Commencement Parking Map and Quick

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Commencement Parking Map and Quick TICKET INFORMATION AND INDOOR VIEWING LIVE WEBCAST AND DVDS Please connect with your degree candidate for A live webcast of the main ceremony and all tickets. Ceremonies requiring tickets are listed college school ceremonies will be available on the below in bold. For guests without tickets, many web at www.uvm.edu/commencement. DVDs of these ceremonies can be viewed on large- of each ceremony may be ordered from the screen display at an alternate location (see University Bookstore. below). In addition, all ceremonies will be live streamed and a link to these broadcasts will be ADA ACCOMMODATIONS available from the Commencement homepage: All 218th commencement ceremonies on www.uvm.edu/commencement Saturday, May 18 and Sunday, May 19, are fully University Commencement Main Ceremony: accessible and include use of live captioning Indoor severe weather venue only: (CART: Communication Access Realtime Davis Center Translation). ASL interpreters will be provided TH College of Arts and Sciences Ceremony: at most ceremonies. Seating is on a first come, Indoor severe weather venue only: first served basis. There is no designated “special Davis Center seating” or “disabled seating.” Please consider Grossman School of Business Ceremony: your mobility needs for the day. Ceremonies 218 No alternative viewing location and receptions are generally a short walk or College of Engineering and Mathematical shuttle bus ride apart. UVM will have a limited Sciences Ceremony: number of wheelchairs available to transport No alternative viewing location individuals at each ceremony venue between The Robert Larner, M.D. College of Medicine the venue’s main entrance and their seat Commencement Ceremony: (please note, guests will not be able to remain Billings-Ira Allen Lecture Hall in the transport wheelchair as UVM is unable to provide a wheelchair for all-day use). At Quick Reference Guide the end of the ceremony, please locate an usher (wearing a yellow vest) to return with a SATURDAY, MAY 21 AND SUNDAY MAY 22, 2017 wheelchair for assistance. SATURDAY, MAY 18 AND SUNDAY MAY 19, 2019 COMMENCEMENT INFORMATION Recorded Commencement Information 800-903-6601 or 802-656-3309 Online www.uvm.edu/commencement Specific Questions 802-656-3272 or [email protected] Questions Commencement Week 802-656-3131 Monday-Friday, May 13-17 Friday, May 17 Saturday, May 18 Sunday, May 19 8 am-4:30 pm 4:30 am–9 pm 8:30 am-9 pm 6 am–4:30 pm COLLEGE AND SCHOOL CONTACTS College of Agriculture and Life Sciences 802-656-2980 [email protected] College of Arts and Sciences 802-656-3344 [email protected] Grossman School of Business 802-656-3151 [email protected] College of Education and Social Services 802-656-3468 [email protected] College of Engineering and Mathematical Sciences 802-656-3392 [email protected] The UniversityUniversity of of Vermont Vermont Rubenstein School of Environment and StateState Agricultural Agricultural College College and Natural Resources 802-656-3003 [email protected] Graduate College 802-656-3160 [email protected] Honors College 802-656-9100 [email protected] The Robert Larner, M.D. College of Medicine 802-656-0733 [email protected] College of Nursing and Health Sciences 802-656-2216 [email protected] UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE 800-331-7305 or 802-656-3290 uvmbookstore.uvm.edu University Bookstore Saturday, May 18, 10 am–5 pm Sunday, May 19, 7 am–4 pm Bookstore Kiosk Sunday, May 19, University Green, 7 am–2 pm and Patrick Gym Lobby, Athletic Complex, 11 am-4 pm Severe weather venue: Multipurpose Facility, Athletic Complex, 7am–4pm SEVERE WEATHER INDOOR VENUE College of Nursing and Health Rubenstein School of Environment Saturday, May 18 To be determined by 1 pm, Saturday, May 18 Sciences CEREMONY: 8:20 am, Multipurpose Facility, Athletic and Natural Resources Graduate College Complex CEREMONY: 12 noon, Gutterson Fieldhouse, Athletic CEREMONY: 3:30 pm, Gutterson Fieldhouse Complex Commencement Ceremony TICKETS: Required for indoor venue, see “Ticket PARKING: Lot E (Harris-Milllis and MAT Parking Information” for alternate viewing site PARKING: Lot D (Catamount East Lot), Shuttle Lots) CEREMONY: 12:30 pm, Multipurpose Facility, Athletic Service available Complex DOORS OPEN: 7 am DOORS OPEN: 2:30 pm LINE-UP: 7:45 am DOORS OPEN: 11 am PARKING: Lot A (Gutterson Lot and Garage) LINE-UP: 2:45 pm, Gardner-Collins Indoor Track DOORS OPEN: 11 am Students: Gardner-Collins Indoor Track LINE-UP: 11:15 am, Gardner-Collins Indoor Track, SPEAKER: Kesha Ram ’08; Harvard Kennedy School Faculty: Athletic Performance Center Athletic Complex LINE-UP: 11:30 am of Government (MPA’18); former Vermont State DIPLOMAS: Awarded at ceremony Students: Patrick Gymnasium Representative Faculty: Athletic Performance Center The Robert Larner, M.D. RECEPTION: 1:30 pm, Grand Maple Ballroom, Davis DIPLOMAS: Awarded at ceremony SPEAKER: Leo M. Lambert, G’78, President Emeritus, College of Medicine Center Elon University RECEPTION: Precedes ceremony, 1:00 pm, Central Commencement Ceremony Campus Dining Hall DIPLOMAS: Students hooded, and degrees conferred CEREMONY: 3 pm, Ira Allen Chapel College of Arts and Sciences and awarded at ceremony PARKING: Lot C (Given Lot) CEREMONY: 12:30 pm, University Green RECEPTION: 2:30 pm, Patrick Gymnasium College of Engineering and DOORS OPEN: 2 pm PARKING: Lots B and C (Jeffords and Given Lots) Honors College Scholars LINE-UP: 2 pm LINE-UP: 11:45 am, Andrew Harris Commons/Davis Mathematical Sciences Recognition Ceremony Students: Billings 165 Center Green CEREMONY: 3:30 pm, Flynn Center for the DIPLOMAS: Distributed following the ceremony in Performing Arts, 153 Main Street, Burlington CEREMONY: 3 pm, Ira Allen Chapel Faculty: MLK Room in Billings/Ira Allen the Royall Tyler Theatre PARKING: College Street Garage adjacent to PARKING: Lot B (Jeffords Lot) TICKETS: Required, see “Ticket Information” for alternate viewing site INDOOR VIEWING OF OUTDOOR CEREMONY: the Hilton Burlington Hotel. Shuttle stops are at DOORS OPEN: 2:30 pm SPEAKER: Rebecca Wilcox, M.D., Associate Waterman Memorial Lounge Hilton Burlington Hotel main entrance on Battery LINE-UP: 2:30 pm, Billings 165 Professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine; RECEPTION: There is no reception for this ceremony. Street, Flynn Center, and Allen House (or Patrick SPEAKER: The Honorable Miro L. Weinberger, Mayor Course Director, Nutrition, Metabolism and Gymnasium if Main Ceremony is moved indoors). SEVERE WEATHER INDOOR VENUE of Burlington Gastrointestinal Systems To be determined by 1 pm, Saturday, May 18 DOORS OPEN: 2:30 pm DIPLOMAS: Awarded at each college/school DIPLOMAS: Degrees conferred and awarded at