125, Instructor: Jil MacMenamin Creating a Google Site is a fun and easy way to organize what you want to present to the world on a web site. No knowledge of HTML, JavaScript or Cascading Style Sheets is needed. There is no software to buy, or monthly fees to pay. Bring your Gmail login and password to class and know how to log in and send email. Jil can work with you the week before class to set up a Gmail account if you don’t have one. You can also set up a domain name to access your site. Class limited to 12 students. Digital Photography Mondays, December 5 to December 19, 5:30 to 7:30, 6 hours, $60, Instructor: Jil MacMenamin Learn your camera or phone features by using your manuals so you can do what you want! Transfer pict ures from your camera to your computer/internet using Picasa - a Google tool. Store your pictures, and organize them in folders. Become adept at Auto Fix, Rotate, Crop, Resize, Exposure, Colors, Sharpen, and Red-eye. Share your pictures and slideshows with family members and other individuals or put them on your web page. Create captions for each picture. Receive feedback on individual pictures that you can audit. Just bring your camera and a cable to get the pictures from your camera to the computer. Class limited to 12 students. PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT Weatherization Skillshop Saturday, November 5, 9:00 to 4:00, 7 hours, $50, Instructor: Brad Cook and Bob Reuter Learn how to make your home more comfortable and more energy-efficient! Weatherization Skillshops have been created to give people with handyman skills the building science background, how-to demonstrations and hands-on skill-building to make energy-saving home improvements. You’ll get great information, hands-on skills training, a reference text, access to tools & supplies, and lunch! You’ll learn how to: • Eva luate your home’s needs • Choose the right materials and tools for your project • Use materials properly—for effectiveness and safety. If you have basic building and home repair skills, you will be able to tackle many energy improvements in your home that can help make your home more comfortable, reduce your fuel use, and save money. For registration and information: Call: 888-514-2151 (toll-free), visit our website: weatherizationskillshop.com or email us: [email protected]. The Skillshop will be held at the Windham Regional Career Center in Brattleboro. Introduction to Woodworking Saturday October 29 and November 5, 1:00 to 5:00, 8 hours, $80 plus $25 materials fee – total $105 – Instructor: Gail Grycel Learn about woodworking through building a simple, personalized pine bookcase. Some basic woodworking machines and power tools will be used, safety procedures and some joinery taught, and finishing opti ons explored. Bring a pencil and tape measure. Students will pick and supply the finish they want (paint or stain).The $25 materials fee will cover wood needs for the bookcase and miscellaneous needs. Gail Grycel is the owner of Twin Birch Woodworking in Westminster West, VT Class limited to 8 students. • Registration deadline is 1 week before the start of a course. • REGISTER EARLY! Class sizes are limited and must have a minimum number of students to run. •You will be contacted with further information about your class approximately one week before the start of class. • No tuition will be refunded after the first class. Send form and payment (check only) to: WRCC, 80 Atwood Street, Brattleboro, VT 05301 Att. Community Education Name: Address: Phone: work home Email: Course Cost Course Cost Amount Enclosed Windham Regional Career Center is committed to providing a respectful learning environment for all. WRCC insures equal employment opportunities in compliance with federal and state law regardless of race, color, national origin, religion, age, disability, gender, sexual orientation, or marital status T h e C ommons NEWS • Wednesday, October 12, 2011 S E C T I O N B1 B SPECIAL FOCUS Wednesday, October 12, 2011 • page B1 sports & recreation, page B4 Walking into an occupation Why would people drive hundreds of miles from Windham County to join 20,000 in New York City to protest economic injustice? The Commons went along to talk with some of the participants in the Occupy Wall Street protest. Here are their stories. By Olga Peters The Commons P rotesters from and members of dozens of labor unions marched through Lower Manhattan from Zuccotti Park to Foley Square Oct. 5 in what media commentators called the biggest rally to date for the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) protest that began last month. An estimated 20,000 people, including a contingent from Windham County, streamed down the sidewalks past tourists, fellow New Yorkers, and police officers chanting, “We are the 99 percent, and so are you!” The rallying cry for the nonviolent occupation of the privately owned Zuccotti Park in the city’s financial district distills the protesters’ frustrations with a political and economic system that allows unprecedented control of the country’s wealth to a disproportionately tiny sliver of the U.S. population. Response to the protest has ranged from positive, to negative, to disbelief, to hope, to praise, to befuddlement at the protesters’ lack of a crystallized set of demands. Two faculty members from Marlboro College Graduate Center, Ralph Meima and Caleb Clark, along with Brattleboro resident Shoshana Rihn and Meima’s daughter Kristina, drove to New York on Oct. 5 to observe the march. Walking into an occupation Cars, vans, delivery trucks, double-decker tour buses, and taxis crawl through the streets of Lower Manhattan. Waves of pedestrians cross the street as the traffic signals change, hold, and release. Around the corner from Ground Zero, a white passenger van from Marlboro College Graduate School stops for a red light. Clark and Rihn jump out. Clark carries a cardboard box of food. He tells Meima to send a text once he’s found parking. The light changes. Meima, with his 15-year-old daughter Kristina as co-pilot, drives away. Clark and Rihn stride in the opposite direction searching for Zuccotti Park. Zuccotti Park, a stone postage stamp dotted with trees, served as a staging area for emergency crews after 9/11. Bordered by Church Street and Broadway, the privately owned park has flower beds and stone rectangles that serve as benches. Buildings tower above the area. Food trucks ring the park. Clark and Rihn turn onto Church Street in search of the Occupy Wall Street protest, which started Sept. 17, when an estimated 2,000 people marched on the city’s financial sector. The protest has spread to more than 65 cities around the United States. Seeing firsthand The overflowing Zuccotti Park, which protesters have renamed “Liberty Park,” continued to fill with their numbers, as well as with curious onlookers, advocates, union members, and more media than one could shake a microphone at. Alison, who did not wish to give her last name, calls herself one of “the timid ones.” She divides her time between her “place” in New York and her home in Charlotte, Vt. She says she has concerns about the power of the Tea Party movement and wanted to check out the OWS protest. “[This protest] seems to mean something,” she says. Alison had walked to Zuccotti Park that morning because she wanted to see OWS first hand. To her, the voices calling for change in the small park came from “regular people, not extreme voices.” She also noted that the media has not covered the protest as much as she expected. Alison thinks the protest has been “ignored somewhat.” Taking the long view Danny Schechter promotes his new film Plunder: The Crime of Our Time as he walks through the park. The longtime journalist started his career as the “News Dissector” at WBCN-FM in Boston. He later transitioned to television, working at WGBH (Channel 2) in Boston, and then as a producer for WLVI (Channel 56) and WCVB (Channel 5) and CNN. Schechter has reported from 61 countries for mainstream and alternative newspapers, magazines, and websites. He has worked as an adjunct professor at the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University and taught investigative reporting at The New School. Schechter has participated in many protests over the years. He said that, compared to the 1960s marches, Occupy Wall Street is “an expression of another generation.” He acknowledges that many activists in that era “were at odds” with labor unions. Schechter hoped that the Oct. 5 march represents an evolution in attitudes. To Schechter, OWS appears less ideological, less top-down, and more interactive. He also describes the protest as “intergenerational, interracial, and international,” and believes that OWS represents the frustrations people have felt in the face of powerful forces in Washington and Wall Street. “[We’re] finally coalescing a challenge to what’s going on,” Schehcter says, adding the people standing in Zuccotti Park are “not wackos.” As a journalist specializing in economic issues, Schechter says he’s warned that Wall Street’s “financial crimes” would come to roost upon everyday people. OWS has built a hopeful, if fragile, momentum, he says: “It’s something.” But Schechter believes the future of the OWS protest and the community at Zuccotti Park looks uncertain with the oncoming winter. “I’m inspired by it,” Schechter says. “I worry for it.” Olga Peters/The Commons The scene in Foley Square in New York, near the municipal court. friend Alan Gilburg. “I’m here because of Alan,” he says. In their blazers, dress pants and ties, the two gentlemen in their 70s could pass as two Liberty Plaza office workers out on their lunch break. Gilburg, from Holyoke, Mass, represents the First Congressional District in western Massachusetts as a council organizer for MoveOn.org, a leftleaning education and advocacy organization. “I have got to be here,” Gilburg said. “This is the tip of the wedge that will break the corporations open.” Gilburg said he loves the “young energy” of the protest — a protest that has “muted the influence of the Tea Party.” He thinks most of the coverage in the media has erred on the side of lies, while the “Wall Street world” acts like nothing is happening. Shaking his head, Gilburg describes the current political debate as an argument between “the ruthless and the clueless.” He likens the choice between the two dominant political parties as a choice “between Stormtroopers or C-3PO.” “The system is rigged and it’s always been rigged,” Gilburg says. Wahman says that, in the 1950s and 1960s, unions pushed for better education and health care for their workers. They also pushed for civil rights, he adds. These rights expanded to all workers, but as labor’s power weakened, no one took its place to defend and preserve those worker benefits. He calls Wall Street “parasites” who are perpetually sucking money from the economy through financial instruments like hedge funds, adding that 70 to 80 percent of hedge funds are unregulated and operate in secrecy. A few months ago, adds Wahman, he attended another demonstration in New York City to protest against corporate taxes. About 300 people showed up, and someone preformed a skit. Wahman describes the tepid attendance as “symbolic of the powerlessness” people feel, he says. But the energy in Zuccotti Park feels different. “God bless these kids,” says Gilburg. Gilburg refers to the young twentysomething protesters as “the self-esteem generation.” Unlike Generation X, he said, these kids believe “we deserve a better, more just society.” The closest thing to hope? “I don’t know how to compare [OWS]” to earlier protests, says Rihn, one of the Windham County participants. Rihn describes herself as a “red diaper baby” following in her parents’ activist footsteps. Over the past 10 years, however, she says, she has felt discouraged at protests because the crowd looked “older and older.” However, OWS “is clearly young-dominated,” she says, adding she feels “delighted and thrilled” to see a new generation The self-esteem spearheading a movement. generation And the people participating Tom Wahman points to his in OWS belong to a different Olga Peters/The Commons Caleb Clark, of the Marlboro College Graduate Center, and Shoshana Rihn of Brattleboro, rest in Zuccotti Park. time, culture, and context from those who took to the streets in the 1960s. Rihn has felt frustrated with the media’s coverage of OWS. She says that reporters have ignored the movement, or they have dismissed the protesters as villainous, stupid, or ineffectual. With the march to Foley Square, the protesters have “forced the news to report” on it, says Rihn. And even if the media continues to heap contempt, OWS’s message has “hit a nerve.” In Rihn’s opinion, so many people see themselves reflected in the OWS protesters that the movement won’t go away. She says that she sees “all that energy and support and determination” and knows that “this is not a flash in the pan.” “This could be the start of a significant movement for change in this country,” says Rihn. Rihn says that from listening to the people gathered in New York, she heard big concerns about losing jobs, losing their homes, and crushing debt. “I was struck by the specifics,” she says. “We were activists in a time of abundance,” Rihn said of her time in the 1960s. She says that, in her younger days, people could fight for ideals while still holding down jobs and having money to pay their bills. But, she says, Americans are living tethered at the end of a long chain of broken promises. “The American people were promised ‘If I work for a living, then I can earn a living,’” Rihn says. But living paycheck to paycheck “is not living,” she said. The energy at OWS feels like the “closest thing to hope as my personality and political outlook will allow,” Rihn says with a laugh. “The American people are coming alive, coming awake, and they’re not going to take it lying down,” she says. “Things may Starting Friday....It’s New England Fabrics th ANNIVERSARY 77 S A L E th ANNIVERSARY n see occupation, page B2 Starting Friday... 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Oct. 23, 1934! 