E - The Commons
Transcription
E - The Commons
PRIMARY ELECTION • AUG. 28 Three Democrats vie for two state Senate seats Candidate profiles this issue Jeannette White Peter Galbraith • Jeanette White, page A2 • Peter Galbraith, page A3 • Mary Cain, page A4 Mary Cain Railcateg ont Your membership in Vermont Independent Media can make this the best free newspaper you’ve ever paid for. See page A5. FREE Verm tion RAILTOWN Press AsCsocia , 20 11 O NT ES T N EW SP AP ER Railhead eneral Excellence of Vermont — G FIRST PRIZE The Best E page St00 ory SECOND PRIZ Best Local THIRD PRIZE g Editorial• Writin NON-DAILY DIVISION www.commonsnews.org Brattleboro, Vermont Wednesday, August 1, 2012 • Vol. VII, No. 31 • Issue #163 WINDHAM COUNTY’S AWARD-WINNING, INDEPENDENT SOURCE FOR NEWS AND VIEWS Voices MEMOIR Dreaming of India page D1 VIEWPOINT Why we’re leaving BF page D1 The Arts DANCE VPL uses dance to tell stories of BF women page C1 Food & Drink WENDY M. LEVY It’s never too hot for cheese page B2 TOM BEDELL Catching up with a microbrew pioneer page B3 Federal jury convicts former treasurer of embezzlement UNION STAT I O N Past, present, and future Former Algiers Fire District official charged with taking more than $80,000 from sewer ratepayers BRATTLEBORO—A 51-year-old Guilford woman who was the treasurer for the Algiers Fire District was convicted of embezzlement by a federal grand jury last week. According to the Office of the U.S. Attorney for the District of Vermont, a federal jury in Brattleboro last Thursday found Sherry Roebuck guilty of federal program embezzlement and mail fraud after a two-day trial. These convictions stem from charges that Roebuck embezzled more than $80,000 from the fire district. Senior U.S. District Judge J. Garvan Murtha continued Roebuck’s release on conditions pending sentencing, which has not been scheduled. In October 2011, a federal grand jury in Rutland returned a two-count indictment accusing Roebuck of embezzling more than $80,000 from the Algiers Fire District, which was established in 1993 by residents of Guilford to provide sewer service to people who lived in the village of Algiers. Between 2007 and March 2011, Roebuck served as the treasurer of the fire district, mailing out quarterly bills to district members, receiving payments, and handling the district’s banking. According to the indictment, beginning in late 2007 and continuing until March 2011, Roebuck embezzled from the district by writing numerous checks to herself without authorization, then cashing the checks at local banks. Roebuck’s theft was not uncovered until early 2011, shortly after she resigned. According to the Burlington Free Press, local officials discovered the embezzlement when the fire district’s account ran out of money. Board member Herb Meyer told the Free Press last year that the volunteer board did not scrutinize the district’s bank statements. In court papers, Assistant U.S. Attorney Gregory Waples stated that Roebuck had written checks to herself totaling $84,000. Evidence from her banking records showed that she paid off her $518 monthly car loan in cash, according to court papers. Five times, those payments came immediately after cashing a fire district check written to her, court papers said. The Free Press reported that, according to court records, Vermont State Police seized records from Roebuck’s house that showed she was in financial trouble — including letters from creditors — and that Roebuck’s boyfriend, Bruce Gilman, told police that she sometimes borrowed money from the fire district but that she told him she repaid it. The U.S. Attorney’s office says that Roebuck faces up to 20 years of imprisonment and a fine of up to $250,000. The actual sentence will be determined with reference to federal sentencing guidelines. CHRISTOPHER EMILY COUTANT RANDOLPH T. HOLHUT/THE COMMONS The new look of Depot Street in Brattleboro, as seen last week before a ribbon-cutting ceremony marking the completion of the first stage of the Union Station project. A downtown anchor undergoes a rebirth, along with the rest of its neighbors By Randolph T. Holhut The Commons BRATTLEBORO—Stand at the corner of Bridge and Depot streets near the train station, and look around. The contrast between what the landscape looked like in March, and what it looks like RANDOLPH T. HOLHUT/THE COMMONS VY employees allow water to drain from spent fuel pool By Anne Galloway vtdigger.org Members of Vermont Independent Media receive The Commons in the mail. Visit http://donate.commonsnews.org. CHANGE SERVICE REQUESTED PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID BRATTLEBORO, VT 05301 PERMIT NO. 24 page B1 P.O. Box 1212, Brattleboro, VT 05302 www.commonsnews.org ■ SEE STATION, PAGE A6 Veronica “Ronny” Johnson, left, and Helene Henry, longtime members of the Union Station Committee, hold pieces of the ribbon that was cut to mark the completion of the first step of the long-running construction project. Cooking up your squash surplus Vermont Independent Media now, is amazing. Look toward Hinsdale, and you see green space instead of derelict buildings. Look across the street, and you see the Whetstone Station Restaurant and Brewery, the newest addition to the local dining scene. The spent fuel pool at Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant. LAURA FROHNE/NEWS21.ORG VERNON—About 2,700 gallons of water from the spent fuel pool at Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Plant drained into a wastewater system on July 22. The 300,000 gallon pool contains 2,500 spent fuel assemblies removed from the reactor core. The spent fuel assemblies are submerged below more than 20 feet of water. The water drained about six inches over the course of about 30 minutes when employees who were working on the fuel pool cleanup system left drain valves open. Operators in the control room discovered the problem after an alarm system went off, according to Rob Williams, spokesman for the plant. The radioactive water drained into a wastewater collection tank. ■ SEE FUEL POOL, PAGE A3 P PA A II D D A AD DV VE ER RT T II S S II N NG G • • T TO O P PL LA AC CE E Y YO OU UR R A AD D ,, C CA AL LL L (( 8 80 02 2 )) 2 24 46 6-6 63 39 97 7 O OR R V V II S S II T T W WW WW W .. C CO OM MM MO ON NS SN NE EW WS S .. O OR RG G n Power We Service All Makes & Models PIZZA HIPPO Granite Counter ADAM’S SEAFOOD Fire Grilled Organic SPECIAL Amazing Pizza, Salads, Hippo Dogs & Lemonade 874-0321 pizzahippo.com Proof Proof generated generated July July 31, 31,2012 2012 11:25 11:25 PM PM $45. SF installed 16 Granites to choose from www.cabinetree.com 802-254-2224 WOW A&J Heating just installed a passive hot water system in our home for under $2,500, and there is a tax rebate! 802-257-9900 It’s the only way to go! Call 802-254-2246 PESKY PESTS? From flying to crawling insects, mice & rats - WE CAN HELP! Pestpatrolvermont.com 802-254-5149 Renaissance Fine JewelR JewelRy Jewel Ry We buy Gold, Diamonds, Coins & Rare Antiques 802-251-0600 151 Main, Brattleboro Open 7 Days NEWS A2 T h e C ommons • Wednesday, August 1, 2012 SPECIAL FOCUS: ELECTION 2012 A publication of Vermont Independent Media ——— 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. Holhut, News Editor Olga Peters, Staff Reporter Catherine Snyder, Copy Editor V er m ont A ssociates T rainee Richard Henke www.vermontassociates.org EDITORIAL VOLUNTEERS Lee Stookey, Proofreading Elizabeth Julia Stoumen, Proofreading David Shaw, Photographer Owen Kohout, Calendar STUDENTS & INTERNS Elias Burgess • Goucher College Isaac Baker • Middlebury College ADVERTISING Nancy Gauthier, Advertising Mgr. John Moriarty, Advertising Sales Sarah Adam, Advertising Production Michael Logerfo, Advertising Production — Mary Cain, Advertising Sales • On leave O P E R AT I O N S Mia Gannon, Administrative Assistant Allen Cohen, Bookkeeper Caleb Quinn, Distribution Tom Finnell, Distribution Deadline for the Aug. 8 issue Friday, Aug. 3 VIM’S MISSION To create a forum for community participation 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. BOARD OF DIRECTORS Barbara S. Evans, Barry Aleshnick, Dan DeWalt, Peter Seares, Curtiss Reed Jr., Jane Noyes, Meghan Houlihan. About The newspaper The Commons is a nonprofit, weekly community newspaper published since 2006 by Vermont Independent Media, Inc., a nonprofit corporation under section 501(c)3 of the federal tax code. 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Please check with the editor before writing essays or other original submissions of substance. 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. The views expressed in our Voices section are those of individual contributors. Bylined commentaries by members of the Vermont Independent Media board of directors represent their individual opinions; as an organization, we are committed to providing a forum for the entire community. As a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization, Vermont Independent Media is legally prohibited from endorsing political candidates. advertising Your advertising directly supports a better newspaper. The display advertising rate is $10.50 per column inch, and The Commons offers discounts for three or more advertising insertions. To place your ad, contact the advertising coordinator at [email protected]. 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Despite our similar name, The Commons is not affiliated with Vermont Commons, a website that is linked with a movement advocating Vermont’s secession from the United States. ————— Without our volunteers, this newspaper would exist only in our imaginations. Special thanks to: Editorial support: Joyce Marcel, Christopher Emily Coutant, Chris Petrak Operations support: Simi Berman, Chris Wesolowski, Diana Bingham, Jim Maxwell, Bob Rottenberg, Bill Pearson, Menda Waters, Jayne Woods Checking off (most) campaign promises Former ambassador seeks second Senate term By Olga Peters The Commons TOWNSHEND—Senator Peter Galbraith reads his 2010 campaign brochure. He checks over his list of campaign promises, assessing which ones he met in his first term. Settled on an overstuffed couch in his Townshend home, the former ambassador and author has swapped his customary suit and tie for shorts, a button-down shirt, and bright blue Crocs. In 2010, Galbraith promised to expand health care, attract investment and jobs to Windham County, advance a green-energy future, keep Vermont special by protecting its open spaces and making farming economically viable, extend cell coverage and broadband Internet throughout the county, and make Windham County’s needs a priority in Montpelier. Galbraith nods at his first-term accomplishments. He voted in favor of the state’s health-care reform and, on the economic front, he helped orchestrate two Senate Economic Development Housing and General Affairs Committee (SEDHGA) hearings in the county. Galbraith quickly adds that Windham County was the only county with field hearings last session. The SEDHGA hearings helped focus attention on the county. The committee’s attention helped funnel money to the Southeastern Vermont Economic Development Strategy (SeVEDS) for two consecutive years. Committee Chair Senator Vince Illuzzi, R-Essex/Orleans, and Galbraith contributed to legislation to assist Vermont’s mobile home parks, inspired by the lawmakers’ visits to TriPark in Brattleboro. Galbraith also introduced a successful bill to ban the practice of hydraulic fracturing, otherwise known as “fracking,” in Vermont. He developed a compromise for the clean-energy bill that had stalled in committee. According to Galbraith, the compromise “enabled Vermont to go forward with small-scale clean-energy projects.” Galbraith, who jokes about standing on a rock in his backyard for a cell signal, advocated for expanded broadband and cell coverage in the county. In 2011 he co-sponsored the telecommunications act that grew out of the SEDHGA committee. He said the bill served as one step in the state’s broader path toward statewide cell coverage. “Retire Vermont Yankee as scheduled in 2012,” he reads on the brochure. “Well, you can’t win them all,” he said. Galbraith is running against fellow Democrats, incumbent Senator Jeannette White of Putney and challenger Mary Cain of Brattleboro, for one of two Senate seats in the Aug. 28 primary. Skills and floor debates Galbraith describes himself as “a fighter,” willing to stand to protect Vermont, its sense of community, and strive for fairness in the government and economy. “I believe we ought to be taking care of each other,” he said, adding that he likes to take a “pragmatic” approach when finding solutions to policy questions. Galbraith complimented the work of his colleagues on the Windham County delegation, who he feels share a deep commitment to Vermonters. Although he came to the group with a different set of experiences, he believes that his skills fit with those of other Windham County lawmakers. When asked what were his weaknesses as a Senator? Galbraith laughed, responding, “I work too hard.” When that response didn’t fly, he nodded and admitted that he can be impatient with the political process. After 24 years in federal government, Galbraith said he’s “mindful” of inefficiencies in Montpelier. Galbraith pointed to the Senate and House not working on the same bills simultaneously, and a failure of Senate leadership to schedule important bills earlier in the session. In his opinion, a better schedule could shorten the legislative session by two months. The amount of committee work also irks him. According to Galbraith, the Senate routinely deferred to committees, rather than opening an issue to debate on the floor. Decisions made during a floor debate are made by the entire Senate, he said. In contrast, committee decisions depend on five to seven committee members. Galbraith said he was more effective when he operated on the Senate floor than in committee. He plans to continue bringing big issues to the floor for debate. The voters elected their Senators and are entitled to a record of the representatives’ voting record. In contrast with Senate activity on the floor, which is streamed on the Internet and recorded, unless the public is physically in the committee room, much of the record is lost. A lot of discussions in committee happen among people without any special expertise with only lobbyists in the room, he said. Although the meetings are taped, Galbraith considers those records essentially “inaccessible” to the general public. “On the whole, the leadership would prefer to not debate the big issues,” he said adding, “There’s a little too much of the herd mentality [in Montpelier].” Randolph T. Holhut/Commons file photo State Sen. Peter Galbraith is going for his second term in the Vermont Senate. toward a second term. “At this stage of my life, I’m not looking for a higher office,” he said. “I’m very proud of my public service career. There’s more to do.” Galbraith spent 24 years as a diplomat before returning full time to Vermont. He still laments the Legislature’s vote against studying a proposed state purchase of the VELCO transmission lines. Galbraith, Illuzzi, and Timothy Ashe, D/P-Chittenden, proposed the amendment, calling on the state to set aside $250,000 for the study. Seven Days reported Feb. 10 that Senate President Pro Tem John Campbell had “called the idea crazy” and “called Illuzzi into a closed-door meeting with the chairs of the Senate Finance and Appropriations committees to cut a deal to avoid the floor amendment.” Galbraith and Ashe were not invited. Galbraith interprets the legislature’s resistance to the idea as pressure from special interests. According to Galbraith, the electricity transmission network comes with a 14 percent rate of return. The state could have borrowed the money to purchase the network at 3 percent. “I think that is something we are going to regret, like we regret not buying the Connecticut River dams,” he said. He also expresses disappointment about the House’s defeat of his amendment aimed at returning $21 million to Central Vermont Public Service (CVPS) ratepayers as a condition of the company’s merger with Green Mountain Power. The amendment required electric utilities that have received a loan from the ratepayers to repay the loan. The Senate passed the amendment. In Galbraith’s opinion, the electric utilities received a “sweetheart deal,” while the CVPS customers “were ripped off.” He concedes work in the legislature sometimes proved frustrating. “All legislatures are.” That’s because the Montpelier establishment doesn’t like change, he said. “I make no apologies. Yes, I made people uncomfortable,” he said of his direct nature that sometimes teetered into confrontational. Next session, Galbraith anticipates health-care reform to top the list of issues. “[Vermont] has the potential to change the way health care is done in the U.S.,” he said. But, the state must finance Green Mountain Care. The GMC board will present its plan for the health-care system to the Legislature by early 2013. Galbraith plans to “take an active role” in the process. He hopes the state will develop a system that maximizes federal funding. He agrees with Dr. William Hsiao’s recommendation that the state enact a payroll tax to help pay for the new health-care system. According to Galbraith, businesses could write off this tax as a business expense. Galbraith cites environmental issues as a passion. Commercial wind projects top his list of undesirables. Vermont’s “extraordinary beauty” stems from its natural environment and its sense of community, he said, adding that “the idea of industrial wind [projects] on ridge lines when it’s opposed by the local community is wrong.” According to Galbraith, wind power in Vermont is intermittent, yet requires damaging fragile ecosystems and disrupting communities. “None of that is compensated,” he said. He plans to co-sponsor a bill requiring commercial wind projects to receive a thumbs-up from all the affected towns. “If local communities want it, fine,” he said. “But if they don’t, I don’t think it should be rammed down their throats.” Galbraith has not dropped the torch he carried last session for campaign finance. “It is a disgrace that Vermont allows direct contributions to candidates when they’ve been banned under federal law since 1907,” he said. House and Senate races in Vermont cost very little compared to other races. Donations totaling $100,000 to various candidates are “peanuts” to most corporations, but have a “huge impact” in the state, he said. To him, the irony of the Legislature voting in this year against the Citizens United decision is that while it’s voting one way, candidates simultaneously say, “But don’t take away my corporate check.” Galbraith self-financed his 2010 campaign. He does not apologize for having the deepenough pockets from which to pay his own way. “I was elected by the people of Windham County, and I wasn’t elected with an asterisk,” he said. ‘There’s more to do’ Galbraith said he’s looking ChildCare Wanted Before & after school childcare needed in my Saxtons River home 802-869-1446 234.*!5-66.7!8* .93+!:;3); ()*+,-,./!-*.!-0)1+! <.)<6. !!!!!"#$%!&'()*+!*%,-.+!/*(%0!$!1$'"!-2!"#*!/(00*+"3!)-+"! ()1-'"$%"!(%4*+")*%"!.-5!6$%!)$7*8!9*+"!-2!$::3!#*!0*"+! "-!;-!("!(%!<(%;#$)!=-5%".3!>#*'*!#*!0'*>!518! ?@!>$+!$!A-'"0$0*!B'(0(%$"-'!(%!C:-'(;$! 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While other patrons melt into their seats, White grins. Fresh from a presentation with fellow legislators to highschool students participating in the Governor’s Institute — Current Issues and Youth Activism, White is animated. She talks about student free speech and the censoring of student newspapers. School administrators have blacked out portions of student newspaper articles, she said. She points to disturbing consequences if such censorship is allowed. “If kids never learn to say things in a civil way, how do we expect adults to do it?” she asked. White, a Democrat from Putney, is vying for one of two Senate Windham County seats in Montpelier. She will go against fellow Democrats — incumbent Peter Galbraith of Townshend and newcomer Mary Cain of Brattleboro — in the Aug. 28 primary. If re-elected, White will serve her sixth term. “I grew up with the notion that you had to be involved,” said White of her inspiration to take up political life. In an indirect way, McCarthyism helped launch n Fuel pool Employees didn’t follow proper procedures, Williams said. Entergy Corp., which owns the plant, will be reviewing maintenance protocols. Vermont Yankee did not send out a press release about the incident. Williams said notifying the public was not necessary because safety wasn’t at issue. Neil Sheehan, spokesman for the Region 1 District office for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, said the plant has clear-cut reporting criteria. If a fire at the plant lasts for more than 15 minutes or if offsite firefighting assistance is called in, for example, the plant is required to report. This incident, he said, “fell in the category of not having to be reported because it was a very low level risk and it was caught quickly.” Employees were not at risk of exposure to radiation because the amount of water over the assemblies provides ample shielding, he said. The NRC’s resident inspector is reviewing the incident, he said. “There’s no good reason for this to happen at any point,” White’s political career. White said she grew up in a “politically committed family” in Minnesota. Her parents belonged to the DemocraticFarmer-Labor Party and were members of the National Farmers Union. They became involved in politics out of embarrassment by both U.S. Sen. Joseph McCarthy and the Wisconsin Republican’s antiCommunist crusade that damaged the lives and careers of many liberals in America. In her school years in the 1960s, White said she participated in anti-war protests and the Civil Rights movement. “When I wasn’t getting in trouble in school for defying the rules, my mother was,” White said. After moving to Vermont, White served nine years on the Putney Selectboard. “I really like doing public policy,” said White about why she remains in public service. Advocacy and policymaking are not the same thing, she said. Acting as an advocate is simpler, White said. An advocate only thinks of his or her mission. Policymakers have to consider everyone under their purview. White enjoys working through a tough problem and finding a solution benefitting Vermonters. Not all issues are black and white, she said. The 40,000 people in Windham County will have “40,000 different opinions.” Sometimes people can or can’t compromise on policy, she said, “but compromise is not bad and does not dilute the necessary.” Consideration for how from SECTION FRONT Sheehan said. “It speaks to human error and attention to detail, no question about that.” Arnie Gundersen, a nuclear engineer and former member of a Vermont Yankee oversight panel, said several steps in a procedure were skipped by employees. He is concerned about oversight and employee training at the plant as older workers retire. Procedures, he said, must be much more specific. “It’s a big deal, it’s a safetyrelated system, we’re not talking about mowing the lawn at VY,” Gundersen said. “There’s 300,000 gallons in the pool, and it lost 1 percent of the water in 30 minutes. It is radioactive water, it’s not like what you put in a water cooler.” Gundersen said last year employees worked on the wrong diesel engine. One was shut down and they inadvertently shut the other one down, he said. “These kinds of mistakes shouldn’t be happening,” Gundersen said. The NRC treated the incident as “business as usual,” Gundersen said. Randolph T. Holhut/Commons file photo State Sen. Jeanette White is going for her sixth term in the Vermont Senate. her decisions might affect Vermonters’ lives underlies all White’s policy considerations. Even the best system can generate negative consequences, she said. “Nobody writes a budget so they can hurt people,” White said. White anticipates healthcare reform and job creation to dominate the upcoming legislative session. The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent ruling deeming the federal Affordable Care Act as constitutional removed immediate uncertainty surrounding Vermont’s Green Mountain Care plan. Determining how to pay for the state’s new health-care plan and designing equitable coverage are the next hurdles, she said. Fallout from Tropical Storm Irene still lurks in the joints of Vermont’s economy. How the state reacts to the pressures on the economy will determine whether jobs are saved or created, she said. White was disappointed the Legislature did not delve into the state’s open meetings law last session. She pledged to continue working on issues of government transparency. She also wants to continue her focus on campaign financing — like which people make contributions, and how they do so. White feels voters have the right to know who donates to political candidates. White wants PACs (political action committees) to list their donors. She said she hopes to help change Vermont’s corrections and judicial system. The state imprisons people who might not need to sit behind bars, she said, and some inmates require mental health services, not jail time. The Legislature had a good bill to decriminalize marijuana in last session, said White. She hopes to pick the bill up in 2013. According to White, people who offend yet stay out of jail are less likely to re-offend. When someone enters the prison system, inmates often acquire “new skills” that lead them to new crimes. Finally, said White, parole often carries “insane standards” that most people can’t meet. White estimates it costs about $55,000 a year to house a male prisoner and about $70,000 for a female prisoner. What if the state took that money and spent it on other restorative justice programs, she asks. College is cheaper than jail, and the results are better for everyone, she said. White chairs the Senate Committee on Government Operations and serves on the Senate Committee on Judiciary. For her first six years in Montpelier, she served on the health-care committee and later on the institutions committee. She loves serving on “government ops,” which she described as the committee that takes on the structure and issues central to Vermont’s democracy. When she served on institutions committee, White said it wasn’t her first choice, “but you serve your constituents wherever you are, and everyone has to play with the team.” When asked about her legislative achievements, White said, “None of us can take individual credit for anything.” White said that over her five terms, she has worked on multiple big decisions like the 2010 vote to deny Vermont Yankee a Certificate of Public Good hearing. White said she also introduced legislation to regulate genetically modified organisms (GMOs) in her second term, worked on health-care reform, and pushed to pass marriage equality. She is also the main sponsor of legislation to help undocumented farm workers. “There’s very little any of us can take accolades for,” she stressed again, adding that she thinks voters should know their legislators work hard but that they should refrain from taking individual credit. Credit is due, she said, for working with 180 legislators and getting bills passed. White’s first term taught her the lesson of building relationships in Montpelier. Constituents at Santa’s Land in Putney contacted White. Park owners solicited help with getting permission to house elephants at the former park. The business had a permit from the U.S. Department of Agriculture but couldn’t get one from Vermont Fish and Wildlife. White took up the cause, hoping to change the state’s classification of elephants to domestic animals to make the permit possible for Santa’s Land. According to White, the male Republican legislators stopped saying “hi” when they passed her in the hall, swapping the greeting for imitations of elephants. White’s work became the brunt of four end-of-session cabaret skits. Although she said the reclassification attempt eventually tanked for another reason, the incident taught her to always work with the Montpelier relationship system among fellow legislators, voters, and lobbyists. “The lobbyists are Vermonters,” she said at the mention of the loaded job title. According to White, a lobbyist for Monsanto one year might well work for the Sheriffs’ Association the next. “We don’t have D.C.