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© ADOBE STOCK<br />

The Vermont Antique And Classic Car Meet<br />

AUGUST 9, 10, & 11, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

FARRS FIELD • ROUTE 2, WATERBURY<br />

Flea Market, Car Corral, Parade, Street Dance and much more!<br />

Sponsored by the Vermont Automobile Enthusiasts<br />

RAIN<br />

OR<br />

SHINE!<br />

SEE<br />

PAGES<br />

4 & 5<br />

ANTIQUE<br />

RACE CARS<br />

&<br />

TRACTORS<br />

CN VN’ V N<br />

Vol. 48, No. 14 403 US RTE 302 - BERLIN, BARRE, VT 05641 • 479-2582 OR 1-800-639-9753 • Fax (802) 479-7916 August 7, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

On the Web: www.vt-world.com Email: sales@vt-world.com<br />

W O R L D C L A S S M U S I C<br />

I N T H E H E A R T O F V E R M O N T<br />

20<strong>19</strong> Vermont Dairy Farm<br />

of the Year<br />

page 2<br />

Low Unemployment Rates<br />

Spur Innovation and<br />

Opportunity for<br />

CVMC Nurses<br />

page 11<br />

Senior<br />

Living<br />

Central Vermont<br />

Chamber Music Festival<br />

August 12th - 25th<br />

Randolph & Woodstock<br />

MEDIA SPONSOR<br />

pages 17-24<br />

INSERTED IN THIS<br />

WEEK’S WORLD<br />

May not be available in all papers<br />

SEARS HOMETOWN<br />

www.cvcmf.org<br />

Box Office 802.728.6464<br />

August 9-10 th • Fri 9-8, Sat 9-6<br />

ANNIVERSARY<br />

SALE<br />

20 % OFF<br />

STOREWIDE!<br />

Discount applies to regular price merchandise only. Some exclusions may apply due to manufacturers pricing restrictions. Excludes Yeti and Gun Safes.<br />

359 N Main St.<br />

Barre, Vermont<br />

(802) 476-7446


VERMONT TIRE & SERVICE<br />

Buying 4 All Season Tires? Get $290 In Extras!<br />

FREE<br />

ALL WHEEL ALIGNMENT<br />

FREE<br />

TIRE ROTATION<br />

FREE<br />

Flat Repair<br />

FREE<br />

Tire Mounting<br />

Remember Vermont Tire For All Your Car Maintenance And Repair Needs<br />

VERMONT<br />

8 State<br />

Inspection<br />

IS DUE<br />

Engine<br />

Diagnostics<br />

A/C<br />

Service<br />

Exhaust<br />

Repair<br />

South Burlington<br />

1877 Williston Rd.<br />

658-1333<br />

1800-639-<strong>19</strong>01<br />

Mon.- Fri. 7:30am-5pm Sat. 8am-12pm<br />

Not responsible for typographical errors<br />

Montpelier<br />

90 River St.<br />

229-4941<br />

1800-639-<strong>19</strong>00


PROUD TO SELL<br />

VP RACING<br />

FUELS<br />

PRODUCTS!<br />

Rt. 14, Williamstown • 802-433-1038<br />

NOW<br />

HIRING!<br />

Shurfine English Muffins, Hotdog/Hamburger<br />

Rolls & White Bread 14-oz .......................................2/$3.00<br />

Shurfine Skim $2.99gal. Shurfine 1% $3.<strong>19</strong>gal.<br />

Shurfine 2% $3.39gal. Shurfine Whole Milk $3.99gal.<br />

Premium 91 octane Non-ethanol Gasoline at the pumps<br />

Great for your small engine lawn tools, motorcycles, classic cars, &<br />

more! We stock many high performance fuels in 5 gallon cans!<br />

Need fuel for the track? Ask about ordering by the 54 gallon drum.<br />

Remember VP Racing Fuel is the Official Fuel of Barre’s Thunder Road!”<br />

NOW CARRYING THE BURLINGTON FREE PRESS 7 DAYS A WEEK<br />

Monday-Thursday 5:00am-10:00pm, Friday 5:00am - 10:00pm<br />

Saturday 6:00am until 10:00pm, Sunday 6:00 am until 10:00pm<br />

Check out our DIETZ & WATSON Deli Meats, Sandwich<br />

Condiments, Beef Jerky, and meat snacks including Dietz Nuts!<br />

THREE DAY MEAT SALE FRIDAY SATURDAY & SUNDAY!<br />

Fresh Ground<br />

Chuck<br />

Family Pk.<br />

$<br />

3 99 /lb<br />

Sirloin Steak<br />

$<br />

6 99 /lb<br />

SPECIALS GOOD THROUGH<br />

HSUNDAY, AUG. 11H<br />

Not responsible for<br />

typographical errors.<br />

NEW!<br />

McKenzie<br />

Natural Casing<br />

Franks<br />

2.5 l.b box<br />

Hickory Smoked or<br />

Thick Cut Bacon<br />

1 lb. pkg.<br />

Sugardale<br />

$<br />

14 99 $<br />

3 99<br />

Pork Chops<br />

or Spareribs<br />

Boneless<br />

Family Pkg.<br />

$<br />

2 99 /lb<br />

NEW!<br />

Hillshire Farms<br />

Cheddurwurst or<br />

Polska Kielbasa<br />

13.5 oz.<br />

$<br />

3 49<br />

2/ $ 5<br />

Fresh<br />

Chicken Thighs<br />

Boneless<br />

Family Pkg.<br />

$<br />

1 49 /lb<br />

Fresh Chicken<br />

Drumsticks<br />

Family Pkg.<br />

99 ¢ /lb<br />

OPEN<br />

EVERYDAY!<br />

Rt. 14, Williamstown • 802-433-1038<br />

DEBIT EBT/SNAP Cards Welcome<br />

Jennifer and Morgan Churchill and their children Nora and Samuel are all smiles after Wonder Why<br />

OPEN AT 5:00AM WEEKDAYS & 6:00AM SAT. & SUN.<br />

Farm, their 235-head certified organic dairy farm in Cabot, Vermont, was named the Vermont Dairy<br />

Farm of the Year for 20<strong>19</strong>. (photo: Peggy Manahan/UVM Extension)<br />

OPEN UNTIL 10PM<br />

NIGHT & WEEKEND HELP!<br />

EVERY NIGHT THIS SUMMER!<br />

Stop by for an application! 20<strong>19</strong> Vermont Dairy Farm of the Year<br />

NOW CARRYING HEADY TOPPER AND OTHER GREAT VT CRAFT BEERS IN OUR ICE COLD CAVE! Wonder Why Farm, a 235-head<br />

certified organic dairy operation in<br />

Cabot, Vermont, has been named<br />

FRESH & LOCAL - MADE IN VERMONT SALE<br />

the 20<strong>19</strong> Vermont Dairy Farm of the<br />

Year.<br />

Morgan and Jennifer Churchill<br />

VT<br />

were selected for this award for their<br />

Maple<br />

overall excellence in dairying as well<br />

Syrup<br />

as their innovative ways to improve<br />

Butternut<br />

Butternut Farm<br />

Farm Bove’s Maple Cream Ben & Jerry’s Cabot herd management and produce<br />

12 oz. Squeeze Pasta Sauce Cookies Ice Cream Cheese high-quality milk, including installing<br />

robotic milkers in a Bottle<br />

24 oz.<br />

$<br />

2 99 14 oz.<br />

$<br />

4 49 Pint<br />

$<br />

3 99 8 oz. Bars<br />

$<br />

6 99 state-of-theart<br />

freestall barn.<br />

The Churchills currently milk 120<br />

cows in a Galaxy Astrea 20.20 automatic<br />

milking system, shipping their<br />

milk to Stonyfield Organics in<br />

Londonderry, New Hampshire.<br />

Daily milk production averages 70<br />

pounds per cow--or 21,350 pounds<br />

per year--with 3.9 percent butterfat<br />

and 3 percent protein, numbers<br />

attributable to good management<br />

practices, not only for cow comfort<br />

and health, but also for selective<br />

breeding for year-round calving.<br />

The couple bought the farm in<br />

2012 from Morgan’s uncle, Walter Churchill,<br />

after leasing it for several years, transitioning<br />

the older, low-input farm into a high-level<br />

operation able to support a profitable, sustainable<br />

dairy. Two years prior to purchasing<br />

the farm, they remodeled the existing tie-stall<br />

barn to milk more cows. Although it was the<br />

right solution at that time, retrofitting the<br />

barn was not a viable option to accommodate<br />

the new milking system, which they installed<br />

in 2015.<br />

They also wanted to be able to house all<br />

their animals under one roof, so they made<br />

the decision to construct a brand-new facility.<br />

With funding through a Dairy<br />

Improvement Grant from the Vermont Farm<br />

and Forest Viability Program and the<br />

Vermont Economic Development Authority,<br />

they built a new 24,000-sq.-ft. freestall barn<br />

for about $400,000, doing all but the steel<br />

framework themselves.<br />

Each 4 x 8-ft. stall in the well-ventilated<br />

barn has sand bedding for cow comfort with<br />

bedded pack in the maternity area. To avoid<br />

overcrowding, 10 stalls are always left empty.<br />

The facility also houses the robotic milking<br />

system, providing easy access for the milkers.<br />

The cows are fed round bales and 18<br />

pounds of grain and two pounds of molasses<br />

a day in addition to free-choice sodium bicarbonate,<br />

minerals, salt and kelp for better hair<br />

condition. The farmers have 295 acres of hay,<br />

which provides about 60 percent of their<br />

herd’s needs, and 120 acres of pasture.<br />

The Churchills also have a maple sugaring<br />

operation, producing an average of 700 gallons<br />

of syrup a year from their 400 buckets<br />

and 2,300 taps on pipeline. This year they<br />

planted four acres of hemp, which they will<br />

sell to a local buyer for oil.<br />

University of Vermont Extension and the<br />

Vermont Dairy Industry Association present<br />

the award annually to an exemplary dairy<br />

farm. The winner is honored at an awards<br />

banquet at Eastern States Exposition in West<br />

Springfield, Massachusetts, in September,<br />

and at the VDIA banquet at the Vermont<br />

Farm Show in Essex Junction in January.<br />

Other finalists for the award, listed alphabetically,<br />

were the Choiniere Family Farm,<br />

Highgate (Guy, Beth and Matt Choiniere);<br />

Savage View Farm (Dwight, Ryan and Travis<br />

Bullis); and Strafford Creamery, Strafford<br />

(Amy Huyffer and Earl Ransom).<br />

page 2 The WORLD August 7, 20<strong>19</strong>


L-R: Jenn White, Salvation Army of Barre Accepted Candidate; Lt. Heather West of the Barre Salvation<br />

Army: and Michelle Tansley, Salvation Army of Barre Advisory Board Member.<br />

The Salvation Army Teams Up<br />

With Walmart to “Stuff the Bus”<br />

Volunteers and community members support local<br />

children with school supply donations nationwide<br />

Walmart and The Salvation Army have collaborated<br />

for more than 30 years with a common<br />

mission: to meet needs in their local communities.<br />

Supporters like Walmart help The Salvation<br />

Army serve more than 23 million Americans<br />

each year through a range of social services to<br />

help them overcome poverty and economic<br />

hardships.<br />

The simple act of providing school supplies<br />

to students in need provides them a boost of<br />

self-confidence and sets them up for a positive<br />

and successful school year. All donations made<br />

at “Stuff the Bus” campaign events will remain<br />

in the local community and will help The Salvation<br />

Army provide back-to-school support to<br />

children in need.<br />

Walmart shoppers will receive a list of suggested<br />

supplies to help fill The Salvation Army’s<br />

bus or collection bin during the “Stuff the Bus”<br />

campaign event. The goal is to provide new<br />

school supplies to children in need of a fresh<br />

start to the school year.<br />

All donations will make a lasting impact on<br />

families. This simple act of kindness serves Central<br />

Vermont Preschoolers-College students.<br />

The Salvation Army will continue to collect<br />

school supplies through the month of August. If<br />

you would like to donate or are in need please<br />

contact The Salvation Army and speak to Lieutenant<br />

Heather West (802)476-5301.<br />

®<br />

OF BARRE<br />

HUNTER EDUCATION<br />

COURSE OFFERED<br />

Registration Monday,<br />

August 12, 6-8 P.M. at the<br />

Barre Fish & Game Club<br />

Gun Club Road<br />

Barre Town<br />

522-2499<br />

WHAT’S NEW IN BUSINESS<br />

Saturday, August 10 th<br />

Ice Cream Social &<br />

Back-to-School Specials!<br />

Chris Russell, Owner; Mesa, Dog<br />

Complete automotive detailing service.<br />

Inside & Out!<br />

Protect your vehicle for life!<br />

Long Lasting Beauty!<br />

Authorized System X<br />

Ceramic Protection Dealer.<br />

Located at Vt. Crossroad Auto<br />

145 Codling Rd., E. Montpelier<br />

223-3393 • Mon-Fri. 8-5<br />

August 8 - 14<br />

286 Waits River RD Bradford, VT 05033<br />

800-222-9316 Open Mon-Sat 8:30-5:30<br />

Friday Nights ‘til 8 PM, Closed Sundays<br />

25% OFF<br />

La-Z-Boy<br />

Up to 20% OFF<br />

Outdoor Furniture<br />

FREE Tastings<br />

from 12-3 PM<br />

Enter to Win<br />

Door Prizes from<br />

Vera Bradley &<br />

Baggallini!<br />

Drawing held August 10 th<br />

FREE Vera Bradley Lunch Bag<br />

with Full Priced Back Pack<br />

Purchases.<br />

(Excludes Hadley Backpack)<br />

FREE Gift with $50-75 purchases<br />

August 7, 20<strong>19</strong> The WORLD page 3


OFFICIAL VERMONT ANTIQUE AND CLASSIC CAR MEET PROGRAM • AUGUST 9, 10, 11, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

CELEBRATING<br />

101 YEARS<br />

IN MEMORY OF<br />

GAEL BOARDMAN<br />

shown here with<br />

his <strong>19</strong>18 Locomobile<br />

KEEP ON TRUCKING !!!<br />

WITH VERMONT FLANNEL<br />

MADE THE GOOD<br />

OLD FASHION WAY<br />

28 CHURCH ST. BURLINGTON<br />

162 VT RT. 15E JOHNSON • 13 ELM ST. WOODSTOCK<br />

5467 RT. 7 FERRISBURGH • 128 MILL ST. EAST BARRE<br />

VERMONTFLANNEL.COM<br />

See You At<br />

The Show!<br />

Since <strong>19</strong>74<br />

SERVICES<br />

802-223-6577<br />

4<strong>07</strong> BARRE ST. MONTPELIER<br />

Professional<br />

Carpet/Upholstery<br />

Cleaning & Maintenance<br />

100% Satisfaction Guaranteed<br />

or your money back.<br />

www.MontpelierCarpetCleaning.com<br />

FASHION SHOW JUDGING<br />

10:30 am at Farr Field.<br />

Costumes must be same era as year of vehicle.<br />

Changing room available.<br />

Downtown<br />

Waterbury<br />

STREET DANCE &<br />

ANTIQUE CAR<br />

PARADE<br />

Saturday, August 10<br />

3:30-5:30 pm Antique Car Parade through downtown<br />

6:00-9:00 pm Street Dance at Rusty Parker Park<br />

LIVE music from WDEV, beer garden,<br />

food trucks, dancing & kids activities<br />

This is a FREE event for the community. Sponsored by<br />

Revitalizing Waterbury and our partners at the Waterbury<br />

Rotary Club. Come on down for food, dancing and a<br />

great time at Rusty Parker Park.<br />

page 4 The WORLD August 7, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

244-5062<br />

52 North Main St.<br />

Waterbury<br />

Store Hours:<br />

MON.- FRI. 5:30am-10pm<br />

AT. & SUN. 7am-10pm<br />

WE ARE A<br />

VERMONT STATE<br />

LIQUOR STORE<br />

Mon.-Fri. 10:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.<br />

Sat. 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. • Closed Sun.<br />

Clothes • Music • Household Items<br />

Furniture • Cheap Art<br />

Jewelry • Books<br />

Antiques • Jerry T-shirts<br />

Jeezum Crow T-Shirts<br />

970 Rt. 2, Middlesex • Exit 9 on I-89 • 802-223-3302


Just a Sample of Many Just Good Autos!<br />

<strong>19</strong>84 LINCOLN<br />

MARK VII<br />

auto., sunroof, 5.0L HP V8,<br />

loaded, low miles, 110K<br />

$3,995<br />

<strong>19</strong>73 MERCURY<br />

COUGAR XR7<br />

CONVERTIBLE<br />

auto., PW, 88K<br />

$11,995<br />

EXTENDED WARRANTIES AVAILABLE<br />

JUST GOOD AUTOS<br />

Trades Welcome • Prices Negotiable<br />

296 E. Montpelier Rd • Rt. 14 North - Barre<br />

802-479-0140<br />

OFFICIAL VERMONT ANTIQUE AND CLASSIC CAR MEET PROGRAM • AUGUST 9, 10, 11, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

A permanent “Vermont Antique and Classic Car” show planning committee” of over 20 VAE<br />

members meets monthly year ‘round to bring fresh ideas to each year’s edition of the Show.<br />

These same volunteers will spend upwards to a week or more at Farr’s Field as well, preparing the<br />

show field for the influx of antique vehicles of all types. Marking the field for 400 + automotive<br />

flea market vendors takes more than a day with a crew of six running line and driving stakes. Most<br />

are on duty throughout the three days, living in campers or RVs at the field. Food is prepared on<br />

site at the “compound” for work crews. It may not be gourmet, but its fresh and satisfying. Come<br />

Sunday morning, there’s a free Judges Breakfast at the Firemen’s food tent. Upwards to 100 volunteers<br />

are recruited to be judges in order to complete the task of technical inspections for 300-400<br />

qualifying vehicles in time for an early afternoon awards program. Yes, there’s a lot of camaraderie<br />

each August at Farr’s Field. Consider volunteering while at the show.<br />

BUILDING GARAGES<br />

FROM FLOOR TO ROOF<br />

Starting At $ 10,500<br />

24 x 24 garage, 6” concrete floors with steel<br />

rebar, (2) 7 x 9 garage doors, one entry door.<br />

Garages to your specifications, any size.<br />

House Framing & Addition Work<br />

Call 802-296-1522 • Ask for Ray<br />

20<strong>19</strong> SCHEDULE OF EVENTS<br />

Spectator admission $12 US Funds per day<br />

Friday, August 9, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

7:00 am - 6:00 pm Food concession on the<br />

field.<br />

8:00 am - 6:00 pm Eligible vehicles register<br />

and pick up registration packet at Farr Field.<br />

8:00 am Flea Market and Car Corral open for<br />

business.<br />

8:00 am - 5:00 pm Car Corral spaces available<br />

for $40 per vehicle at show. Vehicles<br />

must be driven into the car corral.<br />

11:00 am Judges’ training at the Judges’ tent.<br />

Saturday, August 10, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

7:00 am - 6pm Food concession on the field.<br />

8:00 am - 3 :30 pm Show Vehicle Registration.<br />

Show cars remain on the field until the<br />

parade starts at 3:30 pm.<br />

8:00 am Flea Market and Car Corral open for<br />

business.<br />

10:30 am Fashion Show Judging at Farr Field.<br />

(Costumes must be same era as year of vehicle.)<br />

Changing room available.<br />

11:00 am Hot Wheels Racing<br />

WE GUARANTEE YOU WILL<br />

SAVE $1,000 IN CREDIT CARD<br />

PROCESSING FEES OR WE<br />

WILL PAY YOU $1,000<br />

CALL DAN AT 802-249-0606<br />

CENTRAL VERMONT RESIDENT<br />

DATAINSURE.COM<br />

Children 12 and under Free<br />

Saturday, August 10, 20<strong>19</strong> continued<br />

11:00 am Judges’ training at the Judges’ tent.<br />

1:00 pm Senior Class Judging and Youth<br />

Judging Program.<br />

3:30 pm Parade vehicles leave the field on<br />

the parade route, passing the reviewing stand<br />

in Waterbury Village.<br />

6:00 pm- 9:00 pm Street Dance in Waterbury<br />

Village at the Rusty Parker Park near the<br />

restored 1875 Railroad Station.<br />

Sunday, August 11, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

7:00 am - 4:00 pm Food concession on the<br />

field.<br />

7:00 am Judges Breakfast.<br />

8:00 am Judges Training.<br />

8:00 am - 2:00 pm Flea Market and Car Corral<br />

open for business.<br />

9:00 am Technical Judging begins; all Vehicles<br />

to be judged MUST be parked in class<br />

on field by 9:30 am.<br />

11:00 am Valve Cover Racing.<br />

1:30 pm Senior Awards, to be followed by<br />

Class Awards.<br />

SPECIAL EXHIBITS!!<br />

ANTIQUE RACE CARS<br />

& TRACTORS<br />

“Best<br />

Maple<br />

Creemees<br />

in New<br />

England”<br />

-Yankee<br />

Magazine<br />

NOW<br />

OPEN<br />

DAILY<br />

9-8<br />

Great food<br />

at great prices!<br />

Serving<br />

Breakfast, Lunch& Dinner<br />

All-You-Can-Eat<br />

Pasta Night<br />

Fridays 5-8 pm<br />

$9.99<br />

At the Park in Waterbury Village<br />

7 Park Row, Waterbury<br />

(802) 244-5111<br />

COOL OFF<br />

with a Morse Farm<br />

Real Maple<br />

and Chocolate<br />

CREEMEES!<br />

802.223.2740 www.morsefarm.com<br />

1168 County Road Montpelier<br />

just 2.7 miles up Montpelier’s Main St. from the roundabout...<br />

“The Talk of the Town”<br />

Sunday Buffet<br />

8-Noon<br />

$9.99<br />

PLUS Sundaes,<br />

Milkshakes,<br />

Waffle Cones<br />

& New Maple<br />

Creemee<br />

Canollis!<br />

Need A Good Used SUV, Car Or Truck?<br />

WE HAVE 80 IN STOCK - Starting at $4000<br />

VINTAGE RESTORED<br />

CARS & TRUCKS<br />

SEE US HERE AT THE SHOW OR AT...<br />

EAST BARRE AUTO SALES<br />

864 EAST BARRE RD | EAST BARRE, VT<br />

EASTBARREAUTOSALES.COM<br />

802-476-5370 | CELL: 802-272-2003<br />

LOTTERY &<br />

SCRATCH OFF<br />

TICKETS<br />

Vermont Travelers’ Service Center<br />

STORE • DELI • INFORMATION<br />

BEER CAVE • CLEAN FACILITIES<br />

Conveniently located off<br />

Exit 7 of I-89 - Berlin, VT<br />

Look for Our Other Maplewood Locations in Central Vermont<br />

August 7, 20<strong>19</strong> The WORLD page 5


CENTRAL<br />

VERMONT’S<br />

BEST<br />

COUNTRY<br />

UB_20<strong>19</strong>CommercialAd_The<strong>World</strong>_5x5.5_OUTPUT.pdf 1 4/2/<strong>19</strong> 2:14 PM<br />

“I value working with people, first & foremost,<br />

who you can trust.” — David Marvin, Butternut Mountain Farm<br />

Dan Driscoll<br />

FREE<br />

Estimates!<br />

Direct Repair For<br />

Most Major Insurance<br />

Companies<br />

CAPITOL H CITY’S<br />

• Green Technology<br />

• Guaranteed Repairs<br />

• Certified Technicians<br />

• Free Estimate<br />

• Expert Collision Repair<br />

• Courtesy Shuttle Available<br />

• State Of The Art Spray Booth<br />

• Wash & Vacuum Included<br />

page 6 The WORLD August 7, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

Commercial Banking<br />

800.753.4343<br />

GO.UBLOCAL.COM/commercial<br />

Banking local can get you there faster.<br />

WOODBURY<br />

AutoBody<br />

Rte. 2 • 1/2 mile E. of the Roundabout • Montpelier, VT<br />

In the Capitol City Kia Building<br />

223-6283<br />

Mon.-Fri. 7:30AM-5PM CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-691-3914<br />

Fastest<br />

Turn-Around<br />

Time!<br />

WATERBORNE<br />

PAINT SYSTEM<br />

ANY MAKE H ANY MODEL H ANY TIME<br />

Rachael Kelder<br />

Yes, we’re still here with the<br />

same quality service we’ve<br />

offered for over 30 years.<br />

Our experienced staff<br />

does it right and we<br />

guarantee our<br />

repairs 100%.<br />

Let us repair your vehicle<br />

and you get a<br />

$<br />

100 COUPON<br />

to put towards your<br />

deductible or<br />

unrelated damage.<br />

Capstone Community Action Hires New<br />

Director of Community Economic Development<br />

Capstone Community Action announced<br />

that Elizabeth “Liz” Scharf was hired as the<br />

new community economic development<br />

director. As a member of Capstone’s leadership<br />

team, Liz will work to support and grow<br />

programs that advance economic security<br />

for low income Vermonters through financial<br />

coaching, asset building, micro-business<br />

and workforce development.<br />

Liz has a background in the banking and<br />

credit union industry, and worked as<br />

Capstone’s savings and credit program coordinator<br />

as an AFCPE® Accredited Financial<br />

Counselor for the last five years. She brings a<br />

wealth of knowledge in personal finance and<br />

asset building to help Vermonters achieve<br />

economic well-being.<br />

Sue Minter, executive director of Capstone<br />

Community Action stated “I am delighted to<br />

VCIL Director Elected to Prestigious Post<br />

Sarah Launderville, executive director of<br />

a statewide disability rights organization,<br />

was elected president of the National<br />

Council on Independent Living recently.<br />

She ran unopposed for the position and<br />

was voted in for a two-year term at NCIL’s<br />

annual meeting on July 24 in Washington,<br />

D.C.<br />

Launderville said, “Our work at VCIL<br />

over the past 40 years has been to work in<br />

the community so people with disabilities<br />

can live as they choose. So many systems and<br />

policies have a bias toward people with disabilities.<br />

We, as people with disabilities,<br />

need to help shape these systems at the local,<br />

state and national level. Through NCIL we<br />

band together as advocates across the nation<br />

to work on policy priorities important in<br />

dismantling ableism and creating a world<br />

that allows for greater independence.”<br />

She added, “I’m honored to serve as NCIL<br />

president and look forward to the work<br />

ahead.”<br />

The Williamstown resident has headed up<br />

the Vermont Center for Independent Living<br />

since 2009. VCIL, a nonprofit organization<br />

directed and staffed by individuals with disabilities,<br />

works to promote the dignity, independence<br />

and civil rights of Vermonters<br />

with disabilities.<br />

NCIL is the longest-running national<br />

cross-disability, grassroots organization run<br />

Leahy: Vermont Receives $98,918 to Connect<br />

Schools and Local Farms Under Leahy-Authored<br />

Farm to School Program<br />

A program long championed by Senator<br />

Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) will invest $98,918 in<br />

bolstering efforts to bring local agriculture<br />

into the classrooms and cafeterias of Vermont<br />

schools. The U.S. Department of Agriculture<br />

(USDA) has announced Farm to School<br />

grants to connect child nutrition programs<br />

with local farmers.<br />

Leahy said: “Tying local agriculture to<br />

our schools not only provides our children<br />

with healthy meals and improved nutrition,<br />

it encourages a long standing connection to<br />

the farms that define our Green Mountain<br />

State. Every student deserves equal access<br />

to healthy meals, and I’m proud that our<br />

school nutrition leaders will use these funds<br />

to help all children gain a better understand<br />

about where their food comes from. This<br />

announcement is another example of how<br />

Vermont continues to lead the nation in<br />

implementing this effective strategy.”<br />

The Vermont Agency of Agriculture, Food<br />

and Markets received a $98,918 grant to<br />

strengthen farm to school programing in 20<br />

schools in Franklin and Grand Isle counties.<br />

Project partners, including Hunger Free<br />

Vermont, VT FEED, and the Healthy Roots<br />

Collaborative, will work with schools to integrate<br />

farm to school activities into curriculums.<br />

Together, these activities will<br />

strengthen the local agricultural economy in<br />

northwestern Vermont and increase the<br />

health and wellness of students. This grant<br />

builds on the Agency’s 2015 Farm to School<br />

training grant focused on encouraging<br />

Vermont supply chain partners to engage in<br />

agriculture learning in schools.<br />

“This important support is great news for<br />

the people living and working in Franklin<br />

and Grand Isle Counties,” said Vermont<br />

Secretary of Agriculture, Food, and Markets<br />

Anson Tebbetts. “This important project<br />

will help schools, students and Vermont’s<br />

farmers. We look forward to working with<br />

all the partners on this project.”<br />

This award was part of more than $9 million<br />

in grants for 126 projects across 42 states<br />

• • •<br />

• • •<br />

have Liz as part of our senior management<br />

team and leading the organization’s community<br />

economic development department. I<br />

know she will bring great talent and dedication<br />

to champion successful and innovative<br />

programs that grow Capstone’s impact<br />

throughout Central Vermont.”<br />

Capstone Community Action was founded<br />

in <strong>19</strong>65 and works to move Vermonters<br />

out of poverty and create economic opportunity<br />

and strong communities. Capstone’s<br />

programs include: emergency food, heat and<br />

housing assistance, financial empowerment<br />

and workforce development, child and family<br />

development programs in Early Head<br />

Start/Head Start, and weatherization. It provides<br />

over 16,000 services to central<br />

Vermonters through these programs each<br />

year. http://www.capstonevt.org.<br />

by and for people with disabilities. Founded<br />

in <strong>19</strong>82, NCIL represents thousands of individuals<br />

with disabilities and organizations,<br />

including centers for independent living,<br />

statewide independent living councils and<br />

other organizations that advocate for the<br />

human and civil rights of people with disabilities<br />

throughout the United States. NCIL<br />

carries out its mission by assisting member<br />

CILs and SILCs in building their capacity to<br />

promote social change, eliminate disabilitybased<br />

discrimination and create opportunities<br />

for people with disabilities to participate<br />

in the legislative process to effect<br />

change.<br />

that were announced this week as part of a<br />

program that Leahy championed in the creation<br />

of the child nutrition bill of 2010, the<br />

Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act. These projects<br />

are expected to serve more than 3.2 million<br />

students in over 5,400 schools nationwide.<br />

Since the program began awarding<br />

grants seven years ago, Vermont has received<br />

more than $585,000 in federal funding.<br />

Results from the 2015 USDA Farm to School<br />

Census showed that schools with strong<br />

farm to school programs are seeing reductions<br />

in plate waste, increases in school meal<br />

participation rates, and an increased willingness<br />

on the part of children to try new foods,<br />

notably fruits and vegetables. Students at<br />

Vermont schools with Farm to School programs<br />

were above the state and national<br />

averages for fruit and vegetable consumption.<br />

The Leahy-authored USDA Farm to<br />

School program receives $5 million per year<br />

in annual appropriations. As Vice Chairman<br />

of the Senate Appropriations Committee,<br />

Leahy has been instrumental in securing<br />

additional discretionary funding for this<br />

important program through annual appropriations<br />

bills. Earlier this year, Leahy and<br />

Senator David Perdue (R–GA) introduced<br />

bipartisan legislation to raise the program’s<br />

funding level from $5 million to $15 million,<br />

and increase the maximum grant award to<br />

$250,000. The legislation also expands the<br />

scope of the program to include pre-schools,<br />

summer food service programs, and afterschool<br />

programs, and it enhances access to<br />

tribal foods and other farming, such as aquaculture.<br />

The legislation also helps grantees<br />

improve procurement and distribution of<br />

local food.<br />

Leahy added: “In Vermont we’ve long<br />

seen the benefits of farm to school programs<br />

in addressing child hunger. Since we started<br />

the USDA program, grant applications have<br />

far exceed the funds available. It is time we<br />

provide additional support to this commonsense<br />

strategy.”


VT Educational Employee Statewide<br />

Bargaining Reaches Impasse<br />

• • •<br />

Students in the News<br />

The Employer and Employee<br />

Commissioners on Public School Employee<br />

Health Benefits met again yesterday to try to<br />

reach agreement on the relative shares of<br />

health insurance premiums and out-of-pocket<br />

expenses that will be paid by Vermont<br />

taxpayers and education employees.<br />

Unfortunately, despite the school board<br />

commissioners presenting a new proposal<br />

that incorporates additional union requests<br />

and reflects our commitment to balancing<br />

high quality, generous benefits that are sustainable<br />

and affordable for taxpayers, the<br />

Commission was unable to reach agreement.<br />

The two parties will now go to mediation.<br />

The school employers’ team’s proposal<br />

will provide high quality benefits while containing<br />

health care costs. The union representatives<br />

on the commission have so far not<br />

provided data on how much their proposal<br />

will increase costs to taxpayers, despite previous<br />

requests for this crucial information.<br />

The school employers’ team is unwilling<br />

to agree to any proposal without fully understanding<br />

its cost and evaluating whether it is<br />

affordable for Vermont’s school districts and<br />

their supporting taxpayers.<br />

The meeting today marks the end of the<br />

scheduled negotiating process. We will now<br />

enter into mediation with school employee<br />

commission representatives on August 1st,<br />

and continue to work to reach an agreement<br />

that provides generous healthcare benefits to<br />

school employees while ensuring these benefits<br />

are financially sustainable and affordable<br />

for Vermont taxpayers.<br />

While we are disappointed the<br />

Commission was unable to reach an agreement<br />

via direct bargaining, we remain committed<br />

to working for a resolution through<br />

the mediation process.<br />

PERFORMANCE GEAR<br />

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Local Student Graduates<br />

from Bryant University<br />

Caitlyn Bashara of Montpelier, VT, graduated<br />

Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Arts<br />

degree in Communication. Bashara joins a<br />

powerful network of more than 50,000<br />

alumni who are inspired to excel and have<br />

distinguished themselves as leaders in their<br />

organizations and communities around the<br />

world.<br />

Montpelier Student<br />

Named to Dean’s List at<br />

Lawrence University<br />

Lawrence University released its 20<strong>19</strong><br />

Dean’s List, an annual honor roll of students<br />

demonstrating exemplary academic performance.<br />

Harriet Porter of Montpelier, VT, was<br />

among the Lawrence students earning<br />

Dean’s List recognition for the 2018-<strong>19</strong> academic<br />

year.<br />

The Dean’s List is compiled at the end of<br />

the academic year once all grades have been<br />

recorded. To make the Dean’s List, a student<br />

must have earned at least 36 units in<br />

Lawrence courses during the year and have<br />

earned a GPA of at least 3.5.<br />

Local Student Named to<br />

Dean’s List at<br />

University of Rochester<br />

Fiona Nichols-Fleming, a senior majoring<br />

in physics & astronomy at the University of<br />

Rochester, has been named to the Dean’s<br />

List for academic achievement for the spring<br />

20<strong>19</strong> semester.<br />

Nichols-Fleming, a resident of West<br />

Berlin, Vt., is the child of James Nichols-<br />

Fleming and Diane Nichols-Fleming, and a<br />

graduate of U-32 High School in Montpelier,<br />

Vt.<br />

The University of Rochester, founded in<br />

1850, is a private research university located<br />

in Rochester, N.Y., (pop. 212,000) on the<br />

south shore of Lake Ontario. The University<br />

offers a unique undergraduate curriculum,<br />

with no required courses, that emphasizes a<br />

broad liberal education through majors,<br />

minors, and course “clusters”—a Rochester<br />

innovation—in the three main areas of<br />

knowledge: humanities, social sciences, and<br />

physical sciences/engineering. The<br />

University (on the Web at www.rochester.<br />

edu) is also home to the world-renowned<br />

Eastman School of Music as well as graduate<br />

professional schools of business, education,<br />

medicine, and nursing.<br />

Local Students Graduate<br />

from University of Utah<br />

The University of Utah congratulates<br />

8,465 students who received their academic<br />

degrees on May 2, 20<strong>19</strong>. The following local<br />

students earned degrees:<br />

Brennan Degen of Moretown, VT, graduated<br />

with a Bachelor of Science in Biomedical<br />

Engineering.<br />

John O’Shea of Waitsfield, VT, graduated<br />

with a Bachelor of Science in Quantitative<br />

Analysis of Markets and Organizations.<br />

Local Students Named to<br />

Dean’s List at<br />

Worcester Polytechnic<br />

Institute<br />

The following local residents were among<br />

1,598 students from Worcester Polytechnic<br />

Institute (WPI) named to the university’s<br />

Dean’s List for academic excellence for the<br />

spring 20<strong>19</strong> semester.<br />

• Benjamin Slattery of Richmond, Vt., is a<br />

member of the class of 2021 majoring in<br />

computer science, and humanities and arts.<br />

• Evan Llewellyn of Waterbury, Vt., is a<br />

member of the class of 2022 majoring in<br />

computer science.<br />

The criteria for the WPI Dean’s List differs<br />

from most other universities as WPI<br />

does not compute a grade point average<br />

(GPA). Instead, WPI defines the Dean’s List<br />

by the amount of work completed at the<br />

A-level in courses and projects.<br />

UMF Announces Dean’s<br />

List for Spring 20<strong>19</strong><br />

Semester<br />

The University of Maine at Farmington is<br />

proud to announce its Dean’s List for the<br />

spring 20<strong>19</strong> semester. Located in the heart<br />

of Maine’s four-season outdoor recreational<br />

region, UMF is nationally recognized for its<br />

academic excellence, affordability and graduates’<br />

positive career outcomes.<br />

UMF maintains a Dean’s List each semester<br />

for those students completing a minimum<br />

of 12 credits in courses producing<br />

quality points. Students whose grade point<br />

average for the semester is equal to or greater<br />

than 3.8 are listed with high academic<br />

achievement. Students whose grade point<br />

average for the semester is less than 3.8 but<br />

equal to or greater than 3.5 are listed with<br />

academic achievement. Any incompletes<br />

must be satisfactorily completed before the<br />

student is honored with Dean’s List status.<br />

Brattleboro: Vanessa Brown,<br />

Essex Junction: Colleen Messier,<br />

Grand Isle: Bailey Blow,<br />

Graniteville: Haley Kerin,<br />

Lyndonville: Alyssa Leonard,<br />

North Springfield: Breanna Vittum,<br />

Pittsfield: Colby Stevens,<br />

Saint Johnsbury: Jessica Brink,<br />

South Burlington: Daniel Terhune,<br />

Williston: Kyla Antonioli,<br />

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CONTACT US<br />

editor@vt-world.com<br />

sales@vt-world.com<br />

www.vt-world.com<br />

Telephone<br />

(802)479-2582<br />

1-800-639-9753<br />

Fax:<br />

(802)479-7916<br />

403 Route 302-Berlin, Barre, VT 05641<br />

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Route 5, Lyndonville, VT<br />