55 Ralston Ralston St. St. and Keene operated NH 603/352-8683 603/352-8683 55 Keene NH Family owned and operated since our opening on Oct. 23, 1934! SPECIAL FOCUS B2 n Occupation not change, but we’re not going to be quiet.” Rihn says that she can see the value in the protesters not stating any demands at this early stage. The country has so many issues to take on that getting people out and involved may be the best first step. Participants can sort issues as they go along maybe eventually breaking into focus groups, she says. For now, Rihn loves the “We are the 99 percent” call to action because it contains an education of how the economic system leaves many out. “There will always be assholes trying to screw other people,” she says. “So we always need our dissenters.” The center of it all Clark and Meima plan to chronicle their trip through social media. Clark also filmed the march to post as an independent CNN iReport, the cable network’s program encouraging video contributions from viewers. This was Day 18 of the protest, and the day that dozens of labor unions joined the leaderless movement in a march from Zuccotti Park to Foley Square. A protester organizing a tarp and sleeping bags points Clark toward the open-air kitchen. The volunteers behind the kitchen’s counter say “thank you” as they accept Meima and Clark’s donation of cookies, apples, and peanut butter. People stream through the park. Some display “Hello my name is” tags. A man walks by wearing a coat with “INFO” Sharpie-d on the back. Another man in a three-piece beige suit, silver cufflinks, and loafers died oxblood sits on a stone bench eating a muffin. Protesters holding placards line the steps under Mark di Suvero’s red sculpture Joie de Vivre, which reaches toward a blue sky. Members of the U.S. and international media stop the hundreds of people flowing past to ask questions. Police stand on the sidewalk circling Zuccotti Park. “You can’t block the sidewalk. Keep moving,” an officer says to the tourists stopping for photographs. T rue individual freedom cannot exist without economic security and independence. People who are hungry and out of a job are the stuff of which dictatorships are made. —Franklin D. Roosevelt The protesters have organized the park into a community. In addition to the kitchen, they have established a medical area, a place for sleeping, a press area, and a library. Volunteers can sign up to help with outreach, media, and Internet at folding tables throughout the park. Each station lists a daily meeting time. According to Nathan Schneider, in his article “Occupation for Dummies: How it came about, what it means, how it works and everything,” although the occupation remains leaderless by choice, numerous organizations helped spark it. Schneider’s article appeared in the The Occupied Wall Street Journal, a publication distributed in Zuccotti Park and online (www. thenation.com). Schneider credits Adbusters, a Canadian magazine, with being the first to call for a protest in mid-July. Other organizations joined the cause, including US Day of Rage, which calls for fair and free elections where only people make political campaign donations. Anonymous, a group of clandestine computer hackers, joined in August, said Schneider. People involved with NYC General Assembly also helped with the planning in the city. Decisions get made via consensus through a consortium of protestors, the NYC General Assembly, said Schneider. “Get ready for some jargon,” Schneider warns. “The General Assembly is a horizontal, autonomous, leaderless, modified-consensus-based system with roots in anarchist thought.” According to Schneider, the General Assembly is similar to the assemblies that drove the social movements in Egypt’s Tahrir Square and Madrid’s Puerta del Sol. “Working toward consensus is really hard, frustrating, and slow,” Schneider writes. “But the occupiers are taking their time. When they finally get to consensus on some issue, often after days and days of trying, the feeling is quite incredible.” The movement has not named its demands, because, writes Schneider, the political system “is so shot through with corporate money” that making demands would yield little until the protest grows its own political muscles. Most of the people involved with the protest have no desire to get themselves arrested or instigate violence, writes Schneider. Still, the protesters have clashed with police. On Sept. T h e C ommons • Wednesday, October 12, 2011 from section front 24, the New York Police Department (NYPD) arrested 80 people,“mainly for disorderly conduct by individuals who blocked vehicular and pedestrian traffic, but also for resisting arrest, obstructing governmental administration and, in one instance, for assault on a police officer,” the police said in a statement. According to Reuters, on Oct. 1 police arrested more than 700 protesters on the Brooklyn Bridge during a march after some participants stepped off the sidewalk and onto the roadway. As the protest moves forward, the participants have created some structure. On Sept. 29, the General Assembly (GA) released a document called Declaration of the Occupation of New York City. It listed the 22 reasons that brought the protesters to Zuccotti Park. “We come to you at a time when corporations, which place profit over people, self-interest over justice, and oppression over equality, run our governments. We have peaceably assembled here, as is our right, to let these facts be known,” writes the GA. Most of the reasons center on economic injustices. The list of grievances (bit.ly/ grievances) ranges from banks foreclosing on homeowners illegally, to executives receiving “exorbitant” bonuses, to energy companies covering up oil spills, to corporations perpetuating workplace inequality and discrimination, to companies determining economic policy, to agribusiness poisoning the food supply “through negligence, and [undermining] the farming system through monopolization.” ‘$900 I don’t have’ Cara Hartley moved from Indiana to New York City in July. She heard of the protest via an email list she belongs to, and she says she wanted to “check it out.” “I’m fascinated with this new democratic process,” she says. Hartley says she has $40,000 in student loans from earning her English degree. She works as a waitress and shares a room for $300 a month. And every month, Sallie Mae, the agency that originates many federally insured student loans, calls to ask her for “$900 I don’t have,” she said. Hartley says she bought into the “myth of college,” believing that she could better her life and income on “the merit of my degree.” She wants to see the current economic system — the system that “benefits a few” — change. See store for details. Offer expires 10/31/11. Olga Peters/The Commons A protester in Zuccotti Park in New York. The 27-year-old believes that officials don’t hear people. “Let’s make our representatives represent us,” she says. Hartley disagrees with some news outlets that have criticized the movement for not releasing any concrete demands. No demands is a good thing at this stage, she says. The weeks-old movement has launched conversations and ideas, she says. Right now, there is no one solution and it’s important to focus on “all that is wrong,” Hartley asserts. “We just need huge change,” she says, adding that “solutions are important.” The first step, she says, involves organizing and involving people. The ideas will come about, and awareness will rise. She points to the tables ringing the park labelled “newspaper,” “security,” “internet and open source,” and “outreach.” “[We’re] being a part of history,” she said. “Occupy everywhere.” Not your ‘hippie dance party’ Tom Maxwell drove 11 hours from North Carolina on Sunday, Oct. 2. He plans to drive back home after the march. He had followed OWS since it started, but decided to drive to New York City after a friend of a friend became one of more than 700 arrested on the Brooklyn Bridge Oct. 1. Sitting in the middle of the park, Maxwell, 46, calls the protest “extraordinary.” “This isn’t a hippie dance party,” he says. At first, he thought the movement was disorganized. Instead, he found a protest that is “decentralized.” The community existing on a small bit of granite in Lower Manhattan appears flexible to Maxwell. “It’s a new way of organizing [a protest],” he says. I’m amazed at the “media savvy and marvelous diversity of my fellow citizens.” Maxwell believes the protest will evolve, “seeding itself” and eventually feeding the national conversation. For example, he says, Occupy North Carolina’s participation has tripled in a week. “The name of the game is perseverance,” Maxwell says, adding that he will stay involved as he can. In his opinion, people “don’t want to admit the [current financial system] is broken,” that people don’t possess the same level of wealth as their parents, and the middle class has evaporated. He says that people need to “meaningfully address” the current corporate structure and remedy the imbalances — like “monstrous” for-profit health insurance corporations. Maxwell’s son, now 8, survived leukemia many years ago. Maxwell says that he had health insurance through work at the time, but the premiums went sky-high in response to his son’s cancer treatment. Maxwell said he lost his job in the recession and now is trying to support himself as an artist. He says that some of the country’s current problems have been “carefully crafted” by people who prefer a population “dogpaddling and paying bills” over an “informed electorate.” “It’s every man for himself, and we have to be self-reliant,” he says. For three years, Maxwell says, the country has felt a dangerous combination of “dispossessed and hopeless.” The people participating in OWS are peaceful, wanting to avoid arrests, he points out. But if politicians in Washington don’t address the protesters’ grievances in a meaningful way, he fears things could eventually turn ugly. ways he is participating in the protest is by starting a OWSinspired discussion from his laptop. In addition to providing support for the protestors, Meima also wanted to present a document, “ (bit.ly/ pg5PN7)The American People’s New Economic Charter (bit. ly/pg5PN7 )” ( bit.ly/pg5PN7 ) (APNEC) (bit.ly/pg5PN7). Meima says he created the “crowdsourced” document — one to which anyone can contribute ideas — based on Occupy Wall Street’s Declaration of the Occupation of New York City, released Sept. 29. The declaration’s list of 22 reasons for the occupation mostly centered on economic concerns, says Meima. He hopes the APNEC, publicly available as a Google Doc, will help contribute to a new economic structure in America. On the APNEC’s cover page, Meima calls the charter a “a crowdsourced expression of popular will — created by and for the 99 percent.” As Meima moves through New York City, he notes that 80 people contributed to the charter. For three days, the document had remained completely open, he says. But repeated sabotage has forced Meima to limit participation to individuals who identified themselves. “I don’t want that,” Maxwell says. The ratio of the 99 percent to the 1 percent may “not be the America we want,” but we can change this, he says. Maxwell believes in acting beyond the “old dichotomy of Chanting in left or right,” and instead acting the streets through collaborative “targeted “Mic check! Mic check!” calls participation by people of differ- one of the march supporters to ent political stripes.” the increasing crowd. “Mic check!” the crowd calls More than ‘lucky’ back. Senia Barragan, a doctoral To comply with city rules, candidate in Latin American the protesters don’t use megaHistory at Columbia University, phones. They are using a callchecks the time. and-response system of shouted Originally from New Jersey, messages that relay through she has helped organize the stu- the crowd from messenger to dent walkout orchestrated to listeners. coincide with OWS’s afternoon The supporter goes over march with New York Students guidelines for the march: “The Rising (NYSR). walk back from Foley Square is According to its website, permitted. The walk there is not. NYSR is a statewide network of Stay on the sidewalk. students and campus organiza“We ask.... No one break the tions. The network aims to de- rules. “We ask... that no one start fend public higher education and to riot. empower students, who, they “Stay together, keep moving, say, are often underrepresented we’re peacekeepers. Here are your in the campus administrations rights if you’re arrested.... You and state government. Students, don’t have to consent to a search.... NYSR points out, face higher You don’t have to give your immipublic education tuition and gration status.... Here’s the number more student loan debt. for the National Lawyers Guild, Barragan, who has consid- New York, write it on your arm. ered herself an activist since A volunteer hands out a pamhigh school, hopes that 1,500 to phlet by the Guild: “Know Your 2,000 students will walk out of Rights.” their classes and down to Foley “We just want you to be safe,” Square. he says. She said she was participating The crowd moves up the steps in OWS on behalf of her working past the red Joie di Vivre sculpfamily members. ture and onto Broadway. Her family almost lost their The sideway barely holds the home to foreclosure because of a bumpy mass of people trying to predatory loan. These loan com- squeeze past media with longpanies make a habit of preying lensed cameras and tourists on poor whites, hispanics, and snapping photos with iPhones blacks, Barragan says. and disposable cameras. The In her opinion, Barragan finds police line the sidewalk telling it interesting that often corpora- people to stay off the roadway. tions blame the working class for The marchers raise signs not having the money to provide above their heads. for daily needs like food, clothChants rise over the city’s ing, and housing. drumbeat of engines, construcBut the inequity exists in so- tion sites, and pedestrians watchciety with a playing field tilted ing from across the road. against people without the finan“Occupy Wall Street: All day cial resources or connections to — all week!” avoid “horrific” situations like “We are the 99 percent, and foreclosure. so are you.” Barragan says that, with“The banks got bailed out. We out her family, she would be got sold out.” homeless. “NYPD, you’re the 99 percent Although her family saved just like me. You’ll join us, wait their home, Barragan says, “I and see.” don’t want anyone to feel that “This is what democracy way.” looks like.” “We’re the lucky ones,” she The marchers find their says. rhythm and fall into step. The But, Barragan adds, she sea of people winds its way for doesn’t want luck. She wants at least an hour down Broadway “all to have what they need.” to Worth Street and empties into the green grass and streets Listening around Foley Square. Giovanni Almonte, a certiA woman in the crowd says fied life coach located in New she decided to march for her son York City and credited through and 9-year-old grandson. the International Coaching She says her parents raised Federation, volunteers because five children. They had a “good he sees a number of people look- life,” she recalls: not a fancy ing to make a positive change but life — everyone had hand-mefeeling unsure how to engage down clothes — but her parents with the OWS movement. put food on the table and a roof “[OWS] has no identity,” over their children’s heads, her Almonte said, adding peo- mother put two children through ple should know “that this is college, and the family could afinclusive.” ford vacations. He says that the movement All on factory wages, she says. stands wide open. Almonte says But her son and grandson can’t that he listens to people and have a good life with the current helps them get “in touch with economy. their own values” and reasons for joining the movement. Home base “Intelligent people” — from Night falls as the protesters professors, authors, econo- return to home base in the park. mists, philosophers, and artists Some staying the night crawl — have stopped at Almonte’s into sleeping bags under heavy table to talk. blue tarps. People, he says, have exMeanwhile, a woman shyly pressed to him values of quality, watches the people in Zuccotti compassion, love, community, Park. and putting humans before the She says she works in Liberty almighty dollar. Plaza. They’re interested in becomThe bosses look out their wining “involved intelligently,” he dows and say “Oh, those prosaid. “People just want to make testers,” she says. But some of a better world.” the younger people in the office agree with the protesters. Engaging She said someday, maybe, she through ideas will come to a OWS rally if she Meima says that one of the ever feels braver. T h e C ommons SPECIAL FOCUS • Wednesday, October 12, 2011 B3 Patriotism redefined Veterans participate, volunteer in protest By Olga Peters “I’m pro-soldier, anti-war, and pro-the-99percent,” says Joseph Carter, third from left, who served in the Army from 2002 to 2007, with two combat tours in Iraq. The Commons N EW YORK—“You get more flies with honey than vinegar,” says former Marine Michael Russo, a security volunteer for the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) protest. Earlier that morning, a yelling match broke out between two people in Zuccotti Park.. With little fuss, the security volunteers appeared, diffused the conflict, and dispersed the gaggle of curious bystanders. Dispersing the crowd removes the fuel for any flaring tempers, says Russo. He says that the security volunteers would call in the New York Police Department if necessary, but they haven’t needed to. Besides, he adds, it’s always best to use diplomacy first. As NYPD officers stand watch around the park, many clearly feel the potential for flared tempers leading to violence. With accusations of police brutality by protesters during recent arrests freshly on people’s minds, the protesters themselves tell marchers before an afternoon rally that Occupy Wall Street has no intention to riot. It’s a Marine’s role to take care of those who can’t care for themselves, Russo says, hardly looking up from a drawing of a police bomb squad defusing a bomb as he staffs the security table. Security is one of many working groups that people can join at the protest. To Russo’s left at the same table are volunteers for “Outreach” who are working on the OWS newspaper, The Occupied Wall Street Journal. “It’s my civil duty,” said Russo, in response to why he volunteers. According to Russo, everyone contributes what they’re good at in Zuccotti Park. The people volunteering for