Seven Days, November 25, 1998

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Features Leading M an In business and the performing arts, Walt Levering is a

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c la s s i f i e d s .................................................

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car talk ................................................ . . .

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straight dope

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By Melanie M enagh............................................................. page 10

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Heads Up

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Art review.- Juan Perdiguero and Frank Carmelitano By Marc Awodey ...................................................................page 33

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The newly renovated Burlington International Airport is up and running, but the ride m ay be a little bumpy By Erik E sckilsen....................................................................page 36

Poetry: Season al Things By Daniel Lusk .......................... ..........................................page 37

Tube Fed: Thanksgiving: TV’s Forgotten Holiday By Rick Kisonak ...................................................................page 38

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S E V E N ~ V<W


P R O G R E S S IV E BR A IN T R U ST IN C L U D E S W O M E N

who will make a great coi tribution, I'm sure .A lso m contributions as a journalist and writer toward Vermont’s sense of community.

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In her letter to the editor entitled “Women D’s Have Brains, Too” [Nov. 18], Ginny McGrath takes a mean-spirited and factually incorrect swipe at Burlington Progressives. She states that “...the problem with the Democrats and so-called Progressives, i.e., they neither acknowledge or support the con­ tributions — brains — of women in their own parties.” On the contrary, the Chairperson of the Progressive Party and Co-chair of the Progressive Coalition is a dynam­ ic woman named Ashley Moore. Past co-chairs include former City Councilors Barbara Nolfi and UVM professor Jane Knodell. Many other women, including former City Councilor Martha Abbott and current City Councilor Tracy Sawyers, also make up the collective Progressive brain trust here in Burlington, As Vice Chair of the Progressive Party, I attend many Progressive meetings. What I see in those meetings is vibrant smart women working with

vibrant smart men to represent working people instead of the big money corporate interests preferred by the Republicrats. What I’ve never seen at a Progressive meeting is Ginny McGrath. Apparently, Ginny is interested in bashing Progressives without first gathering the facts. One area Ginny and I do agree about, however, is that if Ginny is right, and the Democratic Party “neither acknowledges or supports.. .women,” then a change is needed. Don’t believe the misinformation that Ginny McGrath spews, the Progressive Party supports, encourages and is committed to women in leadership roles where they can make a real difference. — Peter Baker Vice Chair, Progressive Party Burlington

10-month-old white German guilty as they are. Do your part Shepard, and my sister’s dog, as decent human beings and Reuben, a 17-month-old come forth with any information Newfoundland/Husky mix, were you may have. playing on the private land Also during this encounter, behind our house on Carroll Reuben lost his collar. It is a Road in Waitsfield when they black collar with Grateful Dead were shot to death. The person(s) dancing bears on it along with who killed our dogs in cold his tags. For obvious sentimental blood did so for no comprehensi- reasons, if you find it, please ble reason. The person(s) responreturn it to us. For our address or sible for this act then dragged any information, call 496-9235. both dogs (weighing about 100 Finally, I would like to thank pounds between them) out of the everyone from Waterbury to woods, loaded them in their Warren for their support in help­ vehicle and drove them approxiing us find the person(s) involved mately five miles to Rolston \ n d well wishes for our loss. Road, Waitsfield, where they — Josh Pombar threw their bodies over a cliff to Waitsfield escape responsibility, Letters P o lic y : SE V E N DAYS Both my sister and myself have lost our best friends. We wants your rants and raves, cannot get our puppies back, but in 2 5 0 w ords or less. Letters hopefully with your help we can are only accepted that find the person(s) responsible respond to content in Seven Days. Include your full name and a daytime phone num ber and send to: SE V E N DAYS, P.0. Box 1 1 6 4 , Burlington, VT 0 5 4 0 2 - 1 1 6 4 . fax: 8 6 5 - 1 0 1 5 e-mail: sevenday@together.net

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Grego’s Aria

page of The Burlington Free Press, not even one citizen, let alone one Freeps reporter, showed up for the license committee hearing at which Greg Stevens, 47, was always the most the application of the new Irish pub on macho man in the band. But Monday he took the stand over in federal court and sang perfect Church St. won unanimous approval. Even soprano under the direction of federal prosecu­ Mayor Peter Clavelle showed up to add his support for the new watering hole. “I think it’s tor David Kirby. Grego never made eye contact with his four a great addition to downtown,” Clavelle tells Inside Track. The upscale Irish pub, he says, former co-conspirators sitting over at the will be no more of a problem as far as alcohol defense table: Billy Greer, Stephen Hutchins, goes than Leunig’s or NECI. “It’s not the kind Tom Cook and Glenn Koski. Stevens told tales of spot,” he says, “where binge drinkers will going all the way back to 1979 when he first gather.” met Billy the Kid, then a waiter There is opposition, how­ at the Sirloin Saloon. His last ever, in addition to that of caper under the direction of the local Gannett-chain Mr. Greer, he said, was during newspaper. Progressive their 11-week trial in 1997. Councilor Tom Smith tells Grego said he made five walk­ Inside Track he would have ing trips down from Quebec voted against a liquor license with premium hydroponic pot for the Irish pub had he in his backpack. Twice he drove showed up at the committee the loads to the Big Apple and meeting on time. Tom the handed them off to a gentle­ Prog says before any new man in front of the Chelsea liquor licenses are granted he Hotel identified only as “an wants to see a thorough dis­ associate of Dog.” O f course at cussion conducted on where the time, Grego was free on downtown is going. bail with conditions he not Presently, says Smith, all leave the state or associate with there is in downtown Burlap Billy Greer. Not to worry. are “upscale clothing stores, Monday he sang his lungs out bars and restaurants. Is that in hopes Judge William where we want to be going?” Sessions will go lightly on his Expect a heavy dose of sentence. Stevens has already snitched BY PETER FREYNE politically correct progressive grandstanding Monday night on two of his fellow backpack­ when the city council will decide on final ers, and the former bartender offered fresh approval for the new pub. information Monday implicating his former Moonie Goes for Five — Mayor Peter Clavelle boss at the Chickenbone Cafe in a 1991 hash went public Tuesday with his desire to serve a deal that allegedly brought three tons of the fifth term as Mayor of Burlap. As for oppo­ Lebanese delicacy into Boston Harbor. nents, don’t bet on former Police Chief Kevin But Wavy Davy, the laid-back prosecutor, Scully jumping in this time. It’s more likely saved his best for last. It’s no secret Kirby & Kevin will start his political career with a run Co. have not been fans of Inside Track’s cover* for city council. age of the case. O f all the amendments to the Mr. Kurt Wright is itching to take on Constitution it’s been quite clear the First Clavelle, and can spout off a host of issues Amendment isn’t one of their favorites. From which, he says, Clavelle has been on the wrong the start, Kirby wouldn’t talk to us. The side of. He says Mayor Moonie is “out of defense — some of them, anyway — wouldn’t touch with the voters,” a fact, he says, that’s shut up. demonstrated by Clavelle’s support for every So David Kirby, the Kenneth Starr of tax increase that’s come down the pike. Vermont, got Grego to testify that after their Great Move, Gov! — Gotta give “The Pontius May 1997 conviction the five defendants agreed on a plan to have Fred Greer, brother of Pilate Award of 1998” to our governor, Howard Brush Dean III. Mr. Wash-MyBill, tip off yours truly that Juror John Baker Hands-of-the-Whole-Mess earned the coveted had concealed the fact his younger brother had prize by appointing a blue ribbon task force to a record and was once involved in a deal or come up with proposals for improving Act 60. two with Billy. Interesting, but is it true? Ho-Ho’s been all over the map on this one. All we can say is, Inside Track has never Before the election he said he was crunching identified a confidential source and isn’t about the numbers on several proposals, which he to start now. W hat’s important is that what we declined to identify. Said he wanted to get rid reported on Juror Baker was correct, whether of the shark pool entirely. Then said he wanted Wavy Davy liked it or not. And it’s still a little to adjust the shark pool somehow to ease the mind-boggling that after the “Twilight Zone” pain. Now he’s got a cozy little task force to hearing Sessions conducted, in which he inter­ hide behind. Brilliant move! O f course, there viewed the jurors one by one, the judge let the already is a task force working on Act 60 — it’s verdict reached by that chatty bunch stand. called the Vermont State Legislature! Stevens also testified Greer had been trying Media Notes — Couple new faces in TV to work out a deal with the government in which everyone’s sentence would be reduced in News Land. Over at WCAX the new face is that of Joan Ritchie, a graduate of return for information on the Canadian and Northwestern’ s Medill School of Journalism. Dutch connections. There’s been no evidence Joan grew up all over New England, including of such a deal. In fact, Billy the Kid’s latest a few years in St. Albans. She comes to Burlap ploy is to claim he suffers from attention from WAGM in Presque Isle, Maine, and has deficit disorder, and that ADD affected his already made an impression as a pretty savvy relationship with his attorney both before and reporter. Speaking of savvy, WCAX has also during the trial. signed up veteran radio newsman Andy Potter. Hard to keep a straight face on that one. Andy’s been around since before TV — just Seems one thing Billy Greer was always good kidding. at during his international drug smuggling Over at W PTZ, Montreal native Tim career was strict attention to details. Sargeant will be the station’s legislative reporter Sentencing has been postponed once again. At the moment Sessions is shooting for the sec­ come January. Tim’s a graduate of Concordia and has worked at CBC radio and at CBT-TV ond week in January. Bar Wars — Despite the urging of the editorial in St. John’s, Newfoundland. ® K * +J

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SEVEN DAYS' i VAO

page 5 k


Road Rager of the Week Police in Durham, North Carolina, said Sarah C. Carr was stuck in traffic with two girls, 10 and 13, when she became frustrated with the grid­ lock and drove up onto the sidewalk and across people’s yards. Cpl. Lori Fansler, who was directing traffic, stopped the car, but when she leaned inside to talk to the driver, Carr insisted she “didn’t have freak­ ing time for this” and sped off, dragging Fansler, whose hand was tangled in the seat belt, about 10 feet. Another officer chased Carr down a road at about 75 mph before she stopped at a school.

Sets and Violence Falling television sets killed at least 28 children between 1990 and 1997, according to a study in the journal Pediatrics. Using data supplied by the Consumer Product Safety Commission and the Childrens Hospital of Alabama, researchers reported that sets placed on TV stands and dressers were the most danger­ ous, causing 38 percent of the deaths.

Cable-Ready China announced a cam| paign to bring television to the 12 percent of its 1.2 billion | population not currendy receiv­

ing broadcasts, mostly people in poor and remote rural areas. “Positive steps are being taken to ensure that we reach the goal of every village having access to radio and television broadcasts by the end of the century,” Tian Congming, head of the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television, told a broadcast industry meeting in October.

Passing Judgment The Florida Supreme Court reprimanded Circuit Judge Leonard V. Wood, 61, for rude and inappropriate remarks he made to a divorcing couple, ordering Gary Lieberman and Julie Smith-Lieberman to dis­ close details of their sex life. After listening, he then urged them to stay married and have a baby, adding that he wouldn’t mind fathering SmithLieberman’s child himself if she wasn’t already married.

Animal Husbandry Australian scientists seeking a way to reduce the cost of wool gathering have developed a way to make sheep shed their fleece automatically. The New York Times reported that sheep are injected with a natural pro­ tein, then a week later their wool falls off into special nets worn by the animals. The gov­ ernment-owned Common­ wealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization, which

hailed the process as a “new concept in wool harvesting,” said the wool usually begins to grow back within 24 hours. • A 6-foot-tall, 150-pound female emu tried to mate with Ed Stuardi of Mobile, Alabama. The bird followed him around for several days, but when its intentions became known, Stuardi tried scaring it away by shooting his gun into the air. The bird continued hanging around, making deep noises in its throat that are a mating call, forcing Stuardi and his wife to cower in their house for two days. Finally, they called the authorities, who captured the emu and took it to a farm pop­ ulated by her own species. “It was mating season, and she took a fond liking to him,” said Diane Roberts, director of the Animal Rescue Foundation. “He had to ward her off with a boat paddle. She was absolutely intent that this was her mate.” • The Animal Protection Institute reported that General Mills has addressed the problem of animals getting their snouts stuck in the narrow tops of its Yoplait yogurt containers. From now on, the plastic containers will bear a warning on the bot­ tom that reads, “Protect Wildlife: Crush Before Disposal.”

Gone but Not Forgotten Instead of cremating three

bodies at his funeral home in Mount Vernon, Ohio, William B. Grohe, 52, pocketed the money and left the corpses to decompose after his electricity was cut off. Grohe was convict­ ed of three counts of abuse of a corpse. • Flemming Pedersen, 37, asked the staff at a hospital in Copenhagen where his 86-yearold father died to be left alone with him. He then dressed the body in leather gear, boots, a helmet and dark sunglasses, walked the rigid corpse out of the hospital, strapped it to the seat of his motorcycle and drove around the Danish capital for three hours visiting his father’s favorite haunts.

Laboring Under a Delusion When Concetta Romano checked into a hospital in Naples, Italy, in August to give birth, doctors could find no baby

to deliver. The Associated Press reported her husband Antonio Nappello hurried home and dis­ covered his newborn son lying

C H R IS T M A S

on the pavement outside, where the mother apparently gave birth without noticing.

Bad-Boy Clause Latrell Sprewell, whom the National Basketball Association suspended without pay last sea­ son for choking his coach, sued his agent, Arn Tellem, for fail­ ing to anticipate such action. The suit, filed in Los Angeles Superior Court in October, charged that Tellem should have negotiated a clause in Sprewell’s contract to protect his salary in the event of disreputable per­ sonal conduct.

Close But No Cigar Navajo medicine man Yazzie King, 63, was convicted in Albuquerque, New Mexico, of using a bamboo flute to suck evil spirits from womens geni­ tals. • The Rev. Joseph Millien was con­ victed in West Palm Beach, Florida, of sexually molesting a girl despite his insis­ tence that he was only checking to make sure she was a virgin. Millien admitted he had no medical expertise to determine such a condition.®

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SEVEN DAYS

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B y P eter K urth

Pop Shots adies and gentlemen, after a week holed up at the New York Public Library, and with the prospect of 20 or 30 blood relatives showing up for Thanksgiving dinner, the Crank has a confession to make. He’s all dried up. He’s at a loss for words. This will be good news for Repub­ licans, “womyn,” straight men and so forth, but it’s bad news for the Crank, who’s obliged to deliver commentary every other week without fail — either that or see his reputation for off-the-rack punditry evapo­ rate as swiftly as it arose. I thought at first I might write about Kenneth Starr’s appearance before the House Judiciary Committee, but, apart from the deliciously timed resignation of Starr’s “ethics advisor,” Sam Dash, it was so dull and so irrele­ vant that even a wiseguy can’t make hay out of it. Likewise with the President’s

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privately' Ifom his ai with Monica Lewinsky. With even Republicans now praising Hillary Rodham Clinton as the “shining light” of this administration, we can assume that whatever punishment she has in store for her husband is already known to them both. So, with my apologies, it’s out-takes this week, brief and, I hope, pertinent obser­ vations as they occur to me on a brilliant Sunday in November, the last peaceful weekend before “the holi­ days” make animals of us all. I realize that heavy con­ sumer spending is essential to the economy, and that some large percentage of all the fat consumed in the United States is ingested between Thanksgiving and New Year’s, but I still think Christmas should be abol­ ished and replaced by a holi­ day devoted to love, joy and peace (and quiet). Anyhow, here goes: 1)1 wish people would stop telling me when I criticize the media that I am the media. I ain’t. I’m a writer, independent, unaffiliated, unsyndicated, and unknown outside these parts for any­ thing but book reviews, his­ torical biographies and the occasional public scandal, chiefly but not exclusively related to Russian royalty.

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My two books about the Romanovs got me labeled “a monarchist” in local gay and lesbian circles, confirming my suspicion that many political activists in the Burlington area have been educated at a considerable remove. No, I say, and no again. I am not a media flack. I’m a loud, lone voice crying in the wilderness. 2) Am I crazy, or did no one bat an eye when the United States found itself “this close” to war with Iraq? In the whole 10 days or two weeks (or five minutes — who can be sure?) that led to the latest non-action, I did­ n’t hear a single person men­ tion it in conversation, in passing, or on the street. I suppose there must have been the usual band of left­ over war protesters down at the Federal Building, but, if so, they desperately need some public relations advice. Nobody cared. There could be several reasons for this. One is that the public is smarter than it -and knows lat all it takes lo se international crisis is for var­ ious leaders to declare that they’re going to do some­ thing other than what they’re doing now, whether they actually do it or not. Another is that the public isn’t that smart and doesn’t know, or care, that war is real and not just something you see on TV. O r it could be that Americans are used to living in a permanent crisis atmos­ phere, under a 24-hour, seven-day assault of “break­ ing news” that shifts from topic to topic and disaster to calamity just as quickly as you can change the channel. (Yes, I think television cre­ ates the minds it wants to reach. No, I will never back down.) 3) I wish Americans would forget about the Kennedy years and the shimmering kaleidoscope that was Camelot. I don’t want to read another story, ever, about how our innocence died on November 22, 1963. This seems to me to be just another excuse for Americans’ abysmal knowl­ edge of their own history. I’m aware that there are many controversies among educators and psychologists — not to mention an alarmed citizenry — about the best way to teach kids

their lessons. As things stand, however, the United States is the only country on earth that actually believes nothing ever happened before video. 4) I’d like local parents to stop giving their babies names that leave me rolling on the floor. I’m thinking of the children here. How many Camerons, Connors and Tanners can one society need? Ditto all the Katelyns, Tamryns, and Brianna Maries. Ten years ago — I have this written down — the names on the day-care wall were Megan, Ashley, Jennifer, Heather, Holly, Tiffany, Chelsea and Nicole. I forgot to note the boys, but this was before they all started sounding like cars. To be sure, there’s been a resurgent Biblical trend. Hence the legions of Isaiahs and Ezekiels sitting down this very moment to watch “South Park.” I’m all for

Could be that Americans are used ing in a perma­ nent crisis atmos­ phere, under a 24hour, seven-day assault of “breaking news” that shifts from topic to topic and disaster to calamity just as quickly as you can change the channel? Biblical names, and wonder if we couldn’t see a few Hepzibahs, Salomes and Bathshebas thrown into the mix. Or spell Michaela properly. Or go back to the archaic French-Canadian names that used to domi­ nate here: Orefuge, Armandine, Odde and Delphise. I leave you with a pass­ ing thought from Nobel lau­ reate Czeslaw Milosz, taken from his new collection of poems and short essays, Road-side Dog: “Little ani­ mals from cartoons, talking rabbits, doggies, squirrels, as well as ladybugs, bees, grasshoppers. They have as much in common with real animals as our notions of the world have with the real world. Think of this, and tremble.” (7)

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of the conference complex for­ merly known as the Econolodge, which includes the here is a policy forbidding upscale Windjammer sexual harassment at the Best Western on Williston Restaurant. As an actor, he is willing to do just about any­ Road in South Burlington, but thing, including portray a tonight owner Walt Levering is bending the rules a bit. Leaning stereotype of himself. At first brush Levering, who over a young woman hired to has an affable growl and a fond­ help him improve his public ness for sports metaphors, does speaking, he makes a suggestive bring to mind a back-slapping, remark about the confidentiali­ tough-talking, cigar-smoking ty of “the product he is about CEO. But in reality, the Yaleto offer.” W ithin half an hour, educated thespian is “as far he has promised her a leg up the corporate ladder with a not- from that as you can imagine,” Nash says. Thoroughly unpre­ so-subtle proposition behind tentious in life and rehearsal, he closed doors in the Adirondack is a dedicated and enthusiastic Room. It would be a pretty champion of culture — to the convincing case o f exercising tune of approximately $50,000 “executive privilege” — if he a year. Not counting the events weren’t clutching a script. he underwrites through the Levering is full of apologies business, Levering attends at the first rehearsal of a skit about predatory practices in the about 100 arts performances a year. workplace — the first runAs corporate philanthropists through is always a bit rough, go, Levering is a true he explains. But it is not the Renaissance man: a successful first time the 62-year-old for­ businessman who actively par­ mer football star has been cast in the “good of boy” role. Prior ticipates in the cultural com­ munity he supports. Over the to this short work for corporate past few years, Levering has audiences with Champlain Arts stepped up his involvement in Theater Company, Levering local theater, as an actor and starred in a video on the same advocate for affordable perfor­ subject directed by Mark Nash, mance space. His knowledge of who jumped at the chance to culture — and commerce — work with a real businessman. makes him the ideal goLevering is the sole proprietor B y P aula R outly

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between, whether he’s playing a wacked-out Holocaust victim with Green Candle Theater Company or brokering real estate deals with business bud­ dies on the board of the Greater Burlington Industrial Develop­ ment Corporation. “Aside from his obvious love and enthusiasm for theater, he brings a solid understanding of the business community and how the arts fit into the local economy,” says Blake Robison, artistic director of Vermont Stage. “Arts are largely in the not-for-profit sector, and busi­ nesses are concerned about making profits. Reconciling those two priorities can be chal­ lenging. W hat’s great about Walt is that he lives in both camps. “

s a child growing up in Greenwich, Connecticut, Levering had early access to the arts in New York City. Both of his grandmothers lived in Manhattan, and were eager to take him around. His pater­ nal grandmother brought him to young people’s concerts at Carnegie Hall, which sparked a life-long appreciation for classi­ cal music. His maternal grand­ mother preferred theater, instill­ ing in Levering an appreciation

for show and substance. It was a short walk from there to the jazz bars on 52nd Street, which Levering discov­ ered some years later. “We heard Coltrane and Charlie Parker and George Shearing,” he recalls. “I sat as close as you are right now at two in the morning in some joint listening to Art Tatum with about 20 other people. You could go to a place like The Embers and lis­ ten to Ella Fitzgerald sing for two hours straight...people call­ ing up songs and her saying, ‘We’ll get to it, we’ll get to it.” Dramatic interests accompa­ nied Levering to Yale, where he played baseball and football, and made regular forays to the Schubert Theater. But armchair appreciation was as far as it went. Even as he took on highpressure endeavors like team racing on sailboats, it never occurred to Levering to turn his audience status into active pur­ suit. “I used to go to the theater and say, ‘Wow, that was great.’ I had a really good time, and that was it. I never thought about getting up there. It was the last thing in the world I wanted to do.” Simply put, Levering suf­ fered from stage fright — a problem exacerbated by his suc­ cess as a businessman. Although

he had no trouble performing for a stadium full of football fans, the idea of getting up before a group of colleagues — even employees — gave him “the yips,” as he puts it, describing “that heart just bang­ ing on my ribs, like it is going to explode, and the sweat just running right down the back of my shirt. People don’t see that.” The problem became acute when Levering, who was then chair of the board of Trinity College, teamed up with Sister Janice Ryan to raise money for a capital campaign. “We were going around talking to various groups in New York and Boston. I would have to get up and make a speech. After three of ’em, I told Janice, ‘I’m dying. I’m so scared. I can’t keep going.’” Sister Janice referred Levering to former Trinity drama prof Hugh Cronister, who confirmed “that fear of public speaking ranks about 10 places higher than fear of death,” Levering recalls. His recommendation to the tonguetied board member? Adult act­ ing classes. “Acting? I said, ‘Wait a minute, Hugh, you don’t understand. I’m just talk­ ing about public speaking.’ Well, I went to three of those classes and I was hooked.”


By teaching him improvisational skills, Cronister helped Levering learn to think on his feet. “In the beginning I was frightened to death, and hope­ less as an actor,” he admits. “But Hugh taught us how to work ourselves out of situa­ tions. By visualizing himself as a “speech maker,” the aspiring actor eventually got a grip — and his first role with Green Candle Theater Company. Fellow local actor Geri Amori also coached Levering through his problem at the podium. With a tough-love approach that included stealing his precious notes, “she made me stumble through the thing, over and over. It was an attempt to break me from all the crutches,” he explains. “Boy, she was tough, that little shit,” her recalls with an appreciative chuckle. The lesson saw him through a stint as chair of one of the most intimidating boards in Chittenden County: the Lake Champlain Regional Chamber of Commerce.

n business and acting, Levering is a team player — a natural outgrowth of his time on boats, and as a flankerback and wide receiver on the playing field. “Take away all the hitting and everything, and football is going to the right spot and the right time and doing your job,” he explains. “Acting is the same way. You go here on this cue, on this line and do this. And yet the lines can’t be lines and the movement can’t be movement. It’s got to be very natural.” He compares a night at the Stratford Shake­ speare Festival to watching the Yankees and Red Sox play base­ ball. Not surprisingly, Levering is less jazzed by the idea of delivering a soliloquy than par­ ticipating in the complicated choreography of a fight scene. Paul Ugalde called the shots in the Theater Factory production of Tons o f Money, in which, as, Levering puts it, “a guy comes at me with a pitchfork and I have to throw him over the couch and all that. How do you do that night after night and not kill someone, or make it look phony?” Levering describes the phys­ ical intricacies of the scene, like a dancer detailing a particularly daring lift. And he’s done that, too. All through college, Levering dated a June Taylor dancer, with whom he regularly went out to swing and jitter­ bug. She gave him yet another opportunity to make the con­ nection between arts and sport. “During the fall, in football sea­ son, the question was, who was hurt worse this weekend — Walt or Emmy? She was beat up more than I was.” Levering was fast on his feet — on the dance floor and the

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football field. At five feet six inches — the shortest player in the Ivy League — he had to be. “People wrote articles about it,” he says. He made the most of his stature, though thanks to great coaching by a guy not much bigger than himself. Perhaps as a result, there’s no trace of a Napoleon complex in Levering — he’s big enough to find kind words for everybody but himself. “There is no ego there at all,” Nash says of “the hardestworking actor” he has ever directed. “He comes into class as a neophyte and says ‘teach me.’ There is just no sense of pride, no desire to make him­ self important. Even though we

The place appealed to him so much that he took a construc­ tion job on the spot. “It was outdoors, it was athletic. I just stayed.” Although he had not skiied much before then, Levering took to the slopes. And after a variety of jobs in the industry, he got into the bar business. First he and a group of friends bought the Baggy Knees in Stowe. Their success financed a renovation project in Mont­ pelier that became the Thrush Tavern. Next came the “Stowe Center” — a commercial pro­ ject that ranked him as a “developer.” By then he was married with two small daugh­

to do?’ He says, ‘I’m starving. Let’s go back and and get a steak and a beer at the ’jam­ mer.’ That’s my kind of guy.” Chiu was immediately at ease with Levering, who does not discriminate between stars and stagehands. (He calls “Frasier” actor David Hyde Pierce a friend, too.) That makes him accessible to both the high-ranking and the eco­ nomically challenged. He has served on the Flynn board for a dozen years. Robison snagged him for Vermont Stage two months ago. Praising his win­ ning combination of passion and practicality, Robison notes, “Walt puts his money where his mouth is, but he also likes to get in there and help these orga­ nizations improve themselves.” Levering is a big fan of entrepreneurial spirit in the arts. He has nothing but praise for Dewees, for example, who organized and promoted his own recent tour. But he also recognizes that market forces are not sympathetic to the gnarliest problem facing players and audiences in the Burlington area: the shortage of perfor­ mance and rehearsal space. “The Paul Schnabels and the John Alexanders, and they have no place to play,” Levering says. As vice president of the Flynn board, Levering is defi­ nitely looking out for the little .guy. “It can’t be as expensive as Sthe proposed to be,” he says, referring to expansion- 4, plans that include an alternate wears his eclectic tastes on his performance space. “If you rent sleeve. Along with The Logger it on a weekly basis, at a market and the Nevilles, he is sponsor­ rent basis, all your costs cov­ ing classical pianist Fred Chiu ered, there ain’t ever going to be this year, for the third time. He a play.” first spotted the musician on a By the same token, he televised broadcast of the Van brings a dose of reality to his Cliburn piano competition — drama friends. That includes after he had taken up the the folks at Green Candle, instrument himself. Although Champlain Arts, Theater Chiu did not get a medal, he Factory, Vermont Stage and did take risks. He got Levering’s New Group Theater, with vote. whom he is “producing” “The next morning the Memoirs, about the life of Sarah phone rang, and it was Walt,” Bernhardt, at the Vergennes recalls Lane Series director Jane Opera House. “Sometimes the Ambrose, who had also seen the small theater companies expect documentary. He said, ‘Do you a free ride,” Levering warns. know who we should get on the “Nobody is going to step for­ Lane Series next year?’” Read­ ward and give a company space ing his mind, she responded, out of the goodness of their “Fred Chiu.” Both of them still heart.” laugh about the synchronicity. Levering is perfectly posi­ Not only did Levering sponsor tioned to help find a solution, the concert, but when Ambrose or a “50-50 deal,” as he puts it. needed someone to pick up the But it may take all his real artist at the airport, Levering estate contacts, and then some, volunteered. to come up with a plan that is “W hat I found at the air­ self-sustaining. “There has got port was a really neat kind of to be a way that we can endow fun guy. We just became a space for theater and dance friends,” Levering says, taking — those are the two art forms the opportunity to slip Chiu’s that are absolutely out in the latest compact disc into the cold around here,” Levering stereo behind his desk. Levering says. In the meantime, local has since visited Chiu in Paris,, actors can rest assured there is a and traveled to Rhode Island to warm spot for them on Willi­ hear him play. “After his con­ ston Road. And that Walt cert in Burlington two years Levering will definitely leave ago, I said, ‘W hat do you want the light on for them. ® Levering sponsored on behalf of the Windjammer Hospitality Group, has the potential to send up red flags in the boardroom. “Most businesses would be like, ‘Wait a minute, wait a minute, they did that Rosa Parks thing,”’ Levering says with an explosive laugh. More likely, they wouldn’t know the Nevilles at all. His recommendation? “They have to get out more, they have to see more,” Levering suggests. “They sit in their little houses watching public television and think that’s the arts.” When it comes to corporate sponsorship, Levering definitely

“My philosophy is. if we lose our arts, we lose our culture. I think business should be the creators and sponsors of arts. They should be the great patrons.” are having classes in the hotel he owns, he never makes a big deal out of it.” Levering carries that egoless approach to management. “My philosophy is, and always has been, hire the best people and get the hell out of the way,” he explains. “As a coach I can’t play the game, but I sure can help them.” He treats every member of his staff like a cru­ cial member of the team. Non­ employees experience the same generosity of spirit. “If he says, ‘give me a call,’ and you do, he gets back to you,” says actor Rusty Dewees, whose recent tour of The Logger was sponsored by Levering through the Windjammer Hospitality Group. “He makes your little bit seem as impor­ tant as anything else he is doing. He trusts you, too. I call that a heart-gut-handshake businessman.”

evering makes a practice of hurling headlong into things. But uncharacteris­ tically, he “backed into” the hospitality business in Vermont as a stock broker-to-be. En route home from a wild wed­ ding in Montreal, he pulled over in Stowe. “I was so hung over, I could hardly keep it between the trees,” he recalls with characteristic good humor.