LINE-UP: 2:45 pm, backstage, Flynn Center, ceremony on Sunday, May 19 ceremony CEREMONY: 12:30 pm, Multipurpose Facility, Athletic Complex enter through the alley off lower Church Street OVERFLOW SEATING: Billings–Ira Allen Lecture Hall RECEPTION: 5 pm, Grand Maple Ballroom, Davis DOORS OPEN: 11:45 am TICKETS: Required RECEPTION: 4:30 pm, Grand Maple Ballroom, Center Davis Center. Shuttle bus service available. LINE-UP: 11:45 am, Gardner-Collins Indoor Track SPEAKER: Anthony F. Voellm ’93, Principal COLLEGE AND SCHOOL TICKETS: Required for indoor ceremony Development Manager, Azure Cosmos DB, Micorsoft CEREMONIES AND RECEPTIONS DIPLOMAS: Distributed following the ceremony DIPLOMAS: Awarded at ceremony Sunday, May 19 Grossman School of Business at University Heights South RECEPTION: 5:30 pm, Hilton Burlington Hotel CEREMONY: 12 noon, Flynn Center for the The University Commencement Performing Arts, 153 Main Street, Burlington Main Ceremony PARKING: College Street Garage adjacent to College of Education College of Agriculture and the Hilton Burlington Hotel. Shuttle stops are at CEREMONY: 8:20 am, University Green and Social Services Life Sciences Hilton Burlington Hotel main entrance on Battery PARKING: Please park in your college/school Street, Flynn Center, and Allen House (or Patrick CEREMONY: 2:30 pm, Patrick Gymnasium, CEREMONY: 4 pm, Multipurpose Facility, Athletic designated parking area. Parking assignments Gymnasium if Main Ceremony is moved indoors). Athletic Complex Complex remain the same if the ceremony is moved indoors. DOORS OPEN: 11 am PARKING: Lot A (Gutterson Lot and Garage) PARKING: Lot A (Gutterson Lot and Garage) LINE-UP: 7:45 am, Andrew Harris Commons/Davis LINE-UP: 11:15 am, backstage, Flynn Center, DOORS OPEN: 1:30 pm A dedicated shuttle bus will take guests to the enter through the alley off lower Church Street reception and ceremony. Center Green LINE-UP: 1:45 pm, Athletic Performance Center, SPEAKER: Darren Walker, President, Ford Foundation TICKETS: Required Athletic Complex DOORS OPEN: 3 pm SPEAKER: Enerino “Rino” Caruccio ’84, Vice DIPLOMAS: Degrees conferred (diplomas awarded DIPLOMAS: Awarded at ceremony LINE-UP: 3:30 pm, Gardner-Collins Indoor Track, President Financial Analysis Devices, Amazon at college and school ceremonies) Athletic Complex Devices RECEPTION: Precedes ceremony, 11:30 am, Harris- DIPLOMAS: Awarded at ceremony INDOOR VIEWING OF OUTDOOR CEREMONY: DIPLOMAS: Awarded at ceremony Millis Dining Hall Waterman Memorial Lounge RECEPTION: Precedes ceremony, 2 pm, Redstone RECEPTION: 2 pm, Hilton Burlington Hotel Dining (formerly Simpson Hall) Faculty and students should arrive at Academic Procession line-up locations in regalia (cap and gown). LIVE WEBCAST: www.uvm.edu/commencement SEVERE WEATHER INFO: www.uvm.edu or (802) 656-3309, toll free (800) 903-6601 Commencement Parking bus stop) or Patrick Gym (E4, only if the Main Ceremony also be available in the lobby of Gutterson Fieldhouse FLOWER SALES Please respect our neighbors. Parking on area residential is moved indoors due to severe weather). from 10:30 am–5:30 pm. Water stations are located SATURDAY, MAY 18 in the main lobby of Patrick Gymnasium and Gutterson streets is by city-issued permit only. Violators will be Guest Information Flower bouquets will be available for purchase at the subject to City of Burlington policy of ticketing and towing Field House.