security duty come from a variety of military and law enforcement backgrounds. But people contribute in other ways, too, he says. Russo grew up in Brooklyn, where the people in his neighborhood used to watch out for one another. But the area has gotten gentrified, he says, and now people just “walk over each other.” “My neighborhood is destroyed,” he says. “It’s all me, me, me,” Russo says, adding that material things don’t interest him. Russo, honorably discharged from the military after eight years of service between 1981 to 1988, says that he saw a lot during those years. He goes back to working on his drawing. “People are tired of the abuse,” he says, referring to why he thinks the OWS protest has inspired people to come out to the park. In Foley Square that afternoon, four Iraq War veterans hold a banner for the organization Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW). Members from the organization Veterans for Peace stand with the Iraqi vets. The crowd swirls around the soldiers. One Iraq veteran in his dress fatigues stands stiff. Two others wear a black T-shirts emblazoned with the organization’s website (IVAW.org). “I’m pro-soldier, anti-war, and pro-the-99-percent,” says Joseph Carter, who served in the Army from 2002 to 2007, with two combat tours in Iraq. Carter now serves as the coexecutive director for Coffee Strong, a veteran owned and operated GI coffee house in Washington, and works with IVAW’s Operation Recovery. Coffee Strong helps connect soldiers and veterans to resources and support, while Operation Recovery works to stop the redeployment of traumatized troops. In Carter’s opinion, the U.S. government spends its money on the war and bailouts while leaving citizens dry. “The [government] tells us we don’t have money,” says Carter. “But it always finds money to fund the wars,” wars that he believes are “bankrupting” the United States. Carter says he joined IVAW because of what he saw in Iraq. Within six months of his first tour, he says, it became clear that the “deadly” weapons of mass destruction that were cited as the justification for the U.S. invasion of Iraq did not exist. The government lied to the troops and American people, he I would rather be exposed to the inconveniencies attending too much liberty than those attending too small a degree of it. —Thomas Jefferson Olga Peters/The Commons Security volunteer Michael Russo served in the Marines from 1981 to 1988. The people volunteering for security duty come from a variety of military and law enforcement backgrounds. says. “It enraged me.” Carter says he views the military as a tool for supporting public policy. He doesn’t agree with critics who say if someone is antiwar, they’re anti-soldier. Disagreeing with rationales for military action is not a betrayal of the troops, he asserts, especially when it come to Iraq and Afghanistan. “Those wars are not about defending our country,” he said. Citizens can “support the troops by speaking truth to the government,” says Carter, who considers the willingness to speak up as “holding true to the American spirit.” Carter said the OWS movement needs to grow. People should join the movements near them, he said. “We need 10,000 [people] in every major city,” he says. “If we do that, [the government] can’t ignore us.” “To be a patriot, you have to believe in democracy,” says Elliott Adams, a former Army infantryman and paratrooper. Adams, whose military career took him to Korea, Vietnam, Japan, and Alaska, believes that wars are not a form of conflict resolution, nor do they contribute to national security. One thing he is sure of, however, is that a few people “make a whole lot of money off every war.” So, he asks, “Then why do we assume it’s not the intent?” “Democracy is an active form of government,” says Adams, Olga Peters/The Commons who also has a penchant for quoting Frederick Douglass. Citizens have all the power, Adams says, because they are the ones who fight the wars, fires, and crime, the ones who pay the IRS, and the ones who elect the representatives. But people have fallen asleep, he says, forgetting they call the shots. And democracy can’t grow when 90 percent of the financial assets belong to 10 percent of the population, Adams says. Occupation by the numbers The Occupy Wall Street protest has struck during an economically tumultuous time for many Americans. The U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) estimates that 25 million Americans are either unemployed or underemployed. The BLS reports an unemployment rate of 9.1 percent, up from 6.2 percent in September 2008 and 5 percent in September 2001. OWS, so far, has been characterized in media reports as a movement comprised of people under the age of 30 struggling with mountains of student loan debt as they see very few job prospects. According to the BLS, unemployment for those between 16 to 24 rose to 19.1 percent, the highest rate since the federal agency started reporting this statistic in 1948. Among major demographic groups, the BLS’s data showed unemployment rates for young men (20.5 percent) continued upwards. Of unemployed young men, blacks showed a rate of 33.4 percent and Asians at 21.6 percent. The jobless rates for young women (17.5 percent) remained “virtually unchanged,” the BLS reported, with whites at 16.2 percent and Hispanics at 22.1 percent. The number of college students taking on student loan debt has also increased, according to the National Postsecondary Student Aid Study (NPSAS). NPSAS reported that according to the most recent figures based on the 2007-08 academic year, 1.4 million students, about 67 percent, who had graduated from a four-year college or university carried student loan debt. The average debt increased 24 percent to $23,200 in 2008 from $18,650 in 2004. Vermont graduates carry an average of $27,786, according to NPSAS. In Zuccotti Park, protestors reported that their wages couldn’t cover their basic living expenses, let alone student loan debt. 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The Brattleboro Food Co-op is celebrating by featuring not one but three local producers this month; Brattleboro Food Co-op’s Own Sausage produced by Joe Crompton, Dan Rosenberg and Addie Holland’s Real Pickles, and Kristin Barry and Shelly Risinger’s Appalachian Naturals. This Octoberfest continues to introduce us to the diverse collection of producers that thrive in our region. Appalachian Naturals Goshen, MA B4 T h e C ommons • Wednesday, October 12, 2011 SPORTS & RECREATION Left without a home field, Wildcats go on the road T win Valley’s soccer teams have had a nomadic existence this season. The flooding from Tropical Storm Irene on Aug. 28 thoroughly trashed Baker Field, rendering it unplayable for soccer or any other sport for the rest of this year. The backup site was the Twin Valley Middle School in Whitingham. But the combination of poor drainage and heavy rains for most of September has left that field unplayable too. So, the Wildcats have been forced to play “home” games in Arlington, Bennington, and Brattleboro. Fortunately, Brattleboro Union High School has been generous in offering Sawyer Field for Twin Valley’s use. But it is no substitute for being able to dress in your own locker room and then walk a couple hundred yards to your home field. When every game is a road trip, it wears on everyone. That is as good an explanation as any for why the Twin Valley boys and girls are struggling this season. In a “home” game in Brattleboro last Wednesday, the Wildcat boys lost 3-0 to Windsor, another school that lost its soccer field to Irene’s flooding. Windsor scored in the first minute of the game when Nick DeBartolo knocked in a misplayed ball. Shawn Pinsonault added another goal in the 29th minute and David Young got the final tally in the 69th minute. Windsor is a team whose roster is filled with seniors, and Randolph T. Holhut/The Commons Jamie Moore of Bellows Falls won the Russ Pickering Invitational boys’ race on Friday in Westminster. times and Cassie Pedigo added another. BF got all of its goals in the second half. West Rutland beat the Terriers in overtime, 2-1, on Thursday. Samantha Lacz got RANDOLPH T. West Rutland’s first goal at HOLHUT the 20 minute mark. Dumont Sports Roundup tied it in the 30th minute, and the game stayed that way until Lacz got the game-winner in the experience showed in the way they dominated on defense the second overtime period. • On Thursday, the Rebels for most of the game. lost at Arlington, 3-1. Stevie The boys finished the week Roberts scored for the Rebels. on a high note on Saturday Leland & Gray then lost at with a 3-0 win over Otter Bellows Falls in overtime, Valley in Arlington. Colin 2-1, on Saturday morning. Lozito and Ricardo Pereira Dumont scored for BF in the each had a goal and an asfirst half, but Alex Morrow sist, and Dylan Brage scored got the equalizer late in the a goal off a Tony Tarr pass. second half. Dumont then Freshman goalkeeper Sam Molner notched his first career scored the game-winner from shutout for the 3-5-1 Wildcats. Kammie Crawford in the secAs for the Wildcat girls, they ond overtime. haven’t won a game. They Boys’ soccer thought they might have a re• Brattleboro got shut out versal of fortune in Townshend by Monument Mountain, 5-0, last Monday against another last Tuesday. They followed struggling team, the Leland that effort up with a 1-0 loss to & Gray Rebels. Instead, the Burlington on Thursday. The Rebels pulled out a 2-1 win. Colonels then broke their losLeland & Gray’s Giannina ing streak with a 2-1 win over Gaspero-Beckstrom scored first, but Twin Valley’s Jordan Hartford on Saturday. Jordan Renouf and Cesar Moore were Niles later scored on a breakaway to make it 1-1 at the half. the goal scorers as Brattleboro ended the week with a 4-5 The game remained deadrecord. locked until Ashley Goddard • Bellows Falls lost to Twin got the game-winner off of Valley, 3-1, last Tuesday. an acrobatic throw-in by Jeremy Hunt and Tarr scored Oliva Capponcelli in the 53rd to give Twin Valley a 2-0 halfminute. time lead. Tarr scored again Twin Valley had their early in the second half before chances at salvaging a tie, but BF’s Drew Guild broke up the Rebels goalkeeper Bit Aekus shut out. and the defensive line of The Terriers were playing Elizabeth Symanski, Caitlin without their leading scorer, Persa, Capponcelli and Alex Morrow foiled every one of the Matt Marchica, who injured Wildcats’ scoring opportunities his leg against Green Mountain on Sept. 26 and is likely out for in the second half. the season. On Thursday, Proctor shut Last Wednesday, BF lost out Twin Valley, 6-0, and the to Woodstock, 2-0. The game girls finished the week with was scoreless in the first half, a tough 3-2 loss to Arlington but Julian Scherdling scored on Saturday. Shannon Lozito twice in the second half for the and Savannah Nesbitt scored Wasps. for a 2-0 lead at the half, but • Leland & Gray traveled Arlington stormed back with to Proctor last Monday and three unanswered goals in the second half as the Wildcat girls escaped with a scoreless tie. Rebels goalkeeper Tanner fell to 0-6-1. Kard made 11 saves, while Girls’ soccer Proctor’s Rick Carroll stopped • Brattleboro started its week 10 shots. with a pair of scoreless ties. The Rebels blanked Bellows The Colonels played Falls, 2-0, on Saturday to imStevens to a 0-0 tie at home prove to 7-2-1. Brandon Reilly last Monday. Tori Svec and and Hunter Buffum were the Marissa Smith split the goalgoal scorers. keeping duties, as Svec made six saves and Smith stopped Football a penalty kick. The scor• Brattleboro snapped a ing drought continued as the four-game losing streak with a Colonels played Rutland to a 21-6 win over the Burlington scoreless tie. Smith had five Seahorses at Natowich Field saves in goal. Friday night. Against Mount Anthony Burlington scored first on a on Saturday morning, the 24-yard touchdown reception Colonels gutted out a 2-1 by Claudio Herrera. After that, win. Molly Gurney and Greta it was all Colonels. Trenton Pellerin both scored in the Fletcher recovered a fumble in first half, and the Brattleboro the end zone for Brattleboro’s defense held on to give the first touchdown. Andy Hale Colonels a 3-4-3 record. started the second scoring • Bellows Falls beat Mount drive when he recovered an St. Joseph, 4-2, last Tuesday onside kick to start the secas Sara Dumont scored three ond half. Elliot Gragen scored in a 1-yard run and quarterback Tyler Higley ran in the two-point conversion to make it 14-6. Higley later scored on a 2-yard run and Jake Gaboriault kicked the extra point late in the game to ice a victory on Homecoming Night. The 2-4 Colonels face Spaulding this Friday. Randolph T. Holhut/The Commons Bellows Falls goalkeeper Enny Mustapha smothers a loose ball in front of Leland & Gray forward Giannina Gaspero-Beckstrom (24) during the first half of their game in Westminster on Saturday morning. Watching the play is Leland & Gray’s Stevie Roberts. • Bellows Falls came close to knocking off undefeated North Country on Saturday, but fell short, 20-18, at Hadley Field. Trailing 18-12 with 1:09 left in the game, North Country halfback Jason Hatin keyed a game-winning, 69-yard drive. He threw a 29-yard pass to Jacob Buckles, which set up his 2-yard touchdown run. Hattin then ran in the two-point conversion to keep the Falcons perfect at 6-0. The Terriers took a 6-0 lead on a 13-yard by Cooper Long. Buckles scored on a 7-yard run to tie it at the end of the first half. In the second half, Will Bourne hauled in a 13-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Jeremy Kilburn in the third quarter. North Country quarterback Tre Sanville tied up the game on a 2-yard run, but Bourne then scored on a 90-yard kickoff return to give the Terriers an 18-12 lead with 9:07 left in the fourth quarter. It was a tough loss for the 2-4 Terriers, who travel to Lyndon this Saturday. Field hockey • Brattleboro got its first win of the season last Wednesday night, beating Monadnock, 2-0. Lara Atamaniuk and Meghan Kinsman each scored in the second half. Last Tuesday, Brattleboro lost to Mount Anthony, 4-1, in Bennington. The outcome might have been different, had not three of Brattleboro’s goals been disallowed. Nicole Hudon scored the only goal that counted for the Colonels. The Colonels finished the week with a 1-9 record after a 3-0 loss to Hartford on Friday. • Woodstock shut out Bellows Falls last Monday, 3-0. Quinn Lawrence and Shea Wilkinson split time in goal for the Terriers. BF bounced back on Friday with a 1-1 tie with Springfield. Kya Coursen scored from Tori Bissell just three minutes Randolph T. Holhut/The Commons Twin Valley forward Colin Lozito (2) turns toward the goal, closely pursued by Windsor defender Tanner Dana (18) during the first half of their game Wednesday in Brattleboro. into the game. Springfield got the equalizer from Morgan Johnson with under five minutes left in the first half. BF outshot Springfield, 20-9, but couldn’t break the tie. The Terriers played well defensively and Wilkinson had eight saves in goal to finish the week at 1-5-2. Cross country • In a meet last Tuesday in Manchester, the Bellows Falls and Brattleboro boys finished second and third behind Mount Anthony. BF placed three boys in the top 10: Jamie Moore (fifth in 19:49), Collin Johnson (ninth in 20:43), and Timmy Jones (10th in 20:45). Spencer Olson was the top BUHS runner, finishing 12th in 29:47. In the girls’ race, BF’s Anna Clark took second place in 23:26. Brattleboro placed three runners in the top 15 — Hannah Reichel (ninth in 25:39), Leah Silverman (10th in 26:09), and Helen Manning (13th in 27:00) to edge Springfield for third place in team scoring. • In the Russ Pickering Invitational at Bellows Falls Union High School on Friday, the Brattleboro girls finished third. Reichel finished ninth in 21:59 to lead the Colonels, while Manning was 11th in 22:28. Kasey Kidder was 21st in 24:52, Sakia Bailey-De Bruijn was 24th in 24:57 and Janna Yang ended up 39th in 26:36. Anna Clark placed third in a personal best time of 20:40 to lead host Bellows Falls. Jamie Moore of Bellows Falls won the boys race in 16:31. Olson was Brattleboro’s first finisher, placing 14th in 18:21. Staff Pick! We carry a wide variety of local Vermont dairy products like organic Strafford Milk, Butterworks yogurts and creams, and Commonwealth Dairy Greek yogurts. Please try to support our Vermont farms in the aftermath of the flooding from Tropical Storm Irene! Blue Diamond Almond Milk in 3 flavors including unsweetened, is just 2.99 for a half gallon. We now have GoodBelly Probiotic drinks in yummy flavors like mango and pomagrante on sale as well. And to celebrate Octoberfest, check out one of our local Producers of the Month, Real Pickles from Greenfield, MA, with their locally-sourced sauerkraut. Perfect with those sausages! Randolph T. Holhut/The Commons Hannah Reichel and Helen Manning led the Brattleboro girls to a third place finish at the Russ Pickering Invitational on Friday. Something new for you to enjoy on your morning toast is earth Balance Coconut Spread. –Whitney, Bulk and Frozen Foods Manager BrATTleBoro Food CO - OP Mon - Sat 8–9, Sun 9–9 2 Main Street, Brattleboro www.brattleborofoodcoop.coop SECTION B C VOICES Wednesday, October 12, 2011 • page C1 OPINION • COMMENTARY • LETTERS Join the discussion: [email protected] VIEWPOINT DISPATCH Not enough, too fast Public needs more time to digest state’s energy plan Wilder MEREDITH ANGWIN hortly after (yesvy.blogspot.com), a familGovernor Peter iar pro-Vermont Yankee voice Shumlin took ofin the region, is founder of the fice, he said that he Energy Education Project at was very surprised that the the Ethan Allen Institute. A State Energy Plan included physical chemist, writer, and Vermont Yankee operatenergy educator, she has ining past March 2012. Now dustry experience in renewable, his team has put together a combustion-based, and nuclear proposal for Vermont withenergy. out Vermont Yankee: the Comprehensive Energy Plan (CEP). choices. The plan was released by The Institute for Energy the Department of Public and the Environment of Service (DPS) on Sept. 14. Vermont Law School (VLS) The public comment peannounced that it had exriod ends Oct. 10, less than a tensive input on the CEP. month later. Indeed, the plan includes The CEP covers electricreferences to “process” and ity, heating, transmission, “stakeholders” and many and transportation. It is over proposed legislative changes. 