-style lobbyists,” she said. A difference of working styles raised its head last session when White and fellow Windham County Senator Galbraith served on the government operations committee. One point of contention was White’s lapse in delivering the campaign finance bill to Senate leadership after it was voted out of the government operations committee in 2011. “I have to admit I just forgot about it,” she said, adding that she had expected that the Senate wouldn’t take up the bill since the body was busy with redistricting. “It’s a bad thing to do, but that’s what happened.” Although he had voted against the bill in committee, Galbraith wanted to introduce amendments once the bill hit the Senate floor. After receiving questions from the press about the bill’s whereabouts in January 2012, White said she realized she hadn’t delivered it. She found the bill accidentally filed with other draft bills. “I’ll take full responsibility for it,” she said. “I should have never misplaced it.” White said the pair took different approaches to issues and disagreed on solutions. They often agreed, however, on the issues themselves, she said. White stressed that the disharmonious relationship never harmed Windham County’s representation. To White, the benefits of good policy and working relationships extend beyond counties to the entire state. C ompromise is but the sacrifice of one right or good in the hope of retaining another — too often ending in the loss of both. —Tryon Edwards Brattleboro Pharmacy 413 Canal Street 802-254-7777 Experience personal service you deserve from a friendly helpful staff you expect! PENELOPE WURR FINE CONTEMPORARY GLASS LOCAL & EUROPEAN GIFTS Brattleboro, Vermont 167 Main St. | (802) 246-3015 10am - 6pm, Mon - Sat 11am - 5pm, Sun Open 7 days a week www.penelopewurr.com OPEN LATE THIS FRIDAY NIGHT FOR GALLERY WALK Monday-Friday 8-7 Saturday 9-5 • Sunday 10-2 comes to you with the support of our commercial sponsors Award winning wines [email protected] www.putneywine.com 802 387 5925 Tours, Tastings, and Sales at the winery inside Basketville Store in Putney. Open 11-5 Daily. White Funeral Home and Cremation Service 1956 Rt. 30 Townshend, VT 05353 802-365-7555 One-Of-A-Kind Memorials | Grief Counseling Bereavement Travel | Service Guarantee Route 5n, Putney, VT Morning Glorious Vintage SHOP CLOSING! - MOVING SALE! Vintage clothing & accessories, up to 20-50% off Sale runs 2 weeks: Aug 8-18,Wed-Sat 11-5; other times by chance/appointment 18 Kimball Hill, Putney, VT • 802-536-0127 www.MorningGloriousVintage.com Stay tuned for news of our future Brattleboro showroom! Proof generated July 31, 2012 11:25 PM Route Route 5n, Putney, VT5n, Putney, VT 802-387-1100 802-387-1100 802-387-1100 8 Lynwood Ave., Holyoke, MA 8 Lynwood 8 Lynwood Ave., Holyoke,Ave., MA Holyoke, MA 413-539-6875 Plant • Lighting Plant Lighting • •Plant Lighting Chemical Nutrients • Chemical Nutrients • •Chemical Nutrients Hydroponics • Hydroponics • •Hydroponics Organic Nutrients • Organic Nutrients • •Organic Nutrients • Supplies Garden Supplies • •Garden Garden Supplies • Juice Earth Juice • •Earth Juice Earth Fox Farm Fox Farm Fox Farm Pure Blend Pure Blend Pro Pure Blend Pro Pro AN AN AN Worm Castings • Worm •Castings • Bat Worm Castings Bat Guanos Guanos Bat Guanos Canna Nutrients • Canna• Nutrients • Canna Nutrients • Beneficial • Beneficial Bugs Bugs • Beneficial Bugs 413-539-6875 413-539-6875 10 S. Main St. 10 S. Main St.10 S. Main St. 44 (Rt 5S), E.CTE. Windsor, 91 exit 44 (Rt 5S), Windsor,CT CT 91 exit 4491 (Rtexit 5S), E. Windsor, 860-254-5757 860-254-5757 860-254-5757 1179 Central Ave. (Benny's 1179 Central Ave. (Benny's 1179 Central Ave. (Benny's Plaza), Pawtucket, Plaza), Plaza), Pawtucket, RIPawtucket,RIRI 401-722-2724 401-722-2724 401-722-2724 51 West Gray Rd., Gray,ME ME 51 West Gray Rd., Gray, ME 51 West Gray Rd., Gray, 207-657-8033 207-657-8033 207-657-8033 our newest location Visit our newest location VisitVisit our newest location 1702 Fiero Ave., 1702 Fiero Ave., Rotterdam, NYRotterdam, NY 1702 Fiero Ave., Rotterdam, NY 518-952-4654 518-952-4654 518-952-4654 Hours: M-FHours: 10-5:30,M-F Sat.10-5:30, 10-3 Sat. 10-3 Hours: M-F email: 10-5:30, Sat. 10-3 www.liquidsun.bz email: www.liquidsun.bz [email protected] [email protected] www.liquidsun.bz email: [email protected] Elizabeth Ann Agostini Attorney Q PO Box 336 Townshend, VT 05353 www.agostinilaw.com 802•365•7740 [email protected] Jewett Plumbing & Heating, Inc. 802-254-4963 1090 Western Ave. W. Brattleboro, VT [email protected] NEWS A4 AROUND THE TOWNS Family-friendly policies Newcomer Cain sets sights on State Senate Paid family leave By Olga Peters The Commons BRATTLEBORO—State senate hopeful Mary Cain’s bright blazer adds spark to the atmosphere of the The Works Bakery Cafe in downtown Brattleboro. “It’s critical to realize that the very same tools for managing a family, decision making, budgeting time and money are the same as being able to multitask in the field of politics,” said Cain reading from her two typed pages of talking points. “Encouraging women to run is critical to making family-friendly policies in the work place,” she said. The Democratic candidate is challenging fellow Democratic incumbents Jeanette White of Putney and Peter Galbraith of Townshend in the Aug. 28 primary. Cain has centered her campaign on developing familyfriendly policies such as paid parental leave, equal pay, ending childhood hunger, and revitalizing Windham County’s economy. Cain, a justice of the peace, Brattleboro Town Meeting Member, and single mother, said she has won every race she has entered. A keen ability to “frame the conversation” underscores her success, she said. Cain’s resume on the networking website LinkedIn lists years of event planning and marketing experience. For Cain, running for the state senate serves as a natural progression for her as a woman active in her community. “We have to change the face of political leadership so that women look like that they are your next door neighbor, who jogs, organizes clothing drives, schleps her kids to soccer practice and still represents her community,” said Cain. Like the protagonist of the film Slumdog Millionaire, Cain said she feels her entire life has prepared her for to serve as State Senator. “Women are acting in the community. It’s only natural they should seek to make a difference in politics and policy,” she said. “I have been advocating for most of my life, starting from the first election [class president] I won in 1974,” she said. “I have been at school board meetings, town and Selectboard meetings, interactive TV, and at the State Capital giving testimony for issues.” She counts former governor and ambassador Madeleine M. Kunin as a mentor and referenced Kunin’s 2008 book Pearls, Politics, and Power: How Women BCTV Mary Cain, a justice of the peace, is running as a newcomer to state office. Can Win and Lead throughout the interview. In that book, Kunin writes about the need for a new “political leadership” in America. In the introduction, Kunin attributes a quote to 17-year-old Jessica Riegel, and her mother, who wrote to Kunin saying, “We have to change the face of political leadership so that ‘the woman who looks like their next-door neighbor, who jogs in the morning, who loves horror movies, spills coffee, organizes clothing drives, schleps her kids to soccer practice and orders takeout, is responsible and driven enough to represent them [the voters]’.” “You can be assured that I will listen, I will help, and I will try to revitalize our Windham County community through getting more jobs, by thinking Vermont in decision-making and by helping to show how by working together, all of us can make Vermont a better place to live for ourselves and future generations,” she said. Cain said she has listened to the concerns of seniors at Brattleboro’s Melrose Terrace housing complex afraid they’ll be forced to leave their homes. She said she has also heard the concerns of new graduates facing the decision to leave their home state to find jobs. She said she would like to see Vermont partner with local food suppliers to eliminate childhood hunger. “I’d like to see a program implemented similar to WIC in which [food] is delivered to the homes of our most vulnerable senior population, which would help sustain these Vermonters with a minimum of healthy food so that they can stretch their Social Security dollars for other areas.” said Cain. real estate 1-2-3 Rooms Downtown Bratt Secure Building. Heat & Utilities included. 802-257-7571 www.barber building apartments.com References required To place your employment ad, call Nancy at (802) 246-6397 or email [email protected] FOR RENT 1 Bedroom Apartment FOR RENT 9 Canal Street (over the new Co-op) 1Brand Bedroom Apartment New Green Construction & Energy 9 Canal Street the new Co-op) Efficient (over in Downtown Brattleboro, VT Brand New Green Construction & Energy $685/month including Heat & Hot Water EfficientOninSite Downtown Brattleboro, VT Laundry Facility & Bike Storage $685/month including Heat & Hot Water Call (802) 246-2115 On Site LaundryIncome Facility & Bike eligibility up toStorage : Call (802) 246-2115 Income eligibility up to: Single Person $44,700/yr Single Person $44,700/yr People $51,000/yr 2 People2 $51,000/yr Pointing to Europe, Cain said that paid family leave could act as an economic development driver by supporting women’s earning potential, removing the fear some women carry of losing their job if they choose to have a child, equalizing gender roles, and making Vermont an attractive place to potential businesses looking to relocate. “The marketing possibilities are endless in implementing this small change,” said Cain. In her own experience, California’s paid family leave program helped her raise her three small children while living on the West Coast. She said she empathizes with single parents trying to juggle family duties while trying to make ends meet. Cain, who once worked as a caterer, said she helped set up the delivery of leftover food from events she has supervised to shelters. Her experience in catering brought Cain to work at the Vermont Yankee nuclear power station in Vernon, helping to feed refueling outage contractors. This experience provided insight into the VY issue from both outside and inside the plant, she said. The prospect of more green energy projects in Vermont also excites Cain, she said. Disappointment inspired Cain to run for state senate. She expressed frustration with aspects of Vermont government, like the languishing of the early education workers unionization bill, H.97. Cain said it’s hard for lower to middle income Vermonters to take an active role in politics. The time commitment facing Vermont’s citizen legislators requires them to have financial stability before running for office. For Cain, meeting this need translates into someone who is wealthy, retired, or self-employed, she said. Windham County residents need someone who understands them, said Cain. The county also needs a passionate marketing professional to promote the area. Cain said, if elected, she would travel to trade shows to help attract environmental and familyfriendly companies to the region. On her campaign website, www.cain4vt.com, Cain also celebrates her Cavendish childhood, lists herself as a member of the Brattleboro District Agency of Human Services Advisory T h e C o m m o ns • Wednesday, August 1, 2012 Rockingham Old Home Days returns to town this weekend ROCKINGHAM—For the first time in more than a decade, Rockingham Old Home Days is back in The Square. The Great Falls Regional Chamber of Commerce, the Bellows Falls Downtown Development Alliance, the town of Rockingham, and the Old Home Days Committee teamed up bring this annual celebration back downtown. With the exception of an antique truck show at Bellows Falls Union High School, all the events scheduled on Saturday, Aug. 4, will be in and around The Square. The day begins with the Bring It Home 5K road race in the morning. The rest of the day features a sidewalk sale, live music from local bands, games and children’s activities, a pizza and ice cream eating contest, and assorted other activities before the day ends with a fireworks display starting at 9:30 p.m. Food vendors will be on hand from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., and American Legion Post 37 will host a chicken barbecue from 9 a.m.-1 p.m. A townwide tag sale will also be held. For a complete schedule of events, go to www.gfcc.org, or visit the Rockingham Old Home Days Facebook page. Brattleboro, Westminster receive economic development grants BRATTLEBORO—Two Windham County projects are among the recipients of seven Vermont Community Development Program grants totaling $1.9 million that were announced by Gov. Peter Shumlin and Commerce and Community Development Secretary Lawrence Miller at a ceremony July 27 in Morristown. The town of Brattleboro will be getting $325,000 for a loan to Carbon Harvest Energy, which will complete work on an agricultural facility and create nine new jobs in the process. Located at the Windham Solid Waste Management District facility on Old Ferry Road, Carbon Harvest is currently generating 250 kilowatts of electricity from methane gas from the decomposing trash in the now-closed 30-acre landfill. The company plans to use the waste heat from electric generation to heat a 20,000 square foot greenhouse for year-round aquaculture and Council 2007-2010, and details her pride at being the granddaughter of a veteran who served in the Navy’s Construction Battalions, otherwise known at Seabees. The website states that she possesses traditional family values, earned a University of Vermont degree, and is what she called an “unofficial Ambassador” for Vermont. “I hope the people of Windham County think it’s a great match,” she said. Cain’s website also promotes her as “an award winning Justice of the Peace.” During the interview, Cain said she understood that no plant production. grant, which it will loan to the According to the company’s Windham & Windsor Housing website, carbonharvestenergy. Trust for the renovation of a com/projects/brattleboro-carbon- multi-family residential buildharvest, the system will supply ing in the village of North high quality fish and fresh veg- Westminster. etables to local markets, with a The renovation will increase portion going to the Vermont the total number of affordable Foodbank. units from four to six. Carbon Harvest president The Vermont Community Robert McCormick described D e v e l o p m e n t P r o g r a m the process in October 2010 money comes from the apwhen the Brattleboro facility p r o x i m a t e l y $ 7 m i l l i o n opened. He said nutrient-rich Vermont receives annually water from the recirculating in Community Development aquaculture system will be Block Grant funds from the filtered and then recycled as U.S. Department of Housing fertilizer for plants grown hy- and Urban Development, droponically, a technology which must be used principally known as “aquaponics.” This to benefit persons of low and water will also be used, along moderate income. with carbon dioxide from the The awards leverage more power plant, for a research than $13 million in other project to grow algae for bio- funds from private and pubfuels and feed. lic sources. As McCormick described The state awards the comit, it will be a “circular model petitive grants based on recthat is sustainable and wastes ommendations of the Vermont nothing.” Community Development The town of Westminster B o a r d a n d a p p r o v a l o f also received a $150,000 Secretary Miller. awards exist for justices of the peace. Cain explained this sobriquet as “semantics.” Cain said that she has won numerous awards since the 1970s, including a recipe contest. She is also a justice of the peace. Therefore, this combination earns her the title of award-winning justice of the peace. Cain landed in hot water this month when she signed a marriage license for the wedding of Jennifer Dusenbery and Michael Martin, now deceased — a wedding Cain did not officiate at. This action is against Vermont statute. The Vermont State Police confirmed it is investigating the incident, but would not comment whether Cain is targeted in the investigation. Despite the flap, Cain is seeking support. “My campaign is a grassroots one which focuses on issues, not in wasting money on signs that are strewn all over our Vermont landscape and then frequently left for weeks, unpicked up,” said Cain. “The money that I spend will be in getting the message out to Vermonters, so that if they wish to see real change, then they should join the Citizens for Cain campaign and elect me to represent them.” 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: wch s4 pet s.o rg Hi! My name is Dusty and don’t I have the most precious face you’ve ever seen? Although I can be timid at first, I truly am a sweetheart. I love people and affection of all sorts. I also have this cute little quirk - I like to lick people’s hands! It’s a bit weird but adorable nonetheless! I’d probably be all right with another cat in my new home, we’d just need a nice, slow introduction. Dogs would probably be a bit too scary but mellow children 10+ would probably be fine by me. Come in to meet me soon! Hi there! My name is Zinnia and don’t I just have the most precious face? I’m a real doll-I love people more than anything! I can be a bit shy at first but give me some time and some gentle pets on my head, and you’ll see the real me. I get along with other cats and could probably live with a cat-savvy dog if we’re introduced properly. And mellow children 8+ would be fine too! Stop by soon and fall in love! Meet the lovely and charming Wendy girl! Wendy is very easy going and gentle. She gets along with all people, other dogs and is quite a polite lady with cats as well. Wendy is a quiet miss who also enjoys following her nose wherever it may lead her. She is fun and creative and would love nothing better than to sniff around your yard, maybe finding a toad or frog to play with and then coming back to you for a treat and some one on one cuddle time- even watching a movie on the couch! Does Wendy seem like your kinda Beagle gal? Come and check her out! My name is Penny. I am a very sweet and quiet little girl who loves to be around calm people and pets like me. Being curled up in someone’s loving arms is where I want to be, but I do like a good walk and playing with dogs my own size. I think cats are interesting and a little bit intimidating,so maybe a home with outside cats would be better for me. Children around 10 years and up I prefer, just because I feel comfortable when I’m in a calm environment. If you like my photos and what I have to say, please come in and see me. I’m always ready for a good cuddle! Love, Penny This space is graciously sponsored by: 648 Putney Road Brattleboro, VT 802.257.3700 Equal Opportunity Housing www.w-wht.org Equal Opportunity Housing www.w-wht.org Proof generated July 31, 2012 11:25 PM on estopcou n try p e t . c o m 149 Emerald St Keene, NH 603.352.9200 THE COMMONS NEWS • Wednesday, August 1, 2012 A5 MILESTONES Births, deaths, and news of people from Windham County Obituaries • N a n c y J. Burbank, 65 , of Townshend. Died July 25 at home. Wife of John H. Burbank for 33 years. Mother of Melissa Burbank-Gonzalez and her husband, David Gonzalez, of Dover, N.H., and the late Mark Dennis Shuey. Stepmother of Patricia Burbank Lloyd of Audenried, Pa., Sandra Burbank Zarek of Cheshire, Mass., and the late Yvonne Burbank Hudson. Born in Montpelier, the daughter of Helen (Seckington) and the late William Dillon, she was raised in Brattleboro and graduated from Brattleboro Union High School in 1965. She worked for many years as a telephone customer service representative at the Edge Company and received many awards for her outstanding service to customers. MEMORIAL INFORMATION : A service will be held to celebrate her life at St. Michael’s Roman Catholic Church in Brattleboro on Saturday Aug. 4, 2012 at noon. Following the service, there will be a reception at a site to be determined later. Donations to the Grace Cottage Hospital’s Messenger Valley Pharmacy renovation and expansion fund, in care of the Grace Cottage Foundation, P.O. Box 1, Townshend, VT 05353. • Robert “ R o b b ” T. Cross, 61, of and prided herself on regular completion of the Sunday New York Times crossword puzzle. Most of all, she enjoyed many special times with friends and family, in Durham, Tucson, and Wilmington. MEMOR I A L INFORMATION: A service to celebrate her life will be held on Saturday, Aug. 18, at 10 a.m., at Our Lady of Fatima Church in Wilmington, with burial to follow in Riverview Cemetery. Donations to UNC Hospice, P.O. Box 1077, Pittsboro, NC 27312, or UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, External Affairs Office, UNC-CH CB 7295, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7295. • D o r o t hy Elizabeth “ D o t ” Parenchuck, 9 1 , formerly of Brattleboro. Died July 26 at Maplewood Nursing Home in Westmoreland, N.H. Wife of the late Chester W. Parenchuck for 60 years. Mother of Rose Noel of Dracut, Mass, Carol Nason of Groton, Mass, Dawn Whitney of Richmond, N.H., and Donna Foster of Orange, Mass. Sister of George, Donald, Richard, and Everett Field, Jr., Rose Fate, and Florence Geso. Stepsister of Wendell Cook. Born in Hinsdale, N.H., the daughter of the late Everett and Eveline (Stewart) Field, she graduated from Hinsdale High School, Class of 1939. She had been a former resident of Orange and Brattleboro, and prior to becoming a patient at Maplewood, she made her home with her daughter, Dawn, in Richmond, N.H. She had been employed at the former Erving Paper Mill in Erving, Mass. and Georgia Pacific Paper Mill in Brattleboro, where she retired from in 1986. Previously, she had worked for N.D. Cass Toys in Athol, Mass. She had attended St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Orange. She enjoyed ceramics, knitting, and bowling. She also cherished time spent with her family, especially her grandchildren. MEMORIAL INFORMATION: A funeral services was held July 31 at Atamaniuk Funeral Home in Brattleboro, with burial in Pine Grove Cemetery in Hinsdale, where she was laid to rest next to her husband. Donations to Maplewood Nursing Home, 201 River Rd., Westmoreland, NH 03467. Brattleboro. Died July 21 of cancer. Son of Arthur and Helen (Talmadge) Cross. Father of Jason T. Cross and Jesse CrossNickerson. Brother of Edward Cross. Significant other of Doris Severinghaus. He was an accomplished sailor and enjoyed sailing “Limin,” his own boat, and spending time with his boating friends in Rhode Island. He was a NASCAR enthusiast, racing his own cars in his younger days. He also played guitar in rock and blues bands throughout his life. He loved vacationing in the Caribbean, Bob Marley, and a good rum cocktail. The company of his family and many friends gave him great joy. MEMORIAL INFORMATION : A celebration of his life was held July 28 at his home. Donations to the Nicholas G. • Jeffrey L. Sheehan, Giamartino Scholarship Fund, in care of Brattleboro Union 27, of Weston. High School, 131 Fairground Died July 19 Road, Brattleboro, VT 05301, at the Rutland and the Oncology Department at Regional Brattleboro Memorial Hospital, Medical Center. 