Recommended publications
  • Static Campus Map (Green Map PDF)
    89 Colchester Business Park Miller Research & Educational Center Bio-Research Complex Forestry Research Cmplx To Catamount East Parking (Spear St, South Burlington) (Spear St, Burlington) (Spear St, South Burlington) TO SOUTH Lot - UVM Medical Center Four Seasons PARK DR Parking Only (Non-UVM) Main Loop (Nature Path) Bioresearch SPEAR ST Lab 89 Maternity Youngstock Barn Greenhouses To Fort Ehtan Allen & Nutrition Facility Research 659 Spear Colchester Business Park Lapoint Field House CREAM/Equine Dry2 Cow (See Inserts) Sawdust Bldg Facility Entomology Shed Storage 657 Spear Research 8528 Lab 663 Spear HVAC & Elec Centennial Field Shed Hardacre Fitzsimmons Hay & Trailer Shop Complex Equine Centennial Woods Arena Classroom Commodities Center Livestock CFC Storage Baseball Natural Area Holding Research 665 Spear 8527 Vermont 89 Bldg Stands Milking Barn Constructed Department (CREAM) Parlor Wetlands Science Lab of Health Visitor Field & Cream Shed House Ticket/storage Barn North Head House Farm House 280 East Environmental Garage Colchester Ave SPEAR ST Safety Research Facility Shed Facility Library Research Centennial Court Annex UNIVERSITY RD Apartments 282 East Ave CHAMP (Privately Owned) Field House Grounds Rescue Bldgs 284 East Facility Ave CATAMOUNT DR CATAMOUNT Centennial 258 EAST AVE Jughandle Cottages 254 Campus EAST TERRACE 252 256 Jughandle To Miller Research & Educational Ctr, BILODEAU CT BILODEAU Bio-Research Cmplx, Forestry Research Cmplx, CASE PKWY CASE EAST AVE and Horticultural Research Cmplx. (See Inserts) Mcauley RD UNIVERSITY Hall COLCHESTER AVE COLCHESTER CARRIGAN DR 2 SPEAR ST Mercy Hall UVM Med Ctr St Joseph's Mccann Trinity Parking Gar Villa Boiler Hunt Central BEAUMONT AVE House RD PFG Plant Gutterson RD DAVIS Moulton-Winder Frank H.
    [Show full text]
  • The View | from the University of Vermont
    The View | From the University of Vermont July 17, 2008 Text Size: Sm | Med | Lg Model Earth An Enriching Experience The streets of Southeast Washington, D.C., where Sept. 4 and 5. 8 a.m. to Darrion Willis grew up, 5 p.m. Board of aren’t unlike the ones Trustees Meetings. Reggie Carter Davis Center Fourth experienced as a kid in Floor. Information, Baltimore. The crime schedule. rates are high, poverty is an unfortunate reality for many residents and the Sept. 6. 9 a.m. Historic chances of attending Tour of UVM. college are slim. Willis Information, and Carter, academically registration. Tour accomplished students begins at Ira Allen who beat the odds, are statue, Main Green. attending UVM this fall, Tour runs Saturdays, The Amazon Basin is one of several regions MIMES and the Summer through Oct. 11. scientists are using to help test and calibrate their Enrichment Scholars model of Earth's ecosystems. (Photo: Azur Program is helping them . 9 a.m. to noon. Moulaert) — and 15 other first- Sept. 6 year students — Leaf Casting acclimate to a new Workshop. Create your environment before the own natural objects of Human life benefits from models. Take semester begins. art with leaf casts of two examples: the weather forecast and your favorite large- leaf plant. $20. UVM the highway map. Both of these models Deep in the Souls Horticultural Research Center. Information, select one slice of the planet’s boggling of Carrots If Michael registration: (802) 864- complexity and use it to allow informed Pollan was hungry to deliver his message 3073.