600 pages long, including Montpelier will be busy. But the appendices. The main there is little here that an envolume is 368 pages. Less gineer would call a plan. than a month does not give the public much time to reDespite its lack of content, view the documents. the plan has already come Even a cursory review under fire from Vermont shows some serious flaws. Public Interest Research The CEP includes ambiGroup (VPIRG). tious renewable goals, but VPIRG spokespeople little actual planning. Among said that Governor Shumlin other things, it doesn’t adshould be more aggressive dress the issue of electricabout building renewables ity supply without Vermont than the plan indicated. Yankee in a straightforward However, it is unclear how fashion. VPIRG derived the numbers The electricity section on proposed build-out rates of the summary document for renewables. These num(pages 7 through 9) includes bers are not explicitly in the expanding the standard ofplan. fer program for renewable The plan’s discussion of energy, and hiring a new future greenhouse gas emis“renewable energy project sions is also problematic. A development director” for chart of greenhouse emisDPS. The electricity section sions (volume 2, page 14) does not mention natural gas shows that greenhouse gases or acknowledge any gap in from the electricity sector the electricity supply. rise after 2012. However, the home and Presumably, this rise ocbusiness heating section curs after Vermont Yankee of the summary (pages 10 would close — although this through 12) does note that fact is not specified. The there might be an electricity chart also shows aggressive supply gap. and unworkable projections On page 11, the heating for lowering greenhouse section encourages the exemissions, along with a note pansion of a gas pipeline into that the greenhouse goals Vermont because natural gas will not be met. “can address two key needs: The state of Vermont reduce Vermonters’ reliance claims that controlling on overseas oil for heating.... greenhouse gas emissions is and help fill a gap in electric a major energy policy goal. supply.” The CEP chart shows that Continuing with electricclosing Vermont Yankee will ity concerns, the CEP conlead to more greenhouse tains goals such as meeting gases. 90 percent of our energy However, Shumlin’s polneeds by renewable sources icy is to close Vermont by 2050 (page 3 of summary Yankee anyway. This makes document). There are no no sense. numbers or dates for future People in Vermont need construction of renewable to see more content in the sources, however. No state- plan and fewer massive inments such as “this much consistencies. They need wind energy by this date.” more time to review the Vermonters need facts: plan. costs, timelines, sites, hard At this point, it is hard to data about proposed gentake this lengthy document eration, and transmission very seriously. We are the 99 percent S ‘When I watched the corralling, the pepper spray attack, the beatings of people already subdued on the ground prior to arrest, and the detention of journalists — our eyes and ears in New York — I had to do something. ‘The next day I was on the road to Zuccotti Park.’ John Nirenberg Take your pick of causes. Brattleboro John Nirenberg has served as a dean, professor, consultant, in New York — I had to do and writer, applying his education and experience to uncovering the something. principles that result organizations in that are psychologically healthy, The next day I was on the October centerfold creative, productive, and satisfying places. He works as a mentor to road to Zuccotti Park. of Adbusters magazine showed a female doctoral students in the School of Management at Walden University, The energy in the park was dancer atop the brass bull icon an online university headquartered in Minnesota. of lower Manhattan, the symthrilling. It was festive, welbol of Wall Street. She is calm; coming, engaging. her arms are outstretched. It was also comforting and when I watched the corralShe is not quite Joan of Arc, to think freely, whether tea reassuring because here was a ling, the pepper spray attack, but she conveys the power and partiers and anarchists or gathering of articulate, comCommunists and Catholics; the beatings of people already grace of a superior consciousmunity-building people who another is the right to peacesubdued on the ground prior ness rising from the back of didn’t feel they all had to have the charging bull unaware that fully assemble. There are other to arrest, and the detention of the same priorities, the same necessary rights, of course, but journalists — our eyes and ears his time is up. Behind her, in n see 99 percent, page C2 a cloud of tear gas, a mob is in the throes of battle. The call rang out in bold text: “Occupy Wall Street September 17th. Bring Tent.” Unlike the poster’s hint of Seattle at the ministerial meeting of the World Trade Organization in 1999, what the New York City police got instead was a YouTubed, Twittered, Facebooked exposé of this generation’s confrontation with “Gestapo-like tactics in the streets of New York,” to paraphrase Connecticut Sen. Abraham Ribicoff at the 1968 Democratic Presidential Convention in Chicago, shaming the police back into a mostly civil relationship with the gathering. From the pepper spray seen ‘round the world to the surprisingly respectful response by the gathering, this seed of what could have been just another anarchists’ picnic germinated and sprouted into a flowering consciousness-raising that this country desperately needs. I had to go, just as I had to be in Chicago in ‘68. If we are to be the democracy we claim for ourselves, there are some things I consider inviolate. John Nirenberg One right is that of anyone A graphic statement against financial greed on Wall Street. T he September/ VIEWPOINT Failed salmon program doesn’t deserve new life $10 to $14 million to rebuild Bethel hatchery could help the Connecticut far more effectively Greenfield, Mass. Karl Meyer (www.karlmeyerwriting.com), an environregional direcmental journalist and author, tor of the U.S. writes frequently on Connecticut Fish and Wildlife River issues. Service’s (USFWS) Northeast Region in Hadley, Mass., and Bill Archambault, deputy asWRNFH is salmon eggs — six sistant regional director of million of them annually for fisheries, want a boatload of our river’s longest running failpork for the failed salmon pro- ure, the 44-year attempt to recgram of the Connecticut River reate an extinct salmon strain. Atlantic Salmon Commission One hundred and seven fish re(CRASC). Now! turned this season. Through an act of Congress, What will senators Kerry, Weber and Archambault are Brown, Leahy, and Sanders seeking $10 to $14 million in do with this request in a time emergency funding to rebuild of paper-thin budgets and colthe White River National Fish lapsing native herring and shad Hatchery (WRNFH) in Bethel, runs? wiped out by Tropical Storm Irene in August. Last year, when the The primary product of WRNFH got $723,000 in W endi Weber, federal stimulus funds for a makeover, more than $421,000 went to a refrigeration manufacturer in Missouri for an egg chiller. Ironically, a $100,000 egg chiller has sat useless at the Richard Cronin National Salmon Station in Sunderland, Mass., for years. Upon delivery, it simply never worked. Four years ago, WRNFH spent millions in taxpayer dollars to build a well system to supply its hatchery salmon. Upstream, the White River had become infected with the invasive, bottom-smothering algae didymo, which could be transported via eggs and fry that they disperse to tributaries and sent to school programs. They want to start again. Meanwhile, state/federal CRASC commissioners seem willing to play fast and loose with the potentially disastrous dispersal of didymo to Connecticut River tributaries through hatchery fry. Right now, they are devising a rush plan to parcel the surviving 900 broodstock hatchery salmon at White River to hatcheries in Massachusetts, Vermont, and Connecticut — though they admit they can’t be “100 percent certain didymo won’t be taken out of the [White River] facility.” They’d jeopardize an ecosystem for their program. All this information was revealed at an emergency CRASC Tech Committee n see hatchery, page C3 Ann Froschauer/USFWS A USFWS technician at the White River National Fish Hatchery in Bethel sorts Atlantic salmon that escaped and were recaptured after flood waters from Tropical Storm Irene receded. VOICES C2 Smoked Meats & Cheese Mention this ad & receive 15% OFF your purchase!! Bacon • Ham • Sausage Duck • Chicken Grafton • Crowley • Sugarbush & our own Cheeses VT Mustard & Jam Gifts • Gift Baskets • Vermont T-Shirts Grandma Miller Pies • Vermont-made Wine & Beer Rt. 30, Townshend, 1 Mile South of the Village 802-365-7372 www.lawrencessmokeshop.com MILLIONS TO LEND LOWER THAN EVER RATES AT *Rates based on your creditworthiness, see River Valley Credit Union for details. Who says that no one is lending money? Our multi-million dollar growth this year means we have multi-millions to lend. 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(Route. 9 West) West Brattleboro 1075 Putney Rd. Entrance Thru Brisk Ln. (Behind Wendy’s & Dunkin’s) Brattleboro 802.254.5275 Detailing at Putney Road, Starting at $8900 Hours for both locations: Mon–Sat 9:00 – 5:30 $5 Market Coupon – Last Week! TOWNSHEND COMMON FA R M E R S ’ M A R K E T THURSDAY 3:30-6:30 OCTOBER 13 Junction Rt. 30 & 35 RAIN OR SHINE FARM FRESH FRUITS, VEGGIES, EGGS, GRASS-FED MEATS, BREADS, BAKED GOODS, & MORE PLUS HANDMADE GLASS & DINNER ITEMS EBT & FARM TO FAMILY COUPONS WELCOME 802-869-2141 or [email protected] • Wednesday, October 12, 2011 n 99 percent from SECTION FRONT agenda, or the same list of grievances, but who shared the belief that the system is not only broken, it will take serious rethinking to get our country back on track. The genius of the coalition that urged the occupation was to recognize that it isn’t about a single grievance — not even a long agenda of grievances. It is about the vulgar appropriation of the labor of the nation for the astronomically disproportionate benefit of a select few people: the 1 percent, as they say, at the expense of the 99 percent. It is the vulgarity of controlling all of the resources and means of production and then vacuuming all the crumbs that fall from the table: the socalled “entitlements” of Social Security, unemployment insurance, children’s health assistance, and other programs that are no more than the collective common decency of one neighbor extending a helping hand to another. It is the relentless aggregation of wealth in so few hands that is particularly galling. How can a decent society allow 400 people to accumulate more wealth than the total accumulated wealth of 160 million of its other citizens? This voluntary, spontaneous coalition of self-organizing, self-regulating, respectful, articulate people is a welcome antidote to the self-centered, privileged, and paranoiac Tea Partiers who have so perversely twisted history and logic to claim that people like the fictional characters John Galt and Gordon Gekko built this country on self interest, greed, and narcissism, and that they deserve to own it as their personal bounty — and to hell with everyone else. Every now and then I, as well as the nation, seem to fall through a rabbit hole, and I think I must be missing something when tax breaks for the rich are seen as reasonable even though their taxes are already at their historically lowest point, while so many societal needs go unmet. I wonder how the Democrats fell into this hole, too, and became complicit with the Republican agenda. Their socalled “compromise” for bipartisanship is capitulation by another name. Like the child crying out “But he isn’t wearing anything at all!” in “The Emperor’s New Clothes,” these articulate, mostly young people, point out the abject failure of the freemarket system that in a winner-take-all world impoverishes millions, destroys the middle class, and has substituted a blanket of insecurity for the pitiful safety net that was once seen as the very least a prosperous country could do for its people. When did it become a source of shame to build community? When did the idea of progress toward a healthy, satisfying life for all become treasonous? When did the idea of a pension at the end of one’s life become a socialist plot to undermine America? When did public education become a tool for instilling competitiveness and individual success instead of citizenship and a national identity? Being at the gathering in Zuccotti Park allowed me to stand in solidarity with those John Nirenberg abused by the system. It was a way for me to take part, even an infinitesimal one, in the long-overdue repudiation of the Reagan-birthed neoconservative economics that became today’s perverted predator capitalism — the one that ate not only New York, but also Chicago, Tokyo, SÃo Paulo, Bangkok, Johannesburg, London, Paris, and everything in between, the one with globegirdling tendrils that has made globalization synonymous with a rapaciousness that would make Adam Smith spin in his grave. Bringing some of the pain — of unemployment, of a deteriorating environment, of out-of-reach higher education costs, of credit crunches and property foreclosures, of rising poverty, of deteriorating health care, of inadequate pensions, of a collapsing infrastructure, of more — to the doorstep of those who profited by causing all of this mayhem is the duty of each one of us. They must be held accountable. The people of this country have paid to protect their privilege and shore up their institutions. In return, the bankers and financiers resumed their abuse and restored their arrogance with the nourishment of enormous bonuses as if entitled to a bailout while forgetting where it came from. They need to be reminded. Laying out myriad reasons and demands would only comfort them. It would only reassure them that fundamentally the system they created was okay, if only we just changed the oil or fixed a flat tire. That won’t do. The system itself needs a transformation. As one sign said, you can’t fix a system that believes in “infinite growth on a finite planet.” Was it a coincidence, I wonder, that Sept. 17 was chosen to begin this demonstration? That was the day in 1787 that the U.S. Constitution was signed in Philadelphia and sent to the states for ratification. Ours was the first modern country to depend on its citizens to legitimize it. The document as read in the 13 state houses began, “We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare...” The thrill of being with these people — young and old, employed and unemployed, union workers and professionals, the tech savvy and the tech averse — was all the more remarkable because of the conversations, the patience in listening to one another, the diversity of causes and aspirations, and the fundamental sense of participating in a commonwealth of mutual teaching and learning that was exhilarating. All voices were welcomed. There was a scene that typified my observations. Someone from the financial district began a conversation with a resident of the gathering, and it was going all over the place as these things do, but it was respectful. A crowd naturally gravitated to the size that could accommodate natural hearing since there was no voice amplification. And, after going around a few times between “liberty” on the one hand and “fairness” on the other, a truce was called and with a handshake, the knot of spectators dispersed. I turned to listen to the band play and watch a woman gyrating to keep several hula hoops moving while holding a sign that read, “There is enough to go around.” She looked much as I imagined Joan of Arc felt who said, “I am not afraid... I was born to do this.” W hen an individual is protesting society's refusal to acknowledge his dignity as a human being, his very act of protest confers dignity on him. —Bayard Rustin T o sin by silence when they should protest makes cowards of men. —Abraham Lincoln LETTERS FROM READERS VY: safe and reliable by ‘all objective fact-based measures’ McKay’s Used Cars I Now in 2 Locations T h e C ommons have read a lot of articles discussing “safety” and “reliability” when it comes to Vermont Yankee. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission regulates safety at the plant. This is done by providing two full-time inspectors and implementing an inspection program that includes about 12 specialist inspections per year. All of Vermont Yankee’s findings over the recent past have been “green” on the NRC’s color-coding scheme, indicating that the plant is considered very safe by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Information about Vermont Yankee’s safety record can be found at www. nrc.gov (www.nrc.gov). Reliability at Vermont Yankee is monitored by the nuclear industry itself. In 1979, the nuclear industry formed the Institute for Nuclear Plant Operations to promote excellence in nuclear plant operation through plant evaluations, training accreditation, events analysis, and assistance. Industry efforts to improve plant reliability have been very successful, with plant capacity factors reaching well into the 90-percent range. Vermont Yankee is recognized as a top industry performer and has historically had very high capacity factors. Since 2002, Vermont Yankee has had two breakerto-breaker operating cycles, which means the plant operated nonstop for an 18-month fuel cycle, resulting in a capacity factor of 100 percent. By all objective, fact-based measures, Vermont Yankee is both a safe and reliable plant. I would think that people who look objectively at the operation of the plant will come to the same conclusion and welcome 20 more years of safe and reliable operation. Jim DeVincentis Vernon The writer, a 27-year employee of the Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corp., and subsequently, Entergy, is a registered professional engineer. Community has really come together E xcellent commentary by John Mack [“A long-term process,” Voices, Sept. 28]. There certainly was a core group of people who went way beyond what normal people would be expected to do: people (like John Mack, and I could name countless others) who worked endless hours every day for free during the emergency. We thank you, one and all. In addition, there have been few people in the villages, it seems, who haven’t pitched in, despite lives that became incredibly complicated and time consuming. People who couldn’t cook or take a shower were shoveling dirt out of neighbors’ driveways, painting homemade road-hazard signs, putting up cones and barriers to stop people from driving off cliffs that had previously been roads, and performing an endless number of other tasks. These were people struggling to get by, putting in 12 to 15 hours a day simply to survive, yet still finding a way to help out. The community really has come out and come together. John Darling South Newfane T h e C ommons VOICES • Wednesday, October 12, 2011 ESSAY C3 EDITORIAL A day out of time The 99 percent cries ‘Enough!’ When just being with one’s family creates special moments Brattleboro Mary W. Mathias, a licensed clinical social worker and I left home in a writer, spent many years workBrattleboro around ing in refugee mental health. She 8:30 a.m. and drove is writing a book about communal north to spend the day with my farming in the 1970s. son and his family. It felt lucky from the start, with sun shining and no sign of rain. fruit, and some produced When I arrived, close to sour green, and we took what three hours later, those night we could, tossing the wormy owls — Dave, Heather, and and fungus-y ones. Where we home-schooled Aedan, age 10 walked, we squished fallen ap—were getting up, making cof- ples, until the air around us fee, stirring about in preparawas apple sharp. Yellowjackets tion for the day. I never have buzzed in for the sweetness. to leave home at the crack of After dumping all the apdawn to show up in time for ples into a basket back at the their breakfast.. house, we headed out again They live on a hill in on the bikes, on another road Hardwick, up a steep drive, in past some horses and cattle in a little yellow half of a house. a pasture. Aedan led us downThe other half burned down hill, shirt-tails flying. I was less in 1997. The house has under- wobbly, but still took it slow. gone many changes over time, We turned onto a shady, but that side of the family has grown-over logging road, lived there for almost 35 years. muddy after rains, brown burBeing there made me feel dock bushes on either side. younger again — more play“There’s a nice apple tree in ful and adventurous, with the clearing,” said Dave. “I’ll the sense that everything one go check it out.” He dumped needed was available right his bike and bounded ahead, around. Everyone one needed startling a pair of deer browsing to spend time with was no fallen apples under the tree. more than a whisper away. We Aedan and I were puddle had planned nothing ahead of jumping through damp grass time, other than spending the when Dave came back toward day together. us. Smelling crispness in the “These apples are too small air, finding a red leaf on the to bother with,” he said. ground, noticing dry seed He opened his collecting heads blowing in the wind, bag; he had already gathered Dave finished up his coffee and dozens of little green ones. We said, “Let’s go down to Paul’s reached in for a taste, thinking and pick wild apples.” maybe they would be worth“Can I ride my new bike?” while, if sweet. Crunched besaid Aedan. He had already tween the teeth, the green skins been looping around the door- were rough and tough; the apyard on his black mountain ple meat was juicy, but gave off bike. His home school had de- only pale wisps of flavor. clared a holiday, and he was “Let’s give them to the ready for a field trip. horses and the cows,” said There were two old bikes Dave. leaning against the back of the And so we did, offering them house. Dave took a tall threepalms up to the three horses speed, and I rolled the other while leaning carefully over the one — a beat-up, off-white electric fence. The cows stayed one-speed with hand brakes — back but were happy to mouth out into the dooryard. up tossed apples from the pasI wondered if I could even ture grass. remember how to ride a bike. “How about you, Heather?” Back in the kitchen, we Heather said, “I’m going to washed, quartered, and seeded do laundry and hang it out. as many apples as we had paBeautiful day. No rain!” tience for, threw them into a “You’ll do fine, Mom,” said three-quart pot, and set them Dave. “But be careful, only the simmering. Within an hour, front brake works.” there was a pot of applesauce They rode off down the on the stove, and an appledriveway, and I followed on scented house, like the old days foot, wheeling the bike by its on the Farm. handlebars. Once on the hard In the front garden, Aedan gravel road, Aedan went flyhad discovered a stand of tall ing ahead, followed by Dave, conical shaggy mane mushand then me, wobbling along, rooms, which we knew to be squeeze-testing the front brake safe to eat. every few seconds. We collected and cleaned the young ones, and Dave Paul’s apple trees were not made a mushroom-tomato far away, although no one stew, adding leftover chunks passing by in a car would ever of chicken, and we all ate have noticed them, close to lunch in the late afternoon, sitthe road but lost in the dense ting outside at the picnic taovergrowth. ble in the warm westering sun, We parked our bikes in a with a salad of young lettuce ditch, clambered up a weedy leaves fresh from their garden. bank, and then beat our way Freshly laundered clothes blew over branches and jumble to in the breeze nearby. reach the tall, scraggly, unTo me, it was a day out of pruned wild orchard.The trees time — or a day lived as days there were laden with apples. had been lived long ago, when Aedan climbed up in a tree people woke up and smelled and shook it. Down came the the air, glanced at the sky, and ripe apples. decided with few words what The ones freshly fallen were that day was meant for. warm from hanging in the It was a day lived with litsunny air, but the ones that had tle fanfare or planning, where lain on the ground overnight humans and the natural world were cold to the touch. We around them fell easily into the gathered and bagged the best same rhythm, until the line beof the warms and then moved tween people and nature beon to the next tree. came so exceedingly thin as no Some trees bore sweet red longer to exist. O ne recent day, OPEN 365 DAYS A YEAR 802 365 4600 Full Service Meat, Grocery & Deli Including Hot Lunch Served Daily Call ahead for Pizza, Fried Foods, Grinders on the Deli Direct Line: 802-365-4180 • FRESH PRODUCE • GOURMET CHEESE • FRESH SEAFOOD • • FLORAL • MOBIL GAS • ATM • Located on Scenic Rt 30 In Townshend, Vermont M-F 6 AM-9 PM • SAT 7 AM - 9 PM SUN 8 AM -9 PM I f you are wonder- ing why protesters have occupied Wall Street for the past few weeks, and why similar protests have been springing up around the country, consider these facts. Since the end of 2007, the number of working-age Americans has grown by 7 million. Yet the number of those over age 18 who have full-time work has declined by 300,000. Job growth has come to a standstill, yet many U.S. corporations are enjoying record profits and are collectively sitting on a cash stash of $2 trillion. They say they won’t create new jobs until there is enough consumer demand to support them. Consumer spending makes up 70 percent of the U.S. economy. But consumers aren’t spending. If you have a job, you’re worried about keeping it, knowing that you are only a couple of paychecks away from disaster. If you’re jobless, you’re too busy trying to survive and aren’t thinking about buying a new car or a television. We now have this vicious cycle of decreased consumer demand leading to fewer jobs which leads to still-lower demand. But, unlike past recessions, corporations are still making money because they are producing and selling more products overseas than in America. In other words, corporations have reached a point where they don’t need American consumers to be profitable. And, unlike past recessions, the federal government is doing almost nothing to stimulate demand because our Congress is being held hostage by conservative berserkers who would rather see an economic collapse than a second term for President Obama. There are too many politicians in Washington more obsessed with the federal deficit than addressing the needs of 25 million Americans who are either unemployed or underemployed. These politicians are more concerned about protecting the people they’ve taken to calling “job creators” than about helping the millions of Americans drowning in mortgage and personal debt. All of what we are seeing now is a culmination of three decades of economic policies that benefited the wealthy at the expense of the rest of us. Since 1979, the median U.S. income, adjusted for inflation, has been virtually flat, even though the economy is twice as large as it was three decades ago. And nearly all the gains have gone to the wealthiest Americans. The richest 1 percent now accounts for 24 percent of the nation’s income and 40 percent of its wealth, and the gap between the richest and poorest Americans is the widest it’s been since the 1920s. That is why Occupy Wall Street became inevitable, and why this protest is gaining more support with each passing day. Capitalism no longer works for the 99 percent of Americans who aren’t super-wealthy. Politicians of both parties are bought and paid for by the wealthy and powerful, and none of the CEOs who looted the federal treasury and brought the global economy the brink of total collapse has faced accountability for their actions. Far from being the selfindulgent, incoherent, and confused dirty neo-hippies that the chattering class make them out to be, the workers, the students, the unemployed, and the poor who are camped out in Liberty Square form just the first wave on the beachhead, fighting a longoverdue battle against the forces of unbridled avarice and greed. They are one with their brothers and sisters who did likewise earlier this year in Tunis and Cairo, in Madrid and Athens, in Tripoli and Damascus, and in Madison. They are standing up and fighting back. They are crying “Enough!” It is not an exaggeration to say that our nation’s entire economic, social, and political order is being challenged by a movement that is calling for America to live up to its promise of democracy. Too many people are impoverished, disenfranchised, and cast aside by a system where the elite call all the shots. The cry rises up for something better from people who have been let down one time too many. The elites didn’t take the young people in Cairo seriously until former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was forced to step down. That’s what can happen when the collective courage of a small group of determined people sets into motion a force that ultimately can’t be stopped. This force is what we are seeing in New York. This force is what democracy looks like. Editorials represent the collective voice of The Commons and are written by the editors or by members of the Vermont Independent Media Board of Directors. We present our point of view not to have the last word, but the first: we heartily encourage letters from readers, and we love spirited dialogue even if — especially if — you disagree with us. Send your letters to [email protected], or leave a comment at www.commonsnews.org. n Hatchery meeting on Sept. 23. This capital-intensive, million-dollar system of four federal and two state hatcheries floats a small number of well-benefitted government jobs, while ignoring native migrant fish and the lessons of a river ecosystem. It’s a public relations machine, reaching into public schools and assisted via a few hundred, spawned-out hatchery salmon dumped into lakes and streams to mollify anglers duped into believing it will work. With $14 million you could do a lot of good for the Connecticut. With just a fraction of that money, independent scientists could conduct investigations and get real answers about why millions of migratory American shad have remained blocked from getting upstream to Vermont and New Hampshire on the main stem Connecticut at Turners Falls for decades, abandoned from SECTION FRONT to a treacherous power canal literally behind the federal Silvio Conte Anadromous Fish Laboratory. A tiny share of those dollars could begin getting real answers to why a flood of 630,000 blueback herring passing Holyoke dam in 1985 collapsed like the September Red Sox to a “run” of 138 fish here in 2011. Less than half of $14 million could easily build an independent, Five College–based, river ecology lab that would advance our understanding of native fish, the food web, and the mix of seasonal life cycles critical to sustaining a healthy ecosystem. Massachusetts is the crossroads of the Connecticut, where migratory fish have remained blocked from Vermont and New Hampshire waters since 1798. Once built, a sustaining endowment could surely be found for such a facility. “New England’s River” would finally have a think tank worthy of its critical importance. Today, just a few hundred thousand could easily get an answer to the simple question that’s left New Englanders in the dark for generations: Why hundreds of millions of dollars spent on an extinct, coldwater fish is never going to sustain anything but pork production for the 44-year-old Connecticut River Atlantic Salmon Commission, on a warming river in the era of climate change. In 1967, New Englanders from Enfield, Conn. to Walpole, N.H., and Bellows Falls, Vt. were promised great fishing and a bounty of seafood by the New England Cooperative Fisheries Restoration Program, the organization that became today’s CRASC. The chief objective of this federal/state amalgam: “provide the public with high-quality sport fishing opportunities in a highly urbanized area as well as to provide for the long-term needs of the population for seafood.” Runs of a million American shad, commercially harvestable blueback herring returns, and a hypothetical run of fishable (though centuries extinct) salmon were promised. Instead, we’re left with an endless conveyor of salmon pork, no seafood, and damned poor fishing. It’s time to stop this recklessness and waste on the Connecticut. It’s time for accountability from the USFWS. Jettison the Age of Aquarius salmon scheme; refocus the program on still-living native runs. A new name — the “Connecticut River Migratory Fisheries Commission” — would help; all-new commissioners and an ecosystem focus would be a real start. Get The Commons in your mailbox Become a member of Vermont Independent Media today! 