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ters, and living on a sheep farm in Waterbury. Levering was working as a commercial real estate broker at Hickok and Boardman when he bought into his current proper­ ty on Williston Road. The orig­ inal proposal for an indoor shopping mall got shot down by the local planning commis­ sion — at just about the same time the University Mall got through. “So I went to these consulting people and said, ‘Okay, what is the next highest and best use?’ They said a bud­ get hotel.” Twenty-two years later, Levering is surely the only hote­ lier in the area who extends competitive discounts to baroque ensembles and visiting baseball teams. Or whose “bot­ tom line” takes into considera­ tion regular cultural contribu­ tions. “My philosophy is, if we lose our arts, we lose our cul­ ture,” Levering says. “I think business should be the creators and sponsors of arts. They should be the great patrons.” He does acknowledge the obvious drawback, though: Typically, most businesses shy away from associating them­ selves with anything controver­ sial, preferring musicals, cham­ ber ensembles and family pro­ grams. Even an act like The Neville Brothers, which

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hen Wynton Marsalis hoists his horn with the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra at the Flynn next week, it will be to benefit an organization whose mission parallels a crusade dear to the trumpeters heart. Marsalis is known for his connection with children as a teacher, mentor and all-around arts advocate. W hether its an intro-to-music series on public television, or working young inner-city musi­ cians, Marsalis has long been a torch-bearer for the kid cause. Landing such a big name is a coup for the fledgling Bethany’s Children Foundation. But the force behind the fundraiser is not blowing any horns. Not yet, anyway. Between ticket sales and corpo­ rate sponsorships, chutzpah and credit cards, Charles Thomas hopes to raise $20,000 for his organization, which aims to provide arts and humanities programs to every school in Vermont. Starting a foundation — from scratch — is no easy

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undertaking. But Thomas is driven by more than money. His project is dedicated to his fiancee, Bethany Granter, who died two and a half years ago from complications resulting from diabetes. “We had one good year together,” Thomas says. The next four and a half brought Bethany kidney trans­ plants, dialysis, a blood clot and finally, a heart attack. When she finally died, “it was a bless­ ing,” Thomas adds. “She looked like she was 96 years old.” In the chaos of her illness, Thomas lost his business — Dumb Guys Party Supplies at Taft Corner. W hen she passed away at age 33, he got in her car and started driving. Thomas spent months visiting all the major cities in the United States, but eventually found his way back to Burlington. Still fragile, he put in volunteer hours for the Vermont Symphony Orchestra. Eventually, they offered him a week-long gig as driver and roadie for Mokoto Nakura, a Japanese marimba player, who was presenting a series of pro­ grams in schools around the

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state. Checking out the scene at their first stop — no stage, no seats, no lights, no decent sound equipment — Thomas said to himself, “There is some­ thing wrong here.” With the facilities, perhaps, but not with the audience. “Three hundred kids came in and sat on the floor. They were incredibly well-behaved. You could hear a pin drop. They were mesmerized. IVe studied music, so I know at least enough to know greatness when I’m in its presence. Nakura played as smooth as silk, and the kids went nuts. I was like one of them; I clapped louder than they did. “Each performance moved me to tears,” continues Thomas. “The kids’ responses got better and better. Nakura loved the kids, the kids loved him. Some of the principals actually came up and shook my hand and said, ‘Thanks for bringing him here. We get this kind of thing once every TO years, if were lucky.’” That’s when the whole thing clicked. At the culmination of that week, Thomas realized what he wanted to do: help bring arts programs into schools. “I started talking to everybody I could about this,” says Thomas. “I had been a social recluse for five years dur­ ing Bethany’s illness, so I had a long way to go.” The response was cautiously encouraging. “People said, ‘It’s needed, but do you think you’re up to this?”’ Thomas had busi­ ness experience from his retail store, but he didn’t know a thing about nonprofits. He called the Secretary of State and got together a board of direc­ tors, who hammered out a mis­ sion, set goals, planned strate­ gies. The foundation also sent out surveys to 266 schools, ask­ ing about current arts pro­ gramming and projected needs. The average amount spent per year was about $500 — the cost of a single assembly, or hir­ ing a dancer, musician or visual artist for one week. Thomas explains, “That means some have $3500, and others have zero. There’s a lot more money at stake in the Marsalis concert, which has a budget of $65,000. Thomas has raised about $25,000 so far. “We have to win businesses over,” he says. “We approached a number of them and asked for small dona­ tions. We say, ‘Give us a little now, we’ll show you what we can do with that. Then we’ll ask for a lot later.’” In the meantime, the foun­ dation has not been idle. It sponsored a summer arts pro­ gram for 53 teenagers at

Mississquoi High School in Swanton, and a statewide writ­ ing contest for which school kids composed a piece about a musical instrument they play or would like to play. The contest received 434 submissions, and its winners will be attending the Marsalis concert. Based on results from the questionnaires, the Bethany’s board has developed a two-year plan that targets six schools, five of which are financially strapped and have virtually no arts programming. The sixth school will be in an affluent area that already has programs. In this case, Thomas says, “Programs are already coming to them, but we want to make sure the programs are done the right way. We want to make sure the prep work is done and that there is discussion after­

says Dawn Ellis, education coordinator at the Vermont Arts Council. “They’re dabbling right now, trying to figure out what works.. .I’m optimistic that we can work together to see where they can fit and stop a gap, as long as they continue to look and listen and meet a need that is not already being met.” Thomas believes there is plenty of room for improve­ ment. “Some schools don’t even have a room set aside for music,” he says. “They wait five years for an arts program, and they have to go out selling candy bars to get it. People might worry that funding might be compromised, that we’ll get a piece of their pie. But this is America, that’s just healthy competition. It’ll make us all sharper.”

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^^^^^^nam^homas wards, so kids get the most out of the experience.” These six pilot schools will provide an ongoing laboratory. “We’ll document everything, to see the before-and-after picture of how the schools and com­ munities were affected by the arts programs,” says Thomas. “We want the entire state to scrutinize what we’re doing. That keeps us on our toes, keeps us professional.” Thomas hopes that Bethany’s Foundation will someday cover all of Vermont. “We’ll be trying to take what we learned in six schools and do it in 60,” he says. Event­ ually, the idea is to make the foundation obsolete. “We want to teach teachers and adminis­ trators how to do what we’re doing, so it’s not the founda­ tion running around to 320 schools making sure every­ thing’s working.” It’s the kind of comment that could raise eyebrows at the Vermont Arts Council, which organizes cultural outreach for schools through the artist-in­ residence program. “I think the jury’s still out on how Bethany’s Children Foundation is going to do what they’re going to do,”

Last week found Thomas flanked by fifth-graders on the floor of the music room at the Westminster Center School in southern Vermont. The kids were intent, as was Thomas, on the directions of theater artist Peter Gould, who was doing a Bethany’s-sponsored 10-day theater workshop there. W ith minor urging, he had the kids doing the backstroke, riding Harleys and walking across the floor pretending there was an earthquake — ending up in a snarl of twitch­ ing bodies and congenial chaos in the center of the room. After the session he shared a different kind of wisdom: “W hen funds are available to put arts and artists in schools, it would be great if a larger per­ cent goes to schools and less for bureaucracy. Charlie seems to have a good plan for imple­ menting that. “I’ve always been interested in someone who is living through the force of a revela­ tion,” he says of Thomas. “Someone who’s experienced facing destiny or fate, and taken a giant leap in another direc­ tion. Those are the people who impress me most.” ®

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november 25, 1998

SEVEN DAYS

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t started out as every Thanksgiving starts out in our family. That was the problem. A day that had originally been put aside for giving thanks had some­ how evolved into a celebration of traditions. Traditions which became so predictable and unwa­ vering that I was beginning to find the holiday a surreal experience. On this particular Thanksgiving, family members started to arrive at my parents’ house, as expected, and slowly broke up into several different camps. The women went into the kitchen, the men migrated towards the football game in the den, and a cluster of nieces and nephews went out into the backyard to run around and raise hell. It was like

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“W hat are you talking about?” she responded, handing me a bowl. “Here, go put the cranberry sauce on the table.” “That’s what I’m talking about,” I said. “W hy do we have cranberry sauce on Thanksgiving?” “Because we always have cran­ berry sauce on Thanksgiving.” “But no one likes it and no one eats it, yet year after year we put it on the table. And it’s not just the cranberry sauce. W hy do we use the same 1958 electric knife to carve the turkey, even after that time Dad nearly got electrocuted?” “Don’t exaggerate, honey, they were just first-degree burns.” “But this whole day has turned into one big repeat. Everything we do today we did last year, and the year before that, and the year before th a t...” “Excuse me a minute, dear,”

“Who are you?” I demanded. “I’m the turkey from the past.” “Newt Gingrich?” “No, the Turkey of T hanksgiving Past.” watching a rerun of the same old Thanksgiving home movie, and I had had enough. This year, at the age of 3 8 ,1 decided to approach my mother and let my feelings be known. I entered the kitchen and found her preparing cranberry sauce. “Mom, do you think we’re in a rut?”

she interrupted, and then stuck her head out the kitchen door. “Hey, everyone, Mark is giving his annu­ al ‘stupid traditions’ speech!” “Already?” my sister called. “But Grandpa hasn’t told his story about Thanksgiving during the Depression yet.” “If Mark’s already doing his lecC o n t in u e d o n p a g e 1 4

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SEVEN DAYS

page 13


Talking Turkeys

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ture, it must be time for me to start making my famous creamed corn,” Aunt Lucy j e w eillrr yv •• j e w e l r y • j e w e ll r y chimed in. I could see that I was not going to win over any converts on this particular day, so I gave up and went to deliver the cranberry sauce. As I opened the kitchen door I ran into my Uncle Jake who, every year since Eisenhower was in office, has been the official family potato masher. “Mark, come here and pull my finger,” Uncle Jake said to me for my 38th consecutive Thanksgiving. “Uncle Jake, give it a rest, that joke is getting kinda old.” “Well, excuse me, Mr. Sophisticated. You used to think it was funny.” “When I was seven,” I mumbled under my breath. Discouraged and bored, I went into the living room to crash for awhile. “To heck with all of you,” I called out to any­ o p e n e v e n in g s • 115 c o lle g e s t r e e t, B u r lin g to n , v t • 6 5 8 - 4 0 5 0 one who might be listening. “I’m just going to sit in this chair and take a rest.” “Not in the recliner!” my mother yelled from behind the closed door. “That’s your Aunt Frieda’s favorite spot to sit and knit every Thanksgiving.” I moved to the sofa, leaned Enjoy a leisurely tun f? it ■ my head back, and started to p The Daily Planet doze, when I felt something ;;iiu§ ^ jump up onto the cushion next for business or for pie to me. Sitting up, I stared into ur server know if you do have a sch ed u le the beady eyes of a 20-pound bird. O ff th e “Who are you?” I demanded. 15 Cent “I’m the turkey from the _» past. “Newt Gingrich?” “No, the Turkey of Wor Global Fare That’s Out Of This Thanksgiving Past.” “My big dream sequence and I get a talking bird.” “Hey, it’s the holiday sea­ son, and all the big-shot char­ acters are in Christmas stories. Do you mind if we get on with this? I’m supposed to take you to Thanksgiving in your house in the year 1965.” “Was that a special year?” P u zzles feature prints by “Special? Seventeen people G a r y M i le k • W iiy V | p s £ s • F r a n k L a r s o n , gathered around the table, and S a lly S m it h • C J P a r k • E llie D a n ie ls % everyone wanted white meat. It o th e r lo < ^ J j p is t s ^ ^ ^J can be death on a Tom like myself. And then, when it at T h e F lem ing M useum S t o r e y came time to break the wish­ **“1A venue, B iirlington bone...” lay th r u F rid a y ! Saturday and S u n d ay .0 “Hey, isn’t this supposed to M . be my story?” “Oh, yeah. Let’s go into the kitchen,” he suggested, and we TO WIN FREE TICKETS TO walked into the next room. “See that little boy over there with the blue mug?” the turkey asked. '•* FLYNN THEATRE. DEC. 10.11 “You mean that kid in the * " FIND THE H IDD EN FOOTPRINT corner holding his breath?” “No,PAGES that’s OF your little broth­ SOMEWHERE IN THE er throwing a temper tantrum. THIS ISSUE. CALL 865-1020 AT The other kid; the one drink­ 10 A M SHARP O N FRL. NOV. 20. ing from that blue cup with AN D TELL US WHERE IT IS! Donald Duck on the front of it. That’s you. Every Thanks­ giving you used to insist that

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your mother give you milk in that cup. It was so special to you. Then one Thanksgiving you decided that it was a stupid tradition, and you never drank from that cup again.” “I really did like that m ug...” “Yes, you did. And here’s a guy who might shed some light on that subject: the Turkey from Thanksgiving Present.” Back in the living room I met a bigger bird, which bore an uncanny resemblance to Henny Youngman. “Greetings, I just flew in from the kitchen, and boy am I stuffed! Ha! Say, young fella, want to buy a a raffle ticket for a new stove?” “Why are you raffling off an appliance?” “Because I’m a free-range turkey! Get it? Jeez, this is a tough room. Okay, folks, it’s time to talk turkey. Let’s go see a family who knows what tradi­ tions are all about.” No sooner did he utter these words than we appeared in the home of some strange family. “These people here are the Hatchets of Hoboken,” stated the turkey. “Who is that grown-up guy with the bad haircut and the ukulele?” I asked. “That’s Tiny Tim. One Thanksgiving, when he was just a tot, he played that little guitar and every year since then his family has encouraged him do the same exact thing. It’s all about tradition. They even ask him to sing in the same high voice as he did on that fateful holiday so many years ago.” “Wait a minute, Tiny Tim died. W hat’s he doing in this dream sequence?” “Hey, it worked for Bobby on ‘Dallas.’ Well, I’ve got to run, so I’ll turn the show over to a great friend. Will you all give a big hand to the Turkey of Thanksgiving Future?” The third character of my turkey trifecta was an ornery, nasty bird who was all business. “Look, Buddy, let me get to the point here,” the bitter Butterball barked as he knocked me over and stood on my chest. “Tradition is what Thanksgiving is all about. It’s part of our culture and it isn’t going to go away, so why don’t you just wake up and smell the coffee! Do you hear me? Smell the coffee! Smell the coffee!” “...smell the coffee? Would you like some?” It was my mother again. “What?” “I asked if you smell the coffee. You always have a cup on Thanksgiving Day before the big meal. Can I get you some: “Uh, sure. That would be great. And Mom?” “Yes?” “Would you serve it in my old Donald Duck mug?” ®

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SEVEN DAYS

nyone who has faced the job market knows that life is Filled with Catch225, not the least of which is the conundrum of how to become “experienced” when you can’t get a job without it. In many ways, mountaineers and backcountry enthusiasts face the same dilemma, but sometimes with more dire con­ sequences. As three snowboarding Vermonters learned earlier this month, being caught in an avalanche is an experience nobody wants to add to their resume. They were riding a powder-filled slope in the Utah backcOuntry, apparently Some­ what aware bP the risk but still not properly equipped, when an avalanche tragically claimed the life of one of their friends. While armchair moun­ taineering is all too common in the wake of the Everest debacle documented in Jon Krakauer’s Into Thin Air, the best tradition of mountaineering preaches the value of learning from the errors of others. The American Alpine Club set the standard for such learning when they published their first report on the data and circumstances of

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snowboarder hucking big air off the summit of Mt. Mansfield on its cover. Instead, Accidents in North American M ountain­ eering, as the report’s now titled, presents the hard facts on the most instructive accidents in the U.S. and Canada. For the past 25 years, the guiding hand behind the jour­ nal has been Jed Williamson, the president of Sterling Coll­ ege in Craftsbury Common, and an experienced moun­ taineer who’s guided on Everest and climbed all over the world. Williamson is now recognized as a national authority on mountaineering missteps. “He’s the man when it comes to mountaineering, rock climbing or any accidents in a mountain'environment,” sai^T^ John Abbott, director of the University of Vermont’s Outdoor Programs and an experienced adventurer himself — Abbott recently returned from replicating a Viking voy­ age across the north Atlantic. Late last year, Williamson was called upon to investigate a fatal mishap involving a dozen University of Alaska students and their two instructors in the North Couloir of Ptarmigan Peak. Two of the climbers died, and 11 were seriously injured,

Williamson manages to find a remarkable balance between hard facts, gory details and the lighter side of “accident” reporting. mountaineering incidents just over 50 years ago. As stated in the introduc­ tion to the 1948 inaugural edi­ tion, the data was to be gath­ ered “with no intent to criticize persons involved, but rather to learn why these accidents occurred and to emphasize the lessons to be learned from them.” The small, unadorned jour­ nal paints a picture of moun­ taineering adventures without all the soft landings — in stark contrast to Warren Miller’s “extreme” pornography, and even the current issue of Vermont Life, which features a

when a chain reaction brought down four separate strands of roped climbers. “It’s more like being an investigator of the shuttle Challenger than the FAA,” cor­ rects Williamson on his role in the aftermath of various acci­ dents. Now 59, he first traveled to Alaska to climb North America’s highest peak in 1963 and made an ambitious ascent up the East Buttress. “I don’t make any rules or regulations,” Williamson notes, “I go in and try to discover facts and then recommend changes.” In an effort to breed better


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judgment in an estimated 10,000 readers, Williamson manages to find a remarkable balance between hard facts, gory details and the lighter side of “accident” reporting. In the introduction to the current edi­ tion, he highlights the problem of “climbers being unable to self-arrest” — as was the case of the >yaska group — and also manages to note the intrusion of modern society into the mountaineering community. KIn describing a “disturbing report that one can only hope doesn’t become a trend,” he writes, “a climber became angry when another climber was on ‘his’ route and creating a hazard to his party. An altercation took place at the top. One climber was hospitalized with sever lac­ erations caused by being struck with an ice ax. The attacker ended up in the Boulder County Jail.” Most often, though, the plain facts require little embell­ ishment. In illustrating the need to make sure safety gear not only stays in the rock, “but that the rock stays on the cliff,” Williamson relates the story of a New Hampshire accident caused when a refrigerator-sized block of rock gave way and a climber dropped 60 feet, bouncing off a ledge at the 40foot mark. “Daniel was tumbling and landed face-first, breaking his jaw, nose and fracturing his skull,” Williamson writes plain­ ly, before adding that the indi­ vidual had recovered and was climbing again. Skiing and riding accidents rarely make it into the journal — “There could be a whole journal of accidents in North American snowboarding,” he says, only half jesting — unless they have some instructive value. But the quick-witted Williamson doesn’t miss the opportunity to add this editor’s note to a Mt. Hood climbing fatality: “There was [also] a telemark skiing injury below

Crater Rock on M ount Hood. He fell several times, ultimately attributing this to having his skis on the wrong feet.” Although he calls a sense of humor “essential” to his role, Williamson knows the pain of mountaineering accidents. For starters, he’s in the current edi­ tion of his journal for a severe head laceration caused by falling rocks — and the fact that he’d lent his helmet to a client. More seriously, in 1974, the year he took over the edi­ tor’s role for Accidents, he was climbing in the Pamir Mountains in the former Soviet Union when 15 climbers from a variety of expeditions, includ­ ing his own, lost their lives due to avalanches. People often ask Williamson how to prepare for big moun­ tain environments, especially the weather on Denali. “The answer,” he quips, “is to live in northern New England.” Every bit the educator as well as editor, Williamson has stopped using the term “bad weather.” “There’s no such thing as ‘bad weather’, it’s only weather,” he instructs. “We can’t blame the weather, we can only blame our preparation.” But if New Englanders have an advantage with regard to understanding the risks of cold weather, they’re often out of their element when it comes to avalanches, Williamson and other experts agree. Avalanches cascade down the sides of mountains when the forces of gravity exceed the bonding characteristics of the snow. Once released — either sponta­ neously or by a trigger like a skier or rider — snow slides can carry a force equal to the bomb that flattened the Federal Building in Oklahoma. Few Easterners know as much about avalanches or the risks inherent in the backcountry as St. Johnsbury resident and Accidents reader Roger Damon. An avid skier, Mount Washington ski patrolman and

well-respected avalanche safety instructor, Damon has spent the past 50 years roaming the flanks of New England’s largest mountain. Every spring, when legions of thrill seekers trek to the steep glacial cirques in New Hampshire, Damon and his partners rescue — or recover the bodies of — skiers and climbers that fall victim to exposure, falls and, inevitably, slides. “The nature of the beast is that the slopes you really want to be c5n are the slopes most susceptible to avalanches,” says Damon. New England skiers and riders who want to venture onto slopes steeper than 30 degrees — whether visiting the West or straying off-piste in the East — need to educate them­ selves about avalanche safety, he stresses. And if you doubt the East has avalanche potential, he ticks off ice climbs on Smug­ glers’ Notch, the Profanity Trail on Mt. Mansfield, and even manmade snow on the Can-Am Trail at Jay Peak as sites of recent Green Mountain slides. “All you need is a slope and snow; it doesn’t have to be an exotic location,” echoes Dickie Hall, founder of the North American Telemark Association. Readily admitting to once being caught in a slide here in Vermont, Hall makes a point of teaching mountaineering skills as well as skiing at all his tele­ mark classes. “I always tell peo­ ple, ‘Your destination when you leave the car is not the peak, it’s your car.’” But like Damon and Williamson, the normally ebul­ lient Hall grows serious when remembering friends lost in the mountains. “Sometimes the best three words you can know when it comes to ski moun­ taineering,” he intones, “are ‘no, not today.’” ® For information about avalanche safety classes, call the Appalachian M ountain Club at (603) 466-2727.

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DAYS

page 17


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23

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SEVEN DAYS

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page 19


SOUL FINGERS Brooks Williams has been this way before — plenty of times, in fact. But the Massachusetts-based singer-songwriter with the sizzling slide guitar and blues-guy vocals is always worth another listen, if just to remind you of the mean­ ing of awesome. Williams returns to the Burlington Coffeehouse this Friday.

GARNET ALL Next up at Middlebury’s After Dark Music Series is folk favorite Garnet Rogers, a charismatic performer who would impress even if he wasn’t six-six — it’s that baritone! Or maybe those extraordinary tunes. Or even his big-boned sense of humor. Whatever — he’s bringing it all to the Knights of Columbus Hall this Saturday. Up-andcomer Lori McKenna opens.

25

where to go After Dark Music Series, Knights of Columbus Hall, Middlebury, 388-021 6. Alley-Cats, 41 King St., Burl., 660-4304. Backstage Pub, 60 Pearl St., Essex Jet., 878-5494. Boony’s, Rt. 236, Franklin, 933-4569. Borders Books & Music, 29 Church St., Burlington, 865-271 1. Brewski, Rt. 108, Jeffersonville, 644-5432. BU Emporium, Bellwood Shpg. Ctr., Colchester, 658-4292. B.W.'s Restaurant, 1 Towne Mktpl., Essex Jet., 879-0752. Cactus Cafe, 1 Lawson In ., Burl., 862-6900. Cafe Banditos, Mountain Rd., Jeffersonville, 64 4-888 4. Cafe Ole, North Common, Chelsea, 685-2173. Cafe Swift House, 25 Stewart Lane, Middlebury, 388-9925. Cambridge Coffee House, Smugglers' Notch Inn, Jeffersonville, 6 4 4-223 3. Charlie 0 ’s, 70 Main St., Montpelier, 223-682 0. Chicken Bone, 43 King St., Burlington, 864-9674. Chow! Bella, 28 N. Main St., St. Albans, 524-1405. Club Metronome, 188 Main St., Burlington, 865-4563. Club Toast, 165 Church, Burlington, 660-2088. Cobbweb, Sandybirch Rd., Georgia, 527-7000. Diamond Jim's Grille, Highgate Comm. Shpg. Ctr., St. Albans, 524-928 0. Dubie’s Cafe, 160 N. Winooski Ave., Burlington, 658-0693. Edgewater Pub, 340 Malletts Bay Ave., Colchester, 865-421 4. Emerald City, 114 River St., Montpelier. 223-700 7. Extreme Sports Bar/Dance Club, Lakeshore Dr., Malletts Bay, 86 4-833 2. Franny O’s 733 Queen City Pk. Rd., Burlington, 863-2909. Gallagher’s, Rt. 100 & 17, W aitsfield, 4 9 6-880 0. Giorgio’s Cafe, Tucker Hill Lodge, Rt. 17, W aitsfield, 4 9 6-398 3. Good Times Cafe, Hinesburg Village, Rt. 116, 4 8 2-444 4. Greatful Bread, 65 Pearl St., Essex Jet., 878-4466. Ground Round, 1633 Williston Rd., S. Burlington. 862-112 2. Halvorson's, 16 Church St., Burlington, 658-027 8. Henry’s, Holiday Inn, 1068 Williston Rd., S. Burlington, 863-636 1. Higher Ground, 1 Main St., Winooski, 65 4-888 8. Horn of the Moon Cafe, 8 Langdon St., Montpelier, 22 3-289 5. Jake’s, 1233 Shelburne Rd., S. Burlington, 65 8-225 1. J.P.’s Pub, 139 Main St., Burlington, 6 5 8-638 9. LaBrioche, 89 Main St., Montpelier, 22 9-044 3. Last Chance Saloon, 147 Main, Burlington, 862-5159. Leunig's, 115 Church St., Burlington, 863-3759. Live Art at the Barre Opera House, Barre, (schedule) 88 3-930 7; (tickets) 476-818 8. Mad Mountain Tavern, Rt. 100, W aitsfield, 4 9 6-256 2. Main St. Bar & Grill, 118 Main St., Montpelier, 223-3188. Manhattan Pizza, 167 Main St., Burlington, 658-6776. Monopoles, 7 Protection Ave., Plattsburgh, 518-563-2222. Nectar’s, 188 Main St., Burlington, 658-477 1. The Night Spot Outback, Killington Rd., Killington, 42 2-988 5 135 Pearl St., Burlington. 863-2343. Pickle Barrel, Killington Rd., Killington, 422-303 5. Radisson Hotel, 60 Battery St., Burlington, 658-650 0. Red Square, 136 Church St., Burlington, 859-8909. Rhombus, 186 College St., Burlington, 865-3144. Ripton Community Coffee House, Rt. 125, 388-9782. Ruben James, 159 Main St., Burlington, 864-0744. Rude Dog, 14 Green St., Vergennes, 877-203 4. Rusty Nail, Mountain Rd., Stowe, 253-6245. Sai-Gon Cafe, 133 Bank St., Burlington, 863-5637. Sandbar Motor Inn, 59 Rt. 2. S. Hero, 3 7 2-691 1. Sha-Booms, 45 Lake St., St. Albans, 524-901 4. Slammer, Rt. 7, Milton, 893-3454. Something Cool, 22 Brinkerhoff St., Plattsburgh, NY, 518-563 -863 9. Swany’s, 215 Main St., Vergennes, 877-3667. Strand Theater, 25 Brinkerhoff St., Plattsburgh; NY, 51 8-566-7185. Sweetwaters, 113 Church St., Burlington, 864-980 0. The Tavern at the Inn at Essex, Essex Jet., 878-1100. Thirsty Turtle, 1 S. Main St., Waterbury, 24 4-522 3. Three Mountain Lodge, Rt. 108, Jeffersonville, 644-573 6. Thrush Tavern, 107 State St., Montpelier. 223-2030. Toadstool Harry's, Rt. 4 , Killington, 4 2 2-501 9. Trackside Tavern, 18 Malletts Bay Ave., W inooski, 6 5 5-954 2. Tuckaway’s, Sheraton, 870 W illiston Rd., S. Burlington, 865-660 0. Valley Players Theater, Rt. 100, W aitsfield, 4 9 6-340 9. Vermont Pub & Brewery, 144 College, Burlington, 865-050 0. Villa Tragara, Rt. 100, Waterbury Ctr., 24 4-528 8. Windjammer, 1076 Williston Rd., S. Burlington, 86 2-658 5.

WEDNESDAY JASON BERGM AN & BOB GAGNON

(French jazz cabaret), Leunig’s, 8 p.m. NC. OPEN M IK E (acoustic), Dubie’s Cafe, 8 p.m. NC. KARAOKE, 135 Pearl, 9:30 p.m. NC. DISCO FUNK (DJs John Demus & Tim Diaz), Ruben James, 11 p.m. NC. MIGHTY FAB KINGTONES (rock), Nectars, 9:30 p.m. NC. VORCZA TRIO (jazz/lounge/funk), Red Square, 9:30 p.m. NC. PICKLE-DAVIS (jazz-folk), Manhattan Pizza, 9 p.m. NC. C O SM IC LOUNGE (DJ Mike Spearz), Club Toast, 9:30 p.m. $1/4. METRO M A S S IV E (hip-hop/dancehall DJ), Club Metronome, 9 p.m. NC. KARAOKE, J.P.’s Pub, 9 p.m. NC. SA N D BLIZZARD (rock), Trackside Tavern, 9 p.m. $3. BAILEY BROS., THE X-RAYS (blues, rock/r&b), Higher Ground, 9:30 p.m. $5. EMERALD CITY HOUSE BAND (groovefunk jam), Emerald City Nightclub, 9:30 p.m. $2/5. TNT (DJ & karaoke), Thirsty Turtle, 9 p.m. NC. T A M M Y FLETCHER & THE D ISC IPLES

(soul/blues), Rusty Nail, 8:30 p.m. $5. OPEN MIKE, Swany’s, 9 p.m. NC. ACOUSTIC ALLEY (folk duo),

Nightspot Outback, 9:20 p.m. NC.

26 THURSDAY THE X-RAYS (rock/r&b), Nectar’s, 9:30

p.m. NC. ACOUSTIC JAM W/HANNIBAL HILL

(rock), Alley Cats, 9 p.m. NC. LOCOMOTION (DJ Little Martin/’70s

disco), 135 Pearl, 10 p.m. NC. KARAOKE, Edgewater Pub, 9 p.m. NC. DJ NIGHT, Gallagher’s, 8:30 p.m. Donations.

North Avenue

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P A R T I C I P A N T S

W A N T E D

The Vermont Women’s Health Center is seeking women ages 18-35 to participate in a birth control study comparing 5 different types of spermicides This study is sponsored by Family Health International, a non-profit research organization dedicated to contraceptive development and family planning around the world. Participants will be compensated. If you are interested, please call 802-863-1386 for more information

page 20

SEVEN

DAYS

november 25, 1998

All CCTA buses and shuttles are equipped with wheelchair lifts. g m EA Homestead

North Beach & Leddy Park

Gazo Avenue Neighborhood

Starr Farm Nursing Home

Northgate Apartments

n

m

m

a CHITTENDEN

i COUNTY COUNI ■ TRANSPORTATION TRANS ■ ■ AUTHORITY authc


G Y PSY MOTH (acoustic rock),-,;

Nightspot Outback,9:20p.m . NG.