    [Show full text]
  • 2018 Convention Journal
    Episcopal Church in Vermont 2018 Convention Journal Reports from July 1, 2017 through June 30, 2018 The Journal of the 218th Annual Convention of the Episcopal Church in Vermont being the 186th Annual Convention of The Diocese of Vermont held at The Hilton Hotel, Burlington, Vermont October 26-27, 2018 Table of Contents REPORTS TO CONVENTION .................................................................................................. 4 OFFICIAL ACTS THE RIGHT REVEREND THOMAS C. ELY TENTH BISHOP OF VERMONT .................. 4 BROOKHAVEN TREATMENT AND LEARNING CENTER .............................................................................. 6 COMMUNICATIONS MINISTRY REPORT ....................................................................................................... 10 DIOCESAN COUNCIL – THE VERMONT BRANCH OF THE JESUS MOVEMENT ..................................... 16 COOPERATIVE CHRISTIAN MINISTRY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT ....................................... 19 ECUMENICAL AND INTERRELIGIOUS OFFICER’S REPORT ...................................................................... 21 FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT AND AUDIT COMMITTEE .................................................................................... 23 GRANTS AND LOANS COMMITTEE ................................................................................................................ 25 ALLELUIA FUND ................................................................................................................................................. 27 THE
    [Show full text]
  • Program Book
    PROGRAM International Association for Great Lakes Research 2015 Sponsors MAJOR SPONSORS CONTRIBUTING SPONSORS RUBENSTEIN SCHOOL OF ENVIRONMENT & NATURAL RESOURCES SUPPORTING SPONSORS SPONSORS Central Michigan University, Institute for Great Lakes Research Grand Valley State University, Annis Water Resources Institute Ohio Sea Grant College Program U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service PROGRAM 58th Annual Conference on Great Lakes Research May 25–29, 2015 University of Vermont #iaglr2015 ©2015 International Association for Great Lakes Research 4840 South State Road Ann Arbor, Michigan 48108 Cover design and conference logo by Jenifer Thomas CONTENTS Sponsors (Inside Cover) 2 Exhibitors 3 Conference Organizers 3 IAGLR Board of Directors 4 IAGLR Sustaining Members CONFERENCE OVERVIEW 6 Special Events 7 Overview of Conference Activities 8 Plenary, Tuesday: Jake Vander Zanden 9 Plenary, Thursday: Maude Barlow 10 Workshops & Discussions 12 Conference Planner ORAL PRESENTATIONS 15 Overview 20 Tuesday 28 Wednesday Use the 34 Thursday conference hashtag 42 Friday #iaglr2015 POSTERS 51 Posters by Theme GENERAL INFORMATION 57 Presentation Guidelines 57 Internet Access 58 Maps 63 Things To Do EXHIBITORS Welcome Conference Exhibitors! Exhibits are open daily in the Fireplace Lounge on the 4th floor of the Davis Center. Alpha Mach Inc. Great Lakes Observing System Lake Champlain Sea Grant 101-2205 Bombardier 229 Nickels Arcade 81 Carrigan Drive Sainte-Julie, QC J3E 2J9 Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Burlington, VT 05405 alphamach.com glos.us uvm.edu/seagrant Aquatic Informatics Inc. International Joint Commission, Lotek Wireless 2400-1111 West Georgia Street Great Lakes Regional Office 115 Pony Drive Vancouver, BC V6E4M3 100 Ouellette Avenue, Newmarket, ON L3Y 7B5 aquaticinformatics.com 8th Floor lotek.com Windsor, ON N9A 6T3 Cooperative Institute for ijc.org Michigan State University Press Limnology and Ecosystems 1405 S.
    [Show full text]
  • No. R-471. House Concurrent Resolution Congratulating the 2010
    No. R-471. House concurrent resolution congratulating the 2010 University of Vermont Catamounts men’s ice hockey team on its performances in the Hockey East and NCAA tournaments. (H.C.R.316) Offered by: All Members of the House of Representatives Offered by: All Members of the Senate Whereas, repeatedly throughout the 2009–2010 men’s ice hockey season, the University of Vermont (UVM) Catamounts displayed their considerable playing skills, and Whereas, the Catamounts’ winning ways were especially on display at Gutterson Fieldhouse, where they finished the season with a commendable 10–5–3 record, and Whereas, at the Hockey East tournament, the Catamounts, despite being ranked eighth in the ten-team conference, twice defeated the top-seeded University of New Hampshire in a best of three-game elimination round, and Whereas, these victories, which surprised many college hockey observers, raised UVM from 19th to 14th nationally in the USCHO.com/CBS College Sports Poll, and more critically in the Pairwise Ratings, the formula the NCAA uses to select its 16 men’s hockey tournament teams, and Whereas, the No. 14 Catamounts traveled to St. Paul, where they faced the No. 5 University of Wisconsin Badgers in first-round NCAA competition, and Whereas, the Badgers scored the opening first-period goal, but the Catamounts minutes later evened the score, and VT LEG 259005.1 No. R-471 Page 2 Whereas, UVM scored again, creating a 2–1 Catamount lead at 15:44 of the first period, and Whereas, the Catamounts’ good fortune proved temporary, as the Badgers scored