Mon. thru Fri. 9-5, Sat. 9-3, Sun. Closed<br />

1-800-439-5996<br />

296 Meadow St., Littleton, NH<br />

4584 U.S. Rte. 5, Newport, VT<br />

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PUBLIC LIBRARY<br />

Again the Friends of the Aldrich Library have had a successful<br />

summer Book Sale held during the Barre Heritage<br />

Festival! As usual many people worked very hard to make<br />

this another big event for the Friends and the library. We all<br />

have been sorting books all year long with donations cheerfully<br />

received from so many people! We thank you for<br />

remembering us when you cleaned out the books in your<br />

homes. Even the weather cooperated!!<br />

There were so many people who helped us including L.<br />

Brown who let us store boxes of sorted books at their business<br />

during the year, Jerf ’s Tent Rental, Jeff Bergeron who<br />

supplies tables from the BOR, Price Chopper for the paper<br />

93 South Main Street, Northfield, VT 05663<br />

Tel: (802) 485-4621 Fax: (802) 485-4990<br />

Email: bplibdirector@gmail.com<br />

http://www.brownpubliclibrary.org<br />

Don’t Miss Our Annual Labor Day Raffle!<br />

Stop in for tickets on various prizes in our Labor Day<br />

Raffle on sale NOW thru Labor Day weekend. Prizes include<br />

a twin size quilt (made by Cynthia Bushey), Soup of the<br />

Month (made & donated by Gail Hall), Ukulele & lesson<br />

donated by Larry Garland, gift basket with misc. gifts<br />

(donated by Sherri Brickey) and more to come. Tickets are<br />

$5.00 each or 3 for $10.00.<br />

Come check out the prizes, buy some tickets & support<br />

your library.<br />

Attn: Middle and High Schoolers!!<br />

Celebrate the Universe of Books with our Summer Book<br />

Group.<br />

What: Read The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.<br />

The Cutler Memorial Library<br />

has new and improved hours!<br />

Sunday, Tuesday, Thursday 2-8pm •Fridays 10am-6pm<br />

People, Animals & Monsters!<br />

Reusing stuff from our everyday lives, we’ll put our imaginations<br />

to work to craft animals, monsters, and people from<br />

buttons, bottle caps, fabric scraps, etc.! A craft workshop for<br />

kids 3-13, with a recycling message and a story book. With<br />

John Jose, School Zero Waste Coordinator for the Central<br />

Vermont Solid Waste District.<br />

FREE! Friday, August 16th from 4:30 to 6 pm<br />

Zookeepers Concert for Jeudevine<br />

Expansion Fund<br />

The indie rock band David Rosane & the Zookeepers won<br />

the 20<strong>19</strong> Tammy Award for the best Vermont Album. They<br />

will be performing at the Hardwick Town House on Saturday,<br />

August 17 at 7pm by donation at the door. All proceeds will<br />

go to the Jeudevine Expansion Fund. This is a high energy<br />

band which should rock the hall!<br />

For the second summer in a row they are touring Vermont<br />

libraries, donating their creativity to 16 libraries. This year’s<br />

tour title is “Across the Zoo-niverse,” paralleling with the<br />

Summer Reading Program theme used by libraries all over<br />

the country: “A Universe of Stories.”<br />

The trio includes frontman David Rosane with partners in<br />

crime musicians and community activists Don Sinclair &<br />

Jennifer Grossi, of Bradford, Vermont. Bandmate Jennifer<br />

Grossi said “In many communities in Vermont, libraries are<br />

the only places some people can access the Internet. And<br />

we’re lucky in Vermont - there are more libraries here per<br />

capita than in any other state!” They describe their music as<br />

Indie folk-rock/pop and rather ‘nerdy,’ as they are academics,<br />

teachers and community activists by day, hence the<br />

library tour. Watch a video they made for the tour: https://<br />

w w w . y o u t u b e . c o m / w a t c h ? t i m e _<br />

continue=5&v=IYdi1rSAXYE<br />

6 Washington Street<br />

Barre, VT 05641<br />

Phone: (802) 476-7550<br />

www.aldrichpubliclibrary.org<br />

Brown Public<br />

Library<br />

Cutler Memorial Library<br />

151 High Street (Route 2), Plainfield<br />

info@cutlerlibrary.org • 454-8504<br />

Jeudevine<br />

Memorial Library<br />

Hardwick<br />

• • •<br />

• • •<br />

bags (at noon on Saturday it’s “Fill Your Bag for $1”),<br />

CVSWMD who leave recycling boxes for us on Saturday<br />

after the sale. The library staff were big supporters and<br />

encouraged donations. Then, of course, there are the Friends<br />

and their friends who worked throughout the year sorting,<br />

boxing, carrying books and storing them! Then moving all<br />

the books from downstairs in the library out to the lawn! A<br />

BIG job!<br />

There are too many names to include here, but we all are<br />

so grateful to everyone who helped make this a wonderful<br />

and profitable event - over $3400, all going to the library.<br />

It was a wonderful celebration for Barre - congratulations<br />

to the Barre Heritage Festival organizers and congratulations<br />

to our terrific library. We all should be proud to have this<br />

library in our great city!<br />

Christine Litchfield, Friends of the Aldrich Public Library,<br />

President<br />

When: Then join us in August for a night of pizza and discussion.<br />

How: Start reading & contact Rebecca by email, note or<br />

come to the Youth Services Desk at the library.<br />

Contact: bplyouthlib@gmail.com<br />

Looking for something fun to do this summer? Stop in &<br />

ask about our passes to ECHO Museum, Billings Farm &<br />

Museum, Shelburne Farms and VT State Parks!<br />

Don’t Miss Storytime on Mondays and Thursdays with our<br />

new youth librarian, Rebecca Pearish.<br />

Storytime is from 10-11am. We read a story & do a craft.<br />

Bring your children/grandchildren.<br />

Everyone is Welcome!!! You do not need a library card<br />

to enjoy our Storytimes!<br />

Storytime Themes:<br />

• August 8: Community<br />

• August 10: Storytime at DOG RIVER PARK @ 1PM<br />

• August <strong>19</strong>: Vegetables<br />

• August 22: Singalong<br />

When visiting the library, stop in to our BPL Book Store.<br />

We have some great donated books for all interests. When<br />

the library is open, the bookstore is open.<br />

• • •<br />

• • •<br />

Zookeepers, left to right: Don Sinclair, David Rosane, Jennifer<br />

Grossi<br />

There will be an opening set by Kyle Woolard of West<br />

Glover who is part of the band The Anatomy of Frank. He<br />

was recently featured at the Highland Center for the Arts.<br />

Find him at www.theanatomyoffrank.com.<br />

For a full list of locations and libraries, visit the band’s<br />

website www.davidandthezoo.com or Facebook page<br />

https://www.facebook.com/davidrosaneandthezookeepers/<br />

There will be refreshments! For more information call the<br />

Jeudevine Library at 472-5948.<br />

page 8 The WORLD August 7, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

Jaquith Library Summer Concert Series<br />

August 15 Big Hat No Cattle plays old and new songs with a<br />

vintage western vibe. Danceable and fun, western swing is a<br />

rich melting pot of styles, including swing-era jazz, honkytonk<br />

country, frontier fiddle tunes, cowboy songs, and more.<br />

The band is: Kevin Macneil Brown (vocals, steel guitar, guitar),<br />

Michael Ricciarelli (vocals, guitar, fiddle, mandolin),<br />

David Blythe (bass, vocals), Danny McHugh (drums). Food<br />

vendor: Papagyros<br />

Old Schoolhouse Common<br />

122 School St. Room #2<br />

Marshfield, Vt 05658<br />

802-426-3581<br />

Jaquith Public Library Family Fun Nights<br />

for People of all Ages<br />

Wed, August 7 at 6:45 p.m. - Space Cowboy Sing-a-long:<br />

Harness your horse or spaceship and come on down for<br />

some vittles, yarns and songs.<br />

Fri., August 16 at 7 p.m. – Zookeepers: Spend a summer<br />

evening with David Rosane and the Zookeepers to fill your<br />

heart and soul with meaningful melodies and mirth.


Vermont Veterans Welcome the LEGION Act<br />

The signing of the LEGION Act by<br />

President Trump immediately laid out the<br />

welcome mat to thousands of Vermont veterans<br />

who previously were deemed by<br />

Congress to be ineligible to join The<br />

American Legion. Now the LEGION Act<br />

offers membership eligibility in The<br />

American Legion to any U.S. military veteran<br />

who served at least one day of active military<br />

duty since Dec. 7, <strong>19</strong>41, and was honorably<br />

discharged or is currently serving. In<br />

effect, the Act extends the “war period” from<br />

Dec. 7, <strong>19</strong>41 to a time when Congress determines<br />

that the United States is no longer at<br />

war.<br />

Implementation of the LEGION Act (Let<br />

Everyone Get Involved In Opportunities for<br />

Statewide Alliance Plans for 2020:<br />

100th Anniversary of Women’s Right to Vote<br />

National Service Act) opens the door giving<br />

thousands of Vermont veterans access to<br />

American Legion programs and benefits for<br />

which they previously had not been eligible.<br />

Moreover the eligibility for membership in<br />

other elements of the Legion Family - the<br />

Sons of The American Legion and American<br />

Legion Auxiliary - will also change with<br />

more veterans eligible to join The American<br />

Legion. For example, any son or grandson of<br />

a veteran now eligible to join, The American<br />

Legion member would be able to join the<br />

SAL program. Similarly membership in the<br />

American Legion Auxiliary would be open<br />

to grandmothers, mothers, sisters, wives,<br />

and adopted female descendants of veterans<br />

now eligible to join The American Legion.<br />

Women got the vote in <strong>19</strong>20: that’s within<br />

our grandparents’ or great-grandparents’<br />

lifetimes - not so long ago.<br />

Next year, 2020, marks the 100th anniversary.<br />

The Vermont Suffrage Centennial<br />

Alliance (VSCA), an energetic and expanding<br />

statewide group of volunteers led by the<br />

League of Women Voters of Vermont, is<br />

dedicated to informing Vermonters of the<br />

history and outcomes of women’s suffrage<br />

and engaging them in the ongoing quest for<br />

equal rights and citizenship.<br />

The work of VSCA is guided by the talents<br />

and expertise of a wide variety of writers,<br />

educators and historians volunteering their<br />

time to mark this important milestone.<br />

Along with historian Lyn Blackwell, Rachel<br />

Onuf of the Vermont Historical Records<br />

Program, based at the State Archives and<br />

Records Administration, heads up VSCA’s<br />

History and Research subcommittee.<br />

Describing our state’s final push for women’s<br />

suffrage, Onuf stated, “Thanks to an unreceptive<br />

Governor, Percival Clement,<br />

Vermont missed the chance to be the<br />

‘Victory State,’ the final state needed for ratification<br />

of the <strong>19</strong>th Amendment to the<br />

Constitution. This wasn’t due to a lack of<br />

effort on the part of supporters of the suffrage<br />

movement. Governor Clement<br />

received over 1,600 telegrams and letters<br />

urging him to call a special session of the<br />

legislature to vote on ratification, and 400<br />

women marched to Montpelier to make that<br />

appeal in person, but the anti-suffrage<br />

Governor was unmoved, claiming Vermont<br />

couldn’t afford the expense of a special legislative<br />

session. Thus, the way was opened for<br />

Tennessee, which became the ‘Victory State’<br />

in August of <strong>19</strong>20.”<br />

The VSCA intends to share the stories of<br />

Vermont Equal Suffrage Association members<br />

who marched on the capitol on that<br />

rainy day in April, as well as their predecessors<br />

in the movement. “Along with telling<br />

the Vermont suffrage story,” reflects Sue<br />

Racanelli, League President and director of<br />

the Alliance, “we recognize the complex<br />

racial and economic schisms within the suffrage<br />

movement. In addition to the history<br />

we explore how the fight for voting rights,<br />

particularly for women of color, continues to<br />

this day. The Alliance has developed a<br />

pledge to support all the ways Vermont<br />

makes voting easy and accessible. We want<br />

to inspire voters to appreciate and exercise<br />

their right to vote.”<br />

VSCA encourages Vermonters to discover<br />

and contribute their own family stories, and<br />

to remind their local historical societies,<br />

libraries, museums and schools to incorporate<br />

this important centennial in events,<br />

exhibits and programs. Joining other statewide<br />

efforts across the nation, VSCA will<br />

host a major event in August 2020 in<br />

Montpelier, featuring a parade and gathering<br />

with speakers, music and performances on<br />

the State House lawn. Leading up to that,<br />

they will host Fun Runs, lectures, and arts<br />

events around the state. They will also feature<br />

centennial-themed events of other organizations<br />

on their events calendar. Find<br />

them at vtsuffrage2020.org and @<br />

VTSuffrage2020.<br />

The Summer of <strong>19</strong>69 from Easy Rider to Woodstock<br />

On Thursday, August 15th , Allan Mackey<br />

will present a workshop titled The Summer<br />

of <strong>19</strong>69, from Easy Rider to Woodstock, at<br />

the Montpelier Senior Activity Center<br />

(MSAC) Community Room from 1:00 PM<br />

to 3:15 PM. Mackey still remembers his<br />

excitement when he first heard Little Richard<br />

belt out “Long Tall Sally” at the first Rock ‘n’<br />

Roll concert in Philadelphia in <strong>19</strong>56. Ever<br />

since he has called himself a “Prisoner of<br />

Rock ‘n’ Roll”.<br />

Mackey taught one of the first courses in<br />

Rock ‘n’ Roll history in America at the<br />

Community College of Vermont in <strong>19</strong>73.<br />

Since then he has developed presentations<br />

on artists from the <strong>19</strong>70’s and 80’s including<br />

Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty, Van Morrison<br />

and Neil Young. In 2017 he presented a program<br />

at MSAC celebrating the release of the<br />

Beatles’ “Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts<br />

Club Band” album, the Haight-Ashbury<br />

scene and the “Summer of Love - <strong>19</strong>67”.<br />

He observed, “The middle of the summer<br />

of ‘69 between July 14 and August 18 provided<br />

some of the most intense cultural<br />

moments of any summer in the 20th century.<br />

Woodstock began on August 15, <strong>19</strong>69 and we<br />

are now celebrating that momentous event<br />

Montpelier Senior<br />

Activity Center<br />

58 Barre Street, Montpelier • 802-223-2518<br />

exactly fifty years later! For this participatory<br />

presentation, we will focus on all the earth<br />

shaking events of that tumultuous summer<br />

and the widening divide between mainstream<br />

America and the counterculture<br />

movement.”<br />

“From the release of the film Easy Rider to<br />

the Woodstock Festival, we will talk about<br />

the musical, cultural and political events of<br />

that summer,” he continued. “These events<br />

will be highlighted with several video clips.<br />

Participants will be encouraged to share<br />

their reminiscences with those who missed<br />

that summer.”<br />

A donation of $5 for MSAC members and<br />

$10 for the general public is suggested but no<br />

one will be turned away for lack of payment.<br />

For more information visit http://www.<br />

montpelier-vt.org/msac or call (802) 223-<br />

2518.<br />

The Montpelier Senior Activity Center, a<br />

division of the City of Montpelier, provides<br />

older adults in Central Vermont with lifelong<br />

learning opportunities, fitness and movement<br />

programs, cultural events, and nutritious<br />

meals. For more information, visit<br />

www.montpelier-vt.org/msac.<br />

Hunter Ed Courses Are Being Held Now<br />

Vermont Fish & Wildlife says anyone<br />

interested in taking a hunter education<br />

course should consider doing so this summer,<br />

because fewer courses will be available<br />

later in the year.<br />

“Invariably many people are disappointed<br />

when they can’t find a hunter education<br />

course being given in the fall,” said Nicole<br />

Meier with Vermont Fish & Wildlife’s Hunter<br />

Education Program. “We actually have more<br />

courses available now because many of our<br />

certified volunteer instructors have more<br />

time to give the courses before hunting seasons<br />

begin.”<br />

• • •<br />

• • •<br />

• • •<br />

“While more classes will be added through<br />

September, if a course opens up now, this is<br />

the time to sign up for it! Don’t wait until the<br />

last minute.”<br />

Completion of a free course is required<br />

prior to purchasing a person’s first Vermont<br />

hunting, bow hunting or trapping license.<br />

Upcoming courses and information are<br />

listed on the Vermont Fish & Wildlife website<br />

(https://vtfishandwildlife.com/<br />

node/129) as they are scheduled by instructors.<br />

For more information about hunter<br />

education in Vermont call 802-828-1<strong>19</strong>3.<br />

This Week at Bragg Farm<br />

Cate Farm<br />

Tomatoes<br />

have arrived!<br />

Organic & Picked Fresh Daily!<br />

Local Blueberries Have Arrived<br />

NOW OPEN DAILY<br />

8:30 - 8:00<br />

DON’T PUT OFF ‘TIL TOMORROW<br />

WHAT YOU CAN SELL TODAY!<br />

479-2582<br />

Or Toll Free 1-800-639-9753 ~ Central Vermont’s Newspaper<br />

403 U.S. Route 302 - Berlin • Barre, VT 05641<br />

20<strong>19</strong><br />

Farm Critters &<br />

Children's Play Area!<br />

BRONZE<br />

www.braggfarm.com<br />

Awarded the 20<strong>19</strong><br />

Bronze Quality Award<br />

A COMMITMENT TO QUALITY<br />

We are grateful to our providers, staff,<br />

volunteers, and patient and family advisors for<br />

their efforts to support the delivery of high-quality,<br />

person-centered resident care and services.<br />

ABOUT THE AWARD<br />

The 20<strong>19</strong> Bronze - Commitment to Quality Award is given by<br />

the American Health Care Association and National Center for<br />

Assisted Living (AHCA/NCAL). The award honors long term<br />

and post-acute care providers that have demonstrated their<br />

commitment to improving the quality of care for seniors and<br />

individuals with disabilities. Woodridge Rehabilitation and Nursing<br />

is one of four facilities to receive this Bronze Quality Award.<br />

UVMHealth.org/CVMC/Woodridge<br />

Enjoy Our "Cool"<br />

Summer Treats<br />

• “<strong>World</strong>’s Best” Maple &<br />

Chocolate Creemees<br />

• Maple Blueberry and<br />

Maple Strawberry<br />

Milkshakes<br />

• Maple and Maple Apple<br />

Drizzle Sundaes<br />

• Hot Fudge Sundaes too!<br />

1-800-376-5757<br />

or 223-5757<br />

Exit 8 off I-89<br />

5 miles on US Rt 2E, bear left,<br />

1 mile on Vt. Rt. 14N,<br />

1005 Vt. Rt. 14N<br />

East Montpelier 05651<br />

HUNTER EDUCATION<br />

COURSE OFFERED<br />

Registration Monday,<br />

August 12, 6-8 P.M. at the<br />

Barre Fish & Game Club<br />

Gun Club Road<br />

Barre Town<br />

522-2499<br />

August 7, 20<strong>19</strong> The WORLD page 9


Charles (Charlie) Edward Wiley<br />

Montpelier, VT - Charles<br />

(Charlie) Edward Wiley<br />

died on Sunday July 28, 20<strong>19</strong> at<br />

Westview Meadows in Montpelier,<br />

VT at the age of 89, just shy of his<br />

90th birthday.<br />

Charlie was born in Rutland, VT<br />

on September <strong>19</strong>, <strong>19</strong>29 to Clarence<br />

and Celia (Ritchie) Wiley. His youth<br />

was spent living between Porter St.<br />

in Rutland, on the flats in the North Clarendon, the<br />

home of his mother’s family, and at Tip Top Inn on<br />

Crown Point Rd. in Shrewsbury. The Inn had been<br />

his father’s family farm until <strong>19</strong>37 when his parents<br />

began the seasonal Inn.<br />

He graduated from Rutland High School in <strong>19</strong>47<br />

and from the University of Vermont in <strong>19</strong>52. At UVM,<br />

he enrolled in the ROTC program and was commissioned<br />

in the U.S. Army as a 1st Lieutenant upon<br />

graduation. Before his honorable discharge in <strong>19</strong>55 he<br />

was stationed in France during the Korean Conflict.<br />

Charlie married Carolyne (Eaton) Wiley on<br />

February 24, <strong>19</strong>52 and remained a devoted husband<br />

until her death in 2014. They had one daughter, Dana<br />

McCarthy, and two grandchildren, Kerry, and her<br />

partner Sarah with great-grandson Kiernan, of Berlin,<br />

VT.; grandson, Collin and his wife Mary of Boston,<br />

Mass.<br />

Charlie worked in Real Estate in Montpelier for<br />

over 35 years, starting at Century 21 and later joining<br />

Heney Realty. He retired in 20<strong>07</strong>. His business career<br />

had a sales and hospitality theme; starting with Tip<br />

Top Inn, later with Burroughs Corp for 15 years in<br />

regional sales of business storage systems and office<br />

equipment in VT and NH, to Assistant Secretary of<br />

the Agency of Development and Community Affairs<br />

under Governors Phil Hoff and Deane C. Davis. He<br />

was part of the creation and management of the<br />

Vermont Pavilion at the Montreal Expo <strong>19</strong>67 <strong>World</strong>’s<br />

Fair, to promote tourism in Vermont.<br />

For 46 years, Charlie served on the Board of<br />

Trustees for the Gary (Home) Residence actively<br />

involved in the care of senior women residents and<br />

was one of the creators and founders of Westview<br />

Meadows, an Independent and Residential Care<br />

Community, in Montpelier.<br />

He was involved with economic development<br />

through the Vermont Industrial Financing Arm and<br />

early efforts of affordable housing.<br />

Charlie was a member of the Montpelier Kiwanis<br />

Club, Bethany Church, Montpelier Senior Center,<br />

Trinity Methodist Food Pantry, was an AARP instructor<br />

for the Driver Safety Program for six years, served<br />

on the Montpelier Board of Adjustment overseeing<br />

zoning for eight years, and the Montpelier Cemetery<br />

Commission for ten years. He was awarded Citizen of<br />

the Year in 2012.<br />

He was a vital part of the Montpelier community<br />

and will be remembered for his commitment to<br />

Montpelier, his sense of humor, and outgoing personality.<br />

Calling hours were at Guare & Sons Funeral Home<br />

(30 School St., Montpelier) from 6-8 pm on Friday,<br />

August 2. A memorial service was held at Bethany<br />

United Church in Montpelier at 11 am on Saturday,<br />

August 3.<br />

Those wishing to make a memorial contribution<br />

may do so to: Westview Meadows and The Gary<br />

Residence in care of O.M. Fisher Home, Inc. 149 Main<br />

St., Montpelier, 05602. Or, to the Montpelier Kiwanis<br />

Club P.O. Box 741 Montpelier, 05601.<br />

Those wishing to make condolences online may do so<br />

at www.guareandsons.com.<br />

AGNES M. ALLEN, 85, died July 31, 20<strong>19</strong>, at the Dartmouth-<br />

Hitchcock Medical Center in Lebanon, New Hampshire.<br />

Arrangements are pending at the Boardway and Cilley<br />

Funeral Home, Chelsea.<br />

loved time spent at the family camp on Lake Champlain<br />

where she enjoyed fishing, kayaking, swimming, campfires,<br />

watching the beautiful sunsets and good times with family<br />

and friends. She loved cooking, gardening and adopting pug<br />

dogs from pug rescue. She was predeceased by her parents;<br />

husband Larry Alexander; and sister-in-law Susan O’Neil.<br />

She is survived by her brother, David Corliss; and her companion,<br />

Ziggy Kowalskey; also by many family and friends<br />

who loved her dearly. Private service will be held at the convenience<br />

of the family.<br />

PHILIP EDWIN DODGE, 83, of Powder Spring Road, died<br />

at his home Tuesday, July 30, 20<strong>19</strong>. He was born in Topsham,<br />

Dec. 30, <strong>19</strong>35, the son of Charles Edwin and Ellen Amanda<br />

(White) Dodge, and attended the local elementary school in<br />

Topsham and graduated from Bradford Academy in <strong>19</strong>54.<br />

Philip was married to Louise Gagne in Barre on Sept. 26,<br />

<strong>19</strong>64. Philip was active in community affairs and was generous<br />

with his time in helping his family and friends along life’s<br />

journey. Philip is survived by his wife of 54 years, Louise,<br />

daughters, son, brother, grandchildren, and extended family.<br />

There will be no calling hours. A celebration of his life will be<br />

held at the Topsham United Presbyterian Church at a future<br />

date with burial in the family lot in the Topsham town cemetery.<br />

Memorial contributions may be made to either the<br />

Topsham United Presbyterian Church, P.O. Box 61,<br />

Topsham, VT 05<strong>07</strong>6; or to the Tri-Village Fire Dept., P.O.<br />

Box 67, West Topsham, VT 05<strong>08</strong>6. For more information or<br />

to sign an online condolence, please visit www.rickerfh.com.<br />

Ricker Funeral Home & Cremation Care of Woodsville is in<br />

charge of arrangements.<br />

ANNETTE ROSE COUTURE HERNANDEZ On<br />

Wednesday, July 24, 20<strong>19</strong>, Annette, loving wife, mother,<br />

grandmother, great-grandmother, aunt, sister and sister-inlaw,<br />

passed away at age 88. Annette, the eldest of eight children,<br />

was born to Romelus and Adrienne Jacques Couture<br />

on Feb. 14, <strong>19</strong>31, in Barre. She married William Hector<br />

Hernandez Jr. on Sept. 15, <strong>19</strong>51. Annette graduated from<br />

Spaulding High School and Barre School of Nursing. She is<br />

survived by her sisters and brothers, children, grandchildren,<br />

great-grandchildren, nieces and newphews. A Mass of<br />

Christian Burial to honor Annette’s life was celebrated on<br />

Saturday, Aug. 3, 20<strong>19</strong>, at 11 a.m. in St. Monica’s Catholic<br />

Church, Barre. Burial followed in St. Sylvester Cemetery in<br />

Lower Websterville. In lieu of flowers, please consider a<br />

donation to the Alzheimer’s Association, 300 Cornerstone<br />

Drive, Suite 130, Williston, VT 05495 (or www.alz.org).<br />

Arrangements are in the care of the Pruneau-Polli Funeral<br />

Home, 58 Summer St., Barre. Those wishing to send online<br />

condolences may do so at: www.pruneaupollifuneralhome.<br />

com.<br />

ROBERT BARTHOLOMEW LYNCH, 38, of Moretown,<br />

passed away on June 28, 20<strong>19</strong>, in Austin, Texas, after a long<br />

struggle with drug and alcohol addiction. He recently had<br />

been released from an alcohol recovery program, and was<br />

preparing to return to Vermont. Robert was born April 20,<br />

<strong>19</strong>81, in Burlington. He attended the Moretown Elementary<br />

School, Harwood Union High School and the University of<br />

Vermont. By his mid-20s, Robert had lost his footing, and<br />

couldn’t find his place in this life. His health issues became<br />

severe and he joined the millions who are addicted to opiates.<br />

His parents hope that somehow Robert’s death will<br />

encourage others to reach out and show friends who are in<br />

trouble that they are loved. Robert is survived by his parents<br />

John and Vee Lynch, and his brother, Mac. A celebration of<br />

his life will be held at Mad River Glen on Aug. 17, from noon<br />

to 3 p.m. Friends are invited to sing, play music or tell stories<br />

in remembrance of Robert. Please bring food to share.<br />

Contributions in Robert’s memory may be made to the<br />

Central Vermont Humane Society in Montpelier.<br />

SHELDON H. MILLER, born June 2, <strong>19</strong>26, the son of<br />

Webster and Eleanora Mills Miller, died July 25, 20<strong>19</strong>, at<br />

Central Vermont Medical Center in Berlin. He is survived by<br />

three sons and their families. Shelly married Sybil Dodge on<br />

Nov. 13, <strong>19</strong>60. Shelly was a lover of nature and depicted<br />

scenes of the ocean where he spent summers as a young person,<br />

Vermont hills and streams where he fished and hunted<br />

with great success, and “Woodbury Park,” his own piece of<br />

nature where he often walked. He was on the Mad River Ski<br />

Patrol for many years. Many of his good friends, including<br />

Peter Sykas and “Fuzz” Taylor, predeceased him. Those<br />

wishing to make condolences online may do so at www.guareandsons.com.<br />

JEAN MINKIN, 93, of Heaton Street passed<br />

away peacefully after a brief illness on Friday,<br />

July 26, 20<strong>19</strong> surrounded by her family and<br />

with her beloved dog Obie by her side. She<br />

lived life to the fullest and died with no regrets. She enjoyed<br />

her family, her scientific career, travel and seeing the world<br />

on a bicycle. Jean was born in Philadelphia in <strong>19</strong>25. She married<br />

her wartime GI pen pal Max, settled in Philadelphia and<br />

had two children. She pursued a career in science where<br />

women were rarely seen at that time. Survivors include her<br />

sons, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. The family<br />

would like to express its gratitude to the Heaton Woods staff<br />

for all their support and care. The Hooker and Whitcomb<br />

Funeral Home, 7 Academy Street, Barre assisted the family<br />

with the arrangements. For a memorial guestbook, visit<br />

www.hookerwhitcomb.com.<br />

ROGER E. MORGAN—The Memorial Service for Roger<br />

Morgan, who died December 13, 2018 will be held at 10 am,<br />

August 10th at the Berlin Corner Cemetery. Reception following<br />

at the Morgan home. Arrangements by Boardway &<br />

Cilley Funeral Home, Chelsea.<br />

JOE PIRO passed away on April 20, 20<strong>19</strong>. A time for gathering<br />

in his memory is set for Sunday, August 11, 20<strong>19</strong> at 1:00<br />

p.m. at the Barre Fish and Game Club. Come ready to share<br />

your “Joe memories” and join the family in light refreshments.<br />

Feel free to wear your sportsman gear or favorite<br />

sports team t-shirt.<br />

RICHARD A. POPE passed peacefully at his<br />

home in Lake Wales, on July 15, 20<strong>19</strong>. He and<br />

his wife, Susan, resided there for 23 years. In<br />

Vermont, he was born in <strong>19</strong>34 to Hester Pope in<br />

Burlington, raised in Roxbury and attended<br />

Northfield High School. He served 14 years<br />

with the Vermont National Guard and Army<br />

Reserves. He was employed by UPS as a driver from <strong>19</strong>67<br />

until retirement in <strong>19</strong>96. Dick is survived by his wife, son,<br />

daughter, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. A graveside<br />

service was held in the Berlin, Vermont, Cemetery on<br />

Friday, Aug. 2, 20<strong>19</strong>, at 3 p.m.<br />

FERNANDE CECILLE YORK, 87, a longtime Barre resident,<br />

passed away peacefully on Tuesday, July 23, 20<strong>19</strong>, at<br />

the Mayo Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Northfield.<br />

Born on Aug. 2, <strong>19</strong>31, in Washington, Vermont, she was the<br />

daughter of George and Mary Louise (Sylvain) Soucy. She<br />

attended the Catholic Convent School in Barre for her elementary<br />

education and graduated from Spaulding High<br />

School in <strong>19</strong>49. In <strong>19</strong>75, she married Harold York Sr. in a<br />

beautiful ceremony in Barre. The two made their home in<br />

the Barre area and eventually moved to Zephyrhills, Florida.<br />

Harold passed away in <strong>19</strong>99. Throughout her life, Fernande<br />

had many hobbies and interests. The most important of<br />

those were quilting, going for long walks, traveling, playing<br />

cards and spending quality time with her family and friends.<br />

Survivors include her three sons, grandchildren, sisters,<br />

brother, nieces, nephews and cousins. A memorial service to<br />

honor and celebrate Fernande’s life will be held on<br />

Wednesday, Aug. 7, 20<strong>19</strong>, at 11 a.m. in the Hooker and<br />

Whitcomb Funeral Home, 7 Academy St., Barre. Burial will<br />

follow in the Hope Cemetery in Barre. For memorial guestbook,<br />

visit www.hookerwhitcomb.com.<br />

• • •<br />

Founding Executive Director<br />

Victor R. Swenson Dies at 84<br />

It is with great sadness that we share the news that Victor<br />

R. Swenson, the founding Executive Director of the Vermont<br />

Humanities Council, died on Thursday, July 25 at age 84. A<br />

memorial service has tentatively been scheduled for<br />

September.<br />

As the organization’s founder, Victor started many of our<br />

flagship programs, including our Speakers Bureau, Reading<br />

and Discussion, Annual Fall Conference, and Literacy programs.<br />

After his retirement in 2002, the Vermont Humanities<br />

Council board created an award in Victor’s honor that recognizes<br />

an outstanding Vermont educator in grades 6 through<br />

12. The Victor R. Swenson Humanities Educator Award is<br />

presented each year at our Fall Conference.<br />

We sat down with Victor in February 20<strong>19</strong> to discuss his<br />

recollections of the Council’s early years. In the article,<br />

Victor said, “I started in January <strong>19</strong>74 on New Year’s Day…I<br />

moved a picnic table into the office, which was empty, and a<br />

folding chair and got to work.”<br />

We at the Vermont Humanities Council—and the many<br />

thousands of Vermonters whose lives were changed because<br />

of the programs that Victor founded—are deeply grateful<br />

that Victor approached that work with such grace, intelligence,<br />

compassion, and vision. We are honored to have<br />

known him.<br />

PRUNEAU-POLLI<br />

FUNERAL HOME<br />

Serving All Faiths<br />

Family Owned & Operated<br />

58 Summer Street • Barre, Vermont<br />

802-476-4621<br />

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BETH ANN CORLISS, age 62, of Middlesex,<br />

passed away on July 23, 20<strong>19</strong>, at UVM Medical<br />

Center in Burlington, surrounded by family<br />

and friends. Born in Springfield to Foster and<br />

Barbara (Carr) Corliss on Feb. 24, <strong>19</strong>57. Beth<br />

Handicap Accessible<br />

page 10 The WORLD August 7, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

Mayo Healthcare Welcomes New Administrator<br />

After the retirement in April of longtime leader Christine<br />

Scott, Mayo Healthcare has welcomed Tim McAdoo, an<br />

award-winning consultant, executive and author in the field<br />

of long-term care, as its new administrator.<br />

Formerly the founder and CEO of McAdoo Healthcare, a<br />

consulting firm in Washington, D.C., McAdoo has over 25<br />

years’ experience in senior housing and long-term care. The<br />

Tennessee native has served as interim executive director for<br />

extended-care facilities in several southern states, and he was<br />

vice president of a Virginia group that provides physical,<br />

occupational and speech therapy services in some 16 states.<br />

It was a big jump for McAdoo, coming from the national<br />

scene to Mayo, a 50-bed long-term care and rehabilitation<br />

facility, and 45-bed residential care facility, that has won a<br />

number of national and state quality awards.<br />

“I’d never worked for a nonprofit before — and Mayo<br />

works at a different pace,” he explained. “We’ve turned<br />

health care into a machine, but everything here is on a more<br />

• • •<br />

human scale. Mayo has a continuum of care, and you can<br />

work to spearhead specific programs that can enrich residents’<br />

lives.”<br />

One key challenge McAdoo hopes to address at Mayo is<br />

the ongoing need to recruit and retain highly qualified, motivated<br />

staff. That’s a concern that, he said, long-term care<br />

providers around the nation are working to address.<br />

“I’ve always said we take care of our patients by taking<br />

care of our staff,” he said. “People normally join an organization<br />

because they want to make a difference. I want to feed<br />

that and grow it, with lifelong learning and more.”<br />

McAdoo is a fellow of the ACHCA, and serves on its<br />

Board of Directors in both Texas and Kentucky. He’s living<br />

now in Northfield, a quick walk from his new professional<br />

home. He has already experienced a Vermont mud season<br />

— and he has learned that he needs to buy a good pair of<br />

boots.<br />

“I’m told that’s a must,” he said.