27 FRIDAY JOE C A P P S (jazz), Sai-Gon Cafe, 7

p.m. NC. GREG DOUGLASS (singer-songwriter),

Borders, 8 p.m. NC. BROOKS W IL L IA M S (singer-songwriter), Burlington Coffeehouse at Rhombus, 8 p.m. $8. PERRY NUNN (acoustic), Ruben James, 5 p.m. NC, followed by DJ NIGHT, 10 p.m. NC. LES RIOS (acoustic), Sweetwaters, 8:30 p.m. NC. SA N D R A W RIGHT (blues diva), Red Square, 9:30 p.m. NC. EVOLUTION (DJ Craig Mitchell), 135 Pearl, 10 p.m. $4/5. DISCO INFERNO (DJ), Club Metronome, 9 p.m. NC. TREE, NON COM PO S MENTIS, DEMONSPEED, M IN IM U S (hardcore),

Club Toast, 9:30 p.m. $8. THE X-RAYS (rock/r&b), Nectars, 9:30 p.m. NC. M ARTY KEYSTONE BAND (jazz fusion), Vermont Pub & Brewery, 9:30 p.m. NC. R U S S & CO. (rock), Alley Cats, 9 p.m. NC. COM EDY ZONE (stand-up), Radisson Hotel, 8 & 10 p.m. $7. A D A M S & EVE (rock), Franny O s, 9 p.m. NC. EM PT Y POCKETS (rock), Henry’s Pub, Holiday Inn, 9 p.m. NC. RAY V A S S 0 (acoustic), Ground Round, 8 p.m. NC. SAND BLIZZARD (rock), Trackside Tavern, 9 p.m. $3. CHROME COWBOYS, STARLINE RHYTHM BOYS (vintage country, hill­

billy boogie), Higher Ground, 9:30 p.n-f. $5. ALEX SM IT H (jazz), Tavern at Inn at Essex, 8 p.m. NC. DJ NIGHT (Dr. E), Clover House Pub, 9 p.m. NC. SM O K IN ’ GUN (rock), E d g e w ^ P u b , 9 p.m. NC. DAN CIN’ DEAN (country dance & instruction), Cobbwebb, 7:30 p.m. $5. LIVE JAZZ, Diamond Jim's Grille, 7:30 p.m. NC. PIM PCAT PRODUCTIONS, DOWN FOUNDATION, NU TSP0N GE (hard-

core; A.R.A. benefit), Something Cool, 7 p.m. $4. MIRAGE (classic rock), Thirsty Turde, 9 p.m. NC. BETSY & DAN JESSIE (holiday cabaret), Villa Tragara, 6:30 p.m. $7.50. ZOLA TURN (alt-rock), Gallaghers, 9 p.m. $3/4. SETH YAC 0V0N E BLUES BAND, Mad Mountain Tavern, 9 p.m. $4. HUGGY B’S FUNK (jazz-funk), Emerald City Nightclub, 9 p.m. $3/5. FELIX BROWN (dance band), Rusty Nail, 8:30 p.m. $5. JOHNNY DEVIL BAND (rock), Rude Dog Tavern, 9 p.m. NC. S A M ’S PLANET (classic rock), Nightspot Outback, 9:20 p.m. $7. ELBOW (slide blues), Toadstool Harry’s, 9 p.m. NC.

28

SATURDAY GREG GREENAWAY (singer-songwriter), Burlington Coffeehouse at Rhombus, 8 p.m. $8. DAVE JARVIS (solo pop rock), Rasputins, 8 p.m. NC. THE X-RAYS (rock/r&b), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. NC. FACT0RIA (DJ Little Martin), 135 Pearl, 9 p.m. $4/5. DJ NIGHT (hip-hop/r&b DJs), Ruben James, 9 p.m. NC. JAM ES HARVEY BAND (jazz), Red Square, 9:30 p.m. NC. GOLDEN CIRCLE AW ARDS (dancehall, hip-hop DJs), Club Toast, 9:30 p.m. $4/6.

NEIGHBOR HOODS

Roomful of Blues may have a few new faces in the line-up, but their exuberant swing­

ing good-time rockin’ blues remains the same. Their latest CD, There Goes the Neighborhood, says It’s so. Get a Roomful at Higher Ground this Saturday. The Detonators lead the charge. ADAM ROSENBERG (acoustic),

AARON FLINN’S SALAD DAYS (pop

Ground Round, 8 p.m. NC.

rock), Mad Mountain Tavern, 9 p.m. $4. R U S S FLANIGAN (rock), Gallagher’s, 9 p.m. $3/4. FELIX BROWN (dance band), Rusty Nail, 8:30 p.m. $5. S A M ’S PLANET (classic rock), Nightspot Outback, 9:20 p.m. $7. JABE (folk-rock), Toadstool Harry’s, 9 p.m. $5.

ROOMFUL OF BLUES, THE DETONA­ TORS (blues), Higher Ground, 8 p.m.

$13/15. ALEX SM ITH (jazz), Tavern at Inn at

Essex, 8 p.m. NC. EAST COAST M U SCLE (blues-rock),

Backstage Pub, 8:30 p.m. $2.

SW ING DANCE LESSO N S & PARTY

SM O K IN ’ GUN (rock), Edgewater Pub,

Club Metronome, from 6 p.m. $8, followed by RETR0N 0M E (DJ Craig Mitchell), 10 p.m. NC. KARAOKE, J.P.’s Pub, 9 p.m. NC. HIP-HOP NIGHT, Ruben James, 11 p.m. NC. KIP M EAKER (blues) Vermont Pub & Brewery, 9:30 p.m. NC. SOLOMONIC SOUND SY S T E M (reggae DJ), Chicken Bone, 10 p,m. $ 1. COMEDY ZONE (stand-up), Radisson . Hotel, 8 & 10 p.m. 10. GUY C 0LA SA CC 0 (singer-songwriter), Jakes, 6:30 p.m. NC. EM PTY POCKETS (rock), Henry’s Pub, Holiday Inn, 9 p.m. NC. SA M ARMSTRO NG (jazz favorites), Tuckaway’s, Sheraton Hotel, 9 p.m. NC.

9 p.m. NC. LIVE M U SIC (country-rock; round & square dancing), Cobbweb, 8:30 p.m. $7/12. MR. WARD, DISENCHANTED, POLICE LINE (hardcore; A.RA. benefit),

Something Cool, 7 p.m. $4. JOHNNY DEVIL BAND (rock), Rude Dog Tavern, 9 p.m. NC. GARNET ROGERS, LORI M C KEN N A

^

(singer-songwriters), After Dark, Knights'of Columbus Hall, 7 pjr». $15/17. MIRAGE (classic rock), Thirsty Turtle, 9 p.m. NC. JELLY ROLL JAM (New Orleans blues), Emerald City Nightclub, 9 p.m. $3/5.

SUNDAY UN BAR DISCO (Craig Mitchell turntablism), Red Square, 9 p.m. NC. JERRY LAVENE (jazz guitar), Windjammer, 10:36«»gN G .^ g.

KALLIT MOLLY (rock), Nectar’s, 9:30

p.m. NC. ZOLA TURN, THE IM PLA N T S (ait-

rock), Club Metronome, 4:30 p.m. $5. R U S S & CO. (rock), Chicken Bone, 10 p.m. NC. KARAOKE, Edgewater Pub, 7 p.m. NC. M IK E MURDOCH (blues), La Brioche, 11 a.m. NC. LIVE M U S IC (acoustic), Main Street Bar & Grill, 11 a.m. NC. S A M ’S PLANET (classic rock), Nightspot Outback, 9:20 p.m. NC.

30 MONDAY JAM W /NERBAK BROS.

LINDNER BROS. ( f o B c / ^ | g ^ s : ^ c

Borders, 7 p.m. NC. T TUNG-N-GR00VE (improv music & poetry), Rhombus Art Space, 8 p.m. $3-6.

(rock), Alley Cats, 9 p.m. NC. ABA1R BROS, (rock), Nectars, 9:30 p.m. NC.

continued on page 23

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Great gift for the musically inclined, half price intro sale now at Advance Music, 75 Maple St, Burlington, VT www.twanger.com

november 25,1998

SEVEN DAYS

page 21


< />

A SPECIA L 'THANKSGIVING W EEKEN D SHOW!

ROOMFUL OF BLUES

with

Many of you have heard various rumors on the street about what’s going on at Club Toast. Sadly, one of them is true: The lower Church Street nightspot is closing at the end of the year. I’m still not at liberty to say who’s buying the place, nor what they plan to do with it — legal stuff, you know. For five and a half years Toast has been nurturing the local music scene and bringing in acts that might not otherwise have come to Burlington, and it will be sorely missed. Unfortunately, club ownership is a burn-out business, and the hard-working brothers Wygmans are, well, toasted. D e n n is W y g m a n s is looking at various options in the entertainment industry for his next career move, while JllStin is busy at his recording studio, Rock It Science. The only bright spot for music fans in this otherwise sad news? One hell of a New Year’s Eve party! Stay tuned for updates, and meanwhile give thanks this week for the good times, and tunes, we’ve had at Toast. T O A S T A L M O S T DONE

THE DETONATORS

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The legendary watering hole next to Toast may never fill up their whole calendar with live music, but it’s making a stab. Billing it “the new Rasputin’s,’’ owners D am on Brink, M artti M ath e so n , Darren C a S S a n i and S c o tt Le co u rs, have, for starters, added a solo D ave Jarvis on Saturday nights. “We’re six months new into owning the place and think a little live music will liven it up,” says Brink. “We’re shooting for a slightly older (than college) age, and we have a brand new sound system.” Other news in the Jarvis camp: His latest CD, Davemania, has been picked up for distribution by Dutch East, and the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences has accepted him as a voting member. That means Jarvis is currently plowing his way through a 250-page book­ let in order to vote on the Grammies. “I’d always been curi­ ous about how the Grammies worked, and wondered why the people won who won,” he says. “I’m voting in pop alter­ native, r&b, stuff like that. I get to vote on nine of 22 fields. It’s a new process for me, but it’s fun.” N O T E S FRO M T H E U N D E R G R O U N D

ERIDAY. NOVEMBER 27 S5 AT DOOR

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I mentioned a while back that former Burlington bassist John Lilja had made contact from his adopted country of Norway, with the news that his avantgarde jazz group C irc u la s io n e Totale O rchestra had a CD out. Well, I received the CD, and I have to confess it’s not my cuppa. But if you like your jazz way out there, give Borealis (Cadence Jazz Records) a spin . . . If you happen to be going to NYC this holiday weekend, C on structio n Joe would be most happy if you stopped by The Mercury Lounge to lend your cheers — the Burlington “dirt-rockers” play their first show in the Big Apple this Saturday at 8 p.m. . . . Sunday night catch an Eclipse interview and in-studio performance by Montreal’s P ig e o n H ole on “Buzz Homebrew” (99.9 FM) . . . C ra ig B a ile y ’s “Floydian Slip” Web site continues to go to the wall: The Woburn, Mass.based Links2Go Web index company gave his site a “key resource award” in the Pink Floyd category — one of only about 50 representative sites selected in the world. If you haven’t surfed there lately, check www.floydianslip.com — and tune in to Bailey’s radio show Sundays at 7 on Champ 101.3 . . . Best Poster Award — locally, that is — has got to go to B ill Bratcher. The stand-up bassist for The Starlin e Rhythm B o y s (and formerly W a y n e H a n c o c k ), has pro­ duced suitably vintage-looking stuff for previous shows, but has outdone himself on the oversized poster for next Friday’s holiday show with The Chrom e C o w b o y s at Higher Ground. The strong typography is enhanced by eloquent Western-theme woodcuts by local artist Roy Newton. It’s a keeper . . . Speaking of Higher Ground, co-owner Alex S IN G L E T R A C K S

con tin ue d on next p age

Band name of the week:

W W W .HIGHERGROUNDMUSIC.COM

page 22

SEVEN DAYS

K A T H E R IN E Q U IN N , LEAVING DECATUR (self-released CD) — Folk is a word-driven genre — minimal instru­ mentation exposes lyrics to more scrutiny than heavier musical styles. Fortunately for Burlington singer-songwriter Katherine Quinn, words are her strongest suit. Quinn spins 16 (plus 1) word-packed story-songs on her CO newly released disc, Leaving Decatur, and manages to translate to a recording much £ of the charisma that makes her v at cT < live shows so engaging. Quinn l< rejects traditional song struc­ b " " tures in favor of a more linear style that sounds personal and CO fresh at its best, meandering and dull at worst. “Did I Ever 5 Tell You” is a good example of the former — a bittersweet break-up song with vivid imagery and a melancholy melody. Leaving Decatur includes acoustic and electric versions of this song, differ­ ent but equally good. On the down side, some of Quinn’s < /> songs start to sound a bit too similar, with frequent multi­ 5 note vocal filagrees doing little to make up for the missing hooks and choruses. Again, it’s her lyrics that stick in your head, even when they’re occasionally as overwrought as the “frequent flier miles” the addressee of “Weightless” accrues for all the “power trips” (s)he’s been on. But from the call CO to activism of “Kitchen Table” to the reluctant love song, 5 “Times Two,” Quinn generally hits the nail on the head. LU Her choppy guitar playing proves a nice foil for her vocals, and the bare-bones production by Nick Caiano is just right. Caiano also subtly fleshes out Leaving Decaturs last six tracks with guitar, bass, keyboards and, eventually, drums. The disc closes with a beat poetry bonus track. t/> Throughout, Quinn’s earnestness is genuine and powerful, 5 especially against a contemporary backdrop of artifice and irony. A few more hooks, a big-gun producer, some woozy L.A. studio musicians, and she could be mega. But I’ve got a feeling that with Katherine Quinn, it’s gonna be her way LU or the highway. — Paul Gibson

£ LU

november 25, 1998

The Fez-Tones

< />

LU

S P E N C E R L E W IS , THE SILEN CE BETW EEN THE WORDS

(Quartz Recordings, CD) — Bethel-based musician Spencer Lewis has issued yet another stirringly lovely col­ LU lection, whose 12 instrumental tracks (one, “Lea’s Suite,” is really four parts) might be, at least metaphorically, the CO “silence between the words” of the title. The opener, 5 “Memorial Day” is a haunting violin and guitar duet that LU sounds like it was recorded in a cathedral. In fact the CD was recorded at Lewis’ own Quartz Studio, with additional work at Charles Eller Studio in Charlotte, and though LU technology surely contributed to this big chamber sound, it does not announce itself. Eller himself contributes if) Hammond and piano; other guest appearances include Mark LeGrand on bass and Lucas Adler on drums. Mostly, LU though, this is a meditative, often shimmering, and some­ times majestic acoustic journey, with Lewis on strings and synth keyboard. Whether Lewis favors instrumentals because he thinks words distract or because he can’t sing I don’t know, but the choice is okay by me. The Silence CO Between the Words contains 5 engaging, eloquent composi­ tions that speak volumes with the sweet melancholy of the violin and the masterful, articu­ late finger-picking of steel­ CO stringed guitar. If you prefer the equivalent of high-speed 5 car chases in your music, this disc is not for you. Silence is gentle, soothing, mesmerizing — in fact I’d recommend it as accompaniment to a mas­ sage. “A Broken Heart and a Light in His Eye” adds the rhythm section, and a more conventionally pretty, almost if) poppy melody, while “Where the Grace of Nature Sings” £ and “Ode to a Friend” are pared-down, though elegiac, LU acoustic guitar pieces. W ith the smooth strains of “Deep ■ mmm Powder Waltz” you can almost see the flakes fly, while the > synth-piano-guitar title track returns to a profound qui­ LU etude. Lewis closes with a stately violin work, “Only Time Will Heal” which conveys a sadness the title only hints at. CO The song slowly builds with drum and organ to the closest £ thing to a rave-up ending Lewis musters, without losing its dignity. Silence manages to both embrace mourning and enspirit with grace, ushering a delicate balance between one state of being and another. ( 7 ) — Pamela Polston


sOUnd AdviCe

DISC © 0 ROUND

con tin ued from p a g e 21 SERV1 IO CREATIVE WORDL&t CUISINE

ORANGE FACTORY (acid soul/funk),

Red Square, 9:30 p.m. NC. METRO SW ING (dance lessons), Club Metronome, from 7 p.m., $8, followed by DANCE PARTY, 10 p.m. NC. TREACHEROUS GROOVES (bass & drums/turntablism), Club Toast, 9:30 p.m. $1/5.

TUESDAY OPEN STAGE (acoustic), Burlington

Coffeehouse at Rhombus, 8 p.m. $3-6. MICHELE LALIBERTE (French & German cabaret), Leunig’s, 8 p.m. NC. MARTIN & MITCHELL (soul DJs), Club Metronome, 10 p.m. NC. JAM ES HARVEY BAND (jazz) Red Square, 9:30 p.m. NC. 16 COACHES LONG (rock), Nectars, 9:15 p.m. NC. B A SH M E N T (reggae/dancehall DJ), Ruben James, 11 p.m. NC. FLASHBACK (7 0 s-’90s DJ), Club Toast, 9:30 p.m. NC/$5. R U S S & CO. (rock), J.R’s Pub, 9:30 p.m. NC.

S-10PM

y o u r.J o h n Tesh CD, we a lio won’t • t e l l anyone yo u used to ipwn M. Get cash fo r your old CDs. And miams th e word.

198 C o lle g e St., B u rlin g t o n 6 6 0 -8 1 5 0

November 27th & 28th

The Slathers Hellcat Recording A rtis t

Thursday Dee. 3 Our N e w CD

at 9pm, 18+

following a dream

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available at: Borders Books & Music Pure Pop Rock Island Music Vibes • Mix Max Disco Round • VT Folk BigHeavyWorld.com

“The Band” Call Pe r In f o

(802) 422- S019 Toadstool Harry’s Rte 4 Killington Between Killington Access Rd & SKyship

Classic Rock

ROSEBUD FILM SE R IE S (Psycho,

Dial M For Murder), Higher Ground, 7 & 10 p.m. NC.

every W E D N E S D A Y : F R E E POO L ail night

every TH U RSD AY: TNT DJ & Karaoke 8 B A L li T O U R N A M E N T at 7:30

YtHm nEws

Exit 10,1-88,1 So. Main Street* Waterbary, VT (802) 244-5223 • Open Dally 4-dese

style for the holidays that w ill leave you looking & feeling great* ?; Kevin Shea at Metropolitan Hair ' ; 163 Pearl Street. Burlington, VT 864-0065

continued from previous p age Crothers informs that last Thursday was a night for musical chops and cama­ raderie that won’t soon be forgotten — and a conge­ nial way to deal with competition: JaZZ is D ead sat in with W id e sp re a d P a n ic in their earlier show at the Flynn, then members of Panic played with Jazz at HG later on. “All Points Booking did well with their show, we did well with ours, and everybody went home with a grin on their face,” Crothers reports . . . And speaking of mutual admiration, vip e rH o u se vocalist H e lo ise W illia m s sat in on P h is h ’s encore (“You Enjoy Myself”) last week in Winston-Salem, North Carolina — the two bands were coincidentally performing across the street from each other — then Trey A n a s ta s io jammed with the vipers later, according to a Phish on-line discussion group. Will that Phish-friend magic help pave the path for the central Vermont acid-jazzers? ®

Perhaps a different hairdo would have helped Nanooks disposition

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SEVEN DAYS

page 23


nuts about ballet: M ost people don’t expect audience participation at the ballet, especially at a toe-torturing C hristm as classic like The Nutcracker. But you may recognize a few familiar faces in the fantasy ballet, which has entranced wannabe sugarplum fairies for more than a century. In keeping w ith the com pany’s long-standing — and spinning — tradition, local youngsters play soldiers, mice, children, angels, clowns and reindeer alongside the acclaimed dancers from the Albany Berkshire Ballet. Role models, indeed. Saturday, November 28, 3 & 7 :3 0 p .m ., Sunday, November 29, 1 p.m . Flynn Theatre, Burlington. $12.50-27.50. Info, 863-5966.

time passages I T he battle over land developm ent in W illiston began long before W al-M art — some two centuries ago, according to historians W illard Sterne Randall and N ancy Nahra. In Thomas Chittenden's Town, the husband-and-wife history team chronicles the evolution o f the “quintessential V erm ont tow n” from colonial times to the present. Published by the W illiston Historical Society, the cloth-bound, lim ited edition tom e takes readers on an unsentim ental journey through good times and bad. Sunday, November 29. Book Rack, Cham plain M ill, Winooski, 2 p.m . Free. Info, 655-0231.

Seven Days recommends you confirm all calendar events, as times and dates may change after the paper is printed.

SEVEN DAYS

november 25, 1998

TINY TOTS: Kids three and under

POETRY READING: Donavon Troy

Noble, S. Burlington, 10 a.m. Free. Info,

Davidson reads original works to live

864-8001.

2 R

didgeridoo accompaniment at Rhombus

Wednesday

p.m. $3-6. Info, 865-3144.

Gallery, 186 College St., Burlington, 8

kids

hear age-appropriate tales at Barnes &

etc INTERFAITH THANKSGIVING: A non-perishable food item for a needy neighbor is your ticket to this com mu­

dance

PARENTS ANONYMOUS: Parents

nal meal featuring music and good

BURLINGTON CONTACT JAM:

gather for support and assistance around

cheer. Temple Sinai, S. Burlington, 7-8

Explore and expand your range o f

the challenges o f childrearing.

p.m. Free. Info, 862-5125.

motion at this informal gathering o f

Babysitting goes with the program at

spontaneous movers and shakers.

the King Street Youth Center,

Memorial Auditorium Loft, Burlington,

Burlington, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info,

7-9 p.m. Free. Info, 860-3674.

800-639-4014.

art

page 24

words

STORYTIME: Four- and five-year-olds enjoy stories, songs, fingerplays and

26

thursday happy thanksgiving!

FIGURE DRAWING: The human fig­

crafts. South Burlington Community

ure motivates aspiring and accomplished artists in a weekly drawing session at the

Library, 11 a.m. Free. Register, 652-7080.

etc

Firehouse Gallery, Burlington, 6:30-

STORIES: Little listeners hear stories,

SWEETWATERS THANKSGIVING:

9:30 p.m. $3-6. Info, 865-7165.

snack and make crafts at the Children’s

The Church Street eatery serves up

Pages, Winooski, 10 a.m. Free. Info,

turkey with all the trimmings, live

655-1537.

music and warm winter coats. Hungry

j


'0 < 3 2 S 5 > T N

■^TH l l t k

AN N UAL

S t r e e t

S t u d i o

# R Y F r i d a y , »

S a t u r d a y •

&

S u n d a y •

D ecember n o u rs:

1 0

4-6

M l

a m

p m

2 1 Ki n § B

iff life

Let’s face it. Some holiday gifts are easier to return than others. W hen your pre-

nt is a puppy, well, there are responsibilities involved. T h e Green M ountain G olden

u

r

l

i

n

g

T r e m e n d o u s MORE)

ON

t

o

SAVI NGS

H U N D R E D S

OF

n ( 50% OR

OUR

OWN

:triever C lub urges dog lovers to curb their impulse buying, or attend a canine clinic that B E A U T I F U L

H A N D M A D E .

H A N D P A I N T E D

ivers the bowser basics. N o t to m ention the cost o f shots, groom ing and obedience training, P I C T U R E

F R A M E S

usday, December 1. Grace U nited M ethodist Church, Essex Junction, 7:30-9 p.m . Free. Info,

D

a n d

1 9 -1 1 2 8 .

P U P P E T

can be ruff.

ev il

G

ir l

A nd you thought a “swing set” was a playground diversion. Kids can

L

b r o t h e r s

T H E A T E R S .

O D D IT IE S .

lar he b lo w s :

P

f r e a k

CHAIN

O

U

S

C

h o c o

B AN NE D W O M E N

B U TT E R ~ TO A S T ~ J A M

! B

a r s

.

MEDICAL J E WE L R Y ,

TO IL ET R IES.

FINGER

t comparable thrills from early exposure to arts. G ood jazz is the lesson o f die day when W A T C H E S . C A N D E L A B R A S . T R A N S V E S T I T E DAVIDS.

umpeter W ynton Marsalis teams up w ith the celebrated Lincoln C enter Jazz G roup to benethe Bethany’s C hildren Foundation. See story this issue. Proceeds help finance in-school vis-

VARI OUS

T A B L E T O P

K R IS H N A/ K A L l /S U M O

bv area artists. Iusday, December 1. Flynn Theatre, Burlington, 8 p.m . $20-77. Info, 863-5966.

CLOTHS.

ALIENS,

M O R E

A C C E S S O R I E S .

L U N C H B O X E S .

ANIMAL

OH,

BAGS.

AND

FREE

AND

FLOOR

SO

H O M E M A D E

C H O C O L A T E W I T H C O L O R E D M I N I- M A R S H M A L LO W S .

AREA

oiks come on down to Sweerwaters,

Mill, Winooski, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info,

Burlington, noon - 4 p.m. Free. Info,

iurlington, noon - 5 p.m. Free. Info,

656-0231.

863-1648.

164-6360.

STORY HOUR: Toddlers listen to sto­

LIG H TIN G CEREMONY: With the

W

ries at the Milton Public Library, 10:30

flick o f a switch, more than 100,000

a.m. Free. Info, 893-4644.

lights bedazzle shop windows and a 35-

n

K S G M N G MEAL: The holi-

av spirit burns brightly at this commual sit-down meal. Meals on wheels are Iso available. North Avenue Alliance

kids

I M P O R T A N T :

A

RETURNS

A N N U A L

ALL SALES

P O R T I O N

F A C T O R Y

AND SILENT

ARE

OF

FINAL.

T H E

S A L E

GO

HOT

A PLAY

MOVIES.

N O E X C H A N G E S OR

P R O C E E D S F R O M

TO

O U R

TH Ef

foot Christmas tree at this brilliant event including “mini-musical performances”

.hurch, Burlington, noon - 2 p.m.

‘PAJAMARAMA’: Parents and kids read

by the Treble Makers. Burlington City

ree. Info, 864-0501.

together on the “story stage” at this pro-

Hall, 4 & 6 p.m. Santa and his elves

pajama event. Barnes &: Noble, S.

arrive for a visit along Church Steet,

Burlington, 7-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 864-8001.

10 a.m. Free. Info, 863-1648.

27

K I DS

FOR

MUCH

HOLIDAY THRIFT SHOP: Browse

f/(J f f //*

W eti/ct

F /io /: in

and

J

eA e j /

V i s a , m a s t e r c a r d . A m e r i c a n

E x p r e s s ,

a c c e p t e d

l o c a l

. F o r

c h e c k s

m o r e

i w i t h

I D)

p r o p e r

i n f o r m a t i o n

c a l l

a r e

a l l

6 5 8 - 1 7 9 9

for used clothing, toys and other essen­

sport

friday

DIABETES EXERCISE CLASS: People

CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF’: Big

with diabetes benefit from weekly low-

)addy’s birthday brings surprises o f all otts in this sultry Southern family «ama from Tennessee Williams. Briggs House, W hite River Junction, 8 ®. $20. Info, 291-9009.

impact and aqua aerobics. YMCA, Burlington, 9-10:45 a.m. Free. Info, 862-9622.

etc THANKSGIVING CRAFT SHOW:

Ar o n ANDREG G : The southern

at this gift-buying gala. Cortina Inn,

More than three dozen crafters converge

alifornia poet reads new and unpub-

Killington, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Free. Info,

•hed work exploring “the vicissitudes

422-3783.

fhuman relationships.” Seven Days

BLOOD DRIVE: Early-bird blood

itic Marc Awodey also gets a word in

donors get treated to blueberry pancakes

'Red Square, Church St. Marketplace,

at the Burlington Blood Center, 32

Arlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 865-3144.

North Prospect St., Burlington, 7:30

ACHER MAYOR:

a.m. - 1 p.m. Free. Info, 658-6400.

ithor reads and signs his new Ver-

the Vermont Children’s Aid Society. Black Diamond Skiwear Building,

DAYS

3

Waterbury, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Free. Info,

ONLY

4-'

655-0006.

GLBTQ SUPPORT GROUP: Gay, les­

1

1 i ll

S t r e e t

S l u d l O

d e s i g n s

a n d

bian, bisexual, transgendered and ques­

words

he local mystery

tials to benefit social-work programs o f

K)nt-based detective novel, The

HORSE-DRAWN CARRIAGE RIDES: Sleigh bells ring in the holiday

!iiposable Man. Book Rack, Champlain

season on the Church St. Marketplace,

tioning youth make new friends and get support. Outright Vermont, Burlington,

M A N U F A C T U R E S FO R

T H E

G I F T

H O U S E W A R E S A N D

A N D

T A B L E T O P

A C C E S S O R I E S

M A R K E T S .

O U R

T H R O U G H O U T

T H E

6:30-9 p.m. Free. Info, 800-452-2428.

EMOTIONS ANONYMOUS: Women

W O R K

IS

S O L D

IN

GALLERIES

and men suffering from depression, anx­ iety or any other mental or emotional problem find support in this 12-step

U.S. A N D

A N D

C A N A D A

P R I N C E S S E S

A N D

IS

A L I K E .

O W N E D

BY

TH AN KYO U

P R E S I D E N T S FOR SU P P OR T I N G

group. Seneca Center, Champlain Mill, W inooski, 6-7 p.m. Free. Info, 660-9036.

BATTERED W OM EN’S SUPPORT GROUP: Women Helping Battered

A M E R I C A N

A R T I S A N S .

COMMUNITY'S

CHILDREN

IN AND

T U R N THE

WE MASS

S U P P O R T

OUR

PRODUCTION

OF

WARHEADS.

Women facilitates a group in Burlington, 9:30-11 a.m. Free. Info,

llu* 'll!) annual 1 III) Sheet Sludto I aelorx Sale is a l>ud\ iitini ninn

d u e l it

658-1996.

november 25, 1998

SEVEN

DAYS

page 25


Vermont is for glovers: One former Boston Red Sox pitcher represented Colchester in the Legislature. Another all-star catcher was born on King Street. In “A Baseball Fan’s Tour of Chittenden County,” Tom Simon remembers all the local ball players who made it to the majors — well before the Vermont Expos came to town. With a “best baseball book of the year” under his belt, this lecture promises to be a home run. Monday, November 30. Ethan Allen Homestead[ Burlington, 7:30 p. m. Free, Info, 862-8210.

28

Albany Berkshire Ballet continues its

Saturday music H OLIDAY CAROLING: Eklectik Zurn takes its seasonal songs on the road — the Church St. Marketplace, Burlington, noon - 3 p.m. Free. Info, 863-1648.

Christmas collaboration with

dance

drama

sport

Tchaikovsky by inviting local young­ sters to get into the act. See “to do” list, this issue. Flynn Theatre!

BALLROOM DANCE: It takes two to tango. But you can always find a partner amongst the ballroom bunch

‘CAT O N A H O T T IN RO O F’: See

TURKEY WALK-OFF: Join the

November 27, 2 & 8 p.m.

Green Mountain Club on an easy three-mile jaunt to burn off excess

Burlington, 3 & 7:30 p.m. $12.50-

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words

energy. Shelburne Bay Park, 10:30

27.50. Info, 863-5966. JO H N TH ADE: The popular tenor sings hits from Broadways “golden age” at the Stowe Community Church, 7:30 p.m. $12. Info, 800559-7070.

Junction, 8 p.m. $12. Info,

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a.m. Free. Info, 864-5580.

862-2207. CO N TR A DANCE: Lausanne Allen

Vermont author o f M ad Season clues readers in on her latest mystery

calls for Adantic Crossing at this new-

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RIDES: See November 27. HOLIDAY T H R IF T SH O P: See

‘T H O M A S C H IT T E N D E N ’S T O W N ’: Authors Willard Sterne

November 27.

Randall and Nancy Nahra tell a time­

W O M E N ’S FESTIVAL OF CRAFTS: Browse for handmade

traveling tale o f Williston. See “to do” list, this issue. Book Rack,

crafts made and sold with a womans touch. Burlington City Hall

Champlain Mill, W inooski, 2 p.m.

Auditorium, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Free. Info, 863-1648. HOLIDAY CRAFT FAIR: Get a head start on holiday shopping at

kids STORYTIME: Young readers delve

Elementary School, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Free. Info, 524-3668.

Marketplace, Burlington, 4 p.m.

and bakers. Lyndon State College, Lyndonville, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Free. Info, 626-3207.

29

Sunday music HOLIDAY CAROLING: See November 28. T H E N U TCRA CK ER’: See November 28, 1 p.m.

words PH O EBE STO NE: The Middlebury author and illustrator o f Chagall-like books for kids signs and displays her art work at Frog Hollow, Church St. Marketplace, Burlington, noon - 4 p.m. Free. Info, 863-6458. T O N G U E N ’ GROOVE: Wordworkers show their stuff in a “sophisticated blending o f words and music.” Rhombus Gallery, 186 College St., Burlington, 8 p.m. $3-6. Info, 865-3144. A D IR O N D A C K STYLE’: Ann Stillman O ’Leary and Shelburne pho­ tographer Gary Hall lead a literary home tour o f the architectural aes­ thetic captured in their book. Barnes & Noble, S. Burlington, 1 p.m. Free. Info, 864-8001.