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NEWS C4 T h e C ommons • Wednesday, October 12, 2011 AROUND THE TOWNS Google seminar on online business tools offered Oct. 13 BRATTLEBORO — Building a Better Brattleboro (BaBB), in partnership with Marlboro College Graduate School, will present a Google seminar that provides the tools and resources for Vermont businesses to get online and succeed online at the Marlboro Grad Center, 28 Vernon St., on Oct. 13. Morning and afternoon sessions will be held at 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. This is a free seminar for small businesses run by real Google employees. All area businesses are invited and encouraged to attend. According to BaBB Exceutive Director Andrea Livermore, the seminar kicks off an important component of a primary project that it had taken on this year, namely the digital upgrade of the entirety of the downtown business community. “Our hope is to develop a stronger, more cohesive web presence that will translate into increased business,” she said. “We know that 97 percent of Americans look online for local products and services and 63 percent of America’s small businesses do not have a website or online presence. These businesses are virtually invisible to many potential customers. We can’t afford for Brattleboro to be invisible." At the seminar, small business owners will learn how to get a free website, run one’s small business online, and best practices on marketing one’s business online. With professional templates and a few easy steps, businesses can create and publish a website in less than 60 minutes. For more information, or to register for the seminar, go to sites.google.com/site/vtgyboreg. If you can’t make it to the seminar, you can get your free website and hosting online at www. vermontgetonline.com. For more in- The church is located at 18 formation, contact BaBB at 802- Town Crier Drive, off Putney 257-4886 or via email (babb@ Road, across from the Shell sover.net). Station. The entry way is handicapped accessible. For information, contact the church office Methodist Women at 802-254-4218 or by email host fall rummage sale ([email protected]). BRATTLEBORO— The United Methodist Women of the First United Methodist Church will be holding its fall rummage sale on Saturday, Oct. 15, from 9 a.m. until noon. New and used clothing will be featured. Prices are not marked. Customers may take what they need and pay what they can. Monies received are given to both local and Methodist Mission needs, including the Brattleboro Drop In Center, Brattleboro Pastoral Counseling Center, Women’s Freedom Center, Morningside Shelter, the overflow shelter, Brattleboro Area Hospice, Windham Child Care, CHABA, and others. Yoga classes offered at BMH starting Oct. 15 BRATTLEBORO — Brattleboro Memorial Hospital will offer an eight-week “Introduction to Yoga” course with Kim Timlege, LMT, starting Oct. 15. This gentle, beginners’ class demonstrates yoga philosophy and the eight-limbed path, along with how to incorporate the practices of mindfulness in yoga. Classes take place every Saturday through Dec. 3, from 9-10:30 a.m., in the BMH Exercise Room. Timlege is a Certified Kripalu Yoga Instructor and owner and founder of The Massage Studio in Brattleboro. She brings her extensive training and knowledge in therapeutic massage, yoga and meditation to help students bring their body, mind, and spirit into balance. Class size is limited to 12 students. To register, call 802257-8877 and leave your name and mailing address to receive the release form, which must be mailed back along with the $100 registration fee. Checks should be made payable to Kim Timlege and received by close of registration. The third annual Brattleboro Buddy Walk takes place on Saturday, Oct. 15, at the town common. Participants include, but are not limited to, people with Down syndrome, their families, friends, teachers, coworkers and other supporters. Anyone, with or without a direct connection to a member of the Down syndrome community, is welcome to attend. The Buddy Walk was developed by the National Down Syndrome Society (NDSS) to promote acceptance and inclusion of all people with Down syndrome. Brattleboro will join more than 250 other locations around the nation in this event. Alfred Hughes Jr. will be the Brattleboro Grand Marshal. Contact Chloe Learey at the Prouty Center at 802-258-7852, ext. 11, or by email ( chloe@ winstonprouty.org ) for more information. Prouty Center hosts Buddy Walk on Oct. 15 BRATTLEBORO — The Winston Prouty Center is participating in the National Buddy Walk program as part of Down Syndrome Awareness Month in October. We Have The LARGEST SELECTION In Stock In new england! 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In this spirit, the First Congregational Church has invited the “Minister of Music” and the lead soprano from All Peoples Christian Church in Los Angeles to lead a workshop on gospel music on Saturday, Oct. 22. It is open to anyone who would care to learn more about singing, no matter their individual beliefs or religion. Participants will be also invited (and encouraged) to take part singing in the 10 a.m. Sunday worship service the day after the workshop. The idea for the workshop Courtesy photo Aeros Pierce, the Minister of Music at All Peoples Christian Church in Los Angeles. Courtesy photo came to Joseph Amico, the church’s pastor, during a service when everyone began singing the assigned hymn, “This is the Day.” Although the organist played the music as well as he usually did, and the people sang with their usual enthusiasm, Amico felt “as if the song came straight out of a hymnal.” Amico remembered having heard this song sung with so much more verve. Frankie Stewart, lead soprano and an elder at All As a pastor of a small multi- Peoples Christian Church in Los Angeles. cultural, multi-racial church in South Los Angeles before coming to Vermont, Amico said that what was very memorable about All Peoples Christian Church had been its “outstanding music.” And when people ask what he misses most from his old church, he always says, “I miss the music.” It was at All Peoples where he had heard “This is the Day” sung with such exuberant passion, as that church’s congregation clapped hands, hit tambourines, and made the song such a raising of the spirit. So Amico turned to his new congregation in West Brattleboro and asked if they could “jazz the hymn up a bit.” Not really to his surprise, Amico found that the congregation was not only quite successful in breathing new life into the hymn, but they also really enjoyed themselves doing so. Spontaneously jazzing up “This is the Day” proved such a hit with his congregation in West Brattleboro that Amico went to n see gospel, page D2 Restored theater curtains on display in Guilford GUILFORD—On Saturday, Oct. 15, at 7 p.m., the Broad Brook Grange will show all of its painted theater curtains, described by the program’s organizers as “a collection of important folk art works.” Guilford’s Grange Hall has four curtains, but they are not ordinarily all viewable on any given occasion. As part of the ongoing 250th anniversary celebration of the town, all four will be lowered and then, over an interval, raised one by one to reveal each of the four scenes. Some 160 Vermont town halls and Granges contain one or more of these painted theater curtains, an example of a folk art form that flourished for only a few decades. These curtains were cleaned and restored by a team from the Vermont Painted Theater Curtain project, under the auspices of the now-defunct Vermont Museum and Gallery Alliance. The project continues, however, now called Curtains Without Borders, as it moves into other New England states. M.J. Davis, who was one of the conservators who worked on Guilford’s curtains, will present exhibit materials in a slide presentation on the Vermont project, showing notable curtains from various towns, and will speak on the process by which these curtains were located, catalogued, and, in many cases, restored. All of Guilford’s curtains, as well as at least some of a set of scenic panels, have been identified as the work of one of Vermont’s principal artists in Courtesy photo The Grand Drape in Guilford, the curtain that was generally used to keep the stage hidden before a show or between scenes. Chariot scenes are a frequent subject of painter Charles W. Henry. this genre, Charles W. Henry, who happens to have been born in Guilford. Henry and his family comprised an itinerant arts group that traveled from town to town in the late 19th and early 20th century. They would take up residence in a town, and, while Charles Henry fulfilled commissions to paint scenic curtains for local buildings, his family would perform vaudeville shows, often on the stages where the curtains would be hung. 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MATTRESSES & FURNITURE FIND MARBLE Taking Orders Now $ Thru October 31st to be Henry’s work. For decades, it was thought that Broad Brook Grange had three curtains, but when the conservation team examined the collection more closely, a fourth curtain, depicting a lake scene, was discovered. 4500 BrattleboroSubaru.com • 1234 Putney Road, Brattleboro, VT • 802-251-1000 THE SMART CHOICE THE ARTS D2 n Gospel the church’s deacons to ask if he could arrange a workshop on gospel singing. The deacons were excited about the idea. When Amico was leaving his Los Angeles post, Aeros Pierce, the minister of music at All Peoples, and Frankie Stewart, the lead soprano and an elder there, said that they would be delighted to “come up to Vermont and do a workshop,” he said. Amico took them up on their offer. Pierce, a jazz musician, received the NAACP Theatre Award for best music director for the play “Bananas,” based on the life of actress, dancer, and singer Josephine Baker. The play was performed at the 2009 National Black Theatre Festival in Winston-Salem, N.C., and the National Black Touring Circuit Black History Month Play Festival in Harlem. Stewart studied music at Tuskegee Institute, but has never performed professionally. When Amico first heard her soprano voice, amazed, he asked her where else he could see her T h e C ommons from section front perform. She told him that she was an amateur and had done her only singing in the choir. Amico believes Stewart is a great undiscovered talent, “sort of a black Susan Boyle.” Championing diversity The feat of bringing black gospel singers to primarily white protestant Vermont is not out of character for Amico, who has a long and varied history championing diversity. Before becoming pastor at First Congregational, he served as a consultant for Brattleboro Retreat, where he set up the first lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) inpatient psychiatric and addiction treatment program in New England. As an ordained United Church of Christ minister, he worked with the UCC and the Congregational Christian Church of Mexico to form a Church Without Borders in the Southwest. Amico thinks that the Oct. 22 gospel workshop will mean a great deal to a number of different kinds of people, from devoted parishioners to those who will come just for the music. The workshop will include a combination of favorite hymns on which Pierce and Stewart will put a new twist, as well as other church songs for which they will provide some new jazz arrangements of their own. The Sunday worship service will be jointly planned by Amico and Pierce, with Stewart singing solos, and backed by the jazzand-gospel-trained workshop participants. “Windham County is in for a musical delight!” Amico promised. The workshop will take place on Saturday, Oct. 22 at 880 Western Ave. in West Brattleboro from 1 to 5 p.m. The cost: $10 per person, $20 for families of three or more. For those who pre-register, the cost is $8 per person or $16 for families. To preregister, call First Congregational Church, 9 a.m. to noon, at 802-254-9767. Courtesy photo Lindsay Mitnik (Antipholus) and Louisa Strothman (Dromio) in a scene from the BUHS Players production of “The Comedy of Errors,” which will be presented on Oct. 14 and 15 at Brattleboro Union High School. BUHS Players present Shakespeare’s ‘Comedy of Errors’ BRATTLEBORO—The Brattleboro Union High School Players will present William Shakespeare’s farce The Comedy of Errors, on Oct. 14 and 15, at the BUHS Auditorium. Shakespeare’s first comedy (written in 1589 and freely adapted from a work by the Roman playwright Plautus) boasts two sets of twins, long separated by a storm at sea, who are thrown together in the town of Ephesus. Antipholus of Syracuse and his servant, Dromio, arrive in Ephesus unaware that their respective mirror image already lives in the town. Confusion ensues and escalates as each twin is mistaken for the other. Courtesy photo Eric Bass’ award winning puppet piece, “Autumn Portraits,” will be presented at Sandglass Theater in Putney on Oct. 21 and 22. ‘Autumn Portraits’ presented at Sandglass Theater PUTNEY—Eric Bass’ award winning solo performance, Autumn Portraits, will take center stage on Oct. 21 and 22 at 8 p.m., continuing an annual Sandglass Theater tradition. Tickets are $15 ($12 for seniors and students). Autumn is a metaphor for that time of life when our thoughts turn inward, when we feel the loss of summer warmth. Each of these puppet “portraits” presents a moment in one character’s existence. Some are funny, some touching, some bizarre, and all speak to the human experience, as only puppets can. Autumn Portraits is a compelling evening-long solo puppetand-mask performance, a series of five interlocking vignettes, each exploring one puppet character and its interplay with its • Wednesday, October 12, 2011 manipulator, who might appear as a masked figure, or simply a voice from the sky. Bass’ rod puppets act out their stories in precise and evocative gestures as they meet their pasts, their selves, even their puppet deaths. Bass performs solo, and for most of his performance he manipulates the characters in full view of the audience. He combines his own craft with the traditional Japanese Bunraku methods of puppetry. While the performance may be enjoyed by older children, Autumn Portraits