18 licensed nursing assistants from Central Vermont Medical Center attend orientation for new LNA-to-LPN pilot program.<br />

Low Unemployment Rates Spur Innovation and<br />

Opportunity for Central Vermont Medical Center Nurses<br />

Central Vermont Medical Center (CVMC) – in partnership<br />

with the Community Colleges of Vermont (CCV) and<br />

the Vermont Technical College (VTC) - is launching a new<br />

workforce development program aimed at addressing the<br />

shortage of nurses in Vermont. The new program will make<br />

it easier for employeed Licensed Nursing Assistants (LNAs)<br />

to train to become Licensed Practical Nurses (LPNs) by<br />

reducing the two biggest barriers to higher education: time<br />

and money.<br />

“Right now, we have the lowest unemployment rate in<br />

Vermont’s history,” says Robert Patterson, Vice President of<br />

Human Resources and Clinical Operations. “That makes it<br />

challenging to find skilled nurses. We realized that we<br />

couldn’t just wait for qualified people to apply for jobs, and<br />

the alternative of hiring traveling nurses is expensive. We<br />

needed to look at how we could invest in our staff to move<br />

them into key positions.”<br />

Eighteen LNAs from the medical center will start down<br />

the path of becoming LPNs by taking prerequisite courses<br />

this fall through CCV. After, the pilot group will go through<br />

an 11-month LPN training program through VTC. Students<br />

in the program will continue to work part-time but receive<br />

full-time pay and benefits during their training hours.<br />

The staff at CVMC are deeply rooted in our community,”<br />

says Anna Tempesta Noonan, President and Chief Operations<br />

Officer. “They’re committed to our organization and the<br />

patients, residents, and families that we serve. Supporting<br />

their career development is one of the best investments we<br />

can make.”<br />

One of the newly enrolled students, Sydney Konopka, an<br />

LNA at Woodridge Rehabilitation and Nursing, is optimistic<br />

about how this program will impact her life and allow her to<br />

keep serving her residents. “I want to expand the ways I can<br />

help our residents,” says Sydney. “This program is an opportunity<br />

to grow while gaining knowledge that I can use to help<br />

them more.”<br />

Like many hospitals, CVMC offers tuition reimbursement,<br />

but they found that many staff – including LNAs – still<br />

couldn’t balance the demands of a full-time job, family, and<br />

schooling all at the same time.<br />

“When we were creating this program, we sat down with<br />

our LNAs,” says Matt Choate, Chief Nursing Officer. “We<br />

asked them, ‘what are the barriers preventing you from<br />

growing your career?’ What we heard was that we need to<br />

pay people while they’re learning, and we need to make the<br />

school and the classroom content really easy to access.” The<br />

program will be held on weekends at Central Vermont<br />

Medical Center’s main campus. Funding for the LNA-to-<br />

LPN program comes from CVMC and a combination of<br />

Making Progress Against the Number One Cancer Killer<br />

• • •<br />

state and federal grants.<br />

About The University of Vermont Health Network -<br />

Central Vermont Medical Center<br />

Central Vermont Medical Center (CVMC) is the primary<br />

health care provider for 66,000 people who live and work in<br />

central Vermont. We provide 24-hour emergency care and<br />

offer a full spectrum of inpatient and outpatient services at<br />

the main hospital and CVMC’s 20 community-based medical<br />

group practices. These include two ExpressCare clinics,<br />

open 7 days a week, and CVMC’s Woodridge Rehabilitation<br />

and Nursing, a 153-bed long- and short-term care facility.<br />

Our professional staff includes more than 200 physicians and<br />

70 advanced practice providers representing 25 medical specialties.<br />

We employ more than 1,700 full- and part-time employees<br />

and depend upon hundreds of volunteers and donors who<br />

help carry out our mission of working collaboratively to<br />

meet the needs and improve the health of our community.<br />

Central Vermont Medical Center is a member of<br />

OneCareVermont, the statewide accountable care organization.<br />

About The University of Vermont Health Network<br />

The University of Vermont Health Network is an academic<br />

health system that is comprised of six affiliate hospitals,<br />

a multi-specialty medical group, and a home health<br />

agency. We serve the residents of Vermont and northern<br />

New York with a shared mission: working together, we<br />

improve people’s lives. Our partners include:<br />

• The University of Vermont Medical Center<br />

• The University of Vermont Health Network Medical Group<br />

• The University of Vermont Health Network – Alice Hyde<br />

Medical Center<br />

• The University of Vermont Health Network – Central<br />

Vermont Medical Center<br />

• The University of Vermont Health Network – Champlain<br />

Valley Physicians Hospital<br />

• The University of Vermont Health Network – Elizabethtown<br />

Community Hospital<br />

• The University of Vermont Health Network – Porter<br />

Medical Center<br />

• The University of Vermont Health Network – Home<br />

Health and Hospice<br />

Our 4,000 health care professionals are driven to provide<br />

high quality, cost-efficient care as close to home as possible.<br />

Strengthened by our academic connection to the University<br />

of Vermont, each of our hospitals remains committed to its<br />

local community by providing compassionate, personal care<br />

shaped by the latest medical advances and delivered by<br />

highly skilled experts.<br />

Lung cancer death rates in the U.S. have decreased 11.5<br />

percent since 2013, according to recent data from the<br />

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. For <strong>World</strong><br />

Lung Cancer Day on August 1, the American Lung<br />

Association in Vermont is highlighting recent lung cancer<br />

advancements that save more lives.<br />

“Even with the decrease in deaths, lung cancer remains<br />

the number one cancer killer of both men and women in the<br />

U.S. Here in Vermont it is estimated that 510 people will be<br />

diagnosed with lung cancer and approximately 370 will succumb<br />

to the disease in 20<strong>19</strong>,” said Justin King, executive<br />

director for the American Lung Association in Vermont.<br />

“However, we are making huge strides in our fight against<br />

lung cancer and the decrease in lung cancer deaths motivates<br />

us to continue our efforts.”<br />

Awareness<br />

Through its LUNG FORCE initiative, the Lung Association<br />

raises awareness about lung cancer in both women and men.<br />

In the most recent Lung Health Barometer survey, the organization<br />

saw positive increases in their efforts to raise awareness<br />

about the disease. Since the inception of the Lung<br />

Health Barometer, women have become eight percentage<br />

points more likely to speak to their doctor about lung cancer<br />

(26 percent in 2017 vs. 18 percent in 2014). However, there<br />

is more work to do as only three percent of women cite lung<br />

cancer as a top-of-mind health concern.<br />

Early Detection<br />

Unfortunately, most lung cancer cases are still diagnosed<br />

in the later stages when treatment is less likely to be curative.<br />

People diagnosed at early stages of lung cancer are more<br />

than four times more likely to survive five years, but currently<br />

only 16 percent of lung cancer cases are diagnosed<br />

early.<br />

The Lung Association is working to change that. Through<br />

the Saved By the Scan campaign, the organization raises<br />

awareness of lifesaving low-dose CT scan lung cancer screening.<br />

The scan is the only lung cancer screening tool that<br />

reduces the mortality rate for lung cancer by detecting the<br />

disease before it spreads. Today, there are an estimated eight<br />

million Americans who are at high risk for lung cancer and<br />

qualify for screening. If everyone eligible were screened, an<br />

estimated 25,000 lives would be saved. To see if you qualify<br />

for a lung cancer screening, take a two-minute quiz at<br />

SavedBytheScan.org.<br />

Investments in Research<br />

In the last five years, LUNG FORCE has raised money and<br />

advocated for more lung cancer research funding to help<br />

develop new treatments and better methods of early detection.<br />

The Lung Association has funded over $14 million in<br />

lung cancer research since the launch of LUNG FORCE in<br />

2014. Additionally, the organization advocated for a 69 percent<br />

increase in lung cancer research funding at the National<br />

Institutes of Health.<br />

“We are excited to see that lung cancer deaths have<br />

decreased, but there is still so much more that we need to do<br />

to end this terrible disease,” said King, “Anyone with lungs<br />

can get lung cancer, so we encourage everyone to educate<br />

themselves and their loved ones about risks, early detection<br />

and symptoms.”<br />

To learn more about lung cancer, volunteer or donate,<br />

please visit Lung.org.<br />

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HAVE YOU LEFT YOUR JOB? RETIRED? RETIRING?<br />

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Agency Open House<br />

& Career Fair<br />

Children, Youth and<br />

Family Services Building<br />

579 South Barre Road<br />

Barre, VT 05641<br />

Tuesday, August 13th 20<strong>19</strong><br />

4:30 p.m. – 6:00 p.m.<br />

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WCMHS<br />

Where Hope and Support Come Together<br />

WCMHS is a leader in providing compassionate, quality,<br />

trauma-informed services to our communities. Come learn<br />

about our programs and services and discover how you<br />

could join us in bringing hope and support to those in need<br />

in central Vermont. Program information, on-site interviews<br />

for open positions and refreshments will be available.<br />

· Tour our facility and learn fi rst-hand how we are<br />

improving lives<br />

· Learn about open positions across the agency<br />

· Gain details on how to connect with our services<br />

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Please stop by anytime between<br />

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For more information call: (802) 229-1399<br />

wcmhs.org<br />

August 7, 20<strong>19</strong> The WORLD page 11


HUNTER EDUCATION<br />

COURSE OFFERED<br />

Registration Monday,<br />

August 12, 6-8 P.M. at the<br />

Barre Fish & Game Club<br />

Gun Club Road<br />

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522-2499<br />

Classifi ed<br />

Deadline Is<br />

MONDAY<br />

Before 10AM<br />

STATE OF VERMONT<br />

SUPERIOR COURT<br />

Washington Unit<br />

PROBATE DIVISION<br />

Docket No. 420-6-<strong>19</strong> Wnpr<br />

IN RE THE ESTATE OF:<br />

RUTH M. WATSON<br />

LATE OF:<br />

East Montpelier, Vermont<br />

Notice To Creditors<br />

To the creditors of RUTH M. WATSON,<br />

late of East Montpelier, Vermont.<br />

I have been appointed to administer<br />

this estate. All creditors having claims<br />

against the decedent or the estate must<br />

present their claims in writing within<br />

four (4) months of the first publication<br />

of this notice. The claim must be<br />

presented to me at the address listed<br />

below with a copy sent to the Court.<br />

The claim may be barred forever if<br />

it is not presented within the four (4)<br />

month period.<br />

Dated: August 1, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

Signed: Laurie W. Justis<br />

Eexcutor/Administrator:<br />

Laurie W. Justis<br />

1765 Center Road<br />

Montpelier, VT 05602<br />

Phone: (802) 461-5602<br />

Email: LWJustis@gmail.com<br />

Name of Publication: The WORLD<br />

Publication Date: August 7, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

Vermont (Washington) Superior Court/<br />

Probate Division<br />

65 State Street<br />

Montpelier, VT 05602<br />

Contacting Congress<br />

U.S. Rep. Peter Welch<br />

Mailing address:<br />

128 Lakeside Ave, Suite 235<br />

Burlington, VT 05401<br />

Web site: www.welch.house.gov<br />

Phone: (802) 652-2450<br />

I wanted to go to college<br />

but I didn’t think I could<br />

afford it.<br />

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GOLD STANDARD PUBLICATION<br />

email: editor@vt-world.com<br />

or sales@vt-world.com<br />

web site: www.vt-world.com<br />

GOLD STANDARD PUBLICATION<br />

MEMBER<br />

CENTRAL<br />

VERMONT<br />

CHAMBER<br />

OF<br />

COMMERCE<br />

GOLD STANDARD PUBLICATION<br />

Publishers: Gary Hass and Deborah<br />

Phillips. Classified Manager: Ruth<br />

Madigan. Receptionist: Darlene<br />

GOLD STANDARD PUBLICATION<br />

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Companion. Production Manager:<br />

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Should your publication<br />

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Publishers with<br />

Representatives: Kay Roberts<br />

Please refer to the CVC Service<br />

Santamore, Mike Jacques. Circulation:<br />

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Paul Giacherio.<br />

The WORLD is published by WORLD<br />

Publications, Inc. in Berlin, Vermont. The<br />

WORLD is distributed free, and serves<br />

the residents of Washington and northcentral<br />

Orange counties. The WORLD is<br />

published every Wednesday.<br />

The WORLD assumes no financial<br />

responsibility for typographical errors in<br />

advertising but will reprint in the following<br />

issue that part of any advertisement in<br />

which the typographical error occurred.<br />

Notice by advertisers of any error must<br />

be given to this newspaper within five (5)<br />

business days of the date of publication.<br />

The WORLD reserves all rights to<br />

advertising copy produced by its own<br />

staff. No such advertisement may be<br />

used or reproduced without express permission.<br />

Office Hours: Monday-Friday 8:30 a.m.-<br />

5:00 p.m.; Closed Saturday and Sunday.<br />

Subscriptions: $8.00/month, $48.00/6<br />

months, $96.00/year. First Class.<br />

As a CVC Gold Standard publication you may run the Gold Standard<br />

logo until your current audit expires.<br />

achieve Gold Standard scoring in future audits you may continue to<br />

run the Gold Standard logo, or convert to the traditional CVC audit<br />

logo if Gold Standard scores are not achieved.<br />

“current” audit status may display the CVC logo in their publication,<br />

and on marketing materials.<br />

Conditions Agreement regarding logo usage upon audit expiration.<br />

If you have any question please call (800)262-6392.<br />

U.S. Sen. Bernard Sanders<br />

Mailing address:<br />

1 Church St., Third Floor,<br />

Burlington, VT 05401<br />

Web site: www.sanders.senate.gov<br />

Phone: (802) 862-0697<br />

U.S. Sen. Patrick Leahy<br />

Burlington office:<br />

<strong>19</strong>9 Main St., Fourth Floor,<br />

Burlington, VT 05401<br />

Web site: www.leahy.senate.gov<br />

Phone: (802) 863-2525<br />

The WORLD welcomes Letters to the Editor concerning<br />

public issues. Letters should be 400 words or less and<br />

may be subject to editing due to space constraints.<br />

Submissions should also contain the name of the author<br />

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of thanks, contact our advertising department at 479-<br />

2582; non-profit rates are available.<br />

Twelve Reasons We Need Sane Health<br />

Care for Everybody<br />

Health industry lobbyists keep claiming to wonder why<br />

we need Medicare for All when, they insist, we have such a<br />

wonderful system already. Well, here are 12 reasons:<br />

• 9/11 first responders wouldn’t have to beg for health care<br />

• People in horrible accidents wouldn’t have to resort to<br />

online begging<br />

• People with diabetes wouldn’t have to risk amputation to<br />

save money on insulin<br />

• People with huge medical bills wouldn’t have to file for<br />

bankruptcy<br />

• Poor people wouldn’t have to search for a doctor who takes<br />

Medicaid<br />

• Doctors, hospitals, etc., wouldn’t have to spend millions of<br />

hours dealing with insurance companies<br />

• Americans wouldn’t have to spend millions of hours trying<br />

to choose the right Medicare Part D prescription drug plan<br />

• Employers wouldn’t have to spend many thousands of<br />

hours deciding what insurance their employees will have to<br />

use for the next year<br />

• People wouldn’t have to weigh the need to see a doctor<br />

against the need to pay the utility bill, rent, grocery bill…<br />

• People wouldn’t have to wonder for months how much<br />

they will end up paying for a visit to the doctor or hospital<br />

• No one would ever again care about “in network” & “out of<br />

network”<br />

• No one would wonder how large a rate increase the health<br />

insurance companies were going to request each year.<br />

I’m sure most readers will have no trouble coming up with<br />

others.<br />

Lee Russ<br />

Bennington, VT<br />

President Trump is Providing Hope<br />

for Kidney Patients<br />

President Trump has promised to fight for the forgotten<br />

men and women of America—those whose needs and suffering<br />

have been too often unheeded by their government. One<br />

forgotten group in healthcare is the millions of Americans<br />

with some stage of kidney disease—especially the more than<br />

700,000 Americans suffering from the final, deadly stage of<br />

the disease, kidney failure. That includes 826 patients here in<br />

Vermont, most of whom must go through the incredibly<br />

draining experience of receiving kidney dialysis several<br />

times a week, for several hours each time.<br />

But there is good news. President Trump recently signed<br />

an executive order launching a revolutionary initiative at the<br />

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services called<br />

• • •<br />

“Advancing American Kidney Health.” The initiative aims to<br />

help prevent Americans from experiencing kidney failure in<br />

the first place, provide more options for treatment once that<br />

has occurred, and deliver more life-saving transplants.<br />

This is especially important because kidney disease particularly<br />

burdens our low income and minority citizens.<br />

Kidney failure is three times more common among African-<br />

Americans than among whites, and low-income Americans<br />

are 50 percent more likely to suffer from it than those with<br />

higher incomes. Black and Hispanic Americans are also less<br />

likely to receive the transplants that represent the best treatment<br />

for kidney failure.<br />

To prevent kidney disease and provide more treatment<br />

options, we’re launching new ways for Medicare to pay for<br />

kidney care. For example, nephrologists will soon be able to<br />

receive bonuses for preventing the progress of kidney disease<br />

in their patients. We’ll give providers a financial stake in<br />

getting their patients healthy, as opposed to just paying them<br />

for performing more procedures.<br />

We have also proposed a Medicare initiative to give about<br />

half of America’s dialysis providers new incentives to provide<br />

patients with dialysis at home or even in their beds at night,<br />

rather than having them travel to dialysis centers. Today,<br />

only 4.6 percent of kidney patients in Vermont receive dialysis<br />

at home, an option that’s much more common in other<br />

countries. Home treatment is especially important for individuals<br />

and communities struggling to provide for their<br />

families—patients who cannot afford to leave their jobs and<br />

families several times a week for dialysis.<br />

To provide more kidney transplants, we will be revising<br />

how kidneys are obtained from deceased organ donors,<br />

allowing better identification of kidneys for transplant. The<br />

executive order also calls for us to expand support for the<br />

generous living donors who choose to donate organs.<br />

Changing how we identify transplantable kidneys from<br />

deceased donors, by itself, could produce life-saving organs<br />

for an additional 17,000 Americans each year—including<br />

some of the 59 individuals currently waiting for a kidney in<br />

Vermont.<br />

The President’s kidney initiative also includes working<br />

with the private sector to develop artificial, implantable kidneys,<br />

and continuing support for research into precisionmedicine<br />

treatments designed to target kidney disease in the<br />

populations who are more likely to be genetically predisposed<br />

to the disease, including African Americans. We’ll also<br />

undertake a national awareness campaign about kidney disease,<br />

which is often undiagnosed in its early stages, like<br />

breast cancer and prostate cancer once were.<br />

Too often, Washington focuses on some of the same tired<br />

fights in healthcare, year after year—doing nothing for<br />

decades to improve how we cover and treat something like<br />

kidney disease.<br />

President Trump is shaking that up, and delivering<br />

American patients the affordability you need, the options<br />

and control you want, and the quality you deserve—especially<br />

to patients, like those with kidney disease, who have<br />

been forgotten for too long.<br />

Alex M. Azar II<br />

Secretary of Health and Human Services<br />

AT CCV, I CAN.<br />

ccv.edu/ican<br />

page 12 The WORLD August 7, 20<strong>19</strong>


DFR Orders Unlicensed Entities to Cease and Desist<br />

On July 31, 20<strong>19</strong> the Department of Financial Regulation<br />

issued a cease and desist order against four entities and one<br />

individual alleged to be violating state law by deceptively<br />

marketing and soliciting unlicensed health insurance to<br />

Vermonters.<br />

The order requires the following respondents to immediately<br />

stop soliciting or offering the unlicensed health insurance<br />

in Vermont:<br />

• Vermont Alliance for Health Care Alternatives (VAHCA);<br />

• Small Association Leadership Alliance (SALA);<br />

• National Association of Senior Move Managers (NASMM);<br />

• Sedera Health, Inc.;<br />

• Susan Stasny.<br />

Commissioner Michael Pieciak found the respondents<br />

had targeted Vermonters through email and web solicitations<br />

attempting to induce them into purchasing unlicensed<br />

health insurance products in violation of state law.<br />

The advertising purports to be offering a “VAHCA healthcare<br />

program” (the SALA/VAHCA product), providing<br />

preventive care coverage and “medical cost sharing” provided<br />

by Sedera Health. The advertising misleads consumers<br />

to believe that the SALA/VAHCA product is legitimate<br />

State Begins Testing Public Water Supplies for<br />

PFAS as Part of Act 21 Requirements<br />

As part of the state’s expanded effort to identify sources of<br />

PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) chemical contamination<br />

in the environment, the Vermont Agency of<br />

Natural Resources (ANR) sent letters to public drinking<br />

water system operators to begin testing for PFAS.<br />

Act 21, which was passed by the Vermont Legislature and<br />

signed into law by Governor Phil Scott in May, requires all<br />

public and noncommunity water systems to conduct monitoring<br />

for PFAS by December 20<strong>19</strong>. If monitoring confirms<br />

PFAS contaminants in excess of 20 parts per trillion (ppt),<br />

the water system is required to implement treatment to<br />

reduce PFAS contaminants below that level.<br />

“We are pleased to have worked with the legislature to<br />

advance these next steps in the state’s nation-leading PFAS<br />

response,” said Agency of Natural Resources Deputy<br />

Secretary Peter Walke. “I want to thank all of the public<br />

water suppliers for moving forward expeditiously with this<br />

important work. We all share the goal of protecting<br />

Vermonters from the impacts of PFAS and other contaminants.”<br />

PFAS is a large group of human-made chemicals that have<br />

been used in industry and in many consumer products since<br />

the <strong>19</strong>50s because they are resistant to heat, water, oil, grease<br />

and stains. PFAS chemicals include PFOA (perfluorooctanoic<br />

acid) and PFOS (perfluorooctane sulfonic acid).<br />

PFAS can be found in drinking water, food, indoor dust,<br />

many consumer products, and in the workplace. Some PFAS<br />

do not break down easily and therefore stay in the environment<br />

for a very long time, especially in water. There are<br />

currently five PFAS chemicals regulated by the State of<br />

Vermont.<br />

According to the Vermont Department of Health, virtually<br />

everyone is exposed to PFAS chemicals, some of which can<br />

have adverse effects on human health. Although more<br />

research is needed, studies in people have shown that certain<br />

PFAS may:<br />

• Affect growth, learning and behavior of babies and older<br />

children<br />

• Lower a person’s chance of getting pregnant<br />

• Interfere with the body’s natural hormones<br />

• Increase cholesterol levels<br />

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood<br />

HHH1/2<br />

Who is the greatest living American director?<br />

…Scorsese, Stone, Nolen, Payne, Wes Anderson,<br />

Paul Thomas Anderson?<br />

I don’t know. All I know is that Quentin Tarantino has to<br />

be in the mix. And he’s still in the prime of his career.<br />

“Django Unchained” is one of the best movies of all time.<br />

“The Hateful Eight” is not quite as good but it’s even more<br />

meaningful. “Eight” is about two very different people who<br />

survive a violent standoff because they are the only ones savvy<br />

enough to recognize when other people around them are<br />

lying. In this world of scams, charlatans, and fake news, being<br />

able to discern lies using your common sense is one of the<br />

most valuable skills for a person to have.<br />

“Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” is neither as magnificent<br />

as “Django Unchained” nor as intellectually focused as<br />

“The Hateful Eight.”<br />

It’s still a Tarantino film, though. So it’s inspired, unique,<br />

funny, occasionally ultra-violent, and amazing.<br />

It’s Hollywood <strong>19</strong>69. Leonardo DiCaprio is magnificent<br />

as fading star Rick Dalton. Dalton is still a household name<br />

because of the cowboy show he did years ago. But now his<br />

star power is gone and he plays bad guys in TV episodes and<br />

B movies.<br />

We’ve seen aging actors fretting about losing their looks<br />

and their fame. The neat thing about Dalton is what troubles<br />

him the most is losing his talent and professionalism. Di-<br />

Caprio’s Dalton is not a vain Hollywood phony; he a working<br />

American like us who just wants to be great at his job.<br />

When Dalton nails a scene and his costar and director<br />

compliment him, you see a single tear of relief and joy drip<br />

down his cheek. I doubt that was in the script. That was Di-<br />

Caprio feeling the beautiful triumph of the moment.<br />

While Rick Dalton plays cowboys on screen, Brad Pitt’s<br />

Cliff Booth is a real-life cowboy. He’s a happy-go-lucky tough<br />

guy who keeps his emotions close to the vest.<br />

Years ago, Cliff was making good money as Rick’s stunt<br />

• • •<br />

• • •<br />

insurance and can serve as a reasonable replacement for<br />

“traditional” health insurance while lessening a consumer’s<br />

financial risk. The advertising materials obscure the fact that<br />

there is no guarantee that consumers will actually be paid for<br />

any healthcare costs.<br />

“These products claim to save Vermonters money and<br />

reduce their risks related to healthcare expenses, but they<br />

actually do neither,” said Commissioner Pieciak. “The<br />

department will be taking a very serious look at these products<br />

and the entities that sell them, and I encourage<br />

Vermonters to reach out to us or the Department of Vermont<br />

Health Access if approached by anyone selling similar products.”<br />

If you are aware of the respondents engaging in activity<br />

related to the business of insurance in Vermont or have purchased<br />

any products from the respondents, please report<br />

immediately to the Department of Financial Regulation<br />

Consumer Services Section at 802-828-3302 or dfr.insuranceinfo@vermont.gov.<br />

Connect with the Vermont Department of Financial<br />

Regulation on Twitter, Facebook, and on our website.<br />

• Affect the immune system<br />

• Increase the risk of cancer<br />

ANR has already begun to implement many of Act 21’s<br />

requirements. In July 20<strong>19</strong>, the agency finalized its statewide<br />

sampling plan for PFAS. The plan outlines ANR’s monitoring<br />

approach to test PFAS levels in a variety of sectors,<br />

including car washes and landfills.<br />

Before December 1, all public community water systems,<br />

schools and other water systems that serve the same 25<br />

people for more than six months of the year will be required<br />

to test for PFAS substances in drinking water. In total, samples<br />

will be collected from approximately 650 public water<br />

systems. If a system has levels above the 20 ppt state standard,<br />

the system operator will post “Do not drink” (DND)<br />

notices, and find a solution to reduce contamination.<br />

In instances where contamination is found, the state will<br />

quickly work with water system operators to identify potential<br />

PFAS sources and provide guidance to those communities.<br />

The state will also investigate the source in order to<br />

identify any party responsible for the contamination. ANR is<br />

also developing an emergency response manual for communities<br />

and engineers to use during the response.<br />

Over the next five years, the Agency of Natural Resources<br />

(ANR) will embark on a series of steps to safeguard the public<br />

from PFAS contamination:<br />

• The testing of all public drinking water systems by<br />

December 1, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

• The further investigation of additional potential sources<br />

and impacts of PFAS<br />

• The finalization of a drinking water standard<br />

• The development of the scientific basis for and eventual<br />

setting of water quality standards for lakes, ponds, rivers,<br />

and wetlands<br />

As part of Act 21, ANR will also be evaluating PFAS as a<br />

class of chemicals, and whether it is possible to regulate<br />

them as a class. The new law requires ANR to adopt water<br />

quality standards for the regulated PFAS contaminants.<br />

Learn more about the state’s response and actions to identify<br />

PFAS contamination at dec.vermont.gov/pfas. For information<br />

about PFAS and public health, visit healthvermont.<br />

gov/water/pfas.<br />

double. But Cliff did something terrible in his private life and<br />

now he’s blacklisted in Hollywood and hated by many. Rick<br />

keeps Cliff around as his driver, his handyman, and his pal.<br />

“Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” features Roman Polanski<br />

as a small but perfectly likable secondary character.<br />

Quentin Tarantino had a positive working relationship with<br />

Harvey Weinstein for decades. With Cliff Booth, Tarantino<br />

is arguing that even the most disgusting, unforgivable creeps<br />

can be good guys sometimes. He’s saying that it’s possible<br />

to want Harvey Weinstein deported to Siberia to starve and<br />

freeze but also admit that he was a loyal friend and a caring<br />

dog owner.<br />

I found “Hollywood” to be fun and engrossing. I know<br />

for a fact that some will find it boring and miserable because<br />

my wife did. And, in her defense, the paper-thin plot moves<br />

slowly and most of the scenes are style over substance. If you<br />

are bored, though, please don’t walk out before the surprise<br />

ending.<br />

I love the ending to this movie. How the heck do you make<br />

a film that features Sharon Tate and Charles Manson end joyfully?<br />

Leave it to Mr. Tarantino.<br />

Oh, another warning: if you are a hippie, were a hippie, or<br />

have a soft spot for hippies, you will be offended by this film.<br />

“Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” is to hippies what “Birth<br />

of a Nation” was to black people.<br />

I do not recommend “Hollywood” to everyone. But I sure<br />

liked it. I think Quentin Tarantino is a national treasure and<br />

every new movie he makes is a celebration.<br />

Lung Cancer?<br />

Asbestos exposure in industrial,<br />

construction, manufacturing jobs, or<br />

the military may be the cause. Family<br />

in the home were also exposed.<br />

Call 1-866-795-3684 or email<br />

cancer@breakinginjurynews.com.<br />

$30 billion is set aside for asbestos<br />

victims with cancer. Valuable settlement<br />

monies may not require filing a lawsuit.<br />

Weekly Construction Update<br />

Interstate 89 Ledge Removal, Exit 6<br />

PROJECT DESCRIPTION: The Berlin IM <strong>08</strong>9-1(62) project<br />

consists of a 1400 foot ledge face where rock overhangs<br />

the roadway, and periodically falls onto the roadway. This<br />

rock slope was identifi ed as an “A” cut. “A” ranked slopes<br />

represent slopes where rockfall is expected to occur and<br />

reach the roadway.<br />

TRAFFIC IMPACTS: I-89 Northbound has been reduced<br />

to one lane within the vicinity of the construction zone. This<br />

will remain in effect until the project has been completed.<br />

Exit 6 has been reopened to traffi c.<br />

CONSTRUCTION ACTIVITIES:<br />

The I-89 northbound Exit 6 off ramp is open to traffi c.<br />

Blasting operations will continue throughout the<br />

week next week. Rolling road blocks will continue to<br />

be utilized during blasting operations at times of offpeak<br />

commuter traffic. Message boards will indicate<br />

when rolling road blocks are in progress.<br />

Crews will continue removing and hauling away the ledge<br />

material.<br />

CONTACT INFORMATION:<br />

Natalie Boyle, 802-855-3893, nboyle@eivtech.com<br />

To learn more about VTrans Construction Projects, visit our<br />

projects website. https://vtrans.vermont.gov/projects<br />

STATE OF VERMONT<br />

SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION<br />

Washington 2 x 4.75 Unit Docket No. 240-4-18 Wncv<br />

Robert W. Phillips II,<br />

Plaintiff<br />

v.<br />

John Clement and Callie Buck, Defendants<br />

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE<br />

By virtue of the Amended Judgment and Decree of Foreclosure by<br />

Judicial Sale (“Foreclosure Judgment”) filed January 3, 20<strong>19</strong> and<br />

the Power of Sale contained in a certain mortgage granted by John<br />

Clement and Callie Buck (“Mortgagors”), to Robert W. Phillips II<br />

dated June 4, 2014 and recorded on June 5, 2014 in Book 126 at Pages<br />

164-166 of the Town of East Montpelier Land Records, for breach<br />

of the conditions of the mortgage and for the purpose of foreclosing<br />

the same, the undersigned will cause to be sold at public auction<br />

(“Sale”) at 11 a.m. on August 16, 20<strong>19</strong>, the lands and premises<br />

known as 365 Mays Way in the Town of East Montpelier, Vermont<br />

(“Mortgaged Property”), Town Parcel Identification No. <strong>08</strong>-013.100,<br />

and more particularly described as follows:<br />

Being all and the same land and premises conveyed to John Clement<br />

and Callie Buck by Warranty Deed of Robert W. Phillips ii dated<br />

June 4, 2014 and recorded in Book 126 at Pages 162-163 of the Town<br />

of East Montpelier Land Records.<br />

TERMS OF SALE: The Sale will be held at the Mortgaged Property.<br />

The Mortgaged Property will be sold “AS IS, WHERE IS, WITH<br />

ALL FAULTS, WITH NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRAN-<br />

TIES OF ANY KIND”, subject to easements, rights of way, covenants,<br />

permits, reservations and restrictions of record, superior<br />

liens, if any, encumbrances that are not extinguished by the sale, title<br />

defects, environmental hazards, unpaid real estate taxes and other<br />

municipal liens (delinquent and current, including penalty and interest),<br />

to the highest bidder.<br />

The successful bidder shall pay a deposit of at least $10,000 of the<br />

purchase price in cash or bank treasurer’s/cashier’s check at the time<br />

of Sale. The balance of the purchase price shall be paid within ten<br />

days after entry of a confirmation order. The successful bidder will<br />

be required to sign a purchase and sale contract with NO CONTIN-<br />

GENCIES except confirmation of the sale by the court. Title will be<br />

transferred by Confirmation Order. The Sale may be postponed one<br />

or more times for a total time of up to thirty (30) days, by announcing<br />

the new sale date to those present at each adjournment or by<br />

posting notice at a conspicuous location at the place of the Sale. Notice<br />

of the new sale date shall also be sent by first class mail, postage<br />

prepaid, to the Mortgagors at the Mortgagors’ last known address at<br />

least five days before the new sale date.<br />

Other terms to be announced at the Sale or contact:<br />

Terry L. Owen, CAI, AARE<br />

Sr. Vice President<br />

Thomas Hirchak Company<br />

1878 Cady’s Falls Road<br />

Morrisville, VT 05661<br />

1-800-634-7653<br />

www.THCAuction.com<br />

The Mortgagors, or their personal representatives or assigns, may<br />

redeem the Mortgaged Property at any time prior to the Sale by<br />

paying the full amount due under the mortgage, including postjudgment<br />

expenses and the costs and expenses of sale.<br />

Dated at Montpelier, Vermont, this 15th day of July 20<strong>19</strong>.<br />

ROBERT W. PHILLIPS II<br />

/s/ David R. Bookchin<br />

David R. Bookchin, Esq.<br />

Bookchin & Durrell, P.C.<br />

2 Spring Street<br />

Montpelier, Vermont 05602<br />

(802) 229-9829<br />

bookchin@lawofficevt.com<br />

August 7, 20<strong>19</strong> The WORLD page 13


Glider Rocker Chairs<br />

FROM<br />

STARTING AT<br />

$399<br />

Locally Owned & Operated • Mon -Fri 10-6, Sat 10-4<br />

97 US Rt. 302 Barre-Montpelier Rd • 802-479-0671<br />

Thank You<br />

for the Cards,<br />

Gifts, Calls,<br />

and Emails on<br />

My 90th Birthday.<br />

Beverly Conti<br />

Happy Birthday!<br />

BARRE-MONTPELIER RD.<br />

Price Chopper (Berlin, VT) and The WORLD would like to help you wish someone<br />

special a Happy Birthday. Just send their name, address & birthdate. We’ll publish the<br />

names in this space each week. Plus, we’ll draw one (1) winner each week for a<br />

FREE BIRTHDAY CAKE from Price Chopper (Berlin, VT). No obligation, nothing to<br />

buy. Just send birthday names two (2) weeks prior to birthdate, to: The WORLD, c/o<br />

BIRTHDAY CAKE, 403 U.S. Rt. 302—Berlin, Barre, VT 05641. Please provide your<br />

name, address & phone number for prize notification.<br />

August 3<br />

Lila, 55, Plattsburgh, NY<br />

August 4<br />

Emma Rae Baker, 4, East Barre<br />

Valery Weston, 21<br />

August 6<br />

Gloria Mills, Bethel<br />

Roland & Irene<br />

Lafayette<br />

are celebrating their<br />

60th Wedding Anniversary<br />

August 15, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

Send cards to:<br />

81 Blackberry Lane<br />

Waterbury, VT 05676<br />

August 7<br />

Colby Jones, <strong>19</strong>, Barre<br />

Jocelyn Batchelder, 28, Plainfield<br />

August 8<br />

Vanessa Weston, 12, Williamstown<br />

Katie Weston, 24<br />

Lester Felch Jr, 53, Barre<br />

Gary Hass, East Montpelier<br />

Shirley Combs, Chelsea<br />

August 9<br />

Bob Evans, 65, Woodstock<br />

August 11<br />

Joshua Campbell, 24, Phoenix, AZ<br />

August 12<br />

Thomas Neddo, 33, East<br />

Montpelier<br />

Dustin Poitras, 33, Barre<br />

Sarah McDonald, 16, Randolph<br />

August 13<br />

Jade Nutbrown, 6, Barre<br />

Emilly Squier, 22, Maine<br />

This Week’s Cake Winner:<br />

Jade Nutbrown of Barre will be 6 on August 13<br />

CAKE WINNER: Please call Price Chopper (Berlin, VT)<br />

at 479-9<strong>07</strong>8 and ask for the Bakery Department<br />

by Thursday, August 8 to arrange for cake pick-up.<br />

PRICE CHOPPER<br />

“BIRTHDAY DRAWING”<br />

Mail this coupon to: The WORLD c/o Birthday Cake<br />

403 U.S. Rt. 302—Berlin<br />

Barre, VT 05641<br />

Open to people of all ages. Just send in the entry blank below, and we will<br />

publish it in this space each week. Plus, we will draw one (1) name each week<br />

for a FREE BIRTHDAY CAKE from the Price Chopper Super Center (Berlin,<br />

VT). No obligation, nothing to buy. Entries must be mailed two (2) weeks<br />

prior to birthdate. Telephone calls to The WORLD will not be accepted.<br />

BIRTHDATE ___________________________________________<br />

NAME ________________________________________________<br />

AGE (this birthday) ______________________________________<br />

ADDRESS ________________________________________________<br />

PHONE__________________________________ _____________<br />

page 14 The WORLD August 7, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

Central Vermont Chamber Music Festival at Chandler<br />

The Central Vermont Chamber Music Festival will kick off<br />

its 27th season at Chandler Music Hall in Randolph on<br />

August 12 and offer world-class performances and events<br />

through August 25.<br />

Founder, Music Director, and cellist Peter Sanders has<br />

once again packed the two week residency with music - both<br />

traditional and intriguing.<br />

The first Saturday evening concert, on August 17 at 7:30<br />

features two viola quintets - Felix Mendelssohn’s penultimate<br />

work, the String Quintet #2, Opus 87 in B flat and<br />

Johannes Brahms’s first string quintet, Opus 88 in F Major.<br />

Also on the program will be a motet, Ave Maria, attributed<br />

to the Renaissance French composer Josquin des Prez and<br />

arranged for string quartet by the musicologist and late<br />

father of Sanders, Ernest H. Sanders. The musicians will be<br />

violinists Joanna Maurer and Derek Ratzenboeck, violists<br />

Katarzyna Bryla-Weiss and Michael Roth, and cellist Peter<br />

Sanders.<br />

The second Saturday evening concert on August 25 at 7:30<br />

will be devoted to works by Beethoven, with the Violin<br />

Sonata #5 in F, Opus 24, the “Spring Sonata,” the Sonata for<br />

Cello and Piano in D, Opus 102, #5, and the “Ghost” piano<br />

trio in D, Opus 70, #1. Artists for this second week will<br />

include violinist Arturo Delmoni, cellist Peter Sanders, and<br />

pianist Adrienne Kim. This concert will be performed as an<br />

encore in Woodstock at the<br />

SAVE $$$$!<br />

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SATURDAYS<br />

JONES BROS. WAY<br />

near VT Granite Museum &<br />

Faith Community Church<br />

$<br />

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3.75<br />

in Barre<br />

per 30 gal. and/or<br />

25 lb. rubbish bag<br />

for 2 or more at<br />

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per 30 gal. and/or<br />

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See You 7:30AM to 1PM!<br />