AM ATEUR M U SIC IA N S

about alternatives to renting and sin­

ORCHESTRA: Vermont Symphony

gle-family home ownership at the

violinist David Gusakov oversees this

Burlington Com m unity Land Trust,

weekly harmonic convergence o f

179 South W inooski Ave., Burling­ ton, 5:30 p.m. Free. Info, 862-6244. COLLEGE FINANCIAL AID:

amateur musicians in the Music Room, S. Burlington High School, 7:30-9:30 p.m. $5. Info, 985-9750.

POETRY READING: Students o f

College-bound students and parents get valuable advice on making the

Burlington College prof Jim

financial aid grade. M ount Abraham

torio society in a program o f seasonal

McGinnis read their respective works

Union High School, Bristol, 7 p.m.

selections with brass, harp and organ

at the Rhombus Gallery, 186 College

Free. Info, 800-642-3177. TEEN HEALTH CLINIC: Teens get

accompaniment. Spaulding Audi­ torium, Hopkins Center, Dartmouth

information, supplies, screening and

College, Hanover, N .H ., 8 p.m. Free.

treatment for sexually related prob­

Info, 603-646-2422.

H A N D E L CONCERT: Melinda O ’Neal conducts the com munity ora­

Free. Info, Info, 865-2711.

St., Burlington, 8 p.m. $3-6. Info, 865-3144.

sport

C A NAD IAN LITERATURE SERIES: David Brown leads a liter­

W O M E N H IT T H E SLOPES’:

ary tour north via The Journals o f

Burlington, 3:30-6 p.m. Pregnancy

Vermont snowboard champs Julia

Susanna Moodie, by Margaret

Carlson and Betsy Shaw sign copies

Atwood. Wake Robin, Shelburne,

testing is free. Info, 863-6326. RUM M AGE A N D NEARLY N E W

TH EATER’: As part o f a residency

o f Snowboarding: A Womans Guide.

7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 985-8307.

SALE: The whole family finds deals

with local high schools, N ew

on clothes, household items and toys

Orleans-based storyteller John

KIRBY QUILTERS CRAFT FAIR:

works along with hundreds o f crafters

monday

words

into classic and new tales at this halfhour happening. Borders, Church St.

Television’s “R F D ” series unveil

30

Free. Info, 655-0231.

this seasonal sale. St. Albans

The sewing stars o f Vermont Public

C O -O P H O U S IN G CLINIC: Learn

Free. Info, 777-0833.

Barnes & Noble, S. Burlington, 3 p.m. Free. Info, 864-8001. B U R L IN G T O N WALKING T O U R : Reward yourself at a restau­

kids STORYTIME: Children from three to five enjoy stories, songs, finger-

rant after an “easy” eight-mile loop

plays and crafts. South Burlington

through the Queen City. Meet at

Community Library, 11 a.m. Free.

Montpelier High School, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 479-2304.

Info, 652-7080.

etc

AIDS Day. North Lounge, Billings

H O R SE-DR AW N CARRIAGE

Student Center, UV M , Burlington, 7

RIDES: See November 27.

p.m. Free. Info, 656-0608.

W O M E N ’S FESTIVAL OF

LOCAL BASEBALL HEROES:

CRAFTS: See November 28, 11 a.m.

Tom Simon plays back local all-star

- 5 p.m.

history in his “Baseball Fan’s Tour o f

HOLIDAY T H R IF T SH O P: See

Chittenden County.” See “to do” list,

November 27.

this issue. Ethan Allen Homestead, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info,

annual Vermont Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender Pride celebra­ tion. Heineberg Senior Center, Burlington, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Free.

Info, 652-4539.

E M O T IO N S A N O N Y M O U S: People with emotional problems meet at the O ’Brien Center, S.

BATTERED W O M E N ’S SU P ­

4 p.m.

SHOW : Browse a bounty o f crafty

Burlington, 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. Free. Info, 862-2311.

AIDS W O RK SH O P: The ins and info session in anticipation o f World

gifts at this sale to raise funds for the

O ’Neal teaches the com munity to show, not tell, its tales. Bellows Free Academy, St. Albans, 6:30 p.m. $5.

Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Donations.

outs o f protection are the focus o f an

PO R T GROUPS: W omen Helping Battered Women facilitates a group in Burlington, 6:30-8 p.m. Free. Info, 658-1996. Also, the Shelter Committee facilitates a meeting in

862-8219. PR EG N A N T W O M E N ’S SU P ­ PORT GROUP: Expectant mothers get prepared for big changes ahead in this informal “wisdom circle.” Free. Call for location and info, 658-2478.

Info, 860-7129. FARMERS’ M ARKET HOLIDAY

Learn to put creativity in your cam­

BAZAAR: Deck your holiday halls

erawork at a session on flower pho­

with home-grown and homemade goods gathered at the Stowe

tography. Delahanty Hall, Trinity

Elementary School, 11 a.m. - 4 p.m.

Info, 878-0627.

LITE-N-LENS CAMERA CLUB:

College, Burlington, 7-9 p.m. Free.

T U R N IN G STO RIES IN T O

Synagogue, North Prospect St.,

Info, 660-9036.

SHOW : See November 27, 10 a.m. -

drama

at a weekly yard sale. Ohavi Zedek

etc

T H A N K SG IV IN G CRAFT

V E R M O N T GLBT PRIDE CRAFT

lems. Planned Parenthood,

Montpelier, 5:30-7 p.m. Free. Info, 223-0855.

words W R ITER S’ G RO UP: Writers work with words at Dubie’s Cafe, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 865-9257. T O M SLAYTON: The editor o f Vermont Life magazine reads from The Beauty o f Vermont, a compilation o f commentaries on the landscape and seasons. Bear Pond Books, Montpelier, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 229-0774.

kids

1

‘M U SIC W IT H ROBERT RESNIK5: Kids sing songs with the

tuesday music

musical host o f Vermont Public Radio’s folk show “All the Traditions.” Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 11 a.m. Free. Register,

W Y N T O N MARSALIS: The jazz

865-7216.

trumpeter directs the Lincoln Center

STO RIES A N D CRAFTS: Children

Jazz Orchestra in a concert to benefit

cut — and paste — to the chase after

arts programs in Vermont schools.

a morning story. Borders, Church St.

See “to do” list, this issue. Flynn

Marketplace, Burlington, 11 a.m.

Theatre, Burlington, 8 p.m. $20-77. Info, 863-5966.

Free. Info, 865-2711. STO RY TIM E: Kids under three lis-

continued on next page

I LL GET YOU MY PRETTY $ | j a t & l e’a | o u 152 saint paul Street (co rn er of St

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Sunday - Thursday Bud, Bud Light, Molson & Honey Brown

Friday Happy Hour Open at 5pm

FREE FOOD provided by K ou n try K art

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Rock Dutv/er Brow r Ale Puhkel W e i« Bombay Grab l . p A

Average Reader's Age:38

$1.00 PINTS

Vertnoht ShiokW porter

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Seven Days Statistics

Paul & M ain)

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Spuyter Puyvil It

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Thanksgiving Pay: closed

wNo^/Huggy B’s Funk “Well, let me tell you, Mr. Dooley, They're Vipers & then some” HAND SPUN SATURDAY

Benge •Old Sch o o l Funk St. C orner HIpHoc Psychotrope * H IpH ip Hop o p~ /H Ho - use -Techno / Ti

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Available through TicketMaster (802) 862-5300

Fri Dec 4 Sat Dec 5

$2 Cuervo Margaritas! DJ Dancing SU N D A Y

38% Male 62% Female over 90% of our readers have been to college 74% eat out at least several times a month 92% ot our readers will drive an hour or so for arts, dining, shopping or sports

: C/

B o n d "

T h ill'D e c 3

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2 C a sk 'O W itio tW Ale?

$1 well drinks for ladies $2 pitchers, live DJ playing all your 80s favorites THURSDAY $1.50 Drafts Bud, Bud Ught, Molson, Honey Brown Live DJ spinning all your favorite dance tunes FRIDAY

M ig h t y P u rp le & In v is ib le Jet Tammy Fletcher Groove Collective

65% ot our readers regularly engage in outdoor activity s Bud, Bud Light >wn & Icehouse (rinks '

Mystery Night Create your own Stoly’z drink!

57% ot our readers do not read the Burlington Free Press on a daily basis

I I I RIVER ST, MONTPELIER NEXT TO “ HOUSE OF T \ \ ( i ” (802) 223-7007

november 25, 1998

SEVEN DAYS

page 21r


basics. See “to do” list, this issue.

Com m unity Library, 10 a.m. Free.

Grace United Methodist Church,

Info, 652-7080. PRESCHOOLERS: Young readers three to five take a book break at

Essex Junction, 7:30-9 p.m. Free. Info, 899-1128. QUILTERS G U ILD M EETING:

Barnes & Noble, S. Burlington, 10 a.m. Free. Info,

Guests are welcome at this gathering featuring world-renown quilter Ruth

864- 8001.

B. M cDowell. Essex Alliance Church,

STORY H O U R : Kids between three and five engage in artful educational

Old Stage Rd., Essex Junction, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 863-2160. ‘SPACE A N D SPIRIT”: The author

activities. M ilton Public Library, 10:30 a.m. & 1 p.m. Free. Info,

o f Pearly Gates o f Cyberspace offers a

893-4644.

lecture based on her new book subti­ tled “a history o f space from Dante

sport PICK -UP VOLLEYBALL: N o mat­

to the Internet.” Mead Chapel, Middlebury College, 8 p.m. Free.

ter how you spike it, this weekly co­

Info, 443-5937.

ed adult game is a laid-back night o f

FREE LEGAL CLINIC: Attorney

exercise. Edmunds Middle School,

Sandy Baird offers free legal advice to

Burlington, 6:45-9:45 p.m. $2. Info, 865- 7088.

women with questions about family law, housing difficulties and welfare problems. Room 14, Burlington City

etc

Hall, 3-5 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7200.

‘H IV A N D T H E PU R SU IT OF H APPINESS’: The documentary film is screened in anticipation o f World AIDS Day. A discussion fol­

BATTERED W O M E N ’S SU P ­ PO R T GROUP: Meet in Barre, 10:30 a.m. - noon. Free. Info, 223-0855.

Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info,

Students and parents learn about test­ taking strategies at this informational session hosted by Kaplan Educational

2

hell out o f Julia Carlsons way. The Stowe resident crashed onto the snowboarding scene as a national cham­ pion and pro rider, then carved in deep with her book, Snowboarding: A Womans Guide. O u t o f competition after an injury, she now leads women-only snowboarding

W ednesday

Shaw, a W orld Cup com petitor in her

music

own right, to rap about ripping.

Centers. Woolen Mill, Winooski, 7-

M USICA FEMINA: The all-female

8:30 p.m. Free. Reservations,

chorus offers a spiritual song pro­

800-527-8378. PUPPY O W N ER SH IP W O R K ­

gram that mixes music by medieval

SH O P: Puppy presents require more than heavy petting. Learn the bowser

problem with women snowboarders? Then get the

camps. Carlson teams up with Vermonter Betsy

lows. Fleming 101, UV M , 656-0608. SAT A N D PSAT O RIENTATION:

snow, bound: Got a

PHOTO: MATTHEW THORSEN

ten in at the South Burlington

mystic Hildegard von Bingen, con­ temporary composer Naomi Stephen

continued on page 30

HANDCRAFTED BOWLS” AND FINE WOODENWARE

Sunday, November 29. Barnes & Noble, S. Burlington, 3 p.m. Free. Info, 864-8001.

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SEVEN DAYS

november 25,1998

863-6713 for more information Performing A rts League.


acupuncture

7:30 p.m. Memorial Auditorium Loft, Burlington. $8/class, $28/all four. Info,

kids

Shambhala Center, 187 S. Winooski

Plattsburgh. Free. Info, Help Line,

Ave. Free. Info, 658-6795. Instructors

862-4516. I f you’re ready to stop using

INTRO TO ACUPUNCTURE A N D

860-3674. Get in shape as you learn to

GIFT MAKING WORKSHOP: Four

teach non-sectarian and Tibetan

drugs, this group o f recovering addicts can

ORIENTAL MEDICINE: Friday,

dance with grace, rhythm and flow.

Saturdays, November 28 through

Buddhist meditations.

offer inspiration.

December 4, 6:30-8 p.m. Spirit Dancer

SWING LESSONS: Six-week session

December 19, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.

GUIDED MEDITATION: Sundays,

Books, 125 S. Winooski Ave.,

starting November 29. Burlington.

Shelburne Craft School, Shelburne.

10:30 a.m. The Shelburne Athletic

Burlington. Donations. Info, 660-

wicca

$40/six weeks. Info, 862-9033. Learn

$50/day includes materials. Kids six to

Club, Shelburne Commons. Free. Info,

WICCA 202: Thursday, December 3,

8060. Join a discussion detailing how

Lindy Hop, the original style o f swing.

12 create holiday gifts, wrapping and

985-2229. Practice guided meditation for relaxation and focus.

6:30-7:30 p.m. Spirit Dancer Books,

acupunture and oriental herbs work.

accessories, with different projects each

healing

Saturday.

125 S. Winooski Ave., Burlington. $10. Info, 660-8060. Explore how witchcraft

aikido

‘KABBALAH AND HEALING’:

THANK-YOU NOTES: Sunday,

AIKIDO: Adults, Mondays - Fridays,

photography

Friday, December 11, 7-10 p.m.

December 6, 2-4 p.m. The Book Rack,

PHOTOGRAPHY: Private and group,

and seeks balance through knowledge o f

5:45-6:45 p.m. and 7-8:15 p.m.,

Healing in Common, 4076 Shelburne

Winooski. $28. Register, 655-0231.

basic and intermediate classes. Grand

the feminine.

Saturdays, 9-11:45 a.m. Children,

Rd., Shelburne. $15. Register, 496-

Kids get pointers on writing effective and

Isle or Burlington. Info, 372-3104.

relates to the natural forces around us,

writing

Tuesdays & Thursdays, 3:45-4:45 p.m.

9022. Learn powerful models for healing

enthusiastic thank-yous — even fo r pre­

Learn darkroom skills as well as how to

Aikido of Champlain Valley, 17 E.

yourselfand others, based on a system o f

sents they don’t like.

choose, use and exploit the camera to

POETRY WORKSHOP: Thursdays, 1

Allen St., Winooski. $40/month intro

ancient Jewish mysticism.

express your creative style.

p.m. Ilsley Public Library, Middlebury.

kung fu

special. Info, 654-6999. Study this

Free. Info, 388-7523. Bring a poem or

‘VING TSU N ’: Tuesdays and

flexibility, confidence and self-defense

herbs

reiki

HERBAL STRESS RELIEF: Tuesday,

Thursdays, 7:45-9 p.m. The Body

REIKI CLINIC: Wednesday,

skills.

December 1, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Purple

Garage, Cherry St., Burlington. Info,

November 25, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Spirit

astrology

Shutter Herbs, Main St., Burlington.

658-7821. This practical and applicable

Dancer Books, 125 S. Winooski Ave.,

yoga

$10. Info, 865-HERB. Explore ways to

martial art promotes health, fitness and

Burlington. Donations. Info, 660-

YOGA: Wednesdays, 7 p.m. Green Mt.

‘DANCING W ITH THE PLAN­

handle stress with herbs, teas and essential

inner peace.

8060. Experience Reiki, an ancient, non-

Learning Center, 13 Dorset Lane,

ETS’: Saturday, December 12, 9 a.m. -

oils.

invasive, hands-on healing technique.

Williston. $8. Info, 872-3797. Practice

graceful, flowing martial art to develop

language

9 p.m. Burlington. $50 includes dinner.

two to read and discuss at this ongoing workshop.

jewelry

KARUNA REIKI I: Saturday,

yoga with Deborah Binder.

ESL AND SPANISH: Ongoing indi­

December 5, 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. Spirit

BEECHER HILL YOGA: Monday-

‘MAKE HEMP JEWELRY’: Saturday,

vidual and small group classes. S.

Dancer Books, 125 S. Winooski Ave.,

Saturday, daytime & evening classes for

attunements”into movement meditations.

December 6, 12-2 p.m. Spirit Dancer

Burlington. Info, 864-6870. Take classes

Burlington. $150. Info, 660-8060.

all levels. Info, 482-3191. Get private or

computer

Books, 125 S. Winooski Ave.,

in English as a second language or

Learn Karuna Reiki, an important step

group instruction in therapeutic yoga, vig­

Burlington. Free. Info, 660-8060.

Spanish.

on the Reiki path.

orous yoga, yoga fo r pregnancy or yoga for

CYBERSKILLS VERMONT:

Learn the basics o f making hemp jewelry

ITALIAN: Ongoing individual and

self-defense

BURLINGTON YOGA: Mondays,

Register, 482-2836. Get an intro to astrological yoga, integrating "planetary

Ongoing day, evening and weekend

just in time fo r the holidays.

group classes, beginner to advanced,

classes. Old North End Technology Center, 279 N. Winooski Ave., Burlington. $39-349. Info, 860-4057,

karate KARATE AS A WAY TO GENTLE­

health and well-being.

adults and children. Burlington. Info,

BRAZILIAN JIU-JITSU: Ongoing

5:30 and 7 p.m. Flynn Gallery, 148

865-4795. Learn to speak this beautiful

classes for men, women and children,

Main St. Info, 658-3013. Find healing

language from a native speaker and expe­

Monday through Saturday. Vermont

through Iyengar style yoga.

rienced teacher.

Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Academy, 4 Howard

YOGA VERMONT: Daily classes, 12

St., Burlington. Info, 660-4072 or 253-

p.m., 5:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.

9730. Escape fear with an integrated self-

Saturday and Sunday, 9:30 a.m. Chace

ext. 20. Take classes in computer basics,

NESS’: Ongoing Mondays, 7:45-9

Windows 95, Office 9 7 applications, Internet or Web site basics. Private and

Saturdays, 2:30-4 p.m. The Body

custom classes are also available.

meditation

Garage, Cherry St., Burlington. Info,

‘THE WAY OF THE SUFI’: Tuesdays,

defense system based on technique, not

Mill, Burlington. Info, 660-9718.

cooking

860-7029. Learn to deal with aggression

7:30-9 p.m. S. Burlington. Free. Info,

size, strength or speed.

Astanga style “p ower”yoga classes offer

in a humble manner with Shotokan karate's

658-2447. This Sufi-style meditation

support groups .

sweaty fu n fo r all levels o f experience.

ment. y

‘WISHCRAFT/SUCCESS TEAMS’:

YOGA: Mondays, Astanga, 5:30 p.m.,

MEDITATION: Thursdays, 7-8:30

Ongoing groups forming. Burlington

Tuesdays and Thursdays, Hatha 11:10

Register, 865-2522. Take a hands-on

kendo KENDO: Ongoing Wednesdays and

p.m. Green Mountain Learning Center,

area. Free. Info, 863-3101. Success teams

a.m. The Shelburne Athletic Club,

class in making holiday siveets.

Thursdays, 6:45-8:30 p.m. Warren

13 Dorset Lane, Suite 203, Williston.

provide clarity, creative ideas and support

Shelburne Commons. Info, 985-2229.

dance

Town Hall. Donations. Info, 496-4669.

Free. Info, 872-3797. Don’t just do

until you reach your goal.

Take classes in rigorous Astanga or relax­

Develop focus, control and power through

something, sit there!

NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS:

ing Hatha yoga.

MODERN JAZZ: Four Tuesdays,

this Japanese samurai sword-fencing mar­

MEDITATION: First & third

Ongoing daily groups. Various loca­

November 24, December 1,15, 22, 6-

tial art.

Sundays, 10 a.m. - noon. Burlington

tions in Burlington, S. Burlington and

p.m., Fridays, 6-7:30 p.m. and

‘HOLIDAY SWEETS’: November f f ^ - 9 p.m. Isabel^ O tilb e Waterfront, Lake St., Burlington. $40.

T E N T H

15S

- A N N U A L

WOMENS F E S T IV A L <raftj T H E FINEST EXHIB/TlOW

4 « « « i

i

Holiday Special! W e'\e iniulo litis lhe best time to connect \on. ( nil for details. 863-4308

s ders Herbal Confections iBards

O F F IC E S

F o r H o lis t ic H e a lth P R A C T IT IO N E R S

p *

Needs arvings

168 B attery St.

8 6 2 -0 8 3 6 (h

M e m , 29 SAT10-5’SUN.Il-5 BURLINGTON CITY HALL

dow Or Tree Soaps

Pathways to W ell Being

Arlington • 865-HERB Sat 10-6, Sun 12-5

(Networking?

GO Rent-a-Geek 1-888-S O S -G E E K On-Site Software Support for PCs, Mac and Networks

•TUTORING*

V

MATH, ENGLISH, WRITING, SCIENCE, HUMANITIES, PROOFREADING... ■ . • TEST PREP • GRE, LSAT, GMAT, SAT-I, SAT-II, ACT, GED, TOEFL...

a MAC U S E R S * S a v e C o u n tle s s H o u r s !

Software First-Aid Internet Setup/Training

The Mac D o c t o r Where house calls are not a thing of the past

Call 802-453-5570 Today

Steve L'Heureux

: - *" ^

’f~’■ ■

Eves & Weekends available

Michael Kraemer: 862-4042

november 25,

1998

SEVEN DAYS

page

29


Wholesale Warehouse Outlet

K alendar and Aaron Copland. UV M Recital

Famous Name Brands Guaranteed Lowest i Prices

Hall, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free.

* SAVE 25 7,-75% Everyday

Gore-Tex Technical Jackets, Parkas Serac/Gerry Waterproof/Breathable - Jackets, Parkas & Snowboard Outerwear - Jackets & PolarTec Fleece Vests, Pullovers & All Mountain Snowboards.......... Vans/Airwalk Snowboards & Boots, Snowboard Bindings..................

Snowshoes, Hats, Gloves, Crampons, R o u te 7, T e n n y b r o o k S q u a r e M a ll, S h e lb u r n e 8 0 2 .9 8 5 .3 1 5 0 - O P E N S E V E N D A Y S

November 25. SO N G A N D STORYTIME: The

hymns, folk tunes and musical-the­ ater hits with the accompaniment

under-three crowd drops in for tunes and tales. Fletcher Free

o f pianist David Thron. Faulkner

Library, Burlington, 10:15 a.m.

Recital Hall, Hopkins Center, Dartmouth College, Hanover,

Free. Info, 865-7216.

N .H ., 12:30 p.m. Free. Info, 603646-2422.

TIM E: Stay-at-home students five

dance

p.m. Free. Info, 865-7216.

B U R LIN G TO N C O N T A C T JAM: See November 25.

two performances with the VSO.

tnc Friday Concert Series at the Flynn—Classical t S Music with a Twist

Saturday Concert Series at the Flynn

STORYTIME: Four- and fiveyear-olds enjoy stories, songs, finBurlington Community Library,

‘T U R N IN G STORIES IN T O THEATER’: See December 1,

STORIES: Little listeners hear sto­

11 a.m. Free. Register, 652-7080. ries, snack and make crafts at the Children’s Pages, Winooski, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 655-1537. T IN Y TOTS: Kids three and

art

MASTERWORKS

and up share tales at the Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 1:30-2:30

drama $5. Info, 652-4539.

A nthony Newman returns to conduct

H O M ESC H O O LER S’ STORY­

gerplays and crafts. South

Vergennes Opera House, 6:30 p.m.

Baroque music guru

kids PARENTS A N O N Y M O U S: See

Info, 656-3040. VAUGHAN RECITAL SERIES: Soprano Cyndi Swasey sings

under hear age-appropriate tales at

FIGURE DRAW ING: See

Barnes &c Noble, S. Burlington, 10

November 25. ‘P R IN T PROJECT’ SALE: Prints

a.m. Free. Info, 864-8001.

by local artists working with Don

etc

Hanson go on sale to help fund a

W O M E N ’S A ID S/H IV W O RK ­

new community press for

SH O P: Statistics, prevention tips

Burlington. Firehouse Center,

and a first-person account explain

Friday, December 4, 8pm

Saturday, December 5, 8pm

Anthony Newman leads the VSO in an all-Baroque program. Highlights o f Friday’s concert include:

Saturday’s concert features Baroque classics with Anthony Newman. Highlights include:

Albinoni Adagio Vivaldi “Winter” from The Four Seasons

Bach Orchestral Suite No. 3 Bach “Lost” Concerto in d minor

865-7166.

About H IV and A ID S.” UVM

featuring Anthony Newman on harpsichord

Women’s Center, 34 South

Sponsored by

Sponsored by

words

520

Q U EEN

C IT Y

P R IN T E R S

IN C .

Both nights also include H andel’s Water Music, the Pachelbel Canon, and selections fo r three virtuoso trumpets. Also, please join us fo r Musically Speaking, a pre-concert discussion with A nthony Newman on the Flynn stage, 7pm.

Burlington, 5 p.m. Free. Info,

“W hat Women Need to Know

Williams St., Burlington, noon -

‘LOVERS IN LOVE’: This discus­

1:30 p.m. Free. Info, 656-7892.

sion looks at literary loves spurned

COLLEGE FINANCIAL AID:

and spoofed in Stella Gibbons’ Cold Comfort Farm. S. Burlington

ents get valuable advice on making

Community Library, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 652-7050.

College-bound students and par­ the financial aid grade. Middlebury High School, 7:30 p.m., South Burlington High School, 7 p.m.

O r d e r Yo u r T ic k e t s To d a y !

Free. Info, 800-642-3177.

(802 ) 864-5741 ext. 12 VSO TicketLine 1-800 -VS0-9293 e x t.l 2 TdlTFree (802 ) 86-FLYNN ttfn li Theatre%ox Office

C O M M U N IT Y M EDICAL part by

ANNUAL HOLIDAY OPEN HOUSE

GLASSBLOWING DEMONSTRATION & SALE

SEVEN DAYS. . . . . . . . . . . . . .

..............indie as heck

SATURDAY & SUNDAY, N O V E M B E R 2 8 & 2 9 10 A M - 4 P M

m E SERIES

FRIDAY.

7:30 pm, Ira Allen Chapel, Tickets: $15.00

O C T 1997 - Receives international Urban Glass award for “Achievement In Limited Series Production” in Brooklyn, N Y

“Creator of the Stars” Christmas Music of the Renaissance

JAN 1998 - Inclusion in The Corning Museum’s “New Glass Review 19” an annual worldwide survey of 100 innovative works in contemporary glass, selected from a field of 2390 submissions

Alexander Blachly,

ALAN GOLDFARB STUDIO NEWSLETTER HIGHLIGHTS

DIRECTOR

DECEMBER

4

Inspired by the renowned chapel choirs of the Renaissance, Pomerium revives the golden age of a cappella singing. Called by the New York Times “One of the finest early-music ensembles in the country, and perhaps the world,” Pomerium will perform

M A R 1998 - Lecture and demonstration at Massachusetts College of A rt on historical glassworking techniques

a special Christmas concert for

MAY 1998 - Development of “Archeo-Pop Historical Revisions” series (pictured)

the Lane Series - the very concert they present each year in front of

A U G 1998 - Exhibits in San Francisco & Chicago O C T 1998 - Teaching debut at Urban Glass In Brooklyn, NY, leading a workshop on Venetian Goblet Techniques N O V 1998 - Renwick Gallery of the National Museum of American Art, Smithsonian Institution purchases piece for their permanent collection (central goblet pictured above)

the baroque creche at New York’s Sponsored by U N IV ER SITY M ALL

MAY 1999 - Invited to demonstrate at the Glass A rt Society international conference in Tampa, FL

call

page 30

SEVEN DAYS

november 25, 1998

Metropolitan Museum of Art.

656-3085

or

86 - F L YNN


Closin' RENTALS & SALES

SCHOOL: This weekly medical info

for people involved in all aspects o f

session breaks “The Real Story” that prime-time T V doesn’t tell about the

the travel and tourism trade. A for­

“E.R.” Hall A, Given Building,

keynote speech. Killington Grand

mer Disney honcho gives the

UV M , Burlington, 6-8 p.m. Free.

Resort, 7 a.m. - 7 p.m. $125. Info,

Info, 656-2882.

253-7287.

URBAN FORESTRY VOLUN­ TEERS: Branch O ut Burlington

ILLUMINATION NIGHT: Light up your life — and two awesome evergreens — before a carol-filled

up the city and discuss its “Awesome

candlelight procession to cross-cam-

Tree” contest. Waste Water

pus refreshments. Noble Hall, Vermont College, Norwich, 6 p.m.

p ile d by L u c y H o w e . A ll s u b m i s ­

Burlington, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info,

Free. Info, 828-8743.

s i o n s a r e d u e in

862-8245.

FIBROMYALGIA SUPPORT GROUP: This neuromuscular pain

w r it in g on th e

VERMONT-BURMA ALLIANCE MEETING: Rep. Mary Sullivan dis­

T H E IR C L O T H E S !

by E r ik E s c k i l s e n . C la s s e s are co m ­

holds its monthly meeting to spruce

Treatment Plant, Perkins Pier,

W here M r . & M r s. S a n t a get

C a l e n d a r is w ritten

cusses how a recent court ruling may

and fatigue syndrome affects more women than men. Join fellow suffer­

limit Vermont’s right to adopt selec­

ers in the Board Room, Fanny Allen

tive-purchasing policies with repres­

Campus, Colchester, 6:30-8:30 p.m.

sive world governments. Peace and Justice Center, Church St.

Free. Info, 862-3273.

Marketplace, Burlington, 7-9 p.m. Free. Info, 860-4668.

workers swap techniques and design

Traditional • Victorian • Elves Snowmen • Jack Frost Gingerbread M en Reindeer & More!

T h u r s d a y b e fo re

. Rent Ladies' & M en's

Formal W ear

p u b lic a t io n . S E V E N

73 Main, Fair Haven 802-265-3545

KNITTING GROUP: Needle

D A Y S e d it s for

ideas with other wool workers.

COLLEGE A ND JOB FAIR:

Northeast Fiber Arts Center, S.

Veterans and current members o f the

Burlington, 10 a.m. Free. Info,

Vermont National Guard get the low-down on civilian job and educa­

865-4981.

s p a c e a n d s t y le . S e n d to:

d£Stm.

VINYL DESTINATION B

SEVEN

U

T

Q uality used records, tapes and cd s

tional opportunities. Regional

Vinyl Destination - Formerly Yesterday & Today Records

D A Y S , P .O . B o x

Training Institute, Camp Johnson,

UPSTAIRS 200 MAIN ST.. BURLINGTON • 862-5363 Hours: Mon - Sat 11-5:30 Sun 12-5

Colchester, 9 a.m. - 1 p.m. Free.

1 16 4 ,

Info, 888-881-4611.

‘PHYSICS, FAITH A ND FEMI­ NISM ”: Author Margaret Wertheim

B u rlin g to n , V T

discusses the historical and cultural underpinnings o f women’s under­

0 5 4 0 2 - 1 1 6 4 . Or

representation in science. Geonomics Center Library, Middiebury College,

fax 8 0 2 - 8 6 5 -

4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 443-5937.