17 Belmont Ave., Brattleboro, Son of George VT 05301. Condolences may and Marianne Carroll of Weston. be sent to Atamaniuk Funeral Home at www.atamaniuk.com. • Albert Ernest Johnson, 69, of West Dover. Died June 20 in Franklin, Tenn. Son of the late Ernest Albert and Lea Marie Kanerva Johnson. Former husband of Sharon Johnson. Brother of Ron Johnson. He was an insurance agent and served in the Army in Vietnam. MEMORIAL INFORMATION: Graveside services with military honors were held July 28 at Spring Hill Memorial Park. Donations to Windham County Humane Society, P.O. Box 397, Brattleboro, VT 05302. • L a n a W a r n e r Palumbo, 75, of Durham, N.C., formerly of Wilmington. Died July 25 at her home following a long illness. Mother of Andrew Palumbo and his wife, Kristina, of Durham. Born in Bangor, Maine, the daughter of the late Gordon Chase Warner and Hazel Thorne Warner. She was a direct descendant of Andrew Warner, who in 1636 was a founder of Hartford, Conn., with the Rev. Thomas Hooker. She graduated from Smith College in 1959 with a Bachelor of Science degree. Following graduation, she spent four years as a research biologist at Yale. In 1963, she spent her first winter in Vermont and relocated permanently in 1964 running the Handle House Inn. During a period that encompassed nearly four decades, starting in 1968, she was involved with Art on the Mountain, serving as chairwoman for several years. She was also a member of the board of the Deerfield Valley Health Center Volunteers, and her organizational skills were important to the extraordinary financial success of that project. She was Administrative Assistant for the town of Wilmington as well as a Lister, serving the town faithfully from 1991 until 2008, when she moved to Durham to be closer to her grandchildren. She was an avid reader, Brother of April Brown of Chester; Amber Hubner and her husband, Jason, of Putney, Erin Carroll of Weston, Patricia Carroll of Ft. Myers, Fla, and Christian Carroll of Miami, Fla. Born in Brattleboro, he attended Flood Brook Elementary School in Londonderry and graduated from Burr & Burton Academy, Class of 2006. He was employed at the Vermont Country Store in Weston. He enjoyed landscaping and did odd jobs for many people in the town of Weston. He was also assistant sexton at the Old Parish Church. He loved life, loved people, and was an advocate for his friends with disabilities. He loved playing video games, enjoyed comedy, and was an avid fan of the Red Sox and the Patriots. He also enjoyed swimming, hiking, kayaking, yoga, horseback riding, skiing, snowshoeing, cooking and fishing, and he loved animals. MEMORIAL INFORMATION : A memorial service will be celebrated on Sunday, Aug. 5, at 2 p.m., at the Old Parish Church in Weston. Donations to the Old Parish Church, P.O. Box 125, Weston, VT 05161, or to Lincoln Street Global Campus, 374 River St., Springfield, VT 05156. • Christine Alison (Rice) Soule, 43, of Sanford, Maine, formerly of Rockingham. Died July 22 at the Gosnell Memorial Hospice House. Mother of Kelsey and Jensen Doiron of Sanford. Sister of Howard Rice Jr. of Falmouth, Mass., Rebecca Thompson of Richmond, and Amy Sciacca of Westminster. Born in Rockingham, daughter of Howard and Donna (Nims) Rice, she graduated from Bellows Falls Union High School and received a Bachelor of Music degree from Keene State College. Music brought her joy and she spread that love of music throughout her life. She moved to Maine in 1992, and began teaching piano lessons, both privately and through Sanford Community Adult Education. She also served as Sanford High School Marching Band Assistant and Color Guard Instructor for six years. Her true passion was working with children, and she was proud of her 10 years as a teacher at St. Thomas School and her four years at Wells Elementary School. She was a compassionate person and spent time working with others through both Home Instead Senior Care and Waban, Inc. She spent many summers working for the Sanford Recreation Department and for the past nine years had volunteered tireless hours as a coach, board member, registrar, and VP through the Sanford Soccer Association. Her most important and beloved job was raising her two girls. M E MOR I A L I N F OR M A TION : A funeral Mass was held July 25, at St. Therèse of Lisieux Parish, Holy Family Church, in Sanford, with interment on July 26 at the New Westminster Cemetery. Donations to Safe Haven Humane Society, 1616 Post Rd., Wells, ME 04090. College news • C a s ey A . D e M a r s i c o of Newfane and B e t h E . Honsaker of Putney both received first honors on the Clark University Dean’s List for the Spring 2012 semester. Adam P. Boyle of Brattleboro and Daphne L. Kinney-Landis of Guilford received second honors. • Ashley Morgan, a junior majoring in chemical engineering, from West Townshend, and William Parker of Guilford, a freshman majoring in mechanical engineering, both were named to the Dean’s List at Worcester Polytechnic Institute for the Spring 2012 semester. • Nicole Daniels, a junior majoring in chemistry and political science from Brattleboro, was named to the Dean’s List at Hartwick College for the Spring 2012 semester. • Benjamin Harwood of Brattleboro was named to the Dean’s List at Tufts University for the Spring 2012 semester. School news • Elise Huntley, a homeschooled student from Wilmington, recently received a bronze medal in State University of New York at Oswego’s second annual GENIUS (Global Environmental Issues — U.S.) Olympiad, a global high school science, art, creative writing, and design competition focused on the environment. Huntley presented a science project titled “Are Macroinvertebrates Vermont Strong? Monitoring One Stream’s Recovery and Water Quality after Tropical Storm Irene and Investigating the Conventional Belief that Flooding and Stream Dredging Have an Inverse Impact on the Overall Health of a Stream” during an exhibition in the college’s Campus Center arena at the GENIUS finals. 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. Submit obituaries, births, scholarships, high-school and college achievements, awards, and the like to [email protected]. Deadline is Friday for the following week’s paper. Fearing Fearing the the Worst? Worst? Fearing the Worst? Having your car repaired is never at the top of your list. Having your car repaired is at top your The cost Having yourand car anxiety repairedinvolved is never never make at the the most top of ofpeople your list. list. 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HELP WANTED To place your employment ad, call Nancy at (802) 246-6397 or email [email protected] Dutton Farm Farmstand & Bakery Help Full or Part-Time 8:00 AM – 7:30PM • Includes Weekends Apply in person rte 30, newfane or rte 9, West Brattleboro Brattleboro Housing Authority PROPERTY MANAGER The Brattleboro Housing Authority has an exciting opportunity for a Property Manager with responsibility for 3 sites and a total of 132 housing units. The successful candidate will have excellent skills and abilities in: property management; regulatory interpretation, compliance and enforcement; interpersonal relations; verbal and written communication, work organization and computer competency. Experience in property management, assisted housing or working with low-income individuals is desirable, but not essential. Send resumes to [email protected] or Christine Hart, ED, BHA, P.O. Box 2275, Brattleboro, VT 05303. Closing date is August 10, 2012. Position open immediately. EOE. Brattleboro Housing Authority Public Housing caPital imProvement and redeveloPment manager The Brattleboro Housing Authority has an Immediate opening for a Capital Improvement & Redevelopment Manager to manage the capital fund program including all procurement, construction projects and Needs Assessment, as well as the redevelopment of public housing sites. Experience in nonprofit housing development in Vermont helpful, but other nonprofit or public housing development experience is sufficient. Must be a detail-oriented team leader with excellent communication and computer skills and experience in development collaboration. Send resumes to [email protected] or Christine Hart, ED, BHA, P.O. Box 2275, Brattleboro, VT 05303. Closing date is August 10, 2012. Position open immediately. EOE. Medical Receptionist needed for a busy clinic. Must have strong people, phone and computer skills, and be able to multi-task in a fast paced, team oriented office environment. This is a part-time M-F position with shift ending typically by 7:30pm. Pays $9.50 - $10.75 BOE. Please send resume and cover letter to: Sojourns Community Health Clinic Attn: FD 4923 US Rte. 5 Westminster, VT 05158 Two Masters Automotive Two Masters Automotive Two Masters Two Masters Automotive Automotive 114 Main Street, Putney, VT 114 114 Main Main Street, Street, Putney, Putney, VT VT 114 Main Street, Putney, VT 802-387-3641 802-387-3641 802-387-3641 802-387-3641 DEAD HARD DRIVE!! 3 $ You Pay $2.99 Ea. Professional Grade Duck Tape® Assorted colors and styles. Great for color coding materials, fashion crafting and imaginative projects. 42922 After $2 Mail-In Rebate. Insect Killer Spray 99 Brown & Roberts Lyle Howe GraceCottage H O S P I T A L Be sure to look for our flyer in the 8/1 Reformer! Townshend, VT www.gracecottage.org Caring Hands, Healing Hands Grace Cottage Hospital Rehabilitation: Proof generated July 31, 2012 11:25 PM Ea. 14 oz. 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Where construction machinery and piles of dirt and gravel sat just a few short weeks ago, now an iron fence, a new sidewalk, a freshly-paved parking area, new streetlights, and a bus shelter can be seen. Taken together, the panorama of progress suddenly hits you. After more than three decades of discussion, false starts, bureaucratic snafus, and funding uncertainties, the Union Station project is finally becoming real, and its impact on the lower end of downtown Brattleboro near the Whetstone Brook is undeniable. On July 25, the town celebrated the progress made on the Union Station project with a ribbon-cutting ceremony featuring most of the people who have been involved in the final push toward turning an eyesore into an asset. A postcard showing Union Station in the 1920s. The project’s backstory Made in America www.plotkinfurniture.com F i n e F u rni ture & Mattresses 93 Park Ave •Keene, NH • 800-747-2564 Acupuncture for Women’s Health • Improve Fertility • Fibroids and Painful Periods • Natural Menopause/ Hormone Balance Acupuncture & Chinese Medicine Putney Road, Brattleboro, VT 802-289-4087 33 years established practice A Bead Store and a Whole Lot More! 115 Main Street Brattleboro, VT 802-257-5114 www.beadniksvt.com CELEBRATING 20 YEARS! Proof generated July 31, 2012 11:25 PM At a cost of $75,000, Union Station was built for the Central Vermont and Boston & Maine railroads in 1915. For the next five decades, it served as the town’s rail center. But when passenger rail service ended on Sept. 1, 1966 — the result of the Interstate Highway System and changing travel habits — the station closed and quickly fell into disrepair. The building was sold to the town, and there was talk of tearing it down and turning it into a parking lot, but instead, the building was rescued. In 1972, the top two levels became the home of the Brattleboro Museum & Art Center. The station’s ground floor became the new waiting room for passengers when Amtrak resumed rail service to Brattleboro in 1973. Instead of becoming a parking lot, Union Station ended up on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974. But the area around Union Station still reflected the industrial legacy of Brattleboro, a legacy that was slowly fading away. It presented a neglected landscape to passengers coming into town on the train. Veronica “Ronny” Johnson and Helene Henry wanted to do something about that, and pressed the Selectboard in 1977 to apply for grant money to do a study of the site. Town Manager Barbara Sondag said that was when the first mention of renovations to Union Station took place at a Selectboard meeting. The Selectboard decided to go forward with a $100,000 feasibility study, and that marked the beginning a long-running saga of a project that looked like it might never happen. The initial feasibility study was conducted in the 1970s, but languished for nearly 20 years until 1998, when town officials proposed a two-phase, multi-modal project that included a downtown parking garage and a refurbished Amtrak station. The project received $8 million from the Federal Transit Administration; $1.8 million in state grants; $4 million in local funds raised by bond issue; and $1.2 million through other sources. Sondag credited former U.S. Sen. James Jeffords, I-Vt., for providing most of the funds through the earmark process. The parking garage, which also includes a local and intercity bus station, was completed in 2003, but the Union Station renovations and the purchase of land across the tracks from the station on Depot Street, proved harder to complete. Lawsuits, a federal audit of the project’s funding, environmental concerns, and other delays forced the project to be scaled back. Sondag said the original plan, to build a covered passenger platform, had to be shelved because the town lost some of its original funding. The focus shifted across the tracks. The town pressed ahead, and by the end of 2011, work was finally set to begin on Depot Street. Sondag said that it took years of teamwork and determination to get the project to that point. “We’re here today to celebrate a really collaborative effort,” said Sondag. “There are so many people that were involved in this project, and so many unique problems that we experienced with this project, that sometimes I think if we didn’t have each other, it could have been a really bad situation.” Today, and tomorrow Work finally began in March with the demolition of the old Brattleboro Gasworks and Scalehouse buildings. The land was capped with soil and soon was transformed into a small park. A new sidewalk was built in front of the 17-space parking area. This will be the new place for people waiting to pick up or drop off train passengers, as the current parking area at the station will be converted into a passenger platform. A small timber-frame bus shelter, designed and built by Monica MacNeille, was installed near the corner of Bridge and Depot streets. Still to come are improvements to the station itself, which is one of the busiest in Vermont. “Now we have to work on the back of the station,” said BMAC director Danny Lichtenfeld. “It’s a little scruffy now, but it wouldn’t take much to make it look better.” It could become even busier once upgrades to the rail line between Brattleboro and Springfield, Mass., speed up travel times and return passenger trains to the Connecticut River Valley route through Greenfield, Northampton, and Holyoke, Mass., on the way to Springfield, New Haven, Conn., and New York City. As for the Union Station area, one last big piece is still missing — the construction of the new Hinsdale-Brattleboro bridge. The current two bridges that carry Route 119 over the Connecticut River were built in 1920, and have been slated for replacement for years. However, the state of New Hampshire, which owns the bridges, has balked at the estimated nearly $37 million cost of building the replacement span downstream between the former Norm’s Marina and the former Morse’s Feed Store, and has indefinitely deferred the project. If the new bridge gets built, the 1920 spans would become pedestrian bridges and a longtime traffic bottleneck would be removed. The new bridge would cross the railroad tracks, eliminating traffic backups around Malfunction Junction when trains pass through. Also ahead is determining the next use of the former Archery Building at 28 Depot St. It was originally targeted for demolition until the state Division for Historic Preservation deemed the 19th century building historically significant and worthy of saving. Old photographs of the building from the turn of the 20th century suggest that it was a meat-packing house. The Archery Building has been secured. The town is now accepting proposals for reuse of the building. A site visit will be held on Aug. 7 at 1 p.m. Proposals are due by 10 a.m. on Sept. 12. They will then be reviewed by an ad hoc committee comprised of members of the town’s Union Station, SBA, and Arts committees, the Planning Commission, and the Recreation and Parks Department, who will then forward a recommendation to the Selectboard. Because the property was bought with funding from the Federal Transportation Authority, it cannot be sold to a private enterprise. The town hopes to lease it. All in all, Sondag said that while there is still much to do, the project to this point can be considered a success. “We don’t have the project we initially envisioned back in 1997, but I hope people will see that we have a green field where there used to be a brownfield, that removing the parking to over here gives us a safe train platform, that we now have a lovely view when people get off the train, and that we’ve removed some fire hazards by removing some derelict buildings.” “We’re not finished yet,” she added, “but I think this is a successful project.“ It was sentiment echoed by Selectboard Chair Dick DeGray. “This corner of the community has seen dramatic change over the past year,“ he said. “This is what happens when people have a passion in the things they believe in.” Henry and Johnson, who started the ball rolling in 1977, are still on the Union Station Committee and were among the guests at the July 25 ceremony. Johnson had the honor of cutting the ribbon. THE COMMONS FOOD & DRINK • Wednesday, August 1, 2012 S E C T I O N B1 B FOOD & DRINKMonthly Wednesday,August1,2012 • page B1 Tender sweet flavor can reign supreme in the latesummer kitchen Passionate about pickling Author and food maven Andrea Chesman shows how it’s not just for cucumbers anymore By Richard Henke Vermont Associates for The Commons B RATTLEBORO— Earlier this month, celebrated food writer Andrea Chesman came to Everyone’s Books in Brattleboro to talk pickles. Facing a table in the bookstore set out with a tantalizing spread of varieties of homemade pickles for the tasting, paired with palette-cleansing crackers, an eager, pickle-crazy crowd was excited to try her delicacies. They also longed to hear this cooking and canning expert speak to them on the art of fermenting food at home. “Millions of Americans are discovering that growing and harvesting their own vegetables is only half the fun,” Chesman said. “It’s even more gratifying to preserve that produce for yearround eating — and there’s no tastier way to stock the pantry shelves than by making pickles and relishes.” Chesman was in Brattleboro to promote her new book on pickling, The Pickled Pantry: From Apples to Zucchini, 150 Recipes for Pickles, Relishes, Chutneys & More. A resident of Ripton, a small town near Middlebury, Chesman is a food writer and gardener. Some of the many cookbooks she has authored include Recipes from the Root Cellar, Serving Up the Harvest, and Pickles and Relishes. She had been contributing food editor for Vermont Life for 10 years, and had a regular column on food in both the Burlington Free Press and Edible Green Mountains. “Mostly, I have written about vegetables,” she said. “I’ve also written about cooking with the seasons, roasting vegetables, and healthy eating.” She co-wrote Mom’s Best Desserts, Mom’s Best OneDish Suppers, and Mom’s Best Crowd-Pleasers. Chesman’s latest work, The Pickled Pantry, is a guide to pickling the harvest. She said the book provides 150 recipes for pickling everything from apples to zucchini. “There are techniques for making fermented pickles, salsas, relishes, and chutneys; freezer and refrigerator options; and recipes that feature pickles front and center.” She added that there are “instructions for single jars and small batches, as well as ways to preserve a bumper crop of produce. Backyard gardeners, farmers’ market shoppers, and CSA shareholders will all find what they are looking for.” Chessman introduces readers to the foundation techniques of pickling before delving into the recipes, explaining ingredients, equipment, preparation, and safe pickling procedures. Profiles of pickling experts throughout the book include Sandor Katz, author of Wild Fermentation; blogger Tigress in a Pickle; and Addie Rose Holland and Dan Rosenberg, owners of Real Pickles in Greenfield, Mass. She was eager in this book to include voices of others who are passionate about the art of pickling. A whole world of pickles Chesman’s pickled recipes in The Pickled Pantry are astonishingly diverse — from Korean kimchi to French herbed jardinière, from chutneys to chow chow, and from classic bread and butters to rosemary onion confit, Italian tomato relish, and old-fashioned watermelon rind pickles. She explains to her readers how to use all of the pickled produce, with almost 40 recipes for a wide range of dishes, including fried pickles, creamy dilled smoked fish pasta salad, oven-baked barbecue ribs, Korean bulgogi tacos with kimchi, and even German chocolate sauerkraut cake. “I got started in pickling back in 1974 when I worked in a community garden in Ithaca, N.Y., as a way to preserve my first harvest,” she explained. “I asked my grandmother how to pickle, and she said you add just enough salt until you gag. I guess my gag reflex was not as developed as hers, because I did not add nearly enough STOREY.COM salt. My first attempt at pickA u t h o r A n d r e a ling was a failure, as it came Chesman. ■ SEE PICKLING, PAGE B4 Simplicity in SQUASH ASHLEY E. BLOM (QUARTERLIFECUISINE.COM)/THE COMMONS Zucchini boats with tomato and cheese: a ridiculously tasty and simple way to use up those unfairly maligned squash. A Brattleboro UGUST IS a magnifi- cent month for many reasons, not the least of which is that the zucchini crop seems still controllable. An early-morning search in the garden, gingerly parting those large prickly leaves, produces delicate green fingers of squash, a smattering of glorious buttery blossoms with not a late-season monster in sight. Zucchini grow at an alarming rate. Those lovely blossoms can turn into 8-inch fruit in just a few days. If you are slow to pick them, you end up with a garden full of torpedoes. A web search for “largest zucchini ever grown” identifies one that weighs in at 65 pounds. That’s a lot of zucchini bread. Many of our mothers served up all varieties of summer squash in bland, overcooked, mushy mounds whose tepid, watery residue would run all over the plate into the mashed potatoes. Generations of squash haters were thus created. I propose to lure them back. Harvested while still young and tender, zucchini and its cousins — the pattypan and yellow summer squash — have more than enough culinary potential and tender sweet flavor to reign supreme in the latesummer kitchen. Summer squash is delicious when combined with fresh herbs, which are themselves just now coming into their own, or with the addition of a few early tomatoes, a smattering of scallions, and some basics like pasta, eggs, and cheese. Summer begs simplicity. CHRISTOPHER EMILY COUTANT The World on My Plate No one wants to spend hours in the kitchen when the sun is shining and the outdoors is calling, so summer foods should focus on the ingredient, not some fancy combination of flavors. Dinner should be easy to make; at the same time, it should showcase the beauty of the produce we or our neighbor farmers have worked so hard to grow. So here are five simple recipes that will make even the most skeptical among you a believer. These recipes are made to feed two people (adjust accordingly for more), and they use uncomplicated ingredients that can all be put together from start to finish in less than 45 minutes. Pasta with summer squash and zucchini The other night, the refrigerator yielded some squash — a great basis for a simple and delicious pasta dish. There was a bowl of cherry tomatoes on the counter and scallions in the garden, as well as basil and mint. Squash does have a high water content, so they need to be sliced thinly and cooked down to evaporate some of the liquid they throw off. Put on a pot of water to boil for the pasta. Dice 3 scallions or 1 small onion. Wash 2 small yellow summer squash and 2 small zucchini. Halve lengthwise, then slice into thin half moons. Halve ½ cup of cherry tomatoes. Wash and dry ½ cup of basil leaves and ¼ cup of mint leaves. Over medium low heat in a medium sauté pan, melt 1 ■ SEE SQUASH, PAGE B4 ASHLEY E. BLOM (QUARTERLIFECUISINE.COM)/THE COMMONS Summer squash and zucchini can form the basis of a simple and delicious pasta dish. The summer-sipper short list Lighter wines go best with lighter food in the heat of the season T Brattleboro HE DOG DAYS of summer are upon us, and they certainly affect how and what we eat and drink. As a wine lover, I look forward to the changing seasons guiding my wine selections. I look for wines that pair with the settings in which I’ll enjoy a glass and the foods that we’ll be consuming. Now is the height of my “summer sippers” season. What makes a wine a candidate for the summer sipper short list? First, and probably most obviously, it is served chilled. On hot evenings when we sit out on the porch, waiting for the deer to show up in the meadow, listening to the call and response of the myriad birds, and declaring that life is good, we look forward to a nicely chilled wine to accompany la dolce vita. Valpolicella and Bandolino are Italian blends that are often served chilled as well. Popping any of these into the fridge 20 to 30 minutes before you expect to pour them MARTY should bring the wine to a good RAMSBURG temperature. Try any of these wines with Wine Notes meats right off the grill or with Most probably, it is a white grilled flatbreads. You will see or a rosé, but there are reds for yourself that lightly chilled that can accommodate a light reds earn their place in the chill quite nicely. So long as the summer sippers line-up. wine is not tannic (see sidebar), even red wines can be chilled A SECOND PROPERTY that characterizes whites and rosés and therefore candidates for as good summer sippers is a summer sippers. Wines made from red grapes healthy dollop of acidity. When I have a chilled, acidic like Gamay (Beaujolais), wine at 7 p.m., it is energizing, Dolcetto, Cinsault, Tempranillo (Rioja and Ribera not enervating, the way many ponderous reds lull me to sleep del Duero, but be sure these after half a glass. are unoaked), Mondeuse Acidity provides a little tinNoire (Savoie), and some gle in my mouth right when the Cabernet Francs (usually enMARTY RAMSBURG/THE COMMONS try-level Chinon, Saumur, and wine enters, but it is most proThe Danube in Wauchau, one of the areas that produces grapes that make light nounced on the wine’s finish. Bourgueil) are low in tannins summer wines. ■ SEE SUMMER WINE, PAGE B2 and can be enjoyed chilled. Proof generated July 31, 2012 9:25 AM FOOD & DRINK B2 T h e C o m m on s • Wednesday, August 1, 2012 It’s never too hot for cheese Cool cheese choices for meals to beat the summer heat E Brattleboro ven if you’re one of the lucky ones who has air conditioning in your house during the summer heat waves, it’s pretty likely you want your meals to be as low-maintenance as possible. It’s great that all these lovely vegetables are available this time of the year so you can make simple salads, but nobody but a rabbit wants to eat salad three times per day, every day. To make life more interesting, you could add some cheese to your summer diet. Unlike with meat or beans, with cheese you don’t have to cook or even open a can to get the protein you need. Cheese has already gone through the fermentation process and is more