Jodi's<br />

(802)793-7417 Barre<br />

Text or Call<br />

Happy<br />

Anniversary<br />

Unitarian Universalist<br />

Church on Sunday afternoon,<br />

August 25 at 4:00.<br />

Sunday tickets are available<br />

through the presenter,<br />

Pentangle Council on the<br />

Arts, at their website www.<br />

pentanglearts.org or by calling<br />

(802) 457-3981.<br />

The 9th annual popular<br />

Breakfast with Bach will be<br />

held on Sunday, August 18,<br />

with breakfast in the Esther<br />

Mesh Room of the Chandler<br />

Upper Gallery at 11:00, with<br />

food provided by Shari<br />

Dutton and Friends of the<br />

Forget Me Not Flowers & Gifts and The WORLD would like to help you wish<br />

a special couple a Happy Anniversary. Just send their name, address & wedding<br />

anniversary date. Each week we publish the names, plus we’ll have a<br />

monthly winner for a 1/2 dozen wrapped red roses at Forget Me Not Flowers<br />

& Gifts, 214 N. Main Street, Barre. No obligation, nothing to buy. Just send<br />

anniversary names two (2) weeks prior to anniversary date, to: The WORLD,<br />

c/o HAPPY ANNIVERSARY, 403 U.S. Rt. 302 - Berlin, Barre, VT 05641. Please<br />

provide name, address & phone number for prize notification.<br />

Forget Me Not<br />

Flowers & Gifts<br />

214 N. Main St., Barre • 476-6700<br />

Mon.-Fri. 9-6 | Sat. 9-1<br />

We belong to the Flower Shop Network!<br />

.forgetenotoers.barre.co<br />

Please Send Us Your Anniversaries<br />

And Be Automatically Registered To Win A 1/2 Dozen Wrapped,<br />

Red Roses From Forget Me Not Flowers & Gifts<br />

On August 8, Louise and Russ Hoermann of<br />

Barre, Vermont will celebrate 27 years!<br />

On August 10, Mary and Terry Van Veghten of<br />

East Calais, Vermont will celebrate 23 years!<br />

On August 10, Lester and Lisa Felch of<br />

Barre, Vermont will celebrate 28 years!<br />

On August 13, Celine and George Johnson of<br />

Montpelier, Vermont will celebrate 25 years!<br />

FORGET ME NOT FLOWERS & GIFTS<br />

“HAPPY ANNIVERSARY”<br />

Mail this coupon to: The WORLD<br />

c/o Happy Anniversary<br />

403 U.S. Rt. 302 - Berlin, Barre, VT 05641<br />

Just send in the entry blank below, and we will publish it in this space each week.<br />

Plus, we will draw one (1) couple each month for a 1/2 dozen wrapped red roses<br />

from Forget Me Not Flowers & Gifts, 214 N. Main St., Barre. No obligation, nothing<br />

to buy. Entries must be mailed two (2) weeks prior to anniversary date. Telephone<br />

calls to The WORLD will not be accepted.<br />

ANNIVERSARY<br />

DATE_______________________# YEARS______<br />

NAMES___________________________________<br />

ADDRESS_________________________________<br />

_________________________________________<br />

PHONE___________________________________<br />

former Three Bean Café. At 12:30 the Festival artists will be<br />

joined at Bethany church across the street by members of the<br />

Vermont Youth Orchestra, led by VYO Music Director,<br />

Yutaka Kono in a performance of Bach’s Concerto for Two<br />

Violins, Strings, and Continuo in D minor, BWV 1043 and<br />

Sinfonia in B minor, H. 661, Wq. 182, #5 by Bach’s son CPE.<br />

Soloists for the Concerto will be VYO students Lucas<br />

Parascando and Joe Balkan.<br />

A very special event is planned for Wednesday evening,<br />

August 21 at 7:00. Sanders has invited the prize winning<br />

Klezmer quintet Big Galut(e) to perform on the Chandler<br />

main stage for a rollicking evening, with a very eclectic variety<br />

of Jewish music styles, spanning five continents and six<br />

centuries, including Klezmer originals and takes on traditional<br />

classical works. Winner of the Simcha Prize at the<br />

2017 International Jewish Music Festival in Amsterdam, Big<br />

Galut(e) has been described as ‘soulful and unselfconsciously<br />

poignant’, ‘jubilant’, ‘a real treat for open minds,’ and ‘a<br />

serious band with lousy American humor.’<br />

The Friday Night in the Gallery this year on August 23 at<br />

7:00 p.m. will be an opportunity to Meet Your Musicians. All<br />

are invited to come and enjoy an informal chance to meet,<br />

ask questions of, play for (bring your instruments!) our resident<br />

Artists for the week. All ages are encouraged to be part<br />

of this session and light food and drink will be offered, provided<br />

again by Shari Dutton. An All About Community<br />

event, the evening is free and a festival thank you to its supporters<br />

and friends.<br />

Open rehearsals are being held on Thursdays August 15<br />

and 22 beginning at 7 p.m. Admission is free and the public<br />

is invited to come and go, getting a taste of professional<br />

musicians at work.<br />

It is tradition for Festival musicians to be on the air with<br />

Walter Parker, host of VPR Classical, in the new studio in<br />

Colchester. The public is invited to enjoy the program which<br />

begins at 11:00 a.m. on August 16, in the studio or on all VPR<br />

Classical stations.<br />

For more information and to buy tickets online, visit the<br />

Festival website at www.cvcmf.org. Tickets for the Chandler<br />

concerts are also available by calling the Chandler box office<br />

at (802) 728-6464 weekdays 12 to 5:00 p.m.<br />

Chandler Music Hall is fully accessible and equipped for<br />

the hearing impaired.<br />

Whoever said being<br />

a parent is easy?<br />

For help call<br />

Circle of Parents TM<br />

1-800-CHILDREN<br />

1-800-244-5373<br />

HUNTER EDUCATION<br />

COURSE OFFERED<br />

Registration Monday,<br />

August 12, 6-8 P.M. at the<br />

Barre Fish & Game Club<br />

Gun Club Road<br />

Barre Town<br />

522-2499<br />

ARIES (March 21 to April <strong>19</strong>)<br />

Dealing with a difficult person<br />

can be the kind of challenge you<br />

Aries Lambs love. Or it could be<br />

an energy-draining exercise in futility.<br />

Be certain your goals are worth your efforts.<br />

TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) The Divine Bovine might<br />

be seeing red at having your crisis-resolution efforts<br />

overlooked. But others know the truth, and they can be<br />

expected to step forward when the time comes.<br />

GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) You should be well on your<br />

way to finally making that important decision. Having<br />

the support of loved ones will help when crunch time<br />

comes. Keep a positive attitude.<br />

CANCER ( June 21 to July 22) Feeling uneasy about a<br />

move might not mean you’re having a case of Cancerian<br />

wavering. It could be your inner sense is warning you to<br />

reassess your situation before taking action.<br />

LEO ( July 23 to August 22) Your pride could get in the<br />

way of admitting you might have erred. Best to ‘fess up<br />

now before a small mistake turns into a big misunderstanding.<br />

Make the weekend a special family time.<br />

VIRGO (August 23 to September 22) Trying to please<br />

someone with a less-than-glowing opinion of something<br />

you value could be a waste of time. If you like it, stay with<br />

it. The week’s end brings an answer to an old mystery.<br />

LIBRA (September 23 to October 22) There might be<br />

time to make a change. But be honest with yourself: Is<br />

it what you really want, or one you feel pressured into<br />

making? Your answer should determine your next move.<br />

SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21) Change is dominant,<br />

but so is caution: Proceed carefully, checking each<br />

step along the way to avoid encountering any unwelcome<br />

surprises that might be lurking along your path.<br />

SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21) It could<br />

be a mistake to rely on someone to keep his or her promise<br />

without checking out previous performances. What<br />

you learn now could save you from a painful lesson later.<br />

CAPRICORN (December 22 to January <strong>19</strong>) Taking a<br />

strong stand on an issue you feel is too important to ignore<br />

could inspire others to follow suit. The weekend is a good<br />

time to socialize with old friends and make new ones.<br />

AQUARIUS ( January 20 to February 18) Your sensitive<br />

nature gives you an insight into the problems of someone<br />

close to you. Your offer of support could be just what this<br />

person needs to start turning his or her life around.<br />

PISCES (February <strong>19</strong> to March 20) Financial matters continue<br />

to need even more careful analysis than usual. Use<br />

caution with investment possibilities. A personal relationship<br />

might take an unexpected turn by the week’s end.<br />

BORN THIS WEEK: You appreciate the wonders of the<br />

world and enjoy sharing your delight with others.<br />

(c) 20<strong>19</strong> King Features Synd., Inc.


Fact: Americans eat about 50 billion beef<br />

burgers a year.<br />

Fact: Every year, the average American<br />

eats enough red meat to make 800 quarterpound<br />

burgers!<br />

Fact: Red meat such as hamburger delivers<br />

health risks from too much carnitine, lecithin<br />

and choline, which change the bacteria in<br />

your gut to produce inflammation in your<br />

body. That can lead to an increased risk of<br />

heart attacks, strokes, cancer and brain dysfunction.<br />

A large study published in JAMA<br />

Internal Medicine found that eating one additional serving a<br />

day of unprocessed red meat over the decades-long course<br />

of the study raised the risk of mortality by 13%. An extra<br />

daily serving of processed red meat (bacon, hot dogs, salami)<br />

raised the risk by 20%.<br />

Enter the processed, meat-imitating veggie burger.<br />

Sounds like a good idea. After all, it’s made from plants.<br />

Because some of the most popular versions are designed to<br />

imitate the taste of beef -- for example, through the genetic<br />

engineering of heme (aka soy leghemoglobin), which conveys<br />

a meaty flavor -- red-meat lovers might be persuaded to<br />

reduce or eliminate beef burgers from their diet.<br />

But these processed patties have as much saturated fat<br />

and calories as an equivalent-sized 85% lean beef burger!<br />

And we don’t know if these substitutes are just as bad for<br />

your long-term health as a beef burger. They contain coconut<br />

oil, and Dr. Mike thinks the data showing that coconut<br />

oil is an accelerator of brain inflammation and dementia is<br />

substantial. Plus, these veggie burgers are doing nothing to<br />

promote veggie love. Instead they are saying veggies are only<br />

good if they taste like red meat. Not true!<br />

So, here are the facts about the two most popular brands<br />

of “veggies masquerading as meat” burgers:<br />

Beyond Meat Burgers contain water, pea protein isolate,<br />

expeller-pressed canola oil, refined coconut oil, rice protein,<br />

natural flavors, cocoa butter, mung bean protein, methylcellulose,<br />

potato starch, apple extract, salt, potassium chloride,<br />

vinegar, lemon juice concentrate, sunflower lecithin, pomegranate<br />

fruit powder and beet juice extract (for color).<br />

Four ounces delivers 250 calories, 18 total grams of fat,<br />

with 6 grams of saturated fat, 390 milligrams of sodium, only<br />

2 grams of fiber, 20 grams of protein and 25% of your recommended<br />

daily value for iron.<br />

• • •<br />

Listening to Heart Murmurs<br />

Parents have been sounding<br />

off to me with lots of questions<br />

about heart murmurs in their<br />

children. Let me get to the<br />

heart of the matter to provide<br />

some information on this topic.<br />

What is a heart murmur,<br />

exactly?<br />

A heart murmur is simply a<br />

noise heard between the beats<br />

of the heart due to the flow of<br />

blood through the heart. In fact, it sounds<br />

like water flowing through a hose. While the<br />

term heart murmur may sound scary, for<br />

most children it’s extremely common and<br />

doesn’t mean anything is wrong. Usually, it<br />

means that blood is whooshing through the<br />

pipes and sounds louder.<br />

Should I worry about the murmur?<br />

So, when do we most worry about murmurs?<br />

We worry most about infants at birth<br />

and in the first few months of life. This is<br />

because the murmur might be a signal that<br />

there is a congenital abnormality involving<br />

the heart. There may be an abnormal connection<br />

between chambers, problems with<br />

valves controlling blood flow in the heart, or<br />

the major blood vessels coming from the<br />

heart. If a baby appears blue in the face and<br />

has a murmur, which occurs rarely, your<br />

doctor will do other tests such as a chest<br />

x-ray and an electrocardiogram. These are<br />

used to diagnose whether or not a heart<br />

problem exists. If the murmur does exists,<br />

you doctor will refer your child to a pediatric<br />

heart specialist. That specialist will do an<br />

echocardiogram or ultrasound of the heart<br />

to determine the diagnosis and further treatment.<br />

The rise of the veggie burger<br />

BY MICHAEL ROIZEN, M.D., AND MEHMET OZ, M.D.<br />

Social Isolation Linked to Bone Loss in Women<br />

If you ever wanted a compelling<br />

reason to join a group<br />

or get out more, here it is: A<br />

new study shows that poor<br />

social relationships contribute<br />

to bone loss in senior<br />

women.<br />

This wasn’t a small, brief study. In this<br />

Women’s Health Initiative, researchers studied<br />

the bone health of 11,000 women over six<br />

years and included information about social<br />

support and social functioning.<br />

The bottom line: Over those six years,<br />

high social stress equated to lowered bone<br />

mineral density in the femoral neck (where<br />

most hip fractures occur), the lumbar spine<br />

and the whole hip. They assigned a rating to<br />

levels of “social strain,” and found that each<br />

additional point added to the lowered bone<br />

density.<br />

There’s more to this than how many<br />

groups we meet with each week. It turns out<br />

it’s the quality of our relationships rather<br />

than the quantity. Life satisfaction and our<br />

sense of optimism play a part, which might<br />

• • •<br />

The Impossible Burger ingredients are<br />

water, soy protein concentrate, coconut oil,<br />

sunflower oil, natural flavors, 2% or less of:<br />

potato protein, methylcellulose, yeast extract,<br />

cultured dextrose, food starch modified, soy<br />

leghemoglobin, salt, soy protein isolate,<br />

mixed tocopherols (vitamin E), zinc gluconate,<br />

thiamine hydrochloride (vitamin B1),<br />

sodium ascorbate (vitamin C), niacin, pyridoxine<br />

hydrochloride (vitamin B6), riboflavin<br />

(vitamin B2) and vitamin B12.<br />

One 4-ounce patty contains 240 calories,<br />

14 grams of total fat, with 8 grams of saturated fat, 370 milligrams<br />

of sodium, 3 grams of fiber and <strong>19</strong> grams of protein,<br />

plus 1 gram added sugar, and weirdly 5.3 milligrams of the B<br />

vitamin thiamine -- 2,350% of your recommended daily<br />

value (a high intake is 50 milligrams a day) -- and 130% of<br />

B12.<br />

Four ounces of 85% lean, all-beef burger contains 260<br />

calories, 15.6 grams of total fat with 6 grams of saturated fat,<br />

88 milligrams sodium, between 1 and 13% of daily values for<br />

many vitamins (except A and C) and minerals.<br />

So, while you can opt for a meaty-flavored veggie burger<br />

occasionally, they may not be the healthy alternative you’re<br />

seeking. Here are some substitutes:<br />

-- When eating out, opt for a veggie meal that’s upfront<br />

about what it is: A kale salad with walnuts and avocados or<br />

vegetable pasta with 100% whole-wheat spaghetti, garlic<br />

and olive oil (skip the cheese).<br />

-- At home, why not whip up a tasty Quinoa Black Bean<br />

Burger (recipe at www.doctoroz.com/recipe/quinoa-blackbean-veggie-burgers)<br />

that’s loaded with protein and fiber<br />

from the beans and quinoa, plus egg whites, and seasoned<br />

with garlic, onion, tomato and extra-virgin olive oil.<br />

-- And if you want some animal protein, try Dr. Mike’s<br />

favorite salmon burger made with canned wild salmon,<br />

Dijon mustard, onions and whole-wheat breadcrumbs. Get<br />

the recipe at www.doctoroz.com/recipe/salmon-burger.<br />

Mehmet Oz, M.D. is host of “The Dr. Oz Show,” and Mike<br />

Roizen, M.D. is Chief Wellness Officer and Chair of Wellness<br />

Institute at Cleveland Clinic. To live your healthiest, tune into<br />

“The Dr. Oz Show” or visit www.sharecare.com.<br />

(c)20<strong>19</strong> Michael Roizen, M.D. and Mehmet Oz, M.D.<br />

Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc.<br />

When a child reaches preschool<br />

age and is noted to have<br />

a murmur, this is usually less<br />

cause for concern. By examining<br />

your child and listening to<br />

the sound, your child’s health<br />

care professional should be<br />

able to determine if further<br />

testing is needed, but most of<br />

the time it is not.<br />

Is treatment necessary?<br />

If the murmur is just due to blood flowing<br />

noisily through the heart, treatment is not<br />

needed. We call this an “innocent murmur”<br />

due to noisy blood flow.<br />

However, a follow-up visit or two may be<br />

requested to make sure the sound is not<br />

changing or has gone away. If the flow is<br />

stronger because your child is anemic and<br />

needs to make more red blood cells, iron<br />

therapy might be required. If no therapy is<br />

indicated, restricting your child from sports<br />

or other physical activities is not necessary.<br />

When do we otherwise worry about a murmur<br />

in an older child? We do this only if it is<br />

accompanied by rapid breathing, chest pain,<br />

or an older child being very tired or passing<br />

out. These are very rare occurrences.<br />

Hopefully tips like these will mean you<br />

won’t miss a beat when it comes to knowing<br />

more about heart murmurs.<br />

Lewis First, MD, is chief of Pediatrics at<br />

The University of Vermont Children’s Hospital<br />

and chair of the Department of Pediatrics at<br />

the University of Vermont College of Medicine.<br />

You can also catch “First with Kids” weekly on<br />

WOKO 98.9FM and WPTZ Channel 5, or visit<br />

the First with Kids video archives at www.<br />

UVMHealth.org/MedCenterFirstWithKids.<br />

well be tied in with the quality<br />

of the relationships we do<br />

have.<br />

That’s scary, and for those<br />

of us who don’t have much<br />

time for socializing, it serves<br />

as a wake-up call. What are we going to do<br />

about it?<br />

The first thing that comes to mind is any<br />

activity that encourages interaction with<br />

others. Even a weekly reading group at the<br />

library, with participants commenting on<br />

the book they read and adding thoughts to<br />

others’ comments, has the potential to<br />

evolve further into coffee afterward, phone<br />

numbers swapped and invitations to other<br />

activities.<br />

The same goes for dog walking at the animal<br />

shelter, bus trips with the senior center,<br />

walking clubs around town, board-games<br />

night at the library and neighborhood yard<br />

sales.<br />

As a place to look for local activities,<br />

search online for the Red Hat Society (www.<br />

redhatsociety.com). (c) 20<strong>19</strong> King Features Synd., Inc.<br />

THANK YOU FOR SAYING<br />

I SAW IT IN<br />

CVMC PEDIATRIC PRIMARY CARE - BARRE<br />

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medicine.” Dr. Amblo first received a Ph.D. in Biochemistry<br />

from the University of Vermont, but she still felt that desire to<br />

practice medicine. At the age of 36, with three children and<br />

an encouraging husband, Jolanta moved her family back to<br />

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August 7, 20<strong>19</strong> The WORLD page 15


Governor Phil Scott, State Agencies Join Forces<br />

Around Systematic Tick Surveillance Program<br />

~DAYLILIES~HEN & CHICKS~POTTERY~<br />

(1) LONELY FRINGE TREE ~ LAVENDER~BASIL~<br />

Rise & Shine! Come to Jail Branch<br />

The early bird gets the worm...<br />

Or the good deal!<br />

Stop in at Jail Branch for<br />

a nice selection of<br />

(still) Flowering Plants!<br />

(4” Annuals,<br />

Houseplants, etc..)<br />

Also sturdy Perennials<br />

for your gardens!<br />

Plus our stock is<br />

looking good &<br />

Houseplants keep coming.<br />

(Elderberries are<br />

blooming!)<br />

How to Find Answers to Your Gardening Questions<br />

page 16 The WORLD August 7, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

GARDENING & OUTDOORS<br />

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Between Barre<br />

and<br />

East Barre<br />

Open Everyday!<br />

8:30am-6:00pm<br />

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Jackie Abts, Owner<br />

~LIPSTICK PLANTS~HYDRANGEA~A FEW ROSES~<br />

It’s June! As we finish up planting our vegetable and<br />

flower gardens, it’s a good time to start thinking about how<br />

you will address your inevitable garden problems and questions<br />

that pop up each year like weeds.<br />

Fortunately, Vermont has incredible resources right at<br />

your fingertips.<br />

One excellent place to start when you’re stumped is the<br />

free University of Vermont (UVM) Extension Master<br />

Gardener Hotline. Volunteers are available to take phone<br />

calls on Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays from 9 a.m. to<br />

noon at (802) 656-5421. Or you can submit your question<br />

online at www.uvm.edu/extension/mastergardener/<br />

helpline.<br />

I called the hotline for the first time when I found flea<br />

beetles on my turnips, wondering if I should to do something<br />

about them. Their advice was simple and practical. Look at<br />

the extent of the damage on my plants and use that to determine<br />

the scale of my intervention.<br />

In my case, my plants were large and healthy, and the damage<br />

(tiny holes in the leaves) was minor, so I didn’t need to<br />

do anything in the short term. In the long term, I looked to<br />

online Cooperative Extension resources to understand the<br />

life cycle of flea beetles to help anticipate their tendencies in<br />

future seasons.<br />

To find answers to my garden questions online, I strategically<br />

use the search bar in my internet browser to get the<br />

most relevant and scientific results.<br />

For example, last year I planted strawberry plants.<br />

Strawberry plants do their best fruit production in the second<br />

year, so I needed to know how to care for them during<br />

the first year to ensure a great strawberry harvest. I typed<br />

“strawberry extension Vermont” into the search bar.<br />

This strategic combination of words quickly narrowed<br />

down the search results to research-based resources published<br />

by the UVM Extension. I quickly found that I needed<br />

to pinch all of the flowers off the strawberry plants during<br />

their first year.<br />

The idea behind structuring a search like this is to find<br />

Preliminary spring data is in from the<br />

Vermont Agency of Agriculture, Food &<br />

Markets (VAAFM) and Vermont<br />

Department of Health’s systematic tick surveillance<br />

program. A total of 1,924 ticks were<br />

collected in this year’s spring sampling.<br />

“Tickborne diseases are on the rise in<br />

Vermont,” said Governor Phil Scott. “Any<br />

time a tickborne illness appears in a community,<br />

it’s a cause for concern. The good news<br />

is we can still enjoy outdoor activities by<br />

knowing how to protect ourselves from tick<br />

bites.”<br />

The systematic tick surveillance program<br />

was initiated in 2018 by the Health<br />

Department in partnership with VAAFM to<br />

track blacklegged ticks and the pathogens<br />

they carry around the state. In 2018, a total of<br />

1,239 ticks were collected during the spring,<br />

although due to a change in the way ticks are<br />

collected, data from 2018 can’t be compared<br />

to this year’s figures.<br />

The program focuses on the blacklegged<br />

tick, which is responsible for transmitting<br />

over 99% of all tickborne diseases reported<br />

in Vermont. Through this program, ticks are<br />

collected in the spring and fall from locations<br />

around the state. Once all data has been collected,<br />

VAAFM and the Health Department<br />

collaborate to calculate blacklegged tick densities,<br />

in order to determine the likelihood of<br />

human encounters with ticks that can transmit<br />

disease.<br />

After each collection period, ticks are sent<br />

to the Centers for Disease Control and<br />

Prevention (CDC) for identification and<br />

testing of blacklegged ticks for five tickborne<br />

pathogens: Borrelia burgdorferi (the pathogen<br />

that causes Lyme disease), Anaplasma<br />

phagocytophilum, Babesia microti, Borrelia<br />

miyamotoi, and Powassan virus. Pathology<br />

results from the CDC for 20<strong>19</strong> are pending.<br />

The best way to prevent tickborne diseases<br />

is to prevent tick bites. VAAFM and the<br />

Health Department encourage farmers, outdoor<br />

workers, recreationalists, and all<br />

Vermonters to “Be Tick Smart.”<br />

Prevent tick bites<br />

• Wear an EPA-registered insect repellent<br />

(choose the right one for you) and talk with<br />

your veterinarian about tick prevention<br />

products for your pets.<br />

• Wear clothing treated with permethrin,<br />

which kills ticks on contact and protects<br />

through several washings.<br />

• Do a daily tick check after outdoor activity.<br />

• Shower soon after being outside.<br />

• Place clothes in a dryer on high heat for 10<br />

minutes to kill ticks on clothing.<br />

• Promptly remove any ticks that you find on<br />

your body. Learn more about how to properly<br />

remove a tick.<br />

To learn more about Vermont’s Tick<br />

Surveillance Program, visit https://agriculture.vermont.gov/public-health-agricultural-resource-management-division/planthealth-and-pest-management/ticks.<br />

To review previous reports from the statewide<br />

tick survey, another VAAFM project<br />

that looks at ticks in Vermont , visit VAAFM’s<br />

Annual Tick Reports webpage.<br />

To learn more about preventing tickborne<br />

diseases, visit: http://www.healthvermont.<br />

gov/disease-control/tickborne-diseases/<br />

prevent-tick-bites-tickborne-diseases<br />

• • •<br />

~MINTS~SNAKE PLANTS~FERNS~<br />

Keeping Ahead of Powdery Mildew<br />

By Gordon Clark<br />

Extension Master Gardener, UVM<br />

If you’ve ever lost a nice zucchini plant or a<br />

crop of cucumbers or melons to this white<br />

fungus, then you know the heartbreak of powdery<br />

mildew.<br />

It is a plant disease that looks like its name.<br />

It starts as small white circles that look like<br />

talcum powder, circles that will spread and<br />

eventually cover your plant, reducing the<br />

amount of photosynthesis and fruit production<br />

if left untreated.<br />

Powdery mildew is actually not one single<br />

fungus, but a family of closely related fungal<br />

species that affect a range of trees, flowers and<br />

vegetables, including apple, rose, ash, birch,<br />

grapes, zinnia, lilac, beans and tomatoes, but<br />

are particularly fond of cucurbits. Fortunately,<br />

the different family members are fairly host<br />

specific, so that the powdery mildew on your<br />

rose won’t spread to your cukes.<br />

This disease is persistent. It loves to grow in<br />

humid conditions, but the spores also will<br />

spread in dry conditions via breeze or insects.<br />

The best prevention, as usual, starts with<br />

good cultural practices. If you have mildewresistant<br />

strains available, plant those. Make<br />

sure that you plant in a sunny location, water in<br />

the morning so the plants have time to dry, and<br />

space the plants far enough apart so there is<br />

good air circulation. (I am often guilty of overplanting<br />

myself, but leaves laying on top of<br />

leaves is the perfect environment for fungal<br />

growth.)<br />

Inspect your plants regularly. If you see any<br />

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resources about the specific topic (strawberries), but filter<br />

the results to find local (Vermont) resources and resources<br />

that are research-based and developed by an extension<br />

office.<br />

It is best to start by reviewing resources published in your<br />

own state, but if you need more information, looking at<br />

Cooperative Extension websites in states with similar climates<br />

can help, too. What I love about Cooperative Extension<br />

offices is that they present scientifically tested information in<br />

an easy-to-read format, explain difficult scientific concepts<br />

in a simple way, emphasize practical and sustainable methods<br />

and are free to access with a computer or mobile device.<br />

Depending on the topic you are researching, U.S. government<br />

resources also can be very useful, such as the U.S.<br />

Department of Agriculture or U.S. Environmental Protection<br />

Agency. Including these in your search may yield some fruitful<br />

recommendations and best practices.<br />

In addition, you can ask the experts at your local garden<br />

center or nursery for answers to your gardening questions<br />

including recommendations for plants and pest and disease<br />

control. Or check out the “Gardening Resources” section on<br />

the UVM Extension Master Gardener website (www.uvm.<br />

edu/extension/mastergardener) or the eXtension website<br />

(https://impact.extension.org/search) that searches hundreds<br />

of Cooperative Extension websites.<br />

So the next time you find yourself standing in the middle<br />

of your garden with a question, try looking into some of the<br />

free, local, extension resources in your area.<br />

small white circles start to form, remove the<br />

affected leaves immediately. You can then treat<br />

the rest of the plant with one of a number of<br />

organic (OMRI-listed) fungicides, including<br />

sulfur, copper and others, as well as horticultural<br />

oil.<br />

Milk solutions have been studied to some<br />

degree and are especially intriguing. It is<br />

thought that these work as a powdery mildew<br />

deterrent by changing the basic pH of the leaf<br />

surface to something inhospitable to the fungus--like<br />

vinegar but in the opposite direction-<br />

-although other studies suggest that other special<br />

properties of milk might be responsible for<br />

its effect.<br />

However, keep in mind that using a milk<br />

solution would actually be an illegal use of the<br />

product, since it has not been reviewed and<br />

approved by the Environmental Protection<br />

Agency. Instead, it is always best to use the<br />

fungicides that have been reviewed and tested<br />

for efficacy. These formulated fungicides also<br />

may contain additives (spreaders and stickers)<br />

that help the efficacy of the spray.<br />

Whichever spray you use, the key is to start<br />

BEFORE you see the circles forming and to<br />

use it regularly. It works best as a preventative,<br />

not a cure.<br />

Spray the plants thoroughly (undersides<br />

too!) once a week, but not before it rains, and<br />

not in midday sun. If the disease does appear,<br />

clip off affected leaves and keep spraying regularly.<br />

Your plants may still succumb eventually,<br />

but you will give them weeks of extra life and<br />

productivity.<br />

Happy growing!<br />

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August 7, 20<strong>19</strong> The WORLD page 17


SENIOR LIVING | STAYING FIT<br />

© ADOBE STOCK<br />

7 Healthy Habits for Seniors<br />

If your age is catching<br />

up to you, there may be<br />

some lifestyle changes<br />

you can make to give<br />

you a boost in energy<br />

and better overall health.<br />

Try to incorporate a few of these<br />

healthy habits, recommended by<br />

Parent Giving, to feel better and live<br />

longer.<br />

QUIT SMOKING<br />

Smoking tobacco can cause cancer,<br />

stroke and heart failure. It also affects<br />

your skin by causing excessive wrinkling<br />

weakening skin elasticity.<br />

If you’re having difficulty quitting<br />

cold turkey, try cutting back with the<br />

aid of nicotine gum or patches.<br />

STAY ACTIVE<br />

You should do something that<br />

boosts your strength, flexibility and<br />

balance. Participate in activities that<br />

help you stay at a healthy weight to<br />

prevent heart issues, sleep better and<br />

reduce stress.<br />

EAT WELL<br />

The right diet will make it easier to<br />

remain active. Schedule an appointment<br />

with a nutritionist to find the<br />

eating plan that will benefit you the<br />

most. Dietary changes and exercise<br />

can prevent or control illnesses such<br />

as heart disease, obesity, high blood<br />

pressure and diabetes.<br />

MAINTAIN A HEALTHY WEIGHT<br />

Carrying around excessive weight is<br />

dangerous for your heart and promotes<br />

diseases such as diabetes. Find<br />

out what your ideal weight is for your<br />

body type and work to achieve it. You<br />

can maintain it by staying active and<br />

eating right.<br />

PREVENT FALLS<br />

Analyze your home for fall risks and<br />

eliminate them. Things such as loose<br />

carpets or rugs, cluttered walkways<br />

and unlit hallways should all be<br />

addressed. According to the National<br />

Council on Aging, falls are the leading<br />

cause of fatal and non-fatal injuries<br />

for older Americans. In most cases,<br />

they can be easily avoided.<br />

STAY UP-TO-DATE<br />

ON IMMUNIZATIONS<br />

AND SCREENINGS<br />

Staying on top of your health is crucial,<br />

especially as you age. Follow<br />

your doctor’s orders and receive the<br />

immunizations and life-saving<br />

screening schedule they provide to<br />

watch for serious health problems.<br />

MANAGE STRESS<br />

Try to limit the amount of stress you<br />

put yourself through. Exercising and<br />

meditation have shown to relieve<br />

pent-up frustration. You also should<br />

make time to socialize with friends<br />

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SENIOR LIVING | HEALTH BASICS<br />

© ADOBE STOCK<br />

The Importance of Good Sleep<br />

A good night’s sleep affects<br />

much more than how you<br />

feel the next day. With age,<br />

it’s not uncommon for<br />

sleep habits to change.<br />

Most seniors notice they<br />

are ready to fall asleep<br />

earlier in the evening and<br />

wake up at later hours.<br />

As we age, our bodies produce less<br />

melatonin, which can lead to slight disruptions<br />

throughout the night.<br />

However, if you experience disturbed<br />

sleep, are tired when you wake up or<br />

experience other aspects of insomnia,<br />

there may be serious underlying issues.<br />

Learn more information regarding<br />

your sleeping patterns and if you<br />

should visit a specialist, from the<br />

American Geriatrics Society.<br />

COMMON SLEEP<br />

PROBLEMS IN SENIORS<br />

Problems with sleep can lead to<br />

numerous issues for older adults. Here<br />

are a few of the most common types<br />

they experience.<br />

Insomnia: a condition which causes<br />

you not to fall asleep when you think<br />

you should, causes you to stay asleep or<br />

gives the feeling you have not slept<br />

enough once you wake up.<br />

Sleep apnea: a condition that may<br />

cause seniors to stop breathing during<br />

sleep. A lack of oxygen causes some to<br />

wake up gasping for air. This condition<br />

may lead to diseases such as high blood<br />

pressure and heart conditions.<br />

Restless Leg Syndrome: a condition<br />

that causes people to repetitively kick<br />

their legs during sleep. While it may not<br />

wake you up, it’s likely your legs will be<br />

sore in the morning and it will affect<br />

your comfort and ability to rest.<br />

WHAT YOU CAN DO<br />

Your actions throughout the day can<br />

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Take the advice from the group Health<br />

in Aging to set yourself up for a full<br />

night’s rest.<br />

• Avoid caffeine, tobacco and alcohol<br />

in the later part of the day;<br />

• Eat smaller portions before bedtime;<br />

• Follow a strict sleep schedule and<br />

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• Exercise regularly, especially early in<br />

the day.<br />

REACH OUT FOR HELP<br />

If you have tried to make yourself<br />

tired and are still having difficulty sleeping,<br />

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Through tests and studies, they can find<br />

what is keeping you awake.<br />

They may choose cognitive-behavioral<br />

therapy, medical management or<br />

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SENIOR LIVING | MEDICAL DEVICES<br />

Hearing Better for a Happier Life<br />

According to the<br />

National Institute on<br />

Deafness and Other<br />

Communication<br />

Disorders, about one<br />

in three people<br />

between the ages of<br />

65 and 74 have<br />

hearing loss and<br />

nearly half of those<br />

older than 75 have<br />

difficulty hearing.<br />

If you are experiencing a<br />

decline in how you hear, it may<br />

be time to invest in a hearing<br />

aid. There are several considerations<br />

you should make before<br />

committing to a certain model.<br />

Make sure to get your doctor’s<br />

opinion on the option that is<br />

most efficient in your situation.<br />

Here are some factors to<br />

consider before you begin<br />

shopping.<br />

KEY FEATURES<br />

Hearing devices typically<br />

consist of four basic components:<br />

a microphone, a processor,<br />

a receiver and a power<br />

source. The microphone recognizes<br />

the sounds you hear and<br />

transfers them to the processor.<br />

Those sounds are enhanced<br />

by the processor, which then<br />

amplifies them to your ear<br />

canal via the receiver, or speaker.<br />

The system is powered by a<br />

power source, or battery.<br />

While most operate the<br />

same, you can find units with<br />

other high-tech features. Here<br />

are some to look for.<br />

• Automatic gain control<br />

picks up on soft sounds while<br />

maintaining loud noises at<br />

comfortable levels.<br />

• A feedback manager is<br />

helpful to minimize annoying<br />

whistling, while boosting<br />

amplification.<br />

• Noise reduction is great for<br />

reducing background noise so<br />

you can concentrate on speech<br />

intelligibility.<br />

SET REASONABLE<br />

EXPECTATIONS<br />

A hearing aid won’t completely<br />

restore your hearing, so<br />

it’s important to understand<br />

what you should expect.<br />

Most users experience a better<br />

quality of life by picking up<br />

on sounds they couldn’t hear<br />

in the past and enjoying conversations<br />

without asking<br />

someone to repeat themselves.<br />

You also should allow yourself<br />

time to adjust to the new<br />

type of hearing experience.<br />

There may be a short period<br />

before you feel comfortable<br />

with your new earpiece and its<br />

capabilities.<br />

ASSISTIVE<br />

LISTENING DEVICE<br />

In addition to a hearing aid,<br />

© ADOBE STOCK<br />

take advantage of assistive listening<br />

devices that can make<br />

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wireless systems or neck loops<br />

in rooms in which you have<br />

difficulty hearing can make the<br />

sounds more prevalent to<br />

someone with a hearing aid.<br />

Before making a purchase,<br />

check with your insurance policy<br />

to see if they help cover the<br />

cost. Some high-end models<br />

can be expensive.<br />

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SENIOR LIVING | DISEASE PREVENTION<br />