TRAVEL & TOURISM CONFER­ ENCE: “People Are the Difference” is the theme o f this two-day event

sevenday@6pgether.net

Montstream Studio

Decem ber 31,1998 ♦ 2pm 'til M idnight * Dow ntow n Burlington

"A Celebration You'll Remember!” Buy Buttons Now and Save up to 4 0 % ! Through December 24: Individuals $8 each * Famify/Group Plan: 5 for $35 * December 25-31 All Buttons $11

Program Guides and Buttons Available at Verm ont AH Key Bank Branches * AH Merchants Bank Branches * AH Howard Bank Branches AH New England Federal Crecfit Union Branches * AH Shaw's Supermarkets * AH Retponal Grand Union Stores All Hatmaford Food 4 Drug Stores * AH Regional Price (hopper Stores« Anchorage Inn * Apple Mountain Bear Pond Books« Bennington Potters North * Book Rack 4 Children’s Pages * Border's Books and Music Burlington Square MaH ♦ Everyday Bookshop ♦ Fletcher Free Libra ry« Flynn Regional Box Office * Kids Town

Open the day after Thanksgiving!

LaBarge Floral Design ♦ Leddy Park ke Arena« Main Street News * Shelburne Supermarket« Tuneless Toys

Friday & Saturday 9 am - 3 pm

Every 10 minutes to and from : Patrick Gym and Gutterson Reid

Plattsburgh, N Y: Champlain Centres North * Hannaford Food 4 Drug * Price Chopper

Q Free Shuttles! Q House, UVM; Leddy Park; College Street Shuttle and Ira Allen Chapel. AH downtown metered parking is FREE after noon.

Buttonahoevailable at the Rut Ityt Office 230ColfofeStreet, Barfinqton

Sponsored in Part by Slop Farrell and

Holiday Cards A/£<vWatercolor Paintings Limited Edition PURLMGTod Prints Just $40!

This event is partially funded by the National Endowment fo r the Arts and the Verm ont AmCounci.

www.firstnightburlington.com E-math frstnght@together.net

A LBAN Y B

E R K S H IR E

B

1-SOO-253-ON5

d

a l l e t

M a d e l in e C a n t a r e l l a C u lp o , A r t i s t i c D ir e c t o r Saturday, Nov. 28,1998 3:00p.m . 81 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 29,1998 1:00 p.m.

1 Main Street • Burlington • 862-8752

TICKETS $27.50 • $23.50 • $12.50

Discounts: $5.00 Off Children (12 and Under) $2.00 Off Seniors (60+) TICKET AVAILABILITY: Fly n n R egional B o x Office, 1 5 3 M a in Street. B u rlin g to n , V T 05401 (803) 8 6 3 -5 9 6 6 E sse x T ic k e t O oU et 1 5 8 P ea rl S t .. E sse x

• C opy • S h ip • Fax • P lu s

2S% OFF holiday sale

The Park And Ride Connection

• -----....... CHITTENDEN COUNTY TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY

U V M Cam pus T ic k e t Store

*Handling Charges Extra* F o r g ro u p d is c o u n ts , call (802) 8 6 3-5966 Local Co-Ordinator: Camille Vickers, Director of the Vermont Conservatory of Ballet

• -----»»......•

Pine Lakeside Kilbum Bank S t Paul Street Avenue Avenue Street Street

All CCTA buses and shuttles are equipped with wheelchair lifts.

Rte 100 •

V e rm o n t

(802

4274

F L Y N N

T H E A T R E . B U R L IN G T O N . V E R M O N T

november 25, 1998

SEVEN DAYS

page 31


J h selection

!

ml*

rntk/H:

'Sdk

I

ma*erials

^

tremendous

us or stop by, it’s O worth the drive. 635-2203 or 800887-2203. q Located next to vthe Vermont 2 Studio Center, ( /) Pearl St., q Johnson. ” DRURYS OUT You could call Harold A rthur D rury a Vermont artist, but in fact the former New Zealander lived many years down under as well as in London and Paris. Now a Stowe resident, Drury teams up with artist

Frame any print or poster

Carol Rosalinde D rury for a father-daughter show: T he senior D rury’s portion, “Warriors,”

a t o u r everyday low p ric e ! Up to 30"x40", Metal frame in Silver, Gold, Contrast Grey, or Matte Black. Includes dry mounting, clear picture glass, and assembly.

features large-scale, mythic, beastly expressions,

$4095 W

while the distaff Drury offers visual growing-

Plus

up memories in “A Painted Journal.” Both

tax

show their stuff at the Vermont Arts Council’s Spotlight Gallery through January 2. .

o p e n in g s The Fine Art Frameshop 2069 Williston Rd., South Burlington 802-860-1811 • 1-888-533-4000

GLASS HOLIDAY SALE, featuring

the handblown works of resident glassmakers. Church & Maple Glass Studio, Burlington, 8633880. November27, 9 a.m. - 8 p.m.; November 28-29, 9 a.m. 5 p.m. G0LDFARB STUDIO ANNUAL OPEN HOUSE, glassblowing

G R A N N IS G A L L E R Y

A n e w g a lle ry o ffe rin g th e c o lle c t io n s o f c o n t e m p o r a r y A m e r ic a n k je w e lry a rtis ts . 4

demonstrations and sale. Alan Goldfarb Studio, Burlington, 8659820. November 28-29, 10 a.m. 4 p.m. TRAVELS THROUGH VERMONT:

Thomas Jefferson’s Role in Vermont Statehood, 1791. An exhibit presented by the Jefferson Legacy Foundation. Sheldon Museum, Middlebury, 388-2117. Reception December 1, 5-7 p.m.

170 Bank Street, B urlington, VT 05401 Hours: 10-6 M on. - Sat. Ph: (802) 660-2032

Black Horse Fine Art Supply \0%

F o H tm e C o o k ie s F V o m ^ l i c e ’s y M ic e s F o r tu n e CZool<ie.s are. d e s ig n e d j"or s p e c ia l o c c a s io n s T o o r d e r ca ll

8 0 2 .4 5 6 .8 9 9 3 page 32

SEVEN DAYS

ONE-WEEK PRINT SHOW AND SALE, featuring prints by 10

notable Vermont artists, to benefit the purchase of a printing press for Firehouse. Firehouse Center for the Visual Arts, Burlington, 8657165. Reception December 2: 4-5 p.m. members only; 5-7 public. Show/sale through December 9.

o n g o in g ASS0RTEDW 0RKS ON PAPER in

to Off ' er\<l;i\ Kolail I’l u r re a tu rm o :

Holbein Strathmore (General Pencil 200 Main Street, #8 (2nd Floor) Burlington,VT 05401 (802) 860-4972 or (800) 790-2552

november25,1998

mixed media, by Leonard Duffy. Good Times Cafe, Hinesburg, 482-3040. Through January. ELDER ART, a group exhibit in mixed media. Richmond Library, 658-7454. Through November. Also at the Milton Public Library, through December 17, and Winooski City Hall, through December 18. PHOTOGRAPHS AND OTHER

IMAGES by Ethan Jackson. Julian

Scott Memorial Gallery, Johnson State College, 635-1310. Through December 18. VISUAL DIALOGUES, mixed media by B. Amore and her students. Burlington College Gallery, 8629616. Through December 2. OLD BRICK CHURCH, new pho­ tographs by Fred Stetson. Dorothy Ailing Memorial Library, Williston, 878-4918. Through December. RANDALL SMITH, a five-year retro­ spective in mixed media. Pickering Room, Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 863-3403. Through November. SUENG PARKER, J0LENE REYNOLDS & EVAN EINH0RN,

figurative painting and photogra­ phy. Red Square, Burlington, 8598909. Through November. SALLY WARREN, photographs of Bhutan. Adventurous Traveler Bookstore, Burlington, 860-6776. Through November. AMERICAN QUILTS, folk art, prim­ itives and vintage collectibles. Cupola House Gallery, Essex, NY, 518-963-7494. Through December 20. RECENT PAINTINGS AND PRINTS

by Carol Hinrichsen. Red Mill Gallery, Vermont Studio Center, Johnson, 635-2730. Through November 29. COLOR-COATED: PHYSICAL AND PHENOMENAL WORKS, perfor­

mance, photography, sculpture and installation by Missy Bly and Josh Reiman. Exquisite Corpse Artsite, Burlington, 864-5884, ext. 149. Through December. Call for Bly’s performance times.

v ’t

I "-n o f

/ri

t,

- ,r r v -t

HAROLD ARTHUR DRURY & CAROL ROSALINDE DRURY, a

father-daughter show of paintings. Vermont Arts Council Spotlight Gallery, Montpelier, 828-3291. Through January 2. HARVEST FEAST: Cuisine & Clay, an exhibit of handmade pottery cooking and serving pieces. Vermont Clay Studio, Waterbury, 244-1126. Through November. WILLIAM KIRBY, recent paintings in mixed media. Woody’s Restaurant, Middlebury, 3880267. Through December 10. THE INTERIOR FOREST, a group show by Caravan Arts. Daily Planet Restaurant, Burlington, 660-9060. Through November. THE PRESENCE OF LIGHT, pastels, watercolors and oil paintings by Sally Loughridge. Isabel’s on the Waterfront, Burlington, 865-2522. Through December. PRINTS by Bill Davison. OneWall Gallery, Seven Days, Burlington, 864-5684. Through December. OFF THE GRID, Works on Paper by Frank Woods. Montpelier City Hall Showcases, 229-2766. Through November. UNEXPECTED PLACES, handmade prints by Roy Newton. Red Onion Cafe, Burlington, 865-2563. Through December. THE LEATHER PARTY, drawings and prints by Quebec artist Daniel Erban. Rhombus Gallery, 8653144. Through December 10. FAMILY PICTURES & RECENT PAINTINGS by Alice Eckles. Old

School House Common, Marshfield, 456-8993. Also,


RECENT PRINTS, Buffalo M o u n ta in C o o p , H ardw ick. B oth th ro u g h D ecem ber.

to g rap h s from th e archives o f th e Barre M u seum , S o u th Gallery. T.W . W o o d Gallery, V erm ont

GRANNIS GALLERY GRAND OPEN­ ING, featuring th e w o rk o f design­

College, M ontpelier, 8 7 8 -8 7 4 3 . T h ro u g h D ecem b er 20.

er/ goldsm ith T im o th y G ran n is an d o th e r jew elry artists. Bank Street, B urlington, 6 6 0 -2 0 3 2 . O n going.

A GIFT TO THE COLLEGE: The Mr.

JUAN PERDIGUERO, “M etam orfosis,” paintings, a n d

FRANK CARMELITANO, “T h e Spanish Years,” p aintings an d e tc h ­ ings. D oll-A nstadt Gallery, B urlington, 8 6 4 -3 6 6 1 . T h ro u g h N ovem ber. PASTEL FIGURE DRAWINGS by Fred Varney. P hoenix Rising, M ontpelier, 2 2 9 -0 5 2 2 . T h ro u g h N ovem ber. JANET VAN FLEET, recent oil paintings, an d JOY HUCKINS, oils an d pastels. C ity C enter, M ontpelier, 5 6 3 -2 4 8 6 . T h ro u g h D ecem ber 6. C0L0RPRINT U.S.A.: S p an n in g th e States in ’98, featuring a n ationw ide p rin t exhibition. M id d leb u ry C ollege M useum o f A rt, 4 4 3 -5 0 0 7 . T h ro u g h D ecem ber 13. URBAN VIEWS: Really Big A rt show an d sale by n ine local artists from C aravan A rts. M ezzanine, Fletcher Free Library, B urlington, 8 6 3 -3 4 0 3 . T h ro u g h N ovem b er 29.

AN ODYSSEY OF THE MIND, BODY AND SPIRIT, ph o to g rap h s by C h ristin a D ick. Fletcher R oom , Fletcher Free Library, B urlington, 8 6 3 -3 4 0 3 . T h ro u g h N ovem ber.

and Mrs. Adolph WeilJr. Collection o f Master Prints, featuring 110 w orks on p ap er from th e d o n ated collection o f 2 5 7 O ld M aster and 1 9 th -ce n tu ry E uropean prints. H o o d M useum o f A rt, D a rtm o u th C ollege, H anover, N .H ., 6 0 3 -6 4 6 2 8 0 8 . T h ro u g h D ecem ber 20. SILKSCREEN PRINTS by Sally Stetson. S h im m erin g Glass Gallery, W aterbury, 2 4 4 -8 1 3 4 . O n g o in g . A BOUQUET OF FLORALS, p a in t­ ings an d draw ings by Pria C am bio. Bellini's R estaurant, M ontpelier, 2 2 3 -5 3 0 0 . T h ro u g h Jan u ary 1.

COMPILATIONS OF KNOWLEDGE: T h e D id ero t an d N apoleonic Encyclopedias, volum es o f text a n d engravings d ep ictin g French E n lig h te n m e n t an d Egyptian scholarship. Flem ing M useum , B u rlin g to n , 6 5 6 -0 7 5 0 . T h ro u g h D ecem ber 20. LORRAINE MANLEY, paintings. B etter Bagel, W illisto n , 8 6 4 -1 5 5 7 . T h ro u g h N ovem ber.

POLITICAL PICTURES: C o n fro n ta tio n an d C o m m e m ­ o ratio n in R ecent A rt, an exhibit o f in te rn atio n a l artists w ho address social a n d political circum stances in th e ir w ork. F lem ing M useum , B u rlin g to n , 6 5 6 -0 7 5 0 . T h ro u g h D ecem ber 13. (C losed N ovem ber

NVAA ANNUAL HOLIDAY ART SHOW AND SALE, featurin g m e m ­

26-29.)

bers’ w orks in m ixed m edia. Red M ill C raft Shop, Jericho, 8991106. T h ro u g h D ecem ber 30. CONNECTING..., p ainting s by G ail Salzm an inspired by th e 1997 Liz L erm an w orkshops w ith stu d e n ts an d seniors. Je ff’s Seafood R estaurant, St. A lbans, 5 2 4 -7 3 7 6 . T h ro u g h N ovem ber 28. ELDER ART PROGRAM, a group show in m ixed m edia. N o rth H ero

exhibit from th e p erm a n en t collec­ tio n show ing how E uropean glass beads have been used in clothing, co n tain ers an d m ore. F lem ing M u seum , B urlington, 6 5 6 -0 7 5 0 . T h ro u g h D ecem ber. Y0SEMITE VIEWS: M a m m o th -

T ow n H all, 6 5 8 -7 4 5 4 . T h ro u g h N ovem ber.

DUANE MICHALS: W ords and Im ages, p h o to g rap h s and w ritings by the A m erican photographer. M ontreal M useum o f Fine A rts, 5 1 4 -2 8 5 -1 6 0 0 . T h ro u g h Jan u ary

BEADS AND MORE BEADS, an

Plate P ho to g rap h s by C arleto n E. W atkins from th e Park-M cC ullough H ouse. H isto ric m ilestones in p h o to g rap h y from 1861. M id d leb u ry C ollege M useum o f A rt, 4 4 3 -5 0 0 7 . T h ro u g h D ecem ber 13. ELLEN HOFFMAN, pencil d raw ­ ings, an d TOM MERWIN, p a in t­ ings. M erw in Gallery, C astleton, 4 6 8 -2 5 9 2 . O n g o in g .

10.

SCRAP-BASED ARTS & CRAFTS,

COMMISSIONED PORTRAITS & LANDSCAPES in w atercolor an d

featuring re-constructed objects o f all kinds by area artists. T h e

oil, by B renda M yrick. C h a rlo tte

Restore, M ontpelier, 2 2 9 -1 9 3 0 . O n g o in g .

Library, 4 5 3 -6 3 2 3 . T h ro u g h N ovem ber.

A KALEIDOSCOPIC PANORAMA OF BURLINGTON, p h o to g rap h s by H ow ard R om ero, and IN-STALL, new w ork by K ristin H um barger. Firehouse C e n te r for th e Visual A rts, B urlington, 8 6 5 -7 1 6 5 . T h ro u g h N ovem ber 29. PAINTINGS by A n n a V rem an. Bread & Beyond, W illisto n , 8 9 3 2951. T h ro u g h N ovem ber.

A MOMENT OF RISING MIST: Echoes o f a Jo u rn ey in C h in a, p h o to g rap h s by Jeffrey P. R oberts. A Single Pebble R estauran t, Berlin, 4 7 6 -9 7 0 0 . T h ro u g h Jan u ary 3. JOHN PATERSON, sculpture. A rt G allery o f Barre, 4 7 6 -1 0 3 0 . T h ro u g h Jan u ary 5.

ORGANIC CURVES, w aterco lo r p aintings by K ate H artley. Sm okejacks R estaurant, B u rlingto n, 6 6 0 -2 7 9 4 . T h ro u g h D ecem ber.

MYSTERIES IN STONE: Beyond

Public Art, featuring sculp to rs from Barre an d beyond, M ain G allery; an d PAST MASTERS: History in Stone, featu rin g p h o ­

40 YEARS OF PHOTOGRAPHY, featu rin g black -an d -w h ite p h o ­ to g rap h s an d books by Peter M iller. Peter M iller Gallery, W aterbury, 2 4 4 -5 3 3 9 . O ng o in g ; by a p p o in tm e n t only.

19TH AND 20TH CENTURY AMERICAN ARTISTS in clu d in g landscape pain tin g s by V erm ont artists K athleen Kolb, T h o m a s C u rtin , C y n th ia Price a n d m ore. C larke G alleries, Stowe, 2 5 3 -7 1 1 6 . O n g o in g .

FURNISHINGS AND PAINTINGS by R u th Pope. W in d stro m Hill S tudio/G allery, M ontpelier, 2 2 9 5899. O n g o in g .

PLEASE NOTE: Seven D ays is unable to accommodate all o f the displays in our readership area, thus these listings must be restricted to exhibits in truly public viewing places. Art in business offices, lobbies and private residences or studios, with occasional exceptions, will not be accepted.

B y M arc Awodey ubstance and illusion are discreetly coexisting on lower College street this month. Although November’s featured artists at DollAnstadt gallery present nearly antithetical works, they share an ability to unite unapparent connections while transform­ ing objective elements into a new reality. New York City artist Juan Perdiguero does this in a con­ spicuous way, by grafting pri­ mate heads onto plants, and by summoning tenebrous faces through shreds of photo collage. In the adjoining gallery room, Florida artist Frank Carmelitano conjures atmospheric effects from abstract space, and mist from swaths of thinned paint lay­ ered on a thickly gessoed ground. The two artists have also set aside conventional notions of “composition” in their works, and generally favor the power of explicit simplicity. The Perdiguero works are literally and figuratively dark — his “Metamorfosis” series may even be considered creepy. In numbers I-V, Perdiguero has fastened human heads onto plant stems in a series of large-scale collage works. These rise on the walls like victims of Dr. Guillotine, each stuck on the top of a Liberty Tree. “Metamorfosis (Monkey)” is even weirder, considering the simian countenance. But these are not portraits of curiosities of natural history. They are brilliantly collaged chimeras rich with chiarascuro, full of tensions orches­ trated to be engrossing rather than appalling. He compels this with starkly contrasting values, and calm rather than violent colors. The greens are minty, the grays and umbers are invariably cool. Perdiguero’s “Aparicion” series I-III is composed of human faces that seem to be rising out of blackness. The paintings are organized with attention to the edge of the canvas, which adds to the overall imbalance of each piece. The three paintings in

S

the “Cabeza” series are more I Ihue, tend to be ribboned vivid heads that stare like above the central horizontal Chuck Close compositions at axis of each piece, and his the viewer, and the “Ojos” bands often have an almost works are simply eyes and imperceptible curvature. scalp peeking out of the pic­ “Blue Diffusion” is grouped ture plane. around a steely Prussian blue, Most of the collage ele­ but in this Carmelito varied ments in the four series are his approach by moving bits of photography from the toward a vermilion ribbon natural world. Perdiguero then along the bottom of the piece.

From the “ Metamorfosis” series, by Juan Perdiguero. draws on them with paint. He redefines and wipes away areas to shape expressive yet realistic visages. The eyes are always of subtly larger proportion, and the edges of the splintered morsels of incorporated pho­ tography often look like shat­ tered ice. The images of Frank Carmelito are intended to be non-narrative, but each could be easily mistaken for areas in the banded atmospheres of Jupiter or Saturn. The matte surfaces could also be mistak­ en for stain painting, but in these works the paint was scumbled and allowed to run over canvasses primed w ith' textured gesso. Carmelito hones his harmonies to the point of being nearly mono­ chromatic, and has organized his images to draw the viewer in. Warmer variations, and lighter values of the dominant

In “Paisaje Iberico,” lilac, lavender, violet, purple and magenta commingle at their borders across a slyly yellow underpainting, and the indi­ gos of “Hendidura Orion” imitate the richness of ceramic glazes. The works are nearly as simple and powerful as diminutive Rothkos, and in a few of Carmelito’s etchings the abstract space is divided in a similar way. But the artist adds textural elements, even in his graphic works. W ithin the etching “Indian Summer,” a delicate layer o f paper — probably rice — was pressed under the image. The misty insubstantiality o f Carmelito’s works is enlivened by these underlying textures. Perhaps with equal irony, the illusory faces o f Perdiguero are based on reassembled pho­ tos of reality. ®

Juan Perdiguero, “ M etam orfosis,” and Frank Carm elitano, “ The Spanish Ye ars.” Doll-Anstadt Gallery, Burlington. Through Novem ber. november 25, 1998

SEVEN DAYS

page 33


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eliminated by Voight’s comic-book goon squad. The irony is that the murder is caught on tape by an acquaintance of Smith’s. When that video is passed to Smith without his knowl­ edge, it marks him as Voight’s next target and, faster than you can say The Net, all the sinister tap-into-your-files, bug-your-home, screwwith-your-credit power of Big Brother is brought to bear on the baffled, suddenly unemployed attorney. From here we’re off on a cat-and-mouse chase that ranks as very possibly the dullest and most derivative in the history of CONSPIRACY DREARY: Tony Scott’s paranoid parable techno-thrillers. of secret surveillance has more than a few bugs in it. Which is surprising, since it’s directed by Tony Scott, who in the past has managed to make dumb-guy movies one didn’t necessarily ENEMY OF THE STATE* have to be a dumb guy to appreciate ( Top Gun, I cant remember the last time a major direc­ True Romance, Crimson Tide, The Revenge). He’s tor and A-list cast combined talent and experi­ apparently suffered some kind of major break­ ence with such mind-numbing, eye-glazing down, because this is the work of a confused results. If Enemy o f the State doesn’t prove the and troubled mind. For example, a chunk of the rock-bottom, all-out big-screen bore of the sea­ picture is lifted from the Francis Ford Coppola son, there must be a G.I. Jane sequel I haven’t classic, The Conversation, but Scott seems to heard about due any day now. think that’s okay, since he’s cast that film’s star, Will Smith hits the first big snag of his film Gene Hackman, as an older version of essential­ career here in the role of an up-and-coming ly the same character he played back in 1974. young Washington attorney whose picture-per­ And when he’s not borrowing from the work of fect life is turned upside down when his path other filmmakers, he’s stealing from his own. crosses that of a shadowy rogue intelligence offi­ The climactic confrontation is repeated nearly cer. Jon Voight plays the evil government verbatim from the end of True Romance. employee, a role that’s merely the latest in a sad Furthermore, Scott’s gone to the trouble of hir­ series of cartoon characters. At this point, the ing a comic actor, but neglected to grdvidediim once-credible thespian has become a more-orwith anything particularly funny to say. In tone, less Christopher Walken-level presence, sleep­ the picture careens loopily between a work of walking his way through indistinguishable vil­ serious suspense and an almost surreal stab at lain parts in forgettable fare such as The the buddy genre. Rainmaker, Mission Impossible and Anaconda. I could go on, so mind-boggling and multi­ Even by his standards, though, this is a new low. ple are the ways this film’s been mangled. But The idea — and I use the term loosely — is suffice it to say that Enemy o f the State represents that Voight’s formed an outlaw team within the a poor showing for both director and star — National Security Agency. He has ties to a con­ Scott should never have started something he gressman trying to pass a bill designed to give didn’t have a fresh way of finishing, and Smith law enforcement entities greater latitude when it should not have been in such a hurry to prove comes to hidden cameras, phone taps, satellites and other forms of surveillance. Jason Robards is he could carry a movie on his young shoulders. In so doing, each has p ro v e n to be his o w n in the film just long enough to play a heavy­ w o rs t e n e m y . (7) weight on the hill opposed to the bill on invasion-of-privacy grounds, and to find himself

I L M S RUN F RI DA Y .

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C a le n d a r o f H o lid a y E v e n t s • Free Horse Drawn Carriage Rides Noon - 4 p.m. • Lighting Ceremony, 4p.m. & 6 p.m. • Santa on the Church Street Marketplace, 10 a. m.

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28

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• Free Horse Drawn Carriage Rides Noon - 4 p.m. • Caroling by The Eklectik Z u m , Noon - 3 p.m.

• Free Horse Drawn Carriage Rides Noon - 4 p.m. • Caroling by The Eklectik Z u m , Noon - 3 p.m. —

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Babe: A Pig in the City* 11:45, 2, 4:20, 6:40 (Not 12/2), 9.

Blade 1:10, 3:30, 7:15, 9:35. Holy Man 1:00, 7:05.

12/3 only). A Bug’s Life 12, 2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:15.

Mask of Zorro 12:50, 3:30, 7, 9:40. Rounders 12:45, 3:10,

American History X 12:50 (11/25-26 only), 3:30, 7:15

7:40. Snake Eyes 5:35, 10:05. Soldier 3:15, 5:10, 9:20.

(11/25-26 only), 9:40. Antz 11:30, 1:40. Meet Joe Black 4,

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Home Fries* 10:50 (Fri, Sat, and Sun only), 1:10, 3:30,

Main Street, Montpelier, 2 2 9 -0 5 0 9 .

5:35, 7:45, 9:55. Babe: Pig In The City* 12:40 (Fri, Sat, and Sun only), 1, 3:20, 5:45, 8 , 10:05. A Bug’s Life 10:30 (Fri,

Touch of Evil 1:30 (Sat-Sun), 6:30 & 8:45 (daily). Closed 11/26.

Sat, and Sun only), 11:40, 12:45, 2:00, 3:10, 4:20, 5:25,

A t t h e f o llo w i n g t h e a t e r s in o u r a r e a li s t in g s n o t

7:50, 10. Enemy of the State 12:20, 3:50, 6:40, 9:40.

a v a ila b le a t p r e s s t im e . C a ll fo r in fo .

Rugrats 11 (Fri, Sat, and Sun only), 1:15, 3:40, 5:55, 8:10,

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1 0 :1 0 .1 Still Know What You Did Last Summer 12, 2:35, 5,

C A P I T O L T H E A T R E 9 3 State Street, Montpelier,

7:30, 10. Meet Joe Black 11:50, 4, 8:30. Waterboy 12:05,

2 2 9 -0 3 4 3 .

2:10, 4:30, 7:10, 9:30. The Siege 7:20, 9:50. All shows

P A R A M O U N T T H E A T R E 241 North Main Street,

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Know What You Did Last Summer 12:10, 2:20, 7:10, 9:40.

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page 34

THROUGH T H U R S D A Y .

showtimes

C IN E M A

• Free Horse Drawn Carriage Rides Noon - 4 p.m. • Caroling EnMasse Show Choir, Noon - 3 p.m.

S/HiH'tmtlI/',. Ii/Z’it.>/i

NOV 27

mi november 25,1998

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previews A TOUCH OF EVIL The newly rescored version of Orson Welles’ 1957 noir classic about corruption on the U.S.Mexican border. Charlton Heston and Janet Leigh star.

BABE: PIG IN THE CITY Everybody’s favorite ham is back and, in this sequel to the 1995 Best Picture nominee, he leaves the farm for a taste of city life. Magda Szubanski and James Cromwell co-star. George Miller directs. ELIZABETH Cate Blanchett stars in this look at the life of the 16th-century royal. CELEBRITY Some of the biggest names in show business join Woody Allen for a medita­ tion on what it means to be a big name in the ’90s. The cast includes Leonardo DiCaprio, Kenneth Branagh, Winona

Ryder, Charlize Theron and Melanie Griffith, among others. HOME FRIES Drew Barrymore stars in this dark comedy about a Southern belle who falls for a nice young man — and his stepfather. Luke Wilson and Jake Busey co-star.

dian stars here in an update of another family-friendly classic Albert Brooks, Chris Rock, Norm Macdonald, Paul Reubens and other comics pro­ vide the voices for a menagerie of wisecracking animals. Betty {Private Parts) Thomas directs.

VERY BAD THINGS

THE NEGOTIATOR***

Cameron Diaz co-stars with Christian Slater, Jeremy Piven and Jon Favreau in this dark comedy about a bachelor party that takes a turn for the deadly. “Chicago Hope’”s Peter Berg wrote and directed.

Samuel L. Jackson plays a police negotiator who starts taking hostages when he finds himself framed for murder. Kevin Spacey co-stars as a bank president who breaks into his own vault after being accused of embezzlement. With David Morse as an insurance company clerk who steals a whole bunch of paper clips in response to getting accused of pilferage. Just kidding. Well, except about that first one. That’s the plot, believe it or not.

new on v i d e o DOCTOR DOOLITTLE (NR) Eddie Murphy’s sticking with the formula that breathed new life into his failing career: A la Nutty Professor, the come­

role recall Yes, the face is familiar, but can you place the movie in which the above performer played each of the characters shown?

o _____ o _____ ©_ _ _ _ _ O

shorts rating scal e:

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* * * * * NR = not reviewed horrifying horror product of MEET JOE B LA C K ** Kevin Williamson. Guy in the From The Scent o f a Woman to raincoat didn’t die. Comes The Stench o f Death? sort back for naughty twentysomeof. In the latest from Martin things. Yadda yadda. Brest, Brad Pitt plays a Grim I’LL BE HOME FOR Reaper who decides to get C H R IST M A S (NR) physical and sample the plea­ Jonathan Taylor plays a prep sures of the flesh. Claire school brat who discovers the Forlani, for example. W ith true meaning of the holidays Anthony Hopkins and Jefrey in the course of a cross-coun­ Tambor. try trip home. Jessica Biel coRUGRATS (NR) The stars Emmy-winning Nickelodeon series makes the leap to the big THE SIEGE (NR) Denzel Washington joins forces once screen, and the Pickles wel­ again with director Edward come a new member to the {Courage Under Fire) Zwick family. Mom and Dad, keep for an action-thriller with „ an ear pricked for soundtrack political undertones. When contributions from Beck and Arab terrorists wreak havoc on iggy Pop. New York City, the military A M ER IC A N HISTORY X begins rounding up Arab(N R ) From first-time feature Americans under the com­ director Tony Kaye comes the mand o f General Bruce Willis. story of an ex-skinhead trying Annette Bening and Tony to save his brother from a life Shalhoub co-star. of hate crimes. Edward ANTZ (NR) In the first of Norton and Edward Furlong the years two — count ’em: star. two — animated bug sagas, THE W A T E R B 0 Y ***1/2 Woody Allen provides the Adam Sandler plays a dimwit voice of a drone who longs for who rises to gridiron glory in both a more independent life this box-office phenom from and a female ant played by the director of The Wedding Sharon Stone. W ith additional Singer. W ith Kathy Bates and vocal stylings courtesy of Fairuza Balk. Sylvester Stallone, Jane I STILL KNOW WHAT Curtain and Christopher YOU DID LAST S U M ­ Walken. M E R (NR) And I still don’t HOLY MAN** Eddie understand why audiences Murphy plays a mysterious bother with the distinctly nonhome shopping network host

responsible for a miraculous turn-around in sales in the new film from Mr. Holland’s Opus director Stephen Herek. Jeff Goldblum and Kelly Preston co-star.

