Nov. 27, 2013 - The Colchester Sun
Transcription
Nov. 27, 2013 - The Colchester Sun
The Colchester Sun WWW.COLCHESTERSUN.COM NOVEMBER 27, 2013 VOL. 12 No. 48 Look Inside Holiday 2013 gift guide brought to you by: The ColChesTer sun Prsrt Std ECRWSS U.S. Postage Paid Permit No. 266 Burlington, VT 05401 Postal Patron-Residential List of Circ alternatives finalized By JASON STARR The Colchester Sun Helping people get from point A to B doesn’t necessarily mean laying down more pavement, Vermont Transportation Secretary Brian Searles said last week. At least not as much as it used to. Searles’ message came as a group of Chittenden County planners finished more than two years of work to identify transportation projects to replace the once-planned Circumferential Highway. Instead of pouring tens of millions of dollars into a large, limitedaccess highway curving through suburban Chittenden County, the group put together a list of 34 smaller improvements to intersections, bus service, pedestrian facilities and bike lanes — spending about half of what was estimated for the Circumferential Highway. “Driving habits are changing significantly. Millennials don’t appear to be quite as interested in a car. At the age of 16, their first acquisition isn’t a car. Their first acquisition is this,” Searles said holding up a smart phone. “They’re quite willing to take busses and trains. The planning needs to take this into consideration. It doesn’t point us to these outlandish expenditures on new capacity.” The planning group convened in 2011 under the Chittenden County Regional Planning Commission as the Circ Alternatives Task Force. It was a group of elected officials and municipal staffers from Colchester, Essex and Williston — along with other interested parties such as the environmental watchdog Conservation Law Foundation and IBM. They met roughly four times a year to identify projects that could alleviate traffic the way the Circ was supposed to. The project list came in three phases over three fiscal years, ending up on the Agency of Transportation’s statewide capital plan. From there, the projects will compete for limited funds with others from around the state. –See CIRC on page 3 Circ alternatives by the numbers Roadway miles enhanced and shared shoulders created: 7.5 Number of intersections improved: 26 Interstate interchanges upgraded: 2 (Exits 12 and 16) Park and Ride spaces created: 120 New bus services created: 4 Miles of recreation paths and sidewalks created: 8 Colchester Projects Ricky Klein takes a sample from a fermentation tank at Groennfell Meadery in Colchester on Friday afternoon. PHOTOS | OLIVER PARINI Phase II Severance Corners intersection — Additional turning lanes along Route 7, Blakely Road and Severance Road. Cost: $6 million Construction: 2018 Meet mead Winooski couple opens mead brewery in Colchester By JASON STARR The Colchester Sun Meet mead — a storied alcoholic beverage fermented from honey. Meet Groennfell Meadery — a new Colchester mead-making operation that launched its first label, Mannaz Mead, this month. And meet Ricky and Kelly Klein — a married couple from Delaware who graduated from Middlebury College and opened Groennfell this year in a small warehouse near Costco. The Kleins enter a wide open market with hopes that mead — and their dry, crisp brand of it — will follow the path to popularity beaten by Vermont’s craft beer breweries and hard cideries. Groennfell plans to sell bottled four-packs for $10 at a variety of grocery and convenience stores throughout the state. They have kicked things off with bottle sales at The Mule Bar in Winooski and at One Federal Restaurant in St. Albans. They also offer tastings at their 856 Hercules Drive location. St. Michael’s College students who can walk through the woods to Hercules Drive have comprised their primary walk-up traffic so far, the couple said. “We want to be everywhere. Anywhere you can buy cider, we want to have our product,” Ricky said. Never tried (or heard of) mead? The Kleins have honed their quick pitch to potential customers new to the beverage. The story starts with honey, which is heated to 105 degrees, mixed with water, cooled, fermented with yeast, aged and carbonated. The story –See MEAD on page 3 Phase I Interstate 89 Exit 16 interchange — Construction of a “double crossover diamond” interchange that takes traffic to the left side of the road for a short segment to turn left onto the insterstate on-ramps, then returns it to the right side after the ramps. Project also includes new turn lanes on Route 7 at Mountain View Drive, Hercules Drive and Rathe Road. Cost: $5 million Construction: 2014 Phase III Severance Road rec path and intersection at Mill Pond Road — 10foot wide rec path on the south side of Severance Road from Severance Corners to Essex town line at Kellogg Road. New turning lanes at Severance Road intersection with Mill Pond. Cost: $2.4 million Construction: 2018 Ricky Klein holds a four-pack of Groennfell Meadery’s “Mannaz Mead”. Main Street enhancement and East Road intersection — New traffic light, turning lanes and crosswalk at East Road/ Mill Pond Road/Main Street intersection. New sidewalk and bike lanes on both sides on Main Street. On-street parking in front of library and town meeting house. Village-style street lighting. Cost: $3.9 million Construction: 2020 –See NUMBERS on page 3 Efforts renewed to control lake phosphorous EPA and DEC collaborate with public on new regulations By JASON STARR The Colchester Sun The State of Vermont is embarking with the Environmental Protection Agency on the development of a new set of rules to restore Lake Champlain’s water quality. A public engagement campaign begins in December with a series of public meetings on the EPA’s “Total Maximum Daily Load” (TMDL) program that caps the amount of phosphorous allowed to enter Lake Champlain. Excess phosphorous is blamed for summer blooms of toxic algae. The new effort follows a lawsuit from the environmental watchdog group, the Conservation Law Foundation, which sued the EPA in 2008 for approving a flawed TMDL program –See EPA on page 3 Rotary seeks donations for Holiday Food Basket Project By KELLY MARCH The Colchester Sun The Colchester-Milton Rotary Club has already received 145 requests from local families hoping to receive holiday food baskets this December. With more requests expected in the coming weeks, Rotary is seeking donations to help nourish those in need this holiday season. “The requests we’ve received already exceed the number of baskets we delivered to families last year and they’re still coming in,” said Rotary Club Chair Will Hamilton. “There are still a few weeks to go, so we’re anticipating a lot of need. Businesses or community members that can contribute anything in the way of monetary donations, nonperishable foods, gift certificates or small gifts for kids would be greatly appreciated.” Now in its 39th year, the Holiday Food Basket Project was started by Colchester elementary and middle school teachers looking for a way to provide students in need with food for the holidays. Since adopting the program in 2008, the Rotary Club has relied on donations of food, money and time from community members and local businesses to make the project “The requests we’ve received already exceed the number of baskets we delivered to families last year and they’re still coming in.” Will Hamilton Rotary Club Chair possible. Recipients are drawn from the list of families that receive free and reduced lunch in Colchester’s middle and elementary schools. The schools distribute a packet with an application form to those eligible and the families can choose to request or deny a basket. –See BASKETS on page 3 Q&A 2 The Colchester Sun | Wednesday, November 27, 2013 with Vince Hayes of Colchester “The neighbors [didn’t] even know about this,” Vince Hayes said of the 45-foot tall blue spruce that stood to the side of his driveway, but they found out when the crane came to take the tree away on Friday. The Colchester resident donated his tree for display on Church Street in Burlington. “If we’d let it grow another 10 years, we’d have called Rockefeller Center,” Hayes joked. Jim Daly, who works for the Church Street Marketplace, supervised the tree’s removal. Hayes, a New Jersey native, has lived in Vermont for 30 years. He and his wife, Ann, have been married for 28 years; they have three children and two dogs. Since they’re empty nesters, Hayes enjoys taking their dogs, Toby and Layla, Caviler King Charles Spaniels, on walks to Airport Park. All of his dogs have been named after singers; Toby after Toby Keith and Layla after the Eric Clapton song. Last Saturday Hayes elaborated on donating his tree. Q: What is the selection process like to get a tree on Church Street? A: My wife, Ann, gets all the credit. One day I said, ‘that tree would look nice on Church Street. If they want it, they can have it.’ We got in contact with Becky Cassidy from Church Street Marketplace and we’ve been emailing for about four months. A guy from a committee came to check out the tree and said it looked good. They had it narrowed to about four or five trees, and mine won. Q: Is there anything special about this tree? A: Well, there are no wires around it. All of the utilities are underground, so The Hayes family watches as a tree is removed from the front lawn of their home in Colchester to the top of Church Street in Burlington on Friday morning. Pictured from left: Vince Hayes, Luke Hayes, Maggie Stryker and Anne Hayes. PHOTOS | OLIVER PARINI that is probably an advantage in terms of its removal. The whole process will be that much easier. Q: Will you miss the tree? A: I won’t! My daughter will miss it because we’ve always put lights on it around the holidays. It’s been here since we bought the house in 2001. But the branches were scraping the car when you go up the driveway and I’ve been trimming them back for some years now. We’re doing a good deed for the community. If it weren’t being donated, we might have kept it for maybe another year or so. Q: Are you going to plant another tree in its place? A: In spring we might plant another one a bit more to the left. Maybe in another 20 years we can donate again. — Sharon Rhodes Barrett’s Tree Service rigs a hook around the tree. ABOVE: The tree is loaded onto a trailer. LEFT: The tree is lifted away on a crane. Pet of the Week Alix 5 year-old Neutered Male Reason Here: Owner moved and could not take him. SUMMARY: See a slight resemblance to Snoopy? Like that feisty Peanuts pup, Alix refuses to conform. Silly and outspoken, this little guy will keep you chortling with his goofy antics and fun-loving grin. His happy-go-lucky nature has won him a loyal fandom with the HSCC staff, and he’s a popular pup in canine playgroups, too. There’s just one thing he’s still missing: a sidekick. Will you be his Woodstock? Humane Society of Chittenden County 802-862-0135 P H O T O S WEDDING VACATION KIDS SEND US YOURS www.colchestersun. com/submit 3 The Colchester Sun | Wednesday, November 27, 2013 CIRC NUMBERS from page 1 from page 1 “We are committed to doing the whole package, and the speed with which we do it is dependent on factors we can’t predict,” Searles said. Gov. Peter Shumlin set up the task force in 2011 after declaring Circ plans defunct. He made a brief appearance at last Thursday’s final Circ Alternatives Task Force meeting in Williston to thank the members and encourage them to see the projects through to construction — despite the fact that groundbreaking estimates range from 2015 to 2030. “Let’s work together now to get it through the process and start actually making a difference,” Shumlin said. The 34 projects total roughly $125 million, and funding is an everpresent question mark. Funding for the Agency of Transportation’s capital project list comes from MEAD the Federal Highway Administration. Searles said the agency is preparing for a time within the next two years when there is no federal assistance for capital projects. “There has to be a reinvention of the way we fund transportation,” Searles said. “Everyone knows the gas tax isn’t working … Can Congress meet this challenge? I’m optimistic. People have to move. Things have to move. That’s a reality no matter what your political party is.” Less than half of the projects annually listed as needs on the agency’s capital project list currently receive funding. But for the list of Circ Alternatives, just getting on the capital program is a big hurdle, Searles said. “If we get the funding we need, we won’t hesitate,” he said. Blakely Road/Laker Lane intersection – Widening of Blakely to provide a eastbound and westbound turning lanes. Cost: $360,000 Construction: 2018 Prim Road/West Lakeshore Drive intersection — New traffic light, realignment to make Prim to West Lakeshore the primary direction and improved pedestrian corssing. Cost: $1.7 million Construction: 2018 *Costs and construction dates are estimates Source: Chittenden County Regional Planning Commission EPA from page 1 from page 1 includes mead’s history as the alcoholic beverage of choice of the ancient Celtic, Gaelic and Nordic cultures. The Kleins also have a message for the alreadyinitiated. You may have tried what some call “honey-wine” and considered it too sweet for your palette. Groennfell Meadery concocts a unique style that de-emphasizes the sweetness, despite the honey foundation. “We go for dry and drinkable,” Ricky said. “It’s easier when someone says ‘I’ve never heard of it.’ We can start from scratch.” The Mannaz label contains 5 percent alcohol. Groennfell is also putting out a cranberry-infused mead this year and plans two other varieties for 2014. The Kleins’ love of the beverage and its lack of availability fueled the idea for Groennfell Meadery. There is only other commercial meadmaker in Vermont. “You can buy all kinds of awesome beer in Vermont, but we could never find mead on the shelves. We thought, ‘we make it. We love it. Let’s make it available and affordable for people,’” Ricky said. “There is a huge potential for growth,” Kelly added. “In Vermont we’ve seen huge growth in the cider industry, so the industry just seems like it’s ready for this. We’ll see.” Ricky started brewing beer while in college and discovered Mead while studying abroad in Denmark. After graduating Middlebury, he worked in Iowa for a home beer brewer and began honing mead concoctions. The Kleins were looking for an entrepreneurial endeavor and mead-making became the obvious choice. They returned to Vermont with a move to Winooski in April after landing their business location just over the town line in Colchester. “We came to this business model and it fit everything we wanted and every skill we have,” Kelly said. “We both can do almost everything, and if there’s something one of us is lacking, the other one has it. “Plus, we love our product and that really helps.” Their Hercules Drive space functions as a brewery with three 1,000-gallon tanks, a bottling operation and a packaging center. It’s also the headquarters of an active blog and website at www.groennfell.com, the sales/marketing center of the business and a place to offer factory sales and samples. The company has played up mead’s ancient traditions in its branding with a Gaelicinfused font and logo, and a Nordic-derived name. Groennfell means Green Mountains in old Nordic, Ricky says. “We wanted to be a Vermont business,” he said. “Vermont is so friendly to small businesses and to breweries, we just thought it was the perfect fit.” There is room to grow in the Colchester location, and with its proximity to Interstate 89 as well the company’s honey source in Canada, Hercules Drive is Groennfell’s home for now and the foreseeable future. for Lake Champlain in 2002. A settlement in 2011 set the course for the EPA to establish a new TMDL program for Lake Champlain phosphorous pollution. Phosphorous enters the lake from a variety of sources, such as wastewater treatment facilities, runoff from paved surfaces and runoff from farms. The agricultural and pavement runoff are considered “nonpoint” sources and are harder to regulate than what emanates from “point” sources like wastewater treatment facilities. One flaw of the previously approved TMDL program was a lack of assurances that phosphorous reductions from non-point sources would be achieved. A new TMDL program will need to include those assurances, said Kari Dolan of the Vermont Department of Environmental Conservation. “(The EPA) is looking for more specificity about what kind of mechanism will be in place to support our implementation, and they will ask for a timetable on reductions,” she said. “We haven’t done enough. This an opportunity to do more.” The Department of Environmental Conservation has released a draft of the new TMDL program with regulations that touch on the major sources of phosphorous pollution in Lake Champlain. It includes chapters on agriculture, stormwater, river channel stability, forest management and watershed protection. The draft is available online at www.watershedmanagement. vt.gov/erp/champlain/ “All of us contribute to the phosphorus problem, and we must commit to act together,” at Dick Mazza’s garage, next to the General Store in Malletts Bay, to assemble the baskets. The baskets will be personalized for each family based on size and child age. The Colchester Center Volunteer Fire Company and other volunteers from the community will then deliver the baskets on Dec. 21. For more information about what and how to donate, contact Will Hamilton at [email protected] or 954-647-9749. Rotary can arrange for pickup of donations if notified by Dec. 2 and would like to have all donations by Dec. 6. Those interested in making a monetary donation can mail a check to the Holiday Food Basket Project, c/o The Charitable Fund of ColchesterMilton Rotary Club, P.O. Box 82, Colchester, VT, 05446. All donations are tax-deductible and will directly support the Holiday Food Basket Project. the draft’s introduction reads. “Reasonable schedules should be established that give municipalities, farmers, developers and the state time to plan for the higher levels of effort and expense that will be required. This proposal is a first step in this process.” The Vermont departments of agriculture and transportation are involved in the process. “We are proposing solutions that restore our treasured Lake Champlain, and that also preserve our working landscape of farms and forests,” Vermont Agriculture Secretary Chuck Ross said in an EPA press release about the TMDL effort. “We have a rich tradition of tackling tough problems in this state, and I look forward to hearing Vermonters’ thoughts about these solutions and other ideas for how we address the pollution problems facing the lake.” Six public engagement meetings are scheduled throughout the state. The lone Chittenden County meeting is set for 2-4 p.m. Dec. 10 at the ECHO Center in Burlington. A full meeting schedule is available at www. watershedmanagement.vt.gov/ erp/champlain. Congratulations to Carleen Landry of Colchester She found all 4 turkeys in the November 7 edition of The Colchester Sun. She is this month’s winner of a new Colchester Sun t-shirt! Look for the next Get In The Hunt Challenge on December 5. The “Get In The Hunt” contest publishes on the first Thursday of the month. All entries receive a free online subscription, and a drawn winner receives a Colchester Sun t-shirt printed by Humble Screen Printing in Colchester. Submit online at www.colchestersun.com/contest BASKETS from page 1 In recent years, baskets have included items such as turkey, juice, tuna, apples, eggs, dinner rolls, carrots, oranges, cranberry sauce, green beans, corn, pasta and more. The goal is to provide each family with a week worth of food, Hamilton said. With an idea of how many baskets will be needed, Rotary is currently collecting donations and planning its purchases. On the morning of Saturday, Dec. 14, volunteers will gather Small Dog ELECTRONICS Be among the first to know about new properties as they come on the market! VThomefinder.com Introducing provided by john abry ● realtor ● remax north professionals ● 861.3278 ● info@vthomefindercom Brenda J Healey, MD, CCFP FCFP WHEN A FIRST-RATE CREMATION PROVIDER IS SO CLOSE, WHY CHOOSE A DISTANT SECOND? Family Medicine Accepting New Patients We are exactly where you want to be when your interest is in a family-owned, family-oriented cremation provider. Considering our locally owned and operated crematory and a staff eager to serve, there’s no reason to look any further. To learn more about our services, please call or stop by. Dedicated to comprehensive health care for all ages. Don’t put your health on hold! Schedule your first appointment today. The TrusTed Name iN CremaTioN. D Positive I 802/861-3058 CremationSocietyCC.com © adfinity CREMATION GUARANTEE: 308 Blakely Rd, Colchester 261 Shelburne Road Burlington, VT 05401 (802) 861-7171 4 The Colchester Sun | Wednesday, November 27, 2013 OPINION Perspective Double-digit property tax increases? Really? By EMERSON LYNN Local school boards today are in the midst of putting together the final budget numbers for voters to consider on Town Meeting Day in March. It’s a thankless task made all the more so by the fact that the student numbers continue to slip and the costs continue to rise. Statewide education tax rates next year are expected to increase between three cents and seven cents, which is in the neighborhood of what was seen this year. Over a two-year span, that’s roughly $125 million in additional spending, which may result in a double-digit increase in property taxes. Normally, that’s fodder for political upheaval. But not in Vermont. At least, not yet. Most people don’t know about the increase in spending, or the projected increase in property taxes to pay for that spending. Roughly three-quarters of Vermont households are insulated from such increases through the state’s income sensitivity law. The law stipulates that if the household income is less than $90,000 the taxpayers can elect to pay based on income, which is set at 1.80 percent of household income. The effect is to shift the burden to those with incomes above $90,000 and to business, second homes, camps and undeveloped land. This is the cohort that is in the midst of a double-digit property tax increase. They don’t have the political muscle to make much noise. (Or at least they’ve chosen not to.) The current system has its defenders. School boards have less to worry about when the vast majority of the voters are insulated from any budget increase, and, in theory, our system should lessen the inequality between income groups in terms of the quality of instruction in the class room. For the education community, income-sensitivity is a godsend. In many ways, it’s their blank check. For businesses, etc., it is not a godsend. It’s hard to reconcile a double-digit increase in property taxes for a service that has 30 percent fewer “clients” than it had 15 years ago. Vermont’s legislators are keenly aware of the disconnect, but once a benefit has been bestowed it’s difficult to take it back. They have been advised to look to other states for examples of how our school system could be funded in a more defensible manner. The proposal being floated about now is one that would set the property tax rate at a fixed amount, and applicable to all, and then use the income tax system to fund the system’s increases. The need to put downward pressure on school budgets has also prompted legislators to think more about the consolidation of school districts, and to question the wisdom of small school grants, etc. It will be a difficult discussion. Vermonters, in general, are not unhappy with what we have, thus, the compelling need for a wholesale change is not evident. And why should most Vermonters be unhappy? Over 75 percent of them never feel the impact of increased school spending. If the Legislature lowers the property tax, but applies the tax to all property holders, and then includes the income tax as the means to fund the increases, several things happen: first, those who shoulder the increases now will more than likely be asked to pay even more; second, those who are now protected may suddenly find themselves vulnerable; third, it could be an even more complex system than what we have now. Beyond the issue of school finance is the lingering issue of the state’s educational mission. We all agree (or at least most of us) that losing 30,000 students should be the sort of thing that mitigates against spiraling cost increases. We know there is room to cut, but cut to what? Anyone? It can be argued that one has to cut before that mission is “discovered”, that there is no need to innovate if the money is practically guaranteed. If so, that exposes a weakness in the voice of the state’s educational system. One would think they would lead the charge, showing what needs to happen to protect the taxpayer and to ensure that our students were being given a first-class education. It would seem to their advantage to drive this debate, rather than sit back and let others decide for them. Perhaps this is the task – one of many – that will fall to the governor and his new Commissioner of Education, Rebecca Holcombe. Emerson Lynn is co-publisher of The Essex Reporter and The Colchester Sun and publisher of the St. Albans Messenger. The Colchester Sun General Manager Suzanne Lynn Publisher Lynn Publications Inc. Editor Elsie Lynn [email protected] Mailing Address: 42 Severance Green, Unit #108 Colchester, VT 05446 Phone: 878-5282 Fax: 651-9635 Reporter/Editorial Page Editor Jason Starr [email protected] Sports Editor Kelly March [email protected] Advertising Manager Wendy Ewing [email protected] Advertising Sales Kelly K. Malone [email protected] Miles Gasek [email protected] Published Thursdays Advertising deadline: Friday 5 p.m. Subscription rate: $75 per year $38 for six months The Colchester Sun is owned and published by Angelo Lynn and Emerson Lynn of Lynn Publications, Inc. and is a member of the Champlain Valley Newspaper Group. The Colchester Sun makes every effort to be accurate. If you notice an error, contact us at 878-5282 or by e-mail at [email protected]. Autumn bird bingo in the skies above Colchester By ROSS SAXTON heading north in the spring). Some species rely on the lake’s fish while others need The Vermont skies come various plants, insects, and alive in the late fall thanks to crustaceans on which to feed. the approaching winter cold Whatever they eat, waterfowl and snow. Some Vermonters require unpolluted waters for head south to warmer climates their migratory journey. Birds and so do many birds. Along are one of the many reasons with the changing leaf colors, why personal actions, no shorter days, and ripe apples on matter how small these actions the trees, bird migration is one might seem, are important for of the annual events that let us the overall health of the lake know that it’s time to feed the and our communities. wood stove and prepare the ice Some birds to keep an fishing or ski gear. eye out for this fall on or Colchester and the surrounding area is an See more of Lee Cordner’s photos online at www.colchestersun. flying over Lake Champlain PHOTO | LEE CORDNER include Canada geese, snow especially great place to watch com/community-photos. geese, black ducks, mallards, waterfowl birds migrate down wood ducks, green-winged the Lake Champlain corridor. With open meadows, small and large ponds, and lake views teal, greater and lesser scaup, ring-necked ducks, hooded and (from close and afar), you can’t ask for a much better place American mergansers, and common goldeneye. Many bird to watch migrating waterfowl than Colchester. Either alone, guides or a Google search will help you identify these various with a friend or two, or with your family, grab some binoculars birds. A fun and rewarding activity is to write a list of migrating this fall and head outdoors to view dozens of waterfowl species birds you’d like to spot this fall, and when you do, check it off head south to find food and habitat. A good place to look for birds is anywhere along Lake the list. To have even more fun with your family or friends is to Champlain, including Niquette Bay State Park, the bike path play “bird bingo” where you create bingo cards with a different that crosses the Winooski River, the Route 2 causeway, and bird species on each square; mark off each square every time Colchester’s Bayside Park. Another great spot that is inland a bit you spot the bird that matches that square and someone will is Colchester Pond. With a trail that follows the perimeter of the soon have Bingo! It’s a fun way to explore Lake Champlain in pond, you can get many different perspectives. A lot of different a different way than you might have before, and the kids could migratory bird species will fly over your head in groups of just adopt an important connection with the lake that they carry with a couple of birds to hundreds. It’s quite a spectacle to see these them for a lifetime. large groups land on the lake or pond and take off all at once. Ross Saxton is director of conservation and education at Many bird species rely on Lake Champlain for food and protection from predators while migrating south (and, of course, the Colchester non-profit Lake Champlain International. More information is available at www.mychamplain.net. Mobil homes for a flood-resilient future By REBECCA ELLIS In my town of Waterbury, we lost 11 homes at the Whalley Mobile Home Park in Tropical Storm Irene. An additional 19 homes were lost at the Patterson Mobile Home Park in neighboring Duxbury. Across the state, despite making up seven percent of Vermont’s housing stock, 15 percent of all housing damaged by Irene were mobile homes. After the storm, Vermont energy and housing advocates began collaborating to closely examine the quality of options available in the low-income housing market. Led by the Vermont Housing & Conservation Board and Efficiency Vermont, and with funding from the High Meadows Fund, the Vermont Community Foundation, and other donors, the collaborators convened a working group with an ambitious goal: discover how to build a manufactured home to better withstand extreme climate conditions while being energy efficient and affordable to operate. Not an easy task, for sure, but a much-needed focus of work on behalf of low-income homeowners. After two years of study, the Vermont Manufactured Housing Innovation Project unveiled its solution this month in White River Junction: a “high-performance” manufactured home that is specifically designed for northern climates. It looks like a mobile home but has the structural resiliency of a traditional home, and is extremely inexpensive to operate and maintain. The ten new homes under construction in this pilot project represent the culmination of this collaboration, and I believe a profound paradigm shift in the national conversation about housing. Vermont, I’m proud to say, is once again leading the way on both resiliency and energy conservation. While resiliency is a big buzzword now and typically refers to how we adapt to the facts of a