Skin Cancer Awareness<br />

The Skin Cancer<br />

Foundation reports<br />

the odds of<br />

developing skin<br />

cancer rise as you age.<br />

In fact, about 50 percent of<br />

Americans who live to age 65<br />

will have experienced at least<br />

one type of skin disease.<br />

Before enjoying the summer<br />

outdoors, don’t skimp on the<br />

sunscreen.<br />

WHAT IS SKIN CANCER<br />

This type of cancer develops<br />

in one of the tissues in<br />

the skin. When caught early,<br />

most instances are considered<br />

minor problems and are easily<br />

removed. However, if left<br />

unresolved, they can lead to a<br />

fatal disease.<br />

Regular annual checkups<br />

are encouraged by the<br />

American Geriatrics Society.<br />

They report that more than 2<br />

million cases of skin cancer<br />

are discovered annually in the<br />

United Sates.<br />

There are three common<br />

types that experts look for<br />

during examinations.<br />

• Basal cell carcinoma: The<br />

most common type in the<br />

country, starts in the outer<br />

layer of the skin and slowly<br />

grows in its original location<br />

without spreading;<br />

• Squamous cell cancer:<br />

Developed from flat squamous<br />

surfaces on the skin, it<br />

is commonly caused by exposure<br />

from the sun. It’s more<br />

likely to spread than basal cell<br />

but chances are still relatively<br />

low; and<br />

• Melanoma: This is the<br />

most dangerous form of skin<br />

cancer, which often spreads<br />

to important parts of the<br />

body. It occurs by affecting<br />

specialized cells in the skin<br />

that produce melanin. If<br />

caught early, 97 percent of<br />

melanomas can be cured, but<br />

it becomes more difficult to<br />

treat in later stages.<br />

PROTECTING YOURSELF<br />

The most important thing<br />

to do to lessen the risk of skin<br />

cancer is to avoid staying out<br />

in the sun. When going outdoors,<br />

wear long-sleeved<br />

shirts and pants when temperatures<br />

permit. During<br />

sunny days, make sure to liberally<br />

apply sunscreen with a<br />

UPF of 30 or higher on<br />

exposed skin.<br />

Don’t forget to reapply sunscreen<br />

after every few hours if<br />

you will be outside for long<br />

durations.<br />

TREATMENTS<br />

If you find yourself diagnosed<br />

with skin cancer, a specialist<br />

may offer different<br />

treatment methods based on<br />

its severity.<br />

Sometimes surgical<br />

© ADOBE STOCK<br />

extraction can be performed<br />

to easily remove the growth.<br />

For early cases, an incision<br />

usually eradicates the disease.<br />

However, for more advanced<br />

stages, extensive surgery may<br />

be required to eliminate deeper<br />

lesions.<br />

Serious cases which have<br />

spread may require chemotherapy<br />

and radiation to<br />

shrink or eliminate the cancer.<br />

What is SPF?<br />

When shopping for sunscreens, consumers will no<br />

doubt notice each bottle lists its SPF number. Numbers<br />

tend to be as low as 4 or as high as 100. But what<br />

is SPF? And what does it have to do with protecting<br />

the skin from the sun’s harmful rays? According to the<br />

Skin Cancer Foundation, SPF, which stands for sun<br />

protection factor, is a measure of a sunscreen’s ability<br />

to prevent the skin against ultraviolet B, or UVB, rays<br />

from the sun. The Skin Cancer Foundation notes that<br />

SPF works in a way that might surprise even the most<br />

devoted of sun worshippers. If it takes 20 minutes for<br />

unprotected skin to start redding, then a sunscreen<br />

with an SPF of 15 will theoretically prevent redding<br />

for 15 times longer than that — or about five hours.<br />

While that’s impressive, the Skin Cancer Foundation<br />

notes that the SPF model does spark some concern.<br />

For example, no SPF sunscreen, regardless of its number,<br />

should be expected to remain effective for longer<br />

than two hours without reapplication. In addition,<br />

reddening of the skin is a reaction to UVB rays alone<br />

and indicates little about any damage caused by ultraviolet<br />

A, or UVA, rays. To protect themselves against<br />

both UVB and UVA rays, the Skin Cancer Foundation<br />

recommends consumers use only broad-spectrum<br />

sunscreens with an SPF of 15 or higher. Wearing protective<br />

clothing, staying out of the sun between the<br />

hours of 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. and reapplying sunscreen<br />

after sweating or going into the water are other ways<br />

to protect the skin from the sun’s harmful rays.<br />

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August 7, 20<strong>19</strong> The WORLD page 21


SENIOR LIVING | ESTATE PLANNING<br />

What Could Possibly Go Wrong? Choosing the Wrong Executor<br />

Among my workshops my clients most<br />

appreciate is the one called “Thrills, Chills, and<br />

Probate-Related Horror.” The probate process<br />

can seem deceptively simple to people who’ve<br />

never been through it. But in probate, seemingly<br />

minor errors or omissions can have major<br />

consequences – delays that drag on not just for<br />

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have made life more pleasant for the beneficiaries<br />

expended on legal fees or court battles; and,<br />

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among family members. So much can go wrong<br />

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about educating the unwary about the pitfalls that<br />

surround the probate process.<br />

By Claudia Pringles, Esq.<br />

Among the most common source of problems in probate<br />

is the will-maker’s choice of executor – or, rather, the process<br />

the will-maker used to make that choice.<br />

First, let’s clarify some of the terminology. “Probate” is<br />

the court-supervised process of determining the final destination<br />

of the assets of a person who has passed away, such as<br />

finding the deceased person’s assets and determining their<br />

value; paying the deceased’s outstanding debts and taxes;<br />

identifying the rightful beneficiaries and ensuring they<br />

receive the amount due them. The driver of the probate train<br />

is the Executor, who is nominated for this office in the will of<br />

the deceased, then formally appointed by the probate judge<br />

as the probate process begins.<br />

WHAT DOES AN EXECUTOR DO?<br />

The Executor is legally responsible for the many tasks<br />

that make up the probate process. He/she must understand<br />

probate law well enough to be able to comply with it yet<br />

have enough humility to get expert help (paid for out of the<br />

estate) regarding legal and/or financial areas as needed. The<br />

Executor is responsible for filing a variety of documents<br />

with the court properly and on time; for all communications<br />

regarding the affairs of the deceased and the probate process;<br />

for keeping excellent records of work performed and<br />

information gathered, including detailed financial records.<br />

The Executor must also adopt an appropriate, respectful<br />

demeanor when dealing with the probate judge and other<br />

court officials. Given the many responsibilities that come<br />

with this office, a good Executor comes supplied with good<br />

organizational skills and a great deal of patience.<br />

Executors are nominated in the Last Will and Testament<br />

of the person who passed away and formally appointed by a<br />

probate judge as part of the probate process.<br />

CHOOSING AN EXECUTOR<br />

Who makes a good executor? An executor has one job:<br />

to lead the charge with probating your estate through the<br />

court while remaining loyal to your wishes and being fair<br />

to your beneficiaries. As the list of duties above suggests, a<br />

good executor is someone who is organized, fair-minded,<br />

responsible, and has the time to do the work.<br />

It’s not uncommon for clients to walk into their estateplanning<br />

attorney’s office with the assumption that they<br />

had to finish a self-imposed homework assignment before<br />

they’ve even said “Hello.” More often than not, new clients<br />

come to my estate-planning practice with a list assigning<br />

individuals to key estate-planning roles from Executor to<br />

Trustee. Almost without fail, the roles will be assigned to<br />

their children, and will be assigned by birth order, from<br />

eldest to youngest, without regard to the individual’s<br />

strengths, weaknesses, or willingness to undertake their assigned<br />

job. It’s as if they were living in Downton Abbey, with<br />

the rules of primogeniture in force.<br />

Let’s take a fictional family, Mr. and Mrs. Traditional. The<br />

Traditionals have three children: Peter the Ph.D. Physics<br />

Professor, Dana the Doctor, and Eddie the Electrician. The<br />

Traditionals announce they’ve decided to name Peter the<br />

Executor, Peter as their alternate agent for Powers of Attorney<br />

and Advance Directives, and Peter as Successor Trustee.<br />

AS THE PROBATE TURNS...<br />

Never mind the wisdom, much less the fairness, of asking<br />

one person to do all these roles, which would likely occur<br />

close in time. Peter could find himself as: the agent under<br />

his incapacitated parent’s power of attorney and Advance<br />

Directives; the trustee of their trust; and, after the parents’<br />

death, the executor.<br />

Back at the planning stage, would Peter make a good<br />

choice for executor?<br />

As a physicist with a specialization in black hole theory,<br />

Peter is surely smart enough to figure out how to do probate.<br />

His parents admit, however, that Peter tends to be<br />

arrogant, thinks he has all the answers, is unlikely to ask<br />

for help, and would refuse<br />

to step down from the role<br />

of Executor no matter how<br />

overwhelmed he was nor<br />

how poorly or slowly he<br />

performed the job. While<br />

Peter has infinite patience<br />

calculating Absolute v.<br />

Apparent Magnitude, with<br />

other human beings – not so<br />

much. He doesn’t get along<br />

well with his family members<br />

– especially his siblings.<br />

The Traditionals’ secondeldest<br />

child, Dana, also has<br />

some characteristics that<br />

may not be ideal for an<br />

executor. Dana is not financially<br />

responsible and lives<br />

way above his means. He<br />

struggles with keeping his<br />

finances organized and paying<br />

bills on a timely basis. As<br />

one of the most important<br />

responsibilities an executor<br />

has is managing the finances of the decedent, including<br />

clear, detailed, accurate record-keeping and the timely<br />

paying of bills, increasing the amount of such responsibility<br />

Dana must handle will almost certainly overwhelm him.<br />

Finally, there is Eddie. Eddie has been an electrician for<br />

20 years. He runs his own successful business, including<br />

managing its finances. He deals with many customers and<br />

other professionals and has good personal skills. He has<br />

been a keen observer of the family drama triggered by Peter<br />

and Dana, and has managed to remain on cordial terms with<br />

everyone while staying out of the fray.<br />

If the law required the Traditionals to select one of their<br />

children as their Executor, clearly the youngest, Eddie, would<br />

be the best choice. But the law has no such requirement. And<br />

given his desire to stay as far away from family drama as possible,<br />

Eddie might prefer not to serve as Executor.<br />

Knowing this, the Traditionals begin considering a wide<br />

variety of other people well suited to the role – other family<br />

members and friends, or professionals such as attorneys or<br />

accountants. But this time, they base their choice for each<br />

role on how well any individual’s skill set and temperament<br />

match the needs of the job.<br />

Choosing your executor and other persons who will<br />

play key roles in managing your assets can be a far more<br />

important – and more challenging! – aspect of the estateplanning<br />

process than deciding who gets Grandma’s pearls<br />

or the grand piano. Don’t feel you need to have made these<br />

decisions prior to meeting with your estate-planning attorney,<br />

who’ll be able to help you identify objectively persons<br />

well suited to these demanding roles.<br />

Claudia Pringles is an estate planning attorney based in<br />

Montpelier, Vermont. She can be reached at 802-223-0600 or<br />

via her website at www.EstatePlanningVermont.com.<br />

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Kristin Dearborn<br />

Financial Advisor<br />

89 Main St City Center<br />

Suite 10<br />

Montpelier, VT 05602<br />

802-223-1617<br />

Member SIPC<br />

Seniors<br />

Living Well<br />

Barre Area<br />

Senior Center<br />

Health & Wellness, Exercise Programs<br />

Arts & Crafts Classes<br />

Dancing & Entertainment Programs<br />

Activities, Workshops & Events<br />

Trips & Tours and much more . . .<br />

Call or stop by for more info!<br />

www.edwardjones.com<br />

MKT-5894I-A<br />

page 22 The WORLD August 7, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

A locally owned nonprofit.<br />

Celebrating 80 years of providing<br />

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802-479-9512 131 South Main St. #4


SENIOR LIVING | STAYING SAFE<br />

Protect Yourself from Extreme Heat<br />

With warmer<br />

temperatures on the<br />

horizon in most areas<br />

of the country, now<br />

is the time to prepare<br />

your home and body.<br />

According to the Centers<br />

for Disease Control and<br />

Prevention, more people in<br />

the United States die from<br />

extreme heat than earthquakes,<br />

hurricanes, lightning,<br />

floods and tornadoes combined.<br />

With age, our bodies<br />

become less able to cool<br />

down when temperatures are<br />

extreme. Fortunately, there<br />

are several proactive steps<br />

seniors can take to keep<br />

themselves safe this summer.<br />

Don’t underestimate the<br />

impact heat can have on your<br />

health. Remember these tips<br />

as the temperatures increase.<br />

AIR-CONDITIONING<br />

INSPECTION<br />

Before the heat is in full<br />

force, have a certified HVAC<br />

service analyze the integrity<br />

of your air-conditioning system.<br />

Ensuring it will perform<br />

when you need it most is<br />

good peace of mind.<br />

They will test it and perform<br />

preventative maintenance<br />

so it’s running in peak<br />

condition.<br />

If your AC system breaks<br />

down in the middle of the<br />

summer, you may face delays<br />

before a specialist can make<br />

repairs as it is the busy season.<br />

If you should find yourself<br />

in this situation, have a<br />

back-up plan to stay with a<br />

loved one or an emergency<br />

fund to check into a hotel<br />

until the unit is fixed.<br />

REMAIN HYDRATED<br />

A key to keeping safe<br />

during the summer is to stay<br />

hydrated. Drinking plenty of<br />

water is always important but<br />

especially crucial during the<br />

heat. If you find yourself outside<br />

for extended periods, be<br />

sure to take numerous sips,<br />

not just when you’re thirsty,<br />

as thirst isn’t a good indicator<br />

of hydration.<br />

Signs to look for include<br />

headache, muscle cramps<br />

and dry mouth or tongue. If<br />

these symptoms persist, it’s<br />

important to seek medical<br />

attention before they become<br />

worse.<br />

BUDDY SYSTEM<br />

OR CAREGIVER<br />

Call on a friend or loved<br />

one to check in on you every<br />

few hours during days of<br />

extreme heat. You will have<br />

© ADOBE STOCK<br />

peace of mind that if something<br />

goes wrong, you will<br />

have someone looking out for<br />

you.<br />

If you need more constant<br />

care, consider hiring an<br />

in-home caretaker. They can<br />

help ensure you are remaining<br />

hydrated and determine if<br />

the heat is beginning to affect<br />

your health.<br />

Let SR Services Help With Your Spring Cleaning!<br />

Call Now For An Appointment<br />

223-6577<br />

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Cleaning & Maintenance<br />

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Turning 65? New to Medicare?<br />

CVCOA Offers Free Workshops!<br />

Learn about your<br />

Medicare options<br />

TwoWorkshops<br />

Per Month in Barre<br />

Call for Schedule and to<br />

Register: 479-0531 or email<br />

medicareworkshops@cvcoa.org<br />

Central Vermont Council on Aging<br />

59 N. Main Street - 2 nd Floor - Barre<br />

Senior HelpLine - (800) 642-51<strong>19</strong><br />

IONIC FOOT<br />

DETOXIFICATION<br />

$25 first Treatment<br />

$75 for 3-treatment (Package)<br />

$35 each re-visiting treatments<br />

Ionic Detox Therapy pushes<br />

your body back in line<br />

naturally through the<br />

introduction of negative ions<br />

into your cells. This helps to<br />

balance your body and<br />

enhance its natural processes.<br />

enefits<br />

Boosting & Reviving Cell Function<br />

Reinforcing Collagen<br />

Boosting Metabolism<br />

urifiation o loo<br />

Boosting Immune System & Autonomic<br />

Nervous System<br />

Rosalene Bussiere<br />

Certifie in eralism eii <br />

ranger ., erlin, <br />

-- manworsers.weel.com<br />

August 7, 20<strong>19</strong> The WORLD page 23


What distinguishes ales from lagers?<br />

Beer is a subject many people would<br />

happily expound on if given a chance.<br />

Some beer drinkers may be quick to<br />

name a specific beer if ased to pic<br />

a favorite, while others may say they simply<br />

prefer an ale or a lager without naming a<br />

particular beer. But what distinguishes ales<br />

from lagers?<br />

Flavor is one thing that distinguishes ales from lagers.<br />

Lagers are often described as “crisp.” When attaching that<br />

descriptor to lagers, people typically mean the lager goes<br />

down smooth without too complicated a flavor profile. Ales<br />

tend to produce a fruity, aromatic and more complex flavor<br />

than lagers. Some, but not all, ales are characterized by a<br />

bitter flavor, while lagers are generally not. It’s important<br />

to note that these flavor profiles are not set in stone. As a<br />

result, it might be possible to find ales and lagers with flavor<br />

profiles that are wholly unique to the style. This might be<br />

even more possible now thanks to the craft beer movement,<br />

which has inspired many talented brewers to experiment<br />

with ingredients in an effort to expand the flavor possibilities<br />

of their beers, regardless of which style of beer they’re<br />

brewing.<br />

Popular Science notes that the most fundamental difference<br />

between ales and lagers is the type of yeast used<br />

to create the beers. The yeast used affects the flavor of the<br />

beers, so it’s no wonder that ales and lagers tend to taste so<br />

different from one another.<br />

The yeast used to create lagers and ales is different, but<br />

Popular Science notes that the lager yeast genome shares<br />

• • •<br />

What makes a brewer a craft brewer?<br />

Craft beer has never been more popular or lucrative.<br />

According to The Brewers Association, a trade association<br />

that represents small and independent craft brewers in<br />

the United States, small and independent brewers collectively<br />

realized 4 percent total growth in 2018. The retail<br />

dollar value was estimated at $27.6 billion, proving that craft<br />

beer is not just flavorful but also a great way for people with<br />

a passion for brewing to share that passion while earning a<br />

pretty penny.<br />

As popular as craft beer has become over the last decade,<br />

even the most ardent craft beer enthusiasts might not know<br />

just what qualifies a brewery as a craft brewery.<br />

The Brewers Association issues a seal that certifies a<br />

brewery as a craft brewery. Breweries that earn the seal<br />

annually produce six million barrels of beer or less, which<br />

many similarities to the ale yeast genome. So while the yeast<br />

is different, ultimately the difference in flavors between the<br />

two has as much to do with the fermentation process as<br />

it does with the yeast. How the two yeasts behave is a big<br />

reason behind the differences in flavor. Lager yeast works<br />

best in cold temperatures. If employed in those same temperatures,<br />

ale yeast would go dormant. Ales are, according<br />

to “Beer for Dummies,” traditionally fermented at temperatures<br />

between 55 and 70 F, while lagers are fermented<br />

at considerably colder temperatures (38 to 50 F). It’s that<br />

cold environment during the fermentation process of lagers<br />

that prohibits the production of fruity aromas, producing a<br />

lager’s clean, more mellow taste.<br />

Beer afficionados tend to be partial to ales or lagers. And<br />

while ales and lagers differ greatly in terms of taste, the two<br />

are not necessarily as different as some may think.<br />

equates to roughly 3 percent of annual beer sales in the<br />

United States. In addition, a brewery must be deemed<br />

“independent” to earn the seal. That means less than 25<br />

percent of the craft brewer can be owned or controlled by<br />

a beverage alcohol industry member that is not itself a craft<br />

brewer. Finally, to earn the seal, a brewer must have his or<br />

her Brewer’s Notice, which is issued by the Alcohol and Tobacco<br />

Tax and Trade Bureau, a division of the U.S. Department<br />

of the Treasury.<br />

Many craft brewers started out as hobbyists brewing<br />

beer in their garages or sheds. Those who take that passion<br />

to the next level and end up sharing that passion and their<br />

finished product with others may one day earn the right to<br />

be deemed an official craft brewer.<br />

AUGUST 20<strong>19</strong><br />

First Quarter Aug. 7, We 01:32 PM<br />

Full Moon Aug. 15, Th <strong>08</strong>:31 AM<br />

Third Quarter Aug. 15, Th <strong>08</strong>:31 AM<br />

New Moon Aug. 30, Fr 06:38 AM<br />

Full Sturgeon Moon: Some Native American tribes knew<br />

that the sturgeon of the Great Lakes and Lake Champlain<br />

were most readily caught during this full Moon. Others<br />

called it the Green Corn Moon.<br />

Thu, Aug. 1 National Mahjong Day<br />

Fri, Aug. 2 National Coloring Book<br />

Day<br />

Sat, Aug. 3 National Watermelon Day<br />

Sun, Aug. 4 National Coast Guard<br />

Day<br />

Mon, Aug. 5 National Underwear Day<br />

Tue, Aug. 6 National Root Beer<br />

Float Day<br />

Wed, Aug. 7 National Raspberries N’<br />

Cream Day<br />

Thu, Aug. 8 National Frozen Custard<br />

Day<br />

Fri, Aug. 9 National Rice Pudding<br />

Day<br />

Sat, Aug. 10 National S’mores Day<br />

Sun, Aug. 11 National Presidential<br />

Joke Day<br />

Mon, Aug. 12 National Middle Child<br />

Day<br />

Tue, Aug. 13 Left-Handers Day<br />

Wed, Aug. 14 National Creamsicle<br />

Day<br />

Thu, Aug. 15 National Lemon<br />

Meringue Pie Day<br />

~ THIS AD SPONSORED BY~<br />

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Fri, Aug. 16 National Roller Coaster<br />

Day<br />

Sat, Aug. 17 Black Cat Appreciation<br />

Day<br />

Mon, Aug. <strong>19</strong> National Soft Ice<br />

Cream Day<br />

Tue, Aug. 20 National Radio Day<br />

Thu, Aug. 22 National Tooth Fairy<br />

Day<br />

Fri, Aug. 23 National Sponge Cake<br />

Day<br />

Sat, Aug. 24 National Peach Pie Day<br />

Sun, Aug. 25 National Banana Split<br />

Day<br />

Mon, Aug. 26 National Cherry<br />

Popsicle Day<br />

Tue, Aug. 27 National Just Because<br />

Day<br />

Wed, Aug. 28 National Bow Tie Day<br />

Thu, Aug. 29 National Chop Suey<br />

Day<br />

Fri, Aug. 30 National Toasted<br />

Marshmallow Day<br />

Sat, Aug. 31 National Trail Mix Day<br />

- Weird<br />

OPEN EVERY DAY 9AM to 8PM<br />

802-223-2740 www.morsefarm.com<br />

1168 County Rd., Montpelier<br />

STATE LIQUOR STORE<br />

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KAHLUA<br />

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PLATINUM<br />

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1.75L<br />

BACARDI<br />

SUPERIOR RUM<br />

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This ad paid for by Vermont Liquor Brokers or individual companies.<br />

Most liquor stores are open on Sunday • 75+ Convenient Locations Throughout Vermont<br />

For a Complete Price List Visit 802spirits.com• Not responsible for typographical errors<br />

August 7, 20<strong>19</strong> The WORLD page 25


amant.org<br />

Adamant Music School<br />

OUR 77TH SEASON<br />

Master Classes<br />

with Menahem Pressler<br />

August 18 – 22<br />

Five daily Master Classes will be held<br />

August 18-22 from 2:00 – 5:00 pm.<br />

Master Classes are open to<br />

members and the public at a cost of $50.00 per day.<br />

Participant Piano Concerts<br />

August 21 & 22 at 7:30 pm<br />

All concerts are free for members, guest admission is<br />

$10.00. Seniors & Students $6.00.<br />

Susan Wahlrab will be our showcased artist.<br />

For general information call 802-223-3347<br />

or visit adamant.org<br />

Dress Rehearsal for Murder (original mystery)<br />

August 8-11 & 15-18<br />

Evening performances are Thursday, Friday, and<br />

Saturday at 7:30 pm. Matinees are at 2:00 pm<br />

Saturday and Sunday.<br />

All QuarryWorks performances are FREE.<br />

Call 802-229-6978 to make reservations.<br />

For more information visit quarryworks.org<br />

Adamant, Vermont<br />

Find us on<br />

CANADIAN CLUB<br />

BINGO<br />

•Flash Ball 1: $200<br />

•Flash Ball 2: $450<br />

•Mega Jackpot: $2,500<br />

•Jackpot: $1,300<br />

Thursday Night<br />

•Doors Open at 4:00 PM<br />

•Premies at 6:00 PM<br />

CONCESSION<br />

•Regular Games at 7:00 PM<br />

CANADIAN CLUB<br />

ROUTE 14 • 479-9090<br />

Just outside of Barre<br />

OPEN!<br />

All calendar submissions should be sent to editor@vt-world.<br />

com or mailed to The WORLD, Attn: Calendar, 403 U.S.<br />

Route 302, Barre, Vt. 05641. The deadline is 5:00 p.m.,<br />

Thursday preceding publication. The Ongoing section is for<br />

free/low cost/non-profit community events.<br />

Ongoing Events<br />

BARRE—Weekly Business Networking in Central Vermont,<br />

Central Vermont Chamber of Commerce, 33 Stewart Ln.<br />

8AM-9:30AM. Thurs. Free. Info: mike@eternitymarketing.com.<br />

Granite Center Garden Club, the Barre Congregational Church.<br />

Runs Apr.-July & Sept.-Nov., 2nd Mon., 6:30PM. Info: www.<br />

facebook.com/@granitecentergardenclub.<br />

Church of God of Prophecy, 241 Quarry Hill Rd. Sunday<br />

School: 9:30AM; Service: 10:30AM; free potluck dinner: 12PM<br />

on 2nd Sun. Info: (814) 428-2696.<br />

Sons of the American Legion Squadron #10 Meetings, Barre<br />

Legion Post #10, 320 N. Main St. 3rd Wed. of each month. 6PM.<br />

Women & Children 1st: Senior Day, Every Wed. Seniors 55 &<br />

older receive 10% off their purchases. 114 N. Main St.,<br />

Central VT Adult Basic Education, Free classes. Pre-GED and<br />

high school diploma prep classes at Barre Learning Center, 46<br />

Washington St. Info./pre-register 476-4588.<br />

Central Vermont Woodcarving Group, Free instruction projects<br />

for all abilities. Barre Congregational Church, Mon. 1-4pm.<br />

479-9563.<br />

Heart of Vermont Quilt Guild, meets 3rd Tues. of the month at<br />

First Presbyterian Church, Seminary St. 5:30-7:30PM.<br />

Step ‘n’ Time Line Dancers of Central Vermont, Thurs. at The<br />

Old Labor Hall, 46 Granite St. 6:30-8:30PM.<br />

Additional Recycling Collection Center, Open for collection<br />

Mon., Wed., Fri. 11:30-5:30PM, 3rd Sat. 9AM-1PM. 540 N. Main<br />

St., Barre. Visit www.cvswmd.org for list of acceptable items.<br />

Jabbok Christian Center Prayer Meeting, 8 Daniel Dr. 6:30-<br />

8PM. 1st & 3rd Thurs. Info: 479-0302.<br />

Medicare & You, Have questions? We have answers. Central<br />

Vermont Council on Aging, 59 N. Main St., Suite 200, 2nd & 4th<br />

Tues. of the month. Call 479-0531 to register.<br />

Wheelchair Basketball, Barre Evangelical Free Church, 17 S.<br />

Main St., Every other Tues., 5:30-7PM. Info: 498-3030 (David)<br />

or 249-7931 (Sandy).<br />

Central Vermont Business Builders, Community National<br />

Bank, 1st & 3rd Tues., 8-9AM. Info: 777-54<strong>19</strong>.<br />

Weekly Storytime, Next Chapter Bookstore, 158 North Main<br />

St., Sat., 10:30AM. Info. 476-3114.<br />

Play Group, St. Monica’s Church, lower level, Thurs. during<br />

school year, 9:30-11AM<br />

Vermont Modelers Club, Building and flying model airplanes<br />

year-round. Info: 485-7144.<br />

Community Breakfast, First Presbyterian Church, 78 Summer<br />

St., 3rd Sun. FREE, 7:30-9AM. 476-3966.<br />

THE AMERICAN<br />

LEGION<br />

BARRE POST 10<br />

320 NORTH MAIN ST.<br />

BARRE, VT<br />

Fri., August 9 7-11pm<br />

TWANG<br />

CASTERS<br />

$6 COVER<br />

Sat., August 10 7-11pm<br />

LEGEND<br />

$6 COVER<br />

OPEN TO THE PUBLIC 21 & OVER<br />

For information, call the Post at<br />

479-9058<br />

HUNTER EDUCATION<br />

COURSE OFFERED<br />

Registration Monday,<br />

August 12, 6-8 P.M. at the<br />

Barre Fish & Game Club<br />

Gun Club Road<br />

Barre Town<br />

522-2499<br />

CONTACT US<br />

editor@vt-world.com<br />

sales@vt-world.com<br />

www.vt-world.com<br />

Telephone<br />

(802)479-2582<br />

1-800-639-9753<br />

Fax:<br />

(802)479-7916<br />

403 Route 302-Berlin, Barre, VT 05641<br />

Circle of Parents, Confidential support group for parents and<br />

caregivers. Tues. evenings. Info: 229-5724.<br />

Mothers of Preschoolers, Monthly get-togethers for crafts,<br />

refreshments, etc. Christian Alliance Church, 476-3221.<br />

Alcoholics Anonymous, Meetings in Barre, daily; call 802-229-<br />

5100 for latest times & locations; www.aavt.org.<br />

Al-Anon Family Groups, Turning Point, 489 South Main St. Use<br />

back door of parking lot. Older children friendly. Sat. 5-6PM.<br />

Info: vermontalanonalateen.org<br />

Hedding United Methodist Activities & Meetings, 40<br />

Washington St., 476-8156. Choir: Thurs. 7PM; Free Community<br />

Supper: Fri. 5:30-6:30PM; Community Service & Food Shelf<br />

Hours: Weds & Thurs. 3-5PM.<br />

Turning Point Recovery Center, 489 N. Main St., Barre. Safe<br />

and supportive place for individuals/families in or seeking substance<br />

abuse recovery. Open Mon/Tue/Thur: 10AM-5PM;<br />

Wed/Fri: 10AM-9PM; Sat: 6PM-9PM. For info and programs,<br />

call 479-7373.<br />

Green Mountain Spirit Chapter, National women bikers club.<br />

2nd Wed. Info: grnmtnspirit@hotmail.com.<br />

Grief & Bereavement Support Group, Central Vermont Home<br />

Health and Hospice office, 600 Granger Road. This group is<br />

open to anyone who has experienced the death of a loved one.<br />

Group 1 Meets every 3rd Wed. 10AM-11:30AM, Group 2 meets<br />

every 2nd Mon. 6PM-7:30PM. Free. Info: 223-1878.<br />

Safe Disposal of Prescription Drugs, Barre City Police, 15<br />

Fourth St., 476-6613. Get rid of old or unused meds at these local<br />

permanent safe disposal sites.<br />

Granite City Grocery Volunteers, every 3rd Wed./month at<br />

6PM at The Quarry Kitchen & Spirits, second floor. Info: gaylepoinsette@gmail.com.<br />

Granite City Grocery’s Board Meeting, every 2nd Tuesday at<br />

6PM. Open to public.<br />

Community Movie Night at the Barre Universalist Church. Join<br />

us for a family-friendly film each Sunday evening throughout the<br />

summer. All are welcome - doors open at 4:00 pm, popcorn will<br />

be served, details can be found at the church or online at http://<br />

www.FirstChurchBarreUU.org/ or https://www.facebook.com/<br />

FirstChurchBarreUU/ . Donations are always appreciated.<br />

BERLIN- Contra Dance No experience and no partner needed.<br />

All dances are taught plus an introductory session at 7:45.<br />

Everyone welcome! The dance takes place at the Capital City<br />

Grange Hall, 6612 Rt 12, Berlin, VT just 1 mile south of<br />

Montpelier. Please bring clean, soft-soled shoes. Admission is<br />

$10 adults, $5 kids and low income, $15 dance supporters.<br />

Questions? Call Tim Swartz at 802-225-8921, visit: http://capitalcitygrange.org/dancing/contradancing.<br />

Every 1st, 3rd, and<br />

5th Saturday year round.<br />

BETHEL- YMCA Diabetes Prevention Program, United<br />

Church of Bethel, Church St. Thurs., 11AM-12PM. Free. Info:<br />

728-7714.<br />

BRADFORD- Rockinghorse Support Circle. Grace Methodist<br />

Church. For young women w/ or w/o kids, childcare and transportation<br />

available. Wed., 1-2:30PM. Info: 479-1<strong>08</strong>6.<br />

New Hope II Support Group, Grace United Methodist, Mon.,<br />

7-9PM. Info: 1-800-564-2106.<br />

BROOKFIELD- Mothers of Preschoolers, Meal and childcare<br />

provided. New Covenant Church, 2252 Ridge Rd., 3rd Fri., 6PM.<br />

Info: 276-3022.<br />

Health-focused Group, Learn to cope w/ life’s passages. Wed.,<br />

7-8PM. Info: 276-3142.<br />

Deonne Myrick Yoga, Tuesday evenings 6:30-7:30. $5 adult,<br />

children under 18 are free.<br />

Morning Strengthen and Tone exercise classes led by personal<br />

trainers Emma Manion and Shannon Kelly. Monday and<br />

Thursday mornings beginning June 24th 7:30-8:30AM.<br />

CABOT- Fiddle Lessons with Katie Trautz: Mon., Info: 279-<br />

2236; Dungeons & Dragons, Fri., 3-5:30PM. All at Cabot<br />

Library, 563-2721.<br />

CALAIS- Men’s & Women’s Bible Study Groups, County<br />

Road, Wed., 7PM. Info: 485-7577.<br />

CHELSEA- Story Time, For ages 0- 5. Chelsea Public Library,<br />

Wed., 1:15PM. Info: 685-2188.<br />

Take Off Pounds Sensibly, Nonprofit support grp. United<br />

Church of Chelsea, North Common, Wed., 5:45PM. Info: 685-<br />

2271.<br />

continued on next page<br />

SPEAKING OUT | The WORLD<br />

What was your first car?<br />

Uncork Your Creativity!<br />

with acclaimed artist Arthur Zorn<br />

$25 inclusive (in advance - $30 day of)<br />

no experience necessary.<br />

Just Bring Yourself - LNT provides the rest!<br />

Sat. August 10<br />

lostnationtheater.org 229-0492<br />

Ruth, Barre<br />

<strong>19</strong>60 Ford Falcon<br />

Don, Barre<br />

<strong>19</strong>53 Nash Ambassador<br />

Doug, Chelsea<br />

<strong>19</strong>61 Karmann Ghia<br />

David, Plainfield<br />

<strong>19</strong>63 Plymouth Valiant<br />

Joy, Barre<br />

<strong>19</strong>95 Chevy Corsica<br />

Marcie, Middlesex<br />

<strong>19</strong>81 Chevy Monte Carlo<br />

Ray, So. Barre<br />

<strong>19</strong>52 Chevy Convertible<br />

Chris, Middlesex<br />

<strong>19</strong>77 Chevy Monte Carlo<br />

page 26 The WORLD August 7, 20<strong>19</strong>


Chronic Conditions Support Group, Chelsea Senior Center, in<br />

the United Church of Chelsea, 13 North Common. Free. Fri.<br />

8:30-11AM. Info:728-7714.<br />

Chelsea Historical Society House/Museum, Open 3rd Sat.<br />

May-Oct., FREE, 10AM.-12PM. Info: 685-4447.<br />

E. HARDWICK- Bible Study, Touch of Grace Assembly of God<br />

Church, Tues. 10AM; . Bible study (call for info); Wed. Youth<br />

Group, 5PM dinner, 6PM activity. Info: 472-5550.<br />

EAST MONTPELIER- FREE Zumba-like Fitness Dance for<br />

Women 18+, East Montpelier Elementary, Sundays, 4-5PM.<br />

Info: zabundancejoy@gmail.com.<br />

Men’s Ministry, Crossroads Christian Church. Mon. 7-9PM.<br />

Men’s Breakfast: 2nd Sat., 8AM. Sun. Service: 9:30-11AM. Info:<br />

476-8536.<br />

Twin Valley Senior Center, 4583 U.S. Rte 2. Open Mon., Weds.,<br />

Fri., 9AM-2PM. For class listing & info: 223-3322.<br />

GLOVER- Shape Note Sing Early American 4-Part Hymns in<br />

the Fa-Sol-La-Mi tradition. Every Tuesday evening at 7:30<br />

through August 27th. All welcome, no experience or skill necessary.<br />

In the Paper Maché Cathedral at Bread and Puppet<br />

Theater, 753 Heights Road, Glover, VT. Free. For more information<br />

call Elka Schumann at 802-525-6972.<br />

GREENSBORO- Introductory Class in the Yang style of T’ai<br />

Chi Ch’uan 6-week class with Alan Erdossy. $65.00 Fee for<br />

6-Week Class. To register call Alan at 802-223-5125 or 802-249-<br />

2902 (cell). Email him at alanerdossy@gmail.com. At Highland<br />

Center for the Arts 2875 Hardwick St. Thursdays, August 1 -<br />

September 5 @ 10:30 am<br />

GROTON- YA Book Club, 3rd Mon., 6:30PM; Book Discussion<br />

Group: 4th Mon.,, 7PM; Crafts & Conversation, Wed., 1-3PM.<br />

Round Robin Storytime for kids age 0-5: Tues., 10AM. All at<br />

Groton Public Library. Info: 584-3358.<br />

HARDWICK- Caregiver Support Group, Agency on Aging,<br />

rear entrance Merchants Bank, 2nd Thurs. 229-03<strong>08</strong> x306.<br />

Peace & Justice Coalition, G.R.A.C.E. Arts bldg (old firehouse),<br />

Tues., 7PM. Info: 533-2296.<br />

Nurturing Fathers Program. Light supper included. Thurs.,<br />

6-8:30PM. Registration/info: 472-5229.<br />

MARSHFIELD- Playgroup, Twinfield Preschool, Mon.,<br />

8:15AM-9:45AM (except when school not in session).<br />

MIDDLESEX- Food Shelf, United Methodist Church, Sat.,<br />

9-10:30AM.<br />

Camp Meade Eat Up at The Green Live music, local food, craft<br />

beer every Sunday 4-9PM.<br />

MONTPELIER- Elders Together, a Free, drop-in support<br />

group for older elders, meets monthly on the First Friday.<br />

1:00PM to 2:30 PM, Montpelier Sr. Activity Center, 58 Barre St.<br />

Call 223-8140 for info.<br />

First Church of Christ, Scientist Sunday School welcomes<br />

children for Sunday school to learn how to feel close to god<br />

everyday. 10:30AM. 223-2477.<br />

Free Coffee House Potluck, 1st Fri. at the Trinity Methodist<br />

Church. 7PM-9PM.<br />

Healing Rhythms - Drumming Through Grief, 4th Tues. of the<br />

month through Oct. Christ Episcopol Church. Registration<br />

required, call 224-2241. No drumming experience is neccesary.<br />

Vermont College of Fine Arts Friday Night Reading Series,<br />

Cafe Anna, 1st floor of College Hall, 36 College St. 5:30-7:30PM.<br />

Free snacks.<br />

LGBTQ Veterans Group, Christ Episcopal Church.<br />

6PM-8:30PM. 2nd & 4th Wed. Info: 825-2045.<br />

2nd Friday Folk Dancing, Montpelier Senior Activity Center.<br />

Donation: $5. November-March. Info: 223-2518.<br />

Irish Session, Sat.,2PM-5PM, Bagitos, 28 Main St.<br />

Southern Old Time Music Jam, 2nd & 4th Sun., 10AM-12:30PM.<br />

Bagitos, 28 Main St.<br />

Sunday School, Christian Science Church, 145 State St., Sun.,<br />

10:30AM.<br />

Robin’s Nest Nature Playgroup, North Branch Nature Center.<br />

Mon. 9:30-11:30AM. Info: 229-6206.<br />

Montpelier Kiwanis Club, Tues., 6PM. at The Steak House. All<br />

are welcome. Info: 229-6973.<br />

Onion River Exchange Tool Library, 46 Barre St. Over 85 tools.<br />

Wed., 10AM-2PM, Thurs., 10AM-2PM.<br />

Friday Night Group, Open to all LGBTQ youth ages 13-22.<br />

Pizza and social time, facilitated by adults from Outright VT.<br />

Unitarian Church, 2nd & 4th Fri., 6:30-8PM. Info: 223-7035.<br />

Meditation, Mon.,1PM.; Intro to Yoga, Tues. 4PM; Consults,<br />

Fri. 11AM. Free classes, limits apply. Fusion Studio, 56 East State<br />

St. Info: 272-8923.<br />

Open Library, Resurrection Baptist Church. Sun. 12:30-2PM.<br />

Capital City Farmers Market 9AM-1PM every Saturday at 60<br />

State St. Dozens of local vendors with delicious and wholesome<br />

wares. EBT, SNAP and Crop Cash accepted.<br />

Celiac Support Group, Tulsi Tea Room, 34 Elm St., 2nd Wed.,<br />

4-5PM. Info: 598-9206.<br />

MSAC Public Activities, Montpelier Senior Activity Center, 58<br />

Barre St. FEAST Together: Tues. & Fri.,12-1PM (EXCEPT July<br />

24, July 27, July 31, August 3). RSVP 262-6288. Living Strong:<br />

Mon. 2:30-3:30PM. & Fri. 2-3PM; Crafters Group: Wed.,<br />

12-2PM. Photography Club: Thurs., 12-1PM; Ukulele Group:<br />

Thurs., 6-8PM; Walks with Joan: Tues., 10-11AM; Italian Group:<br />

Tues., 1:15-2:45PM; Trash Tramps: Tues., 2-3PM.For info on a<br />

listing: 223-2518. Elders Together First Friday of the month<br />

1-2:30PM.<br />

A Course in Miracles, at Christ Episcopal Church, 64 State St.,<br />

each Tues., 7-8PM. Info: 622-4516.<br />

Parent’s Group & Meet-Up, Connect with local parents to share<br />

advice and info. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Hayes Rm, 1st Mon.,<br />