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LAS T W EEK ’S A N S W ER S :

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THE M A S K OF Z 0 R R 0 * * 1/2 Anthony Hopkins plays a middle-aged swashbuckler who passes pro­ fessional secrets on to Zorroin-training Antonio Banderas. Martin {Golden-Eye) Campbell directs. SOLDIER*** From the guy who wrote Blade Runner and Unforgiven comes a sci-fi Western about an aging space cowboy banished to a barren planet. Kurt Russell stars. SN AKE EYES (NR) The latest from Brian De Palma stars Nicolas Cage as an Adantic City cop with just two hours to figure out who assassinated the Secretary of Defense in the middle of a sold-out boxing match. With Gary Sinise and John Heard. ROUNDERS**** The lat­ est from John ( The Last Seduction) Dahl gives new -meaning to the term “high stakes poker.” Matt Damon stars as a card shark whose life is put in danger when he tries to help a friend with gambling debts out ofconorol. W ith Edward Norton and John Malkovich.

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SEVEN DAYS

page 35


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lit t le

bum py

re g io n . A n d t h a t ’s s im p ly n o t e n o u g h to m a k e it w o r t h a b u d ­

a n d a h a l f ago. H o w c o u ld I? fa c in g th e s o u th ru n w a y , o ffers

G ro w in g u p in S o u th

u p s ta te N e w Y ork, n o r th e r n V e r m o n t a n d th e U p p e r V alley

W h a t k e e p s th e n u m b e r

lin e s rep la ce t u r b o - p r o p a irc ra ft

g e t a irlin e ’s w h ile . “I f y o u in c re a se d th e p o p u la tio n b y tw o

B u r lin g to n ’s a i r p o r t n e i g h b o r ­

a T ita n ic - s ty le v a n ta g e p o i n t fo r

fro m b e in g firm is th e fa c t th a t

w ith h ig h - te c h re g io n a l je ts,

h o o d , m y frie n d s a n d I p la y e d a

w a tc h in g p la n e s ta k e o f f a n d

so m e p e o p le w h o p u ll in to th e

H a m i lto n says.

p r im itiv e f o rm o f r u g b y o n th e

ta x i to th e c o m m u te r g a te s — a

p a r k in g g a ra g e h av e a h a r d tim e

tr e e - d o tte d la w n w h e re th e n e w

v ie w t h a t w o u ld b e im p ro v e d

fin d in g th e ir w a y o u t a g a in . I f

t h a t c u s to m e rs are p le a se d w ith

p a r k in g g a ra g e n o w s ta n d s . T h e

b y th e re m o v a l o f th e re c y c lin g

J a m e s H o ff a h a d n ’t d is a p p e a re d

th e n e w lo o k , H a m i lto n k n o w s

n ow , is th e fac t t h a t V e r m o n t

a ir p o r t w as o u r m a ll b e fo re w e

b in s ju s t b e lo w th e p ro w .

so lo n g ag o , I ’d su g g e st lo o k in g

w h a t w o u ld m a k e p e o p le really

T ra n s it h as in itia te d d ir e c t se r­

fo r h im th e re .

h a p p y : a lo w -c o st c a rrie r — say,

v ice to th e M a n c h e s te r a irp o r t.

g o t th e U n iv e rs ity M a ll. A n d

D is c lo s in g view s to th e o u t ­

B u t r e lie f is in sig h t,

m illio n ,” h e says, “S o u th w e s t

W h ile a ir p o r t o fficials r e p o r t

a S o u th w e s t o r a M e tr o je t —

w o u ld b e h e re to m o r r o w .” M a k in g m a tte rs w o rse , fo r

H a m i lto n h as n o t g iv e n u p

b e fo re th e a i r p o r t g o t real

sid e w o rld w as a n o t h e r im p o r ­

S k y cap s, p a s se n g e rs s o m e tim e s

t a n t o b je c tiv e in th e re d e sig n ,

p ro m is e s a ir p o r t e n g in e e r

s u c h as th o s e th a t fly o u t o f th e

g o t us k id s in g ra s s -s ta in e d

a c c o r d in g to B eck . “W e rea lly

R o b e rt M c E w in g , w ith th e

M a n c h e s te r, N e w H a m p s h ire ,

th e ta b le w ith o fficials a t U .S .

w a n te d to h a v e t h a t o p e n feel­

im p e n d in g a rriv al o f m is sin g

a irp o r t. B u t as h e le a rn e d in

A irw a y s — w h ic h ru n s

in g ,” h e says. “Y ou’re c o m in g to

sig n a g e. A c c o rd in g to d ir e c to r

r e c e n t ta lk s w ith S o u th w e s t,

M e tr o je t — n e x t m o n th . “ I f

a n d - im p r o v e d a i r p o r t feels a b i t

V e r m o n t to b e in th e o u t ­

o f a v ia tio n J.J. H a m i lto n , th e

lik e r e tu r n in g to a c h ild h o o d

d o o r s .”

sig n a g e w as h e ld u p as v a rio u s

W ra n g le rs to c a rry th e ir b ag s. S o , a p p r o a c h in g th e n e w -

h o m e n o w o c c u p ie d b y s o m e ­ o n e else. O f c o u rs e , th e a i r p o r t w as n e v e r

my a i r p o r t

— i t ’s

A t th e n o r th e r n e n d o f th e

p la y e rs o n th e re n o v a tio n te a m

a ir p o r t, th e b a g g a g e c la im are a

d e b a te d c o lo rs, m a te ria ls a n d

h a s also b e e n o p e n e d u p to

su c h .

B u r lin g to n ’s a ir p o r t, a n d S o u th

a ffo rd a v ie w o f th e ta rm a c .

T ra v elers fly in g o u t o f th e a ir p o r t w ill b e th a n k fu l fo r th e

B u r lin g to n ’s la rg e st ta x p a y e r —

A g a in , I ’m su re t h a t v ie w w ill

b u t I ’m still k e e n ly in te r e s te d in

b e s p le n d id o n c e th e fe n c e c u r ­

n e w sk y b rid g e c o n n e c tin g th e

w h a t th e r e n o v a tio n te a m h a s

r e n tly b lo c k in g it is re m o v e d .

g ara g e a n d th e te rm in a l. As

d o n e to th e p la ce .

O n th e w h o le , th e n e w

M c E w in g says, “ N o w y o u c a n

d e s ig n a e s th e tic m a k e s fo r a

leav e fo r F lo rid a a n d y o u d o n ’t

re n o v a te d a i r p o r t f o r th e first

m u c h h ip p e r a i r p o r t th a n I

n e e d to w e a r b o o ts .”

tim e , I fe lt as i f I ’d tr a d e d o n e

re m e m b e r. S ittin g in th e p lu s h

c h ild h o o d m e m o r y fo r a n o th e r .

f u r n it u r e sp a rse ly p o p u la tin g

th e e a sin g o f c o n g e s tio n in th e

T h e lig h t w o o d a b u t m e n t s a n d

th e m e z z a n in e b r o u g h t to m in d

tic k e tin g lo b b y . A ir p o rt o ffic ia ls

tre e -lik e c o lu m n s t h a t fra m e

th e lo b b y o f M a n h a tt a n ’s h y p e r-

are h o p in g th a t 3 0 a d d itio n a l fe e t o f w id th w ill relieve th e

U p o n e n te r in g th e n e w ly

A n o th e r im p r o v e m e n t w as

m u c h o f th e in te r io r c re a te th e

sty liz e d P a r a m o u n t H o te l, th e n

e ffec t o f w a lk in g th e s tr u ts o f

B u r lin g to n ’s D a ily P la n e t b ar,

te n s io n , a llo w in g fo r m o re

a n e n o r m o u s b a ls a w o o d a ir­

b e fo re m a k in g m e th i n k o f

cle a rly d e lin e a te d q u e u e s. So far

p la n e .

o th e r a irp o rts . T h is is a n e sp e ­

th e re su lts h a v e b e e n m ix e d .

cia lly re m a rk a b le a c h ie v e m e n t

D u r i n g b u sy h o u r s — p e a k

g iv e n t h a t th e re n o v a tio n

c o m m u te r h o u r s , e sp e c ia lly —

B u r lin g to n -b a s e d a r c h ite c ts

in v o lv e d u n if y in g th re e p re v i­

th e n e w te rm in a l still rese m b le s

w h o d e s ig n e d a n d o v e rsa w th e

o u s a d d itio n s m a d e to th e

th e o ld .

a i r p o r t r e n o v a tio n , th e a e r o n a u ­

b u ild in g sin c e it firs t w e n t u p

tic a l m o tifs are n o t f ig m e n ts o f m y im a g in a tio n . S m o o th , a e ro ­

in 1 9 2 7 . W h e t h e r th e n e w a i r p o r t is

c h a n g e s a t th e s o u th e n d o f th e

d y n a m ic c o n to u r s a re e v e ry ­

im p r o v e d , f u n c tio n a lly s p e a k ­

te rm in a l. A c c o rd in g to

w h e re — in h a n d ra ilin g s, c u s ­

in g , is a n o t h e r q u e s tio n .

A c c o rd in g to Jesse B e c k o f F re e m a n F re n c h F re e m a n , th e

to m - d e s ig n e d lig h t fix tu re s , th e

W i t h o u t a d o u b t , th e n e w

P a rt o f th e s o lu tio n m a y b e a d d re sse d in a n o th e r r o u n d o f

H a m i lto n , a p r o p e r w a itin g are a o u ts id e th e c o m m u te r g a te s is

c u rv e s o f th e p u r p le , g o ld a n d

p a r k in g g a ra g e is a g re a t

in th e p la n n in g stag es, sla te d

fo re s t-g re e n w all t h a t b e n d s

im p r o v e m e n t o v e r n o p a r k in g

fo r c o m p le tio n w ith in a y e a r o r

to w a r d O n e F lig h t U p , th e a ir ­

g ara g e. A t a lm o s t 1 1 0 0 sp aces,

tw o . T h e m o d if ic a tio n w ill also

p o r t r e s ta u r a n t a n d lo u n g e .

it is th e la rg e s t p a r k in g s tr u c ­

see th e c o n s tr u c tio n o f a c o n ­

A n d i f th e a i r p o r t lo g o — a

tu r e in th e s ta te , a c c o rd in g to

c o u rs e , w h ic h w ill sp a re c o m ­

s im p le , c le a n f r o n ta l im a g e o f

B eck . A n d e v e n w ith s o m e 1 2 0

m u te r s f ro m h a v in g to p o u n d

a n a irp la n e — s u b tly g ra c in g

slo ts ta k e n u p b y re n ta l cars,

th e ta rm a c to g e t to th e a irc ra ft.

glass p a n e ls h e re a n d th e re

th e re are still ro u g h ly 4 0 0 m o re

T h e c h a n g e s s h o u ld c o in c id e

esca p es a t te n t io n , th e p r o p e lle r

p a r k in g s p o ts t h a n b e f o r e . .. t h e ­

n ic e ly w ith im p r o v e m e n ts in

p a tte r n s in th e m a in lo b b y flo o r

o retically .

c o m m u te r se rv ic e as sev eral a ir­

“If you increased the pop­ ulation by two million Southwest would be here tomor­ row. M

— J.J. Hamilton, director of aviation

h a s b e e n c r a fte d i n to a e r o n a u ti­ cal s h a p e . T h e m e z z a n in e ’s “s o u th p r o w ,” a ta ilfin o f g lass

page 36

SEVEN DAYS

th e y ’re n o t in te re s te d , w e ’ll lo o k in to s o m e o th e r lo w -c o st e n tr a n ts t h a t are o u t th e r e ,” h e says. O b v io u s ly , t h a t ’s a m o o t p o i n t fo r h o lid a y trav e lers th is year. D e p e n d in g o n th e w e a th ­ er, th o u g h , o th e r m o d if ic a tio n s c o u ld s o o n b e p u t to th e test. P a sse n g ers in tax is a n d lim o u ­ sin e s th a t o p e r a te o n a c o n tr a c t basis w ith th e a ir p o r t c o u ld be th e first to feel th e s tin g , sin c e th e y d o n ’t e n jo y th e b e n e fits o f c u r b s id e d ro p o ff. L arg e a irp o rts a v o id m ix in g d r o p - o f f a n d g r o u n d tr a n s p o r ta tio n b y a s s ig n in g th e m to d if fe r e n t lev­ els. A t B u r lin g to n I n te r n a tio n a l, H a m i lto n e x p la in s , “ I f th e p e r ­ s o n in th e c a b is n o t p a y in g th e b ill, th e y m u s t u se th e c o n tr a c t la n e .” Y ou m a y w a n t to w e a r y o u r b o o ts a fte r all. T e r m in a l- w id e m o n ito r s p o s tin g arriv al a n d d e p a r tu r e in f o r m a tio n are still o n th e w is h list, a c c o r d in g to H a m i lto n . “W e h a d th e m lis t­ e d , b u t it w as a lo w - p rio r ity i te m ,” h e says. O t h e r areas fo r f in e - tu n in g w ill s u re ly p r e s e n t th e m se lv e s as th e a i r p o r t se ttle s. A sk e d i f th e o u t d o o r d r a in a g e sy ste m w ill h a n d le m id - w in te r r u n o f f b y c r e a tin g m in i- s k a tin g rin k s , fo r e x a m p le , a r c h ite c t B e c k says “tim e w ill te ll” — a n d t h a t ’s b e c o m e s o m e th in g o f a m a n tr a a m o n g a i r p o r t o ffic ia ls a b o u t

tilin g e m p h a s iz e th e th e m e . P a r t o f th e b u ild i n g its e lf

h o p e , th o u g h . H e ’ll g o b a c k to

Air Apparent november 25, 1998

th e r e n o v a tio n s as a w h o le . B u t a c c o r d in g to th e c a le n ­ d ar, t h a t tim e is no w . <2)


Se aso n al

B y Daniel Lusk

ovember unfurls along Ashmill Road,

N

and the last dogwood leaves cling like Red Sox

pennants.

Lovers go inside the house, their arms filled with dead wood they have gathered. Behind them the floor of the woods is gold with its own coin; this is the money they have failed to earn in the allowable season. If they seem sad, it is because they know they would have no use for it anyway.

Risotto w ith

The mind on such days collects itself, a squirrel’s nest in a hollow tree. The squirrel sleeps peacefully and warm; he does not need to remember all he has gathered.

roodVermont Quail ♦ T-Bone Steak TWP

In the steely light the sycamore shows its new

Creole Salm on V erm ont Bison Chili

Extensive Salad Bar

__SIRLOIN__

green scars like shadows burned into its arms. The poet decides to take the harder way this time, and the trail the deer make descending to the stream at dusk leads him to their beds. He knows

B u t Seafood Restaurant 1993-1998

“ServmgYou Steak, Seafood c3 Smileo"™

2545 Shelburne Rd. Shelburne

Church St. Marketplace Burlington

1080 Shelburne Rd. South Burlington

9 8 5 -2 2 0 0

8 6 4 -9 8 0 0

8 6 2 -1 3 0 0

they have the perfect house — no roof, no walls, no mortgage but the acrid saliva of the hunter. They will loan him this house, leaping out of its windows and doors when they hear him. He knows they stand apart from him like bridesmaids, waiting for him to touch their invisible furniture, the places they have lain. Which of those still saplings are the legs of deer waiting for him to pass? The lovers warm their hands by the fire they have made. The heat makes a wind, rushing into the chimney. Outside, the poet stands, hearing the wind and the deer straying down the hill to the creek and the lovers who have scars like the sycamore, merely seasonal things. He gathers what he can, knowing it is worth everything, and that he cannot keep it. ® november 25,1998

SEVEN DAYS

page 3 7 *


■« '•*: .* * • <* •*. *•

T h a n k s g iv in g

TV’s

F o r g o t t e n H o l id a y

t may occupy an honored place in our hearts, but, where TV is concerned, Thanksgiving is the Rodney Dangerfield of holidays — all but invisible between Hallo­ ween and Christmas. If Thanksgiving were a television personality, it would be in seri­ ous need of an agent. Have you savored the spe­ cial day’s approach by gather­ ing family ’round the tube, >with a family-size bowl of pop­ corn and a traditional Thanksgiving movie or special on the menu? O f course you haven’t. There aren’t any. And if there were, when would net­ work and cable programmers run them? The hundreds of Halloween and Christmas spe­ cials take every second of air time available from midOctober through the end of the year. Even Groundhog Day got its own movie. Is that a conspiracy I smell? Nope. Just the wafting scent of stage turkeys from all those morning talk-show cook­

I

ing and entertaining segments. O f course, these don’t count as bona fide Thanksgiving pro­ gramming, because Martha and the rest would all be doling out advice for some other occasion if there didn’t happen to be a holiday for which to offer a late November theme. Hey, you say — desperate to whip up a bit of spirit around the house — if we can’t watch holiday specials on TV, maybe the thing to do is slap a star-studded compilation of Thanksgiving favorites into the old stereo and get the family to sing along with some cher­ ished, eye-misting old chestnut. Good luck! The TV ads for the Yuletide compilations have been running night and day for weeks — as if everyone on the planet who might conceivably wish to doesn’t already own Elvis Presley’s rendition of “Here Comes Santa Claus” on 8-track, vinyl and CD. Even if there were such a thing as a tra­ ditional Thanksgiving song, it’s too late now for any of the

© 1998

III

HSUL

p a g e 38’

SEVEN DAYS '

official T V compilation legends — Dean Martin, Burl Ives, Bing Crosby, Nat King Cole, etc. — to record it. Something tells me Busta Rhymes and Puff Daddy aren’t about to take up the slack. Well, you can always share the warmth and good will of the season by sending a card, right? Let me ask you this: Have you seen even one TV ad encouraging you to reach out and Hallmark someone? Me, neither. Just to see whether the darned things even exist, I checked out the card sections at several local Hannafords. W hat I found in each case was a Thanksgiving assortment only marginally more expansive than their “Congratulations on Winning the Powerball Drawing!” selection. The sad truth is that Thanksgiving’s one real claim to TV fame is the Macy’s Parade. But let’s be honest: The floats, along with the low-grade TV personalities who bum a ride on them, the rolling Broadway pantomimes, the narcotic banter of the bundledup emcees, and the hovering cartoon characters don’t have a thing to do with Thanksgiving. That’s not John Smith or one of his Pilgrim pals everybody’s waiting for at the end of the corny caravan. It’s Santa Claus, and it isn’t difficult to under­ stand exactly why Macy’s might be less vested in throwing a Turkey Day luau than in jumpstarting the Christmas shop­ ping season. Right about now you’re probably saying, okay, so what?

n o v e m B e r25, ' i 998

Aside from the folks at Butterball, who spends money tying into the big day? Thanksgiving’s a beloved holi­ day, sure, but a borderline dull one, too. You watch TV, you eat, you hang out with family members you don’t often get to hang out with, you eat some more. Where’s the Emmy-winning subject matter in that? Well, I’m not saying Thanksgiving has what it takes to be a Christmas-caliber TV event, or even one with the Q factor of New Year’s Eve. I do believe, however, that with a little imagination we could bring it up to speed with, say, Valentine’s Day or the Fourth of July. To that end, I offer the following suggestions: If you ask me, one reason Thanksgiving has no screen presence is the absence of anticipation-building holiday advertising. Aside from the folks at Butterball, who spends money tying into the big day? I’d like to start seeing spots from companies like No-Doz, Alka-Seltzer and Weight Watchers. And how about the people who make elasticwaist pants? I bet any TV advertising that family counselors might purchase would pay for itself before the left-over turkey ran out. A major Thanksgiving drawback, of course, is the fact that there are no gifts. Wouldn’t we all take the holiday more seriously if we knew presents were going to be involved? All the A-list holidays — Christmas, Halloween, Valentine’s Day, Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, etc. — entail getting things from other people. I say we should start exchanging gifts at Thanksgiving immediate­ ly. Not only will we get stuff, stuff will get adver­ tised on TV and voila!: more screen presence, more Yule-style anticipation­ building. I can foresee a day when Americans work themselves into a lather as Thanksgiving approaches. And how about a new mascot? Thanksgiving needs signature imagery that can hold its own with icons like

jolly old St. Nick, his reindeer, sleigh and elves, Halloween’s fat pumpkins, spooks, mini­ monsters and black cats, not to mention everyone’s little Valentine, Cupid. In the entire history of lame marketing moves, choosing a Pilgrim (snore) as the logo for this holi­ day ranks right up there with New Coke. Finally, these are just a few of the many possible subjects ripe for moving, Barbara Walters-style Thanksgiving profiles: • Saddam Hussein. The redun­ dant Iraqi fruit loop has loads to be thankful for this year. For example, the fact that U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan is such a gullible camera hog. • Maury Pauvich, Sally Jesse Raphael, Jenny Jones and Montel Williams must thank their lucky stars every day that Jerry Springer is on the air. Next to him, these blowhards look like Oprah. • Oprah. Lucky for her Maury, Sally, Jenny, Montel and Jerry are in business. They make her look like Walter Cronkite and Mother Teresa wrapped into one. • Mike McCurry. The former White House press secretary can now make cigar jokes at the office like everybody else. • O.J. and the Ramsey parents. Thanksgiving is a time to reflect and feel gratitude for life’s blessings, like health, wealth and shoddy police work. • Bruce Willis. Now he can make Demi Moore jokes like everybody else. So you see, there’s no good reason for television’s Thanks­ giving blackout. Hours and hours of seasonally themed programming are just waiting for industry executives, market­ ing pros and writing teams to turn them into must-see holi­ day TV. Will they see the light? Only time will tell. Meanwhile, feel free to get the ball rolling by sending me a belated Thanksgiving present in care o f this paper. (7)


D C

7

d e a d lin e :

m o n d a y ,

a s s i f i e d s 5

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p h o n e

8 0 2 .8 6 4 .5 6 8 4

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8 0 2 .8 6 5 .1 0 1 5

LINE ADS: 25 words for $7. Over 25 words: 300 a word. Longer running ads are discounted. Ads must be prepaid. DISPLAY ADS: $13.00 per col. inch. Group buys for employment display ads are available with the Addison Independent, the St. Alban’s Messenger, the Milton Independent and the Essex Reporter. Call for more details. VISA and MASTERCARD accepted.

EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT VOLUNTEERS REAL ESTATE CREATIVE D IRECTO R/GRAPH IC D E SIG N E R : Established, enterprising & successful Burlington com pany with young, vibrant office environ­ ment seeks individual with diverse art background and Quark/Photoshop, etc. experi­ ence to fill niche full-time position. Great benefits & perks. Fax resume A S A P to 6 5 1 -4 0 0 4 . DO YOU LOVE C A N D LE S? Opportunity to earn $20/hr. and up! No cash investment. Free starter kit. Set your own schedule. Call 8 6 4 - 5 6 2 8 . EARN M O NEY OVER C H R IS T ­ M A S BR EA K . Help needed to fill several positions at Champlain College Book Store. Availability needed 12/21— 1/15 (Christmas & New Years holidays off). Apply in person to Champlain College Book Store, 3 7 1 Maple St., Burl.

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BUSINESS OPP. W E’LL PAY YOU $$ TO LO SE up to 3 0 lbs. in the next 3 0 days. We need 2 3 more people in this area to lose weight. Call Kelly, 1 -8 8 8 -7 6 4 -4 6 9 1 or (8 0 2 ) 8 6 0 -1 6 9 3 .

+

(t o la J a y

c a s k

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W E H A V E A N U M B E R O F SH O R T -T E R M A N D Lo n g -T e r m P o s it io n s Av a il a b l e !

• Reception/Word Processors • Cashiers • Housekeepers • Light Assembly

• Carpenters • Painters • Food Production • General Labor • C N C Machinists

BIG HEAVY W ORLD S E E K S volunteers to help w/ the Web site. Into graphics, Web work, music & Burlington? Come rock w/ us! Call 3 7 3 - 1 8 2 4 (www.bigheavyworld.com). VO LU NTEERS N E E D E D FOR community service, three hour shifts, November 27-December 5. 1 -8 0 0 -2 9 6 -1 4 4 5 , leave name & number. Thank you.

ANNOUNCE­ MENTS A R E YOU A 1988 CVU G RAD­ UATE? Our reunion will be 12/26/98. Check out Website: www.CVU 8 8 .com for info. C RA FTERS/VEN DO RS N E E D ­ ED for craft fair/flea market, Nov. 29, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., to be held at the Hinesburg Senior Center. For more info, call Mike, 8 6 0 -7 1 2 9 .

8 6 4 - 8 2 5 5 o r 1 -8 0 0 - 8 9 4 -8 4 5 5 e m a il: t r ia d t e m p @ a o l. c o m w w w .tria d te m p .c o m

seven days p e rs o n a l

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Tuesday •12/ 1/98 •5 p.m., view 4 p.m. At the Williston Gallery, 55 Williston Rd. (Rt. 2), Williston, VT (Exit 12 off I-89; left at Taft Corners, 1 mi. on right) P A R T IA L L IS T Furniture: from a Stowe

Estate, Brand New / Never Used: Chinese Chippendale Style Sofa, 86” & Loveseat, Traditional Style Queen Sleeper Sofa, ChenyLine Dresser, 60”, Upholstered Chairs, Baldwin Brass Lamps, Landscape Mirror; Other: Chippendale Style Mahogany HighBoy, Server, Desk, 3 Dwr Chest, & Settee; Uphol. Armchair, Ball & Claw Feet; Brass Floor Lamp; Display Cabinet, 80 x 46, bracket base; Gov. Winthrop Style Secretary; Ladderback Chairs; Sofa Tables; Smoking Stand; Uphol. Settee; Armchairs; Ant. Oak Wash Stand; Butler’s Table; Flax Wheel; Bookcase; Brass Headboard; Drum Table; Pine Secretary Desk; Uphol. & Sectional Sofas; Roll Away Cot; Queen Anne Style Table;

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please note: r e fu n d s c a n n o t be g r a n te d for a n y re a so n , a d ju s t m e n t s w ill be c re d ite d to th e a d v e r tise r ’s a c c o u n t to w a rd fu tu re c la s s i f i e d s p la c e m e n t only, w e p ro o fre a d ca re fu lly , b u t eve n so , m is t a k e s <pan o cc u r, rep o rt errors at o n c e , a s se v e n d a y s w ill n ot be r e s p o n s ib le for e rrors c o n t in u in g b e y o n d th e first p rin tin g , a d ju s t m e n t fo r error is lim ite d to r e p u b lic a tio n , in a n y eve n t, lia b ility fo r e rrors (or o m is s io n s ) s h a ll not e x c e e d th e c o s t o f th e s p a c e o c c u p ie d b y s u c h a n error (or o m is s io n ) , all a d v e r t is in g is s u b j e c t to re v ie w b y s e v e n d a y s, se v e n d a y s re se rv e s th e r ig h t to e d it, p ro p e rly c a te g o riz e or d e c lin e a n y a d w ith o u t c o m m e n t or a p p e a l.

november 25, 1998

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SEVEN DAYS L

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page 3 &


Classifieds • 864.5684

AUTOMOTIVE 1984 VOLVO DL WAGON: Maroon, auto., 1 5 8 K mi., well-maintained, winter tires & Yakima bike rack incl. $ 1 ,2 0 0 . 4 8 2 -5 2 4 8 .

Hill I CM?

LOOKING FOR A U SED CAR THAT’S really had good care? Ready to spend more than 3 figures? This is your car! For Sale: 1 9 8 7 Pontiac Station Wagon. Could use some body touch-up. A year ago three grand was put into her engine’s main works. S h e ’ll be dependable for long- or short-term trips for years. Reason for selling: I’ve been given (free) a newer car. More infor­ mation? Call 8 0 2 - 4 2 5 -3 8 2 2 , leave name & #.

T h e £ u ro p e< * n Q u r e

LIGHTER ONTHE FRITZ Dear Tom and Ray: My wife and I just had our first child, a boy. Andyes, you guessed right, the names Tom and Ray were at the very bottom of our list, right below Pius XII and. Heidi! In any case, wejust bought a ’91 Honda Accord wagon and are selling (sniff!) our beloved Mazda Miata. The Honda is great sofar, with one exception: The cigarette lighter is on the fritz. It's not that either of us smokes (certainly not with a baby around), it's just that we need the lighter socket to power the on­ board bottle warmer we bought for $10. I found thefuse box, but can'tfind a fuse responsiblefor the lighter. Plus, all of thefuses seem fine. Do you esteemedgentlemen have any suggestions on how I can fix this? — Harvey T O M : O f course we do, Harvey. G o to th e "other" fuse box. RAY: T h is car has tw o fuse boxes. O n e is u n d er th e dash­ board. T h a t's probably the one you checked. T h e second box is u n d er the ho o d . A n d th e n u m ­ ber 8 fuse in th a t box controls the d o m e light, th e courtesy lights an d th e cigarette lighter. T O M : Now, if th e d om e light w orks, th a t m eans th e fuse is fine an d there's som eth in g else w rong w ith the lighter. T h e m ost likely problem — in m y experience — is th a t som eone unplugged the w ire to th e lighter w hile installing a radio and for­ got to plug it back in. RAY: So start by checking th e dom e light. I f it's dead, too, a fuse will fix th e problem . I f it w orks, however, you m ay have to go in for som e exploratory w ork — or sw itch to breast­ feeding.

Dear Tom and Ray: Why do some manufacturers build their cars with the gas-tank filler tube on the driver's side, and someput it on the passenger side? My theory was that my Subaru had the gas-tankfiller on the right side because that's the driver's side in japan. When they moved the steering wheel to the left sidefor American sales, they efidn't bother moving the gasfiller. However, my research (done in a mega-mall parking lot) does not support this hypothesis, and the placement seems to be random. Any idea what the rationale behind the placement is? — William

T he

filler cap on th e passenger side, W hy? Because if you ru n o u t o f gas by th e side o f th e road, you w o n 't have to p o u r y o u r little gallon o f gas in to th e car on th e driver's side as sem is an d m ilk trucks go w hizzing by. T h a t sounds k in d o f bogus to m e, b u t th a t's an arg u m e n t th a t's been m ade. RAY: T h e case for having th e filler tu b e o n th e driver's side m akes m o re sense to m e. First o f all, w h en you drive up to a gas statio n "island," you pull up on th e rig h t side, ju st like you do everywhere else in th e U n ited States o f A m erica. Plus, if y ou're p u m p in g th e gas yourself, it's m ore convenient to p u m p the gas from th e side y o u 're already on, isn 't it? T O M : B ut as far as we know, th ere's no universal standard, n o r is there any overw helm ing reason to go o n e way or th e other. T h e exhaust system has to go dow n o n e side o f th e car, and th e gasoline filler tub e generally goes on th e other. RAY: If you th in k you have a com pelling arg u m en t for one side or th e other, w rite to us care o f this paper, o r th ro u g h o ur W eb site (the C ar Talk section o f cars.com ) an d w e’ll p rin t your thoughts. T O M : A n d rem em ber, since every m ajor au to m ob ile m a n u ­ facturer reads o u r co lu m n reli­ giously (as d o 'th e ir legal staffs), yotir ideas will be going right to th e top!

What's one secret offinancial success? Driving a used car! Read How to Buy a Used Car: Things Detroit and Tokyo Don't Want You to Know. You can order it by sending $3 and a (55 cents) SASE, No. 10, to Used Car, POB 6420, Riverton, N f 08077-6420. Got a question about cars? Write to Click and Clack in care of this newspaper, or e-mail them by vis­ iting the Car Talk section of cars.com on the World Wide Web.

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D O N ' T JJage 40

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SEVEN DAYS

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november 25, 1998

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mmm LOOKING TO RENT

A RT IST STUDIO: Looking for good-size studio. Could be heated garage or out-building in Burlington area. Call 8 0 2 6 4 4 -5 4 8 5 .