changing climate, we also need to combat its root cause: greenhouse gas emissions. Adaptation, then, is not just about building stronger structures and lifting base floors above the flood level, but about creating affordable housing options that use as little energy as possible. This is precisely what this project has done. The ten pilot homes being built by Vermont High Performance Homes and purchased by Vermont buyers reflect the fact that durability, resiliency, energy efficiency and homeowner comfort are each extremely important and interrelated in building design. It’s high time that the national housing market adapts and designs with these characteristics in mind, especially for low-income homeowners. The new homes are projected to use one-third the energy of conventional mobile homes, thanks to better insulation, a high-tech heat pump, triple-glazed windows and Energy-Star appliances. The anchoring design is more flood resistant, with a solid foundation that makes it harder for the homes to be swept away and which also provides added energy efficiency compared to the traditional “skirt” surrounding mobile homes on concrete blocks. We finally have a new type of manufactured home that combats climate change through energy conservation, efficiency and increased durability. The final piece of the puzzle is the cost of such a home, because if nobody buys this new type of home there will be no impact on our energy landscape. A study by the Vermont Housing & Conservation Board and Efficiency Vermont suggests that if fuel costs continue to rise, within two years the owner of this high efficiency manufactured home would save enough money on energy costs to offset and even surpass the additional cost of purchasing such a well-built home. This is a pilot project and only time will tell if consumers will be in favor of tremendous energy savings down the road versus a higher up-front cost. I, for one, hope that these high-efficiency manufactured homes take off, and there are currently subsidies in place to encourage initial adoption. Not only would it benefit the environment and many low- and moderate-income homeowners, but it would also be a boon for Vermont’s energy and manufacturing economy. I truly believe that increased energy efficiency is closely connected with the basic principle that drives homeownership itself — a desire for freedom and independence. Rebuilding for disaster resiliency is one of the key lessons we learned in the aftermath of Irene. With the introduction of the high performance manufactured home in Vermont, we can also say that Irene left us with lessons for how we can improve our energy and climate future. Rebecca Ellis of Waterbury represents Washington County in the Vermont House of Representatives. Letter To The Editor Working for a hunger-free holiday We started “Fill The Truck For The Food Shelf” last year and, thanks to local residents and businesses, $1,861 and over 1,000 pounds of food were donated to the Colchester Community Food Shelf. This year the need is even greater. Please help fill the RE/MAX moving truck with food for Colchester families that need your support to make this holiday season hunger free. Drop off your non-perishable food items and checks (preferred — see below) during business hours (9-5) now thru Dec. 23rd at the RE/MAX reception desk at 875 Roosevelt Highway Suite 201 (on the second floor near the corner of Rt. 7 and Rathe Road). We will load the truck and transport all donations to the Colchester Community Food Shelf on the afternoon of Dec. 23. We can pick up large business donations. Priority items most needed: • Hearty Soups • Pasta Sauces • Tuna Fish • Canned Chicken • Canned Fruit • Canned Vegetables • Peanut Butter • Jellies • Bottled Juices Monetary donations are also accepted — and actually preferred — as the Food Shelf’s purchasing power is two to three times more than yours! Please make checks payable to Colchester Food Shelf. The Colchester Food Shelf relies on help, supplies and continued donations from Colchester citizens churches, schools, organizations and businesses. In Vermont, 13 percent of all households are food insecure and more than 25,000 children live in food insecure households. More than 12,000 Vermont children depend on food shelves each month. Call 861-3278 for more information about the Fill The Truck For The Food Shelf campaign and visit hungrefreevt. org for more about hunger in Vermont. John Abry Colchester 5 The Colchester Sun | Wednesday, November 27, 2013 COLCHESTER’S WEEKLY Town News “Colchester, Vermont, located on Lake Champlain’s Malletts Bay, is a diverse, civic-minded community endowed with a rich heritage of commercial, agricultural, recreational, and educational gifts. Proud of the quality of life already enjoyed here, the people of Colchester seek to build upon this foundation to ensure economic prosperity, recreational opportunity, and an entrepreneurial spirit for future generations” Vision Statement, Heritage Project, 2012 The following information highlights some activities performed by the Town from Nov. 18-22. Town Manager’s Office Reported by Dawn Francis, town manager The Colchester Selectboard has been reviewing a draft budget, and we expect to have a draft available for public review shortly after their final work session on Dec. 2. A comment that has arisen is that it seems that a lot of new positions have been added by the Town over the last year. To clarify, the only new position that has been added during the current fiscal year is an Information Technology position, which is being funded by cost savings in other areas; all other positions are replacements due to retirements or employees moving onto other opportunities. As soon as the budget is finalized in two weeks, I will report out on the proposed staffing for FY15. Save the Date – On Dec. 2 at 5:45 p.m., there will be a dedication of a beautiful mosaic commemorating Colchester’s 250th anniversary at the Town Hall on Blakely Road. This work of art was the brainchild of Sandy Hawkes, a teacher at Colchester Middle School who oversaw its preparation on Charter Day by Colchester students and residents. A copy of Colchester’s original charter was presented by the Wolcott family to the community and will also be recognized at this time. Our community has certainly had a full and exciting year of events dedicated to our 250th anniversary as a result of many residents’ hard work. Attended a monthly Chittenden County Manager’s meeting in which the escalating problem of opiate addictions throughout our region is resulting in a significant number of burglaries, robberies and other crimes was described by our area police chiefs. Measures are being considered to address these issues at a regional level. Did a site walk of the Bayside/Hazelett property owned by the Town. As a result of 13 meetings over a 30-month process, the Circ Alternatives Task Force voted on a suite of 34 projects in the towns of Colchester, Essex and Williston with an estimated total cost of $99 million as alternatives to the Circ Highway. Colchester will be the beneficiary of at least $19 million in projects ranging from intersection improvements to sidewalks/ multi-use paths and transit improvements. Clerk’s Office Reported by Karen Richard, town clerk Highlights of the activities of the Town Clerk’s Office this week include the following: • The second installment of taxes was due last week. We billed $12,921,920.14 for this installment. The amount that went delinquent was $318,451.57, which is 2.46 percent. • Although our delinquency rate is low, we are still faced with bringing accounts to a tax sale. When an account has multiple years of delinquent taxes and the taxpayer has not responded to our many requests to contact us to set up a payment plan or has failed to fulfill his or her obligation to the payment plan, we have no choice but to turn the account over to an attorney for tax sale. • On Nov. 21, we conducted a tax sale. Initially, there were eleven properties advertised to be sold. The taxpayer is notified, as well as all of the lienholders. The properties are advertised in the paper for three consecutive weeks. During that period, we responded to many requests for information from the lienholders and the public. Two properties were paid in advance of the sale. Nine properties were sold. Most were sold for more than the taxes owed. The Town then put the additional amount into an escrow account. The delinquent taxpayer has a year to “redeem” the property. If the taxes and additional monies plus interest are not paid or “redeemed” by the taxpayer, the property will be deeded to the successful bidder. For more information visit http://colchestervt.gov/ TownClerk/townClerkHome.shtml or call 264-5520 Read the complete newsletter online: www.colchestersun. com For more information about the Town of Colchester visit the town offices at 781 Blakely Road, Colchester, online at www.colchestervt.gov or call (802) 264-5500. Volunteers By SUE ALENICK United Way Volunteer The listings below are a sample of the 300+ volunteer needs from more than 200 agencies found on-line at www.unitedwaycc.org. More information available at 860-1677, Mon.-Fri. from 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. A Friendly Greeting American Red Cross Blood Services is looking for volunteers to answer phones and greet donors and other visitors. Clerical and customer service experience would be helpful. Two 3-hour shifts per week. Flexible scheduling. Candy Cane Land Burlington Parks & Recreation is sponsoring its annual Candy Cane Land event for children on Dec. 7, at the Miller Community Recreation Center. Volunteers are needed to help with candy cane crafts, cookie decorating, parking cars, circulating as costumed characters, etc. Have lots of fun and help benefit the department’s scholarship program. 10:30 a.m.3:30 p.m. Burnham Memorial Library BOOK REVIEWS “Fangirl,” by Rainbow Rowell Young Adult Fiction, 2013 Reviewed by Hannah Peacock, Youth Services Librarian Cath and Wren are twins heading off to the same college. The plan has always been for them to share a room and continue as a connected set away from home. That is until Wren decides that she wants her own college experience. Cath is the less social of the two and just wants to stay in her room writing her increasingly popular Simon Snow fanfic, trying to complete her version of the story before the 8th and final book in the series is released. Wren had always been Cath’s writing partner and fellow fan, but now she has more important things to do. As the year progresses, the sisters drift further and further apart as they inevitably get caught up in all the temptations that freshman year has to offer. Fangirl is a wonderful story of two once inseparable sisters learning the importance of individuality, love, friendship, loyalty and creative expression. “Inferno,” by Dante Alighieri; translation by Tom Simone Adult Fiction, circa 1300 (translation 2007) Reviewed by Ann Doubleday, Adult Services Are you intrigued by a perilous journey into the depths of the underworld inhabited by fearful demons and gruesome figures of the dead so boldly depicted it would put Stephen King to shame? If you’ve always felt you ought to have read Dante’s Inferno but never have, I highly recommend UVM professor Tom Simone’s translation with commentary. Simone’s translation offers clarity of meaning while retaining the poetic tone and beauty of this great classic. Each canto is prefaced with a summary and brief analysis and each page contains helpful annotation at the foot of the text making this edition of Inferno perfect for the beginning reader of Dante. With this guidance, Dante’s great work becomes far more accessible than one may have imagined. And for all you readers of Dan Brown’s Inferno, you might want to look to the source and read Dante’s masterpiece. Who knows, you may find yourself clamoring for more and complete the journey into Purgatorio and Pardiso. Simone’s new translation of Purgatorio is expected to be released within the year. Holiday dangers Colchester local helps for pets build a professional By M. KATHLEEN SHAW, DVM The often derided gift — fruitcake — is actually quite dangerous to our pets. Grapes, raisins and currants are common ingredients and have been implicated in kidney failure in dogs. In addition, many fruitcakes have been soaked in rum or other alcohols making it doubly dangerous to pets. Alcohol is rapidly absorbed into the pet’s bloodstream causing drops in blood sugar, blood pressure and body temperature. Play it safe with your pets this holiday season. If you have any questions about the potential dangers of holiday plants, decorations, or foods, contact your veterinary office for answers. With the holiday season rapidly approaching, many pet owners are unsure which plants, foods, and decorations are and are not for their pets. Most species of lilies are deadly to cats. In some cases, a small amount of pollen or even one leaf can cause sudden kidney failure. Christmas cactus and Christmas (English) holly can cause significant damage to the stomach and intestinal tract of dogs and cats. Death is not usually reported, but it’s best to keep these plants out of reach. If your pet ingests some of these plants, call your veterinarian immediately. M. Kathleen Shaw, DVM A holiday myth is that lives in North Bennington, Vt. Poinsettias and mistletoe are Find out more at www.vtvets. toxic to pets. These plants are org or call 878-6888. not as toxic as urban legend describes. Poinsettias have little crystals in them that can be irritating to the pet’s mouth or skin, but serious poisonings are almost unheard of. American mistletoe (the kind we use for Christmas parties) is not very toxic, generally causing mild stomach upset. Its cousin, European mistletoe is more toxic and causes more Essex Automotive Services problems. The most dangerous HOW FAR WE’VE COME, foods at this time of year WHERE WE’RE GOING are chocolates and cocoa, Owing to multiple factors, Americans’ car-buying habits have changed over sugarless gum/candies the past ten years. What are we buycontaining Xylitol, fatty meat ing now, and what are we looking to scraps and yeast bread dough. purchase in the near future? When Early Learning Greater Burlington YMCA is in need of a volunteer to help with organizing and nurturing playgroups. Tasks include setting up and taking down play areas, engaging with children and caregivers, and modeling appropriate adult/child interactions. Cultural sensitivity toward new Americans and nonEnglish speaking caregivers is needed. References and background check required. Weekly scheduling. Be A Buddy HomeShare Vermont is seeking a companion for a man in his 30’s with mild development disability. The gentleman is smart, talkative, loves animals and would enjoy having a friend to take him on occasional outings such as community or sporting events, a short hike, lunch, or a scenic drive. References and background check required. Flexible scheduling. Discussion Group Cathedral Square Corporation is looking for a group discussion leader for 8-12 Heineberg senior residents. Topics can range from elder law to cooking for one. Preferable time is Fridays from 1-2 p.m. statistics for 2005 are compared with expectations for 2014, we see that the percentage of coupes and hatchbacks has gone from 6.0% of the total cars and trucks purchased in 2005 to an expected 13.4% in 2014. Compact sedans have increased from 10.6% to an estimated 14.2%, while midsize sedans increased from 14.9% to 18.1%; wagons and five-door hatchbacks increased