10-11:30AM. Info: mamasayszine@gmail.com.<br />

Families Anonymous, For families or friends who have issues<br />

with addiction, alcohol and/or mental illness. Bethany Church,<br />

2nd floor youth room, Mon., 7-8PM. Info: 229-62<strong>19</strong>.<br />

Freeride Montpelier Open Shop Nights, Need help w/a bike<br />

repair? Come to the volunteer-run community bike shop. 89<br />

Barre St., Wed. 4-6PM. Info: freeridemontpelier.org.<br />

Free Community Meals, Mon: Unitarian Church, 11AM-1PM;<br />

Tues: Bethany Church, 11:30AM-1PM; Wed: Christ Church,<br />

11AM-12:30PM; Thurs: Trinity Church, 11:30AM-1PM; Fri: St.<br />

Augustine Church, 11AM-12:30PM; Last Sun., Bethany Church,<br />

4:30-6:30PM.<br />

Calico County Quilters, All skill levels welcome. 2nd Sat. Sept.<br />

through June, 1-3PM. Location info: 244-7001.<br />

Co-Dependents Anonymous (CoDA), Bethany Church basement,<br />

Tues., 6:30PM. Info: 229-9036.<br />

Kellogg-Hubbard Library Activities, 135 Main St., Story Time:<br />

Tues/Fri, 10:30AM. Info:223-3338.<br />

CHADD ADHD Parent Support Group, Childcare not available.<br />

Woodbury College, 2nd Tues., 5:30-7:30PM. Info: 498-<br />

5928.<br />

Resurrection Baptist Church Weekly Events, 144 Elm St. Sun.,<br />

9:45AM. Bible Study; 11AM. Worship Service; Wed., 7PM.<br />

Prayer Meeting.<br />

Good Beginnings of Central VT, 174 River St. Drop-In Hours at<br />

the Nest. 1st floor Weds/Thurs/Fri., 9AM-3PM. Babywearers of<br />

Central Vermont meet upstairs, 4th Mon., 5:45-7:45PM & 2nd<br />

Thurs., 9:30-11:30AM. Info: 595-7953. Breastfeeding support:<br />

3rd Thurs., 9:30- 11:30AM; Nursing Beyond a Year: 3rd Fri.,<br />

9:30-11:30AM (802-879-3000).<br />

continued on next page<br />

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M-Th. 5am-6pm, Fri. 5am-8pm, Sat. 7am-8pm,<br />

Sun. 7am-6pm<br />

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Sunday Brunch<br />

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Enjoy Our Outdoor Patio<br />

802-476-9303<br />

August 7, 20<strong>19</strong> The WORLD page 27


Al-Anon, Trinity Methodist Church, Main St.,<br />

Sun., 6:15-7:30PM. Info:1-866-972-5266.<br />

Al-Anon, Bethany Church basement, 115 Main<br />

St., Tues. & Thurs. 12-1PM., Wed. 7-8PM.<br />

Info: 1-866-972-5266.<br />

SL AA, 12-step recovery group for sex/relationship<br />

problems. Bethany Church, Wed.,<br />

5PM. Info: 249-6825.<br />

Survivors of Incest Anonymous, Bethany<br />

Church parlor, 115 Main St., Mon., 5PM.<br />

Please call first: 229-9036 or 454-8402.<br />

Brain Injury Support Group, Unitarian<br />

Church, 3rd Thurs., 1:30-2:30PM. Info: 1-877-<br />

856-1772.<br />

Playgroups: Dads & Kids, Thurs., 6-7:30PM.<br />

& Sat., 9:30-11AM, at Family Center of<br />

Washington County. Held during school year<br />

only.<br />

Kindred Connections Peer to Peer Cancer<br />

Support, for patients and caregivers. Info:<br />

1-800-652-5064.<br />

Christian Meditation, Christ Church, Mon.,<br />

12-1PM.<br />

Mood Disorders Support Group, 149 State<br />

St., Last Entryway, First Floor. Peer and professionally<br />

led support for people coping with<br />

mental illness. Wed. 4-5PM. Free. Info: 917-<br />

<strong>19</strong>59.<br />

Safe Disposal of Prescription Drugs,<br />

Montpelier Police, 1 Pitkin Court, 223-3445 at<br />

Washington County Sheriff, 10 Elm St., 223-<br />

3001. Get rid of old or unused meds at these<br />

local permanent safe disposal sites.<br />

Memory Cafe, is no longer at the Montpelier<br />

Senior Activity Center, 58 Barre St. It is now<br />

called MEMORABLE TIMES CAFE hosted<br />

Central Vermont Council on Aging and the<br />

State of Vermont ABLE Library and will be<br />

held the 3rd Wednesday of each month October<br />

through March at the Vermont History Center,<br />

60 Washington St., Barre, VT. Contact Barb<br />

Asen, CVCOA Family Caregiver Support<br />

Director, at basen@cvcoa.org or 802-476-2681<br />

Community Song Circle, Center for Arts and<br />

Learning, 46 Barre St. 1st Sun. except July/<br />

Aug., 6-8PM. Info: vtcommunitysing@gmail.<br />

com.<br />

Capital City Band plays free outdoor concerts<br />

every Wednesday evening from 7-8PM on the<br />

State House lawn throughout the summer.<br />

Come enjoy a picnic with neighbors or meet<br />

some new friends while enjoying this delightful<br />

Vermont musical tradition. Or, bring an<br />

instrument and play along with the band.<br />

Concerts are held on Wednesdays starting on<br />

June 12 and ending on August 14. For more<br />

information call 456-7054.<br />

MORETOWN- Mad River Chorale. Rehearsals<br />

at Harwood Union H.S., Mon., 7-9PM. Info:<br />

496-2048.<br />

MORRISVILLE- “The Role of Power,<br />

Authority & Control in Groups” Monthly<br />

Meeting, Morristown Centennial Library, 20<br />

Lower Main St. 1st Tues. 5:30PM-7PM. Info:<br />

gerette@dreamhavenvt.com.<br />

Overeaters Anonymous, 12-step program for<br />

people who identify as overeaters, compulsive<br />

eaters, food addicts, anorexics, bulimics, etc.<br />

All welcome; no dues or fees. Info re: place &<br />

time: 863-2655.<br />

River Arts Events, Photo Co-op Drop-in 3rd<br />

Thurs., 6PM-8PM. $5 suggested donation.<br />

Poetry Clinic Drop-in 1st & 3rd Tues.,<br />

6PM-8PM. $5 suggested donation.<br />

NORTHFIELD- Bingo, Northfield Senior<br />

Center. Mon., 4PM.<br />

Civil Air Patrol Cadet Program, Ages 12-18.<br />

Readiness and Regional Technology Center,<br />

Norwich campus, Tues., 6-8:30PM. Info: capitalcomposite@yahoo.com.<br />

Clogging & Irish Step Lessons, W/Green<br />

Mountain Cloggers, ages 8-78. Sun., 5-8PM.<br />

Info: 522-2935.<br />

Playgroup, United Church of Northfield. Wed.,<br />

9:30-11AM. Held only when school in session.<br />

Info: 262-3292 x113.<br />

Safe Disposal of Prescription Drugs,<br />

Northfield Police, 110 Wall St., 485-9181. Get<br />

rid of old or unused meds at these local permanent<br />

safe disposal sites.<br />

PLAINFIELD- Farmers Market, Fri., 4-7<br />

P.M., Mill Street. Local produce, plants, crafts,<br />

maple syrup, teas and service, and more.<br />

Community Supper Support Group, Grace<br />

United Methodist Church. 4th Tues.,<br />

6PM-7PM. Info: michaelbix@gmail.com.<br />

Cardio Funk Class. the Community Center.<br />

Fri., 5-6PM. Info: email shannonkellymovement@gmail.com.<br />

Cutler Memorial Library Activities, Classic<br />

Book Club: 1st Mon., 6PM; Tuesday Night<br />

Knitters (except 1st Tues.). Info: 454-8504.<br />

Diabetes Discussion & Support Group,<br />

Everyone welcome. The Health Center conf.<br />

room, 3rd Thurs., 1:30PM. Info:322-6600.<br />

Community Film Series, The Health Center<br />

will be hosting a Community Film Series on<br />

Tuesday evenings at the Plainfield Opera<br />

House starting on July 9th and going through<br />

August 13th. This summer film series is a free<br />

community event with snacks available at<br />

5:30pm, film at 6:00pm and with a community<br />

discussion from 7-7:30pm. The Health Center<br />

157 Towne Avenue.<br />

RANDOLPH- Health Support Groups, Maple<br />

Leaf Room at Gifford Medical Center. Tobacco<br />

Cessation Program regularly offers four-week<br />

“Quit in Person” group sessions. Info: 728-<br />

7714.<br />

Caregiver Support Group, Gifford Medical<br />

Center. 2-3PM. Meets 2nd Wed. of the month.<br />

Info: 728-7781.<br />

Diabetes Management Program, Kingwood<br />

Health Center (lower level conf. room), 1422<br />

VT Route 66. Thurs., 10AM-12:30PM. Six<br />

week program for people diagnosed with type-<br />

2 diabetes. Info/register: 728-7714.<br />

New Business Forum, Vermont Tech<br />

Enterprise Center, 1540 VT Rte 66, 2nd Weds.,<br />

11:30AM-1PM. Info: 728-9101.<br />

Yoga Classes. All ages and levels. Donations<br />

benefit Safeline. VTC Campus Center, last Sun.<br />

of month, 2-3:30PM.<br />

Cancer Support Group, Gifford Conference<br />

Ctr, 2nd Tues., 9:30-11AM. Info:728-2270.<br />

Storytime. Kimball Library. Wed., 11AM, ages<br />

2-5; Toddler-time, Fri., 10:30AM; Gathering<br />

for handwork, 2nd & 4th Mon., 6PM.<br />

THETFORD- Summer Dances Fourth<br />

Saturday Dances at the East Thetford Pavilion<br />

140 Pavilion Road, - near Cedar Circle Farm.<br />

Admission: $12 adults, under 16 - $5. more<br />

info: uvdm.org/ contact Bill Shepard (802)<br />

785-2855 continued on next page<br />

fall guide<br />

The 20<strong>19</strong> Fall Guide offers you fresh ideas and<br />

opportunities to generate business.<br />

Profit through dynamic advertising in this<br />

informative<br />

seasonal guide, with a 3 month shelf life and<br />

distribution of 10,000 copies to your local<br />

customers and out of town visitors.<br />

The 20<strong>19</strong> Fall uide includes extensive editorial<br />

that will boost awareness of your advertising.<br />

Advertising Deadline: August 12, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

Calendar Deadline: August 12, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

Distribution: September 18, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

Email calendar listings:<br />

editorvt-world.com<br />

To reserve advertising space:<br />

479-2582 or email salesvt-world.com<br />

20<strong>19</strong><br />

403 U.S. RT. 302-BERLIN • BARRE, VERMONT 05641-2274<br />

802-479-2582 • VT & NH Toll Free 1-800-639-9753 • Fax: 802-479-7916<br />

sales@vt-world.com or editor@vt-world.com<br />

page 28 The WORLD August 7, 20<strong>19</strong>


WAITSFIELD- Community Acupuncture<br />

Night, Free assessment and treatment.<br />

Donations welcome. Three Moons Wellness,<br />

859 Old County Rd., 2nd fl., last Weds., 4-7PM.<br />

RSVP: 272-3690.<br />

WARREN- Knit & Play, Warren Public<br />

Library. Bring your kids and your projects. All<br />

levels. Thurs., 9:30-11:30AM.<br />

WASHINGTON- Central VT ATV Club,<br />

Washington Fire Station, 3rd Tues., 6:30PM.<br />

Info: 224-6889.<br />

Calef Mem. Library Activities, Art and<br />

Adventure w/ April: 3rd Sat., 1AM; Storytime:<br />

Mon., 11AM; Tech Help Drop-In: Sat.,<br />

10AM-2PM. Info: 883-2343.<br />

WATERBURY- Waterbury Public Library<br />

Activities, Preschool Story Time: Thurs.,<br />

10AM. Baby and Toddler Story Time: Mon.,<br />

10AM. Crafts: Tues., 3-4PM. Info: 244-7036.<br />

WATERBURY CTR- Bible Study Group,<br />

Waterbury Ctn Grange. Sun., 5-6PM. Bring<br />

bible, coffee provided. Info: 498-4565.<br />

WEBSTERVILLE- Safe Disposal of<br />

Prescription Drugs, Barretown Police, 149<br />

Websterville Rd., 479-05<strong>08</strong>. Get rid of old or<br />

unused meds at these local permanent safe disposal<br />

sites.<br />

Weekly Guided Nature Walks, Barre Town<br />

Forest. 9AM. Meet at 44 Brook St. Websterville.<br />

All ages and dogs on leashes welcome. Easy to<br />

moderate. Tues. (unless it’s raining enough for<br />

an umbrella) through September. Info: 476-<br />

4185.<br />

WEST TOPSHAM- Bible Study, New Hope<br />

Methodist Church, 2 Gendron Rd. Wed.,<br />

6:30PM.<br />

WILLIAMSTOWN- Bible Study, Christian<br />

Alliance Church, Sun., 6PM. Info: 476-3221.<br />

WORCESTER- Knitting Night, The Wool<br />

Shed, Tues., 6:30-8:30PM.<br />

Wednesday, August 7<br />

BARRE- Dave Keller Band live concert presented<br />

by Barre Partnership in Currier Park.<br />

7PM.<br />

GREENSBORO- The Book of Life Mid-week<br />

movie $5 Tickets, Kids 12 and under are free.<br />

AT the Highland Center for the Arts<br />

2875 Hardwick Street. 7-8:30PM.<br />

MONTPELIER- Parent Support Group with<br />

Theo Lagerstedt of Prevent Child Abuse<br />

Vermont 5:00-6:30pm. To sign up for this<br />

workshop, email your name and contact information<br />

to info@hungermountain.coop. All<br />

workshops are held in the Hunger Mountain<br />

Co-op community room.<br />

Downstream film screening. A one hour documentary<br />

film featuring the compelling stories<br />

of those left behind when a parent goes to<br />

prison. This event is free and open to the public.<br />

At the Kellogg-Hubbard Library, 6:30-8PM.<br />

Thursday, August 8<br />

CABOT- BBQ at Cabot United Church BBQ<br />

pulled pork, baked beans, macaroni and cheese,<br />

salads, rolls, desserts and beverages. 5:30-<br />

7:00PM. Adults $10 and kids $5. Take out available<br />

at 5PM.<br />

GREENSBORO- Chicken Pie Supper at St<br />

Michael’s Church Hall 270 The Bend Rd. Menu:<br />

chicken pie, assorted casseroles, baked beans,<br />

cole slaw, rolls, pie and beverages. Prices:<br />

adults - $10.00 children under 8 - $5.00. No<br />

reservations—take out available. 5PM. For<br />

more information, please contact Jeannine at<br />

cfli443@gmtmom.com or 802-586-2899<br />

Christine Malcolm & Jasper Hill Farm Garden<br />

Party Christine Malcolm, a mom and singer,<br />

songwriter, and musician living in Elmore,<br />

Vermont, teams up with Greensboro’s Jasper<br />

Hill Farm at the Hardwick Street Cafe. 4-6PM<br />

MONTPELIER- East Bay Jazz plays Brown<br />

Bag Concerts in Montpelier City Hall Plaza.<br />

Time TBD.<br />

Friday, August 9<br />

GLOVER- Bread and Puppet Presents: The<br />

Essential Furthermore 7:30 p.m. in the Paper<br />

Maché Cathedral at Bread and Puppet Theater,<br />

753 Heights Road. Suggested donation $10-20,<br />

no-one turned away for lack of funds. For information:<br />

www.breadandpuppet.org.<br />

RANDOLPH CENTER- Pancake Supper at<br />

Silloway Maple from 5:00 - 7:00, 1303 Boudro<br />

Road. 802-272-6249 Hayrides, farm animals,<br />

tours, supper $5/Adult, Children


BARRE- Eye Spy: Watch out, you’re being observed in this fun<br />

show focused on the eye, perfect for visual arts lovers. July 9 –<br />

August 23, 20<strong>19</strong>. Reception: Thurs., July 11, 6-8 PM. Studio Place<br />

Arts 201 N. Main St.<br />

Seriality: Artwork by Lisa Myers. Seriality is a psychoanalytic<br />

concept used to describe sibling relationships, the same but different<br />

and it is explored in these etching/chine-colle/mixed<br />

media pieces based on old photographs of the artist’s grandmother<br />

and her siblings. July 9 – August 23, 20<strong>19</strong>. Reception:<br />

Thurs., July 11, 6-8 PM. Studio Place Arts 201 N. Main St.<br />

Orah Moore: Everyday, Someone – 365 Days in Black &<br />

White. A visual diary of black and white iPhone photographs.<br />

July 9 – August 23, 20<strong>19</strong>. Reception: Thurs., July 11, 6-8 PM.<br />

Studio Place Arts 201 N. Main St.<br />

Plane Geometry by Linda Maney An exploration of some of the<br />

more common Geometric Shapes, sometimes complicating<br />

them, sometimes not. June 26 – September 28, 20<strong>19</strong> at Studio<br />

Place Arts 201 N. Main St.<br />

BERLIN- Resurfaced paintings by Emilia Olson in The Gallery<br />

at Central Vermont Medical Center June 23 - August 17. Opening<br />

reception and artist talk Thurs. June 27, 4:30 - 6PM.<br />

CHELSEA- Sadie’s Fancy Work - Embroidery by Sadie<br />

Kennedy on display at the Chelsea Public Library July 1 - August<br />

31, chelsealibrary.com, 685-2188.<br />

Kathleen Kolb: Night and Day, Now and Then exhibit runs<br />

from July 24 – September 8 at the Highland Center for the Arts<br />

with opening reception Aug. 2 5pm. Free.<br />

Vermont Authors Lecture Series Thursday evenings, 6:30 – 8:00<br />

PM, mid-July through August. Enjoy summer evenings with<br />

Vermont Authors in an intimate setting at the Highland Center<br />

for the Arts.<br />

MONTPELIER- Lois Eby at the VT Supreme Court Gallery<br />

Her exhibit, titled Studies in Rhythmic Vitality, will be on view<br />

from July 2nd through September 27th.<br />

Annual Summer Juried Art Exhibit at T.W. Wood Gallery, July<br />

5th – August 30th. The opening reception will take place on July<br />

11th , from 5-7PM.<br />

The Vermont Supreme Court Gallery presents Studies in<br />

Rhythmic Vitality: Paintings by Lois Eby. July 2nd through<br />

September 27th , with an Opening Reception on July 11th from<br />

4:00-7:00 PM.<br />

MORRISVILLE- Morriville Mosaics, the culmination of a<br />

community collaborative project, exhibits through Sept. 25th.<br />

Reception Aug. 8, 5-7PM. At River Arts 74 Pleasant St.<br />

Undercover: Work by Open Studio Figure Drawing exhibits<br />

through September 25th in the Copley Common Room at River<br />

Arts 74 Pleasant St. Reception Aug. 8 5-7PM.<br />

NORTHFIELD- 200 Years–200 Objects, Norwich University’s<br />

Sullivan Museum and History Center, free & open to the public<br />

Mon-Fri., 8AM-4PM. Runs until 12/21. Info: www.norwich.edu/<br />

museum.<br />

RANDOLPH- Rendering: Cause to Become. Chandler Center<br />

for the Arts, Group exhibition open 6/29-9/1. Artist open house<br />

7/27 noon-6PM.<br />

Paintings by Emily Burkholder at the Gifford Gallery, 44 S. Main<br />

St. Through Aug 7.<br />

ROCHESTER- Vermont Paintings. Big Town is delighted to<br />

welcome three new exhibitions to the Main, Center, and Projects<br />

Gallery spaces this summer. From June 26 - August 11, Celia<br />

Reisman’s series “The Vermont Paintings” will reside in the main<br />

gallery space, and Helen Matteson’s “The Geometric Exercises of<br />

Helen Matteson” will feature in the center gallery. Rob Fish, a<br />

new artist to the gallery, will be exhibited in the Projects space<br />

from June <strong>19</strong> - July 21.<br />

STOWE- Suzy Spence: On the Hunt Public Program Suzy<br />

Spence and Christa Kemp In Discussion 5:00pm at the Helen Day<br />

Art Center. Discussion on the history of fox hunting.<br />

STOWE- Exposed Outdoor Sculpture Exhibition. his year’s exhibition<br />

will feature nationally renowned sculptors Tom Fruin and<br />

David Stromeyer. July 20 - October <strong>19</strong>. At the Helen Day Art<br />

Center, 90 Pond St.<br />

WAITFIELD- The Art Among Us will be presented by the<br />

Waitsfield United Chturch of Christ Village Meeting House during<br />

the 20<strong>19</strong> Vermont Festival of the Arts. Sat and Sun. 12-4. Now<br />

thru Aug. 18. The Opening Reception will be Sunday, August 4<br />

from 12-2 pm<br />

page 30 The WORLD August 7, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

oncert<br />

Connections<br />

Beck – Cage The Elephant @ Bank of<br />

NH Pavillion<br />

August 16 @ 6:00 pm - 10:30 pm<br />

Pat Benatar, Neil Giraldo & Melissa<br />

Etheridge @ Champlain Valley Fair<br />

August 31 @ 7:00 pm - 10:30 pm<br />

Grand Point North @ Waterfront Park<br />

September 14 @ 3:00 pm - 7:00 pm<br />

Grand Point North @ Waterfront Park<br />

September 15 @ 3:00 pm - 7:00 pm<br />

Dr. Dog & Shakey Graves @<br />

Shelburne Museum<br />

September 17 @ 7:00 pm - 10:30 pm<br />

For venue phone numbers, call<br />

The Point at 223-2396 9:00 to 5:00<br />

Mon.-Fri., or visit our web site at<br />

www.pointfm.com<br />

ONION RIVER COMMUNITY ACCESS MEDIA CHANNELS 15, 16, 17<br />

• Bethel • Braintree • Montpelier • Randolph • Rochester • U-32 District Towns • Waterbury Schedules subject to change without notice.<br />

ORCA Media Channel 15<br />

10:00a Vermonters for Justice in Palestine 6:00p Great Streets BTV<br />

ORCA Media Channel 17<br />

Public Access<br />

11:00a Green Mountain Transit<br />

7:00p Abenaki Heritage Weekend<br />

Government Access<br />

Weekly Program Schedule<br />

12:00p The Thom Hartmann Program 8:00p Wash Central Union School Board Weekly Program Schedule<br />

Wednesday, Aug 7<br />

1:00p Celluloid Mirror<br />

Friday, Aug 9<br />

Wed, Aug 7<br />

1:30p Octagon St. Laveau<br />

6:00a Goddard College Faculty Readings<br />

12:00p Wash Central Supervisory Union 7:00a Bethel Selectboard<br />

2:00p Vermont Historical Society<br />

7:00a Moccasin Tracks<br />

3:30p Berlin School Board<br />

11:00a Green Mountain Care Board<br />

3:00p Democracy Now!<br />

8:00a Democracy Now!<br />

5:30p Creative Communities Exchange: 3:00p Randolph Selectboard<br />

4:00p Moccasin Tracks<br />

9:00a Celluloid Mirror<br />

Clemmons Family Farm<br />

6:30p Montpelier City Council<br />

5:00p History of Adamant Music School<br />

9:30a Octagon St. Laveau<br />

6:30p North Branch Nature Center:<br />

and Piano Recital by AMS Students<br />

Thu, Aug 8<br />

10:00a Bread and Puppets<br />

Caterpillar Lab<br />

7:00p Moving Light Dance Co.<br />

7:00a Racial Disparities Advisory Panel<br />

11:00a Bill Doyle on VT Issues<br />

8:00p U-32 School Board<br />

8:00p Into the Issues<br />

9:00a PEG Access Study Committee<br />

12:00p The Thom Hartmann Program<br />

10:30p Game of the Week<br />

8:30p Close The Camps<br />

12:00p Vermont Fish and Wildlife<br />

1:00p Waterbury Historical Society - The<br />

Saturday, Aug 10<br />

9:00p Waterbury Historical Society - The<br />

4:00p Central Vermont Fiber<br />

Yankee Brass Band<br />

12:00p Osher Lifelong Learning Institute<br />

Yankee Brass Band<br />

8:00p Waterbury Selectboard<br />

3:00p Democracy Now!<br />

2:00p North Branch Nature Center:<br />

11:00p The Science of Effective Prevention<br />

Fri, Aug 9<br />

4:00p For the Animals<br />

Botanical Art with Susan Sawyer<br />

11:30p House at Pooh Corner<br />

7:00a Berlin Selectboard<br />

4:30p Juneteenth Celebration<br />

3:30p North Branch Nature Center: Emerald<br />

7:00p VT Physicians for a National Health<br />

Tuesday, Aug 13<br />

10:00a Berlin Development Review Board<br />

Ash Borer<br />

Program<br />

6:00a Hunger Mountain Coop<br />

12:00p Moretown Selectboard<br />

4:00p Lake Score Cards Highlight Restoration<br />

Progress and Protection Needs<br />

7:30p Montpelier Senior Activity Center<br />

8:00a Democracy Now!<br />

3:00p Central Vermont Fiber<br />

9:30p Close The Camps<br />

9:00a Juneteenth Celebration<br />

6:00p Rochester Selectboard<br />

5:30p Rochester-Stockbridge Unified<br />

11:30a Close The Camps<br />

8:30p Montpelier Planning Commission<br />

10:00p Hunger Mountain Coop<br />

District<br />

12:00p The Thom Hartmann Program 9:00p U-32 School Board<br />

Sat, Aug 10<br />

Thursday, Aug 8<br />

1:00p All Things LGBTQ<br />

11:00p Astronomy for Everyone<br />

6:00a Central Vermont Regional Planning<br />

6:00a VT Physicians for a National Health<br />

2:00p David Pakman Show<br />

11:30p VT Master Anglers<br />

Commission<br />

Program<br />

3:00p Democracy Now!<br />

Sunday, Aug 11<br />

8:30a Vermont State House<br />

6:30a House at Pooh Corner<br />

4:00p Car Guy Channel<br />

12:00p Orange SW Supervisory Union<br />

12:00p Randolph Selectboard<br />

7:00a Green Mountain Transit<br />

4:30p House at Pooh Corner<br />

2:30p ArtSynergy<br />

5:00p Calais Selectboard<br />

8:00a Democracy Now!<br />

5:00p The Science of Effective Prevention 3:30p East Montpelier School Board<br />

8:00p Green Mountain Care Board<br />

9:00a David Pakman Show<br />

5:30p Abled and on Air<br />

5:00p North Branch Nature Center: Sun, Aug 11<br />

10:00a Waterbury Historical Society - The<br />

6:30p Abled to Cook<br />

Botanical Art with Susan Sawyer<br />

7:00a Waterbury Selectboard<br />

Yankee Brass Band<br />

7:00p Joe Davidian Trio<br />

7:00p Montpelier/Roxbury School Board 9:30a Berlin Selectboard<br />

12:00p The Thom Hartmann Program<br />

8:30p Delia Robinson<br />

10:00p Waterbury Library<br />

12:00p Vermont State House<br />

1:00p Hunger Mountain Coop<br />

9:00p Bear Pond Books Events<br />

3:00p Democracy Now!<br />

Monday, Aug 12<br />

4:00p Montpelier Development Review<br />

10:30p Bread and Puppets<br />

12:00p Middlesex Town School District<br />

Board<br />

4:00p Kellogg-Hubbard Library<br />

11:30p Green Mountain Transit<br />

Board<br />

6:30p Montpelier Design Review Committee<br />

5:30p Comedies with a Conscience<br />

7:00p Open Door Theater<br />

ORCA Media Channel 16<br />

3:00p Waterbury Library<br />

9:00p Montpelier City Council<br />

9:00p Senior Moments<br />

Education Access<br />

5:30p Astronomy for Everyone Mon, Aug 12<br />

6:00p VT State Board of Education 7:00a Moretown Selectboard<br />

11:00p Moccasin Tracks<br />

Weekly Program Schedule<br />

Friday, Aug 9<br />

Wednesday, Aug 7<br />

Tuesday, Aug 13<br />

10:00a Racial Disparities Advisory Panel<br />

12:00p Rochester-Stockbridge Unified<br />

12:00p Bethel Selectboard<br />

6:00a Senior Moments<br />

12:00p North Branch Nature Center:<br />

District<br />

3:30p Middlesex Selectboard<br />

8:00a Democracy Now!<br />

Caterpillar Lab<br />

4:00p Orange SWt Supervisory Union<br />

5:30p Montp Planning Commission LIVE<br />

9:00a Abled and on Air<br />

2:00p VT Master Anglers<br />

7:00p Middlesex Town School District Board Tue, Aug 13<br />

10:00a All Things LGBTQ<br />

2:30p First Wednesdays<br />

10:30p Tuesday Talks<br />

7:00a Calais Selectboard<br />

11:00a Talking About Movies<br />

4:30p Tuesday Talks<br />

10:00a CV Regional Planning Commission<br />

12:00p Brunch with Bernie<br />

6:30p Montpelier/Roxbury School Board<br />

12:30p Vermont State House<br />

1:00p The Thom Hartmann Program<br />

2:00p Goddard College Faculty Readings<br />

3:00p Democracy Now!<br />

Thursday, Aug 8<br />

12:00p Harwood Unified<br />

4:00p Berlin School Board<br />

5:30p Montpelier Design Review Committee<br />

7:00p Montp Development Review Board<br />

10:30p PEG Access Study Committee<br />

4:00p Bill Doyle on VT Issues<br />

5:00p Montpelier Senior Activity Center<br />

7:00p Comedies with a Conscience<br />

8:30p Gay USA<br />

9:30p Juneteenth Celebration<br />

Saturday, Aug 10<br />

6:00a Comedies with a Conscience<br />

7:30a Abled to Cook<br />

8:00a Moving Light Dance Co.<br />

9:00a Into the Issues<br />

9:30a The Science of Effective Prevention<br />

10:00a Joe Davidian Trio<br />

11:30a Delia Robinson<br />

12:00p Senior Moments<br />

2:00p Green Mountain Transit<br />

3:00p Bear Pond Books Events<br />

4:30p Roman Catholic Mass<br />

5:00p Washington Baptist Church<br />

6:00p Bread and Puppets<br />

7:00p Vermont Historical Society<br />

8:00p All Things LGBTQ<br />

9:00p Vote for Vermont<br />

10:00p St. Laveau's <strong>World</strong> Cinema<br />

10:30p Betty St. Laveau's House of Horror<br />

Sunday, Aug 11<br />

6:00a Open Door Theater<br />

8:00a Bear Pond Books Events<br />

9:30a Washington Baptist Church<br />

10:30a Roman Catholic Mass<br />

11:00a Vermont Historical Society<br />

12:00p Moving Light Dance Co.<br />

1:00p Into the Issues<br />

2:00p Joe Davidian Trio<br />

3:30p Delia Robinson<br />

4:00p VT Physicians for a National Health<br />

Program<br />

4:30p Close The Camps<br />

5:00p Vote for Vermont<br />

6:00p St. Laveau's <strong>World</strong> Cinema<br />

6:30p Lifelines<br />

7:00p Goddard College Faculty Readings<br />

8:00p Octagon St. Laveau<br />

8:30p Abled and on Air<br />

9:30p Abled to Cook<br />

10:00p Kellogg-Hubbard Library<br />

Monday, Aug 12<br />

6:00a Kellogg-Hubbard Library<br />

7:30a St. Laveau's <strong>World</strong> Cinema<br />

8:00a Democracy Now!<br />

9:00a Vote for Vermont<br />

Habitat Diversity Workshop with North Branch Nature Center,<br />

1-4PM. Experience the biological diversity of New England<br />

habitats.<br />

Thursday, August 15<br />

BROOKFIELD- Roger Hill talks climate change in Vermont 7<br />

pm at Brookfield Old Town Hall.<br />

HARDWICK- Teen Ensemble III at the Heartbeet Cummunity<br />

Hall. 7:30 PM. $5-15 sliding scale.<br />

John Emil at the Hardwick Street Cafe! 2875 Hardwick St. 6:30-<br />

8:30PM. Free.<br />

MONTPELIER- The Revenants play Brown Bag Concerts in<br />

Montpelier City Hall Plaza. Time TBD.<br />

Get to Know Your Co-op: Sustainable Shopping with members<br />

of the Co-op’s Green Team. 5:30-6:30pm. To sign up for this free<br />

workshop, email your name and contact information to info@<br />

hungermountain.coop. All workshops are held in the Hunger<br />

Mountain Co-op community room unless otherwise noted<br />

STOWE- Tango Music Festival at 1056 Mountain Road in<br />

Stowe. 7:30PM-10PM. Feel free to bring instruments and dance<br />

shows, all experience levels welcome. Completely free. Dance<br />

Workshops every day that week. Call 802-760-4634 for details.<br />

Friday, August 16<br />

HARDWICK- 7:00 pm at Knights of Columbus Hall 206 Rt. 14<br />

South in Hardwick. Pre-owned and new items; gifts & services<br />

from local businesses. For more info contact Joe at 586-2899<br />

MONTPELIER- The Wiz Weekend at Lost Nation Theatre<br />

8/16-8/<strong>19</strong>. 7PM Friday, 2 and 7PM Saturday, 3PM Sunday. Ease<br />

on down the road with this rip-roaring dance musical inspired by<br />

L Frank Baum’s The Wizard of Oz! $5-$15.<br />

RANDOLPH- Last Mile Ride, 5K and Walks Aug. 16-17. 14th<br />

annual event benefits end-of-life patients, families. The LMR<br />

walks and 5K run begin at 6 p.m. Friday, Aug. 16, with registration<br />

starting at 4:30 p.m., at Gifford Medical Center. The registration<br />

fee is $25 per person. Participants are encouraged to<br />

create teams with friends and family.<br />

THANK YOU FOR SAYING<br />

I SAW IT IN<br />

Community Media (802) 224-9901 Check out our Web page at www.orcamedia.net<br />

Saturday, August 17<br />

BROOKFIELD- Chris Shoelen Guitar Duo 7PM at Brookfield<br />

Old Town Hall.<br />

MONTPELIER- Capital City Farmers Market 9AM-1PM every<br />

Saturday at 60 State St. Dozens of local vendors with delicious<br />

and wholesome wares. EBT, SNAP and Crop Cash accepted.<br />

PLAINFIELD- Edible Landscapes for the Homesteader/<br />

Gardener. Join Nicko Rubin for a workshop at East Hill Tree<br />

Farm and discover their extensive edible landscape. 2-5PM. 3499<br />

East Hill Rd. Cost: $30 NOFA-VT members, $40 for non-members.<br />

QUECHEE- Guided Orchard Walk: Summer Varieties at<br />

Whitman Brook Orchard. Come taste late summer fruits like the<br />

Yellow Transparent and the Duchess. 2-4PM.<br />

RANDOLPH- Last Mile Ride, 5K and Walks Aug. 16-17. 14th<br />

annual event benefits end-of-life patients, families. Registration<br />

for the motorcycle ride begins at 8:30 a.m. at Gifford Medical<br />

Center. The entrance fee is $50 per driver; $75 per driver and<br />

passenger. The ride, which starts at 10 a.m., takes participants on<br />

an 80-mile journey through central Vermont.<br />

Sunday, August 18<br />

BROOKFIELD- “What’s the Dog Saying?” Canine<br />

Communication with Deb Helfrich of Gold Star Dog Training.<br />

4PM at Brookfield Old Town Hall.<br />

GLOVER- Bread and Puppet Presents: The Diagonal Life<br />

Circus & The Normality Rebellion Pageant At the Circus Field<br />

at the Bread and Puppet Farm on Rt. 122, 3PM, Suggested donation<br />

$10-20. For information: www.breadandpuppet.org.<br />

GREENSBORO- Circus Smirkus Finale. High-flying feats from<br />

performers ages 10-18. Presented by The Circus Barn. 1PM and<br />

6PM. 1 Circus Rd.<br />

Monday, Augutst <strong>19</strong><br />

GREENSBORO- Caspian Monday Music returns to the Main<br />

Stage this summer for a chamber concert. At the Highland<br />

Center for the Arts 7:30PM. Tickets are $23, Students $10, and<br />

Seniors $20.<br />

CVTV CHANNEL <strong>19</strong>4<br />

Wednesday<br />

6:00AM - Community Bulletin<br />

7:00AM - News<br />

9:00AM - Barre City Council<br />

12:00PM - Barre City Council<br />

3:00PM - Barre City Council<br />

6:00PM - News<br />

7:00PM - Williamstown Select<br />

10:00PM - Williamstown Select<br />

Thursday<br />

5:00AM - News<br />

6:00AM - Williamstown Select<br />

9:00AM - Williamstown Select<br />

12:00PM - Williamstown Select<br />

2:00PM - Community Bulletin<br />

3:00PM - Barre Unified Union School<br />

Board Meeting<br />

6:00PM - News<br />

7:00PM - Barre Unified Union School<br />

Board Meeting<br />

10:00PM - Barre Unified Union<br />

School Board Meeting<br />

Friday<br />

5:00AM - News<br />

6:00AM - Barre Unified Union School<br />

Board Meeting<br />

CHARTER COMMUNICATIONS OF BARRE<br />

ALL PROGRAMING SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE<br />

CVTV Channel <strong>19</strong>2 • BARRE, VT<br />

Wednesday<br />

9:00AM - Abled and On Air - Special Needs<br />

Students and Transition into College<br />

9:31AM - House at Pooh Corner - O, Say,<br />

Can You See Pt. 2<br />

10:00AM - News<br />

11:00AM - Authors at Aldrich Library -<br />

<strong>07</strong>/31/<strong>19</strong><br />

11:42AM - Hero in U: Tribute to Bill<br />

Carpenter<br />

12:00PM - Betty St. Laveau’s House of<br />

Horror - “Night of the Living Dead”<br />

1:42PM - Join hosts KJ Traynor, and Mitch<br />

Fortier as they desperately miss Terry<br />

Traynor, and interview Steve Blackwood,<br />

director and star of “Meet The Author!”<br />

2:45PM - The Story of the Lost Boys of<br />

Sudan<br />

3:30PM - Barre heritage Festival - <strong>07</strong>/27/<strong>19</strong><br />