easily assimilated into your body, so it’s less likely than fresh milk to upset your stomach on even the hottest days, and you won’t have to worry about not getting enough calcium in the summer. A very easy way to prepare a lovely summertime meal is to borrow from the Italians and put together a cold antipasto plate. I grew up in a region of the United States with a great many Southern Italian immigrants and their descendants, and in any Italian restaurant, from the most casual pizza joint to the fanciest white-tablecloth establishment, you could be sure to find a cold antipasto plate — for me, a childhood comfort food — listed as WENDY M. LEVY The Cheese Log an appetizer. Usually divided into rough sections on a large oval platter: crisp iceberg lettuce dressed with a vinaigrette, mixed olives, big chunks of aged provolone cheese, slices of Genoa salami and pepperoni, strips of roasted red pepper, marinated artichoke hearts, big chunks of dark tuna packed in olive oil (not light tuna, and not packed in water!), and a few long anchovy fillets draped over the top. Your antipasto can incorporate pretty much anything you like, but the general idea is to arrange a variety of chopped or sliced foods that you could eat with your fingers if you’re too lethargic to set out the forks: some fresh vegetables, some pickled vegetables, cured meats (or chilled cooked meats), cheese and olives. Serve bread alongside, and that’s it. You have all of your main food groups there, the food is filling without being heavy, and if you’re sharing this plate with friends or family, just put out a big platter in the middle of the table and everyone can take what he or she wants. The only labor involved is chopping, and you can recruit help. You can go even simpler n Summer wines from section front Wines with more acidity leave one’s mouth salivating. That reaction is one that really wakes up my mouth, in effect cleaning it up, getting it ready for more good tastes. In short, the overall effect is Tannins and chilling T annins are a component found in the skins and pips (seeds) of red grapes. Since grape skins also provide a lot of flavor and color, the juice for red wines is often macerated, or left in contact with the skins to extract those desirable properties. The presence of tannins also lends a particular texture, or mouthfeel, to the resultant wine. You can tell that a wine is tannic if your mouth feels drier after you take a sip of wine. Tannins are accentuated by colder temperatures, one of the reasons we generally serve red wines at cellar or room temperature. refreshing. Grapes that have a nice balance of sweet ripeness and high acidity are abundant, but some of my favorites for summer sippers include Grüner Veltliner (entry level), Vermentino, Sauvignon Blanc, Vinho Verde (Portuguese blend), Garganega (Soave), Verdejo (Rueda), Godello (Bierzo), dry Rieslings (especially from Austria), and Grenache Blanc (Empordà or South of France). The body of a wine refers to its weight in your mouth. Think about the difference between skim milk and whole milk; if you are used to drinking whole milk and you take a sip of skim milk, it feels like there’s nothing there. Wines vary every bit as much. My summer sippers are relatively light bodied. One of the principal factors contributing to a wine’s weight is alcohol. The higher the alcohol, the weightier it is. Alcohol is a function of the ripeness of the berries in the winemaking process. The riper the berries, the higher the sugar content, and it is sugar that the yeast converts to alcohol. Those big reds from California (Zinfandel, Cabernet Sauvignon, than that: make a salad, get a loaf of bread, and find a cheese you like. There’s dinner. Some of the smaller sized cheeses are ideal for this purpose, especially if it’s a dinner for two. Willow Hill Farm’s Summertomme, Alderbrook and La Fleurie come to mind, as does Jasper Hill’s Moses Sleeper. For goat fans wanting an ideal “cheese for two” for a meal, try Blue Ledge Farm’s Crottina. Once the tomatoes are ready to be plucked from the vine and the basil is begging to be picked, don’t forget the classic salad of fresh mozzarella, sliced tomatoes, and fresh basil. Dress with salt, pepper, oil and vinegar; no other preparation is necessary. Round it out with some bread and perhaps some chilled roasted ham or chicken, and you’ll find yourself full and happy. Maplebrook Farm in Bennington makes not only wonderful fresh mozzarella but also an exemplary burrata, another fine summer cheese. Burrata originated in Puglia, Italy, and so did Domenico Marchitelli, one of Maplebrook’s cheesemakers, who brings with him 25 years of experience. You can get Italian burrata in some markets, but like fresh mozzarella, burrata is best served as fresh as possible. I don’t know about you, but I’d rather have my burrata travel only just over the Searsburg Ridge. Burrata is a pouch of fresh mozzarella filled with cream-enhanced fresh mozzarella curds. It comes in either eight, four or two ounce pieces. To serve, simply place each ball into a dish, drizzle with a small amount of the best olive oil you have in the house, and grind some fresh black pepper over the top. Another fine way to incorporate cheese into an easy summer meal is to cut the cheese into little cubes and put the cheese in a salad. Nearly any semi-firm or firm cheese will do: cheddar, OssauIraty Brebis (the aged Basque sheep cheese), Parmigiano (use a vegetable peeler and shave the cheese into curls), Gruyère (or any other aged Swiss cheese like Appenzeller or HochYbrig), aged Gouda, Pecorino Toscano, your favorite blue cheese — the list goes on. When you add cheese to salad, also try adding some raw or roasted nuts and seeds (unsalted is best) and fresh fruit, such as halved grapes or cherries or chunks of fresh peach or strawberries. Cheese, a natural friend to fruits and nuts, will turn a salad into something more special than a bunch of ripped-up leaves. Are you the grilling type? If so, and you’re getting bored with endless stacks of hot dogs and hamburgers, you could always grill cheese. Not “grilled cheese,” but cheese you can put right on the grill. Yes, for real! Halloumi is a dense, brined cheese from Cyprus made of a combination of sheep’s maplebrookvt.com Maplebrook Farm in Bennington makes an exemplary burrata, a fine summer cheese served as fresh as possible. and goats’ milk. Because it’s brined, it’s a bit salty, but it’s not strong. You can grill it right over an open flame, or fry it in a pan, and because its melting point is very high, it retains its shape, but develops a nicely browned, crispy crust. Cypriots traditionally serve Halloumi with fresh watermelon and mint. A similar meal from a similar region of Europe is Saganaki. This fried-cheese dish comes from Greece, and is simply a thick slice of Kefalotyri or Kasseri that’s been fried in a small metal pan or on top of a flat grill. If you don’t have a grill, you can make Halloumi and Saganaki in the house, using a heavy-bottom pan. Like Halloumi, Kefalotyri and Kasseri are dense enough to retain their shape, becoming slightly gooey inside and crisp and browned on the outside. Saganaki is traditionally served with lemon wedges, black pepper, and plenty of pita bread. If you have a small pan or baking dish (with low sides) A short list of some of my favorite summer sippers: • 2011 Anton Bauer, Grüner Veltliner, “Gmork,” Wagram, Austria: We tried all of the entry-level Grüners available to us when the 2011s were released, and this one had the perfect trifecta: great flavors, long finish, and tons of energy — wow! Flavors include tart Granny Smith apples, lime zest, fresh peas, and a beautiful white pepper finish that just goes on and on. Speaking of peas, get some and try them with this wine, just straight out of the pods. I call this my happy wine because it always puts a smile on my face. A bottle is always chilling at home. Grüner is a very versatile grape, producing wines that range from 12 percent to 14.5 percent. If you are looking for a summer sipper, remember to look for a lower Merlot), the South of France (Grenache, Syrah), parts of Spain (Grenache, Cabernet, Carignan) and Australia (Shiraz) come from areas with long, hot summers capable of allowing those varieties to alcohol one. The Gmork lists 12.5 percent and feels almost weightless in the mouth. • 2011 Balnea, Rueda (Verdejo): More citrus, though this time more along the lines of orange peel, along with some fresh herbs like parsley and chervil. I get a little something like clove on the finish. We call this one our “shower curtain” wine because of its label design. Like Grüners, there is considerable range among Verdejos. We also love Shaya’s verdejo, but I would hesitate to label that one a summer sipper. It’s dropdead delicious, but with more weight, it wants to be paired with bigger food. • 2011 Broadbent Vinho Verde: Vinho Verdes come from the northern region of Portugal and vary widely since there are something like 15 different varieties from which it may be produced. attain their sweet ripeness. When their sugars are converted to alcohol, they produce wines that weigh in from 14 percent to 16 percent alcohol; that is a mouthful of wine! In contrast, summer sippers Buy Direct from the Farmer • Homemade Jam Green Beans New Potatoes • Lettuce Zucchini & Summer Squash Herbs • Garlic • Beets Peppers • Cucumbers Early Apples Peaches • Currants • Plums Fresh-Cut Flowers & Glads • Local Cheeses • Apples • Maple Syrup • Maple & Black Raspberry Creamies– Made with our Own Fruit! Proof generated July 31, 2012 9:25 AM If you still feel you haven’t gotten enough cheese in your summertime meal, don’t forget that cheese makes a divine dessert. Make a platter of Consider Bardwell Farm’s Mettowee, Twig Farm’s Washed Rind Wheel, and Green Mountain Blue Cheese’s Boucher Blue, and serve with fresh berries and mint iced tea. You can bake a cake when the temperature goes back down below 98, right? Favorite summer sippers The white Vinho Verdes usually are very low alcohol. Vinho Verde, after all, means “green wine,” a term thought to refer to the ripeness of the grapes when picked. Since they are not very ripe, and therefore sugar levels are not high, alcohol levels are correspondingly low. That makes Vinho Verde a great brunch or late-afternoon wine since you can have a small glass and still carry on with your day. Want to reward yourself for weeding that section that has been annoying you for so long? How about a glass of Vinho Verde at 4 p.m.? You can still go on a walk or get back to work. • 2011 Suavia, Soave Classico (100 percent Garganega): For those of you of a certain age, remember when Soave had no identity? Well, no more! This one has a pretty nose of lemon-lime, usually measure 11 percent to 13 percent alcohol, and they’re often made from berries that just don’t get that long to mature because they come from cooler climates. These wines feel lighter and Tomatoes - Blueberries - Sweet Corn • Fudge that can withstand the heat and flame of your grill, you can make Saganaki outdoors. You could also use a thick piece of aluminum foil, but don’t wrap the cheese; it’ll steam and not develop the delicious crust. While you have the grill on, take some fresh goat cheese, otherwise known as “chèvre.” Slice it, then lay it down on some thick aluminum foil. Grill it for just a few minutes and serve on salad or grilled vegetables. Perennial Sale! Shortcakes, Breads, Rolls, Cookies & Pies- Fresh Baked from Scratch with our very own berries & apples! Special Orders Welcome! Fruit Trees & Berry Bushes! www.duttonberryfarm.com facebook.com/duttonberryfarm O p e n D a i ly 9 a M –7 p M Route 30, Route 9, newfane West Brattleboro 802-365-4168 802-254-0254 We Accept EBT Cards Routes 11/30, Manchester 802-362-3083 white flowers, wet rocks (like the ones on which you sit while talking with friends, dripping and air-drying, after coming out of the river). We visited Suavia a few years back. Meri Tessari, one of the three young women who now run the winery handed down across generations, told me that she loves coming home from trips, walking in the vineyards, and getting restored. The wine generates the passion of this family. • Rosé: We are lucky in the past several years to have a veritable deluge of rosés enter Vermont’s market. My favorite is no longer available this year, but generally speaking, if you look at alcohol levels and pick something from the South of France or the Loire, you might find your own summer sipper. friskier in the mouth, and that helps make them good candidates for the kinds of foods we are likely to want on a hot summer evening: fresh fruit, salads, vegetables simply prepared, and grilled meats. The most important factor to consider when pairing food and wine is weight. Because the foods of summer are lighter than the roasts, stews, and casseroles of winter, our wines should be lighter as well. We want the wine to complement, not overwhelm, the food. Chill, Acidity Body = Refreshing! So, back to the front porch, 7 p.m. It is still sunny, but the shadows of the trees are starting to lengthen, and soon “our deer” will show up. We are connecting on the front porch, sharing observations about our respective days, listening to the sounds of summer in the background: birds, now tractors mowing hay, and bike tires on our dirt road as the area’s many cyclists get out for an evening ride. I reach for my summer sipper. La dolce vita, in Green River, Vt. C lose friends contribute to our personal growth. They also contribute to our personal pleasure, making the music sound sweeter, the wine taste richer, the laughter ring louder because they are there. —Judith Viorst The Commons FOOD & DRINK • Wednesday, August 1, 2012 B3 Keeping the game fresh A microbrew pioneer reflects on more than 25 years in the business into the round at the Purpoodock Club in Cape Elizabeth, Maine, when someone asked David Geary where the name “Purpoodock” came from. “It’s from one of the Maine tribes,” he said. “It means: Where the wind is in your face — on every hole.’” What? This isn’t a golf column? No worries. Although part of the purpose of the jaunt north was certainly to have a go-round on Geary’s home course, it was more to talk about beer, and his pioneering role in establishing New England’s first microbrewery. Geary was a medical equipment salesman in the early 1980s, when he became something of a regular at Three Dollar Dewey’s in Portland, then being run by Alan Eames. “Eames did everything wrong,” said Geary. “That is, everything that conventional wisdom said was wrong. There was no Budweiser, no Heineken, no television. There were benches at long tables covered with copies of the New York Times, classical music playing and people drinking Guinness and other virtually unknown imports.” (Eames would later replicate the Three Dollar Dewey’s experience in Brattleboro — the forerunner to McNeill’s — and continue his beer adventures until his untimely death in 2007.) “Back then, almost all the good beers were imports. We barely knew about the microbreweries out West — there were fewer than 15 in the country at the time — and we couldn’t get any of the beers anyway. “But the beers Eames was serving — Gale’s Prize Old Ale, Traquair House Ale — were a revelation to me. Until I tasted it in beer, I thought ‘ester’ was a girl’s name.” The men became friends, and at one point Eames said to Geary, “You need to get into the booze business.” “Eventually I met Peter Maxwell Stuart of Traquair House and we, too, became friends. He stayed at my house on a visit over from Scotland and told me, ‘If you ever need anything, I’ll start you on your journey.’” tom bedell Bedell on Beer of England, doing hands-on unpaid internships at various breweries and studying at the Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh. The plan for a brewery was taking shape, and a recipe for the first beer was being formulated. But first, Geary said, “It took us about a year and a half to put together a business plan, find a location, design packaging, and raise enough money.” On December 10, 1986, Geary’s Pale Ale went on sale. “That was close enough to the end of the year that we thought we could celebrate our 25th anniversary in both 2011 and 2012.” The beer was patterned on a traditional England brew, using yeast that Geary had obtained from the former Hull Brewery in Yorkshire. The yeast has outlived the brewery, now an office complex; Geary has propagated the yeast 4,000 times in a quarter century. It wasn’t all clear sailing from the start. “Everything was a bit of a struggle in the beginning, because there were no road maps back then,” said Geary. Not everyone who tried similar journeys in craft beermaking made it; he mentioned Steve Mason, who started the Catamount Brewing Company in Vermont in 1986, an enterprise that went under in 2000 after an overly ambitious expansion. “We were never that close to going out of business,” said Geary. “It was never an option.” David Geary, a Maine brewer who established the state’s first microbrewery in 1983. and the Maine Beer Company than Geary’s products. (Brattleboro Food Co-op beer and wine manager Jeff Houle said he expected to have some soon, as it’s now being distributed in the state by the Craft Beer Guild of Vermont.) Some of this stress shows on Geary, who has a roadmap of a face and a bum knee that knocked him out of the golf round early. But he clearly still has a zest for the game and a sly humor to help see him through. He fondly recalled the marketing campaign for the company’s Hampshire Special Ale, originally a winter seasonal beer that was “[a]vailable as long as the weather sucks.” But the beer proved so popular that it’s now available year-round, no matter the weather. “We’re a 22,000-square foot brewery brewing in 18,000 square feet,” Geary said. “We’re doing 150-barrel brews in two shifts five days a week, about 18,000 barrels a year.” “But in late fall we’re attaching a new building that will add 15,000 square feet and allow us to do 22-ounce bottlings, ramp up to seven days a week brewing, and do some contract It still isn’t, though Geary said older microbreweries have to keep their game fresh: “Initially we had plenty of buzz just because we were new, and we had great demographics.” The company was almost the only game in town for a time for people looking for something different. But that’s all changed. Portland is now a hotbed of craft brewing, and nationwide the brewing universe seems to going through its version of the Big Bang, ever expanding. The Brewers Association The journey began in ear- figures from late July showed nest when Geary and his first 2,126 U.S. brewers in operawife, Karen, incorporated tion, with 1,251 breweries in as the D.L. Geary Brewing the planning stages. Company in 1983. In 1984, Indeed, it’s been easier in Geary took off on a four-month these parts lately to find beer journey to the highlands of from Portland upstarts like Scotland and the south coast Allagash Brewing Company brewing,” he added. “The demand is there.” The Pale Ale is still the flagship beer, except when overtaken in the warmer months by the Summer Ale, available from April to September. It is also evidence of trying to keep the game fresh. The company awards an annual $5,000 scholarship to a Maine College of Art undergraduate who submits the best design for the Summer Ale packaging. (This year’s winner: Annie Mora, a junior studying graphic design.) My favorite of the yearround beers is the London Porter, a 4.2 percent alcohol by volume (ABV) beer which, by not trying to do too much, succeeds splendidly. (It was the top choice of a New York Times tasting panel on porters in 2006.) As part of the anniversary celebration, Geary asked some of his former brewmasters to develop some recipes, hence some departures from the core brands: an Oatmeal Stout, a Tom Bedell/The Commons Wee Heavy, a Red Ale, and an Imperial IPA. But surely Geary knew the whole “Imperial” trend, slapping the term on a style and almost doubling its strength, was a bit ersatz? With that sly smile, he confessed that surely he did. “Yes, I gave in,” he said. “Sometimes it’s just easier to ride the horse in the direction he’s going.” Since 1907 Robb Family F rm a • All Naturally-Grown Beef • All local natural feed • No growth hormones or Antibiotics Maple Syrup- All Grades Maple Candy • Maple Cream • Maple-Coated Nuts Ames Hill Road (Only 3 Mi. From Route 9) West Brattleboro, VT 802-258-9087 • RobbFamilyFarm.com Exotic Thai Cuisine The Far East Just Got a Little Closer! 7 High Street Brattleboro, VT (802) 251-1010 ThaiBambooVT.com China Buffet Chinese Restaurant Dine in & take Out 1.00 OFF Lunch Buffet or $ 1.50 OFF Dinner Buffet $ Dine In Only Exp. 8/31/12 RSDAY 7-10PM Open Mic EVERY THU ry hosted by Kevin Par Best Atmosphere! Best Burger! Good only at China Buffet, Brattleboro, VT O Brattleboro ur foursome was a few holes 801 Putney Road, Brattleboro, VT 802-254-8888 • www.chinabuffetVT.com Best French Fries! 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You’ll be glad you did! BrattleBOrO Food CO - OP Mon - Sat 7–9, Sun 9–9 2 Main Street, Brattleboro BrattleboroFoodCoop.coop FOOD & DRINK B4 n Pickles Ashley E. Blom (quarterlifecuisine.com)/The Commons Harvested while still young and tender, zucchini and its cousins, the pattypan and yellow summer squash, have more than enough culinary potential and tender, sweet flavor to reign supreme in the late-summer kitchen. n Squash from section front T h e C o m m on s out a smiley mess.” Pickling, whether in vinegar or with salt, has a very ancient legacy, often as a means to preserve food, or just for the taste itself. “Cleopatra used vinegar pickling, and the record of salt curing vegetables goes way back in history,” Chesman said. Asked why she wrote the book, she candidly replied, “To make money. I make a third of my income from my books.” Her earlier book on pickling, Pickles & Relishes, has long been beloved by connoisseurs. “In 1984, Garden Way Publishers wanted to do a book on pickles. I was a staff writer there, and I was asked to find an author or someone qualified on the subject to write the book. When this F • Wednesday, August 1, 2012 from section front proved to be rather difficult, I thought ‘Hey, I could do this myself.’ My editor agreed, and the book has never been out of print. However, I never made a dime on it because I wrote it as a staff writer as part of my job.” In some ways, this new pickling book is based on her first. “Over the years, Garden Way evolved into Story Publishing, and 30 years later, they wanted me to revise the earlier book,” she said, “but I essentially wrote a new book.” Her new book includes more ethnic cuisines. “People have grown much more open to these foods,” she said. “For instance, I have three different recipes for kimchi, that Korean delicacy; and I use kimchi in other recipes in the book.” ollowing are two recipes from Andrea Chesman’s book. Chesman knows that all pickling is not for everyone. “Of course, there are many kinds of pickling, and some of it involves regional tastes,” she said. “For instance, in the South, they like their pickles far sweeter than I prefer, since I like my pickles to be of the salty briny variety. I also have a hard time with some of the Indian pickles. But, you see, there are pickles for all persuasions.” H e r w e b s i t e , w w w. andreachesman.com , gives more detailed descriptions of Chesman and all her books and provides readers with many recipes. Of special interest is the section Roots and Leaves, where she talks about the art of eating seasonally and locally. Classic bread and butters by the pint A farmhouse classic, bread and butters are essential to the pickler’s pantry: sweet, spiced, it all down, then break a fresh egg Pattypans, with their scalcrunchy. They make an excellent addition to over the cheese. No-fail half-sour dill pickles old-fashioned macaroni salad. (Makes 1 pint.) loped spaceship shape, are the Bake for 15 to 20 minutes, unVinegar gives a kick start to the pickling adorable member of the squash til the white is cooked but the yolk • 2¼ to 2½ cups thinly sliced pickling cucumprocess in these quick and easy pickles, guar- bers, blossom ends discarded family. They make terrific reis still jiggly. anteeing success. If you’ve never tried ferceptacles for all sorts of savory • ½ small onion, thinly sliced mented pickles, this is definitely the recipe to ingredients. • 1 tablespoon pickling or fine sea salt, or more Lemon-marinated start with. Serve with the tops placed if needed squash salad You can multiply this recipe as many times jauntily ajar and accompany • ½ cup cider vinegar This next recipe is a bit of a as you like, but these pickles are best enjoyed with a fresh salad and some • 1/3 cup firmly packed brown sugar cheat on the 45-minutes rule, at 1 to 2 weeks, so it makes sense to make sliced tomato. • ¼ teaspoon ground turmeric in that it is put together quickly small batches as the cucumber season proFind two perfect specimens of • 1 teaspoon mixed pickling spices but needs around 4 hours in gresses. (Makes about 2 quarts.) pattypan squash, each about 3 • ½ teaspoon celery seeds • 4 cups water inches in diameter. Wash and dry the refrigerator before serving. • Boiling water The result is cold, refresh• 2 tablespoons pickling or fine sea salt them, then cut off the tops and • Pickle Crisp Granules (optional) ing, and lemony, full of the • ½ cup distilled white vinegar scoop out the interior, leaving ¼ 1. Combine the cucumbers, onion, and salt fresh flavors of summer. If you • 1 dill head, or 6 sprigs fresh dill to ½ inch attached to the shell. in a large bowl. Mix well. Cover the vegetacan plan ahead, I highly recom• 4 garlic cloves, peeled De-seed and dice the innards, bles with ice water and let stand for at least 2 mend this dish as a light and • 8 cups whole pickling cucumbers then set aside. hours, up to 6 hours. Drain. Taste a slice of delicious accompaniment to a 1. Heat the water and salt in a saucePreheat the oven to 375 F. cucumber. If it isn’t decidedly salty, toss the summer cookout. pan, stirring until the salt is fully dissolved. Brush the squash and the tops vegetables with an additional 1 to 2 teaspoons You will need ½ to ¾ pound of Add the white vinegar and let cool to room with a bit of olive oil and put pickling salt. If it is too salty (which it never is any variety, or a mixed variety, temperature. them on a baking sheet, cut side for me), rinse the vegetables in water. of unpeeled small summer squash. 