from 5.3% to 7.5%. At the same time, the percentage of full-size pickups will have fallen from 14.9% to 11.6%, and vans/minivans will have fallen from 8.7% to 5.3%. This interesting and informative column is brought to you by the entire staff at ESSEX AUTOMOTIVE SERVICES. We feature A.S.E. Technicians including Master Techs. “Service You Can Trust” Our auto specialists’ service most makes and models of foreign and domestic vehicles. No matter the auto service, we get it right the first time! We appreciate your business, and provide personal service to each and every customer. Come to 141-147 Pearl St, Essex Jct. or call 802.879.1966 for all your automotive needs. We offer same day service, and free customer shuttle. Ask us for details. It’s time to get your car ready for winter. Bring your car in today and let us help you prepare. “We do it all!” We are open for Business!!! OPEN 6:59 AM NO APPT. NEEDED HINT: In 2005, car/truck sales hit 16,951,300, while sales are projected to be 15,820,400 in 2014. Vt. cycling team Adam Carr Johnson State College President Barbara Murphy recognized Colchester resident Adam Carr as part of Alumni and Family Reunion Weekend festivities on Sept. 21. Carr received the Outstanding Alumni Award from Johnson State. He graduated with a B.A. in business from JSC in 2008. While a student, he gained exposure to a number of athletic pursuits, including climbing and skiing, but it was cycling that won his heart — so he and his roommate founded a cycling program at JSC and competed nationally for the college for three years. After graduation, Carr signed on with an elite-level cycling team in Texas, then turned pro the following year, racing with a team in California. Today he has moved back to Vermont, where he remains a full-time professional racer and is helping to build a professional Vermont cycling team. 802-863-9027 ERIC’S EXCAVATING Complete Excavation Services Septic Systems Jaime Laredo, music Director www.vso.org PRESENTS � Anthony Princiotti, conductor mOZART Overture to the magic Flute SHOSTAKOViCH Symphony No. 9 TCHAiKOVSKY Symphony No. 5 Saturday, December 7, 2013 8:00 pm at the Flynn Center for the Performing Arts, Burlington SPONSORED BY: THE OFFiCiAL LAgER OF THE VSO 2013/2014 CO-SPONSOR: mEDiA SPONSOR: Musically Speaking, 7:00 pm Enrich your concertgoing experience with a free, lively and interactive discussion. TickeTs: 802-86-FLYNN, flynntix.org or the Flynn Regional Box Office. 6 The Colchester Sun | Wednesday, November 27, 2013 CALENDAR 27 Wednesday Comedy Night. Benefit for American Cancer Society. Tickets are $10 and available at www.thepenaltybox.org/#!events/ c66t. The show features comedians from the former Levity Comedy Club in Burlington including Higher Ground Comedy Battle Winner Carmen Lagala and 2013 Funniest Comic in Vermont Winner Phil Davidson. The Penalty Box, 127 Porter’s Point, Suite 4 Colchester. 8:30 p.m. Contact Chad Arel: 782-9111. 28 What’s Cooking in your Kitchen? Mass. St. Michael’s College invites the community to celebrate Mass on Thanksgiving Day at 10 a.m. in the Chapel of St. Michael the Archangel. Dinner. Veterans turkey dinner begins at noon. Free. VFW Post 6689, 73 Pearl Street, Essex Junction, 5:30 p.m. Contact: 8780700. Thanksgiving Dinner. Donations accepted. American Legion 91, Colchester. 12-3 p.m. Contact: 872-7622. 29 Friday Pasta night. Live Entertainment: One-Duzzi. No cover. $7 adults, $3 children under 12. Open to the public. VFW Post 6689, 73 Pearl Street, Essex Junction, 5:30-10 p.m. Contact: 878-0700. No Meeting. No Elder Education Enrichment meeting Nov. 29 or Dec. 2. 30 Turn up the heat on our online food page! Submit your Winter recipe to our Community Kitchen at: www.colchestersun.com/community-kitchen When homeand andthe the Whenlooking lookingfor for aa new new home service call serviceyou you deserve, deserve, call Janice Janice Battaline Battaline Realtor 1983 Realtor since since 1983 RE/MAX RE/MAXNorth North Professionals Professionals [email protected] [email protected] 802-861-6226802-861-6226 or1-800-639-4520 1-800-639-4520 ext.226 802-861-6226 or ext.226 Showcase of Homes To advertise your listings contact your ad rep today! 802-878-5282 Kelly K. Malone x 207 [email protected] Miles Gasek x 209 [email protected] Saturday Christmas Craft Fair. Featuring: Granny’s Attic, Home Made Soup & Sandwiches, Crafts galore, candy and various foods. Everyone is welcomed, no entrance fee. Grace United Methodist Church, 130 Maple Street, Essex Junction. 9 a.m.-3.p.m. Contact Ann: 879-7943 or 878-8071. Craft Festival. Over 80 local craftswomen are represented at the 24th Annual Women’s Craft Festival. Tables will include: jewelry, artwork, pottery, clothing and more. Admission is free. Memorial Auditorium, Burlington. Nov. 30, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Dec. 1, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Info: womensfestivalofcrafts.com. Happy HappyThanksgiving! Thanksgiving! Happy December! 1 Sunday Learn to Curl Clinic. Clinics offered by the Green Mountain Curling Club. Bedford Curling & Ice arena, Bedford, Quebec. 1:45-4 p.m. More info: www.greenmountaincurlingclub.org. To register for class or for additional information, email: [email protected]. Contact Connie: 238-0898. CONVENIENT COLCHESTER LOCATION Carol Audette at Coldwell Banker Hickok and Boardman (802) 846-8800 | www.carolaudette.com Vermont, Burlington. 7:30 p.m. Free and open to the public. Contact: 656-7766. Shape and share life stories. Prompts trigger real life experience stories, which are crafted into engaging narratives and shared with the group. Led by Recille Hamrell. Free and open to all adults. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, 21 Library Lane, Williston. Today and Dec. 16, 12:30-2:30 p.m. Contact: 878-4918 or www.williston.lib.vt.us. Winter holiday party with UVM Zest. An a cappella concert and decorating the library for the winter holidays. Cookie decorating activity for kids. Sponsored by the Friends of the Dorothy Alling Library. Free and open to the public. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, 21 Library Lane, Williston, 6 p.m. Contact: 8784918 or www.williston.lib.vt.us. Lecture. World AIDS week: Robin Hood Tax Teach-In. Free and open to the public. St. Michael’s College, Cheray Science Hall room 101, 7 p.m. Contact: 654-2536. 3 Tuesday Holiday activities. Shelburne Museum rings in the holidays with a week-long Deck the Halls extravaganza that celebrates the creative spirit of the season. Featuring the “I Spy” game, candy cane hunt, DIY holiday cards, snow globes and gift boxes, musical performances and more. Dec. 3-7 from 1-4 p.m., and Dec. 8 from 12-4 p.m. Admission for Vermont residents $5 adults; $3 children. Contact: 985-3346 or www.shelburnemuseum.org. Catamount Winter Concert. The University of Vermont’s select choir’s annual Winter Concert begins at 12:15 p.m. Tuesdays at St Paul’s Cathedral, 2 Cherry Street in Burlington. Bring a bag lunch. Coffee and tea are provided. Free admission. Free parking. Contact: 864-0471. First Wednesdays. Former Iranian Ambassador to the UN Mansour Farhang will look at the prospects for democracy in Arab countries. Brownell Library, Essex Junction. 7 p.m. Contact: 878-6955. Story time and crafts. Preschoolers are introduced to a variety of books and authors while gaining early literacy skills. Includes a simple craft activity. For children 3-5. Free and open to the public. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, 21 Library Lane, Williston, Tuesdays, Dec. 3-17, 11 a.m. Contact: 878-4918 or www.williston.lib. vt.us. Lecture. Keeping the Catholic in Catholic Higher Education: Strategies for Church and Academy by Father William Graham, Ph.D. St. Michael’s College, St. Edmund’s Hall Farrell Room #315, 12:15 p.m. Contact: 654-2536. 4 Wednesday Community Breakfast. Sponsored by the Ladies Auxiliary to the Veterans of Foreign Wars. All are invited, both members and non-members! Adults $6 and Children $3. VFW Post 6689, 73 Pearl Street, Essex Junction. 9-11 a.m. Contact: 878-0700. Percussion ensemble concert. A performance under the direction of Jeffrey Salisbury. Free and open to the public. UVM Southwick Ballroom, Burlington, 7:30-9 p.m. Contact: 656-7774. 2 Advent Reflection. “The Old Testament for the New,” by Fr. Richard Berube. Holy Cross Catholic Church, 416 Church Rd., Colchester. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Info: [email protected]. Contact Monica: 863-3002. Monday Protest Songs: Music of Latin America. Performed by vocalist Miriam Bernardo and Jairo Sequeira – Nylon string guitar. Music Recital Hall, 384 South Prospect Street, University of PROTEST SONGS: MUSIC OF LATIN AMERICA 1 level ranch on a nice corner lot backing up to a park. 3 bedrooms, living room with newer bay window - lots of upgrades including newer roof, furnace, windows, kitchen cabinets & counters. Hardwood under all carpets throughout. Oversized 2 car attached garage. Offered at $194,900 Memorial Auditorium, 250 Main Street, Burlington Saturday, Nov. 30 from 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 1 from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Free and open to the public Info: www.womensfestivalofcrafts.com Thursday HAPPY THANKSGIVING! Performed by vocalist Miriam Bernardo and Jairo Sequeira – Nylon string guitar. Music Recital Hall, 384 South Prospect Street, University of Vermont, Burlington. 7:30 p.m. Free and open to the public. Contact: 656-7766. DEC 2 toys, stories and fingerplays for children birth-2 years and their caregivers. For information call 876-7555. Sponsored by Building Bright Futures. Free and open to the public. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, 21 Library Lane, Williston, 6-7:30 p.m. Contact: 878-4918 or www.williston.lib.vt.us. 24TH ANNUAL WOMEN’S FESTIVAL OF CRAFTS Blood Drawing. Sponsored by the Underhill Lions Club. As usual, donors can enjoy pies and other desserts after donating. Donors will also receive a ski pass for buy one get one free to Smuggs, Jay Peak or Mad River Glen. All blood types are needed. Donors must be at least 17 years old, weigh over 110 pounds and be in good health. Covenant Church on Rt. 15. 1-6 p.m. Info: www.ju-lions.org. Evening playgroup. Age appropriate Advent lessons and carols. Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, 273 Route 15, Jericho, 6:30 p.m. Contact: 899-3932. Winter tales. Features stories by Vermont writers, poetry from student in the Young Writers Project and songs. Tickets: $32 and include complimentary hot cider and molasses cookies from B’s pantry. FlynnSpace, Dec. 4-8. Wednesday-Saturday at 7:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday at 2 p.m. Contact: 86-FLYNN or www.flynntix.org. 5 Thursday PLAN results program. Tenth-grade students and parents should pick up the PLAN (pre-ACT) test results and students’ testing booklets and learn about how to use the PLAN in planning for the future. Essex High School Cafeteria, 6:30 p.m. Contact School Counseling Office: 879-5515. Concert. Shelburne Vineyard “First Thursday,” a fall concert series, will feature local singer songwriters. Local foods will be available, as well as wine and Fiddlehead for sale by the glass. 6308 Shelburne Road, Shelburne, 6-8:30 p.m. Free and open to the public. Contact: 9858222. Noontime Concert Series. The ensemble Reed, Rosin and Pedal will perform classical and Klezmer-inspired works. First Baptist Church, 81 St. Paul Street in Burlington, 12:15 p.m. Free and open to the public. Bring a lunch; tea and coffee are provided. Contact: 864-6515 or fbcburlingtonvt.com. Colchester Legislative Breakfast. Hosted by Colchester Community Development Corporation and the Town of Colchester. Hampton Inn, Chateaugay Room, Colchester. 8-9:30 a.m. RSVP to Kathy Finnie at CCDC by Dec. 5 at [email protected] or 872-9757. Food for thought teen group. Teens meet for pizza, discussion, book/DVD selection and plan special events for the library. Free and open to anyone grades 7-12. New members welcome. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, 21 Library Lane, Williston, 4-5 p.m. Contact: 878-4918 or www.williston.lib.vt.us. Art show. The Emile A Gruppe Gallery, in Jericho Center, presents an exhibition of unique creations from 16 artists of the Caspian Arts. Works will include fine art in watercolor, oils and acrylics, kiln-fired glass, bronzes, ceramics, fiber and jewelry. Through Dec. 22, hours: ThursdaySunday 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Contact: www. emilegruppegallery.com. Panel. World AIDS week: Social Justice Alumni Career panel. Distinguished alumnae speak about their advocacy work on HIV/AIDS. St. Michael’s College, St. Edmunds Hall Farrell Room #315, 6 p.m. Contact: 654-2536. Concert. Wind and Jazz Ensembles. Jazz Orchestra directed by Brian McCarthy, Wind Ensemble directed by Chris Gribnau. St. Michael’s College, McCarthy Arts Center, 7 p.m. Contact: 654-2536. Winter tales. Features stories by Vermont writers, poetry from students in the Young Writers Project and songs. Tickets: $32 and include complimentary hot cider and molasses cookies from B’s pantry. FlynnSpace, Dec. 4-8. Wednesday-Saturday at 7:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday at 2 p.m. Contact: 86-FLYNN or www.flynntix.org. 6 Friday Holiday Tea. The Burlington Garden Club will host their Fourth Annual Holiday Tea and Craft Fair. A $5 donation supports academic scholarships available to Vermont residents and civic beautification projects. Faith United Methodist Church, 899 Dorset Street, South Burlington. 2-4 p.m. Info: http://www.bgcvt.org. Colchester Community Chorus Concert. “Heavenly Harmonies” will include selections by Braz, Herman, Leavitt, Luis de Victoria, Martin, Miller and Jackson, Ross, Rutter, Wood and others. Directed by Carol Reichard, Frank Whitcomb will be the accompanist and Heidi Soons will play harp. Colchester High School auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Free with donations accepted. Contact Georgene Raub: 8623910. Elder Education. “Is Technology Rendering Congress Obsolete?” presented by Al- 7 The Colchester Sun | Wednesday, November 27, 2013 CALENDAR lison Stanger, PhD, Professor of Political Science, Middlebury College, $5 fee. Faith Methodist Church, 899 Dorset Street, South Burlington. 2-3 p.m. Information: eeevermont.org. International festival. Showcasing the diversity of Vermont with crafts, food, dancing and musical performances representing cultures from all over the world. Tickets: Adults $7, $5 kids age 6-12 and seniors 65+, $20 family pass, children under 6 free. Admission good for the entire weekend. Free parking and handicapped accessible. Champlain Valley Exposition, Route 15/Pearl Street, Essex Junction. Dec. 6: 5-8 p.m. Dec. 7: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Dec. 8: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Contact: www.vermontinternationalfestival.com. Rally. World AIDS week: Rally for Robin Hood Tax and Resources for HIV/AIDS. Starts on Church Street at Senator Bernie Sanders’ office and concludes at Senator Patrick Leahy’s office, 2 p.m. Contact: Play. Stage version of “It’s A Wonderful Life” presented by the Lamoille County Players. Tickets: $18 adults, $12 students and seniors (age 60+). Hyde Park Opera House. Dec. 6-7 and 13-14, 7 p.m. Dec. 8 and 15, 2 p.m. Contact: www.LCPlayers.com or 888-4507. Talk. “Is Technology Rendering Congress Obsolete?” Presented by Allison Stanger, PhD, Professor of Political Science at Middlebury College. Admission: $5. Faith United Methodist Church, 61 Fairmount Street, Burlington, 2 p.m. Contact: www. EEEVermont.org. 7 Saturday Spanish Playgroup. Join Constancia Gomez for Spanish rhymes, books, and songs. Includes a craft activity and snack. For children birth to age 5. Free. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, 21 Library Lane, Williston, 10:30 a.m. Contact: 878-4918. Holiday Craft Fair. Local artisans, craftspeople and businesses will be on hand selling their products just in time for holiday shopping. Homemade soup and bake sale. Underhill Central School, 6 Irish Settlement Road, Underhill Center. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Contact Lucinda: 899-1773. Holiday Bazaar. The First Unitarian Universalist Society of Burlington hosts their 81st Annual Holiday Bazaar. Enjoy food, craft vendors and a silent auction. Free and open to the public. First Unitarian Universalist Society of Burlington, 152 Pearl Street, Burlington. 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Contact Jean: 288-9566. Winooski Scholarship Train Show. The 20th Annual Winooski Scholarship Train Show features operating layouts in a variety of gauges, Lego trains and a display, books, videos, railroadiana, toy train dealers, displays and a food concession. Adults $5, ages 6-12 $1, children under 6 are free when accompanied by an adult. Admission support the Winooski Dollars for Scholars program. Winooski Educational Center, Main Street, Winooski. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Info: www.winooski.k12.vt.us. Contact John: 655-2555. Ghosts Through History. Local author and historian Thea Lewis presents a peek at the Winooski’s spirited past through stories and photos. Vermont Genealogy Library, 377 Hegeman Ave., Fort Ethan Allen, Colchester. 10:30 a.m.-12 p.m. Free. The library is also open for research Tuesdays from 3-9:30 p.m. and Saturdays from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. More info. www.vtgenlib.org. Contact: 310-9285. Bookfair Benefit. Make a donation to Milton Family Community Center by doing some holiday shopping at Barnes & Noble on Dec. 7. Present a voucher (available at the store) at checkout or shop online Dec. 7 -14 and use bookfair ID#11101383. MFCC receives a percentage of your purchase. More info: www.miltonfamilycenter.org. Holiday playhouse. To benefit St. Michael’s Playhouse 2014 summer season. Performances by Bill Carmichael, John Jensen, Kathryn Markey, Amanda Ryan Paige and Gabrielle Stravelli. Tickets: $27. Buy online at www.saintmichaelsplayhouse. org; call 654-2281 or visit the box office starting Dec. 2. St. Michael’s College, McCarthy Arts Center, 2 and 7:30 p.m. Contact: 654-2536. Holiday concert. Presented by the Vermont Fiddle Orchestra. Tickets: $15 adults, $12 students and seniors, children under 12 free. Reservations required; discount coupons available. College Hall Chapel on the green at the Vermont College of Fine Arts on East State Street, Montpelier, 7 p.m. Contact: 1-877-343-3531(FIDDLE1) or www.vtfiddleorchestra.org. Concert. Interfaith Festival of the Choirs concert. Free and open to the public. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Chapel, 73 Essex Way, Essex Junction, 6 p.m. Contact: 879-9142. EVENTS AT BURNHAM MEMORIAL LIBRARY The library will be closed: Nov. 27 – library closes at 5 p.m. Nov. 28 & 29 – closed for Thanksgiving Sunday, December 1 Christmas tree lighting and caroling. Gather for crafts, songs, cocoa, cookies and lights on the tree. At 4 p.m., children can make a holiday craft in the library. Around 4:30 p.m., we’ll all sing with the Colchester Community Chorus at the Meeting House. The annual tree lighting follows outside around 5 p.m. No sign-up required. Monday, December 2 Gingerbread house contest. Drop off your entry on Dec. 2 or 3. Build a tasty gingerbread structure, and bring it to the library for our annual contest. All creations will be on display and every entrant will be eligible for a raffled basket of goodies. Gingerbread kits are welcome, and family entries are very much encouraged. Guidelines and entry forms are available at the library or online. Cider and cookie week. Dec. 2-6. Stop in for homemade cookies and spicy cider, compliments of library staff. Young Adult Advisory Board. Help make the library a destination for people your age. Young adults in grades 6-12 can join the fabulous people on the Library’s Young Adult Advisory Board. 5:30 p.m. Write Now! Get the inspiration to start writing that poem or book that will someday be your bestseller. If you’re in grades 6-12, and you want to join a writing group, this is it. 6:30 p.m. REBECCA J. COLLMAN, MD Pediatrics Primary medical care for newborns through age 18 ONGOING Book drive for holiday baskets. The Burnham Memorial Library’s Young Adult Advisory Board works in cooperation with Colchester-Milton Rotary on their annual Holiday Basket project. While Rotarians collect food and other essentials for approximately 250 local families, the YA Board collects books for the children and teens in each family. The goal is to make certain that every child and teen on the list gets to feed their minds with something good to read. Donate a new or likenew book until Dec. 9. Burnham Knitters. Knitters of all skill levels meet Wednesdays. Beginners welcome. Colchester Meeting House or Burnham Memorial Library, 6-8 p.m. Preschool music with Derek. Wednesdays (except Dec. 25). Derek brings music and fun every Wednesday. Best for ages 3-5. 1-1:30 pm. Drop-in gentle Hatha yoga. Tuesdays until Dec. 17. Bring a mat and enjoy poses for mindful stretching and relaxation. Beginners and intermediates welcome. 4:305:30 p.m. Call 878-0313 to sign up. Drop-in story-time. Saturdays. A weekly selection of music and books for children of all ages. No sign-up required. 10 a.m. Contact: 878-0313. Toddler story-time. Tuesdays until Dec. 17. A weekly selection of music, rhymes, and stories. For ages 18 months-3 years. Call to sign-up. 10:30 a.m. Preschool summer story-time. Mondays and Thursdays. Join us for stories followed by a craft or activity. For ages 3-6. Call to register. 10:30 a.m. VT Health Connect Help. Tuesdays until Dec. 17. Confused? Speak one-on-one with a trained Health Connect Navigator. Schedule an appointment; in-depth (1 hour) sessions will be scheduled from 2-5 p.m., and shorter (15 min) sessions from 5-6 p.m. Call 264-5660, and choose Option 3 and then Option 1 to speak to the front desk. Preschool holiday story-time. Mondays and Thursdays (Dec. 2, 5, 9, 12, 16 and 19). Join us for stories followed by a craft or activity. For ages 3-6. Call to register. 10:30 a.m. Burnham Library hours Monday, Wednesday: 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Friday: 12-5 p.m.; Saturday: 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 898 Main Street, Colchester Contact: 879-7576 or [email protected]. Holiday Stroll. Join the Vergennes community as they sponsor breakfast with Santa at VUHS, a holiday craft fair at VUES and many other holiday activities. Open to the public. Vergennes, 7:30 a.m.-6 p.m. View the full schedule at www.AddisonCounty.com/HolidayStroll or call 3887951 x1. Mass. Holy Family - St. Lawrence Parish, 158 West Street, Essex Junction. Saturdays 4 p.m. Sundays 9:30 a.m. Reconciliation: Saturday 3:15-3:45 p.m. Contact: www. hfslvt.org. Christmas open house. Celebrate the season with the 15th annual Christmas open house and paint-in hosted by the MRV Chamber of Commerce, featuring homemade gifts, holiday music and food. Waitsfield and Warren, all day Dec. 7-8. Contact: 496-3409 or www.madrivervalley.com/events. Ongoing Gallery exhibition. “Shades of Fall,” a small picture exhibition featuring 88 artists presented by the Bryan Memorial Gallery. Free and open to the public. Bryan Memorial Gallery, 180 Main Street, Jeffersonville, Through Dec. 29. The gallery is open Thursday-Sunday, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Contact Mickey Myers: 644-5100. or monetary donation for the Richmond Food Shelf. Richmond Free Library, 201 Bridge Street, Richmond, 6-7 p.m. Contact: [email protected] or 318-5570. Burlington Writers Workshop. A free writing workshop for all Vermonters. Meets every Wednesday in downtown Burlington. Free and open to the public. Participants must register at meetup.com. More info: burlingtonwritersworkshop.com. Cell phones for soldiers. Local residents can support these collection drives by donating their old cell phones at A. W. Rich Funeral Home, 57 Main Street, Essex Junction or at the American Legion, 3650 Roosevelt Highway, Colchester. Collections accepted 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Contact: 849-6261. First Friday Art Walk. Over 40 galleries and art venues stay open late to welcome walkers and share the art scene. Check out www.artmapburlington.com to see a list of participating venues. Citywide, Burlington, 5-8 p.m. Contact: 264-4839 or [email protected]. Champlain Echoes. A women’s four-part harmony chorus group seeks additional women to sing in their holiday performances. Meetings are Monday nights. The Pines, Aspen Drive, South Burlington, 6:30 p.m. Contact: 655-2174. Bingo. Sponsored by the Whitcomb Woods Residents Association. Whitcomb Woods, 128 West Street, Essex Junction. Mondays at 6 p.m. Contact: 879-1829. Colchester-Milton Rotary meeting. Thursdays. Serving the communities of Colchester, Milton and the Champlain Islands. Hampton Inn, Colchester, 12 p.m. Beginner line dance class. Mondays. Learn to line dance or refresh your basic skills. All types of music, no dance experience needed. Donation: $4 for gym use. St. Joseph School, 20 Allen Street, Burlington, 6:30-7:30 p.m. Crafters wanted. Ascension Church in Georgia is looking for crafters for its Craft Fair on Nov. 30. Anyone interested in renting a table is asked to contact Louise St. Amour: 893-7297. Beginner yoga classes. Tuesdays. In lieu of a fee, please bring a non-perishable item For more calendar events, visit www.colchestersun.com/ calendar 164 Main St • Colchester 878-7844 LEE J. WELTMAN D.D.S. 905 Roosevelt Highway, Suite 230, Colchester, VT 05446 Above The Rehab Gym Wand Technology for an Anxiety-Free Experience • Veneers/Bonding • TMJ • INVISALIGN • Digital X-Rays • Implants New Patients & Emergencies Welcome 655-5305 www.DentistVT.com VT • www.sunnyhollowdental.com h ll SUNNY HOLLOW DENTAL WHERE SUNNY SMILES GROW Special event coming up? Tuesday, December 3 Scrabble Meetup. Join a friendly game of Scrabble at the Bayside Activity Center. 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, December 4 DCF book discussion group. Join other kids aged 8-11 and voice your likes and dislikes about Dorothy Canfield Fischer Award books. This month, we’ll discuss “One for the Murphy’s,” by Lynda Hunt. 6:30 p.m. • 20 years in Colchester • Board certified • High continuity of care • Available 24 hours • Intimate office • Personalized attention • Convenient location • Complimentary prenatal visits We would love to hear about it! SUBMIT ONLINE Submit: colchestersun.com/calendar PREVENT CHRONIC PAIN Take a proactive approach to your cat’s health with feline dental x-rays. Catch dental issues that your cat cannot tell you about. 5% OFF FIRST TIME DENTAL X-RAYS FIND US ON FACEBOOK Affectionately Cats Feline Veterinary Hospital and Boarding Suites www.affectionatelycats.com 860-CATS (2287) Colchester Religious Directory Daybreak Community Church 67 Creek Farm Plaza, Colchester VT. 05446 802-338-9118 or [email protected] www.daybreakvermont.org Sunday Service at 10:30am Lead Pastor, Brent Devenney Holy Cross Church 416 Church Road, Colchester; 863-3002 Mass Schedule Saturday: 4:30 p.m.; Sunday: 9 a.m.; 11 a.m.; Monday - Wednesday & Friday: 9 a.m. For Catholics who are returning home to the Church, welcome. We are happy that the Holy Spirit is leading you and we are pleased to welcome you. Come Join Us! Islamic Society of Vermont 182 Hegeman Avenue. 655-6711 Islamic Society of Vermont. Join Imam Islam Hassan ([email protected]) for the five daily prayers. Timings at ISVT homepage www.isvt.org The call for Friday Jumah prayers is exactly at 1:00PM followed by Khutbah and prayer. Additional Friday night lectures between Magrib and Isha prayers. Weekend Islamic classes on Sundays 9:45AM-1:30PM for all children 4 years and older during the school year. Interested non-members always welcome. (802) 655-6711 or [email protected] or Facebook. Malletts Bay Congregational Church UCC 1672 West Lakeshore Dr. 658-9155. Rev. Mary Nelson Abbott, Pastor. Worship Service: Sunday at 9:30 a.m. Church School: Sunday at 10:00 a.m. Fellowship time: Sunday at 10:30 a.m. Childcare provided. All are welcome! St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church 1063 Prim Road, 658-0533. Rev. Lisette Baxter, Rector Sundays: 8 a.m. & 10 a.m., Holy Eucharist 10 a.m. Sunday School: Nursery & all grades Wednesdays: 11:30 Bible class; 12:30 Holy Eucharist For evening services & Adult Education, check answering machine. All are always welcome. United Church Of Colchester - ABC Rte 2A-Village Green, 879-5442. Pastor Josh Steely. Worship: 10:30 a.m. Adult Sunday School: 9:00 a.m. Youth Sunday School during 10:30 worship; pre-school through 11 years. Nursery care available during worship. Christ Centered - Family Oriented. 8 The Colchester Sun | Wednesday, November 27, 2013 Friday at 5pm for display ads CONTACT US for a free quote or to place an ad PHONE: FAX: EMAIL: MAIL: 802-878-5282 802-651-9635 [email protected] The Colchester Sun 462 Hegeman Avenue, Suite 105 Colchester VT 05446 FOR SALE AUTO 2001 Ford Taurus Wagon. 100,000 miles. Runs good. Needs some body work. $1,200 OBO. 802-9990948. SERVICES A burst of color can do wonders for your home. Allow the professionals at Lafayette Painting to transform your interior space. We have been changing the colors of Chittenden County since 1977. Call 863-5397 and visit Lafayette PaintingInc. com FABRIC High quality wools, silks, cottons, brocades in individual garment lengths. Sat/Sun, Nov 30 / Dec 1, 9-3. Essex Jct. Info 879-3584. TOOL WIZARD. Repair air and electric tools. Small engines. All pick and delivery available. 10% off Military and retirees. ID required. Please leave a message. Contact Kevin: 802-343-8690. FOR SALE Jeep Cherokee Classic, 2001. Lots of new parts. 127, 000 miles. $2,500 288-9972. DEHUMIDIFIER $75 802-868-3507 COFFEE MAKER, MR. Coffee, 12 cups, programmable, stainless steel accents. New condition. Reason for selling: Doesn't fit under cabinets. $25. 802-524-6254 DISHWASHER, PORTABLE, ONLY used five times. Perfect for apartments, office kitchens or any smallsized kitchens. Portable countertop dishwasher will fit between most counter tops and cabinetry. The quick-connect to any kitchen faucet eliminates need for direct DEADLINES Friday at 5 p.m. for line ads to run in the following Thursday paper plumbing or permanent installation. $145. 802-752-5694 or email: angiedand @gmail.com REFRIGERATOR, APARTMENT SIZE, in good condition. Asking $80. 802-8687975 FOR RENT OR SALE 2-BEDROOM MOBILE HOME in Colchester's Westbury Trailer Park. $900 a month. No pets. Background and credit check required. Serious inquiries only. Contact: 802598-1073 or 802777-3618. SUITCASE, VINTAGE 1920's, with around the world stickers including Queen Mary. Great for coffee table. $90. 802-485-8266. STEMWARE, ANTIQUE, COBALT blue. Global style, 7.5" tall, 3" across top. 10 at $8. each plus free spare. No dealers. 802-8685177. DOCTOR'S Seeking Licensed Preschool Teacher and Infant Lead Teacher: COLLECTIBLES FROG COLLECTION, CAMELOT frog sculpture collection with certification from Hamilton Mint, plus numerous other frogs. With shadow box. $20. 