4:30PM - Car Corner - Oil Leaks<br />

5:30PM - A discussion with Tim Shea,<br />

Executive Director of the Champlain Valley<br />

Exposition in Essex Junction<br />

6:00PM - News<br />

7:00PM - The Struggle<br />

7:30PM - Africa on the Horizon<br />

9:00PM - Abled and On Air - Special Needs<br />

Students and Transition into College<br />

9:31PM - House at Pooh Corner - O, Say,<br />

Can You See Pt. 2<br />

10:00PM - VT Dept of Libraries Tuesday<br />

Talks - 20th Century VT Development<br />

Paradox<br />

11:00PM - Authors at Aldrich Library -<br />

<strong>07</strong>/31/<strong>19</strong><br />

11:42PM - Hero in U: Tribute to Bill<br />

Carpenter<br />

Thursday<br />

8:14AM - Artful Word: Left Eye Jump Band<br />

-- Concert of the Left Eye Jump Band.<br />

9:00AM - Join hosts Terry Traynor, KJ<br />

Traynor, and Mitch Fortier as they interview<br />

Lisa Carter, head of Drinkwater<br />

Productions!<br />

10:00AM - News<br />

11:00AM - Author and comedian Joey<br />

Voices is the guest. Mike Cherone hosts<br />

12:00PM - Sidewalks Entertainment<br />

12:30PM - Dennis Wholey speaks with H.E.<br />

Domingos Fezas Vital, who currently<br />

serves as the Portuguese Republic’s<br />

Ambassador to the United States.<br />

1:00PM - How flowers can transform<br />

Vermont’s 21st century FARM economy<br />

with Walt Krukowsk<br />

1:45PM - NH’s WildSide - Catfishing<br />

E<strong>07</strong><strong>19</strong>A<br />

2:00PM - Guests include Mark Correia of<br />

ILC; executive director Terri Guenard of<br />

Forestdale Park Assisted Living; Compass<br />

Program director Denise Thorud; performances<br />

by Takz & Papi Shampoo. Ron Cox<br />

hosts.<br />

3:00PM - JD Green Aired Out<br />

4:00PM - State House Programming<br />

6:00PM - News<br />

7:00PM - Here We Are with guest Marjorie<br />

Pivar<br />

7:30PM - No cliches, the effects of war on<br />

individuals & communities<br />

8:00PM - Artful Word: Summer Solstice<br />

Longest Day of the Year<br />

8:14PM - Artful Word: Left Eye Jump Band<br />

-- Concert of the Left Eye Jump Band.<br />

9:00PM - Join hosts Terry Traynor, KJ<br />

Traynor, and Mitch Fortier as they interview<br />

Lisa Carter, head of Drinkwater<br />

Productions!<br />

10:00PM - Presidental Candidate Series:<br />

Warren<br />

9:00AM - Barre Unified Union School<br />

Board Meeting<br />

12:00PM - Barre Unified Union<br />

School Board Meeting<br />

3:00PM - Barre Town Select<br />

5:30PM - Community Bulletin<br />

6:00PM - News<br />

7:00PM - Barre Town Select<br />

10:00PM - Barre Town Select<br />

Saturday<br />

5:00AM - News<br />

6:00AM - Barre Town Select<br />

9:00AM - Barre Town Select<br />

12:00PM - Barre Town Select<br />

3:00PM - Community Bulletin<br />

4:00PM - Washington Baptist Church<br />

5:00PM - Barre Congregational<br />

Church<br />

7:00PM - News<br />

<strong>08</strong>:00PM - First Presbyterian Church<br />

10:00PM - Barre Town Select<br />

Sunday<br />

6:00AM - Barre Congregational<br />

Church<br />

8:00AM - COPC SERMON<br />

9:00AM - Washington Baptist Church<br />

11:00PM - JD Green Aired Out<br />

Friday<br />

9:00AM - The Time is Now<br />

9:30AM - Into the Issues - Vermont Council<br />

on Rural Development<br />

10:00AM - News<br />

11:00AM - Gay USA<br />

12:00PM - Hate Free Vermont Community<br />

Forum - July 25, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

2:00PM - Think Free or Die<br />

3:00PM - Barre heritage Festival - <strong>07</strong>/27/<strong>19</strong><br />

4:00PM - Thunder Road Race - <strong>07</strong>/18/<strong>19</strong><br />

5:45PM - Extinction Rebellion Vermont -<br />

Direct Action<br />

6:00PM - News<br />

7:00PM - JD Green Aired Out<br />

8:00PM - The Cinemaniacs! - <strong>07</strong>29<strong>19</strong><br />

9:00PM - The Time is Now<br />

9:30PM - Into the Issues - Vermont Council<br />

on Rural Development<br />

10:00PM - Authors at Aldrich Library -<br />

<strong>07</strong>/24/<strong>19</strong><br />

11:00PM - Gay USA<br />

Saturday<br />

9:00AM - Energy Week - 7/18/<strong>19</strong><br />

10:00AM - Washington Baptist Church<br />

11:00AM - A Year in the New Hampshire<br />

Forests<br />

12:00PM - Sidewalks Entertainment<br />

12:30PM - Americans with Disabilities Act<br />

1:00PM - On this program Dennis Wholey<br />

speaks with H.E. Domingos Fezas Vital<br />

1:30PM - EmpoweringWomenEverywhere<br />

AmyWohl<br />

2:00PM - Barre Congregational Church<br />

3:30PM - Part one of an interview with<br />

Woody Guthrie’s daughter Nora.<br />

4:00PM - JD Green Aired Out<br />

5:00PM - Car Corner - Oil Leaks<br />

6:00PM - News<br />

7:00PM - Dennis Wholey speaks with H.E.<br />

Albert Muchanga who currently serves as<br />

Commissioner for Trade and Industry of<br />

the African Union Commission.<br />

7:30PM - Maternal Health<br />

8:00PM - Authors at Aldrich Library -<br />

<strong>07</strong>/31/<strong>19</strong><br />

8:42PM - Hero in U: Tribute to Bill<br />

Carpenter<br />

9:00PM - Ghost Chronicles-Next<br />

Generation - #65<br />

10:00PM - Thunder Road Race - <strong>07</strong>/18/<strong>19</strong><br />

11:45PM - NH’s WildSide - Catfishing<br />

E<strong>07</strong><strong>19</strong>A<br />

Sunday<br />

9:30AM - Not Just Rock and Roll 34th<br />

Anniversary<br />

10:00AM - EmpoweringWomenEverywhere<br />

AmyWohl<br />

10:30AM - Americans with Disabilities Act<br />

11:00AM - Doing Life<br />

12:00PM - Barre Congregational Church<br />

1:30PM - Foreign Students in America<br />

2:00PM - New England Cooks<br />

3:00PM - Barre heritage Festival - <strong>07</strong>/27/<strong>19</strong><br />

4:00PM - Washington Baptist Church<br />

5:00PM - Into the Issues - Vermont Council<br />

on Rural Development<br />

5:30PM - ReasonandRevelation027615<br />

6:00PM - SPEL Howards Grove<br />

7:00PM - Your Disability Connection<br />

(Vocational Training)<br />

7:32PM - Wood Artist Shares How He<br />

Thinks<br />

8:00PM - Forty Plus Fitness - ep 4<br />

9:00PM - Ludlow Baptist Church<br />

10:00PM - Barre Congregational Church<br />

11:30PM - A discussion with Tim Shea,<br />

Executive Director of the Champlain Valley<br />

Exposition in Essex Junction<br />

Up-to-date schedules for CVTV can also<br />

be viewed online at cvtv723.org<br />

Up-to-date schedules for CVTV can also be viewed online at cvtv723.org<br />

10:00AM - First Presbyterian Church<br />

12:30PM - Barre Congregational<br />

Church<br />

2:30PM - Washington Baptist Church<br />

6:00PM - SPEL Howards Grove<br />

8:00PM - Barre Congregational<br />

Church<br />

10:00PM - Ludlow Baptist Church<br />

Monday<br />

6:00AM - State House Programming<br />

9:00AM - State House Programming<br />

12:00PM - State House Programming<br />

3:00PM - Plainfield Select<br />

6:00PM - State House Programming<br />

7:00PM - Plainfield Select<br />

10:00PM - Plainfield Select<br />

Tuesday<br />

5:00AM - News<br />

6:00AM - Plainfield Select<br />

9:00AM - Plainfield Select<br />

12:00PM - Plainfield Select<br />

3:00PM to 5:00PM - State House<br />

Programming<br />

6:00PM - News<br />

7:00PM - Barre City Council “Live”<br />

10:00PM - Barre City Council<br />

“All schedules are subject to<br />

change, please call us<br />

with questions - 479-1<strong>07</strong>5.”<br />

Monday<br />

9:00AM - All Things LGBTQ+ Youth Edition<br />

- The Word “Queer”<br />

9:35AM - Diverge Wrestling 6<br />

10:00AM - Sound Off 20<strong>19</strong>0611<br />

11:02AM - Dukes of Sports 7-23-<strong>19</strong><br />

12:00PM - Sidewalks Entertainment<br />

12:30PM - Hate Free Vermont Community<br />

Forum - July 25, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

2:30PM - Part two of the interview with<br />

Nora Guthrie.<br />

3:00PM - Brett Hughes and Lowell<br />

Thompson 1st SET July 21, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

3:50PM - Performing “Know You” and<br />

“Tequila Little Time” as part of the<br />

Songwriter Circle Series.<br />

4:00PM - Presidental Candidate Series:<br />

Warren<br />

5:00PM - Forty Plus Fitness - ep 4<br />

6:00PM - Energy Week - 7/25/<strong>19</strong><br />

7:00PM - Hunger Mountain Coop Workshop<br />

- Self-Care Practices for Rejuvenation<br />

7:30PM - Ep 53 - Science360: Dispatches<br />

from the Cutting Edge<br />

8:00PM - Talking With Henrietta - Vaping<br />

9:00PM - All Things LGBTQ+ Youth Edition<br />

- The Word “Queer”<br />

9:35PM - Diverge Wrestling 6<br />

10:00PM - Sound Off 20<strong>19</strong>0611<br />

11:02PM - Dukes of Sports 7-23-<strong>19</strong><br />

Tuesday<br />

Veteran<br />

9:22AM - Performing “Know You” and<br />

“Tequila Little Time” as part of the<br />

Songwriter Circle Series.<br />

9:30AM - Felix the Fox A Detective Solving<br />

Mysteries in A Roman Fantasy Realm<br />

10:00AM - News<br />

11:00AM - HavanaFairfax005515<br />

12:00PM - A Year in the New Hampshire<br />

Forests<br />

1:00PM - The Story of the Lost Boys of<br />

Sudan<br />

1:45PM - Extinction Rebellion Vermont -<br />

Direct Action<br />

2:00PM - The Vermont Abortion Law is Bad<br />

Legislation<br />

2:32PM - Cape Conversations D. Webster<br />

3:00PM - Foreign Students in America<br />

3:30PM - Songwriter Daniel Boling talks<br />

about his life and songs.<br />

4:00PM - Sing Along Fun with Miss Miriam<br />

4:22PM - Dennis Wholey speaks with H.E.<br />

Albert Muchanga who currently serves as<br />

Commissioner for Trade and Industry of<br />

the African Union Commission.<br />

4:50PM - John Bacon Jr. - Korean War<br />

Veteran<br />

6:00PM - News<br />

7:00PM - International Education Exchange<br />

7:30PM - Your Disability Connection (Early<br />

Intervention)<br />

8:02PM - Darby Reynolds - Vietnam<br />

Veteran<br />

9:22PM - Performing “Know You” and<br />

“Tequila Little Time” as part of the<br />

Songwriter Circle Series.<br />

9:30PM - Felix the Fox A Detective Solving<br />

Mysteries in A Roman Fantasy Realm<br />

10:00PM - Dennis Wholey speaks with H.E.<br />

Domingos Fezas Vital, who currently<br />

serves as the Portuguese Republic’s<br />

Ambassador to the United States.<br />

10:30PM - Songwriter Daniel Boling talks<br />

about his life and songs.<br />

11:00PM - HavanaFairfax005515


SPORTS & OUTDOORS<br />

Vermont’s Migratory Bird Hunting Seasons Are Announced<br />

The Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department has announced<br />

the 20<strong>19</strong>-2020 migratory bird hunting season dates and bag<br />

limits.<br />

A printable copy of the Migratory Bird Syllabus can be<br />

downloaded from the Vermont Fish & Wildlife website<br />

(www.vtfishandwildlife.com) under “Hunt” – “Hunting<br />

Regulations and Seasons.” A printed version also will be<br />

available from license agents and post offices by late August.<br />

A statewide Vermont open hunting season for resident<br />

Canada geese will occur September 1-25. The daily bag limit<br />

is five Canada geese in the Connecticut River Zone and eight<br />

in the rest of the state during this September season. The<br />

purpose of the September season is to help control Vermont’s<br />

resident Canada goose population prior to the arrival of<br />

Canada geese migrating south from Canada.<br />

A second Canada goose hunting season for resident and<br />

migrant geese will be held October 10-November 8 in the<br />

Lake Champlain and Interior Zones with a daily bag limit of<br />

two Canada geese.<br />

In the Connecticut River Zone, the second Canada goose<br />

season will be October 2-November 3, and November<br />

20-December 16 with a daily bag limit of two Canada geese.<br />

Duck season this fall opens on October 10 in the Lake<br />

Champlain and Interior Vermont Zones and on October 2 in<br />

the Connecticut River Zone. The Lake Champlain Zone has<br />

a split season (October 10-November 1 and November<br />

23-December 29). The Interior Vermont Zone has a straight<br />

season (October 10-December 8). The Connecticut River<br />

Zone has a split season (October 2-November 3 and<br />

November 20-December 16).<br />

Vermont’s youth waterfowl hunting weekend will be<br />

September 28 and 29. Resident and nonresident hunters 17<br />

years of age or younger on those dates may hunt ducks and<br />

geese within the Lake Champlain and Interior Vermont<br />

Governor Phil Scott Joins Nation’s Governors to Launch<br />

Outdoor Recreation Learning Network to Promote<br />

Economic Growth Through the Outdoor Industry<br />

The National Governors Association (NGA) announced<br />

Wednesday the launch of the Outdoor Recreation Learning<br />

Network to help governors and their staffs leverage their<br />

unique natural, cultural and historical resources to advance<br />

economic, workforce, health and environmental benefits.<br />

The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis estimates that the<br />

outdoors industry employed more than 4.5 million people<br />

nationally in 2016, and generated more than $730 billion in<br />

economic impact.<br />

Vermont outdoor recreation accounts for 34,000 direct<br />

jobs and brings $2.5 billion into the economy.<br />

“As my Administration thought about how to grow our<br />

economy, it became clear we could do more by leveraging<br />

our natural and recreational assets – those closely aligned<br />

with our outdoor recreation brand,” said Governor Scott. “In<br />

2017 I established the Vermont Outdoor Recreation<br />

Economic Collaborative by executive order to advise me and<br />

my administration on how to enhance outdoor business<br />

opportunities, improve participation, strengthen our recreation<br />

infrastructure, protect our natural resources, and grow<br />

Vermont’s economy,” Governor Scott said.<br />

“While we have made progress, there is so much more we<br />

can do and we’re looking forward to hearing from other<br />

Governors and States here to learn more because it’s so<br />

important to our economy and the overall health of our communities<br />

– and ultimately a part of our identity as Vermonters”<br />

Governor Scott added.<br />

NGA Solutions: The Center for Best Practices will partner<br />

with state outdoor recreation directors through the network<br />

to convene governors’ office staffs and other state officials.<br />

Through peer-to-peer exchanges, the network will spotlight<br />

strategies states can use to advance outdoor recreation. It<br />

will focus on key issue areas, including conservation, stewardship,<br />

education, workforce training, economic development,<br />

infrastructure, public health, equity and wellness.<br />

Governors launched the network at NGA’s annual Summer<br />

Meeting, where state leaders share best practices and hear<br />

from experts in various fields. This year, the meeting is being<br />

held in Salt Lake City, Utah, from July 24-26. Participants<br />

included Utah Governor Gary Herbert, Maine Governor<br />

Janet Mills, Oregon Governor Kate Brown, Vermont<br />

Governor Phil Scott, Montana Governor Steve Bullock,<br />

Nevada Governor Steve Sisolak and outdoor recreation<br />

directors from many states. The launch was held at the<br />

Natural History Museum of Utah’s Rio Tinto Center at the<br />

University of Utah and included a guided walk in nearby Red<br />

Butte Garden featuring a narration by Dr. David Strayer of<br />

the University of Utah, a leading researcher in the cognitive<br />

Vermont State Parks Announces New Bike Rental<br />

Partnership at Burton Island State Park<br />

Vermont State Parks is excited to announce a partnership<br />

with Local Motion, Inc. to provide bike rentals at Burton<br />

Island State Park. New for the 20<strong>19</strong> season, a fleet of rental<br />

bicycles will be provided for park visitors to use while visiting<br />

the island.<br />

“Burton Island has always been a fantastic place to explore<br />

by bike,” says Ryan Baker Dunn, Marine Operations<br />

Supervisor for Vermont State Parks. “The 253-acre island<br />

has miles of trails and park roads on picturesque Lake<br />

Champlain with views of the Green and Adirondack mountains.<br />

Aside from a few staff work vehicles, there are no cars<br />

on the island, making it a safe, quiet environment for biking.<br />

Vermont State Parks has also invested in work tricycles to<br />

further minimize vehicles in the park, making Burton Island<br />

a great place for the whole family to ride.”<br />

• • •<br />

• • •<br />

Zones during this weekend while accompanied by an adult<br />

18 or older. In the Connecticut River Zone, youth must be<br />

15 years of age or younger on those dates. Both adult and<br />

youth must have Vermont hunting licenses. The adult may<br />

not hunt or carry a firearm. Youth ages 16 and 17 must have<br />

a Vermont Migratory Waterfowl tag and federal duck stamp.<br />

Woodcock hunting season is October 1- November 14<br />

statewide with a three-bird bag limit.<br />

In addition to a hunting license, a waterfowl hunter 16 or<br />

older must carry a current federal duck stamp and Vermont<br />

Migratory Waterfowl tag in order to hunt waterfowl in<br />

Vermont. Federal stamps are sold at post offices, federal<br />

refuges, or online at www.fws.gov/birds/get-involved/duckstamp/buy-duck-stamp.php.<br />

State Migratory Waterfowl<br />

tags are available on Vermont Fish & Wildlife’s website<br />

(www.vtfishandwildlife.com) and from license agents. The<br />

hunter must sign the federal duck stamp.<br />

All migratory game bird (woodcock, ducks and geese)<br />

hunters must also be registered with the Harvest Information<br />

Program (H.I.P.) in each state they hunt. You can register on<br />

Vermont Fish & Wildlife’s website or call toll-free 1-877-306-<br />

7091. After providing some basic information, you will<br />

receive your annual H.I.P. registration number, which you<br />

then need to record on your hunting license.<br />

The hunting season dates, bag limits and related regulations<br />

for all migratory birds are set annually within a framework<br />

established by the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, and in<br />

coordination with New York and New Hampshire.<br />

Waterfowl season dates and bag limits are set in three<br />

zones: Lake Champlain, Interior Vermont, and Connecticut<br />

River. The New Hampshire Fish & Game Department sets<br />

the season dates and bag limits for the Connecticut River<br />

Zone.<br />

benefits of outdoor recreation.<br />

“This effort hearkens back to the founding of the organization,”<br />

observed Nikki Guilford, NGA interim executive<br />

director and chief of staff. “In <strong>19</strong><strong>08</strong>, President Theodore<br />

Roosevelt hosted the first meeting of the nation’s governors<br />

at the White House to discuss conserving America’s natural<br />

resources.”<br />

Following that inaugural meeting, governors decided to<br />

form an association through which they could come together<br />

to discuss mutual concerns and act collectively.<br />

The founding sponsors of the Outdoor Recreation<br />

Learning Network include REI Co-op, the Outdoor Industry<br />

Association and the Outdoor Recreation Roundtable.<br />

“At REI Co-op, we believe a life outdoors is a life welllived.<br />

So, we applaud NGA’s launch of the Outdoor<br />

Recreation Learning Network. And we’re grateful to the<br />

dozen-plus states that have created offices of outdoor recreation,<br />

as well as to states considering them,” said Eric Artz,<br />

REI’s president and CEO. “There are tremendous opportunities<br />

for maximizing the social and economic benefits of<br />

time outdoors – whether that’s improving stewardship,<br />

access, equity, youth development or health outcomes.”<br />

“We have seen states with offices of outdoor recreation<br />

take great steps forward promoting and bolstering outdoor<br />

recreation – bringing more jobs and revenue to rural and<br />

gateway communities and coordinating amongst government<br />

agencies while helping to get more children and families<br />

outside and into healthier lifestyles,” said David<br />

Weinstein, state and local policy director for Outdoor<br />

Industry Association. “The Outdoor Recreation Learning<br />

Network will be a great resource for existing outdoor recreation<br />

offices and for states looking to develop new offices to<br />

collaborate on and improve outdoor programs and initiatives<br />

– OIA looks forward to helping build it.”<br />

“Outdoor recreation is a crucial part of America’s economy,<br />

contributing 2.2 percent of the gross domestic product<br />

and growing faster than the economy as a whole,” said Jessica<br />

Wahl, president of the Outdoor Recreation Roundtable.<br />

“ORR is proud to partner with the National Governors<br />

Association to launch the game-changing Outdoor<br />

Recreation Learning Network. This partnership will ensure<br />

that the outdoor recreation sector has the support it needs to<br />

continue to grow in states across the country, providing outdoor<br />

access for all, jobs, and health and quality-of life benefits<br />

for generations to come.”<br />

For more information about the Outdoor Recreation<br />

Learning Network, see www.nga.org/outdoors.<br />

Local Motion is a non-profit organization dedicated to<br />

“helping Vermont communities become more walkable,<br />

bikeable, and livable.” Their mission and experience with<br />

bike rentals made them an ideal partner to work with<br />

Vermont State Parks on this initiative.<br />

The fleet of adult and kids bicycles will be available for<br />

half-day, full-day, and multi-day rentals. Bike rentals start at<br />

just $15 dollars for half days and $25 for full days, with additional<br />

days for $15. Rentals will be first come, first served,<br />

and helmets will be provided with each bike rental. Many of<br />

the bikes also have baskets that come in handy for beach gear<br />

or store purchases.<br />

For more information on Burton Island State Park:<br />

https://www.vtstateparks.com/burton.html For more information<br />

on Local Motion: https://www.localmotion.org/<br />

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ANNUAL CHICKEN<br />

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includes Salad, Roll,<br />

Beverage & Ice Cream<br />

Thurs., Aug. 8<br />

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Adults $12.00, Kids $6.00<br />

Tickets available from<br />

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ANOTHER THURSDAY NIGHT OF<br />

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August 7, 20<strong>19</strong> The WORLD page 31


Security Officers<br />

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Hiring areas:<br />

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DISPLAY ADS THURSDAY AT 5:00PM<br />

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Email: sales@vt-world.com<br />

Journeyman Electricians &<br />

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Licensed Electricians to join team.<br />

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or email resume plizzari@selectricvt.com<br />

DAYTIME BUILDING FACILITIES LEAD<br />

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For complete job description and requirements email<br />

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Send cover letter, resume, 3 reference letters to<br />

Jamie Evans, Facilities Director<br />

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Barre, VT 06541<br />

Community Banker<br />

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There is no better time to join NSB’s team!<br />

Northfield Savings Bank, founded in 1867, is the largest<br />

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• NSB offers a competitive compensation and benefits<br />

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Northfield Savings Bank hours of operation are Monday –<br />

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Please submit your resume and application in<br />

