Sep 23-29, 2020

Sep 23-29, 2020 / Vol. 25 / No. 52
Black Lives Matter Protesters Occupied a Park, Captivated a City — and Got Some of What They Wanted; New Childcare Hubs Offer Support on Remote-Learning Days; Parents, Teachers and Staff Share Stories of First Week Back at School; Vermont Farmers Ride Wave of Demand for Local Meat

Cover Story

The Magnificent 7: Must See, Must Do, September 24 to 30

1. Through Her Eyes “LUNAFEST is not just a traveling film festival,” reads lunafest.org, “it’s a force for change.” To that end, this cinematic celebration brings fresh ideas to the big screen via short movies made by, for and about women. On Wednesday, September 30, Vermonters can catch films such as “Lady Parts,” about an…

Hot Air? Gov. Phil Scott’s Critics Question His Climate Record

Gov. Phil Scott has earned praise for following the guidance of public health experts as he leads Vermont’s response to the coronavirus pandemic. Nearly every opportunity he gets, he notes his reliance on data and science. But when it comes to the peril posed by a rapidly warming planet, environmental advocates argue, Scott has failed…

Pons, ‘Intellect’

(Self-released, digital) Pons are pure anarchy. The young trio of Sam Cameron, Jack Parker and newish member Sebastien Carnot, all juniors at the University of Vermont, creates music that truly resists, in many senses of the word. It has no need for order. It thinks order sucks. Furthermore, the group and its manic tunes consistently…

Letters to the Editor (9/23/20)

Happy Transplants I read with delight “The New Vermonters” [September 9]. My husband, Paul, and I moved to Vermont in 2013 after many years as residents of Massachusetts. We fell in love with Vermont after one of our kids attended and graduated from the University of Vermont and stayed in Vermont. We had been spending…

Free Will Astrology (9/23/20)

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Seventy-nine-year-old Libran poet Robert Pinsky has had a triumphant life. He has published 19 books, including his own poems and essays, as well as translations of Italian and Polish poetry. For four years he served as the United States poet laureate. To what factors does he attribute his success? Here’s one:…

Full Circle Microbes Converts Hemp Waste Into High-Yield Fertilizer

September marks the start of hemp harvest season in New England, but this year Vermont’s landscape has far fewer skunky-smelling fields. Many growers passed on planting the crop in the spring due to a combination of factors, including an oversupply of hemp from 2019, record low wholesale prices earlier this year, higher state registration fees…

Palindrome Pro Mark Saltveit Moves to Vermont

After 2,000 years on the linguistic sidelines, palindromes could be making their move into mainstream culture. Huh? A palindrome is a word, phrase, sentence or number that reads the same forward and backward. A familiar example is “Madam, I’m Adam.” Fast-forward a few thousand years, and palindromes have moved from fig leaf to big screen. A…

Childcare Hubs Offer Structure, Support on Remote-Learning Days

By mid-September, camp is usually a distant memory for kids. But last week at Common Ground Center in Starksboro, school-age children played in Lewis Creek with summertime abandon, despite the unmistakable chill in the air. A young girl, wearing rainbow-hued sneakers and a Dr. Seuss-themed mask, lugged a flat rock from the water to the…

Big Heavy World’s Jim Lockridge on the Org’s Recent Award Nomination

For nearly 25 years, Burlington music nonprofit Big Heavy World has endeavored to strengthen the ties that bind Vermont’s music community together. It’s hosted countless shows in teen centers, public parks, and even the basement of founder and executive director Jim Lockridge. It’s provided musicians with practical resources, from industry connections and advice to a…


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