2. Slice 1/16 inch off the blossom end of up. 2. Combine the cider vinegar, brown sugar, Wash and trim them, then shave each cucumber. Bake for 15-20 minutes, until and turmeric in a saucepan, stirring to dis3. Pack a clean 2-quart canning jar or crock solve the sugar, and bring to a boil. Bring a you can pierce the flesh easily with them lengthwise into really thin, with the dill, garlic, and cucumbers, in that a sharp knife. Remove them from long ribbons. One of those inexkettle of water to a boil. pensive Japanese mandoline slicorder. Pour in the brine. Weight the cucumthe oven, but leave them on the 3. Pack pickling spices and celery seeds into ers is the best tool for the task, but bers so they are completely submerged in the the clean hot 1-pint jar. Pack in the cucumbaking sheet. brine. In a small pan, sauté until ten- a wide vegetable peeler will work bers and onions, leaving 1/2 inch headspace. 4. Cover the container to exclude the air. der: 1 diced shallot, 1 diced clove as well. Pour in the vinegar mixture. The vinegar mixSprinkle the ribbons with ½ Set the jar where the temperature will remain ture will not cover the vegetables, so top off of garlic, and the innards that you teaspoon salt, and let them sit on constant: 65 degrees to 75 degrees F is ideal. removed earlier. with the boiling water, leaving 1/2 inch headpaper towels for about 15 min5. Check the jar daily and remove any scum space. Add a rounded 1/8 teaspoon of Pickle Add 2 tablespoons of chopped utes to drain. This step helps to that forms on the surface. dill, and spoon this mixture into Crisp to the jar, if using. Remove any air bubget rid of all the water that can 6. The pickles will be ready in 2 to 3 days, the squash shells, distributing it bles and seal. make squash soggy, giving it a although full flavor will not be reached for a equally. 4. Process in a boiling water bath for 10 week. If your kitchen is reasonably cool, you Top each squash with a few ta- bad name. minutes. Let cool undisturbed for 12 hours. Gently blot the squash, becan leave these pickles out for up to 2 weeks. blespoons of grated cheese. Tamp Store in a cool, dry place. Do not open for at ing careful not to tear the ribIf the brine starts to become cloudy, refrigleast 6 weeks to allow the flavors to develop. bons, and put them in a medium erate immediately to prevent spoiling. The Kitchen note: If you slice your cucumbers bowl. Mix the juice of 1 lemon, 1 flavor of the dill and garlic will continue to paper-thin on a mandoline or other device, crushed garlic clove, and 2 tabledevelop. The pickles will keep for at least 3 you will fit 2½ cups of salted slices into a pint spoons of extra-virgin olive oil. months in the refrigerator. jar. If the slices are thicker, fewer will fit in. Gently toss this mixture into the Kitchen note: If your cucumbers are large, Extra-salted cucumber slices are tasty in salsquash. you might want to cut them into spears ads or enjoyed plain. Cover and marinate in the rather than leave them whole. Spears will refrigerator for 4 to 6 hours. pickle faster and more evenly than whole The acid in the lemon actually cucumbers. “cooks” the squash, allowing it Both recipes adapted from The Pickled Pantry, by Andrea Chesman. Copyright 2012 Andrea to soften and soak up the tasty Chesman. All rights reserved. marinade. When ready to serve, remove same day. the garlic clove, and add 2 table- shallow boats, and put them on a forte of squash cucina is the fried zucchini blossom. If you Fried zucchini blossoms small baking sheet. spoons of finely minced mint and have never had the pleasure must be eaten immediately afIn a little bowl, combine 8 dill, or parsley/basil/marjoram if of eating one and this column ter they are done, so plan your diced cherry tomatoes with 2 tayou prefer. time accordingly. blespoons of minced fresh oregano provides the opportunity, you You can keep the picked and a splash of red-wine vinegar. will have made me the happiest Zucchini boats blossoms in the refrigerator Mound this mixture inside your of cooks. with tomato Zucchini blossoms come in for a day, stored loosely inlittle boats. Drain off any excess and cheese side a plastic bag in the veggie liquid and mound this mixture in- male and female just like us, Here is another ridiculously and for the same reason. The drawer. I gently shake the blosside your little boats. Tear a ball tasty and simple way to use up of high-quality mozzarella and male pollen fertilizes the female soms upside down to dislodge those unfairly maligned squash. scatter these on top of the tomato. blossoms, and a zucchini is any small bugs that might be With a salad of bitter greens, a born, so to speak. hidden inside. Bake for 20 minutes. If you loaf of great bread, and a glass Either blossom can be fried, This recipe uses 12 blosprefer the tops crispy, place the of rosé, this meal is a short trip baking sheet under the broiler for but if you want to practice zuc- soms. I use a 12-inch pan and Custom Cut Local, Imported, to the Amalfi coast. chini birth control, use the fecook 6 blossoms at a time. a few minutes until the cheese is Pre-heat the oven to 400 F. male blossoms. (They don’t I fry in a mixture of 75 perbubbly and brown. Take 2 small zucchini — the have pollen, and the flowers cent canola oil and 25 percent & Domestic Cheeses for the Italian Romesco ribbed variety grow atop a fruit instead of on olive oil. The olive oil gives flaworks well here — and slice them Fried zucchini a simple stem.) Gather them vor, but the canola oil gets hotDiscriminating Palate in half lengthwise. Scrape out the blossom early in the morning before the ter before it starts smoking, so Speaking of Italy, the piatto seeds, leaving the squash like little sun gets hot, and use them that the combination works well. Serve piping hot and crispy with a small wedge of lemon. Gently remove the female pistils or the male stamen from the inside of the flowers, but leave some stem to give you something to hold onto when you dip the blossoms Shop with Chef Nancy Cain into batter. Join Nancy as she shops the market after 4pm Pour 8 ounces of cold seltzer Then watch and sample what the summer harvest or club soda into a medium bowl, bounty inspires her to create and sign up for recipes! and whisk in a scant 1 cup of unDebit, EBT & Farm To Family Coupons Welcome bleached white flour and ½ teaspoon of salt until just this side of Fresh, local produce, meat, dinner choices & more. smooth. 802-869-2141 or [email protected] Heat 2 inches of oil to 350 degrees on a deep fry thermometer in a large, cast-iron fry pan with sides. If your stove has an exhaust fan, now’s the time to use it! When the oil is hot, take each blossom and, holding onto the stem, quickly dip it into the batter, shake off the excess, and lay it in the oil. Don’t crowd the pan. It should take just a couple of minutes for one side to get brown. Carefully flip the blos:PVSMPDBMTPVSDFGPS :PVSMPDBMTPVSDFGPS (SBTT'FE#FFG (SBTT'FE#FFG soms and cook the other side, :PVSMPDBMTPVSDFGPS (SBTT'FE#FFG then remove them to a paper t 3FUBJMDVUTBWBJMBCMFGSPN"OHVTTUFFST t 3FUBJMDVUTBWBJMBCMFGSPN"OHVTTUFFST towel. Salt them while hot! CPSOBOESBJTFEPOPVSDIFNJDBMGSFFQBTUVSFT t 3FUBJMDVUTBWBJMBCMFGSPN"OHVTTUFFST CPSOBOESBJTFEPOPVSDIFNJDBMGSFFQBTUVSFT t (VBSBOUFFEIPSNPOFBOEBOUJCJPUJDGSFF tCPSOBOESBJTFEPOPVSDIFNJDBMGSFFQBTUVSFT If picked when small and (VBSBOUFFEIPSNPOFBOEBOUJCJPUJDGSFF handled simply, summer t (VBSBOUFFEIPSNPOFBOEBOUJCJPUJDGSFF squash deliver a more subtle 4XFFU5SFF'BSN4VHBS)PVTF reward than other August har3PVUF&BTU%VNNFSTUPO7FSNPOU 4XFFU5SFF'BSN4VHBS)PVTF vests, but their quiet and pure 3PVUF&BTU%VNNFSTUPO7FSNPOU 4XFFU5SFF'BSN4VHBS)PVTF flavor should not be belittled. 3PVUF&BTU%VNNFSTUPO7FSNPOU TXFFUUSFFGBSNDPN We can reserve those lateseason monsters for someone TXFFUUSFFGBSNDPN else’s zucchini bread. tablespoon of butter and 1 tablespoon of olive oil. Put in the scallion or onion, then cook until soft. Add the squash and the tomatoes, plus a dash of salt and pepper. Lower the heat and cook, covered, around 7 to 12 minutes. Stir occasionally. Keep cooking, stirring and lifting the cover to see if the liquid is becoming a bit thicker. You are going for a creamy, slightly homogenous mixture that will have a varied texture with various sized pieces of squash, the tomatoes, and the onion. Make sure the pan is just barely simmering and add a bit more water if there is any threat of burning. Meanwhile, cook 2 ounces of whatever dry pasta you have in the cupboard. 1 ounce of dry pasta will yield ½ cup of cooked. Cut the herbs into thin ribbons. When the pasta is done to your liking, drain it and add it to the pan with the vegetables. Cook gently for a minute, tossing everything so that the pasta is coated with sauce. Take it off the heat and toss again with the herbs, then add salt and pepper to taste. If you want to add some protein, ½ cup of crumbled feta doesn’t do this dish any harm at all. Stuffed pattypans Who Cut The Cheese? WE Cut The Cheese! Coming Soon To Downtown Brattleboro www.Brattleboro Cheese.com SWEET FARM SWEET TREE FARM SWEET TREE TREE FARM Open: Tues & Thurs 4:00-6:00 pm, Sat 10:30-12:30pm TXFFUUSFFGBSNDPN Proof generated July 31, 2012 9:25 AM THE COMMONS THE ARTS • Wednesday, August 1, 2012 S E C T I O N C1 C ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT Wednesday, August 1, 2012 • page C1 VPL kicked off its summer residency with choreographer Victoria Marks and filmmaker Ann Kaneko on June 26. These artists will be developing Action Conversations: Bellows Falls with five teen and five adult women from the Bellows Falls community. Film in Déjà vu progress Vocalist who came to area from New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina donates song proceeds to Vermont Disaster Relief Fund BRATTLEBORO—Blues and jazz vocalist Samirah Evans of Brattleboro has chosen the Vermont Disaster Relief Fund (VDRF) to be a beneficiary of sales from her song, Strength in Numbers, available for purchase at www. (www.cdbaby.com)cdbaby. com (www.cdbaby.com). In 2005, the flooding brought on by Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans destroyed the home of Evans and her husband, Chris Lenois. The couple ended up relocating to Lenois’ hometown of Brattleboro. Six years later, one day before the anniversary of Katrina, they watched Tropical Storm Irene bring similar ruin to many parts of Vermont, including their own community. While they were spared any personal loss this time, Evans and Lenois were deeply moved by the tragedy and the outpouring of support from the community for those in need. They wrote Strength in Numbers to be performed at a fundraising event in Brattleboro. The song is a soulful and heartfelt account of how tragic and challenging circumstances naturally galvanize the human spirit to give strength and hope to one another. “I was devastated by the destruction of Vermont,” said Evans. “Irene happened to land one day before the sixth anniversary of Katrina. As one can imagine, it took me back to the horror of it all. In Katrina’s aftermath there was so much loss: lives and livelihoods, physical and emotional stability. It was painful to witness and know that people were going through similar circumstances from Irene. We wanted to do something for our community, and raising money to help those who are still trying to recover was top on the list." So far, nearly $1.5 million has been allocated to Vermonters from the VDRF. However, with the possibility of as much as $10 million still needed, and more than 800 families with unmet needs, it is as important as ever for Vermonters to support the recovery, according to the fund’s administrators. “Even while we brace ourselves for another hurricane season, there are hundreds of Vermonters still not in their homes,” said VRDF Executive Director Betsy Ide. “Samirah’s generosity is a heartening example of the unique ways Vermonters can make a difference.” Strength in Numbers is available for download with all proceeds from purchases between now and Aug. 29 (the seventh anniversary of Katrina) going to the Vermont Disaster Relief Fund. “It is my hope that this song offers comfort as well as an opportunity for anyone, even those who may not have much, to feel good by offering a small donation that will help Vermonters affected by Irene get back on their feet,” said Evans. For more information, go to www.vermontdisasterrecovery.com/ events/samirahevans. captures Bellows Falls women and their community walls studio WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/VERMONTPERFORMANCELAB beyond the of the By Richard Henke Vermont Associates for The Commons B ELLOWS FALLS— Choreographer Victoria Marks and filmmaker Ann Kaneko said they believe dance can become a civic conversation that can participate in the life of the town. On Thursday, Aug. 2, at 7 p.m at the Bellows Falls Opera House, Vermont Performance Lab (VPL) will be screening their work-in-progress documentary Action Conversations: Bellows Falls. The presentation is the culmination of a six-week Vermont Performance Lab residency led by Marks and Kaneko with teen and adult women from greater Bellows Falls. The event will include an informal presentation and a segments of Action Conversations, which captures the stories and reflections of these women and their community. The VPL presentation is free and open to the public, and is wheelchair accessible. Located in Guilford, Vermont Performance Lab is a new type of performance incubator that takes the creation of new work — in the words of Marks and Kaneko — “beyond the walls of the studio and into the community by fostering experimental approaches to research and performance.” It provides performing artists with research-and-development residencies, where artists have the resources to create new work and to engage rural communities around the creative process. This year’s project, Action Conversations, captures the stories and reflections of a group of women and their community. The work aims to bridge the gap between adults and youth. VPL Founder and ProducFACEBOOK.COM ing Director Sara Coffey exVictoria Marks. plained that the goal of the project was to engage Bellows ■ SEE CONVERSATIONS, PAGE C2 Guitar legend Bill Kirchen comes to the region Will play Aug. 5 at BF Opera House BILLKERCHEN.COM Bill Kerchen will perform in Bellows Falls. BELLOWS FALLS— Bill Kirchen, whose Commander Cody classic Hot Rod Lincoln drove into the Top Ten in 1972, will play a concert on Sunday, Aug. 5, at the Lower Theater of the Bellows Falls Opera House. The show is presented by Vermont Festivals, LLC, in association with Flying Under Radar and Kicking & Screaming. Known for his indelible Telecaster sound on Hot Rod Lincoln, Kirchen was a founding member of Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen. He’s released eight critically acclaimed solo albums and he’s toured internationally with Nick Lowe, and has performed with Doug Sahm, Gene Vincent, Elvis Costello, Dan Hicks, Emmylou Harris, and Link Wray. Named “The Titan of the Telecaster” by Guitar Player magazine, Kirchen celebrates an American musical tradition where rock ’n’ roll and country music draws upon its origins in blues and bluegrass, Western swing from Texas, and California honky-tonk. His most recent album, Word to the Wise, includes collaborations with Norton Buffalo, Paul Carrack, Commander Cody, Elvis Costello, Blackie Farrell, Dan Hicks, Nick Lowe, Maria Muldaur, and Asleep at the Wheel alumna Chris O’Connell. “We sent the tapes of Man in the Bottom of the Well to Vancouver for Elvis [Costello] to put his vocals on, but the rest of the time, we traveled around the country and collected those people,” Kirchen said. In each case, the guests recorded their parts on top of basic tracks laid out by the core band of Kirchen, drummer/singer Jack O’Dell, bass player Johnny Castle, and keyboardist/guitarist/ ALL NEW 2012s MUST GO! THE SMA R T C H OI CE ■ SEE KIRCHEN, PAGE C2 0% Financing PLUS FREE Oil Change For Life Program 1234 Putney Road Brattleboro, VT 800-300-1910 Proof generated July 31, 2012 6:05 PM * Like us on Facebook! for news and special offers! *Subject to SMF Tier 1 approval. Up to 36 months financing. See dealer for details. Visit our website to see our full inventory BRATTLEBOROSUBARU.COM Ove r 80 P re ow n ed to ch o ose from ! THE ARTS C2 T he C o m m o n s • Wednesday, August 1, 2012 Main Street Arts offers painting classes SAXTONS RIVER—Main Street Arts is offering two opportunities for adults and teens to explore painting in August. Matt Peake will offer a Plein Air painting workshop on Sunday, Aug. 5, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., with a fee of $42 for members and $56 for non-members. The group will meet at Main Street Arts for a demonstration and strategy session, then travel to a nearby scenic spot to paint (with pastels or water colors) or draw with graphite/charcoal. Outdoor easels are encouraged but not necessary. MSA can provide paper, charcoal, and graphite, but participants need to bring their own pastels, watercolors, and watercolor paper if they want to work in that medium. In case of rain, the group will work indoors from their favorite scenic photographs. “Going outdoors to paint or draw is sometimes more romantic a notion than an enjoyable experience,” said Peake. “The hot sun, the intense light, the threat of rain, changing shadows, bugs, etc., all make the experience challenging, to say the least, but I would be willing to do this with that disclaimer. And bring a lunch!” Robert O’Brien will lead Painting Spectacular Flowers Using Watercolors on Saturday, Aug. 18, from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. for a fee of $57 for members and $72 for non-members. The workshop is for all levels of painting, with some drawing experience recommended. Participants will learn basic floral painting techniques, with an emphasis on values and composition. The session will begin with a demonstration by the instructor, followed by class painting. O’Brien will provide handson guidance through the process. The course will focus on painting from photo-reference of flowers in an artistic and close-focus setting. There will be a critique and class discussion at the end of the day. A materials list will be provided upon request. O’Brien has been painting in watercolors for 40 years. He has received many awards, most recently, in 2012, a gold medal in the New England Watercolor Society’s Spring Juried Signature Members’ Exhibition in Boston. Examples of his work can be seen on his website www.robertjobrien.com. mjpeakeart.blogspot.com Registration is required for classes by calling 802-869-2960 Instructor Matt Peake will offer a plein air painting or emailing info@mainstreetarts. workshop. Above, an example of Peake’s own landscape work (“Prominence,” 12 in. x 9 in.). org. n Conversations from SECTION FRONT Falls’ teenagers in conversation with the community’s adults mediated through dance and film. Marks had told Coffey when the community-based project discussion began two years ago, “Listen to your community and find out where there needs to be a conversation.” After much “amazing conversation” with Youth Services of Windham County, with whom it is co-producing the project, VPL ultimately chose a community of women in Bellows Falls. “Five teenagers and five adults, who have limited interBRATTLEBORO—For 37 action with each other and thereyears, the Vermont Jazz Center fore many misconceptions, met (VJC) has presented its summer for for four mornings each of six jazz workshop, encouraging stuweeks as choreographer Marks dents from down the street and translated their intense civic diaaround the world to hone their logue into movement, which ulimprovisational and musiciantimately was filmed by Kaneko,” ship skills while getting away to Coffey said. For the five teen women, this a country setting. On Thursday, Aug. 9, at 8 project served as part of their pm, VJC presents the summer job training with Youth Serworkshop faculty concert, where vices’ summer youth employteacher/musicians get to show ment program. With the help of their stuff. The concert features an advisory committee, VPL revocalists Sheila Jordan and Jay cruited five adult women to doClayton, Howard Brofsky and nate 60 hours of their summer Jeff Galindo on trumpet, Scott to participate with the youth on the project. Mullett and Jake Whitesell on Youth Services Youth Develsaxophone, Helmut Kegerer on guitar, Harvey Diamond, Ray opment Director Bianca Barry Courtesy photo Gallon, and Eugene Uman on Jay Clayton, left, and Sheila Jordan will be the featured vocalists when the said, “We were especially excited piano, Cameron Brown, George Vermont Jazz Center presents its summer workshop faculty concert on Aug. 9 to be able to work with VPL to Kaye, James Robbins, and David at the Currier Center at The Putney School. place this project in Bellows Picchi on bass, Satoshi Takeishi Falls, where the gap between and Claire Arenius on drums, and Julian Gerstin, percussion. several piano trios. This concert Both concerts will take place marginalized young people and Tickets are $20 and can be will be divided into two sections, at the Michael S. Currier Center the community-at-large is particularly wide.” purchased at the door, online the first will start at 3:30 p.m., at the Putney School. at www.vtjazz.org , or at In the and the second show will resume The VJC’s summer work“We’re thrilled to provide shop was founded and attained an opportunity for these young Moment Record Shop on Main at 8 p.m. after a dinner break. Street in Brattleboro. Call 802Singers will be accompanied nonprofit status in 1974 when women to experience working 254-9088 for reservations. by a professional jazz trio and the founding director Attila Zoller with two powerful female artOn Friday, Aug. 10, the VJC piano trios will be assisted and officially organized the informal ists like Ann Kaneko and Vic summer workshop will showcase perform with a faculty bassist. gatherings of guitarists he held Marks,” she added. faculty-coached student ensem- Also performing will be a num- at his home in Newfane. Kaneko is an Los Angelesbles with numerous vocalists and ber of faculty-coached ensemThe VJC encourages an inter- based independent filmmaker bles, usually comprised of horn, generational balance where par- who has produced numerous CAT LOST in EAST PuTnEy piano, bass, and drums. For the ticipants of all ages learn from award-winning shorts and docustudent concert, a $5 donation each other, gleaning from both mentaries that tell the stories of Small, white with muted is suggested. the wisdom of jazz’s “old school” what she called brave individucalico/tiger markings. and the pedagogical advance- als trying to survive the odds. ments put forth in today’s devel- She participated in the American 11 years old, blind in one oped system of jazz education. Film Institute Directing Workeye, feisty, wearing old The VJC’s summer workshop shop for Women and received collar with tags, will be emphasizes the importance of an MFA in film directing from very thirsty. Missing since improvisation and small-group UCLA. Friday, July 6 from Lower dynamics within the context of Marks is a professor of choCassidy Rd., near East jazz, encouraging participants to reography in the Department Putney Brook Rd. & Route find their own voices using the of World Arts and Cultures at 5. Her name is Ramona. jazz language. UCLA, where she began teachThe courses offered include ing in 1995. Over the course of Any info, please call jazz theory, composition, mas- her career, she has been the re802-387-1194 or ter classes in each instrument, cipient of multiple grants and 802-380-5567 focused listening and faculty-led fellowships from the National ensembles. Endowment for the Arts, the New York State Council on the Arts, and the New York Foundation for the Arts, and the Guggenheim Foundation. Marks employs movement as a powerful tool for self-expression, claiming she “enjoys being inserted into a civic dialogue.” Her “action conversation” methodFabulous designer fabrics, silk, linen, ology offers “avenues of self-exwool, vintage inspired buttons, ploration and positive expression Works by Townsend, Robinson & Schommer jewelry, scarves, shawls... to help participants frame their relationships with themselves, Packaged assortments of small silk pieces for crazy quilts. 