802-868-5177. BUILDING MATERIAL COMPUTERS/ SUPPLIES SINK FOR BATHROOM, beige color. Like new. $25. 802868-3691. COMPAQ TOWER WITH mouse and keyboard, no screen. $30. 802782-2089. COAT, BLACK, LONG, wool, women's. Good condition. $50. or best offer. 802524-2973. COAT, LONDON FOG, with lining, tan color, women's. $35. or best offer. 802524-2973. LAPTOP, HP, WINDOWS Vista, Wi-Fi included, comes with charger. Works excellent. $100. 802-782-2089. CHILDREN'S ITEMS CRADLES, (2), HANDMADE, wooden. For big dolls. Good condition. $20. paddle. Works great. Asking $35. 802-7822089. STEREO, HOME, 2 speakers. Works great. $40. 802-7822089 each. 802-8683691. WINTER JACKETS (2), Arizona parkas, very warm, boys size 18-20. New, tags still attached, $80. Will sell for $10. each. 802524-2714. Crafts & Sewing Supplies TV, PANASONIC, 36", works great. Inputs front and back. Free. 802782-2089 MATERIALS FOR QUILT, cotton and double knit. $15. 802-8683691. VCRS, (3), WORK great. $15. each. Call 802-7822089. TABLE LOOM, WARP and weave, counter balanced, book of instructions. Paid over $500. Never used. Selling for $250. 802-8685177. EQUIPMENT/ MACHINERY SAWMILLS FROM ONLY $4897. MAKE AND SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill. Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info/ DVD: www.Norwood Sawmills.com 1-800-578-1363 Ext. 300N. WREATH MAKER, TREADLE-CLAMP style, with supplies. $150. 802-868-7205 YARN, CROCHET THREAD, and needlepoint yarn. Large amount. $0.25. to $1. 802524-6254. EXERCISE/ SPORTING EQUIPMENT ELECTRONICS/ CAMERAS/ETC. TREADMILL, LIFESTYLE, IN working order. $30. 802-5242973. PS II WITH five games and 1 COAT, LONG, TAN, women's, 100% wool, Jones of New York. $50. or best offer. 802-524-2973. Pine Forest Children’s Center, a 5-STAR child care program, PARKAS, MEN'S, (2), size XL. One seeks a Preschool teacher with Level 1 Educator’s License is Columbia with with Early Childhood Education Endorsement for a full-time ESSEX REPORTER zip out down teaching position. liner, and one x 3.5” We are also seeking professional level teacher for3.362 a London Fog. Both full-time Lead Infant teaching position. jb/æ dark in color, like Our curriculum is emergent and play-based. Please send resume, new condition. cover letter, and 3 letters of recommendation to: $50. each. 802Pine Forest Children’s Center, 208 Flynn Ave., Suite 2F, 524-3054. Burlington, VT, 05401 ATTN: Amy Ligay, Executive Director (802) 652-2506 or e-mail: [email protected] EOE ESSEX REPORTER Professional Advertising Sales Representative 3.362 x 3.5” jb/æ The St. Albans Messenger is seeking a highly motivated individual interested in sales - for print, web and various niche products. The position has an existing client base with strong repeat customers, and the prospects going forward are considerable We are looking for someone who appreciates the need to listen, and who understands the importance of relationship selling. The successful candidate will possess strong organizational skills, a sense of optimism and the ability to work well with others. Excellent benefits are included. Email your resume to: [email protected] or mail to: Emerson Lynn C/o St. Albans Messenger 281 North Main Street St. Albans, Vermont 05478 It is your responsibility to check your ad on the first day of publication for any errors. Refunds are not issued for classified ads, but if notification is given to our department after the first day of publication, we will run your corrected ad for one extra day. We will not be responsible for more than one incorrect publication of each ad. Still need some help, call us and we will help write your ad and design it for FREE! TRUNK, VINTAGE 1920'S, $50. 802485-8266. CLOTHING & ACCESSORIES SOMETIMES ERRORS OCCUR Always start with a keyword that makes it clear what you are advertising. Include as much description as you can so the buyer or potential employee knows exactly what you are offering. This may avoid unnecessary calls with redundant questions! NUTCRACKER, VINTAGE, FORSTER German, 13 inch. In original package, never on display. $100. 802-485-8266. ANTIQUES BUREAU, ANTIQUE, 4 drawers with hand-carved pulls. Drawers can be locked. Bureau has been stripped to be finished as you like. Very old. $150. No dealers. 802-868-5177. How To Write A Classified FIREWOOD DRY HARDWOOD FOR sale, $185./ cord. Log lengths $100. local delivery; $125. out of area. Call for more information: 802868-4163. FURNITURE RECLINER, LEATHER, PLUM color. Good condition. $80. or best offer. 802524-2973. FURNISHINGS AFGHANS, DIFFERENT COLORS and sizes. $12. to $25. 802-868-3691 LAMPS, ONE SET, great for bedroom. $22. 802-868-3691 PRINT, SACRED HEART of Jesus with red robe, 12x6, in gold flex frame. $20. 802485-8266. HEALTH SUPPLIES FOOT MASSAGER SPA, Conair, electric. Used only twice, still in box. $20. 802527-0808. regular. $150. 802-485-8266. MAPLE PRODUCTS/ SUPPLIES VT MAPLE SYRUP 3 gal. Dark Amber $100. 3 gal. Grade B $95. Maurice's Service Center 265 No. Main Street St. Albans 802-527-0348. PETS GUINEA PIG, MALE, tan/ white, 10 months old, friendly. To a good, warm home. $15. adoption fee. 802-868-2408. KITTENS, FREE, (4), 6 weeks old. 2 black with white paws and bib, 1 female and 1 male; 1 grey female, 1 grey male with white paws. 802-7828437. SKIING/ SNOWBOARDING/ SLEDS BURTON SNOWBOARD: BOOTS, bindings, board and bag. $50. or best offer. 802-9334442. SNOWBLOWERS/ PLOWS SIDEWALK SNOW THROWER, 12/6/2012 Toro, electric, 18". Excellent KMULAC CHRISTMAS KINHSD0730 condition, less DEER, LIGHT up, Healthcare than 1 hour for outside, buck usage. $150. and doe, with firm. Call 802a double plug 524-2010. extension cord you stick in the WOODSTOVES/ ground. $30. Call HEATING 802-524-2201 HOLIDAY ITEMS CH050498B 2 CH050498B 2 12/6/2012 MONITOR, CHRISTMAS KINHSD0730 2500, HEATS up FIGURINES, to 1500 sq. ft. Healthcare LIGHT up and Asking $1,200. or move, lots best offer. 802of Christmas 933-8868. decorations. Reasonable LOST & prices. Can be FOUND Starr Farm Nursing Center, a Kindred Healthcare facility, is seen 6-8pm or currently seeking qualified candidates to join our teams in during day. 802the following roles: 527-9916. LOST: CHARM BRACELET, gold, LNAs 5 discs, names of LIGHTS AND 5 grandchildren FT Day (Job# 160718), Evening (Job# 160721), and SOUNDS of and birthdates. Night (Job # 160719) positions available! Christmas, Lost mid-August $1500 Sign on Bonus General Electric, in St. Albans Valid state certification as an LNA. High school diploma 20 Christmas area. Reward carols in 3 or equivalent and six months experience in a long-term care offered. Call 910modes, indoor/ environment preferred. 208-3182. outdoor, lights flash, new in box. LOST: WEDDING RN Supervisor $100. 802-485BAND in Full Time Evenings (Job # 159973) or 8266. vicinity of Part Time Weekends (Job #157637) McDonald's and Graduate of accredited school of nursing; BS preferred. HUNTING/ Ace Hardware Valid RN state license. Valid CPR FISHING in St. Albans. certification. Three years of experience in nursing; White gold with SUPPLIES one year supervisory experience preferred. three stones. Reward offered Apply online at www.kindred.com and search CAMOUFLAGE for recovery of desired job #. Or call Maeve Luciani at 978-474-1107. JACKET AND the ring. Great On the spot interviews available! pants, new, cold sentimental weather Gore Drug Free / EOE value. 802-868Tex, size medium 2552. KMULAC 9 The Colchester Sun | Wednesday, November 27, 2013 DOWN 1. Fence part 2. C in TLC 3. Kilimanjaro top, e.g. 4. Slow, musically speaking 5. Lamentation 6. Blatant promotion 7. ___ Royal Highness 8. ABBA’s genre 9. Auction off 10. Dry riverbed 11. Bread maker 12. Ship wrecker 15. Torch holder 20. Result of pitcher’s dominance 22. Pendulum’s path 24. *Type of words less common these days 25. *Dots and dashes code 26. Popular potato 27. Gin’s partner 29. Symphony member 31. Patty ____ 32. Accustom 33. “Sexus” and “Plexus” partner 34. *It’s characterlimited 36. Gauche or Droite in Paris 38. *Email button 42. Grain of Mesoamerica 45. Hook, line and sinker person 49. Building addition 51. Comedian Daniel and reggae musician Peter 54. Chill-inducing 56. Japanese port 57. *It features postings 58. First-____ 59. Pot contribution 60. Coffee choice 61. Mimicking bird 62. Came down 63. Type of pool 64. Units of work 67. Colony-living insect CROSSWORD MORE THAN JUST NUMBERS! Join our dynamic team at The Essex Reporter & The Colchester Sun as a bookkeeper AND website editor. Wordpress proficiency preferred. A knack for numbers, accuracy and a positive attitude a must! Independently owned business offers a very stable and friendly work environment, and reasonably flexible hours. Send your resume to [email protected]. THEME: MODES OF COMMUNICATION ACROSS 1. Dandruff manufacturer 6. Third degree 9. Mop 13. Spot for boutonniËre 14. Oahu greeting gift 15. Boxer’s move 16. Gladiators’ battlefield 17. *Yours, when texting 18. Village V.I.P. 19. *As opposed to calling 21. *Following dial tone 23. Lennon’s wife 24. *It’s spoken 25. *E-mail was invented by this school’s alum 28. Marvel Comics hammer wielder 30. Building material 35. Can be strong on those not bathed 37. Wading bird 39. Sign up again 40. Hindu princess 41. Clan emblem 43. Like top-notch accommodations 44. Seven days postmortem 46. Largest volcano in Europe 47. Test choice 48. Between Paleocene and Oligocene 50. *Do it to email before sending? 52. “C’___ la vie!” 53. Start of some scotch names 55. Petting spot 57. *Raised dots 61. *Bottled on water 65. Jousting pole 66. Bit of sunshine 68. Comparative of hale 69. Weasel’s aquatic cousin 70. Lodge 71. Augmenting 72. Turned to the right, as in horse 73. Pilot’s estimate 74. Makes full BUSINESS DIRECTORY ACCOUNTING PROPERTY MAINTENANCE LANDSCAPING Over 20 Years Experience Serving The Champlain Valley FALL CLEAN UP! All Phase Property Maintenance, LLC Fre e E st im ates Residential 24 H o u r S e r v i ce Commercial Care & Gardens, Fence Installation/Repair, Stone-Concrete Walkways, Lawn Care &&Gardens - Perennials, Shrubs, Pressure Spring &Washing, Fall Clean up, Trucking - Stone, Lawn CareLawn Gardens, Fence Installation/Repair, Stone-Concrete Walkways, Walls And Patios,Refurbishing Firewood, Light- Yorkraking, Trucking Mulch, Topsoil, Sand Driveway Brushhogging, Plowing, Sanding & &Brush Salting, Electrical & much more .more.... . .Mulching & Excavating Spring & Fall Cleanups, Driveway Refurbishing, Hogging, Lawn Dethatching, SnowSnow Plowing, Sanding Salting, Electrical & much • BARK MULCH • LANDSCAPE DESIGN • BRUSH HOGGING • GARDEN CLEANUP AND MUCH MUCH MORE! Office: 899-2919 - Cell: 734-8247 Fully Insured 879-1353 CONSTRUCTION LANDSCAPING let it snow! Schill Landscape Group, LLC. 578-7641 CONSTRUCTION/HOME IMPROVEMENT REMODELING KITCHENS • ADDITIONS DECKS • ROOFS • RESTORATION PAINTING • WINDOWS Over 25 Years of Experience • Fully Insured • Free Estimates MIKE DUGGAN 497-2636 • 557-7325 • [email protected] LANDSCAPING Stone Patios and Walkways Driveway Repair Seasonal Decorations Tree, Garden & Lawn Installation Fall Clean-Ups Professional Property Maintenance 802-730-5857 or www.BouncingDogLandscape.com LANDSCAPING Tree Pruning and removal Snow Removal | Fall Clean Up Vermont Certified Arborist [email protected] PAINTING VALLEY PAINTING “Living & Working In Essex Junction For Over 35 Years” INTERIORS CATHEDRAL CEILINGS STAIRWAYS TAPING RENOVATIONS & EXTERIORS CUSTOM CARPENTRY PRESSURE WASHING TRIM WORK GUTTER CLEANING Call TJ Valley • 802- 355-0392 Pinstripe Property Maintenance Lawn Care & Snow Removal Year Round Service • • • • • Commercial Plowing Residential Plowing Salt/Sand Shovel Ice Removal • • • • • Commercial Mowing Fully Residential Mowing Licensed and Tree & Shrub Pruning Insured Mulch Around Trees & Gardens De-thatch Lawns Covering Residential and Commercial locations from Swanton to Williston with quality full service lawn care and snow removal. Pete Borman (802) 734-7226 • [email protected] Adam Collins (802) 393-0992 • [email protected] REAL ESTATE PLUMBING For the Results You Deserve… Adam’s Plumbing …moving across town or across the country, S E R V I C E 878 - 1002 The Reliable Local Pro! For all your residential plumbing repairs and installations PRINT AND DESIGN Graphics On Demand Dedicated to affordable high quality services Essex, VT 05452 PROPERTY MAINTENANCE \ Snowplowing | Salt/Sand Residential-Commercial 24 hour coverage 20 years experience — fully licensed and insured Stephan Griffiths Jr. - since Owner Family owned and operated 1990 · Flyers · Brochures · Product Catalogs · Large format projects · Formatting for press · Post Card Mailings And Much More www.graphicsondemand.biz • 802- 865-9203 Rely on an Experienced Realtor! Janice Battaline Certified Residential Specialist Seniors Real Estate Specialist Your Partner in SUCCESS! 802-861-6226 1-800-639-4520 x226 [email protected] RE/MAX North Professionals theexperience. experience. It’s It’s the ROOFING ALL AMERICAN ROOFING Metal Asphalt Rubber Slate FREE ESTIMATE CALL CHRIS NOW! 802 • 363 • 5523 10 The Colchester Sun | Wednesday, November 27, 2013 Spot WEB Visit us online at www.colchestersun.com/ arts-and-entertainment Spotlight on local Holiday Arts T is the season for crafts, bazaars, gifts and more. Check out the local vendors and their wares at one of the many upcoming holiday events listed below. Not interested in more stuff? Well, there’s something for you too; performances from comedy to classical glitter local stages this season. Wednesday, November 27 Friday, December 6 COMEDY NIGHT. Benefit for American Cancer Society. Tickets are $10 and available at www. thepenaltybox.org/#!events/c66t. The show features comedians from the former Levity Comedy Club in Burlington, including Higher Ground Comedy Battle Winner Carmen Lagala and 2013 Funniest Comic in Vermont Winner Phil Davidson. The Penalty Box, 127 Porter’s Point Road, Suite 4, Colchester. 8:30 p.m. Contact Chad Arel: 782-9111. INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL. Showcasing the diversity of Vermont with crafts, food, dancing and musical performances representing cultures from all over the world. Tickets: Adults $7, $5 kids age 6-12 and seniors 65+, $20 family pass, children under 6 free. Admission good for the entire weekend. Free parking and handicapped accessible. Champlain Valley Exposition, Route 15/Pearl Street, Essex Junction. Dec. 6: 5-8 p.m. Dec. 7: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Dec. 8: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Contact: www. vermontinternationalfestival.com. Saturday, November 30 Saturday, December 7 CRAFT FAIR. Featuring Granny’s Attic, homemade soup and sandwiches, crafts, candy and other food. Free and open to the public. Grace United Methodist Church, 130 Maple Street, Essex Junction, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Contact Ann: 879-7943 or the church office: 878-8071. WINOOSKI SCHOLARSHIP TRAIN SHOW. The 20th Annual Winooski Scholarship Train Show features operating layouts in a variety of gauges, Lego trains and a display, books, videos, railroadiana, toy train dealers, displays and a food concession. Adults $5, ages 6-12 $1, children under 6 are free when accompanied by an adult. Admission support the Winooski Dollars for Scholars program. Winooski Educational Center, Main Street, Winooski. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Info: www.winooski. k12.vt.us. Contact John: 655-2555. Thursday, December 5 Saturday, December 7 CONCERT. Wind and Jazz Ensembles. Jazz Orchestra directed by Brian McCarthy, Wind Ensemble directed by Chris Gribnau. St. Michael’s College, McCarthy Arts Center, 7 p.m. Contact: 654-2536. HOLIDAY CRAFT FAIR. Featuring local artisans, craftspeople and businesses. Free and open to the public. Underhill Central School, 6 Irish Settlement Road, Underhill Center, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Contact Lucinda Doyle: 899-1773. Friday, December 6 Saturday, December 7 COLCHESTER COMMUNITY CHORUS CONCERT. “Heavenly Harmonies” will include selections by Braz, Herman, Leavitt, Luis de Victoria, Martin, Miller and Jackson, Ross, Rutter, Wood and others. Directed by Carol Reichard, Frank Whitcomb will be the accompanist and Heidi Soons will play harp. Colchester High School auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Free with donations accepted. Contact Georgene Raub: 862-3910. HOLIDAY PLAYHOUSE. To benefit St. Michael’s Playhouse 2014 summer season. Performances by Bill Carmichael, John Jensen, Kathryn Markey, Amanda Ryan Paige and Gabrielle Stravelli. Tickets: $27. Buy online at www.saintmichaelsplayhouse.org; call 654-2281 or visit the box office starting Dec. 2. St. Michael’s College, McCarthy Arts Center, 2 and 7:30 p.m. Contact: 654-2536. BCA seeking nominations for 2014 Barbara Smail Award Thanksgiving Turkey Dinner 1 p.m. – 6 p.m. Turkey or ham with mashed potatoes, stuffing, corn, squash, cranberry sauce and choice of pumpkin or apple pie. Reservations being accepted now. $12.95 adults / $9.95 children Book your business lunch or private party with us Dinners Monday– Saturday 4:30 p.m. – 9:00 p.m. Weekday Food Specials 4:30 p.m. 6:00 p.m. Sunday Brunch Special 9:30 a.m. – 2 p.m. $3 Mimosas & $4 Bloody Marys Daily Drink Specials Sunday Brunch 9:30 a.m. 2:00 p.m. 860-0144 471 CHURCH ROAD FIND US ON FACEBOOK O‘BRIENS CLOVER HOUSE COLCHESTER Burlington City Arts is seeking nominations for the 2014 Barbara Smail Award. The award is given to a mid-career Vermont-based artist who has a desire to expand his or her creative experience and has displayed an enthusiastic support of his or her peers. Previous award winners include Carol MacDonald, Jennifer Koch, Diane Gabriel, Catherine Hall, Lynn Rupe, Peter Gallo, Jude Bond, Anthony Sini, Kat Clear, Gregg Blasdel and Kate Donnelly. Recipients of the 12 Annual Barbara Smail Award will be awarded a $1,500 cash stipend and $1,000 worth of class registration and/or usage of The BCA Center’s studio facilities (this includes the Print and Clay Studio at 250 Main Street, as well as the Community Darkroom at The BCA Center) for one year. Upon completion of the calendar year, BCA will host an exhibition of the artist’s work. Friends and family of Barbara Smail, a wellloved and highly respected artist from the Burlington area who died in the fall of 2001, established the Barbara Smail Award. To nominate an artist, submit in writing your reasons for nomination, along with a link to the artist’s website or attached an image and email to BCA Gallery Manager Ashley Landers at [email protected]. Deadline for submission is Dec. 6. For more information call 865-7166 or visit burlingtoncityarts.org. Current Exhibits September Caspian Arts Exhibit. An exhibition of unique creations from 16 artists of the Caspian Arts. Works include fine art in watercolor, oils and acrylics, kilnfired glass, bronzes, ceramics, fiber and jewelry. The exhibition runs through Dec. 22. Emile A Gruppe Gallery, Jericho Center. Gallery hours are Thursday through Sunday 10 a.m. -3 p.m. Info: www.emilegruppegallery.com. Photography Exhibit: “Feast.” From farm to table; the harvesting, preparing and plating of culinary masterpieces. A reception will be held at the conclusion of the exhibit on Dec. 8 from 3-5 p.m. Darkroom Gallery, Essex Junction. Call To Artists: Holiday Exhibitions. The S.P.A.C.E. Gallery is now accepting applications for small works and ornaments, gifts $50 and under, and large works. Deadline Dec. 2. Submission details: http://form.jotformpro.com/ form/33164967318967. Contact: [email protected] People’s choice competition. 39 architectural photographs will be displayed online by the Vermont Chapter of the American Institute of Architects. Caste your vote until Nov. 27. The winner will be announced at the AIAVT annual meeting and design awards. All entries are from architects in Vermont. More information and to vote: aiavt.org/ awards/entries/peopleschoice. “Visions of Vermont.“ Featuring photographers Patricia Lyon-Surrey, Lisa Dimondstein, Julie Parker, Sandra Shenk and Gail Yanowitch, a potter. Through Nov. 30. Shelburne Vineyard, 6308 Shelburne Road. Contact Gail Albert: 985-8222 or galbert@shelburnevineyard. com. “Of Land & Local.” A multidisciplinary exhibition designed to initiate a dialogue about the Vermont landscape, featuring works from over 40 international and Vermont-based artists. Through Dec. 7. The BCA Center, Church Street, Burlington. Upcoming Events September Auditions. “Les Misérables” put up by Lyric Theatre is looking for adult and teen actors. Auditions will be held Dec. 1 at 12:30 p.m.; Dec. 2, 3 and 4 at 5:45 p.m. at The Schoolhouse, 8 Catkin Drive, South Burlington. There are six featured male roles and four featured female roles, plus a large ensemble. To audition, adults and teens must be at least 15 years old as of Jan. 1, 2014, and have a believable stage age of 18. Children are welcome to audition for the play on Dec. 7 at 8:30 a.m. at the same location. Info: www.lyrictheatrevt.org. Contact Sean Leach, Stage Manager: 363-4599 or [email protected]. Colchester Community Chorus Concert. “Heavenly Harmonies” will include selections by Braz, Herman, Leavitt, Luis de Victoria, Martin, Miller & Jackson, Ross, Rutter, Wood and others. Directed by Carol Reichard, Frank Whitcomb will be the accompanist and Heidi Soons will play harp. Dec. 6, 7:30 p.m. at Colchester High School auditorium. Free with donations accepted. Contact Georgene Raub: 8623910. Silent Auction. Bid on fine art photography to benefit Hunger Free VT at Darkroom Gallery at 12 Main Street in Essex Junction Dec. 8. Refreshments will be served. Contact: 777-3686. Performance. Stage Version of Holiday Classic “It’s A Wonderful Life”. Presented by the Lamoille County Players. Dec. 6-7 and 13-14, 7 p.m.; Dec. 8 and 15, 2 p.m. Hyde Park Opera House. $18 Regular / $12 Student and Senior. Info: www. LCPlayers.com. Contact: 888-4507. Holiday Concert. The Vermont Fiddle Orchestra will be presenting its annual Holiday Concert with youth fiddlers, refreshments and a silent auction. College Hall Chapel on the green at the Vermont College of Fine Arts on East State Street in Montpelier. Dec. 7 at 7 p.m. Tickets: $15 for adults, $12 for seniors and students and children 12 and under are free. Contact: 1-877-343-3531(FIDDLE1), [email protected] or www. vtfiddleorchestra.org. For more listings visit www.colchestersun.com/arts-andentertainment 11 Sports The Colchester Sun | Wednesday, November THE 27, 2013 COLCHESTER SUN / NOVEMBER 27, 2013 SWIMMING THIS WEEK IN ST. MICHAEL’S COLLEGE ATHLETICS Colchester native Lindsay McNall, pictured, was tabbed Counsilman Hunsaker Women’s Division II Swimmer of the Week for the week ending Sunday, Nov. 17. CODY ARRINGTON Local makes waves in collegiate debut McNall tabbed DII Swimmer of the Week Colchester native Lindsay McNall, a St. Michael’s College swimming and diving first-year, has racked up an impressive list of awards in her first two weeks of collegiate competition. She was one of only six swimmers across three divisions to be named the CollegeSwimming.com Counsilman Hunsaker Women’s Division II Swimmer of the Week for the week ending on Sunday, Nov. 17, and has been tabbed Northeast-10 Conference Rookie of the Week twice. McNall won three events while setting two school records last Saturday during a 111-51 victory over Clarkson University. She won the 200-yard individual medley (2:16.75) by 15.65 seconds and the 200-yard butterfly (2:14.63) by 21.83 seconds, setting program marks in each. She eclipsed a 200 IM mark of 2:19.52 set by Kaytlyn Kelley on Feb. 5, 2010, and a 200 fly record of 2:16.14 posted by Sammy Sweeney on Feb. 19, 2012. McNall also swam for the top 200-yard medley relay (1:56.68). McNall is undefeated in eight individual races this year, setting school marks in four events – the 50 (27.88), 100 (1:01.81) and 200 (2:14.63) fly events, and the 200 IM (2:16.75) – while falling just 0.20 seconds shy of a fifth school record against Norwich University, finishing the 100-yard backstroke in 1:00.29. Between 11 combined individual and relay races, McNall has won 10 times while claiming second place on one occasion. Per CollegeSwimming.com’s database, McNall’s top performances in the 200 fly (2:14.63), 200 IM (2:16.75) and 200-yard freestyle (2:00.08) are the second-best times in those events in the NE-10 this year. She is third in the 100 back (1:00.29), fourth in the 100 fly (1:01.81), tied for fifth in the 100 free (56.06) and 16th in the 500 free (5:34.51). Among all Division II women, McNall is 50th in the 100 back, 55th in the 200 fly, 97th in the 200 IM and 100th in the 200 free. Prior to joining the Purple Knights, McNall swam for Green Mountain Aquatics, a local club team. It’s Yamboree time HOCKEY Youth hockey tournament slated for Nov. 29-30 By KELLY MARCH The Colchester Sun schedule Lakers’ The fifth annual Thanksgiving Yamboree is expected to draw over 320 youth hockey players to the Essex Skating Facility on Nov. 29-30. FILE | OLIVER PARINI BOYS’ HOCKEY: 12/4 Colchester at Milton 7:25 p.m. GIRLS’ HOCKEY: 12/4 Colchester vs. Middlebury 4:30 p.m. 12/6 Colchester at BFA St. Albans 7 p.m. 12/7 Colchester vs. BFA St. Albans 6:10 p.m. 12/11 Colchester at Harwood 6 p.m. Over 320 youth hockey players ages 5-8 will work off their Thanksgiving indulgences at the Essex Youth Hockey Association’s fourth annual Yamboree on Nov. 29-30. The tournament, which will be held at the Essex Skating Facility, will feature 32 teams from across the state, as well as teams from New York and New Hampshire. “This is our biggest Yamboree to date,” said Jennifer McFaul, who is codirecting the tournament this year with Missy Blondin. “Some of the teams are house teams...they scrimmage amongst themselves, but don’t travel to play other organizations. It will be an exciting experience for those kids to play in their first tournament. It’s also a big deal to the kids who are used to competition because there are so many teams involved.” Each travel team will have the opportunity to participate in at least four games during the round robin style tournament, while house teams will compete in three. The top four travel teams will advance to a championship or consolation game, with trophies being awarded to the top two teams. A total of 66 games will be played in the two-day span. Each game will be a three-on-three with a goalie and will last for 30 minutes. The rink will be split into cross sections, allowing three games and six teams to be on the ice at the same time – a format taken from USA Hockey’s American Development Model. McFaul said the tournament is entirely run by volunteers, from ticket sales and concessions to timing. Spectators will be charged $4 per day or $6 per weekend for admission. The funds will be used to help offset the cost of ice time and referees. Boutelle takes 86th at NCAA championship As the first woman to represent St. Michael’s College cross country at an NCAA Championship, junior Chloe Boutelle claimed 86th place among 244 runners on Saturday in Spokane, Wash. By clocking in at 22:30, Boutelle was just six seconds shy of her own 6K school record, set at the 2012 NCAA East Regional Championship in Nashua, N.H. She improved 21 positions after the midway point in the race. Thanks to Boutelle, St. Michael’s was one of 57 Division II institutions represented at the meet, and one of six from the Northeast-10 Conference. Among NE-10 runners, Boutelle was sixth out of 24 harriers, trailing two from Bentley University and one apiece from Adelphi University, American International College and Stonehill College. She was eight seconds short of finishing in the top 70. An atlarge qualifier for the championship after taking seventh in 22:48 at the Nov. 10 NCAA East Regional Championship in Boston’s Franklin Park, Boutelle joined Drew Best ‘04 as the lone Purple Knight harriers to ever compete at an NCAA Championship. Best placed 69th out of 176 during the 2003 meet in Cary, N.C. Men’s basketball goes one-for-one The St. Michael’s College men’s basketball team (5-1, 1-1) went 1-1 last week, rallying from 14 points down in the second half to upset 23rd-ranked Franklin Pierce University, 68-66, on Wednesday and then falling to defending Northeast-10 Championship victor Southern New Hampshire University, 69-66, on Saturday. Against the Ravens, who were ranked by the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC), had been averaging 90.4 points a game and advanced to last year’s NCAA Tournament Elite Eight, the Purple Knights reached 5-0 for the first time since 2000-01, when the squad last qualified for the NCAA Tournament, ultimately reaching the Sweet 16. Junior James Cambronne came within two points of his career high during a 17-point, five-rebound, two-block evening, shooting 7-of-14. First-year Matt Bonds added career bests of 16 points and 15 boards, with nine coming on the offensive end alone. Junior Mike Holton Jr. had nine points and seven rebounds, classmate Corey Crawford II turned in eight points and three steals, and junior Dom Ditlefsen had seven points and six rebounds. First-year Zaire Williams tallied four steals in 12 minutes, and sophomore Morrell Gaskins notched six points and four caroms, three being of the offensive variety. Against the Penmen, Crawford scored a career-high 21 points on 4-of-7 three-point shooting for St. Michael’s, while Ditlefsen shot 6-of-8 en route to 15 points. Cambronne had 13 points and six rebounds, and Bonds pulled down 11 boards. Williams dished out three assists, and Gaskins notched four rebounds and two blocks. Women’s basketball goes 0-2 The St. Michael’s College women’s basketball team (1-4, 0-2) went 0-2 last week, erasing a 22-point secondhalf deficit and forcing overtime before losing to Franklin Pierce University, 75-69, on Wednesday, and then erasing a 14-point second-half hole before falling to Southern New Hampshire University, 53-47, on Saturday. Against the Ravens, who were receiving votes toward the preseason national poll, senior Alexa Long had a careerhigh-tying 25 points on 10-of-15 shooting for the hosts while hauling down 14 rebounds, and sophomore Makenzie Burud notched 16 points, 10 boards, four assists and two steals. First-year Indira Evora banked in a tying three-pointer with 2.4 seconds remaining in regulation, totaling 16 points, four rebounds, four assists and four steals off the bench for the Purple Knights, who turned the ball over only twice in the second half while using the same unit of five players from the time 7:45 remained in regulation until there were 7.7 seconds left in overtime. Against the Penmen, Burud shot 5-of-9 to post 12 points, eight rebounds, four blocks and two steals while Long added 12 points and five boards. Senior Cara Deroy tacked on 10 points and four assists, and junior Maggie Sabine hauled in 10 rebounds. Men’s hockey drops two The St. Michael’s College men’s ice hockey team (0-5, 0-5 ECAC East, 0-1 NE-10) went 0-2 last week, losing to nationally-regarded New England College, 4-2, on Friday and then falling to St. Anselm College, 6-3, on Saturday. Against the Pilgrims, who are receiving votes towards both the D3hockey.com and the U.S. College Hockey Online (USCHO) Division III national polls, juniors AJ Pieprzak and Jeremy Wong both scored for the hosts, and classmate Dave Donzanti had 29 saves, including 19 in the second period alone. St. Michael’s was only outshot 33-26, holding edges in the first and last stanzas. Against St. Anselm, Pieprzak scored twice, while Wong had a goal and an assist. Donzanti made 31 saves during 48:55 of relief, while sophomore Michael Comitini recorded six stops. The Purple Knights erased a 3-0 deficit to tie the game on a Pieprzak tally 7:37 into the third period before the Hawks netted three goals in the final 5:51 of the contest. Women’s hockey loses two ECAC East contests The St. Michael’s College women’s ice hockey team (07, 0-6) went 0-2 last week, losing to New England College, 3-0, on Friday and then falling to in-state rival Castleton State College, 7-1, on Saturday. Against the Pilgrims, first-year Tina Frasca turned away a career-high 33 shots, including posting a season best for a period with 19 in the second period. Her team outshot the hosts 39-33, including 17-8 in the first period and 13-8 in the third. Against the Spartans, senior Olivia Collins scored her team’s only goal while classmate Macey Thomas and firstyear Kayla Kee each had assists. Classmate Abby Burke stopped 29 shots. 