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The late Jake Burton Carpenter opened his first workshop in Londonderry in 1977. Jake's widow, Donna Carpenter, is the current owner of Burton Snowboards, and says the marker signifies how the town and southern Vermont made the company what it is today.
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The last round of the grants totaled nearly $2 million, out of the overall fund of nearly $9 million, and went to 85 organizations in the state.
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Neagley discusses her childhood in Ascutney and her role in the founding of Shelburne Farms.
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Eve Meehan, who performs as tip/toe, recently released a new album titled Hot Girls Don't Trust the Government.
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Emmy Award-winning actor and Norwich resident Gordon Clapp shares details from his life and his one-man show about poet Robert Frost being produced in Middlebury this weekend.
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Host Mikaela Lefrak talks with Eric Ford, the executive producer and host of ¿ªÔÆÌåÓý's Made Here.
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Rick Winston, founder and former owner and operator of the Savoy Theater in Montpelier, discusses his new memoir, Save Me A Seat: A Life with Movies.
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The Middlebury New Filmmakers Festival is underway, showcasing more than 125 films. One of them was shot almost entirely in Bristol, Vermont � though it spans three generations and over 6,000 miles. Vermont filmmaker Sierra Urich’s debut documentary feature is called "Joonam."
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Vermont is home to a small but strong network of bars and arcades where you can play pinball games like Godzilla, Baywatch and the Big Lebowski.
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Kitty Kitty, a beloved cat who lived Last Stop Sports Bar in Winooski for more than a dozen years, died this month. She was 16 or 17, according to Shayla Ruland, the bar's owner.