599 RT. 30, NEWFANE, VT (NEXT TO PEOPLE’S BANK) their families and communities.” DAILY 10-4 OR CALL FOR APPT. (802) 365-7777 White (naturals) in cotton, linen or silk –cotton batiste, She has used dance in similar voile, lawn, dotted swiss, handkerchief linen, linen gauze. ways before. In her last project with Kaneko, which culminated 125 Main Street, Brattleboro • (802) 257-4456 in a film also called Action Conwww.delectablemountain.com versations, Marks employed movement as a way to bring vetMonday Th ursday & Saturday 10-5 Located on Scenic Route 30 in historic Newfane, Vermont erans of the Iraq war, and those Friday 10-6:30 • Sunday 1-5 Specializing for over 30 years in 18th and 19th Century English and opposed to the Iraq war, into American furniture, equestrian antiques & hunting prints. conversation with one another. Brass and tole. Custom decorating in the folk art tradition. “I like to get two groups of Thursday through Monday, 10–5 people together in a room who Jack and Gillian Winner P.O. Box 212, Newfane, VT 05345 wouldn’t usually be there and see (802) 365-7215 Phone/Fax what develops,” Marks said. “I www.winnerantiques.com know it is a huge responsibility to The Tri-state region’s premier center for jazz. email: [email protected] be at the center of these discusSa t uCenter’s r d a y,37th M a r c h 1 3 tsions. h aPeople t 8 are pM member Vermont Antiques Dealers’ Association giving me the Vermont Jazz S a t u r d a y, M a r c h 1 3 t h a t 8 p M gift of trust and I have to live up Jazz Center presents summer workshop Delectable Mountain Jack Winner Antiques and Gillian’s Guest House LORI FRANDINO ANTIQUE & VINTAGE ORIENTAL RUGS Good selection of older rugs, many with slight to moderate wear and very affordable. P.O. Box 218 Walpole, NH 03608 603-756-3982 [email protected] Proof generated July 31, 2012 6:05 PM Annual Summer Jazz Workshop Whirrr! Music SPECIALTIESGiuffre FROM FAR AND NEAR Whirrr! The Music The of Jimmy Giuffreof Jimmy Concerts in the Michael S. with Currier Center, The Harrison/Schuller A small, independent with TheSextet Harrison/Schuller Sextet Putney featuring School,Marty Putney, VT& Cameron Brown Ehrlich facebook.com Ann Kaneko. grocery store to this responsibility.” Difficult conversations She said that while the conversations among the women in Bellows Falls this summer have been very rewarding, they seldom have been easy, and often have been raw. One of the adult participants, Laura Simoneau said, “It’s been really...how should I put this...I mean it’s been great. But it’s been intense and exhausting since it’s about living and our experiences here in Bellows Falls. What I really love is that we are talking about issues that don’t get talked about on a regular basis.” As conversation among the Bellows Falls women developed, Marks would translate their issues into gestures of dance. “Talking yields movement, and movement yields talking,” Marks said. “Tiny dances are created to tell the story of what has happened among the women in this room. I am asking what is this thing called choreography, for this project pushes the boundaries in certain interesting ways.” “Unlike many projects I have worked on,” she added, “this does not end up with a live public performance. It did not make sense to me to have the ultimate outcome of this choreographed experience to take place on the stage, but rather on film. We are doing something unusual here.” Simoneau agreed that something special was happening. “We are engaging in a civic dialogue filtered through an art framework,” she said. Barry spoke on behalf of the teenagers in the program, saying, “The Vermont Performance Lab project was an amorphous evolving process that was deeply felt by the youth participants, which changed the lives of the five young women in significant ways.” The complete documentary Action Conversations: Bellows Falls is intended to be shown locally and nationally. VPL plans to present the premiere of the completed film of Action Conversations: Bellows Falls in 2013, in Bellows Falls, perhaps in conjunction with the Women’s Film Festival in Brattleboro. The Action Conversations: Bellows Falls project is made possible in part with funding support from the Vermont Arts Council, the Copper Beach Foundation, the Oswald Family Foundation, and VPL’s Creation Fund donors. n Kirchen from SECTION FRONT vocalist Austin de Lone, the former leader of pub-rock band Eggs Over Easy. Tickets are available at Village Square Booksellers and Fat Franks in Bellows Falls, Turn it Up! in Brattleboro, Misty Valley Books in Chester, as well as online at www. (www.brattleborotix. com)brattleborotix.com ( www. brattleborotix.com). The Bellows Falls Opera House is located on the Square in downtown Bellows Falls. Free parking is available at the Centennial and Elks Club lots. Doors open at 7 p.m. For more information, call 802-463-9595. Janet Langdon, featuring Marty Ehrlich & Cameron PurveyorBrown of fine meats, Janet cheeses, Langdon, M. Div., NCPsyA Faculty Masterfulconcert improvising and killer arrangements salads, soups, wine and beer Thursday, August 9th at 8 pm improvising and killer arrangements Masterful Student Concerts S AXTONS RIVER Friday, August 10th VILLAGE MARKET with sets at 3:30 & 8 pm Averill Larsen, Proprietor 72 C otton M ill H ill 25 Main St., Saxtons River B r attleBoro, Vt 05301 www.vtjazz.org 802-869-2266 M O N . – S AT. 7 – 7, S U N . 7 – 6 o ff e xit 1, i nterstate 91 (802) 254-9088 Psychoanalysis Pastoral Counseling Individuals and Couples River Road, Putney VT näÓÎnÇxx{ÇÊUÊiÃJÞv>À«Ì°iÌ THE ARTS • Wednesday, August 1, 2012 Wilmington Town Clerk’s office to close for move WILMINGTON — The Wilmington Town Clerk’s office will be closed on August 1, 2, 3 and 6. During those days, the Town Clerk’s office will be moving from its temporary quarters at Shaw’s Plaza, 97 East Main St., back to its former permanent location of 2 East Main St. For those customers needing motor vehicle renewals processed, check with the Dover Town Clerk’s office or use the online renewal service at https:// secure.vermont.gov/dmv/express (secure.vermont.gov/dmv/express). First Baptist to serve Italian-style buffet BRATTLEBORO — First Baptist Church, 190 Main St., will host the second in a series of monthly fundraising dinners held during Gallery Walk. This month’s will be held on Friday, Aug. 3, starting at 5 p.m. The Italian-style buffet features homemade sausage lasagna, spaghetti with a choice of three homemade sauces, salad, and garlic bread, plus beverages and dessert. The suggested donation is $10 for adults, $5 for children age 5-12. Children under 5 eat free. All proceeds benefit the church’s ongoing mission programs to feed the hungry. To make a reservation, call 802-2549566 or 802-257-4216. Women’s Freedom Center offers summer camp for local girls BRATTLEBORO — The Women’s Freedom Center is offering a free summer camp to all girls entering grades 7-9. The focus of the camp is healthy relationships. The camp provides a fun and supportive space where girls have the opportunity to look at their lives, their relationships with friends and dating partners, as well as their relationships with the media, food, etc. Girls will learn strategies to navigate adolescence, identify healthy/unhealthy relationships, and create change in both their immediate lives and the world around them. A fun-filled week is planned. Some activities will include hiking, swimming, games, buttons and jewelry making, video design, power tools, and more. Lunches will be provided, and transportation can be supported. The Quest camp is offered in Bellows Falls the week of Aug. 6-10 and in Brattleboro the week of Aug. 13-17. Contact Kate at 802-257-7364 for more information. Windham County Democrats to open campaign headquarters BRATTLEBORO — The formal opening of the 2012 Campaign Headquarters for Windham County Democrats will take place Friday, Aug. 3, at 80 Flat St., in the former Probate Court space in the J.F. Church Building. A ribbon-cutting ceremony will take place at 5:30 p.m. with State Sen. Peter Galbraith, State Treasurer Beth Pearce, Attorney General Bill Sorrell, and Secretary of State Jim Condos; as well as Windham County’s representatives to the Vermont House; and other state and county Democratic candidates. Many of the candidates will then proceed to Main Street to greet the public during Gallery Walk. Along with the festivities at the Flat Street Headquarters, a Main Street Windham County and Obama Campaign Showroom will also be open to the public during Gallery Walk hours on Friday, at the Catherine Dianich Gallery in the Hooker-Dunham Building, 139 Main St. The Flat Street and HookerDunham locations will host campaign activities on behalf of Obama for America, the Vermont Democratic Coordinated Campaign, and all county Democratic candidates though Election Day on Nov. 6. Joan Bowman of Putney has been appointed as Field Organizer for the Democratic Coordinated Campaign, and assumed her post at the Flat Street headquarters on Aug. 1. Volunteers for Obama For America (OFA) can call the Headquarters reception desk at 802-490-2396 after Aug, 3. A main activity for OFA will be door-to-door campaigning in nearby Cheshire County in New Hampshire. The number to call to volunteer to support to other state and local Democratic candidates is 802-579-1134. Townshend Common Farmers’ Market celebrates National Farmers Market Week with Pie Day TOWNSHEND — Townshend Common Farmers’ Market is getting ready to celebrate National Farmers Market Week on Thursday, Aug. 9, with its first-ever Pie Day. Market vendors will have a plethora of pies for sale whole or by the slice. In addition, both market vendors and the public are invited to enter their favorite pies featuring the bounty of the harvest season in our Farmers’ Market Pie Contest. Prize categories will include sweet, savory, most creative, and most Vermont. Entries should be brought to the “Pie Tent” by 4:30 p.m. Between 5-6 p.m., judges will be sampling all the entries to determine the winners. Entry fee is $2, proceeds go to support our Market Match Program making fresh local food more affordable and accessible to all. The market is open every Thursday through Oct. 11 from 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. on the Common at the intersection of Routes 30 and 35. EBT, Debit, and Farm to Family coupons accepted. Market Match coupons are available for EBT shoppers to turn $10 into $20 every week. For more information, contact Sherry at 802-869-2141 or farmersmarket@postoilsolutions. org (mce_host/site/editsystem05a/ [email protected]). Little Arrows Early Childhood Center hosts open house BRATTLEBORO — The Little Arrows Early Childhood Center will host a series of three open houses on Aug, 9 from 5-7 p.m., Aug. 11 from 9:30-11:30 a.m., and Wednesday, Aug. 15 from 5-7 p.m.. Little Arrows is an educational program under Vermont Center for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing, Inc. Little Arrows is open to serve the greater community in addition to deaf, and hard of hearing population. Children age 6 weeks old to 5 years old are eligible. Little Arrows has three classrooms; an infant room, a Toddler class and a Preschool class. Open Enrollment and the announcement of the new Toddler Room will be celebrated; opening their doors to new families for the fall in all three of the programs. A Bilingual Communication approach is practiced at the center. Children are taught and communicated with both spoken English and American Sign Language (ASL) The communication mode used will provide the children with the skills to communicate with their deaf peers, their deaf parents/siblings and the program staff. Because Little Arrows is a part of VCDHH, children have access to the campus’s various facilities and resources, including the Austine School for the Deaf’s library and gym, and the campus nature trail and pond. The beautiful campus is wide and safe and provides an excellent environment in which Little Arrows children can explore and discover Vermont Center for the Deaf & Hard of Hearing, Inc., provides comprehensive educational and support services to deaf and hard of hearing children, adults, and families. For additional information, call 802-258-9500 or visit www.vcdhh.org. Got an opinion? (Of course you do! You’re from Windham County!) Got something on your mind? Send contributions to our Letters from Readers section (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. Proof generated July 31, 2012 6:05 PM HELP CHARLES C harles Marchant of Townshend has a collection of 20,000 postcards and historical photos, and he would like to know more about the people and places they show. Each issue we will publish one of his images with a question or two in the hopes that readers can help him preserve a piece of Vermont history for future generations. Can anyone identify this mill dam and pond? It’s a postcard mailed from Charlestown, N.H. to Quaker City (Unity), N.H. If you can help Charles Marchant, please call him at (802) 365-7937 or email West River Valley Veterinary Services Publication of this postcard is underwritten by: 720 Vt. Route 30, Newfane, VT • 802-365-9362 Mon.,Tues., Thurs., Fri. 8-5pm; Wed. 8-8pm [email protected]. EMILY COX AND HENRY RATHVON THE COMMONS CROSSWORD “Not John Smith” NOT JOHN SMITH by Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon 1. 8. 14. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 37. 40. 41. 44. 45. 46. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 56. 58. 60. 64. 65. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 74. 76. 77. 78. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 91. 92. 95. 96. 97. 99. 101. 102. 107. 109. 110. 111. 112. 113. 114. 115. 116. Wrap in diapers Resembling a Nile viper Red Rocks site of Arizona Fizzy water brand Humble home Latin American plains Harmonizes Hannibal the Cannibal Quakers in the woods First Internet factoid, part 1 The NCAA’s Sun Devils Kosovo minority Thessaly mount Red Ryder ammo Fido annoyer Choice in loaves Cookbook writer Rombauer Margin jottings Metal-on-metal sound Public transport, quaintly Narc’s org. Rough or vulgar First Internet factoid, part 2 Suffix on morph Mornings, briefly “__ Misbehavin’” Untanned Ancient computer Tiny speck Hind end Wall Street letters Urban’s opposite Bill Monroe’s bag “Ivanhoe” author Not so much Change states Bit of Viking writing Pronounced Duel tool Rich earth Caustic cleanser Sch. founded by Jefferson Second Internet factoid, part 1 Montana’s capital Attila follower Perilous current Fix, as copy Army doc City near the Sphinx GPS heading Diplomacy Kin of bro “Ginormous” Old stone slab “Boston Legal” fig. Second Internet factoid, part 2 Harangue Long cold spell __ fizz Star, in Paris List of Sox, e.g. “Color of the Year” company Person who e-mails Records Suits for lane racers 3 5 4 6 7 9 8 10 12 11 14 13 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 30 31 34 35 41 46 37 36 42 38 43 56 72 79 85 67 71 75 76 82 86 90 96 103 108 83 84 91 104 105 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 © 2012 by Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon Foppish footwear Ram in a flock Line from the heart Rhythmic thumping Jurassic critters Sauterne sediment Formerly, formerly 5-Down example Comes across as Arcade game with ghosts Absorbed by WWII shooter Birch family member 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 27. 28. 33. 35. 36. 38. 39. 40. 42. 43. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 55. 56. 57. 59. 61. 62. 63. 65. 66. 67. 69. 71. 73. 75. 76. 78. 79. Bridge feats Other Fist-bump greeting Mild, as chili Malarkey Palliated Jazz ensemble “Sixpack” muscles Dance with handclaps News bits Column crossers Chief Norse god Arms treaty goal Brat’s stocking stuffer Moving-day rental Roofing option Do some yakking Permeate Gets warmer on a search Sentence breakdown Gets off the fence? Doo-wop’s “Duke of __” Window with a hinged sash Not in the pink Audibly Avail Mammy of Dogpatch Wozniak or Jobs Sicilian top-blower Epitome of redness Grapevine product Fork out Natural tabletop Assad’s land Frog central Prefix for everything? Skater’s jump “Soap” family Iron ore 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 89. 90. 93. 94. 96. 94 99 109 107 93 92 98 97 102 101 77 87 89 95 61 60 66 81 88 59 70 80 63 49 58 74 62 45 57 73 19 53 69 68 18 40 44 65 78 39 52 64 17 33 48 55 16 29 32 51 54 15 28 47 50 DOWN 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 2 1 ACROSS 106 98. 99. 100. 102. 103. 104. 105. 106. 108. Hard-to-pin-down bit The __ Cat Pickers of nits Spotted Art lover Cambridge campus JFK’s prep school Neptune, e.g. Wild weather cause Villainous look 100 Egger-on Treat with tea De Mille of dance Just sitting there Keynes’s subj. The Lakers’ Jerry AOL and such Insult follower A hand Last issue’s solution “The Hunger Games” THE HUNGER GAMES A B O K S B A L A L O A F C O N N E T H E R I O R Z O C E L I C E I T E I S I L I N P I L E W I S E S N G G O N Z O L T D L O F E O S N A M E B A N G T E L M C O O L S M Y I P O L D A A T A N L I M E L O N G I C O O K E A T O S I A A N G I T Y E P A G E I I I I E S E T A T E R S Y A M M E R P L Y S C I S R E I O L I D S O A C T A C D O U G H N U T S U E L Y W O O D P E T O N E A R A M P L PUBLICATION OF THE CROSSWORD IS UNDERWRITTEN BY Brattleboro Tire 558 Putney Rd., Brattleboro • 254-5411 commons BRATTLEBORO TIRE 26 26 Most cars. Up to 5 qts. 5W-30 $ 25 env. fee Special Oil & Filters Extra. 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AROUND THE TOWNS C3 " THE COMMONS with coupon VT10 STATE off VTINSPECTION sTaTe inspeCTion $ Reg. PRice $40 $5 OFF THE REGULAR PRICE Limited time offer VT State Inspection Red #8 #6 Due Now Green THE ARTS C4 The Commons • Wednesday, August 1, 2012 a r t s & c o m m u n i t y C A LEND A R THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Instruction 2 n . Shall We Dance? Rumba.: Ballroom Dance Classes. n 7:30 p.m. n $10/drop in. n BRATTLEBORO Stone Church, 210 Main Street. 3 n . Shall We Dance? Ballroom and Latin Dance.: Brattleboro Ballroom dance. n 7 p.m. n $8 singles; $15 couples; $5 teens & seniors. n Stone Church, 210 Main Street. 5 n BRATTLEBORO BRATTLEBORO . Balkan Dance: Participatory line and circle dances from the Balkans, with live music by Xopo, featuring Becky Ashenden, Chuck Corman, Gawain Thomas, Annie Guion, Addie Holland and Joe and Barbara Blumenthal. Music Please bring a water bottle and clean, softsoled shoes to protect the dance floor. All levels welcome. n 7-10 p.m. n Suggested donation $12. n Stone Church, 210 Main Street. Information: rachelleackerman@yahoo. com or call 802-257-9513 or 802-254-2040. 8 n . African Dance and Drum Summer Class: All levels are always welcome and BRATTLEBORO the classes are accompanied by accomplished drummer, Namory Keita from Guinea along with Jason Graves and other drummers. n 7 p.m. n The cost is on a sliding scale of $12-15. n Stone Church, 210 Main Street. Information: [email protected] or call 802-258-6475. Art walks and tours 3 n BRATTLEBORO . Gallery Walk: 35 to 50 galleries and other exhibit venues host art openings during this year-round first-Friday festival of the arts, many with meet-the-artist receptions and live music. Most exhibits are up all month long. n 5:30-8:30 p.m. n Free. n Gallery Walk. Information: 802-257-2616; www. gallerywalk.org. 3 n . Double Japanese Festival at Gallery Walk: At the park downtown at the foot of BRATTLEBORO Main St., between the Co-op and the Museum, Asian Cultural Center of Vermont (ACCVT) presents Tanabata-Obon Festival. Obon is a celebration of ancestors and reconnection with Spirits. Tanabata is a star festival for communities to make wishes for the future. Join a walk on a lantern-lit path to the Table of Remembrance. n 5:30-8:30 p.m. n Free. n Gallery Walk. Information: (802) 579-9088. Film and video 2 n . Workin-Progress Screening of "Action Conversations:Bellows Falls": This is an informal presentation and BELLOW FALLS a work-in-progress screening of segments of a docu-dance film of the project. n 7 p.m. n Free. n Bellows Falls Opera House, 7 The Village Square. 3 n . Waste Land: Filmed over nearly three years, BRATTLEBORO this documentary follows renowned artist Vik Muniz as he journeys from his home base in Brooklyn to his native Brazil and the world's largest garbage dump, Jardim Gramacho, located on the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro. n 8:30-10 p.m. n n Brattleboro Museum and Art Center, 10 Vernon Street. Information: 802-257-0124; www.brattleboromuseum.org. teacher treasures 2 n The written word . Open Mic: Kevin Parry hosts Open Mic every BRATTLEBORO 2 n . . Featuring: School Year Hours Wed-Fri 2-5 Sat 10-5 Rte. 30, Newfane - Just North of the Village 802-365-4811 lustrations of a 5-month journey in India. The opening will be taking place during Gallery Walk. n 5:30-8:30 p.m. n Free. n Twilight Tea Lounge, Arch Street. Information: http:// dreamingindia2012.blogspot.com/. 3 n PUTNEY . Concert: Music by Brett Dean, Dmitri Shostakovich, Stefano Gervasoni, and George Enescu. n 8 p.m. n $22. n Yellow Barn, 63 Main Street. Information: 802-3876637; [email protected]. 4 n . Folksongs and Sacred Works : Counterpoint, GRAFTON Vermont's 12-voice professional vocal ensemble, under the direction of Artistic Director Nathaniel G. Lew. presents "The Voice of My Beloved." The concert highlight the ensemble's stylistic versatility, with African-American spirituals (a well-known Counterpoint specialty) and folksongs from America, England, Venezuela, and Eastern Europe. Also included are jubilant sacred works by Dmitri Bortniansky (a Russian contemporary of Mozart) and Johannes Brahms. n 8 p.m. n $20 for adults, $15 for seniors, $5 for students. n White Church in Grafton, Main Street. Information: 802-540-1784. www. counterpointchorus.org. Tickets also available at the Grafton Village Store. 4 n . Yellow Bar n Matinee Concert: Music by Erich PUTNEY Wolfgang Korngold, Bela Bartok, Brett Dean, and Robert Schumann. n 12:30 p.m. n 2 n WEST CHESTERFIELD . Mauritius: Stamp collecting doesn't seem like much of a subject for a play, but Theresa Rebeck's drama brings out the best and worst in its characters, two half-sisters fighting over their recently deceased mother's stamp collection, and three men with shady backgrounds and motives who want to get it. n 7:30 p.m. Through Saturday, August 4. n Thursdays are $12 (Students $6); Fridays $15 (Students $8) and Saturdays all tickets are $15. n Actors Theatre Playhouse, Corner $18. n Yellow Barn, 63 Main St. Information: 802-387-6637; [email protected]. 5 n . Draa Hobbs: Sunday Brunch at the Marina BRATTLEBORO with guitarist Draa Hobbs playing a variety of standards and Jazz classics. n 11 a.m.-1 p.m. n Free with Brunch. n Marina, Putney Road. Information: 802-257-7428; www. kevinparrymusic.com. 5 n . Live: Bill Kirchen: Justly famous for BELLOW FALLS his indelible Telecaster sound on "Hot Rod Lincoln," his 1972 Top 10 hit with Commander Cody, Kirchen has been everywhere since he first plugged in during the mid-1960s. He was a founding member of the legendary Brook & Main St. Information: 802-254-4714; WWW. Actors-Theatre.Info. LOAN SPECIAL Forlano appears globally in theater, cabaret, club, and outdoor venues. He performs in the universal style of the great clowns with contemporary comic and dramatic influences, verbally and nonverbally. n 10:30 a.m. n Free. n Living Memorial Park, Guilford Street Extension. [email protected] www.durandtoyota.com Ben Mousel “Same Face, New Place” 6 n . "Week of Rock" camp: For all ages and BRATTLEBORO abilities, established groups are welcome. Spend the week playing rock music of different genres, getting coaching from professionals on performance and band development, including topics on gear, rehearsing, groove, soloing, and accompanying. The week will culminate with a performance at Headroom Stages on Elliot Street. n . Through Friday, August 10. n n Headroom Stages, 17 Elliot St. Information: 802 254 5054 or email info@ openmusiccollective.org. Kids and fa m i l i e s BRATTLEBORO BRATTLEBORO P.O. Box 497 6896 Route 5 South Bellows Falls, VT 05101 Refinancing from another Financial Organization Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen. n Doors open at 7 p.m. n $18 general admission. n Bellows Falls Opera House, 7 The Village Square. Information: 802-463-9595. . (800) 639-2037 ext. 328 (802) 463-3300 ext. 328 Cell (802) 522-5864 Fax (802) 463-4089 this engaging and educational activity with their children. n . n n KidsPLAYce, 20 Elliot St. Information: 802-254-5212; www. kidsplayce.org. Government 7 n . Townshend Democratic Caucus Meeting: The Townshend Democratic TOWNSHEND Caucus will meet to elect nominees to serve as Justice of the Peace for the town of Townshend. Contact Kathy Greve, Democratic Town Chair, for more information. n 7 p.m. n n Townshend Town Hall. Information: 802-874-4403. www.members1cu.com 10 Browne CT PO Box 8245 Acupuncture N. Brattleboro, VT 05304 Chiropractic NCUA Insured to 250,000 *Annual Percentage Rate Tel. (802) 257-5131 General Family Medicine Fax (802) 257-5837 Lifestyle medicine 205 Main Street Brattleboro, VT 05301 Phone. 802.275.4732 Fax. 802.275.4738 [email protected] www.biologichealthcare.com [ Massage Therapy Naturopathic Medicine Nutritional Assessment/Individualized Programs Physical Therapy Psychotherapy instant oil change, llc 668 Putney Road • Brattleboro, VT www.stopngooil.com [email protected] 802.254.5050 • Fax: 802.251.7274 auto sales 802.257.3033 NORTHFIELD DRIVE•IN THEATRE ★ double feature ★ fri., Sat. & Sun., aug. 3, 4 & 5 1st :25 at 8 BRAVE Dark Knight Rises www.northfielddrivein.com (603) 239-4054 Northfield - Hinsdale Rd. (Rt. 63) Visual arts and shows 3 n membership could mean much at your nonprofit community newspaper. we all know that $55 doesn’t buy as much as it used to. Sarah Adam focus on silhouettes and patterns made by natural and manufactured objects, including tree branches, vines, and icicles. Paintings are primarily acrylic on various surfaces. n 5:30-8 p.m. n Free. n Latchis Theatre, 50 Main Street. Information: www. madsahara.com. Ideas and education . Medicine for the People talks: Greg Carder PUTNEY will discuss indigenous medicine. There will be time for questions after the information session. n 7-8:30 p.m. n Free. n Medicine for the People, 25 Main St. Information: 802387-3028; info.medicineforthepeople@ gmail.com.. Fundraising and awareness events 2 n our printing costs for about a month. by the Brattleboro Branch of the American Association of University Women raises funds for college scholarships for local girls and women. Good used fiction and nonfiction, antique and collector editions, audiobooks too. For more information, call 802-3802805 or email [email protected]. n 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Through Saturday, August 4. n n Centre Congregational Church, 139 Main St. Information: 802-380-2805 or email [email protected]. Government 7 n . Townshend Democratic Caucus Meeting: The Townshend Democratic TOWNSHEND Caucus will meet to elect nominees to serve as Justice of the Peace for the town of Townshend. Contact Kathy Greve, Democratic Town Chair, for more information. n 7 p.m. n n Townshend Town Hall. Information: 802-874-4403. Together, we can make The Commons VIM members get the paper in the mail and join us for occasional special events. We gratefully accept donations of smaller amounts, but we cannot mail the paper. ADDRESS ________________________________________________________ TOwN/CITy ______________________________________________________ E-MAIL _________________________________________________________ I wish to become a member. $55–$99 Loyal Reader $100–$249 Newshound $250+ Independent Media Mogul I already am a member, and I want to give an additional gift of $______________. My total donation is $_____________ I will pick up the paper at any of more than 150 locations around Windham County. Please don’t mail it, but thanks anyway. I enclose a check. Please charge my credit card. You can phone us (802-246-6397) or fax us (802-246-1319) with this information if you prefer. even better. Come join us today. We ap- NUMBER 3-DIGIT CODE EXp. MM/yy ______________________________________________________________ preciate every one of you. CARDHOLDER’S SIGNATURE P.O. Box 1212, Brattleboro, VT 05302 comm-memb.form04.indd Proof generated July 31, 2012 6:05 PM ] Yes! STATE_____ ZIp ___________ pHONE _________________________________ it all matters. you all matter. . AAUW Book Sale: Annual 3-day book sale BRATTLEBORO I want to help support Vermont Independent Media and the work of The Commons, www.Commonsnews.org, the Media Mentoring Project, and VIM’s outreach to journalism programs in schools. My NAME ________________________________________________________ but if 100 readers do the same? that covers . Adam's art opening: New paintings by BRATTLEBORO you know you’ve been meaning to you might not think that your single $55 . L ev i Fuller A435 Extravaganza: BRATTLEBORO Use tools to tune found objects to Levi Fuller's famous A435 tuning. Use electronic tuners to check your results. Perform a piece using your newly tuned instrument. Starts at the Estey Organ Museum, ends at Morningside Cemetery. n 2-5 p.m. n n Estey Organ Museum, 108 Birge Street. Information: 802-246-8366; [email protected].. 