APT./H0USE FOR RENT BU R LIN G TO N : Clean studio, nice wood trim. Avail. 12/1. $475/mo., heated. Also 1bdrm., recent rehab., clean, quiet bldg., laundry, parking, pets neg. Avail 1/1. $495/mo. 6 5 8 -9 9 4 8 . BU R LIN G TO N : Full 2-bdrm „ walk to water & downtown. $580/mo. + utils. Call for info, 8 6 2 -4 0 4 2 . H IN E SB U R G : Beautiful & sunny, 2 -bdrm. lake-front home. Jan.— June. $650/mo. No pets. Please call David, 4 8 2 -2 3 8 7 . NEW HAVEN: Attention artist/crafts people. Live/work space available 3 mi. north of Middlebury. Quiet country set­ ting. 2 -bdrm. apt. & large studio/work space. No sm oking or pets. Call 3 8 8 -3 3 5 2 .

HOUSEMATES WANTED BU R LIN G TO N : Pets & smokers welcome! Sunny, private deck, fenced yard, parking, storage, 8 -min. walkk to downtown. Quiet person, refs. $270/mo. Avail. 12/1. 8 6 5 -3 2 1 1 . BU R LIN G TO N : 2-bdrm. apt., School St. Looking for one grad student/prof. for friendly, creative, quiet household. No dogs. $300/mo., heat incl. 8 6 3 -8 3 1 3 . BU R LIN G TO N : Downtown townhouse looking for 2 0 s -3 0 s male grad/semi-prof. hipster. No sm oking or pets. $250/mo. 8 6 3 -6 2 7 2 . S H E L B U R N E : M/F housemates for large 4-bdrm. house, W/D, garage, yard, deck, no sm ok­ ing, pets possible— must love dogs. $250-500/m o.; refs. Melissa, 6 5 8 - 0 0 8 0 (d), 2 2 3 - 6 6 4 2 (e).

WINOOSKI to ESSEX JCT.: I am looking for a ride to IBM. I work 7 p.m. to 7:30 a.m., schedule varies. (3024) BURLINGTON to U-MALL. I am being relocated to the mall and am seeking ride MF/S, 9 to 6 . (2999) BARRE to BURLINGTON. I am a student looking for a ride M,W,F, 8 a.m.. Flex, return. (3051)

BURLINGTON to WILLISTON. I am currently earless and looking for a ride to work M-F. My hours are 8:30 to 4:30. (3031)

HINESBURG to BURLING­ TON. I am looking for a ride to the U-Mall M-F, around 9:30 a.m. (3040) GRAND ISLE to BURLING­ TON. I’m looking to share dri­ ving on a smoke-free com­ mute to work. Hours are M-F, 9 to 6 , some flex. (3038) SO. BURLINGTON to MILTON. I am working on a house in Milton for a month and seeking a ride to the site M-F at 7 a.m. (3036) MIDDLEBURY to BURLING­ TON. I’m a working student looking for a ride Tues. or Weds, to Burl./returning Fri. or Sat. eve to Middlebury. (3035) MORRISVILLE to WILLISTON. I’m looking to share driving on my trek to work. Hours are M-F, 8 to 4:30. (2997)

RED M E A T

W IN O O SKI: 2-bdrm. house, furnished, bright, clean, next to park. Prof, couple preferred. 1/1— 6/1. $950/mo. + utils. 6 5 5 -0 4 5 6 .

HOUSEMATES WANTED

SWANTON to ST. ALBANS. I am a late sleeper looking for a ride to work at noon. I work M-F, noon to 7 p.m. or later. (3033) BURLINGTON to SO. BURLINGTON. I am a recent arrival to town looking for a ride to work M-F, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. (3028) BURLINGTON to COLCH­ ESTER. I am a teachers’ aide looking for a ride to Colchester. My hours are 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. (3026) BURLINGTON to SUGARBUSH. I am a ski bum work­ ing at Sugarbush this season looking to share driving to/from the mountain. My hours are 8 to 4, varying days. (3022)

ILLUSTRATION: SLUG SIGNORINO

HYDE PARK/JOHNSON to WILLISTON. I am looking to share driving on my long trek to work. Hours are M-F, 8:30 to 5. (2997) PLATTSBURGH/GRAND ISLE to BURLINGTON. I am a nurse working the graveyard shift, 11 to 7, various days of the week. I’m looking to share driving with someone depend­ able. (2993)

BURLINGTON to SHEL­ BURNE. With all the con­ struction on Shleburne Rd. & only one person in most cars, how about helping reduce the congestion? I’d like to ride w/ someone & willing to pay. Work 8 to 4:30, M-F. (2905) BURLINGTON to STOWE. I’d like to hook up with someone and share the ride to work. I work 8 to 4:30 p.m., M-F with some flexibility. (2906)

SHELBU RNE to RICHMOND. I work 9 to 5, M-F & looking to share driving. (2814) BURLINGTON to SO. BURLINGTON. I am an ener­ gy-conscious night owl looking for a ride one-way to work around 4:30. (2983)

V e rm o n t

R id e sh a re

BURLINGTON to WILLISTON. I am a new arrival to the area looking for a ride to and from work. My hours are 8-5, but I’m flexible. (2985)

t he sq u irtin g sq u id s o f squalor

fro m th e s e c r e t f ile s o f

mo*

can n o n

If an intoxicated adult in a three-quarter ton milk delivery vehicle just carelessly ran over a box of my dolls, I’d start crying.

So would I, but those weren’t dolls in there... the Hell’s Angels were givin’ away free puppies.

do this, practically no dealer or garage will actually perform the operation. The otherfunny thing is that although we kill over 40,000 persons a year in vehicle accidents, I couldn’t fin d any mention o f how many were saved (or how many were killed) by the air bag. — Guyler Magruder, Singapore

Dear Cecil, I just returnedfrom a holiday in the States. While there I rented a 1998 Ford Mustang. There was a notice on the visor to look on the other side. I did and took a picture o f the second notice. See attached. Am I crazy, or is it logical for a safety device to have a notice that it may kill you? Naturally, at the first opportunity I checked out ‘'air bag”on Yahoo. There are numerous sites, practically all o f which relate to disabling the air bags. Thefunny thing is that while it is possible to get the government’s permission to

RICHFORD to BURLINGTON. I work weekends and am look­ ing to share driving. Hours are 6 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. (3001)

BURLINGTON to JEFFER­ SONVILLE. Would you like to have company on your com­ mute to work 2 or 3 days per week? I’m willing to ride along or share the driving. Work 7:30 to 5 p.m. (2892)

No question, pops, it’d be a bummer to have a safety device that killed more people than it saved. But not to worry. If you buckle your seat belts, sit up straight, and put the kids in the back seat, the air bags will be perfect­ ly safe. O f course, if you did all that, you wouldn’t need air bags in the first place. Okay, I’m exaggerating, but there’s no denying that air bags have a Catch-22 aspect. First some numbers. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says that, as of September 1, 1998, air bags have saved 3448 lives (2954 drivers, 494 passengers) since they were first installed in quantity in the early ’90s. During the same period 113 people (66 of them children) have been killed by air bags. So we’re talking 30 lives saved for every one lost. It’s estimated that air bags reduce the risk of dying in a direct frontal collision by 30 percent. Some of these numbers are a little shaky. The NHTSA doesn’t investigate every accident in which an air bag is deployed. The figure for lives saved was arrived at using a double-pair comparison study, which the agency describes as “a mathematical analysis of the realworld fatality experience of vehicles with air bags com­ pared with vehicles without air bags.” In other words, despite its seeming precision, 3448 is an estimate. Some also argue that air-bag deaths are understated, since the figure includes only cases of low-speed accidents in which the air bag was clearly at fault.

Though 30:1 is a pretty favorable kill ratio, the fatal­ ities show that air bags aren’t the goof-proof passive safe­ ty devices some people thought they’d be. Thirty years ago Ralph Nader argued that people didn’t use seat belts and that a passive system like air bags was the only answer. Even today, with mandatory seat belt laws, only about 65 percent of auto users buckle up. Air bags save a lot of the heedless types. According to the NHTSA, of the 3448 people saved, 2483 weren’t wearing seat belts. But you may argue: I use seat belts, and I insist that everyone in my car use them. Why should I be required to risk air-bag injury just to protect the mopes that can’t be bothered? The NHTSA’s answer is that air bags and seat belts combined offer more crash protection than either device individually. Most of the people killed by air bags fail into identifiable risk groups — kids in the front seat, for example. The NHTSA concedes that air bags make the front seat significantly more dangerous for those under 12. But if you’re careful and put the kids in the back, etc., you can minimize the danger. Admittedly some people do everything right and still get killed by air bags — to date, 11 belted adults. Many of these were short drivers who presumably sat close to the steering wheel and were hit by the air bag as it expanded. Short people are now eligible to have a switch installed that lets them disable the air bag. But let’s set aside the special cases. Air bags basically work and aren’t the dangerous boondoggle that some folks think. Admittedly the “passive” aspect of air bags was oversold. The real lesson here is that it’s impossible to design a safety feature so foolproof that you needn’t get your mind in gear before you step on the gas. (7) > — CECIL ADAMS

Is there something you need to get straight? Cecil Adams can deliver the Straight Dope on any topic. Write Cecil Adams at the Chicago Reader, 11 E. Illinois, Chicago, IL 60611, or e-mail him at cecil@chireader.com.

november 25, 1998

SEVEN DAYS

page 41


Class

5684

HOUSEMATES DATING WANTED SERVICES SH E LB U R N E: Looking for a young, responsible M/F to share space in 3-bdrm. apt. Looks out to beautiful view. Peaceful, quiet area. $233/mo. + utils, water incl. No dogs. Avail, now. 9 8 5 -9 0 6 4 . ST. ALBANS: 2-bdrm. apt., completely furnished. Female non-smoker desirable. $235/mo. 5 2 7 -3 9 6 3 .

VER GEN N ES: Housemate wanted on Otter Creek, private bdrms. & living rm., shared kitchen, bath, $275/mo. + 1/2 utils. 8 7 7 -9 2 2 1 , leave mes­ sage.

WINOOSKI: Looking for female for Main St. apt. Avail. 12/1. $225/mo. + dep. + utils. Call 6 5 5 -0 9 8 0 , leave message.

UNIQUE LIV­ ING SITUA­ TIONS SH E LB U R N E: Free full-time room in exchange for early morning childcare 2 wks. out of the month. Non-smoking, energetic person please call 9 8 5 -1 4 1 6 .

SERVICES CASH: Have you sold property and taken back a mortgage? I’ll pay cash for all your remaining payments. (8 0 2 ) 7 7 5 - 2 5 5 2 x202. CHILD CA RE &/OR R ES ID E N ­ TIAL CLEAN IN G . W e ll-e xp e rk _ enced, caring, dependable & ^ honest. I'm in between careers, let’s help each other. Call 8 7 9 -9 1 0 2 .

COM PATIBLES. HOLIDAY S P E­ CIAL: Singles meet by being in the same place as other sin­ gles. We've made this the best time to connect you. Call for details, 8 6 3 -4 3 0 8 . www.compatibles.com.

N .E. S IN G LES CONNECTION: Dating & Friendship Network for relationship minded Single Adults. Professional, Intel­ ligent, Personal. Lifetime membership, Newsletter. For Free info, (8 0 0 ) 7 7 5 -3 0 9 0 .

NORDIC TRAK: Great shape, was $ 6 5 0 new— $ 2 7 5 takes it away. 6 5 8 - 1 1 2 8 ext. 145. W INE CELLA R LIQUIDATION. Top-rated ’9 4 Cabernets, '9 5 Bordeaux, small lots of other, reds and -whites,'mast~avaif-able. Great price's. Call for cel­ lar list. 6 5 8 - 1 1 2 8 ext. 145. W O L F F T A N N IN G

INTERIOR DECORATING: Interior painting & wall paper­ ing. Don’t have the time or the knack? Special techniques and patterns; meticulous, efficient, cheerful. Call Lisa, 6 6 0 -4 8 6 2 .

PARTY/GATHERING EN TER ­ TAINMENT FOR H IR E: Unique art-performance; theatre, music, poetry by Shakespeare, Dylan Thomas, Beat-poets & originals. Creative light show. Credible refs. & brochure avail. 8 7 9 -2 9 5 3 .

B E D S TAN AT H O M E B U Y D IR E C T A N D S A V E ! C O M M E R C IA L / H O M E U N IT S F R O M $199 F R E E C O L O R CATALO G C A L L T O D A Y 1-800-842-1310

MANDOLIN MANIA! Brian

MAX MIX DJ/RECORD SHOP,

Perkins has an Aria " F ”-style mandolin with Fishman pick­ up, $5 3 5 . And a Flatiron octave mandolin with pickup, $4 7 5 . Gary has a Kentucky solid-body electric mandolin, $2 75 . Call Gary, 8 6 3 -5 6 4 6 .

1 0 8 Church St., Burlington, looking for used DJ/music equipment, record collections and local clothing designers. Merchandise placed on con­ signment. 8 0 2 -6 5 1 -0 7 2 2 .

ADULT

NEEDED: FEMALE VOCALS/

Hoi! Live! 1 on 1

io p n a p p e k s

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SEEK IN G PROF. M USICIANS: South Catherine St. Jug Band currently auditioning for full­ time drummer & fiddle/mandolin/banjo. Call 5 1 8 -6 4 3 8890.

AD ASTRA RECORDING. Relax. Record. Get the tracks. Make a demo. Make a record. Quality is high. Rates are low. State of the art equip. & a big deck w/ great views. Call (802) 8 7 2 -8 5 8 3 .

keyboard player w/ vocals for est. classic rock/R&B band. Booked into 1999. Call Andy, 8 0 2 -4 7 9 -9 4 2 9 , leave mes­ sage.

SEEKIN G BASS PLAYER,

MUSIC INSTRUCTION

trombone, singer (male), and keyboard to play mostly ska, some swing & other tunes w/ brass. Craig, 6 6 0 -8 2 0 9 .

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C L E A E W N E T T S S T S A L P U R E A R S M A F T A R C 0 R H o P I A N E M N E B A D E E G E L I L T S T 0 A 0 A M A N S T E R S E S

H E L 0 T S 0 H 0 0 L I 0 A S H E N

I T E M L E T 0 N N I T R E T I T 0

November 25, 1998

C A S P I A N S E A

S A N S

E S S E G D A S M E P E W

W e e k ’s P u z z l e R A P T A G E R S E A 1 S E L B E E A R L E S L 1 A T E C S 0 L D E R 1 E S S E A S w T 1 A R T 1 S N 0 0 N S D A R E A N 0 S C H M S AI D H 0 N D E A R S E A S E E L L S A L T E

C A B L A D 10 L A N D R A G S L E A R R E E L A G L E A U T A L L 0 N E T B R D R A C R A V L A T E A T W T R Ia R A R p E N H i N G 0 A T E

E S S E S S T 0 w A B E D E N T E R


Nov 26-Dec 2 H fto dealing with people,

ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): I

| l “Basically, I try to be as

urge you to practice that “I’ve only

Richarming and ingratiating as I

got eyes for you” look till you get it

K e a n without making myself

right. Use a mirror if necessary. Try to

vom it.” I would like to recommend

get your most eternal, smoldering

convention o f tigers convenes

members. These days, catharsis means

launch a master plan to earn your

feeling to leap out and spiral around

upstairs. To make the metaphor (and

anything — from a riveting movie to

first million (or at least your first

the room like a flaming tornado. Pack

your predicament) even more ridicu­

heart-boggling sex to an intense ses­

hundred grand).

it full o f the most radical, focused

lous, the worm o f doubt may be eat­

sion o f psychotherapy — which

intimacy you can muster. Once

ing into the apple o f domestic bliss

mobilizes a spiritual renewal through

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.

even as the eagle o f victory arrives

the build-up and release o f tension. I

22-Dec. 21): I hope you’re up for

single most worthy candidate, or at

with laurels to reward your public

predict that such a strenuous blessing

some homework this week,

most two — not the whole world.

struggle. D o tigers prey upon ter­

lies just ahead for you.

Sagittarius. Your assignment, should you choose to accept it, is to write a

TAURUS (Apr. 20-M ay 20): I

usually — but then your dumb luck

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22):

can’t remember whether it was Andy

with symbolic saviors is unusually

Everyone’s a bit schizo from time to

spective o f the person you will be

Warhol or Mao Zedong whose strate­

good right now.

time, so don’t get flustered as you

next spring, and it should be about

watch your psyche divide up into fac­

the life you’re going to live between

gies for successful power-tripping

story. It should be told from the per­

included techniques for converting

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): H alf the

tions. I like to think that it’s exactly

now and then. The recommended

your weaknesses into strengths. If you

world is now in recession or suffering

at moments like these, when the con­

length o f this tale is three to five

developed a pimple on the day o f a

meager economic growth. The ozone

dition is most aggravated, that the

pages, and I’d like you to finish it by

big social occasion, for instance,

hole over Antarctica has mushroomed

cure is most possible. Perhaps the

December 3. N ow here are a few

Andy or Mao might suggest that you

to an unprecedented size in recent

Willful Strategist in you has some­

meditations to get you started. What

repackage it into a glitzy fashion

months. Animal and plant species are

thing to learn from the Adaptable

questions would you like to have

statement, say by drawing a circle

dying off at an alarming rate

Harmonizer, for instance. Likewise,

answered in the next 19 weeks? What

around it with a felt-tip pen. N ow get

unmatched since the last mass extinc­

the Lover o f Beauty may not be so at

hypotheses would you like to collect

out there, Taurus, and apply this sage

tion 65 million years ago. Meanwhile,

odds with the Sharp Thinker as you

experimental data about? What bud­

philosophy in every way you can

however, you Leos are slipping into

imagine, and the Demanding

ding plot lines would you like to see

imagine.

one o f your slaphappiest moods ever,

Fantasizer could find an ally, not just

fleshed out in ways that thrill your

and may be able to linger in this state

a debunker, in the Practical Master o f

imagination?

o f goofy but beatific grace until well

Intimacy.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20):

CAPRICORN

ing your network o f useful contacts, and getting what you want by being almost appallingly nice.

PISCES

(Feb. 19-Mar. 20):

Buddhist sage Jack Kornfield tells o f a woman devastated by the demise o f a love affair. She turned to her Zen teacher, a Japanese monk, who soothed and consoled her as she grieved for weeks. Alas, the monk then returned to Japan, leaving the woman to fend for herself. Months later he returned, and the woman picked him up at the airport. As he handed her a gift o f prayer beads, she broke into sobs, confessing that her heart had still not mended from the loss o f her paramour. W ithout hesita­ tion, the teacher slapped her across the face. “One year is too long!” he barked, “Get over it!” I bring this up, Pisces, because I have a similar impa­

N ot to overgeneralize or anything,

after Christmas. To what do we owe

but one o f the pivotal quests o f every

your charmed ability to go against the

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.

Jan. 19): You’ve only just started your

Gemini is to learn how to avoid mis­

flow? Maybe it has to do with the fact

21): “Be Happy You’re Poor — Too

final exam, so it’s impossible to say

taking the map for the territory. The

that while everyone else seems

Much Money Can Make You Crazy,”

how well you’ll do. But preliminary

(Dec. 22-

challenge is complicated by the fact

obsessed with the half-truth that shit

read the headline in the Weekly World

indications are that you have an

that many o f you are such damn

happens, you’re focused on the more

News (a rag whose credibility has sur­

excellent chance o f proving the dic­

good map-makers and map-readers.

constructive half-truth that magic

passed much o f the mass media in

tum, i f it doesn’t crush your spirit, it’l l

H ow tempting it must be to believe

happens.

recent months). I had to agree with

help you w in your biggest argum ent

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): This

the article’s assertion that obscene

w ith G od In fact, I’m betting that

m om ent you get its contours down

wealth corroded the mental health o f

we’ll ultimately see some miraculous

you’ve conquered a problem the

the next few weeks. It will be prime time for making new friends, expand­

you’ve got it down, unleash it on the

mites? Will eagles devour worms? N ot

this strategy to you Aquarians during

tience with a dispiritedness you’ve allowed to linger. Instead o f the slap, though, imagine I’m applying a cream pie to your face right now. (7)

You cmn call Rob Brezany, day or night for your

on paper! But wait. D op t despair.

week’s vocabulary word, class, is

Howard H ughes, Henry Ford, Ross

(if melodramatic) transmutations in

There’s good news. You’re about to

catharsis. It’s derived from the ancient

Perot, and Leona Helmsley. But I

you. An old wart on your attitude

e x p a n d e d w e e M y h o r o s c o p e

receive an assignment that will

Greek word katharsis, which was a

don’t think that’s a problem you

just might dissolve, for instance, and

1 -9 0 0 -9 0 3 -2 5 0 0

absolutely require you to navigate by

medical term for “purgation” or

Scorpios have to worry about. The

diamond-bright insights may illumi­

dead reckoning alone.

“purification,” as in a flushing o f the

deprivations you’ve suffered over the

nate one o f your blindest spots.

bowels. Aristotle turned it into a

years have built up so much character

$1.99 per minute. 18 and over. Touchtone phone, c/a 612/373-9785 = ■ And don’t forget to check out Rob ’a Web site at tumrur.realaatrology.com/ Updated Tueaday night.

CANCER (June 21-July 22):

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.

metaphor that referred to how a trag­

in you that you’re incapable o f being

You may discover termites in the

ic drama performed on stage can

spoiled by fabulous riches. I bring

18): Ace TV journalist Katie Couric

foundation at about the same time a

“clean out” the emotions o f audience

this up because it’s prime time to

once said, in describing her approach

la s t w e e k ’s an sw e rs

on. aaee 4 3 ACRO SS 1 Word with mask or meter 4 Bacchante 10 Little devil 13 Hecuba’s hubby 18 Clark’s “Mogambo" co-star 19 Actress Pier 20 Skater Babilonia 21 Marmalade fruit 22 “— don’t say!” 23 Why did Franklin fly a kite? 26 Lambs' dams 28 Nasty 29 Docile 30 Horatian creation 31 Actress Lenska 34 Brickell or McClurg 36 Invitation request: abbr. 39 Why did folks find Howe funny? 47 Pitcher part 48 Tremendous bargain 49 Stephen of “Princess Caraboo" 50 Develop 52 “King Kong"

fa g e 4 4 —

101 Long or actress 54 Gridiron gain Peeples 103 Conductor 57 Deranged Boulanger 60 Easy stride 105 Shuffleboard 61 Swung stick around 106 Did people 63 Soccer superstar like Whitney? 112 O ’Hara 64 Bridge homestead support 66 Security org. 113 Thames town 67 Gets cracking 114 Vacation sensation 70 Castle 115 Heifer or hen material 118 Gelatinous 72 Galba’s predecessor product 120 Philharmonic 73 Beret or beaver section 74 How predict­ 124 Oklahoma city able was 127 Did Nobel Gutenberg? have a bad 78 Gush temper? 81 Bank deposit? 133 Tokyo, once 82 Gigio and 134 Dumas Jerry character 83 Singer Percy 135 Sneeze and 86 Make budget wheeze cuts? ' 136 Accuse 87 Ahab’s mark tentatively 88 — Visitor of 137 — up ‘Deep Space (complete) Nine" 138 Massenet 90 Stockwell and opera Martin 139 Brit, fliers 92 Sell 140 Juan Ponce — 94 Author Le Shan 141 Japanese 95 Actress honorific Mayron DOWN 98 Litter's littlest 1 Marvin of 99 Pianist Motown Schnabel 2 Confess

SEVEN M W ,:

3 Wurst accompani­ ment 4 — -jongg 5 Chemical suffix 6 Tomorrow’s turtles 7 Light material 8 Meter leader 9 Highfalutin’ headgear 10 Robert of “Quincy, M.E.” 11 Toy dog 12 Falafel holder 13 Set 14 — Grande 15 Facts, for short 16 Biting 17 Apportion, with “out" 21 Pursuit 24 Champions of the Force 25 King of Israel 27 Dion's “Runaround" girl 32 Audio antiques? 33 A BA member 35 Memo start 37 Tape player: abbr. 38 An Everly brother 39 Hacks 40 Noblemen 41 It's in the bag

n o v e m b e r2 5 ,1998

Garlunkel 42 David's song, e.g. instrument 95 Marshal Dillon 43 Firstborn 96 Wedding 44 “The Magic words Flute" hero 97 Mozart’s “— 45 Age kleine 46 Photo tint Nachtmusik" 51 Spruce 100 Rug type 53 Beatles 102 Torpor refrain 55 Eye opener? 104 — glance 107 Sturdy carts 56 Authentic 108 Othello's 58 Helps in a ensign heist 109 Succotash 59 Dragon or Hall stuff 62 Don one’s 110“— Apple" (71 hit) duds 111 Sugary suffix 65 — in 115 Make-believe (enticed) 68 Hawthorne's 116 Olympic first lady "— Told 117 Writer Hunter Tales" 69 Dieter's food 119 Way over yonder 71 Window dressing? 121 She. to 75 Beach Stendhal 76 Lodger 122 Farmer's place 77 German river 78 Indonesian 123 — Pea (Popeye’s kid) island 125 Scheme 79 Put forth 126 Canine 80 Fractional amount command 84 Lack of social 128 Funnyman grace Philips 129— Tin Tin 85 Boredom 89 Med school 130 Folklore fairy 131 Actor subj. 91 Prepare Tognazzi 132 Put it in cherries writing 93 Simon &


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Aookinq tm n SWPF, NS. CTRL VT, 46 , ENERGETIC outgoing, musical, positive outlook. Likes movies, reading, concerts, danc­ ing, walking, eating out. ISO ethical, outgoing, NS who believes life is not a dress rehearsal. 2324 _________________

VOLUPTUOUS, BROWN HAIR, BROWNeyed SWPF, 31 , NS, who enjoys music, hockey, movies, books, theatre, travel. ISO SWPM, NS, 28 -40 , for friendship, p o ssib le LTS^ evem ngs~out& lots of laughter. 2 3 2 5 ________. . „

SEEKING HOPELESS ROMANTIC SWPF. NS, 5 ’8 ”, 24 , blonde, blue-eyed. ISO a spark w/ a hard-working, honest SM, 22 -35 , who enjoys dancing, biking, movies, hockey games & romantic evenings alone. 2326 _________________

MIDWESTERN ROOTS. DWPF, 43 , NS, who loves life, skiing, football, nights on the town, candlelight dinners, danc­ ing. ISO honest, fun-loving W M for romance, adventure & fun. 2327 ______ WHAT A LONG, STRANGE TRIP ITS BEEN. Rubenesque DWF, 26 , ISO S M to journey with. Must value individuality, be family-oriented. Enjoy travel, nature, mysticism & romance. 2344 ___________

KIDS GROWN, ON MY OWN. PETITE, funny. Have money. Handsome man could make my day. Adventurous, loves to play. Must be neat, must be clean. Don’t smoke or drink, and don’t be mean. Love to cuddle, love to touch. Hope I’m not asking too much. 2350

WHERE IN THE WORLD ARE YOU? Enthused, passionate, intelligent, spiri­ tual, dog-loving DWF, 37 , geographer, ISO centered M to share life’s journey. Send me the map to your heart. 2322

SPONTANEITY MAKES LIFE INTEREST­ ING! Share adventures: hockey, biking, travel. ISO active (I mean active!!), tall, honest, kid-loving guy, 30 -40 . 2304

DWF LOOKING FOR WILD, MELLOW, practical, passionate, tall DWPM, 40 4 5 — type guy to share life’s stuff. 13.05 TWO CRAZY GEMINI GIRLS LOOKING for playmates. Must be tall, dark (or blond) and handsome, 35 -45 . No cowards, please! 2306 ___________________

HIGH-VOLTAGE FUN & PLAY. Are you game? I’m looking for a man whom I can share some serious chemistry/ friendship with. Me: early-3 os, attractive, fiery, heart of gold, athletic. 2309 GENTLE, WARM, ATTRACTIVE SWF, 44. Love learning about life, spirituality. Seeking warm, positive, thoughtful man, 40 -5 2 , to share thoughts, music, reading, movies, walking, dancing, silli­ ness, hugs, friendship, maybe more.

SWF, 34, PRETTY 81 SLENDER, INTO A

OK, SO I WAS A LATE BLOOMER...BUT I

serious relationship or real friendship. ISO a good-looking SWM, 27 -35 . Must be interesting, exciting & reliable. 2227

get it now. If you’re a guy who wants to help my blooming flower evolve, do buzz me. I’m a SWF, 33 . 2 17 5 _________

LETS CREATE A FRIENDSHIP. SWF, 31, 5 ' i ”, quiet, pleasant, ISO SWM, 30 -37 ,

INTELLIGENT, PRETTY SWPF, 31, petite, Ctrl. VT. Interested in intellectual/cultural pursuits and cooking. Fit, but not athletic. ISO SW PM, 30 -40 , NS/ND, emotionally & financially stable, con­ siderate, with sense of direction in life and similar interests for friendship, possible LTR. 2180 ___________________

who balances with me and to share experiences. I enjoy movies, travel, working out and shopping. 2245 ______

COOKING PARTNER WANTED. Ingredents I have: 30 years life experi­ ence, BFA, height, own business and a big smile with dimples. Looking for: big hearted, financially secure, creative man under 35 . 2239 __________________

I’M THE EXCEPTIONAL WOMAN YOU’VE

ADVENTUROUS DPWF, 37. 5’3", slen­

^ „

for kindred spirit who enjoys the quiet & simple pleasures of life, hiking, movies, science fiction, cuddling and is emotionally & financially secure. 2272

SLIM BLONDE, BLUE-EYED MID-LIFEmama w/ children gone, who refuses to grow old, is searching for that special, lovable PW M to share interests such as skiing & travel, who can be serious, too. Must still believe in love. Let’s take a chance! 2 2 7 7 __________________

FUN IS WHAT I LIKE TO HAVE. SWF, 30, loves the outdoors, dogs (I have 2), traveling, swing and looking for SW M who enjoys life. Friends first. 2279

SWF, 44, 5*8". ATTRACTIVE, NO KIDS, atheist, loves dogs, extremely cynical, saIVfhg cOhSb'eHce ttirough aetiVl^t’ : ■ environmentalism, seeking peace/country life with gentle, honest mate. You are probably tall, preferrably no kids, 35 -53 . thinker but work with your hands, not a veggie, principled, extremely liberal, patient. 2280 ________

FAIR MAIDEN SEEKS SHINING KNIGHT1 He’s tall, handsome, financially secure, honest, romantic, chivalrous, sincere. She’s a very attractive, red-headed wonder, loves 4x 4 s, children, garden­ ing, dancing, classic cars, cooking, football, thigh-highs, NASCAR. Sir Lancelot, please reply; Jeff Gordan fens be cautious to try! 2281

SELF-PROCLAIMED -GLAMOUR GIRL" seeks self-proclaimed “Bad Boy.” SWPF, blonde, 30 s, seeks male: “good by day,” over 40 . 2223

always wanted to meet! Classy & sexy, warm & witty, sensitive & beautiful, I love cooking, theatre, kids, animals, kayaking & silk lingerie. ISO very exceptional man, 35 -45 , tall & very handsome, successful & soulful, light­ hearted & fun, romantic & smiling, kind-hearted & affectionate. 2247

SWPF, 38, 5’8", NS, VEGETARIAN, liber­ al thinker, friend of animals. I like British comedy, hiking, canoeing, danc­ ing, art, antiques, museums and being involved in my community. I'm ISO a single male, 3 oish-4 oish, with similar attitudes and interests for friendship or possible LTR. 2243 _________________

HOW DUSTY ARE YOUR DANCING shoes? Let’s kick up some dust together. Be my swing-dance partner. I’m 40 , fit, a little to the left & looking for fun. 2218

ARE YOU READY FOR A LOVING chal­ lenge? Attractive DWF ISO fiscally/physically fit NS, ND caring man, 50 -55 , to share providence, poet­ ry and bliss. Mother of intelligent, delightful n-yr.-old boy. 2219 __________

JACK OF ALL TRADES, MASTER OF SOME wanted by this petite, fit, auburn­ haired beauty-in-search-of-a-beast. Prefer 40-45 , fit, active. 2191 __________

LONG-LEGGED AND LONELY, SWF, 38, looking to make new friends, possibly more. Out going, active and love to laugh. Looking for men who are honest and don’t play games. 2212 ___________

A MEETING OF THE MIND, HEART 8l SOUL with compatible S/DM, NS, 45 60 , is sought by holistic, THr, petite, NS

ANYBODY OUT THERE LOVE JAZZ? Fiercely independent SWPF, 61 , seeks M companion who likes to get out, to hear the great music available in our area. Jazz tops my list of favorites. Other interests are walking, talking, singing, papermaking, movies, theater, friends & family. 2186 ________________

SWF, FULL-FIGURED, SEEKING FRIENDship. Travel, investments, photography, art, museums, jewelry, weekends, books/good writing, busy, financially/ emotionally secure. 2184 ______________

I’M READY FOR A HEALTHY, FUN 81 hon­ est relationship w/ an emotionally sound prof., late 20 s-earty 40s, who’s good-looking, fit & loves nature. I can offer the same & more. I’m 35 . 2188

A BOY, A GIRL, AN OPEN GRAVE... Morticia seeks Gomez for an unwhole­ some relationship. I have a Wednesday. No Pugsleys, Festers or Lurches need apply. 2189 __________________________

Dear Lola, My husband still Sets correspondence prom an ex-sirlpriend, even apter tel tins her th at he prepers not to. She doesn’t send letters,

DANCE WITH ME! SWPF, writer, slim, funny, musical, adventurous, loves jazz, yoga, outdoors. ISO fiscally/ physically fit, funny SW PM, 40S-50S, NS, w/ wellstocked mind, generous heart. 2156

to sendins articles —

LETS MAKE THE ROCKIES CRUMBLE 81

with no return address

Gibralter tumble. SBF seeks submissive SW M &/or crossdresser for intimate journeys which cross peaks of mutual desire & the heights of pleasure. 2150

WORKING WEEKENDS MEANS HAVING the trails to myself mid-week. Restaurants, theatres and roads are quiet, too. We still have time to hike, paddle, bike and blade before we get our winter toys out. DWF, 40 , NS, seeks mid-week playmate, 30 -50 . 2164

instead she has taken

— that represent scmethins prom their p a s t like restaurant reviews op places they used to eat and peatures on priends op his. Is this manipulative, or am I

vegetarian F with poetic expression and natural appeal. 2215 ______________

beins overly sensitive? I

SOULFUL, INTREPID MUSE WHO LIVES

peel she is tryins to

in her body and knows what she means, seeks same in large, wise, sol­ vent adventurer who could sleep on the other side of my dog and not take it personally. 2216 __________________

porce him to think about her despite his request to cease and desist.