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P.O. Box 7180<br />

Barre, VT 05641-7180<br />

Equal Opportunity Employer/Member FDIC<br />

page 32 The WORLD August 7, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

CONTACT US<br />

editor@vt-world.com<br />

sales@vt-world.com<br />

www.vt-world.com<br />

Fax:<br />

(802)479-7916<br />

403 Route<br />

302-Berlin<br />

Barre, VT 05641<br />

Telephone<br />

(802)479-2582<br />

1-800-639-9753<br />

AIRLINE<br />

CAREERS<br />

Get FAA approved maintenance training at campuses<br />

coast to coast. Job placement assistance.<br />

Financial Aid for qualifying students. Military friendly.<br />

Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance<br />

800-481-7894<br />

COACHING VACANCIES<br />

Spaulding High School is seeking the<br />

following FALL 20<strong>19</strong> Coaches:<br />

JV BOYS’ SOCCER<br />

JV GIRLS’ FIELD HOCKEY<br />

Interested candidates are invited to<br />

submit a letter of interest, resume, and<br />

three references to:<br />

Natalie Soffen, Director of Athletics<br />

Spaulding High School<br />

155 Ayers Street; SUITE 1<br />

Barre, VT 05641<br />

Phone: 802-476-6334<br />

TO VIEW OR APPLY POSTED ON SCHOOL SPRING<br />

Barre Unified Union School District<br />

recruiting positions for<br />

20<strong>19</strong>-2020 school year.<br />

Barre Town Middle and Elementary School:<br />

Licensed Math Interventionist<br />

Custodian (year round position)<br />

Licensed Kindergarten Special Educator<br />

Licensed Middle School Special Educator<br />

Licensed 6th Grade Teacher to Specialize in ELA<br />

Barre City Elementary and Middle School:<br />

Licensed PK Special Educator<br />

Perm PreK Substitute<br />

Spaulding High School:<br />

Building Facilities Lead (year round position)<br />

Permanent Substitutes<br />

Athletic Coach<br />

Central Vermont Career Center:<br />

Automotive Tech Lab Assistant<br />

BUUSD:<br />

Communications Specialist<br />

Substitute Teachers<br />

Paraeducators<br />

Behavior Interventionists<br />

EOE<br />

JOB<br />

OPPORTUNITIES<br />

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS,<br />

General Salvage Yard Laborer,<br />

Part or Full Time. Flexible<br />

Pay. 802-685-7799<br />

INDEPENDENT GARAGE IN<br />

Central Vermont LOOKING<br />

for a eerienced and certifi ed<br />

Auto Technician with a mini-<br />

u of yrs eerience<br />

ery ood ay and enefi ts<br />

all --<br />

JOURNEYMAN ELECTRI-<br />

T<br />

SOUGHT -<br />

Commercial Electrical<br />

Contractor seeking Licensed<br />

lectricians to oin tea<br />

Competitive wages and<br />

growth potentials. Call<br />

- or<br />

email resume to<br />

plizzari@selectricvt.com<br />

Apply through our employment page at buusd.org<br />

BUUSD Contact: Linda Papineau, (802) 476-5011<br />

JOB<br />

OPPORTUNITIES<br />

DUMP TRUCK OWNER$ —<br />

what do you do when sum-<br />

er wor ends <br />

ENERGY has winter work<br />

for you ee your actie<br />

and oney owin into<br />

your $checkbook$ November<br />

through March! Contact<br />

us now so you have all your<br />

licenses and certifi cations in<br />

tie euires or <br />

taner haat endorsements<br />

(we can help you get<br />

them), clean driving record,<br />

ability to drive in winter weather<br />

refer you to e located<br />

in Montpelier, Waterbury or<br />

aitsfi eld areas ewards<br />

Competitive pay, paid holidays<br />

aid tie off easonal<br />

onu iscount<br />

nifor local coany<br />

cares about our employees,<br />

customers, communities and<br />

the environment PREFER<br />

YEAR-ROUND WORK? With<br />

the right location, licenses and<br />

experience we might be able<br />

to fi t you into a fulltie reular<br />

position. Apply at www.<br />

BournesEnergy.com, visit<br />

your local ournes nery<br />

offi ce or send your resue to<br />

annette@bournes.net<br />

Currently Seeking<br />

rtfi ars<br />

Must have reliable<br />

transportation.<br />

Willing to train.<br />

as ca<br />

802-505-3859<br />

or a traccotroaco<br />

Everybody Wins! Vermont<br />

Site Coordinators<br />

Barre City Elementary & Middle School (10 hrs/wk, W & F)<br />

Waterbury—Thatcher Brook Primary School (14 hrs/wk, T-W-Th)<br />

Experience the joy of bringing children and volunteer mentors<br />

together to read every week in Barre City (10 hrs/week, W & F)<br />

or Waterbury (14 hrs./week, T-W-Th). Successful applicants have<br />

exceptional people skills and love to be organized!<br />

More information & job description: everybodywinsvermont.org<br />

Apply with cover letter/resume: info@everybodywinsvermont.org<br />

Equal Opportunity Employer<br />

JOB<br />

OPPORTUNITIES<br />

SEASONAL FARM LABOR.<br />

NICHOLS TREE FARM Orford<br />

has nine oenins for<br />

hristas Tree far worers<br />

3 months minimum experience<br />

ro <br />

hearin fi rewood trees and<br />

tips harvest, wreath making<br />

and other far laor as needed.<br />

Tools provided. Full Time<br />

27 Hours average per week<br />

guaranteed over the work period<br />

er hour ousin<br />

ay e aailale for worers<br />

not living in work area.<br />

Transportation subsistence<br />

expense may be paid to the<br />

o site after of the wor<br />

contract. Send resume to NH<br />

Employment Security.<br />

o rder <br />

603-353-4832<br />

45 South Fruit Street, Concord<br />

-<br />

STEWART ROSE Farms<br />

Randolph Center VT, Part-<br />

Time leading to Full Time<br />

on 280 acre Farm, Farm<br />

Workers Needed. For more<br />

info contact araret ordon<br />

802-728-4806 or<br />

--<br />

stewartrosefarsco<br />

Drug Free Work Place<br />

EOE<br />

continued on next page<br />

EVERYBODY WINS! VERMONT<br />

Bookkeeper<br />

10 hours/week, Montpelier<br />

Statewide literacy organization seeks experienced<br />

part-time bookkeeper. Responsibilities include payroll,<br />

invoicing, receiving payments, deposits, preparing<br />

annual ta fi les for accountant<br />

ore inforation o descrition<br />

everybodywinsvermont.org<br />

Apply with cover letter/resume to<br />

info@everybodywinsvermont.org<br />

Equal Opportunity Employer


JOB<br />

OPPORTUNITIES<br />

The Williamstown United<br />

Federated Church is seeking<br />

an organist to play our<br />

fully restored 1868 Nutting<br />

Tracker organ during Sunday<br />

worship services and<br />

special occasions during the<br />

liturgical year. Please send a<br />

resume to the Williamstown<br />

United Federated Church,<br />

PO Box 438, Williamstown<br />

VT 05679, or contact Kay<br />

Poirier at 802-433-6695<br />

WANTED:<br />

FULL-TIME<br />

COUNTERPERSON<br />

2 Years Experience As An<br />

Auto Parts Counterperson<br />

Required.<br />

Stop In and See Peter at<br />

NAPA of Barre<br />

44 South Main St.<br />

WORK AT HOME AND EARN<br />

BIG BUCKS!<br />

Earn up to $1,000 a week<br />

at your leisure in your own<br />

home? The probability of gainin<br />

i rofi ts fro this and<br />

many similar at home jobs is<br />

slim. Promoters of these jobs<br />

usually require a fee to teach<br />

you useless and unrofi tale<br />

trades, or to provide you with<br />

futile information. TIP: If a<br />

work-at-home program is legitimate,<br />

your sponsor should<br />

tell you, for free and in writing,<br />

what is involved. If you question<br />

a roras leitiacy<br />

call the ATTORNEY GEN-<br />

-<br />

TANCE PROGRAM at 1-800-<br />

649-2424.<br />

BUSINESS<br />

OPPORTUNITIES<br />

LOOKING TO EARN A MIL-<br />

LION$? Watch out for business<br />

opportunities that make<br />

outrageous claims about<br />

otential earnins ont<br />

get fooled into get rich quick<br />

scams. There are legitimate<br />

business opportunities, but<br />

be cautious of any business<br />

that cant re ect in writin<br />

the typical earnings of previous<br />

employees. TIP: Investigate<br />

earning potential claims<br />

of businesses by requesting<br />

written information from them<br />

before you send any money,<br />

or y callin the TT<br />

GENERAL CONSUMER AS-<br />

SISTANCE PROGRAM, at<br />

1-800-649-2424.<br />

CLASSES &<br />

WORKSHOPS<br />

AIRLINE MECHANIC TRAIN-<br />

ING — Get FAA Technician<br />

certifi cation roed for<br />

ilitary enefi ts inancial id<br />

if ualifi ed o laceent assistance.<br />

Call Aviation Institute<br />

of Maintenance 866-453-6204<br />

INTERESTED<br />

IN CDL?<br />

Classes<br />

ongoing in Barre<br />

Information:<br />

476-4679<br />

461-8<strong>08</strong>9<br />

Visit Our Website:<br />

www.cdlschoolinvt.com<br />

PERSONALS<br />

MAKE A CONNECTION. Real<br />

People, Flirty Chat. Meet singles<br />

right now! Call LiveLinks.<br />

Try it FREE. Call NOW 1-888-<br />

909-9905 18+.<br />

FREE ITEMS<br />

$ A1-CASH PAID<br />

UP TO $300+<br />

T<br />

FOR INFO, 802-522-4279.<br />

FREE “BEWARE OF THE<br />

VERMONT LAND TRUST”<br />

Bumper Stickers, Call<br />

802-454-8561<br />

HEALTH CARE<br />

DENTAL INSURANCE from<br />

Physicians Mutual Insurance<br />

Company. NOT just a discount<br />

plan, REAL coverage for (350)<br />

procedures. Call 1-877-3<strong>08</strong>-<br />

2834 for details. www.dental50plus.com<br />

/ cadnet 6118-<br />

02<strong>19</strong><br />

DIAGNOSED WITH LUNG<br />

CANCER? You may qualify<br />

for a substantial cash award.<br />

oliation risee<br />

recovered millions. Let us help<br />

you!! Call 24/7. 855-845-8269<br />

DO YOU HAVE CHRONIC<br />

KNEE OR BACK PAIN? If<br />

you have insurance, you may<br />

qualify for the perfect brace at<br />

little to no cost. Get yours today!<br />

Call 1-800-217-0504<br />

GO*GO SCOOTER — Comes<br />

a part in 3 pieces, 1 1/2 years<br />

old, $600.00. 802-622-0339<br />

HEAR AGAIN! Try our hearing<br />

aid for just $75 down and $50<br />

per month! Call 800-426-4212<br />

and mention 88272 for a risk<br />

free trial! FREE SHIPPING!<br />

ANIMAL CONTROL OFFICER<br />

Town of Barre<br />

The Town of Barre is accepting applications for a parttime<br />

(not more than 15 hrs./wk.) Animal Control Officer<br />

(ACO). This is a year-round part-time position reporting to<br />

the Barre Town police chief. The ACO works on a complaint<br />

received basis which would include follow-up. Applicants<br />

must: have a valid driver’s license; have a vehicle suitable<br />

for transporting animals; be mobile on their feet; be able to<br />

read, understand and apply the animal nuisance ordinance<br />

to complaints and write tickets, if needed; be able to write<br />

clear case reports; be able to communicate effectively with<br />

the public; and pass a department background check.<br />

Starting hourly rate is $14.50 with increase for satisfactory<br />

performance after 1 year. The ACO will be reimbursed for<br />

use of their personal vehicle. Applications are available at<br />

the Barre Town Manager’s Office, 149 Websterville Road or<br />

call 479-9331. Applications are due for review by 4:00 p.m.<br />

Tuesday, August 20, 20<strong>19</strong>.<br />

~ Equal Opportunity Employer ~<br />

BARRE TOWN<br />

Administrative Assistant<br />

Planning & Zoning Department<br />

This position provides clerical and administrative<br />

support to the Planning & Zoning Administrator by<br />

typing, composing documents, copying, filing and<br />

recordkeeping. Extensive computer use is required. The<br />

Administrative Assistant will answer phone calls and<br />

serve the public at the counter.<br />

The person filling this position will also serve as the<br />

Clerk to the Planning Commission and the Development<br />

Review Board (DRB), requiring attendance at each<br />

board’s monthly nighttime meeting. The Clerk will<br />

prepare meeting minutes and write decision letters for<br />

the DRB and Planning Commission.<br />

The Planning & Zoning administrative assistant will<br />

assist other departments with similar office/clerical<br />

work as assigned.<br />

Minimum qualifications include high school<br />

diploma. Successful candidates should be personable<br />

and friendly, be able to interpret ordinances and<br />

policies and give the public clear and accurate answers,<br />

be able to write accurate letters and minutes, and<br />

demonstrate attention to detail. Working knowledge<br />

of Microsoft Word and Excel and the ability to learn<br />

department software is required. This position is<br />

available immediately. Competitive wages and benefits<br />

via a union contract. For an application, contact<br />

the Town Manager’s Office at 479-9331 or offices@<br />

barretown.org or download from www.barretown.org/<br />

Permits_Forms/employmentapplication.pdf. Resumes<br />

may supplement the application. Deadline to apply is<br />

4:00 p.m. Wednesday, August 14, 20<strong>19</strong>.<br />

~ Barre Town is an Equal Opportunity Employer ~<br />

CLASSIFIEDS<br />

HEALTH CARE<br />

LOOKING FOR A MIRACLE /<br />

Lose 20 pounds in one<br />

week? This is almost impossible!<br />

Weight loss ads must<br />

re ect the tyical eeriences<br />

of the diet users. Beware<br />

of programs that claim<br />

you can lose weight effortlessly.<br />

TIP: Clues to fraudulent<br />

ads include words like:<br />

“breakthrough,”effortless,”<br />

and “new discovery.” When<br />

you see words like these be<br />

skeptical. Before you invest<br />

your time and money call the<br />

TT <br />

CONSUMER ASSISTANCE<br />

PROGRAM, at 1-800-649-<br />

2424.<br />

OXYGEN — Anytime. Anywhere<br />

o tans to refi ll o<br />

deliveries. Only 2.8 pounds!<br />

FAA approved! FREE info kit:<br />

Call 1-800-732-0442<br />

Portable Oxygen Concentrator<br />

May Be Covered by Medicare!<br />

Reclaim independence<br />

and mobility with the compact<br />

design and long-lasting battery<br />

of Inogen One. Free information<br />

kit! Call 888-609-2189<br />

STAY IN YOUR HOME longer<br />

with an American Standard<br />

Walk-In Bathtub. Receive up<br />

to $1,500 off, including a free<br />

toilet, and a lifetime warranty<br />

on the tub and installation!<br />

Call us at 1-866-945-3783.<br />

Suffering from an ADDIC-<br />

TION to Alcohol, Opiates, Prescription<br />

PainKillers or other<br />

DRUGS? There is hope! Call<br />

Today to speak with someone<br />

who cares. Call NOW<br />

1-855-866-0913<br />

continued on next page<br />

to manage my schedule<br />

HIRING: LICENSED NURSING ASSISTANT<br />

We understand the importance of family.<br />

At CVHHH, you will experience flexibility that is not<br />

possible in a hospital or facility.<br />

Set and manage your own schedule and make time<br />

for the things, and the people, that matter.<br />

This is the freedom of CVHHH. Come work with us.<br />

Apply at cvhhh.org/world<br />

hr@cvhhh.org • (802) 224-2257<br />

Central Vermont<br />

Home Health & Hospice<br />

Central Sterile Reprocessing<br />

Technician<br />

The UVM Health Network - Central Vermont Medical<br />

Center (CVMC) is looking for a full time Central Sterile<br />

Reprocessing (CSR) Technician to join our team. The<br />

CSR Technician performs the critical functions of<br />

cleaning, inspecting, assembly and sterilizing surgical<br />

instrumentation and medical equipment. A high school<br />

diploma or equivalent is required for this position. CVMC<br />

offers excellent benefits and generous paid time off.<br />

$3,500 sign-on bonus available!<br />

Interested in learning more?<br />

Please visit UVMHealth.org/CVMC/Jobs<br />

or call our Talent Acquisition team at (802) 371-4<strong>19</strong>1.<br />

Equal Opportunity Employer<br />

August 7, 20<strong>19</strong> The WORLD page 33


35 ¢<br />

PER WORD<br />

$3.50 MIN.<br />

Per Week<br />

Per Ad<br />

4 for 3<br />

SPECIAL<br />

Run The Same<br />

Classified for<br />

3 Consecutive Weeks-<br />

Get 4th Week<br />

FREE!<br />

(Any changes void free week)<br />

CLIP AND MAIL THIS HANDY FORM TODAY<br />

page 34 The WORLD August 7, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

CLASSIFIEDS<br />

HEALTH CARE WANTED ANTIQUES/ MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS<br />

COLLECTIBLES/<br />

RESTORATION<br />

WANT A CURE-ALL?<br />

Health fraud is a business<br />

that sells false hope. Beware<br />

of unsubstantiated claims for<br />

health products and services.<br />

There are no “Quick Cures”<br />

— no matter what the ad is<br />

claiming. TIP: DO NOT rely<br />

on promises of a “money back<br />

guarantee!” Watch out for<br />

key words such as “exclusive<br />

secret,”amazing results,” or<br />

scientifi c reathrouh or<br />

more information on health related<br />

products or services, call<br />

the TT <br />

CONSUMER ASSISTANCE<br />

PROGRAM at 1-800-649-<br />

2424, or consult a health care<br />

provider.<br />

WANTED<br />

$$OLD GUITARS &<br />

AMPS<br />

WANTED$$<br />

GIBSON*FENDER*MARTIN.<br />

ALL BRANDS. TOP DOL-<br />

LAR PAID. CALL TOLL FREE<br />

---<br />

COIN COLLECTOR will Pay<br />

Cash for Pre-<strong>19</strong>65 Coins and<br />

Coin Collections. Call Joe<br />

802-498-3692<br />

HOUSE PAINTERS<br />

Call Brian at<br />

02-258-8010<br />

OLD LICENSE PLATES<br />

If you have old VT plates<br />

before <strong>19</strong>20 that you might<br />

sell d lie to hear aout<br />

them. Lifelong cash buyer.<br />

Conrad Hughson, Box 1,<br />

Putney, VT 05346<br />

chughson@svcable.net<br />

--<br />

Please leave message.<br />

WANTED FREON R12.<br />

We Pay CA$H.<br />

R12 R500 R11.<br />

Convenient.<br />

ertifi ed rofessionals<br />

wwwrefrierantfi nders<br />

com / ad<br />

312-291-9169<br />

WANTS TO purchase minerals<br />

and other oil and gas interests.<br />

Send details to: PO Box<br />

ener <br />

LINE RATE 1-3 Words Per Line $1.75/LINE<br />

CAPITALIZATION:<br />

Capitalizing more than the first 2 words, etc. 70¢/WORD<br />

DEADLINE: For The WORLD is MONDAY by 10:00<br />

AM<br />

CANCELLATIONS: A classified ad cancelled before 10:00 AM<br />

on Monday will receive credit for the remaining paid weeks.<br />

The WORLD asks that you check your ad on its first publication. If you find an error<br />

please notify us immediately so that corrections can be made. The WORLD will not be<br />

responsible for more than one incorrect publication of the ad.<br />

PHONE NUMBER ___________________________________________________________________________<br />

LAST NAME _______________________________________________________________________________<br />

FIRST NAME ______________________________________________________________________________<br />

ADDRESS _________________________________________________________________________________<br />

CITY _______________________________________________ STATE ____________ ZIP _______________<br />

START DATE: ___________ NUMBER OF ISSUES: __________<br />

EXACTLY HOW YOU WANT THE AD TO READ<br />

Please print, we cannot be responsible for words we can't read.<br />

________________________________________________________________<br />

________________________________________________________________<br />

________________________________________________________________<br />

________________________________________________________________<br />

________________________________________________________________<br />

________________________________________________________________<br />

________________________________________________________________<br />

________________________________________________________________<br />

________________________________________________________________<br />

________________________________________________________________<br />

THE COST OF YOUR AD IN THE WORLD<br />

Each separate word, each phone number counts as one word<br />

Number of words ____________ times 35¢($3.50 min.) _________________ (cost for one week)<br />

times number of weeks __________ 4 for 3 Special<br />

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FORM<br />

403 U.S. RT. 302 - BERLIN • BARRE, VT 05641-2274<br />

479-2582 • 1-800-639-9753 • FAX 479-7916<br />

BUYING ANTIQUES<br />

Furniture and Smalls.<br />

G.S. Antiques<br />

802-461-3004<br />

Last Time Around Antiques<br />

114 No. Main St. Barre.<br />

--<br />

MISCELLANEOUS<br />

“GREEN MOUNTAIN<br />

BARGAIN SHOP”<br />

--<br />

We Buy-Sell-Barter<br />

“Lets Make a Deal”<br />

Williamstown VT<br />

$ A1-CASH PAID<br />

T <br />

JUNK CARS, TRUCKS<br />

--<br />

2 PERSON NECKY Hard Blue<br />

plastic kyak $250 802-345-<br />

0042<br />

THANK YOU FOR SAYING<br />

I SAW IT IN<br />

TOTAL COST __________________<br />

$ FULL PAYMENT MUST ACCOMPANY THIS FORM <br />

MasterCard<br />

Visa<br />

Credit Card<br />

Number ____________________________________________________ Discover<br />

CVC#______<br />

Signature __________________________________________Exp. Date ___________________<br />

2005 CEDAR CREEK 5TH<br />

WHEEL CAMPER, 3 slideouts,<br />

added screen room,<br />

air conditioning, ceiling fans,<br />

Queen size bed. One Owner.<br />

Bought New. Asking $10,500.<br />

Call 802-461-8695<br />

A PLACE FOR MOM. The<br />

nations larest senior liin<br />

referral service. Contact our<br />

trusted, local experts today!<br />

Our service is FREE / no obli-<br />

ation ---<br />

A PLACE FOR MOM. The<br />

nations larest senior liin<br />

referral service. Contact our<br />

trusted, local experts today!<br />

Our service is FREE / no obli-<br />

ation ---<br />

Applying for Social Security<br />

Disability or Appealing a Denied<br />

Claim? Call Bill Gordon &<br />

Assoc., Social Security Attorneys,<br />

1-855-498-6323! FREE<br />

Consultations. Local Attorneys<br />

Nationwide [Mail: 2420<br />

N St NW, Washington DC.<br />

ffice roward o T <br />

NM Bar.)]<br />

Use your VISA/MC/DISCOVER<br />

and call 479-2582 or<br />

1-800-639-9753<br />

CHECK HEADING:<br />

Animals-Farm ......................500<br />

Animals-Pet .........................430<br />

Antiques/Restorations .........144<br />

Baby/Children Items ............140<br />

Bicycles ...............................220<br />

Boating/Fishing ...................210<br />

Building Materials ................300<br />

Business Items ....................<strong>08</strong>0<br />

Business Opportunities .......060<br />

Camping ..............................205<br />

Childcare Service ................030<br />

Christmas Trees ..................370<br />

Class & Workshops .............103<br />

Clothing & Accessories .......130<br />

Computers/Electronics ........100<br />

Farm/Garden/Lawn .............410<br />

Free Ads ..............................1<strong>08</strong><br />

Furniture ..............................180<br />

Garage Sales/Flea Mkt. ......145<br />

Health ..................................113<br />

Home Appliances ................160<br />

Hunting/Guns/Archery .........305<br />

Insurance/Investments ........090<br />

Job Opportunities ................020<br />

Lost and Found ...................110<br />

Miscellaneous .....................150<br />

Musical ................................200<br />

Personals ............................105<br />

Professional Services .........540<br />

Rideshare ............................125<br />

Snow Removal Equip. .........355<br />

Snowmobiles/Access. .........360<br />

Sporting Equipment ............250<br />

Storage................................235<br />

Support Groups ..................1<strong>07</strong><br />

Tools ....................................330<br />

Wanted ................................120<br />

Wood/Heating Equip. ...........350<br />

Work Wanted .......................040<br />

AUTOMOTIVE<br />

Campers/Motor Homes .......845<br />

Cars & Accessories ............875<br />

Motorcycles/ATV’s ...............850<br />

Trucks/Vans/Jeeps Access. .870<br />

Vintage/Classic Vehicles .....873<br />

Work Vehicles/Heavy Equip. ....855<br />

REAL ESTATE<br />

Apts./House for Rent ...........630<br />

Camps for Sale ...................650<br />

Comm. Rentals/Sales .........605<br />

Condominiums ....................680<br />

Apt. Blds. for Sale ................685<br />

Homes .................................690<br />

Land for Sale .......................670<br />

Mobile Homes .....................600<br />

Vacation Rentals/Sales .......645<br />

Wanted to Rent/Buy ............610<br />

APPLYING FOR SOCIAL SE-<br />

CURITY DISABILITY or appealing<br />

a denied claim? Call<br />

Bill Gordon & Assoc., Social<br />

Security Disability Attorneys!<br />

FREE Consultations. Local<br />

Attorneys Nationwide 1-866-<br />

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802-498-3159<br />

continued on next page


June 29-July 7<br />

WOOD/HEATING<br />

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BEWARE OF The Vermont<br />

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udio Taes s s<br />

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ere oin to the<br />

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PET OF THE WEEK<br />

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Tools and gadgets, antiques<br />

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Mimi is a sweetheart feline who came to CVHS<br />

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1589 VT Rte 14S, East Montpelier<br />

476-3811 • centralvermonthumane.org<br />

Tues.-Fri. 1pm-5pm,<br />

Sat. 10am-4pm<br />

August 7, 20<strong>19</strong> The WORLD page 35


Kevin E. Hudson<br />

Free junk car removal in<br />

Central Vermont Area<br />

Huds Transport LLC<br />

SERVICE<br />

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(802)249-7112<br />

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Call/Text: Heather: 802-279-3469<br />

Visit us on Facebook<br />

esiential mall<br />

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eris emoal<br />

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IF IT’S DIRT, WE DIG IT!<br />

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Chain Saw Sharpening and Tune-ups<br />

DAVE GUILMETTE’S<br />

Tool Sharpening Services<br />

85 Barnes Road Montpelier, VT (802) 477-2406<br />

Email: dguilmette49@gmail.com<br />

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t la ear io iesel in lainfiel<br />

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• Free Estimates<br />

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Gene M. Bowen/Donald W. Mucherino, Jr. Owners<br />

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802-456-7049, 802-456-1332, 802-793-<strong>08</strong>95<br />

Please call for Free Estimates<br />

SUNKEN SLAB? UNEVEN WALKWAY?<br />

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owner Bill Marsha cell 802-272-7150 email bill@liftaslab.com<br />

Check our website for more details www.LiftaSlab.com<br />

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Since <strong>19</strong>74<br />

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page 36 The WORLD August 7, 20<strong>19</strong>


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before the 2018-<strong>19</strong> season<br />

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Davey Lopes, Detroit’s Phil Garner<br />

and Kansas City’s Tony Muser) were<br />

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August 7, 20<strong>19</strong> The WORLD page 37


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page 38 The WORLD August 7, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

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• • •<br />

Helliwell Takes Advantage of Late<br />

Tangle to Win Midsummer 250<br />

oer s ayne elliwell ature te to rie in te<br />

isummer ater te leaers tangle wit our las to go. ar<br />

lan umner oto<br />

Dover, NH’s Wayne Helliwell<br />

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took the lead with four laps<br />

remaining after Jimmy Hebert<br />

and Scott Payea tangled<br />

on a restart, then held off a<br />

last-lap bid by Graniteville,<br />

VT’s Stephen Donahue for<br />

the win.<br />

Helliwell’s sudden rise to the top spot was<br />

just the latest twist in a race that was full of<br />

them. The three-time ACT champion had<br />

been running in the top-five through the late<br />

stages, but Hebert seemed to have the race in<br />

hand as the laps wound down – a feat made<br />

even more impressive by going the whole<br />

way on the same four tires.<br />

But Trent Goodrow spun in turn two to<br />

bring out the event’s 11th caution on lap 246.<br />

The yellow allowed Payea – who had already<br />

led 40 laps after starting 23rd – to draw to Hebert’s<br />

outside. The first two attempts at the<br />

restart were waved off, and on the third try,<br />

the lead duo got together entering turn two.<br />

Payea spun and both drivers were sent to the<br />

rear. That put Donahue and Helliwell on the<br />

front row for the restart, and when the green<br />

flag waved again, Helliwell made the outside<br />

groove work to grab his 12th career ACT<br />

Late Model Tour win.<br />

Donahue was the dominant driver early,<br />

taking the lead from polesitter Scott Dragon<br />

on lap four and staying out front for more<br />

than 70 laps. A competition caution for a fuel<br />

stop on lap 75 closed the field back up, and<br />

after the caution came back out three laps<br />

later for Jonathan Bouvrette’s spin, Groveton,<br />

NH’s Quinny Welch drove past him to take<br />

the top spot. During the caution, ACT point<br />

leader Rich Dubeau was one of a handful of<br />

drivers to change tires as strategy began to<br />

play itself out.<br />

Donahue and Welch swapped the lead<br />

twice more after another pair of quick cautions<br />

before the field settled into a long green<br />

flag run. Welch, the WMMP Late Model<br />

point leader, proceeded to lead 87 straight<br />

laps before Mark Jension hit the turn-two<br />

wall on lap 170 to bring out the sixth caution.<br />

During that yellow, all lead-lap cars except for<br />

Hebert, Dubeau, and Adam Gray came to the<br />

pits for tires. At that point, Williamstown’s<br />

Hebert was the only driver in the field still<br />

on the same tires he started with, and he assumed<br />

command for the restart.<br />

Hebert led the next nine laps until another<br />

yellow flew for Gray’s turn-two crash. The<br />

outside had been the place to be on restarts<br />

all night, and this time, it was Payea’s turn to<br />

ride the rim, completing his drive to first after<br />

needing to qualify through the B-Feature.<br />

Payea led the next 40 laps, but on the race’s<br />

next restart at lap 2<strong>19</strong> for Jesse Switser’s spin,<br />

Payea succumbed to the inside curse as Donahue<br />

took the lead back.<br />

During this time, Hebert had hung with<br />

the leaders even on his old tires. As Donahue<br />

and Payea diced for the point, Hebert<br />

saw a chance and made a daring three-wide<br />

move into turn three with 22 laps to go. Just<br />

seconds after Hebert crossed the line in first,<br />

Corey Mason spun in turn two to bring out<br />

the ninth caution, locking the pass into the<br />

record books. Mason was subsequently disqualified<br />

from the event for intentionally hitting<br />

another car under the caution.<br />

All the while, Helliwell was lurking. The<br />

veteran started 15th and spent the first twothirds<br />

of the event hanging around the back<br />

half of the top-10. Once the mass tire stop occurred<br />

on lap-170, he started creeping closer<br />

and closer to the front. Helliwell broke into<br />

the top-three for the first time on lap 206 and<br />

bounced between the third and fourth spot<br />

for the next 40 laps, waiting for an opportunity<br />

to strike.<br />

That opportunity finally arrived with four<br />

laps to go. Hebert had managed to make the<br />

inside work on a lap-236 restart from a debris<br />

caution, but Goodrow’s spin put Hebert and<br />

Payea side-by-side one more time with Donahue<br />

and Helliwell right behind. The contact<br />

between the leaders opened the door for<br />

Helliwell, and while Donahue tried to sneak<br />

back through in the final corners, “The Punisher”<br />

brought home the win. It was Helliwell’s<br />

second straight victory at WMMP after<br />

taking the New Hampshire Governor’s Cup<br />

the week before.<br />

Donahue earned an ACT career-best<br />

second-place finish. Barre, VT’s Jason Corliss<br />

was quiet most of the night but also took<br />

advantage of the late tangle to come home<br />

third. Milton, VT’s Scott Dragon took fourth<br />

with Plainfield, NH’s Dubeau rounding out<br />

the top-five. Welch, Ryan Kuhn, Payea, Joel<br />

Hodgdon, and Hebert finished sixth through<br />

10th.<br />

Jonathan Bouvrette, Dylan Payea, and Dubeau<br />

won the qualifying heats. Helliwell and<br />

Christopher Pelkey were victorious in the<br />

consolation rounds while Cody LeBlanc captured<br />

the last-chance B-Feature.<br />

The ACT Late Model Tour next travels to<br />

Maine’s Oxford Plains Speedway on Saturday,<br />

August 24. The Oxford Plains 150 is part of<br />

the “Night Before the 250” that also includes<br />

events for the Tri-Track Open Modified Series,<br />

North East Classic Lites, NELCAR<br />

Legends, Oxford Street Stocks, and Wicked<br />

Good Vintage Racers. Post time is 4:30pm.<br />

For more information, contact the ACT offices<br />

at (802) 244-6963, media@acttour.com,<br />

or visit www.acttour.com.


REAL ESTATE<br />

PUBLISHER’S<br />

NOTICE<br />

PUBLISHER’S NOTICE<br />

EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY<br />

All real estate advertising in this<br />

newspaper is subject to the fair housing<br />

act which makes it illegal to advertise<br />

“any preference, limitation or discrimination<br />

based on race, color, religion,<br />

sex, handicap, familial status or<br />

national origin, or an intention, to make<br />

any such preference, limitation or discrimination.”<br />

Additionally, Vermont’s Fair Housing<br />

and Public Accomodations Act prohibits<br />

advertising that indicates any preference,<br />

limitation or discrimination based<br />

on age, marital status, sexual orientation<br />

or receipt of public assistance.<br />

This newspaper will not knowingly<br />

accept any advertising for real estate<br />

which is in violation of the law. Our<br />

readers are hereby informed that all<br />

dwellings advertised in this newspaper<br />

are available on an equal opportunity<br />

basis.<br />

To file a complaint of discrimination,<br />

call the Vermont Human Rights<br />

Commisson toll-free at 1-800-416-2010<br />

(voice & TTY) or call HUD toll<br />

free at 1-800-669-9777 (voice)<br />

or 1-800-927-9275 (TTY).<br />

MOBILE HOMES/<br />

RENT/SALE<br />

-<br />

for sale by owner. 2 bed,<br />

2 bath with many updates.<br />

all --<br />

for more details.<br />

COMMERCIAL<br />

RENTALS/SALES<br />

<br />

or ent oerhead<br />

doors lifts air co-<br />

ressor o all for<br />

ore info --<br />

APARTMENTS<br />

ROOMS/HOUSES<br />

FOR RENT<br />

one ed aartent<br />

includesheat electricity rubish,<br />

no pets,<br />

non-soin arin for one<br />

car. deposit.,<br />

--<br />

T ale<br />

orner rea ottae on<br />

ead-end oad cofortable<br />

for one or two people.<br />

Equipped kitchen, living room<br />

with fi relace aths<br />

nd oor edroo roane<br />

innai effi cient heat eaceful<br />

walin trails o<br />

ease o ets hone -<br />

-<br />

APARTMENTS<br />

ROOMS/HOUSES<br />

FOR RENT<br />

T newly<br />

renoated it ath arin<br />

coin-o wd ll utilities<br />

included except electricity.<br />

Credit check & references.<br />

<br />

--<br />

T T -<br />

nfurnished edroo<br />

nd oor ncludes eat<br />

hot water electricity eosit<br />

reuired o ets nonsoin<br />

o all -<br />

-<br />

T<br />

escrie your roerty<br />

not the “appropriate” buyer or<br />

renter, not the landlord,<br />

not the neighbors.<br />

Just describe the property and<br />

youll alost always oey the<br />

law.<br />

VACATION<br />

RENTALS/SALES<br />

T is ear<br />

ound in rua The water<br />

is safe and the dinin is fantastic.<br />

Walk out to the beach.<br />

-edroo wees aailale<br />

lees eail carolaction<br />

aol.com<br />

for more information.<br />

CAMPS FOR SALE<br />

T TT <br />

ast on ond oodury<br />

shoreline acres<br />

off the rid s ft <br />

with s ft <br />

and sft <br />

outhouse, lawn, dock, and<br />

swi raft artially furnished<br />

Springwater to kitchen and<br />

as aliances ie iles<br />

from Woodbury, at the end of<br />

a gated lane for 9 immediate<br />

neihors ery uiet and<br />

riate ae water is clear<br />

for pleasant swimming and<br />

oatin uilt in the s<br />

udates reairs in the s<br />

sin ee hotos<br />

at raislist listin ostin<br />

uer all<br />

--<br />

Email Us!<br />

sales@vt-world.com<br />

LAND FOR SALE<br />

T off<br />

herry Tree ill in ast ont-<br />

elier riate road all utilities<br />

underground. Starting at<br />

each<br />

--<br />

<br />

T T -<br />

educed for uic sale <br />

acres, open and wooded with<br />

power, drilled well and septic<br />

syste deal location for your<br />

new odular stic uilt or o-<br />

ile hoe uiet country location<br />

on a dead end road yet<br />

inutes to - eit sin<br />

all don at --<br />

<br />

T T T ast<br />

airy ree on iht ity<br />

water, and sewer available.<br />

udiision or ulti units ossile<br />

acres o<br />

--<br />

T oute <br />

T all aroed<br />

cres ile fro - <br />

iles fro orwich niersity<br />

--<br />

Classifi ed<br />

Deadline Is<br />

MONDAY<br />

Before 10AM<br />

Updated Weekly<br />

HOMES<br />

T -riate ocation<br />

edroo ath<br />

oe f riacy is iortant<br />

to you check out this home!<br />

aed country road no neih-<br />

ors in siht lare decsone<br />

with a hottub(included), 2<br />

car heated garage. The house<br />

was completely renovated 9<br />

years ago. Radiant heat, utility<br />

room, 12 foot ceilings, 2,300<br />

suare feet uch ore ont<br />

miss this $400,000 home with<br />

an asking price of $369,900.<br />

all orthfi eld eal state <br />

raisal at --<br />

ask for Rich or Erika.<br />

T -<br />

<br />

Having trouble paying your<br />

ortae The ederal Trade<br />

oission says dont ay<br />

any fees in adance to eople<br />

who promise to protect<br />

your home from foreclosure.<br />

Report them to the FTC, the<br />

nations consuer rotection<br />

agency. For more information,<br />

call --T- or clic<br />

on ftco essae fro<br />

The <strong>World</strong> and the FTC.<br />

HUNTER EDUCATION<br />

COURSE OFFERED<br />

Registration Monday,<br />

August 12, 6-8 P.M. at the<br />

Barre Fish & Game Club<br />

Gun Club Road<br />

Barre Town<br />

522-2499<br />

Home Mortgage Rates<br />

LAST<br />

DOWN<br />

LENDER UPDATE RATE APR TERM PTS PAYMENT<br />

Community National 8/2/<strong>19</strong> 3.875% 3.893% 30 yr fixed 0 5%<br />

Bank 1-800-340-3460 3.500% 3.532% 15 yr fixed 0 5%<br />

New England Federal 8/2/<strong>19</strong> 3.750% 3.774% 30 yr fixed 0 5%<br />

Credit Union 866-805-6267 3.250% 3.292% 15 yr fixed 0 5%<br />

Northfield Savings 8/2/<strong>19</strong> 3.750% 3.788% 30 yr fixed 0 5%<br />

Bank (NSB) 3.125% 3.<strong>19</strong>3% 15 yr fixed 0 5%<br />

802-485-5871<br />

VT State Employees 8/2/<strong>19</strong> 3.750% 3.789% 30 yr fixed 0 5%<br />

Credit Union (VSECU) 3.125% 3.<strong>19</strong>4% 15 yr fixed 0 5%<br />

1-800-371-5162 X5345<br />

Rates can change without notice.<br />

***APRs are based on 20% down payment. Some products are available with as little as<br />

5% down, with purchase of Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI). The cost of PMI is not<br />

included in the APR calculations.<br />

WINDY WOOD – BARRE TOWN<br />

WINDY WOOD – BARRE TOWN<br />

“A common interest community”<br />

VIEW<br />

“A<br />

HOMES<br />

common<br />

BEING<br />

interest<br />

BUILT SUNDAYS<br />

community”<br />

1 PM – 3 PM<br />

VIEW HOMES SHOWN BEING BY APPOINTMENT BUILT SUNDAYS ANYTIME 1 PM – 3 PM<br />

SHOWN CALL BY 802-249-8251 APPOINTMENT OR 802-734-<strong>19</strong>20 ANYTIME<br />

One Level Living: single and duplex units, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, full basement, 1 or 2 car garage option<br />

Single family homes priced from $267,000 and Duplex homes priced from $229,000<br />

CALL 802-249-8251 OR 802-734-<strong>19</strong>20<br />

One Level Living: single and duplex units, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, full<br />

basement, 1 or 2 car garage option<br />

Single family homes priced from $272,000<br />

and Duplex homes priced from $232,000<br />

Directions: From RT 302, turn onto Hill Street at Elmwood Cemetery, ¾ mile on Hill Street, left onto<br />

Windy Wood Road, look for sign on left and turn into Windy Wood.<br />

Directions: From RT 302, turn onto Hill Street at Elmwood Cemetery, ¾ mile<br />

on Hill Street, left onto Windy Wood Road, look for sign on left and turn into<br />

Windy Wood.<br />

www.facebook.com/vtworld.news<br />

Foreclosure: 5.2± Acre Building Lot<br />

Fri., Aug. 16 @ 11AM<br />

Mays Way, E. Montpelier, VT<br />

Walk the Land Anytime!<br />

5.2± acre building lot in quiet and convenient<br />

location. Close to Barre or Montpelier. 10 minute<br />

drive to I-89. Great home site surrounded by<br />

mountains in a peaceful setting.<br />

From Rt. 14 in East Montpelier, turn right before Bragg Farm onto<br />

Mays Way. Bear right at driveway. Walk the land any time.<br />

Thomas Hirchak Company<br />

THCAuction.com • 800-634-7653<br />

AFFORDABLE<br />

APARTMENTS<br />

WITH HEAT<br />

INCLUDED<br />

Highgate<br />

Apartments<br />

located in Barre, is currently accepting applications<br />

for 2 & 3 bedroom apartments<br />

Hardwood floors, fresh paint, modern kitchen & baths, yard space,<br />

ample closets, & washer/dryer hook-ups. Laundry room on site.<br />

Rent includes heat/hot water, 24-hour emergency maintenance,<br />

parking, snow removal, & trash removal. Income limits apply.<br />

To request an application, call 476-8645 or stop by the on-site<br />

rental office at 73 Highgate Drive, #121, Barre, VT.<br />

EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY<br />

OPEN HOUSE<br />

Saturday, Aug. 10 • 1:00-3:00pm<br />

Denise’s<br />

Danville Listing<br />

BEAUTIFUL 13 ACRE PARCEL<br />

Danville: 13 acre lot with a mobile home that’s been used as a hunting<br />

camp. Frontage on a class 3, town maintained road and an existing<br />

driveway. This is a great spot to build a home or just enjoy the way it is.<br />

$75,000--ML4755371<br />

ST. JOHNSBURY<br />

309 Portland St, Suite 101; 802-748-2045<br />

DANVILLE<br />

10 Route 2 West, P.O. Box 68; 802-684-1127<br />

beginrealty.com<br />

REALTY ASSOCIATES<br />

31 Herricks Cove Rd.<br />

Solidly built 4 season home on Woodbury Lake features full<br />

kitchen,dining room,living room full bath. Has radiant heat,wired in<br />

backup generator,drilled well and septic.New front deck overlooks<br />

waterfront.Property has half acre with 120ff of direct water access and its<br />

own "stone island" with dock. MLS #4751428 New Price of $350,000.<br />

Visit Our Website For Details On These And Other Listings<br />

HARRINGTON REALTY<br />

www.harringtonvt.com<br />

802-563-6000 or 802-595-1156<br />

Cabot, Vermont<br />

August 7, 20<strong>19</strong> The WORLD page 39


Barre City - $269,000<br />

This spacious 2-story building is perfect for your business<br />

or residential use and is close to downtown. The upstairs<br />

could easily be turned into a 3-bedroom unit, let the rent<br />

pay your mortgage! There is more than sufficient parking at<br />

this property.<br />

MLS #4730090<br />

Montpelier – $292,000<br />

Country living yet only one mile from the State Capital. Lovely<br />

farmhouse boasts 5BR and 2BA. This home offers both a<br />

living room and bonus family room as well as a wrap-around<br />

porch and more! Close to public transportation.<br />

MLS #4761797<br />

Barre City – $132,000<br />

Looking for the Condo Life? Here it is with this 2 bedroom<br />

1.5 bath home. Updated ½ bath on 1st fl oor. Master<br />

bedroom with walk in closet, a spacious 2nd bedroom<br />

and full bath. Also features garage, laundry room with new<br />

washer and dryer, new roof, new windows, new fl ooring<br />

and new appliances!<br />

MLS #4758<strong>19</strong>2<br />

PRICE<br />

IMPROVED<br />

Barre City - $115,400<br />

This cozy 3 bedroom, 2 bath home has nice hardwood floors,<br />

high ceilings, large rooms and newer windows throughout.<br />

Private back deck for grilling and relaxing.<br />

MLS #4718634<br />

Woodbury - $350,000<br />

a pond with 460 feet of water frontage! Enjoy the open beach<br />

areas, canoeing/kayaking, swimming and fi shing all just<br />

outside the front door. The property offers 3 bedrooms, a<br />

deck and 2.24 acres. Additional acreage available.<br />

MLS #4750185<br />

Barre City - $142,500<br />

Lovely home with lots of character and charm! Natural light<br />

and beautiful woodwork throughout this four bedroom, one<br />

and a half bath home. This home also includes a covered<br />

front porch, a walk-up attic that could easily be fi nished,<br />

2-car garage and nice private backyard with deck.<br />

MLS #4744518<br />

PRICE<br />

IMPROVED<br />

PRICE<br />

IMPROVED<br />

arsfiel <br />

55.9 acre parcel with tons of possibilities and lots of privacy!<br />

There is a house site ready with state septic permit for a 3BR<br />

home. Property includes a cozy camp that has a bunk room<br />

and loft, comes fully furnished w/wood stove for heat and<br />

solar panel for lights. Hunt, hike, garden or just sit on the<br />

deck of the camp, listen to nature and enjoy the solitude!<br />

MLS #4695781<br />

Williamstown - $265,000<br />

This beautifully renovated 5-bedroom 1850 Historic Farm<br />

House has numerous updates. The kitchen boasts an antique<br />

wood cook stove that also heats much of the home. There is<br />

plenty of room to entertain family and friends on the front and<br />

back decks, overlooking amazing mountain views. The large<br />

level lawn is beautifully landscaped and is lined with large,<br />

century year old trees.<br />

MLS #4648832<br />

Woodbury - $250,000<br />

Here’s your opportunity to own your Vermont Getaway! This<br />

camp offers just under 3.0 acres with approx 320 feet of<br />

level water frontage with beach and grass. Plenty of storage<br />

with your own boat house and additional outbuildings. Great<br />

fi shing, swimming, boating and more. Come check it out!<br />

MLS #4750187<br />

When you buy or sell your home with us, you can use our moving truck for FREE!<br />

“As a Vermont family business, we know what home means. Our approach is<br />

local, personalized and unique. Local ownership and decision making combined<br />

with the resources and strengths of one of the largest real estate brokerages in<br />

the northeast allows us to offer our clients the best of all worlds. Call us today to<br />

learn more about the William Raveis difference.” –John B.<br />

Come work with a local family-owned<br />

company that knows the market and<br />

gets results.<br />

BARRE • BURLINGTON ESSEX JCT. • • ST. ST. JOHNSBURY • • STOWE • • STRATTON •• WOODSTOCK<br />

802.479.3366<br />

BARRE • ESSEX JCT. • ST. JOHNSBURY • STOWE • STRATTON • WOODSTOCK<br />

802.479.3366<br />

page 40 The WORLD August 7, 20<strong>19</strong><br />

Independently Owned and Operated<br />

Independently Owned and Operated

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