7 n Story and . 3 Snack: Hosted by Brattleboro Food 3 Comedy by Daniel Physical Forlano: n n Co-op. All parents are encouraged to enjoy DuranD 6.5%APR* Vehicle Buying New, Used or Special good until the end of July. draahobbs.com Guitarist Draa Hobbs will perform standards and jazz classics at The Marina on Aug. 5. Performing arts “The SMALL Credit Union with a BIG HEART” Credit Union Quoted Rates on Recreational Vehicle Loans. 4 n Yellow Bar n MEMBERS 1ST CREDIT UNION 1 ½% Reduction On Members 1st Credit Union Quoted Recreational Vehicle Loans! Beyond Description Indian photo exhibit: "Surrender" are ilBRATTLEBORO BRATTLEBORO his writing before, you will discover s a treat of naturalist writing. You may not be familiar with the birds he talks about, but you'll want to be after his talk. n 6 p.m. n Free. n Everyone's Books, 25 Elliot St. Information: 802-254-8160; www.everyonesbks.com. Brett Dean, Anton Webern and Gerald Finzi. n 8 p.m. n $18. n Yellow Barn, 63 Main St. Information: 802-387-6637; info@ yellowbarn.org. 3 n . Chris Petrak discusses "More Tails of Birding": If you haven't encountered Yellow Bar n Concert: Music by Benjamin Britten, PUTNEY A Teacher Resource Store & More! Teacher Created Resources Creative Teaching Press House Mouse Designs Home-Schooler & Christian Materials Scrap Booking Used Books & Lending Library 3 n Thursday at the Marina Restaurant. Musicians can sign up in advance by calling. n 710 p.m. n Free. n Marina, Putney Road. Information: 802-257-7563. Please make checks payable to Vermont Independent Media. VIM is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization. Your donation is tax deductible. THE COMMONS VOICES • Wednesday, August 1, 2012 VOICES S E C T I O N D1 B D Wednesday, August 1, 2012 • page D1 OPINION • COMMENTARY • LETTERS Join the discussion: [email protected] DISPATCH MEMOIR My first day knowing ‘He’d said he would go to college at night and work during the day. And now? Now that I was pregnant, he was leaving.’ I Townshend JUDITH DRESSED for school, putting on my plaid polyester skirt, zipping it up. It fit fine, but how long would I be able to wear this school uniform? How long before I started to show? I put on a white blouse and my maroon sweater. I looked the same but didn’t feel the same. All day long at school, I felt like I had a special secret inside. I couldn’t wait to get home and call Kevin with the news. “Guess what?” I asked when he answered. “What?” “I’m pregnant!” I exclaimed happily. During classes that day, I’d daydreamed about being parents together, holding and caring for our infant. “I’m going home tonight,” he said. “My parents want to talk.” It was as if he hadn’t heard what I said, so I said it again. “I’m pregnant.” “I know,” he said. “I heard you.” “I was hoping you’d be happy. It’s not like this is a mistake,” I reminded him. “Yeah, I know. I’m just confused.” I wanted him to be thrilled with the news, but he wasn’t. We made plans to get together that night. WHEN I ARRIVED at his parents’ house, Kevin met me at the car and said his parents wanted him to stay home. Then, I was confused. I’d driven some distance to see him, and now he was saying I couldn’t come in. He stood beside the car with his family’s large brick colonial home behind him. “I’m going to go to school,” he said. “My parents said I could go even though we’re still engaged.” “But I’m definitely pregnant,” I said, wanting him to remember that he’d promised to marry me. “Yeah, and I’m going to school.” I didn’t understand. We’d been talking about what we were going to do for weeks. He’d been living at my house and then his brother’s. He’d been out of his parents’ house for three whole weeks. He’d applied for jobs. School had already started. He’d said he didn’t want to go. That he wanted to stay with me. He’d said he would go to college at night and work during the day. And now? Now that I was pregnant, he was leaving. I started crying. Not just a little. A lot. I was totally shocked. DICKERMANNELSON’s memoir Believe in Me: A Teen Mom’s Story, from where this piece was excerpted, was recently published by Jefferson Park Press. Her poetry and prose has appeared in numerous journals and anthologies. Information: bit.ly/judithd-n. He held out two slips of paper. “What’s this?” I asked. “They’re names of counselors,” he said. “Places where you can go to give a baby up for adoption. My dad got them.” “What are you talking about?” My head was spinning. Adoption? He knew I was adopted. He knew I would never give our baby away. He knew that I didn’t know who my birth parents were, and I’d told him how that made me feel like a part of me was missing. He was still talking about what he and his parents had discussed, but I couldn’t hear him. Suddenly, I felt like I was drowning and his words were swirling around me as if I was immersed in water. “I still want to marry you,” he said, and I heard that, like he had thrown a life preserver into the water. “You do?” “Yes, of course. But I don’t think I can be a father right now.” I didn’t know what to say, and I couldn’t talk if I’d wanted to because I was crying so much. “Let’s go for a walk,” he said. “I thought you couldn’t see me,” I managed to say. “Yeah, well, a little walk won’t hurt.” He held out his hand. I stepped out of the car and took his hand, and we walked around the neighborhood until we came to a big rock at the end of a road. “I still love you,” he said, and tried to kiss me. I pulled away. “Hey,” he said. “I do.” And he tried again. This time I let him. My face was wet from crying, and he’d been crying too. We stayed there hugging and talking for about a half an hour. I didn’t want to let go because it felt like I was losing him. When we went back to his house, I didn’t want to leave. But again he didn’t ask me to come inside. He kissed me goodbye, but I didn’t know when I would see him again, and it hurt not knowing, like ■ SEE PREGNANT, PAGE D3 D R E A M I N G of INDIA The crazier it sounded and the scarier it became, the more we had to take on this adventure I Brattleboro WANTED TO pinch my- self several times as I stood above the lower level of the airport. My gaze overlooked the overflowing immigration line and became glued to the large hand mudras within the Delhi airport. Why here and why now? Was it the letters that I exchanged for a short time with a high-school friend, Veenu, who traveled between India and the United States? Was it the poster-sized picture of the Taj Mahal that I purchased 10 years ago and placed upon the walls of my first office? Was it Indu Sundaresan’s book with magnetic images of 17th-century India? Or the epic I stayed up all night watching which included swirling saris, belly dance lessons in caves, and a dramatic love story all set in India? Was it my increasing fondness for the many stories of the Hindu gods and goddesses Krishna, Radha, Hanuman, or the epic Bhagavad Gita? These tales entranced me and perhaps joined with many other events in my life in a lovely conspiratorial mix that led me to the place that was India. THERE WAS also a more SHANTA L.E. CROWLEY/SPECIAL TO THE COMMONS Elephant ride in India: “Funny thing: the ride only lasted a few minutes but I was so terrified could not speak and asked to get off.” SHANTA L. E. CROWLEY’s photo exhibit, “Surrender,” about her journey to India, is now on display at the Twilight Tea Lounge, 41 Main St. Her “Dreaming of India” blog (dreamingindia2012.blogspot.com) includes the music she heard there; she also blogs regularly at www.reformer802.com/realtalk. Contact her at [email protected]. logical reason for the trip — or at least it was logical to my husband and me. We were both unemployed, and life appeared to be more glaringly uncertain. As Women at a street vendor in Agra, India. someone who has been working since I was 13 years old, this was the first time in 19 years that I was without a job, a title, or any answers to the question, “What do you do?” SHANTA L.E. CROWLEY/SPECIAL TO THE COMMONS On my way home after my last day of work, my 2004 Nissan refused the response of my foot upon the accelerator as it slowed down on the highway during rush-hour traffic. It did not matter at this point, as I had to return my car to the bank and plot my next move. At some point during this wave of confusion, we hatched something of a plan: use this time to go to India, see another part of the world, take a break from the economy. We did not have any firm contacts, friends, or family in India, and this would be our first time immersing ourselves into another culture for five months. The idea of taking the little money we had to try to make it abroad instead of hunkering down to find work and pay rent, utilities, and day-to-day living seemed crazy. Our friends and family either supported us, quietly doubted whether we could do such a thing, or asked in a reserved voice, “Why India?” The crazier it sounded and the scarier it became as we packed up our apartment, the more we just knew that we had to take on this adventure. After only a month — and only a couple of weeks of being married — we arrived in India. ACCORDING TO a guy named Vishnu, who was corresponding with my husband over ■ SEE INDIA, PAGE D2 VIEWPOINT Why we’re leaving Bellows Falls ‘I am hitting my head on a brick wall, because it is a very lonely existence when you try and try and try, and all you get is ridiculed and bullied’ Bellows Falls LESLIE FLANAGAN has “lived in many areas, from my hometown of Baltimore, Md., to Enosburg Falls, Vt. Along the way, I have met many people and have enjoyed the time we have spent in the three years ago. I am communities we have lived in. Again, until we decided to move here.” not originally from New England, but I lived in northern Vermont several years ago. That is to say, until our deci- respect, especially from the My family and I have never sion to move to Bellows Falls. children of this community. had any issues with residents of We came to Bellows Falls I am not sure to whom I am a particular area that we have for medical and employment supposed to direct my conchosen to move to. We have reasons. We did not move cern, but I do know that as a always gotten along with the here and expect to find instant community, no one has made a residents, respected the comfriendship, but I never thought successful attempt in fixing our munity, and tried to fit in. that I would have to fight for problem. I MOVED HERE almost Proof generated July 31, 2012 10:19 PM This does seem to be a community-wide problem, because I am not the only “new” resident who have had problems, but ours does seem to be constant and severe. Our community needs to be aware that times are changing, and that people are moving in and out of their town. OUR PROBLEMS began in our neighborhood when my children began meeting the neighborhood children. One child in particular was not happy that my daughter was becoming friends with another little girl she had grown up with. I had to watch as my children were ignored, then bullied. I even tried to go to the parents of the children who were taking part in these activities, with no success. Instead of parents taking responsibility for their children’s behaviors, I was told that my daughter was trying too hard to make friends. Our problem then took root in the elementary school. Things escalated, and finally a teacher told me what was going on. My children had been filling me in but were leaving out many details for fear that they would get in trouble with me. My husband and I are strict parents, and we watch closely what our children do. I feel ■ SEE BELLOWS FALLS, PAGE D2 VOICES D2 The Commons • Wednesday, August 1, 2012 n Bellows Falls The largesT selecTion of pre-owned equipmenT in vermonT! new audio & home TheaTer equipmenT Yamaha, polk, panasonic, pioneer & more... 2 Elliot St., Brattleboro, VT (Inside Turn It Up) 802.380.1879 [email protected] MATT SKOVE/AUDIO DESIGN Home Stereo/Flat Screen TVs Home Theater Installation Car Stereo/Remote Car Starters Sales and/or Installation “I’ll come to you!’’ 802-257-5419 www.audiodesignvt.com This space for rent 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]. Jane Wheeler, MA Licensed Alcohol and Drug Counselor Addiction Recovery Counseling Life Changes, Personal Spirituality Connect - Body - Mind - Spirit 802-246-7594 • [email protected] Brattleboro Office that we have taught our children well and we have spoken to them about bullying. I finally spoke to the principal and was told that there would be a meeting with the children accused of the bullying and that my children could attend if they felt comfortable enough to do so. I was also reassured that the topic of being new in a community and acceptance would be delivered. I never found out if the parents of those children involved were contacted, and I needed to let go of the situation and move forward. Last summer, we tried to get out and about to meet the residents of our community. However, we were never fully accepted and never approached to join in or become part of the neighborhood to which we now pay taxes. It seemed the more we tried to be accepted, the more we were looked upon with contempt. Last summer, neighborhood children — the very same children we had issues with at school — would stand at the foot of our driveway and laugh and point at us. We would be stared at in public, and all we could do was stand by and take it. We kept our children home and away from any potential problems. I then contacted the middle school principal for a meeting before the start of the new school year. I was not going to sit back and experience yet another year where my children are targets. I explained that there is a real fear behind my concerns, because my children and I suffer from two genetic bleeding disorders, and if we cut ourselves or bump or fall, we will bleed uncontrollably. As parents, we have spoken to our children about ignoring these kids, but what happens if one of my kids are tripped and they hit their head — all out of ignorance? So my husband and I had this meeting and spoke about our concerns, our experiences, and our ultimate fears. For the most part, the school year was uneventful because my children were busy working and getting straight As. My son was even recognized as being head of the fifth grade last year, and my daughter was busy with her own academics and art projects. They do not walk the streets, nor do they cause problems. Everyone who meets my children have from SECTION FRONT moved closer to the door. I saw this and felt threatened because I could clearly see her trying to make it harder for us to leave. All the while, they were coughing and laughing — with us My husband and I purchased passes for each of our standing right there. children to swim this summer. The girl who has caused us In addition, we enrolled them the most problems was trying in another swimming lesson to hide her head on the table, session. but it was too late. I saw her It is very hard for us to simparticipating, and she knew I ply pay for extra things outdid so. I live around the corner side of our budget because I from her and directly across the am on disability, and treatstreet from her grandmother. ing my medical condition and This child did something to my medications cost a small my kids the year before. I did fortune. My weekly transfutry to tell her parents, but only sions alone cost $10,000 and managed to speak to an older we are responsible for the codaughter. I asked that the parpay, every week, every month, ents speak to me but nothing and every year. This also does ever materialized. not include my other monthly As I now saw my exit with a medications and preparations. leg in front of it — the leg of a So, my children began uschild, mind you. If I had fallen ing the pool and started their and hit my head, I would have swimming lessons. They were had a major bleed in my skull. due to finish their lessons on After having been ridiJuly 20. On July 19, while at culed, taunted, and teased by their lessons, I was in the park- these 11-to-12-year-old girls, I ing lot waiting for them to fin- stopped at the table that they ish. We noticed the very girls were sitting at and asked, “Why they have always had probare you doing this? Why do you lems with entering the rec cen- bother us when my child and I ter at the start of the swimming do not bother you?” lessons. I just wanted to know why! This meant that my children It is also funny that when had to walk past them to get to these girls need help with the pool. As they did so — and school work, they will be nice I was with them — the “trouble to my kids because they know girls” began coughing loudly that my children will give them and laughing. This happened a direct and honest answer. But every time they saw us thereaf- otherwise, they are made fun of ter — every time. and teased relentlessly. After my kids were safely at the pool, I left them and went I am writing this because we are now moving. back to the parking lot to wait We have had it with this the 30 minutes for them to finish. As I walked through to the community and just as soon as the school year ends, we are exit, I too was coughed at and out of here. This has been by laughed at. When the lessons were over, far the worst experience of my life. I entered the rec center to get I have had so many intermy children and again was nal bleeds due to stress from coughed at and laughed at. the antics that take place here Now, it was louder, and when in this small town. I have tried I turned around to see these and tried to make friends, and girls, they were pointing and I could go on about our many laughing at me. other bad experiences. Now they are disrespectI am also writing because afing an adult, and if this is what ter I asked these girls why they they do to an adult, what are were bothering us, the woman they capable of doing to anadult at the rec center looked other child? I told the gentledirectly at me and told me man at the rec center, “I hate that they were doing nothing when kids do this.” wrong. I was furious; I still am. While saying this, I saw my I will find out this town emdaughter, stopped speaking to the attendant, and grabbed my ployee’s name, and I want to file a complaint because those child because I just wanted to girls were clearly taunting us. I get out of there. My son was am sick and tired of no one dostill changing, but I needed to get out of there because I have ing anything about the constant bullying that takes place in this had enough. town. As I neared the exit, one of Does someone have to the girls who was sitting nearest the door stuck out her foot and get seriously hurt before we nothing but positive, wonderful things to say about them. This is why I am so angry, upset, and beside myself. recognize that there is a real problem here? I think this is real shame, because I liked Bellows Falls at first. My children love the school and have done exceptionally well. But the residents of this place need a serious wake-up call. Bellows Falls should have caution tape wrapped around it, preventing people from moving in and trying to set up house. In all of the places where we have lived, we have never experienced the things that have happened to us here. I buy locally and respect the town. We are law-abiding citizens and are teaching our children the same values. But I am hitting my head on a brick wall, because it is a very lonely existence when you try and try and try, and all you get is ridiculed and bullied. These are now the memories my children will have of the time we spent in Bellows Falls, while their parents tried to set up a safe home for them. I don’t know what the answer is, but there is a problem. Maybe a welcome committee could be established to help outsiders fit in. The community needs to be aware when people move in, set up house, and help the community to thrive. It is such a shame because I know that many of these problems begin at home, behind closed doors, and with the parents of the children of this community. I am concerned about safety issues, but all I can do from here is alert the middle school about what has taken place. I saw firsthand what these kids can do, and that action of sticking out of the foot told me to be concerned. Again, if this girl was willing to trip me, she will trip my kids. It is unfair for an outsider to have to go through what we have gone through — all because we were not born and raised here. We have rights, too, and we have been violated too many times now to count. But this has been hard because of children being involved and bullying. Things that have happened to us were always on the right side of the law, and we were forced to sit back, shut up, and take it. No more. We are just as important as residents of Bellows Falls as the next person, and we do not deserve to be treated the way we have been treated. n India NUTS ’n’ BOLTS Your local sources for home improvement The Chimney Doctor Chimney & Stove Care Whole System Service •Cleaning •Repair •Installation •Relining •Year-round Service (802) 387-6037 Putney, VT [email protected] www.vtchimneydoctor.com Mayotte’s tree service Service & General Maintenance 146’ 23 Ton Crane • 60’ Bucket Truck Specializing in Roof & Barn Trusses • Set Log Cabin Beams • Stump Grinding & Large Tree Removal Chuck Mayotte, Sr. Guilford, VT NOW BOOKING seasoNaL tree svc. 802-254-2293 or 802-258-0500 or 802-258-8075 Over 40 Years Experience! [email protected] MOMANEY PAINTERS Interior Exterior Quality Painting Renovation, Wallpapering & Repairs Serving the area for over 50 years - Insured Moe Momaney (802) 257-7600 cell: 802-380-4122 www.momaneypainters.com Proof generated July 31, 2012 10:19 PM moments of stares, individuals running to take my picture, or random conversations that always seemed to involve personal questions, like “Why isn’t your husband black like you?” To say our experience was a culture shock might be a bit of an understatement. It would be more apt to say that India molested my senses on every level. At any moment walking in the streets or interacting with various people, I had to intensely use all five senses, in addition to trying to process what was taking place. There were moments where I cried for the familiarity of home and the comfort of my bed, where I wished for the absence of coconut beetles or for a hot shower that did not involve hitting a switch. Many times, I asked myself if I was in over my head, especially when it took 44 hours (25 hours by train and mostly delay due to the fog) to travel from Varanasi to Rishikesh. There were numerous train rides with bunks that would give a claustrophobic a lifetime of nightmares. There was also the headon rickshaw accident that took place in Alleppey; it left me with minor bruises but forever PTSD’d-out over what I call the drunk-game-of-chicken driving that best describes the road rules. Yet I managed. Tears I shed over being homesick also competed with tears over the poverty in India, or over varying forms of what my Western mind would call “cruelty.” On many levels, I felt powerless as I saw many people of all ages in the streets who were disfigured (some on purpose as a way to generate money) and, in some cases, barely clothed. Yet, true to my feeling that I was involved in a dysfunctional relationship with India, I fell in love with it. The Taj Mahal was one place where I felt as if my life dream unzipped right During the five months, we before me as the thick fog would experience many intense slowly undressed its splendor the past couple of months via Facebook, a taxi driver would greet us at the airport holding a sign with our names. Upon spotting us in this crowded Delhi airport, our driver picked us up to take us to the ashram in Rishikesh to meet Vishnu so we could begin our adventure up to the Himalayan Mountains for our yoga-meditation retreat. Vishnu was a new contact, but we’d never Skyped or talked on the phone; we just somehow trusted that all of these arrangements would work just as they sounded in the emails. This was certainly a far cry from the streets of Brattleboro, or the dark apartment where I would fantasize about a life that was better than the so-called reality of Hartford, Conn. Because it was so early in the morning, it took a while for the morning sun to pull back the curtains of where we were. Smoke filled the air, and I sat in the back seat, nearly passing out because of close calls from the lack of turn signals and the chaos from the beeping that seemed to signify “I’m coming through — move out of the way!” I tried to use the music to calm myself. The streets did not smell like one big incense cloud, as some of our friends said it would. Instead, there seemed to be an obsession with burning many things; those odors commingled with other smells and made my stomach flip-flop. The cab driver stopped at a street stand along the way for us to grab some chai. I remember reading that we weren’t supposed to be doing this, yet I did not want to miss out on my favorite addiction — Indian chai. As I sipped the chai slowly, the moment became intense, as we were the only foreigners amid many of the locals. We all seemed to be in some weird stare-off because we were unique to the environment. from SECTION FRONT right before my eyes. I just stood there staring in awe, speechless. Places like Munnar and Alleppey seemed out of a storybook as each became a familiar neighborhood, complete with our favorite restaurants and corner-store vendors. There were many beautiful moments and challenges I faced every day as I adjusted to the culture and to being gone for such a long time. I had expectations upon going to India thinking that I would find answers, that I would somehow finally get on the guru bus (besides the one I’d been riding that says I am my own teacher) that so many people in the U.S. seemed to dig so much, perhaps even plunge deeper into Tantric practice. I even stopped drinking from the cup of judgment as I made initial plans to get my yoga