is intended for adult audiences. Bass has presented his work in theaters and festivals throughout Europe, America, Australia and Israel. His awards include the Citation of Excellence from Pecs, Hungary, and the First Prize Critics Award for Best Production at the International Festival of Puppetry in Adelaide, Australia. The New York Times has written, “He is a master.” And the Derniers Nouvelles D’Alsace, in Strasbourg, France, wrote “... from these astonishing creatures...which are in reality our doubles, our secret brothers, sprung from a shadow within us...one learns more...than from the many laborious works on the human condition that are proposed to us by philosophers, psychoanalysts, and psychologists.” Sandglass Theater is located in the center of Putney, on Kimball Hill. For reservations and information, contact Sandglass Theater at 802-387-4051 or [email protected], or visit www.sandglasstheater.org. A subplot that frames the farce from start to finish involves Egeon, a merchant from Syracuse and father of the Antipholus twins, who visits Ephesus in his lifelong search for the boys and soon becomes embroiled in the complications. In every scene, identities are confounded, roles reversed, and moral distinctions blurred as audiences watch the confusion unfold much like a juggling act, with more and more balls being tossed into the air. The BUHS company includes many actors playing multiple roles. Featured performers include Matt Carroll (Duke Solinus. Jailer), Mary Friesen (Egeon, Luciana), Lindsay Mitnik (Antipholus of Syracuse and Antipholus of Ephesus), Louisa Strothman (Dromio of Syracuse and Dromio of Ephesus), Charlotte Maxwell (Adriana), Amanda Rink (Courtesan, Amelia), Emily Stromberg (Luce), Willow Coronella (Merchant), and Casey Metcalfe (Angelo, Doctor Pinch). The production is under the direction of Bob Kramsky and is stage-managed by Willow Coronella. Performances are at 7 p.m. each evening and tickets are $5 at the door. For more information, call 802-451-3762. Olssons to kick off series at Main Street Arts SAXTONS RIVER— Musicians Ken and Julie Olsson will kick off the fourth annual Taste of the Arts series at Main Street Arts (MSA) Thursday, Oct. 13, at 6 p.m. by telling their love story through song. Taste of the Arts features local personalities with interesting stories to tell over a catered meal in an informal setting. Reservations are requested at least three days in advance. Ken Olsson was musical director of the MSA productions of H.M.S. Pinafore, The Gondoliers, and High Button Shoes, and he and Julie will be co-directing The Mystery of Edwin Drood at MSA in March. Although they have been performing as the Dynamic Two-O for a few short years, the Olssons’ musical collaboration goes back more than 25 years. Both grew up in southeastern Connecticut, attending the same school system and church. Julie attended Ithaca College and was followed there four years later by Ken. In Ithaca, their relationship and musical collaboration began, but after a few short years, Ken and Julie went their separate ways. Julie went on to graduate studies at the University of MissouriKansas City. While there, she joined the Lyric Opera of Kansas City and began to pursue a career in opera. She has been featured in productions of Die Fledermaus, Suor Angelica, The Magic Flute, The Marriage of Figaro, and Madama Butterfly. Meanwhile, Ken stayed in Central New York and worked with Tri-Cities Opera in Binghamton, N.Y. He was a vocal coach and accompanist at Binghamton University and became an accompanist and music director for the musical theater program at Elmira College. He went on to become an assistant conductor with Syracuse Opera and was involved in many productions, including Macbeth, Otello, La Traviata, Tosca, Madama Butterfly, and The Magic Flute. The couple reunited after 14 years, were married in 2007, and moved to Vermont to spread the joy of music through their teachings and performances. Locally, they produced Amahl and the Night Visitors at the Jamaica Town Hall. The Olssons have also made appearances with Opera Theatre of Weston and Raylynmor Opera in Keene, N.H. Julie will also present a voice recital at the Guilford Community Church as part of the Friends of Music at Guilford concert series. This year’s Taste of the Arts series will also feature painter Charlie Hunter (Nov. 10); Bob Wilson, author of Vermont Curiosities (Jan. 12); and travelers Eric and David Robinson (Feb. 9). The series is offered as a fundraiser for Main Street Arts. Admission is $50 per person for all four events or $15 per event. Children accompanied by an adult may attend for $5. Tickets are available at Main Street Arts or online ( www. MainStreetArts.org). More information is available by contacting MSA at (802) 869-2960 or by email ([email protected]). EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR V Serving Vermont’s Progressive Community Since 1984 Save 29 over 99 55% $67.99 Value Gorilla Rack Steel Shelving Unit 72”H x 36”W x 14”D. 5 shelves. Holds up to 200 lbs. per shelf. 5396221. Brown & Roberts 182 Main St., Brattleboro, Vt. 802-257-4566 Open 7 days Lyel Howe BOOKS • COMPACT DISKS PERIODICALS • T-SHIRTS BUTTONS • CARDS BUMPER STICKERS 25 Elliot Street, Brattleboro, VT 802.254.8160 www.everyonesbks.com [email protected] ermont Independent Media (VIM) seeks an experienced, energetic, creative Executive Director with excellent communications skills to manage and grow its business operations. Vermont Independent Media is a growing non-profit organization based in Brattleboro, Vermont and publisher of The Commons, an awardwinning, independent weekly community newspaper serving Windham County. The VIM board of directors seeks a business-oriented entrepreneur to lead the organization and the newspaper into the next phase of growth. The Executive Director will oversee the financial sustainability of all operations, including the Media Mentoring Project, which brings journalism skills to schools and to community workshops. Fundraising activities will include membership building, events planning, and grant writing. In this new position, the Executive Director will manage ad sales, accounting, and digital strategy, and will have business computing skills. Some knowledge of Quickbooks and graphic design skills are a plus. VIM seeks an exceptional and visionary professional who will care about community journalism and be willing to begin part-time and provide the leadership and expertise to build the job into a sustainable full-time position. Please submit your cover letter and resumé by October 14 to [email protected] or to VIM/Search, P.O. Box 1212, Brattleboro, VT 05302. T h e C ommons LIFE & WORK • Wednesday, October 12, 2011 D3 HELP CHARLES C harles Marchant of Townshend has a collection of 20,000 postcards, and he would like to know more about the people and places they show. Each issue we will publish one of his postcards with a question or two in the hopes that readers can help him preserve a piece of Windham County history for future generations. At right: A Harry Chapman photo on the Townshend Common, circa 1910. Do you recognize the people in the image? If you can help Charles Marchant, please call him at (802) 365-7937 or email Elizabeth Ann Agostini, ESQ. Publication of this postcard is underwritten by: Attorney 2087 VT Route 30 Townshend, VT 05353 www.agostinilaw.com 802•365•7740 [email protected]. WARDSBORO—Tropical storm Irene has not interrupted plans for the ninth annual Gilfeather Turnip Festival scheduled for Saturday, Oct. 22, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Wardsboro Town Hall and under a big tent, both on Main Street. The free event takes place rain or shine, and is the largest community fundraising event supporting the town’s public library. The unique festival celebrates the Gilfeather turnip, first propagated in Wardsboro in the early 1900s by farmer, John Gilfeather. Gilfeather Farm still exists, right in the heart of Wardsboro, and the current owners carry on the tradition of Farmer John by planting a large crop of the heirloom turnip that originated on their farm at the turn of the century. The festival has grown in popularity through the years as more people discover the culinary possibilities of the now-famous sweet tuber. It’s exciting that a humble root vegetable – which some say is actually more of a rutabaga – has attracted much attention to the small town even after leaf-season has peaked, and all for a good cause as well. This year, more than 100 pounds of Gilfeathers will be cooked for the event’s signature Gilfeather turnip soup. Another 200 pounds will be given out to various Wardsboro chefs to prepare different recipes that will be featured as “turnip tastings” at the Turnip Café. Casseroles, slaws, soufflés, breads, cakes, pies are only a few of the many offerings that will appear on the “tasting table.” The turnip cart outside town hall will be loaded with up to 700 pounds of Gilfeathers, many grown on neighboring farms such as Dutton’s in Newfane or in local gardens. Turnips are sold by the pound and “they go fast,” according to the Friends’ top turnip sales person, Cris Tarnay. She says, “they are hardy and easy to cultivate from seed, but shouldn’t be harvested before a bite of hard frost. It acquires a notable sweetness after a frost and that sweetness is what makes the Gilfeather so special.” The Turnip Café is located in the Wardsboro Town Hall and serves homemade cider donuts and coffee beginning at 10 a.m. followed by lunch and a la carte servings of turnip tastings plus the delicious, creamy Gilfeather turnip soup from 11:30 a.m. until the food runs out. Soup and tastings are available for “take out” or to enjoy at a sit-down lunch. An outdoor “soup station” is for event-goers who want to buy soup only. The most exciting part of the Turnip Festival is the annual Turnip Contest. Contestants may register Gilfeathers (big, ugly or both!) from 10 a.m. to noon and then return to town hall for the announcement of the winners and ribbon awards immediately after the judging. More than 30 craft and farmers’ market vendors are set up inside Town Hall as well as outdoors under the big tent. The most popular booth is the Turnip Shoppe featuring apparel, accessories, books and movies all about the Gilfeather turnip, as well as many other gift items of local interest. This year, the turnip gifts on sale will fill one entire room in Town Hall. Live music is always a big draw at the Turnip Fest. Visitors will be treated to the guitar and vocals of Jimmy Knapp, Wardsboro’s strolling musician who annually serenades visitors with his original Gilfeather turnip ballad. Alan Bills and his band of talented musicians are also performing. Festival admission and parking are free. The festival is a fundraiser for the Friends of the Wardsboro Library for the support of the Gloria Danforth Memorial Building, the home of the Wardsboro Public Library. For more information, call 802896-3416 or visit www.friendsofwardsborolibrary.org. BMH to provide health services to people traveling abroad BRATTLEBORO— Brattleboro Memorial Hospital announced it will begin providing health services to area citizens planning trips out of the United States through its Occupational Health Department. The services fill a gap left by World Learning when they closed their travel health center prior to the start of their fall semester. Previously, students in the World Learning programs as well as the general public could go to the Black Mountain Road campus for immunizations and other travel-related health advice. BMH President & CEO Steven Gordon says the hospital has hired an occupational nurse with experience in the field to begin offering this service immediately. Gordon says BMH is also in discussion with World Learning about providing consultative services on non-emergency issues for its students, including reviewing and evaluating student medical forms, as well as emergency services through the hospital’s Emergency Department. “World Learning has a number of students on campus who will need advice on medical issues during the application process, and when they are on campus as well as in another country,” said Gordon. “The nursing and medical staff in our Occupational Health Department has the capability to serve both World Learning students and the general public in this capacity.” BMH’s Occupational Health Services department provides resources to area businesses that create a safer workplace environment and improve overall employee health, including preplacement and annual physicals, drug screening, flu clinics, ergonomic evaluations, and on-site and off-site testing of hearing, vision and blood pressure. The Occupational Health Services department is open Monday through Friday from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Appointments can be made by calling 802-257-8235. ThE COMMONS CROSSWORD “Not as Good as Gold” NOT AS GOOD AS GOLD Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon ([email protected]) 1 ACROSS 1. 5. 9. 14. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 25. 27. 28. 30. 31. 33. 34. 35. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 52. 54. 55. 56. 58. 61. 64. 66. 67. 69. 70. 71. 72. 75. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 88. 91. 92. 94. 97. 98. 99. 100. 102. 106. 108. 110. 111. 112. 113. 114. 115. 116. 117. Passing fancy 39-Down jilted by Aeneas Arafat’s successor Have by dint of Sitar piece Grandson of Eve Hogwash Malamud’s Yakov Bok, e.g. Dull songbird? Mean disposition? Morsel for an aardvark Militarily relaxed Vega’s spectral type Not of this earth Goes on wheels Conqueror of Aztecs Last-place finishers? Campus feature Surfeit Diner seating option Tofu, for one Yoga accessory Med. research agcy. Gasp and cry Club obligation Surrealist Magritte Be in a funk Harmonizes Statues or sardines Fit for growing cacti Thumbs up at sea Pet-store reject? Go mad with hunger “Gilligan’s Island” ingenue Lightly fries Lesser Bond villain? Bit of merriment Oversized plugs “Understood” C-3PO’s sort Winged archer Combine Was familiar with Item of regalia Muckraker Tarbell Flattery in verse Wheel with teeth Non-Polynesian “Amanda” band Pitch Fielder’s booby prize? Ratty town of legend __ -miss (spotty) Taco topper Delivery from a sibyl Overjoys Arm-twisted Lousy retirement gift? Turn into gold, maybe? Passed out Astronomer Tycho Engaged a clapper? Chapters in history Goo-yielding plants On the move Makes a choice Place to get a Reuben 3 4 6 5 19 8 7 24 31 32 37 56 61 62 30 33 34 42 48 53 57 64 68 70 71 59 72 85 73 75 74 77 78 86 104 105 82 87 88 92 89 90 93 98 97 99 76 66 81 96 45 69 91 95 44 60 65 84 83 43 55 80 79 18 49 54 58 63 17 39 52 67 94 29 47 51 16 26 41 46 15 14 22 38 40 50 13 12 25 28 36 11 10 21 27 35 9 20 23 101 100 103 102 106 107 108 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 109 © 2011 Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon DOWN 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 2 Court order Pace-pushing runner “Young Frankenstein” flunky Artificial Residents of Asgard Down and out Elmer, to Bugs Govt. labor watchdog Camus, by belief Scope Unfairly influences “Avant”’s opposite 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 24. 26. 29. 32. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 42. 43. 44. 45. 47. 48. 49. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 57. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 68. 69. 73. 74. 76. Harden Get rid of Software helper Stay alive All wound up Killer whales Projected works Comes to mind Pair plus one Big cheese An eye for 24- Down? Where tolls may be taken Feel the pain Spot for a stud 5-Across, in Carthage Spice in curry Worthiness Ouzo flavoring Geek Squad members One Dionne quint to another Faintly praise? Disprove Out of whack Boo and hiss Bilko, familiarly Safety device Advertiser’s Yule Crooning actor Montand Highly caustic stuff Pre-owned Social pariah Flirted “Let It Be” label Pincher of pennies From square one Championship match Sail of a sort Go head over heels Two-toned treats Poet Dove 77. 78. 80. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 101. 103. 104. 105. 107. 