12 The Colchester Sun | Wednesday, November 27, 2013 VNA honors staff and volunteers at annual dinner Dr. Paula Fives-Taylor (left), a VNA Hospice volunteer, poses with Roberta MacDonald, Senior V. P. of Marketing at Cabot Creamery cooperative at the VNA Annual Dinner and Staff and Volunteer Recognition event on Nov. 13 at the Hampton Inn in Colchester. Fives-Taylor, of South Burlington, was recognized at the event for her five-year anniversary as a VNA Hospice volunteer; McDonald accepted an award on behalf of Cabot for the company’s donation of volunteer tracking software to strengthen the Hospice volunteer program. the Burlington Free Press in 1988, she wrote in her cover letter that she looked forward to the “exciting challenge” of working in home care. As VNA President Judy Peterson pointed out in her opening remarks, anyone working as a visiting nurse for 25 years has experienced plenty of excitement and witnessed remarkable changes — from constantly evolving technology to sweeping healthcare reforms. Through it all, Shephard — like so many dedicated VNA employees — has adapted with grace and shown unwavering compassion and commitment to her clients. Also celebrating a 25-year anniversary was the VNA Family Room, which opened its doors in Burlington’s Old North End in 1988. The program, which primarily serves lowincome and refugee families, works to improve parenting skills, facilitate school VNA Board Chair Jim Madison (far left) and VNA President Judy Peterson (center) present the J. Churchill Hindes Community Service Award to Roberta MacDonald, Senior V. P. of Marketing at Cabot Creamery cooperative. Cabot received the award for their donation of volunteer tracking software to strengthen the Hospice volunteer program. popular celebration. Over 70 staff and volunteers were celebrated for anniversaries ranging from 5 to 25 years. Pegge Shephard, RN, was recognized for 25 years of service with the VNA’s Adult Home Care Program. When Shephard responded to a VNA job listing in LEFT: VNA staff that celebrated anniversaries pose at the VNA Annual Dinner and Staff and Volunteer Recognition event. PHOTOS CONTRIBUTED Achievements Something to Celebrate? Congratulations students Email [email protected] to receive a free online subscription to The Colchester and mo re rs , Hono s h t ir ... s, B g ons n i id t a du a r s, G Prom oti on he Visiting Nurse Association of Chittenden and Grande Isle Counties (VNA) held its Annual Dinner and Staff and Volunteer Recognition event on Nov. 13 at the Hampton Inn in Colchester. Staff, volunteers and friends of the VNA gathered to honor their colleagues and friends at the We d T readiness and decrease isolation through playgroups, mentoring and workshops for children ages birth to six, and their parents. Over the past year, the VNA conducted several interviews in the community as we plan the Family Room’s next 25 years. Community partners and leaders consistently said they value the Family Room and consider it a unique model that serves parents and children together. The number of families using Family Room services has more than doubled since 2007, now numbering 494 — clear evidence of the program’s vitality. Family Room staff were serenaded and surprised with a birthday cake at the annual recognition dinner. The J. Churchill Hindes Community Service Award, created to acknowledge a person or group who exhibits exemplary community service and support of the VNA, was given to Cabot Creamery cooperative for their support of VNA Hospice with the donation of volunteer tracking software to strengthen the Hospice volunteer program. Roberta MacDonald, Senior V. P. of Marketing, accepted the award on behalf of the farm families of Cabot. In her acceptance remarks, McDonald, herself a VNA Hospice volunteer, noted that the profoundly positive affect that Hospice care has on families during a very difficult time ties in directly with Cabot’s desire to support the communities where their farmers farm and where they sell cheese. It is Cabot’s intent to support Hospice programs throughout the country by offering them the volunteer tracking software program, which was piloted at the VNA. . Tell Elsie! [email protected] Maxine Senft Miller, of Colchester, was named to the honor roll for the first quarter at the Vermont Commons School in South Burlington. Maxine is the daughter of John and Erika Senft Miller of Colchester. Eliza Jackson, of Colchester, was named to the honor roll for the first quarter at the Vermont Commons School in South Burlington. Eliza is the daughter of Carol Blattspieler of Colchester. Emily Davis, of Colchester, was inducted into the chapter of Lambda Pi Eta, the official communication studies honor society of the National Communication Association (NCA), at ColbySawyer College in New London, N.H. Aaron Hodge, of Colchester, was inducted into the chapter of Lambda Pi Eta, the official communication studies honor society of the National Communication Association (NCA), at ColbySawyer College in New London, N.H. Shelby Wood, of Colchester, graduated from Roger Williams University in Bristol, R.I. during the commencement ceremony held on May 18. Wood received a Bachelor of Arts in Elementary Education. Andrew Barton, of Colchester, was named to the spring 2013 semester Dean’s List at MCPHS University in Boston, Mass. Barton is pursuing a Doctor of Pharmacy. Chelsea LeBlanc, of Colchester, was named to the spring 2013 semester Dean’s List at MCPHS University in Boston, Mass. LeBlanc is pursuing a Doctor of Pharmacy. Amy Horton, of Colchester, was named to the spring 2013 semester Dean’s List at MCPHS University in Boston, Mass. Horton is pursuing a Bachelor of Science in Radiography. Kylie Sheppard, of Colchester, is a new student at Centenary College in Hackeettstown, N.Y. as of this semester. Sheppard plans to study Equine Studies. Submit your achievement today at colchestersun.com/submit 13 The Colchester Sun | Wednesday, November 27, 2013 “The Nutcracker” returns to the Flynn Musician of the Month Beth Moore Colchester High School Beth Moore has been selected as Musician of the Month by Director of Bands Evan Peltier. Moore is a sophomore at Colchester High School. She plays the flute and piccolo in concert and jazz band, and is also a member of the concert choir. “I chose Beth because she has pretty much done everything you can do so far this year in terms of musical opportunities,” Peltier explained. “She auditioned and participated in the district band festival this year, and made it into Wind Ensemble. She played flute for the musical this year, which is always a big commitment. She’s also a member of Vermont Youth Philharmonic, an ensemble within the VYOA. Beth has also started to mentor other younger students in the VYOA as well. On top of all that, she’s a part of three CHS ensembles, which brings even more preparation, energy and commitment.” Along with all of these commitments, Peltier described Moore as “an enthusiastic student and musician, always excited to be performing in any kind of situation. She will always be a dependable member of our ensembles here at CHS, and an asset to the music program at large.” When asked what her favorite part of the band program is, Moore said, “I think that it’s a great way to get to know people and interact with fellow students. I have a great time with the other band students and making friends within the program. I also enjoy doing competitions and playing new music from various composers.” Moore has always loved music and dreams of becoming a professional musician. “I think being in the music program is a big part of reaching that goal,” she said. Lecture in First Wednesdays Series presented at Brownell Former Iranian Ambassador to the UN Mansour Farhang will look at the prospects for democracy in Arab countries in a talk at Brownell Library in Essex Junction on Tuesday, Dec. 3 at 7 p.m. His talk, “The Struggle for Democracy in the Arab World,” is part of the Vermont Humanities Council’s First Wednesdays lecture series and is free and open to the public. (Note: This talk takes place on a Tuesday on a special date.) Farhang’s talk will examine the cultural impediments to democratic pluralism in the Arab ON TUESDAY THIS WEEK countries where popular rebellions led to the overthrow of autocratic rulers. Farhang is an Iranian-born author and former diplomat. He was Iran’s ambassador to the United Nations in 1979-1980, resigning when efforts to negotiate release of American hostages in Tehran failed. In June 1981, following the violent suppression of political dissidents, he was forced to leave Iran. He is a frequent contributor to scholarly journals and the national news media. He has taught at Bennington College since 1983, where he is the Catharine Osgood Foster Chair for Distinguished Teaching. More info: www.vermonthumanities. org/WhatWeDo/FirstWednesdays/ FirstWednesdaysBurlington/tabid/164/Default. aspx LCATV to host sketch comedy group Lake Champlain Access Television (LCATV) continues its 3 Camera Theatre performing arts series on Dec. 6, with a live performance of Stealing from Work: Episode II — Son of the Bride of the Shadow Goes to Camp, in 3D!, a sketch comedy revue. Following a recent successful run at Burlington’s Off Center for the Dramatic Arts, Stealing from Work: Episode II — Son of the Bride of the Shadow Goes to Camp, in 3D! will move to the LCATV studio for a single performance to be captured as a three-camera video shoot before a live studio audience. The 8 p.m. performance is free and open to the public, with a suggested donation to LCATV. Stealing from Work contains adult language and situations and is recommended for mature audiences only. Written by local theatre artists Angie Albeck and Marianne DiMascio, Stealing THE LOGGER HOLIDAY VARIETY SHOW R U ST Y D E WE E S RUSTY DEWEES Comedy – Music an Ole Style Variety Show Holiday Treat For The Family! With Nashville Singer Keeghan Nolan Master Fiddler Patrick Ross Emmy Winner Peter B. Wilder and UNCLE FURMON •South Burlington High School December 6, 7, 13, 14 802-888-8838 thelogger.com •Stowe High School Pictured from back to front: Kevin Christopher, Geeda Searfoorce, Chris Caswell, and Marianne DiMascio. CHRISTOPHER RYAN December 27, 28 802-888-8838 thelogger.com •Spruce Peak Performing Arts Center December 31 *7 pm 802-760-4634 8 pm shows * Show Is Full of Gluten Rated SC some cussin’ from Work features Chris Caswell, Kevin Christopher, Marianne DiMascio and Geeda Searfoorce. With each sketch the actors deftly transform into a different set of extraordinary characters, spoofing contemporary arts, culture and political issues, all with a local flavor. More information about the production is available at www.facebook.com/ StealingFromWork. Dancers Eleanor Sowles, left, Nastassja Nguyen, center, and Abigail Sowles, right, all of Colchester will perform in this weekend’s production of “The Nutcracker.” The performance will be held on the Flynn MainStage in Burlington on Nov. 30 and Dec. 1. PHOTO CONTRIBUTED Albany Berkshire Ballet’s “The Nutcracker” has been captivating audiences with ballet’s most enchanting tale since 1974. The Burlington holiday tradition returns to the Flynn MainStage on Nov. 30 and Dec. 1. The holiday classic unites children from all over Vermont to perform with professional dancers at the Flynn Center for the Performing Arts. Albany Berkshire Ballet, under the guidance of Artistic Director Madeline Cantarella Culpo, has choreographed the ballet, which also features the glittering score of Peter Tchaikovsky. With lavish sets and scenery designed by Carl Sprague, the performances feature over 140 local dance students from over 30 Vermont towns. Helena Sullivan, owner and Artistic Director of Stowe Dance Academy, Mad River Dance Academy, and the Rehearsal Mistress for Albany Berkshire Ballet, has been leading the rehearsals for our young, local dancers to prepare them for the magical production. Aspiring Vermont dancers, ages 3 to 17, coming from Caledonia, Chittenden, Addison, Franklin, Lamoille, Orleans and Washington counties are given the opportunity to share the stage with professional dancers from across the globe on the historic Flynn stage. Three Thanksgiving weekend performances will take place at the Flynn, each with a different cast of local dancers. Dancers from the Colchester area include Nastassja Nguyen, Abigail Sowles, and Eleanor Sowles. This holiday season, accompany Clara on her wonderful adventure in this classic ballet and share in the tradition of keeping the magic of “The Nutcracker” alive. Performances will be held Nov. 30 at 3 and 7 p.m., and Dec. 1 at 1 p.m. Tickets available for purchase at www.Flynntix.org or by calling 863-5966. Vermont Bee offers high school students opportunity to sharpen brain knowledge Who will be the first student from your high school to participate in the 5th Annual Vermont Regional Brain Bee? The Vermont Brain Bee — a day-long event devoted to knowledge about neuroscience — seeks bright and motivated students from all over Vermont to participate in the 2014 Brain Bee, which takes place on Feb. 8, 2014 at the University of Vermont in Burlington. The event is open to individuals or groups of students in grades 9-12 from public and private schools, as well as those who are home-schooled. To prepare, students brush up on facts related to human brain structure and function and then come to the Bee and participate in a written, practical and oral competition and attend noteworthy activities, including: a keynote address featuring Dr. Michael Cannizzarro, who will speak on monitoring brain signals during communication; Psychiatry Fellows conducting mock patient diagnoses of neural disorders; and hearing from a neuroscience graduate and undergraduate student panel. The half day-long event joins together students from across Vermont for an opportunity to represent the state in the U.S. National Brain Bee in Baltimore, Maryland in mid-March. The goal of the Vermont Brain Bee is to create excitement for learning about the fabulous brain. Learn more about the 2014 event here. For details about past Vermont Brain Bees visit http://vermontbrainbee.com. For more information contact [email protected]. 14 The Colchester Sun | Wednesday, November 27, 2013