certification while in India, challenging my long-held belief that it was just a bunch of posturing and big business in the U.S. I came to a place just before leaving India that I was okay with what did and did not happen for me on the trip. Letting go was the constant theme. Suspending assumption and withholding judgment and expectation of a previous norm — all that became daily practice. I am forever thankful to India for an opportunity to challenge who and what I thought I was, and who and what I would want to be. Though it has been about five months since my return, I continue to ask myself if I truly have any of these qualities that I had relinquished or suspended during our experience. Before coming back to the U.S., I encountered many teachers who came in many forms. Some teachers were self-proclaimed. Other teachers were students, business owners, children, animals, fellow travelers, the naked yogi I encountered in the Himalayas with a surveillance camera in his cave — and the overall day-to-day experience itself. Our many experiences handed me back to myself in a certain graceful, gentle judo that at times left me disoriented but then quickly grasping the point: to be present and embrace what is in my way. The moment I stepped upon the plane to India was the moment I crumpled up whatever life I thought I knew. The familiar became unfamiliar and the unfamiliar started to feel like home, especially when I returned to Brattleboro. Post-travel depression set in, as I felt like an alien who landed from another planet, yet one who was happy to re-engage with friends and family. At times, it even felt like I was still asleep in India and only dreamed so lucidly about being home. I am no longer the same me as a result of this journey; my home is not the same home. And so the list goes on and on. This beautiful transformation still continues. I am left with not only my memories, but also the 12,000 pictures that I took on this wonderful adventure. LETTER Townshend ordinance: illegal R E: “It’s our job” [Viewpoint, July 25]: I wholeheartedly agree with Ryan Hockertlotz. I also contacted the Townshend Selectboard and advised them that I thought the ordinance was illegal and didn’t want to see my tax dollars wasted to defend it when challenged. Fran Allen West Townshend THE COMMONS NEWS • Wednesday, August 1, 2012 LETTERS FROM READERS Clearing up the VY euphemisms T he English language is full of euphemisms: for example, Vermont Yankee’s “Emergency Planning Zone” as mentioned in Richard January’s letter [July 11]. I won’t quibble with the actual title of the zone in question. I do, however, question the purpose of the “Emergency Planning Zone.” If it isn’t to alert and prepare us for the possibility of evacuation, why do we receive each year a beautiful historical calendar that overflows with detailed (and unrealistic) information about where to go and how to get there in case of an evacuation required by an “event” at our friendly, local, and economically beneficial nuke? And, as a topper, why did we recently receive a letter from the Vermont Department of Health reminding us about the importance of updating our supply of potassium iodide tablets as part of “Vermont’s continuing emergency preparedness effort?” I’ll happily replace my “VY Evacuation Zone” sign with one that says something like, “VY Emergency Planning Zone for Nuclear Disaster Evacuations.” That would clear up all the euphemisms. Robert Rottenberg Brattleboro Drain the river, close Vermont Yankee I t’s time we recognized all the benefits that we are getting from Vermont Yankee. First, there is the electricity, right? Didn’t VY produce two-thirds of Vermont’s electricity? Well...VY might have produced it, but they didn’t provide it! Vermont Yankee is a merchant plant, selling electricity to the highest bidder, and it certainly didn’t all go to Vermont. Why am I speaking in the past tense? Because since March 22, Vermont hasn’t been buying any power from Vermont Yankee. Don’t believe me? Call the Vermont Department of Public Service and ask them. What about all the electricity that goes out onto the grid from Vermont Yankee? Won’t there be rolling blackouts if it is shut down? Rolling blackouts, my sweet rumpus! Typically, 4,000 extra megawatts is available on the grid. Vermont Yankee produces one-sixth of the excess available electricity. That’s why the plant can shut down for a whole month when workers change the spent fuel rods. Don’t believe me? Watch the figures on the ISO New England daily reports. That organization regulates electricity sales. I’ve seen as much as 10,000 megawatts on the grid with no buyer. So... let’s take a look at what else we get from Vermont Yankee. Google: “Vermont Yankee annual radioactive effluent reports.” Then get on the nrc. gov website. Here’s what we got from Vermont Yankee in 2011: Released into the atmosphere in the form of gaseous effluents as particulates: radioactive iodine-131, known to cause thyroid cancer (see recent letter to post office boxholders from the Vermont Department of Health); tritium, shown through epidemiological research to be correlated with Down’s syndrome; carbon-14, which causes leukemia. Trucked out as waste sludge, spent resin, and irradiated parts: cesium-137, known to cause breast cancer, cobalt-60, associated with liver cancer; strontium-89 and -90, associated with leukemia. For a complete list, see the reports at nrc.gov. Here is what I don’t understand. Our governor, Peter Shumlin, who got elected on his anti-nuclear policy, has not yet shut down Vermont Yankee. All it would take is to close off the Bellows Falls dam for a day or two each week. This strategy would drain the Connecticut river all the way to the Vernon Dam and cut off the necessary coolant so that VY would have to shut down repeatedly. It can be done. We don’t have a contract to provide water to Vermont Yankee. Peter Van der Does Brattleboro EDITORIAL Barriers to voting have no place in a democracy I T’S EASY to take for granted how markedly different Vermont’s attitude toward voting and elections is, compared to the rest of the nation’s. It’s easy to register to vote in Vermont, and registration drives at sites from schools to nursing homes happen regularly. Early voting takes place six weeks before an election, and voters can cast a ballot ahead of Election Day for any reason they offer. No photo ID is required at polling places (a good thing, as Vermont is one of the few states that issues driver licenses without photos). Granted, most towns are small enough that the Town Clerk knows who you are without an ID, but every voter’s identity is still checked against the names and addresses on the voting rolls. In short, the default position of the state of Vermont is to make it easy as possible to vote and to run the elections accordingly. Democrats and Republicans benefit equally. That’s why participation in elections here is higher than most places. COMPARE THIS attitude to what we are seeing elsewhere in the nation. The voter ID laws so vigorously backed by Republicans are ostensibly about preventing voting fraud, an act so rare in most jurisdictions that it’s nearly non-existent. No, these laws are really about making it more difficult to register to vote. They are about frightening off groups that want to hold voter registration drives. They are about requiring voters to have photo ID cards, then making it difficult to obtain them. They’re about curtailing early voting periods, then making it difficult to get an absentee ballot. In short, these laws illustrate the exact opposite of Vermont’s approach to voting. Republican-controlled state legislatures are pushing restrictive new voting rules for one simple reason. Put up as many bureaucratic hurdles as possible, and you might be able to discourage or block enough people from voting — mostly the poor, the young, the elderly, or the blacks and Hispanics who usually vote for Democrats — to ensure that Republicans get elected. According to the nonpartisan Brennan Center for Justice, 1 in 10 eligible voters lacks the necessary ID to vote. That figure includes 1 in 4 African Americans, and about 1 in 5 senior citizens. How would this affect an election? The Brennan Center estimates that more than 5 million people will have a significantly harder time R VA: Great care for me R I had a weight on my chest. get engaged.” “And then you used sex to ON THE DRIVE home, I manipulate him.” thought about how long it had “It’s not like I forced him!” taken to find out I was pregI said. It was as if his famnant. Would it have made any ily had another story about difference if we’d found out the what had happened, and it was news while he was living at my not the same story I was livhouse and looking for work? ing. It seemed to me they were Would he have stayed with me the ones who were doing the then? The whole way home, manipulating. I kept wiping my eyes with a “He’s leaving for school tonapkin. morrow, and you won’t see The next day I called him, him then,” she said, and she and his mother answered. sounded pleased, smug even. When I asked for Kevin, she Leaving for school? said, “He’s busy right now. But Tomorrow? I’d like to speak with you. You “Please let me talk to thought you could trap Kevin Kevin,” I said, a whine rising in by getting engaged. Well—” my voice. “Wait a minute,” I said, cutI was left standing there, the ting her off. “Kevin wanted to dial tone sounding in my ear. Proof generated July 31, 2012 10:19 PM THE BRENNAN CENTER recently looked at 10 states that recently passed restrictive voter ID laws: Alabama, Georgia, Indiana, Kansas, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Wisconsin. Five of the states have passed laws that are currently in effect (Georgia, Indiana, Kansas, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee). The other five are either awaiting federal approval (Mississippi, South Carolina, and Texas), on appeal after being found unconstitutional under state law (Wisconsin), or not scheduled to go into effect until after 2012 (Alabama). The Brennan Center found that about a half-million eligible voters will find it nearly impossible to obtain the necessary ID because they live in households without access to transportation and live more than 10 miles away from an ID-issuing office. Because many of these voters might not have driver’s licenses — and nearly all live in rural areas with limited public transportation — it could be significantly harder for them to get an ID and cast a ballot. Even if you have a way to get to the office that issues IDs, there’s no guarantee it will be be open during regular business hours. Not surprisingly, the Brennan Center found that the areas with the highest concentration of people of color and people living in poverty had the least access to an ID-issuing office. Then there is the other problem: tracking down the birth certificates, marriage licenses, divorce decrees, and other documentation that some states now require to get a voter ID. Even though voter IDs are free, the time and expense of coming up with these documents is beyond the reach, financially and logistically, of many potential voters. That’s why these voter ID laws are being challenged in courts around the nation. Practically speaking, they become barriers that discourage voter participation. They are laws that are simply unworthy of a democracy. For democracy to work, voting must be a universal right not subject to the partisan whims of whoever is in power. When those in power decide to curtail that right, no matter what the excuse, our nation suffers. BHA: Nothing is off the table S ■ Pregnant casting a vote in the 2012 election, and that the states which have already cut back on voting rights account for 171 electoral votes in this year’s election. That’s 63 percent of the 270 electoral votes needed for victory. 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. E: “Eight possible sites for public housing” [July 25]: We started with a list, compiled by Stevens & Associates, of properties that might be enior Solutions (formerly available and were considered back home. Others park their the Council on Aging for worth studying. Most were revehicles in the Senior Lot. Southeastern Vermont) has Some cannot walk easily or far. moved from the list because long had a local office in the they were too expensive, too far Someone has decided to Brattleboro Senior Center. from services, too hilly, no wamove this Senior Solutions Senior citizens gather week- office to the Brattleboro ter, and other such reasons. days at the center for activiThe eight “survivors” will be Municipal Center, up and ties and meals, where they can across Main Street, then up a carefully vetted, with a rough meet easily and privately with development plan provided for steep hill, effective Aug. 8. Senior Solutions staff. each. Is this a senior solution? Some arrive via public transNo decisions have been Howard Fairman portation directly from and Vernon made at this time. As BHA Executive Director Chris Hart remarked, “Nothing is off the table.” New properties might be looked at, and the “losers” might come back up if new E: “Single-payer health profit-driven so care is what its information suggests it. The care works: Just visit a VA staff concentrates on. desired 152 units might be hospital and see” [Viewpoint, As for those who think that concentrated in one or two July 18]: the Affordable Care Act is a As a disabled Vietnam vetbad solution to health care, eran, I agree wholeheartedly they need to look more closely with Robert Miller. The VA at what our government has has provided great care for me been doing for our veterans since I first entered a VA hospi- over the years. Maybe this is tal in Boston in 1969. the system that should be used The White River Junction for all Americans. VA is exceptional in the care Louis Cayer they give our veterans. And as West Dover Mr. Miller states, the VA is not Is this a senior solution? D3 locations, or distributed among a greater number of sites. Some sort of mixed-income development, such as we have at the A.W. Richards Building, is also a possibility. Ideas and suggestion from the public are welcomed. The BHA can be reached at 802-254-6071 or at bha@sover. net. Tom Finnell Brattleboro The writer serves on the Brattleboro Housing Authority and on its Housing Alternative Study Committee. Komen should be shut down R E: “Local Komen chapter shouldn’t suffer consequences” [Letters, July 25]: The students and current football players at Penn State will suffer due to the horrible actions of a few. But suffer they must. Sometimes the innocent suffer from the punishment of those who did wrong. I happened to see the movie Pink Ribbons, Inc.; I will never again donate to any organization aligned with Komen. EDITOR’S NOTE When such a small fraction of the money raised really goes to discovering the cause of cancer, donations are wasted. Komen should be shut down, and the good local organization should be reconstituted under some other name and commit that 90 percent of funds will go to uncovering the causes of cancer. Steve Morgan Amherst, Mass. T his week, between the contributions from readers, comments from the website, and the usual mix of food for thought that we find for you, your editor was working with approximately three times the amount of material than he usually has for the Voices section. We are still working on a roundup of local viewpoints in the aftermath of the Colorado shooting, which should appear in next week’s paper. We’ll plan to run letters about the primary election in several batches. Thanks, as always, for making Voices an eclectic, vibrant, and growing section of this newspaper. PREPARE TODAY FOR TOMORROW’S JOBS FROM SECTION FRONT How was it that one evening we were making plans to get married and two days later, he was getting ready to leave for school? I felt dizzy. My world was spinning out of control, and I didn’t know what to do. I hung up and just stood there. LATER THAT NIGHT, the phone rang. When I heard Kevin’s voice, I was glad. But as he spoke, my eyes welled with tears. “I’m going to be there for you in the end,” he said. “I love you.” More than anything, I wanted to believe him. But he was leaving, and this latenight phone call was our quiet goodbye. APPLIED BUSINESS PRACTICES Register Now! Financial aid available. Learn more about all of our degree, certificate and continuing education options at www.ccv.edu or call 1-800-228-6686. D4 THE COMMONS • Wednesday, August 1, 2012 SPORTS & RECREATION Shrine game returns to Dartmouth’s Alumni Field T his Saturday is the 59th Shrine Maple Sugar Bowl and, for the first time since 2008, the game is back at Dartmouth College’s Alumni Field. The annual match-up between the top high school graduates of Vermont and New Hampshire starts at 2:30 p.m. in Hanover, N.H., site of 48 previous Shrine games. Renovations to Alumni Field forced the game to McLeayRoyce Field in Windsor for the past three years. There’s only one local representative on the Vermont squad this year, Brattleboro wide receiver and kick returner Soren Pelz-Walsh. Pelz-Walsh, who lives in Dummerston, was a standout wide receiver and team captain for the Colonels in 2011. He was a first-team selection on the Vermont Division I AllStar team as he helped lead the Colonels to a 5-4 record. A three-sport star, he was also captain of the basketball and baseball teams in the 201112 school year. He’ll be going to the University of Vermont this fall. The Vermont squad is coached by Rutland’s Mike Norman. Mike Beliveau of Souhegan High School leads the New Hampshire team. New Hampshire leads the all-time series, 43-13-2, and has won the last 11 Shrine games. Quick exit for Post 5 in Legion tourney • Brattleboro Post 5 didn’t stay long in the Vermont American Legion Baseball Tournament in Rutland and Castleton. In the opening game last Thursday, Post 5 lost to Addison County, 8-2. Charlie Stapleford threw a completegame one-hitter with 11 strikeouts to get the win. Addison County pounded Brattleboro’s pitchers for 16 hits. The next day, Brattleboro was knocked out of the doubleelimination tournament with a 7-5 loss to Lakes Region. The two best baseball teams in the state, Bennington and Essex, reached the state finals, and it was Essex that prevailed with a 11-10 win on Monday. Essex now advances to the rain-shortened game between these teams, Keene won, 6-5. The Newport Polar Bears are hanging with those two teams at 7-7. They split a doubleheader with the Brattleboro River Rats, winning the first game, 5-1, and losing the second game, 6-2. Ludlow now has a 6-7 record, followed by Brattleboro (5-9), Saxtons River (5-10), and the Putney Fossils (4-10). • The Green Mountain Club (GMC) recently put out the first edition of the Manchester Area Hiking Trail Map, featuring hiking trails in southern • Health Care and Vermont. Rehabilitation Services The Manchester Section, (HCRS) will host its fifth anone of the 14 chapters of the nual Golf Tournament for GMC, maintains the hikAutism on Friday, Aug. 17, ing trails in the Manchester, at Tater Hill Golf Club in Stratton, and Bromley area. Windham. They helped put together this The tournament has a shot- pocket-sized, waterproof map gun start at 1 p.m. and will be which includes hiking trails on a mixed-scramble based on Bromley, Stratton, Equinox, best ball. Players will have an and White Rocks mountains. opportunity to compete for It is the fifth in the club’s series some hole-in-one prizes, as of regional maps that also inwell as prizes for longest drive clude Camels Hump, Mount and closest to the pins. In adMansfield, the Northeast dition, a silent auction will be Kingdom, and Killington areas. held throughout the day and In addition to regional an awards banquet will be held maps, the GMC offers a numfollowing the tournament. ber of comprehensive hiking The entry fee is $130, and all trail publications including proceeds will be used to help the Long Trail Map, the Day support area individuals and Hiker’s Guide to Vermont, and families living with the ongoing the classic Long Trail Guide. challenges of Autism. For more To learn more, visit www. greenmountainclub.org, or stop by information, contact Alice Bradeen at HCRS at 802-886- local outdoor gear and bookstores around the state to pick 4567, ext. 2191. up your map. Youth Services’ Golf Tournament Brattleboro’s Soren Pelz-Walsh (14), seen here last year blocking for teammate nets more Hassan Cansler, is the lone area representative to the Shrine Maple Sugar Bowl. than $22,000 RANDOLPH T. HOLHUT/COMMONS FILE PHOTO RANDOLPH T. HOLHUT Sports Roundup regional tournament at Old Orchard Beach, Maine next weekend. Softball roundup As the regular season of the Brattleboro Area Men’s Softball League nears its conclusion, the races for the top spots in the four divisions are getting close at the end of last Need New flooring? LLC. Vinyl Tile • SHeeT GOOdS • CeRaMiC Tile HaRdwOOd & laMinaTe VOTED by Marke of America Green Mountain Club releases new hiking trail map HCRS hosts fifth annual Golf Tournament for Autism Damian Flooring Can Help! t Best of the Bes ning 12 Yearst Run Surveyors prize for Women’s Closest to the Pin while Iedje Hornsby won Closest to the Line. In the Men’s Division, Ward Dannemiller took the prize for Longest Drive. Steven Sayer took Closest to the Line with Joe Bartlett winning Closest to Pin. CaRpeT • aRea RuGS • BRaided RuGS www.damianflooring.com 340 Franklin Road, Vernon, VT • Off Rt. 5, South from Brattleboro 802-254-4945 • [email protected] Hours: Mon-Fri, 9am - 4pm, Saturday, 9am - 1pm week’s games. The Brattleboro Elks (124) remain in first place in Division 1, but the Moose (115) are only one game back and Fletcher’s Auto (10-5) are not far behind. Sportsmen’s Lounge/Hotel Pharmacy (2-12) trails the field. Roadhouse Bar & Billiards and In Pursuit 365 are tied atop Division 2 at 10-7, with Zooters/Green Mountain Creamery in third place at 8-8. Westmoreland Auto remains in the basement at 2-15. In Division 3, Hescock Lawn Care (12-5) remains in first, but three teams — Newton Business, Aerodyne, and GSP Coatings — are all tied for second at 11-6. Marina/DMI (107) is two games back in fifth, followed by VFW (9-7) MT3/ DJ’s/Goodenough (6-9), W & B Maintenance (5-10) , GS Precision (5-12) and Stark Outdoors (2-14). Falvey Pools is cruising atop Division 4 with a 16-1 record, while Mocha Joe’s (115) is in second. Twin State Auto (10-6) is third, followed by Frankie’s Pizza/McNeill’s Brewery (9-6), Chelsea Royal (7-8), the Firefighters (7-9), • Ninety-two area golfers participated in Youth Services’ 27th annual Golf Tournament at the Brattleboro Country Club on July 25. The event generated over $22,000 to CRVBL roundup help underwrite the agency’s • With two weeks left in programs. the Connecticut River Valley The team of Jeff Morse, Baseball League’s regular sea- Tammy Morse, Barb Henry, son, the Chester Crush is still and Hugh Barber won First in first place with an 11-3 reGross, with the team of Ken cord, but the Claremont Whitworth, David Ross, Eric Cardinals are just a game back Carpenter, and Brian Baker at 10-4. finishing First Net, for the secClaremont kept pace with ond year in a row. a 13-4 win over the Saxtons The team of Elizabeth River Pirates on Sunday, while Walker, Eileen Ranslow, Chester split a doubleheader Dough Dannemiller, and Toby with the Ludlow Athletics, win- Munsill took Second Gross ning the first game, 8-5, and and Steve Hellus, Chip Hellus, losing the second game, 3-2. Dan Harrison, and Henry The Keene Black Dawgs Scott took Second Net. and Walpole Wild Blue are tied Barb Henry won the prize for third at 7-6. In Sunday’s for the Women’s Longest Drive. Sabine Rhyne won the Tony Farnum Construction (5-10), UNFI (5-12), and Brattleboro Family Health Care (2-15). Jamaica Healing Arts & Wellness Center Raise your vibration, uplift your body & spirit! Margaret R. Miller, M.Ed Jamaica, Vermont Now Scheduling for Reiki, Theraputic Massage, Acupuncure, & Myofascial Release Counselor, Pastor, Reiki healer, weaver, and Mistress of Ceremonies. (802) 874-7201 [email protected] Reiki and Intuitive Counseling Bi-weekly Tuesday healing meditation gatherings at the Confluence of Massy and Ball Mountain Brooks EARLY BIRD SPECIAL Snow Plow Service $ 9995 Fluid Included Expires 8/31/12 NEW BOSS PLOWS Straight Blade 8-Ft. with Trip Edge Installed.......$4,19995 V-Plow 9.2-Ft. 4,99995 $ Installed....... Expires 8/31/12 800 Putney Rd. • Brattleboro, VT 802-257-5100 www.brattautomall.com Proof generated July 31, 2012 10:19 PM MORE AROUND THE TOWNS AARP driver training offered in Townshend TOWNSHEND — The AARP Driver Safety Program, a classroom driver refresher course for mature drivers, will hold a class in Townshend at the Grace Cottage Hospital Wellness Center on Saturday, Aug. 11. The course explains the changes that occur in vision, hearing, and reaction time as people age. Content includes coverage of changes in highways, vehicles, and Vermont state law that affect drivers. There is a $14 fee for the program, which is reduced to $12 for AARP members. A special Educator Promotion is in effect for classes taken during the months of July and August. All current and former school employees are eligible to take the class for $5. AARP Volunteer Instructor Elliott Greenblott will offer the course using a combination lecture, discussion, and video presentation which will begin at 8:30 a.m., and conclude at approximately 1 p.m. To register or for more information, contact Elliott Greenblott at 802-2544489 or egreenblott@comcast. net (mce_host/site/editsystem05a/ [email protected]). Brattleboro Area Hospice plans fall training for volunteers BRATTLEBORO — Brattleboro Area Hospice will offer its fall volunteer rraining beginning Thursday, Sept. 6 and continuing until Nov. 15. The trainings run from 6-9 p.m., and are held at BAH, 191 Canal St. Applications are due Aug. 17. Hospice volunteers help and support neighbors and their families who are living with lifethreatening illnesses throughout Windham County. Help may range from errands and gardening to emotional and physical support. Volunteers report the work is challenging and very rewarding. Training topics include Hospice philosophy, nuts and bolts of volunteering, ethical issues, personal attitudes toward death and dying, and grief issues. Presenters include professionals from the community as well as Hospice staff and volunteers. For an application, call 802-2570775. There is a $40 contribution requested to cover the cost of training materials.