M(mm...) SNOWBOARDER, HELP ME! SWF, 20 , slim, attractive, crazy hairdo, ISO you, 19 -30 , knows how to treat a woman, go snowboarding & teach me how to master my board. 217 1 ._______

-Cranky in Colchester Dear Cranky,

DWF, 47, ISO SMALL HOMESTEAD W/ nice land, healthy outdoors man, sheep, dogs, cats. Educated eccentrics welcome, NS/ND. Do you snowshoe, XC-ski, bike, walk, canoe, quilt, garden, cook? 2174

y o u ’re coirect on all counts. Jes, sh e ’s beins manipulative, yes, sh e ’s tryins to porce him to

Winter’s Coming.

think about her despite his request. And yes, y o u ’re beins overly sen ­ sitive. Ip your husband contacts this woman asain, h e ’ll be playins risht into her hands; likewise ip you le ty c u r selp set bent out op

C r e a tiv e B la c k T ie S in g les P a r t y . D e c e m b e r 4th S ee p a g e 2 f o r d e ta ils .

2315

shape over this. Isnore the clippinss. s e t on with your own lipe and have a nice day. .cue,

c Phone blocked from d ia lin g 9 0 0 num bers? Don't want a c h a r g e on jyour phone b ill? R

espo nd

T o P e r s o n a l s U sin g Y

our

C r e d it C a r d !

Call 1-800-710-8727 $l.99/mfn. must be 18+

f jo

la

tefi rattotola c/o 2SS S. Champlain Street, m

november 25, 1998

SEVEN DAYS

page 45


to respond to a personal ad call I - 9OO- 370 ‘ 7127

• # # # mm m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m r n m m m We’re open 24 hours a day! $1.99 a minute, must be 18 or older. STRONG & SILENT, EDUCATED, VERY busy, 6’, active, health club, mountain/ road bikes, skiing, outdoor activities, health-minded, movies, dancing, dinning out. Looking for best friend. 2295

mm Ai&km q wom en NEW TO BURLINGTON. SW M, 34 , 180 lbs., 6’2 ”, NS, social drinker. Enjoys

YOUR BEST FRIEND FOR LIFE. Attractive, honest, sensitive, reliable DWM, 48,

nature, outdoor activities, dancing. Looking for a woman who can show me what this town has to offer. 2328

who likes to work out, ski, dance, ISO smart, sweet, caring, healthy, fun, romantic S/DF, 35 -48 . 2296 ____________

SEEKING INTELLIGENT, SEXY LIFEDANCE partner, love interest. Hispanic, handsome, 50 , fit, creative, musician,

42 YEARS OLD, 5*9", 216 LBS., ENJOYS

pets. Lives in Plattsburgh. Enjoys jazz, cooking, Flynn, art; not interested in sports, country music or smokers. 2329

38 YO TEENAGER. DWM, SMOKER, light drinker, likes all kinds of music— from alternative to Grateful Dead— seeks F • • • V e rsio n of same. Skiing, fishing, out­ doors, music, movies, etc. Let’s do it. 2 3 3 2 ________________________________

HI, I’M AN UPBEAT SINGLE FATHER W/ one daughter. I’m a musician, inventor, hiker, photographer, blah, blah, blah, yadda, yadda, yadda. Let’s chat. 2334

M, 37, HONEST, DIVORCED, OCCASION­ AL smoker & drinker, kids: 2 teenage girls. Self-employed in VT music ind.

?m ________________________ NON-PC, BOSTON-IRISH GENT, 38, loves his kids, slow dances, the Bruins, bad movies, pint of Guinness and a smoke, the Stones, spooning and laughing. How about you? 2 3 4 7 ______

I AM ALIVE! SWM, 36, HEALTHY, FIT 81 clean, s ’s ”, 145 lbs., NS, likes to travel * 8i hopes to meet SF, 26 -40 , NS, who ^ iaojoys life & stays active/healthy. 2348 SM, 42, SOME BRAINS, KINDA C U T E cleans up well— seeks friendship & intimacy in a LTR filled with silly laughter & sweet love. 2352 ________________

SEPARATED WM LOOKING TO BE som e­ one’s special toy to play w/, enjoy life with and to sleep with. I’m in my 40s, good shape, have a job, but needs a place to live 81 be your personal slave to that special person. 2353 __________

VIBRANT, INTELLIGENT WM, 36, health­ care prof, w/ European sensibilities & North American enthusiasm. Very ath­ letic, well-traveled. Loves inc.: music/ dance, get-a-ways to the woods & urban scene. Prefer 26 -36 , slightly cyni­ cal, possessing a good belly laugh. 2284 _________________________________

SINCERE, HONEST, ROMANTIC SWM, 42 , 5 ’9”, brown hair, blue eyes, looking for SWF to share meaningful times. Must be honest and like to travel. Let’s cash in on life together. 2285 ________ _

OPTIMISTIC, CHEERFUL, 43 YRS. YOUNG, educated (sometimes silly) WPM, ISO PF, 30 -43 , happy, employed, objective, physically fit and craving adventure/travel to uncharted destinations. Romance/LTR. 2286 _____________

STIMULATE MY BRAIN. MAKE ME LAUGH. A massage would be nice, too. SWM, 31 , witty, athletic, articulate, seeks humorous, active, attractive WF, 25 -32 . Will reciprocate on massage. Perhaps. 2301 ________________________

LIFFS SIMPLE PLEASURES CAN BE shared with this DWM, 3 2 , 5 ’io ”, 165 lbs., average looks. Honest, hard-workwmmmg outdoorsman. Likes country music, gardening, hunting, running, sunrise, quiet evenings 81 good company. 2288

1963 MODEL: WELL-MAINTAINED PROF. equipped w/ independent suspension, overdrive, ABS (attractive, bright, sensi­ tive), boots (ski 81 hiking), tent, clubs, canoe, and other options. Has garage space for sleek, SWPF with great lines, classic good looks, and desire to see where the road goes from here. 2278

SWM, 26, 6’i", 200 LBS., SEEKS attrac­ tive F or BiF, 18 -45 , for fun and games. Discretion & maturity ensured. 2264

dining out, movies, dancing, day trips, cuddling, quiet times. Looking for F with similar interests for friendship, possible romantic LTR. Holidays are coming! 2323 ________________________

CTRL VT DWM, 44. SLIM, SEEKING equal partner for fun & sharing life’s good and bad times. Optimistic, confi­ dent and adventurous. You be the same. All replies answered. 2270 ______

HANDSOME, TALL WM, 40, SEEKS

THE COMING MONTH & YEAR DO NOT

attractive woman w/ a nice, big bottom 81 pleasant but passionate nature. Likes reading, conversation, passion 81 quiet times, too. Age, race unimportant. No obese, please. 2297 __________

exist. Ours only is the present’s tiny point. Romantic, NS, ND, 39 , hand­ some, blue eyes, 6’, ISO pretty, sexy, smart, fun woman to share. 2271 ______

WHO’S OUT THERE?! Attractive, fit SWPM, 24 , seeks attractive, fit, intelli­ gent female for sweaty activities. Looking for someone a little different and is comfortable w/ her body. 2302

WARM-HEARTED, INTELLECTUAL out­ doorsman, 42 , DWPM w/ children, seeking serious, sensible, petite, pretty partner for hiking, back-country skiing & other adventures. Ctrl. VT. 2311 _____

SWM, 22, 170 LBS. LOOKING FOR LTR. ISO attractive F who likes to cheat. I’m a clean-cut car guy. I make my woman happy. 2319 __________________________

INTELIGENT, AFFECTIONATE, GOODlooking, liberal, NS, passionate music lover. Enjoy outdoors, cooking, conver­ sation. Young 46 , fit, not athletic. Seek smart, attractive, affectionate F in northeastern VT. I’m near St. J. 2317

M, 50S, SEEKING NS F VEGETARIAN swinger...big band, that is. Some notes are blue; the mall buildings are, too. Read the clue, and I will meet you. 2321 ___________ _____________________

28 YO, SELF-EMPLOYED CONST, worker, excellent cond. physically/mentally/spiritually. ISO a sexy lady who knows how to make a man feel like a man. 2250 SEMI-SERIOUS DWPM, 40S, LOVER OF museums, mtd. trails, carriage rides & lazy kisses. Attractive, balanced assort­ ment of virtues 81 vices. Seek confident lady open to life’s possibilities. 2251

MY FRIEND-LOVER FANTASY: Radiant, zestful, soulful, healthful, fit 81 athletic playmate. Intelligent, articulate 81 imag­ inative learner. Empathetic, giving, sen­ sual, loving, unguarded, centered, pow­ erful & independent yearner. Ready for me. 35 +. 2252 ________________________ LIFE IS SHORT. A LITTLE BIT SHY, divorced for three years, and ready to start exploring new adventures. I enjoy many outdoor activities, dining out or in, and good conversation. 2259 ______

SMART, HEP, FUNNY, CUTE, GEMINI, „ native of NYC, been at school in VT for fodr years now. Seek funny, cool girl who likes fun and adventure. 2268

TALL ATHLETIC, FIT, ATTRACTIVE, affec­ tionate, progressive, well-educated, divorced, prof, single dad, 5 1 , who likes conversation, ethnic food, films, tennis, hiking, skiing. ISO intelligent, active woman for friendship/LTR. 2276

RECEPTIVE, EBULLIENT, LUMINOUS, earthy, resonant, athletic SWM, 37 , 5 ’n ”, 185 lbs. NS vegetarian ISO multi­

p & id jo n a l •9 M / n m p n seeking ccoAklno m pn” women mem

Petite, funny. Have money. Handsome man could make my day. Adventurous, loves to play. Must be neat, must be clean. Don’t smoke or drink, and don’t be mean. Love to cuddle, love to touch. Hope I’m not asking too much.

2350 Personal of the ^ Week wins a ticket j f k to the Singles S Winter Formal.

ry, no longer slaying dragons. Living alone in his castle. Would like to serve his queen, 35 -42 , beautiful inside/outside. Share love, laughter 8. fun. 2225

CONNECTION HAPPENS. I’m 32 , tall, attractive, high IQ, prof., creative, gen­ uine, relationship-oriented. If you’re 25 32 , believe key to happiness is rela­ tionship, mutuality, nurturing, respect, sharing, call. Otherwise, don’t. 2226 SINGLE DAD, 52, SEEKS YOUNGER female for dating, to LTR. Single parent okay. No head games. Honesty a must. Rutland/Manchester area. 2233 ________

control either way. Want to share life’s adventures? Call, I don’t bite. 2248

SCM, 36, SEEKS SCF FOR FRIENDSHIP.

ADVENTUROUS, FIT, OUTDOORSY DWM, 4oish, enjoys biking, hiking, canoeing,

Must be kind, spiritual and open-minded. Call and we’ll chat. 2 2 3 7 _________

XC, etc. ISO attractive, fit, petite F w/ similar interests to enjoy outdoors, nature 81 hopefully more. 2260

DWM, 36, GOOD-LOOKING, 5 ’? • 165 lbs., realistic, honest, down-to-earth, looking for the One— open-minded, sane, uninhibited, honest, F. Age, race unimportant. Friends, LTR. Are you there? 2220

T h e M -o s t l y U n f a b u l o u s S o c i a l L i f e o f E t h a n *R,e turn To aNceSTral Howe <£Leep iN WeirA Be<R.

fouteioor'Gcar used • closeout • new 19 1 Bank S t , Burlington 860-0190

NS, self-employed, four-season outdoor athletes. Literate, articulate. Comfort­ able in big cities or backwoods. World travelers, one cynical, one very sin­ cere— both irreverent. Seeking two active, bright women for friendship, adventure, snowball fights. 2177 _______

UNBEARABLE LIGHTNESS OF BEING. SWPM, 36 , 5 ’n ”, 185 lbs., tall, dark, handsome, likes exercise, outdoors, adventure. Recently separated from LTR, no kids. ISO attractive SPF, 36 +/-, shares the above & wants to swing-, slow-dance away cares together. She believes life’s best things are mostly free. 2193 _______________ __________ _

COUNT DRACULA SEEKS MINA TO BITE into love. SWPM, 42 , blue-eyed, active

I KNOW THAT what I’m doing now isn’t living. Fit DWM, 45 , ISO fit partner. No

W inner also receives a gift certificate for a FREE D a y H iker’s G uid e to VT from

TWO REGULAR GUYS, SWM. 36 81 37,

SOULFUL SYNERGY. SWPM, 54. WHAT’S

folksy, literate. No kids, ex, or baggage. ISO harmonious F forever. 2242

1110 Shelburne Rd., So. Burlington 651-8774

sports, music, quiet evenings, ISO SWF who’s dominant, kinky, funny, disease free, who wears sexy stockings, leather, garterbelts, maid uniforms, for LTR. Photo/letter. 2221 _________ ___________

YOU: YOUNGER, INTELLIGENT, NS w/

SWPM, 34, MUSICIAN, HIKER, RURAL

Ribs • Rotlsserle Chicken & More! 4 p.m. — 10 p.m.

SWM, 21, ATTRACTIVE, WITTY, LIKES

DWM, NS, MID-40S, LOVES LIFE’S pas­ sions. I’m youthful, creative, fun, gen­ tle, fit, adventuresome. Enjoy dancing, travel, hiking, kayaking, XC skiing, working out, gardening, art, antiques, food/wine. Have two part-time, live-in, wonderful children. ISO fit, NS, sensual lady, 33 -48 ish, to share similar inter­ ests. Value humor, smiles, laughs, ten­ der touch, some spontaneity for quality friendship and/or LTR. 2246 _________ important? Friends, the country life, thoughts, values, passions, humor. ISO a kind woman who walks lightly on the sands of time. 2241 __________________

s

Personal of the Week wins dinner for two at

KIDS GROWN, ON MY OWN.

faceted, musical, spontaneous, embod­ ied woman for mundane activities 81 bubble baths. 2224 ___________________

HANDSOME KNIGHT, of honor 81 chival­

ih

HEY, WAKE UP! INSTEAD OF READING these ads and doing nothing because you assume that there are only strange, maladjusted guys advertising, try calling me. I hate smoky bars, and I love to play outside. I’m athletic, welleducated, sane. SWM, 37 , NS, vegetarian, loveable. 2178 ____________________

eclectic taste, reliable fire starter, enjoy antiquing. Me: above + shy, over­ worked supervisor, student, sports, avid reader 81 junk collector, intense to laid-back, some surprises. 2198 _______

THE FROST IS ON THE PUMPKIN FOR

NICE GUYS FINISHING LAST HAS COME

skinhead, recently singled, ISO “Betty” to skank with. Talking is good, too. I’m 2 7 , NS, veggie with ink. Lydia Lunch, Cock Sparrer, Specials. Ctrl. VT, but do drive to Burlington. 2187

to an end. We’re taking over. Looking for a great lady to help this SW M, 25 , start the revolution. Let’s start a great cause. 2199__________________________

night creature wants directions straight to the SWF soul mate’s heart. Remember, true love never dies. 2210

GOLDILOCKS DESIRED FOR STORYBOOK life w/ attractive, successful, SW PM, 50 , NS, teddy bear. Great book, but needs attractive, slim, intelligent, avid skier, biker, ballroom dancer, traveler to make best-seller. 2204 ________________

48. PROFESSIONAL 6’i" . FIT, reason­ ably sane, equitably pragmatic with a mild streak of silliness. Seeking attrac­ tive, slender lady to share our laughter and, if simpatico, commitment. Call or write. 2208

this mid-life teacher/writer. Lettuce meet in the garden & dig some carrots & turnip up. It beets me why not! 2170

"BOB" SEEKS “CONNIE." OLD PUNK/

a m n Aookinq w om m SMART, CREATIVE, PASSIONATE, HIPPIE femme looking for fun, active butch to laugh, bike, ski, travel, eat healthy, stay sober, talk deep and touch a lot. Burl, area, 4Q-55- 2176 ________________

PRETTY, HONEST, EDUCATED SWF WHO loves life, philosophy, writing, cooking, skiing seeks kindred spirit for poten­ tially LTR. Burl, area only. 2160

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to respond to j a personal ad^ call jt -Q 0 0 - 3 7 0 - 7 i 2 7 We’re open 24 hours a day! $1.99 a minute, must be 18 or older. WORKING-CLASS MEN: GWM, 39 , 195 lbs., 5 ’8”, br./bl. seeking G/BiWM mili­ tary, law enforcement, construction, trucker, business man, UPS or other uniformed profession for discreet dates, 18 -45 . 2313 ____________________

w i A o s k in q m a n

NEW TO PERSONALS, 30s, s ’ i o " , 150 lbs., kind-hearted romantic. Shy, but ready to be set loose. Masculine, musi­ cian, loves outdoors, dance music. Eager to make new friends. 2330 ______

MEN: HESITANCY IS NOWHERE IN THIS personal, only true thoughts and feel­ ings for you... If this is unclear, don’t let it be; I’m all ears! 2222 ____________

GWM, 20, ISO ANOTHER GUY WHO wears the same outfit more than two days in a row, can humor me with chicken anecdotes, and maybe, just maybe, will be himself. 2308 __________

GWM, 24, MASCULINE, LOVES HUNTING and outdoor activities, as well as inti­ macy, seeks straight-acting, masculine, fit man, 20 -35 , with similar interests. Hoping for a great friendship, possible LTR. 2238 ____________________________

BLUE EYES. GWM, 39, HANDSOME, young-looking, seeking G/BiWM for dis­ creet fun evenings. Inexperienced wel­ come, long hair a +, 18 -48 , no fats or ferns. 2312 ___________________________

GM, 38. S'7n. 160 LBS., MUSCULAR, hazel, PA, military cut, br./gr., glasses, attractive, open mind, heavy libido. ISO relationship-oriented man, who is at least 50 % top, self-supporting and not afraid to take charge. OK if not out, but you should be comfortable. 2244

GWM, 30S, 6’, 170 LBS., ATTRACTIVE, in shape, ISO intelligent, attractive, in­ shape guys, 25 -35 , for friendships and LTRs. Like to workout, hike, bike, trav­ el, socialize. Burlington/Lake Champlain region. 2316 __________________________

DAYTIME FUN/STRESS RELEASE. BIWM will provide during casual encounters, no strings attached, to: clean, discreet, straight-acting Bi males. Experimenters, beginners welcome. 2235

I WANT YOU!! GWM seeks international M s in uniform. I’m a professional. Especially interested in B/A/H. Must be discreet. Deserve to have a sensational time. 2314

GWM, 41, ISO PHYSICALLY challenged G/BiPM, 25 -45 , not giving up, who enjoys life, for friendship, possible LTR. Intellectual stimulation just as impor­ tant as physical in a relationship. 2201

To respond to Letters Only ads: Seal your response in an envelope, write box # on the outside and place in another envelope with $5 for each response. Address to: PERSON TO PERSON c/o SEVEN DAYS. P.0. Box 1164 , Burlington, VT 05402

SWF, 32, BLOND, BRIGHT, BEAUTIFUL, seeks handsome counterpart, 28 -42 . Athletic, fit, articulate, passionate, seeks same with sense of humor, love of play, need for adventure. If you’re a knight in modern armor, I’m your fair maiden. Picture helps. Box 401________

GWM SEEKING THIN, A/B/HM, 18-25. for new experiences. Enjoy videos, mas­ sages and quiet times. Discretion expected and assured. 2168

WCU (M. 35 & F, 35), ATTRACTIVE, seeks BiF for discreet fun & pleasure. Females only, please. Dinner, movies, dancing, cuddling. 2342 ______________ HAPPILY MaWM, AMATEUR MASSEUSE, sensitive, sweet, listener, discreet, seeks only to please. ISO Ma/SF, any age/ace to give pleasure to. No relationships, just 2 ships passing. 2343 WM, 40, CLEAN, FIT, -BIG”, BORED. Looking to add spice. Seeking S/Ma/BiF or CU for discreet, sensual pleasure. If you’re reading this, you’re ready! 2331

SWM, 44, FAST-PACED, OVER ACHIEV­ ER, 150 lbs., 5 ’8 ”, very fit, business owner, tight smoker, loves cooking, dancing, shopping & my dog. ISO F, fit 81 friendly. Ready-made family nice. Box 394

COLLEGE WM, 20, LOOKING FOR CUs, Fs and Ms to explore new territories and have discreet fun with. I am young and it's time to live a little bit! 2299 WCU, 50, ISO FCOMPANION to join us in bicycling, conversation, dining, the­ ater (not opera), antiquing 81 other interests. Weekend trips. Any race, NS, ND, 42 -60, social drinker OK, 2282 R O M THE TOP OF THE HOSE TO THE tip of the toes! Gentleman, 40s, ama­ teur photographer, seeks heavenly female soles. Let me play “Elmer Batters” & lens your exotic feet. 2269 AMATEUR M STRIPPER, BLOND, TAN & fit, ISO individuals/parties for midweek matinee exhibitionism. Clean, safe, fun. 2275 __________________________________ M, 6’, 200 LBS., 25, SCORPIO SEEKS F or BiF, 18 -45 , for fun and games. Discreet sex, sex, sex. No pigs. 2240 CREATIVE ROLE PLAY. ELEGANT, exclu­ sive 81 new. 2236

LITTLE FEAT CONCERT-GREG R O M Essex, I met 8t danced w/ you. I had a great time. Would like to see you again. Sarah. 2333 ____________________ YOU WORK AT TRADE W IN D S - cute, petite, college-age brunette w/ slightly curly hair. Seen you working, wanteed to talk to you, but can’t work up the guts. 2349 ____________________________ RACQUETS EDGE POOL, 11/17- You were working (physical therapist?). I was the dark-haired man swimming. Your dark, flashing eyes looked as interested as I was. Would like to take you to lunch if you ‘d like to look further. 2351 ________________ ____________ IRA ALLEN, FLOOD VICTIM BENEFIT con­ cert. We chatted about the show, the prizes, and you told me you made ceramic buttons. You were whisked away before I could learn more. 2355 10/3 1 : WE MET, WE DANCED. Lenora

(Lenny), you said you wanted to know me personally, but vanished like Cinderella. Call me, have coffee, con­ versation? Elvira. 2298

WM LOOKING TO EXPLORE ADULT urges witha fun F or CU. Age/looks not as important as discretion/honasty. 2345 -•

TALL, HANDSOME ARTIST, POET, Taoist monk and weekend father, 49, seeking companionship w/ beautiful woman, any age, race or color, with a curious mind, open heart, soft style and imagination. Box 376______________________

43. ATTRACTIVE, TALI, NS, PENT-UP affection for shy, intuitive, mysterious witch. We will be close, caring, private, enduring. Purring like cats. Singing like birds. Candle quiet. Where are you? Box 400_____________________________

INDEPENDENT DF, 65, WOULD LIKE TO meet sophisticated friend/companion, 65 +, to share ideas and participate in the cultural life of Burlington. Box 399

SUBMISSIVE BIWM, 22, ISO A LOVING, but strict mistress to pleasure and serve in the Burlington area. Age/race unimportant. 2340 ____________________

Box 385_____________________

Assddnq wom m

GREAT CAKE NEEDS ICING. SWPF, 36 , bright, warm, attractive, educated, loves the outdoors, has house and crit­ ters, seeks playmate/soulmate/boy-toy to share food, talk, wine, romps... house, critters? Wrije. Box 396________

GWM, BOTTOM BEAR, SMOKER, 3 RD shifter looking for LTR or just some fun w/ a hot top. I’m 6 ’2 ”, 270 lbs., #3 buzzed brown hair, blue eyes, pierced, tattooed and hairy. 2185 _______

SUNLIGHT FILLS A CABIN BY A moun­ tain stream. Bearded craftsman, 35 , NS, NA, ND, NTV, flexible schedule. Seek F to ski hard, play fair and have fun. Box 395_______ __________________

KINDNESS, LAUGHTER. ROMANCE? Attractive, plus-sized SWF artist, 39 , seeking special guy, 30 -45 , to create awesome atmosphere of trust, affec­ tion, fun and friendship/LTR. We love the outdoors, music, food and movies. Humor required. We can really create magic! Ctrl. VT/Burl. area. Box 377

WHERE ARE YOU? Intelligent, attractive SWF, young- 30s, seeks similar man w/ sense of humor about life. Join me run­ ning, hiking, skiing, laughing, dining, traveling and/or dancing! Don’t be shy! Box 392 " — y ________________

ACTIVE CU, 47-52, SEEKS F OR OTHER CU for sensual encounters. This safe, discreet, Montpelier area CU looks forward to your response. 2346 __________

I’M LOOKING FOR A NEW BEST FRIEND. Criteria: SW PM, 35 -40 , lover of moun­ tains, snowshoes, labrador retrievers, family, coffee 81 good books. Must have a warm, generous heart. Please write. ATTRACTIVE WARM, PETITE, NS/ND, red-haired DWPF who enjoys travel, classical music, theater, exercise, learn­ ing experiences. ISO S/DWPM, fit, NS/ND, 50 -65 , similar interests for hon­ est communication, possible LTR. Box 388____________________ _____________

AssJdnq m m

BIWM ISO THIN Gj/BIM, 25-40; FIRSTtime encounter. Walks, read, films, laugh, massage & play. NS, ND 81 open mind necessary. Discretion please. 2213

RETIRED DPM ISO GRAY-HAIRED LADY, 55 -65 , who’s warm, open, sharing 81 fit, who, like me, reads broadly, enjoys continuing to learn, loves classical music, has sense of the ridiculous & enjoys country/city 8t travel. Box 380 SHELL- WALLY CLEAVER MEETS JOHN Travolta. Stuffing: Kurt (Vonnegut), Carson (Rachel), Kramer (Cosmo). Genuine, nutty, very fit, conversant, deceptively clean-cut quasi-vegan, 26 , loves writing silly songs, hiking, biking, reading and cooking; seeks smart, witty, confident, fit Burl, girt, 21 -28 , for friendship first. Box 381_______________ DWM, 46, 5’6", 41 LBS., RT AND UKES to run, bike and hike, Buddhist, rea­ sonably successful professional, likes art— Monet 81 Rembrandt— classical music and baseball. I lead a quiet, sim­ ple lifestyle. Seeking an intelligent, cul­ tured, emotionally secure F for a gentle relationship. Please write first. Box 378

100 m m GWF, MATURE, LOVES TO DANCE, romantic walks in the moonlight, can­ dlelight dinners. Looking for GF, NS, age & looks unimportant. Clean & neat a must. LTR w/ right person. Take a chance. Box 393

DIRTY BOY. GWM, 36, SEEKS TRAINING, discipline & more. Box 402____________ 48, 5’io", 150 LBS., LOOKING FOR M companion & friend. Enjoy cooking, quiet times, massage, rides 81 walks in the country. Rutland area. Box 397 MIDDLE-AGED, CLEAN BiWM WOULD like to meet WM, 18 -24 , for very plea­ surable sexual experiences discreetly. Pref. thin 8i clean. Box 398____________ EARTH LOVER SEEKS LIFE/TRAVEL PA L Kayak, swim, surf, hike, camp (cheaply) New Zealand,‘India, Ctrl. America? You pick. 49 , 6’, 160 lbs., gardener, home­ steader, ecobuilder (scrounged materi­ als), off-grid Luddite, TV-free, sports playing, massage, political activist, attractive, healthy top, creative, sensi­ tive, considerate. Box 391

GWM SEEKS TO MEET OTHER GM FOR friendship 81 possibly more. I am 37 , blue eyes, brow hair, very healthy, in great shape. I enjoy cooking, dining out, going for long rides in the country. If you’re out there, please drop me a line. Box 389_________________________ GWM, 5’u ”, 195 LBS., LOOKING FOR relationship. Can travel. Any race or color. Box 384________________________ UVM QUEER, GWM, 19, 6’2”, 165 LBS., brown/hazel, student, activist, revolu­ tionary. Cute and sincere, somewhat shy, loves foreign/vintage films and theater. Seeking GWM, 18 -25 , who’s comfortable with themselves. Box 382 ONE-MAN GUY, 36, 6’, 190 LBS., GOODlooking, fit, intelligent, has lots to offer. Looking for that special male to build a quality relationship with. Handsome loners encouraged to reply. Box 379

SBM, SUBMISSIVE, SEEKS IMMEDIATE written contact with box 2150 . Please respond. Urgent. Box 386 _________ CU (30s & 40s) SEEKS TALL BIM, 3040 , for sensual adventures. Must be clean 81 very discreet. Light drink 81 smoke OK. Well-built a +. Possible LTR. We’re waiting. Box 387

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