109. Bakery freebie Castle-building material Nub Esophagi Maker of hard drives Someone else Grimm baddie Has a rightful place Watering holes Moved en masse Taunt from the stands Quixotically charge Unoccupied Element maker Moon of Uranus Chinese tourist hot spot Gets wind (of) Houston ballplayer, to fans Make sound List-ending abbr. Lucy’s partner Org. that awards belts 50 Cent style Last issue’s solution “A Day atPARK the Park” A DAY AT THE ([email protected]) Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon 1 2 K N 19 3 I 4 5 T A M A I 23 S 27 S U I 8 9 I E H A D O I L L A N D 24 31 D R 35 40 41 T R A T T L E I C E I G H T 42 A 45 J 46 E 54 H T 62 R 55 E L L E M O N E Y 73 O T S 78 T 82 T 83 84 A K 92 E E I N D O W N T O T R 103 P 106 I 110 T S 71 E I A N S L A R E I G O R I O Y S N C H 100 E 104 W H O L B A 111 L 86 K S A R O S E S O N A T A T H E B A T O S 65 P E 50 R Y B O O N E O U S A L V E 61 T O U T L Y T S E S S 77 E N 81 E R 88 A S 94 95 T E A E W B A L L S B R A E A L S 90 91 C A P A N A 102 A N 105 89 96 G A S 101 112 E R U A S E I 53 L E C K L 52 E N 57 I 87 108 51 S U R O D I I E H E R S E N T S E R L L 99 C H 107 S S E G T D 72 G R M 60 64 18 N A D A 29 E 68 80 85 93 98 S 76 Y S L M A E A R A L A S 97 H L 17 26 E E S E B A S E S O K A 79 H 16 E B O N 22 O P E S A 56 E 75 S 49 C L 70 74 48 K 67 F N O L 59 63 39 43 S O W E N S N O S 38 O F I 66 69 T 37 15 E 33 A N R A N G E I I L E R A C O V 58 47 T 14 E S A A R O M A S 44 13 L V R 12 E A V 25 28 36 A G E 11 S M O T 21 E P 32 E 10 N G O T A T 7 T E P E N D S 6 U P T 30 34 S 20 T E R G A M 109 E I N G O A T O L 113 © 2011 Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon PUBLICATION OF THE CROSSWORD IS UNDERWRITTEN BY Brattleboro Tire 558 Putney Rd., Brattleboro • 254-5411 commons JOHN PENFIELD’S BRATTLEBORO TIRE LUBE, OIL & FILTER 26 $ 95 Most cars. 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Deirdre Holmes/planithealthier.wordpress.com VT STATE INSPECTION $5 OFF THE REGULAR PRICE VT State Inspection Red#10 #6 Due Now Red D4 T h e C ommons • Wednesday, October 12, 2011 arts & community C A L E N D A R THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY Film and video WEDNESDAY 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 I deas and education 14 n B R A T T L E B O R O . Peter Kinder Discusses Corporations: With the Supreme Court's recent ruling that the U.S. Constitution guarantees corporations the right to participate in elections, the rights of corporations as individuals has again become a hot issue. Speaker Kinder has studied the relationship between society and corporations for 40 years. n 5 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. n Free. n Marlboro College Graduate Center, 28 Vernon St. 17 n . Free Prostate Screening Clinic: BRATTLEBORO In addition to the free screening, the visit will include a PSA blood test and a digital rectal exam. To be eligible, individuals must be between 40 and 70 years old and must not have had a prostate screening or PSA blood test in the past 12 months. n 5:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. n Free. n Brattleboro Memorial Hospital, 17 Belmont Ave. Information: 802251-8459; www.bmhvt.org/events/healthier_living.shtml. 17 n . Talk: Cultivating spiritual connection: Join a short talk on what it P U T N E Y means to have a spiritual connection with the land and how that directly relates to improving crop yield and homestead planning. P er f orming arts n 7 p.m. - 9 p.m. n Free. n Putney Public Library, 55 Main Street. Information: 802-387-4407. 19 n . Black Bears in Vermont: Join Forrest BELLOWS FALLS Hammond, from Vermont Fish & Wildlife, who will talk about Black Bears in Vermont and the challenges they face, especially from future development in the state. n 7 p.m. n Free. n Rockingham Free Public Library, 65 Westminster Street. Information: 802-4634270; www.rockingham.lib.vt.us. V isual arts and s h ows 15 n . GRAFTON Classical realist: Jon McAuliffe: McAuliffe is noted for his portraitures in both oils and charcoal, and his work is in private collections in Vermont, New Hampshire, New York City, and Chicago. The public is invited to meet Jon and see his new work. n 5 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. n Free. n Hunter Gallery of Fine Art, 74 Main Street. Information: 802 843 1440.; www.hunterartworks.com. MEMBERS 1ST CREDIT UNION “The SMALL Credit Union with a BIG HEART” www.members1cu.com 10 Browne CT PO Box 8245 N. Brattleboro, VT 05304 NCUA Insured to 250,000 13 n 13 n WEST CHESTERFIELD . Ten Minute Plays: Ten Minute Plays capture pivotal moments. They challenge the playwright, the director, and the actors to make it all happen now the way it often does in real life. n 7:30 p.m. Through Saturday, October 15. n $8 and reservations are highly recommended. n Actors Theatre Playhouse, Corner Brook & Main St. Information: 802-2544714; www. Actors-Theatre.Info. 14 n . NEYT: "The Children's Hour" : Lillian BRATTLEBORO Hellman's drama is about the power of lies and the consequence of not speaking out against them. An angry student, Mary Tilford, runs away from her all-girls boarding school. To avoid punishment she invents a lie to tell her grandmother - that the two headmistresses are having an affair. The accusation proceeds to destroy the women's careers, relationships and lives. n Varies. Through Sunday, October 16. n $13, $11 seniors, $9 13 n B R A T T L E B O R O . Community Gardens: The Greater Falls Great Food Community Conversation (GFGFCC) will host a community gathering to discuss and plan for the development of community gardens in Bellows Falls for 2012. The conversation will take place at St. Charles Sacred Heart Education and Social Center, 39 Green Street, at the corner of Green and Williams Street. n 6 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. n Free. n Post Oil Solutions. Information: 802-869-2141; www.postoilsolutions.org. . Literary Festival Writing Workshops: BRATTLEBORO Serving Windham Counties Windsor &Windsor Windham&Counties Serving WindsorServing & Windham Counties R ecreation Operated by Operated by Operated by River Transit Connecticut River Transit Connecticut Connecticut River Transit ProvideProvide Your RideYour LetLet“The Current” YourRideRide Let“The“TheCurrent” Current” Provide 15 n . oculars. n 7 p.m. n Museum and SoVerA members free; non-member adults $10, chil dren 18 and under $5, family max $25. n Grafton Ponds Outdoor Center, 783 Townshend Road. Information: 802-843-2400; graftonponds.com. www.crtransit.org or Call us at 888-869-6287 or www.crtransit.org or Call us at 888-869-6287 or (7433) or802-460-RIDE Call us at 888-869-6287 802-460-RIDE (7433) or 802-460-RIDE (7433) Alcan Power Equipment Sales • Service • Parts !!! WE ARE BACK !!! We want to thank our friends & customers that helped with our clean up and those that called from out of state to offer help and support. Our roads are shaky but YOU CAN GET HERE! If in doubt, call us for an update or to have our truck do pick up and delivery for you. Thanks again to all, Tom, Pat, & The Alcan Staff Alcan Power Equipment Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5 Sat. 8-12 Augerhole Road So. Newfane, VT BRATTLEBORO GUILFORD ducted by Marco Armiliato, is based on the final, tragic days of Anne Boleyn and has been a dramatic and vocal showcase for some of the greatest sopranos in operatic history. n 1 p.m. Through Sunday, October 16. n Saturday $26; Sunday encore: $24. n Latchis Theatre, 50 Main Street. Information: 802-254.1109; www.latchis.com. 15 n . Theater: "Comedy of Er rors" : The BRATTLEBORO Brattleboro Union High School Players will present William Shakespeare's hilarious farce. Filled with mistaken identities, madcap chases, and ridiculous characters, this comic classic offers laughs and delight for workshop will be led by Nicholas Delbanco from the University of Michigan. All workshop students are invited to a private author reception on Friday evening. n 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. n $75. n Marlboro College Graduate Center, 28 Vernon St. 15 n . Fall Landscape Workshop: Learn BELLOWS FALLS to paint beautiful fall colors with watercolorist Robert J.Brien. This one day workshop will focus on painting the spectacular fall landscape of Vermont. n 9:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. n Cost not available at press time. n Saxtons River Art Guild, United Church. Information: 603-835-2387; [email protected]. . Healthy 17 cooking: This informative sesn BRATTLEBORO collection of important folk art works will be available to be seen by the public, as Broad Brook Grange shows in one evening all of its painted theater curtains. Guilford's grange hall has four of these curtains, but they are not ordinarily all viewable on any given occasion. As part of the ongoing 250th anniversary celebration of the town, all four will be lowered and then, over an interval, raised one by one to reveal each of the four scenes. n 7 p.m. n Free. n Guilford 250, Broad Brook Grange. Information: 802-254-5910; [email protected]. FLOOD CLEAN UP SPECIAL Free chain sharpen with this coupon Good through October 15, 2011 We Service all Brands 18 n . Job Search 101: Young adults ages 15 BELLOWS FALLS to 21 are invited to come to the Rockingham Free Public Library for Job Search 101, a fiveweek series that will give the basic information, skills and techniques to begin planning a career and finding a job. n 3:15 p.m. n Free. n Rockingham Free Public Library, 65 Westminster Street. Information: 802-4634270; www.rockingham.lib.vt.us. C ele b rations , f estivals , community meals 14 n B R A T T L E B O R O . Brattleboro Literary Festival: The festival is a three-day cel- ebration of those who read books, those who write books, and of the books themselves. Located in downtown Brattleboro, the festival includes readings, panel discussions, and special events, featuring emerging and established authors. n Various times. Various locations. Through Sunday, October 16. n Free. n Brattleboro Literary Festival, Various locations. 15 n PUTNEY . Medieval Faire: Vermont will be transformed into a medieval village. Enjoy the village as King Arthur and his royal court preside over games, feasts, and peasant frivolity. n 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. n Free. n Grammar School, 69 Hickory Ridge Road South. 13 n B R A T T L E B O R O . Documentar y:"Hey Boo": In a series of interviews with Scott Turow, James McBride, Wally Lamb, Rosanne Cash, Anna Quindlen, Oprah Winfrey, and Tom Brokaw, and with rare cooperation from Harper Lee's sister and friends, documentarian Mary Murphy traces the history of an astonishing phenomenon. n 7 p.m. n Free. n Brooks Memorial Library, 224 Main Street. Information: 802-254-5290; www.brooks.lib.vt.us. 18 n WEST BRATTLEBORO . Films for the Spirit series: "Cherry Blossoms": Doris Dorrie"s fim is a tender, emotionally intense and profoundly moving story of marital love. n 6:30 p.m. n $5 suggested donation. n All Souls Church, 29 South Street. Information: 802-2549377; www.ascvt.org. 15 n BRATTLEBORO . Kenny Barron Trio: To hear Kenny Barron is to experience one of the greatest jazz pianists in the world. n 8 p.m. - 11 p.m. n Cost not available at press time. n Latchis Theatre, 50 Main Street. Information: 802254.1109; www.latchis.com. 15 n . Live: The Alash Ensemble : The BELLOWS FALLS throat singing ensemble Alash will perform the unique, traditional music of Tuva, a tiny republic in the heart of Central Asia. n 7:30 p.m. n $14-$22 with a discount of $4 for students and seniors. n Bellows Falls Opera House, 7 The Village Square. Information: 802463-3100.; www.bfoperahouse.com/. . Live: Pianist Nigel Coxe: This performance will MARLBORO include works by Bach, Beethoven, Liszt, as well as works by Marlboro music professor Stan Charkey. n 3 p.m. n Free. n Ragle Hall, Serkin Center for the Performing Arts, Marlboro College. . Live: Cincha: 16 Cincha puts her beautiful voice, a n GRAFTON 15 n . BRATTLEBORO Artist talk and book-signing: Acclaimed children's-book illustrator Salley Mavor, whose original fabric reliefs are on view in the Museum's Activity Gallery, will discuss her career, describe her technique, and sign copies of her award-winning Pocketful of Posies: A Treasury of Nursery Rhymes and other books. n 3 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. n Free. n Brattleboro Museum & Art Center, 10 Vernon Street. Information: 802-257-0124; www.brattleboromuseum.org. 16 n B R A T T L E B O R O . Vermont Reads: "To Kill a Mockingbird" : The Vermont Humanities Council is again sponsoring Vermont Reads, the statewide one-book community reading program, during the Brattleboro Literary Festival. Discussion of "To Kill a Mockingbird" will end the festival's program. n 5 p.m. n Free. n Brooks Memorial Library, 224 Main Street. Information: 802-254-5290; www. brooks.lib.vt.us. Fundraising and awareness events 15 n . Bingo Benefit: Bingo Benefit for displaced residents of Wilmington. n 6 p.m. - 10 p.m. n Cost not available at press time. n Twin WILMINGTON Valley High School, 1 School Street. For more information: Brenda Ouellette, Coordinator of Event. 802.780.8159. M usic 802 /348-7898 n 16 Alcan Power Equipment by Andrezej Mikijaniec, Chef at Brattleboro Memorial Hospital, who will present valuable information for ways that busy families can eat a healthy diet. n 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. n Free. n Brattleboro Memorial Hospital, 17 Belmont Ave. Information: 802251-8459; www.bmhvt.org/events/healthier_living.shtml. sion on healthy cooking will be presented Astronomy Evening: Learn how to enjoy ceGRAFTON For Bus Schedules and Information Visit our Website at For Bus Schedules and Information Visit our Website at lestial neighbors through a telescope or bin- For Bus Schedules and Information Visit our Website at www.crtransit.org The Met: . Curtain 15 Live in HD: "Anna Bolena": n 15 Raising & Presentation: The opera, directed by David McVicar and con- n A deaf teen living in New York City, discovers the power of American Sign Language poetry. The documentary film will be followed by a discussion with Jim Castrese, Residential Director of the Vermont Center for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing. n 7:30 p.m. n $6, $4 seniors, $3 students. Members and children 5 and under are admitted free of charge. n Brattleboro Museum & Art Center, 10 Vernon Street. Information: 802-257-0124; www. brattleboromuseum.org. T h e written word The Brattleboro Literary Festival, in conjunction with Marlboro College, is pleased to announce it is offering workshops for poets and fiction writers for the first time in 2011. New York poet Jeanne Marie Beaumont will run the poetry workshop, while the fiction Leave your Car behindbehind and Leave your and Leave yourCar Car behind and . the entire family. n 7 p.m. n $5. n Brattleboro Union High School, Brattleboro Union High School Auditorium. Information: 802-451-3762.. I nstruction 14 n Tel. (802) 257-5131 Fax (802) 257-5837 students. n New England Youth Theatre, 100 Flat Street. Information: 802-380-5090; [email protected]. . BRATTLEBORO Deaf Jam: In Deaf Jam Aneta Brodski, a Bonnie Raitt, she has an entirely original sound that hooks every audience she plays for. n 8 p.m. n $10 per person and pro ceeds go to the Grafton Fund, a giving program of the non-profit Windham Found. n Old Tavern at Grafton, Main Street. Information: 802-843-2211; [email protected]. 16 n . Benefit concert: Come dance and groove BRATTLEBORO to the music of Flabbergaster at Marijuana Resolve's first benefit concert. Meet and Greet the band in mid-set. n 6:30 p.m. n Donation at the door. n Hooker-Dunham Theater & Gallery, 139 Main Street. Contact: 802 451-8390 or marijuanaresolve@gmail. com; www.marijuanaresolve.org. . Wendy's jazz soiree: Bob Stabach with Eugene GUILFORD This space for rent Uman on piano, George Kaye on bass, Tim Gilmore on drums and Bob on sax will premiere new compositions. The band will be playing some of their favorite tunes which lend themselves to extended improvisations and emotional depth. n Jazz at 7pm and potluck at 6pm. n Suggested donation $8 to $15 at the door. n Soirées Musicales, 2596 Tater Lane. Information: 802- 254-6189; wendy@ asteriamusic.com. You are looking at Windham County’s best advertising value. To promote your business in the next issue of The Commons, call Nancy at (802) 246-6397 or e-mail [email protected]. TEACHER TREASURES A Teacher Resource Store silken piano, and some wicked humor to an amazing array of original songs. 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