    [Show full text]
  • November 12, 2013
    volume 14 - issue 11 - tuesday, november, 12, 2013 - uvm, burlington, vt uvm.edu/~watertwr - thewatertower.tumblr.com by mikaelawaters by dustineagar Forgive me UVM, for I have sinned. After four years in a Catholic high Russia has been in the news quite a bit school and a subsequent lately. Allegations of skullduggery at the vow to never again partici- recent G-20 conference, a hardline stance pate in organized religion, against UN intervention into the humani- I confess to believing in a tarian crisis in Syria, an uncharacteristic higher power. Dare I say embrace of NSA leader Edward Snowden, it? After suffering through and a flex of military muscle in the Arctic countless masses, endless have combined with many other episodes religion classes, and a com- in recent years to elevate tensions between plete memorization of both Mother Russia and her capitalist cousins. the Hail Mary and the Our The house Stalin built has likened itself Father in Latin, I confess to that kid in your neighborhood who is to having a different reli- always getting in trouble—whenever the gion. This religion, power- name comes up you wonder what sort of ful enough to seize my heart half-witted shenanigans have irritated the and bring me back into the community this time. More recently, prob- fold, is Coffee. ably since mass protests erupted in Mos- As definitively sacrile- cow over allegations of election fraud in gious and questionably ab- December 2011, Russia has been throwing surd as this confession may a hissy-fit of global proportion. sound, my relationship with In September, the Russian Navy ar- coffee conforms to the basic rested 30 people at gunpoint aboard the structure of conventional re- Dutch-flagged ship “Arctic Sunrise”.
    [Show full text]
  • ED350244.Pdf
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 350 244 SO 022 631 AUTHOR True, Marshall, Ed.; And Others TITLE Vermont's Heritage: A Working Conferencefor Teachers. Plans, Proposals, and Needs. Proceedingsof a Conference (Burlington, Vermont, July 8-10, 1983). INSTITUTION Vermont Univ., Burlington. Center for Researchon Vermont. SPONS AGENCY Vermont Council on the Humanities and PublicIssues, Hyde Park. PUB DATE 83 NOT:, 130p.; For a related document,see SO 022 632. PUB TYPE Collected Works Conference Proceedings (021) EDRS PRICE MFOI/PC06 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Cultural Education; *Curriculum Development; Educational Resources; Elementary Secondary Education; Folk Culture; Heritage Education; *Instructional Materials; Local History;*Material Development; Social Studies; *State History;Teacher Developed Materials; *Teaching Methods IDENTIFIERS *Vermont ABSTRACT This document presents materials designedto help teachers in Vermont to teachmore effectively about that state and its heritage. The materials stem froma conference at which scholars spoke to Vermont teachers about theirwork and about how it might be taught. Papers presented at the conferenceare included, as well as sample lessons and units developed byteachers who attended the conference. Examples of papers includedare: "The Varieties of Vermont's Heritage: Resources forVermont Schools" (H. Nicholas Muller, III); "Vermont Folk Art" (MildredAmes and others); and "Resource Guide to Vermont StudiesMaterials" (Mary Gover and others). Three appendices alsoare included: (1) Vermont Studies Survey: A Report
    [Show full text]
  • I-89 Exit 14 Slip Lane & Intermodal Intercept Parking Facility
    I-89 Exit 14 Slip Lane & Intermodal Intercept Parking Facility Final Scoping Report May 2013 110 West Canal St, Suite 202 Winooski, Vermont 05404 t 802-660-4071 f 802-660-4079 www.ccrpcvt.org The preparation of this document has been financed through transportation planning funds provided by the U.S. Department of Transportation and matching funds provided by Chittenden County’s 18 municipalities and the Vermont Agency of Transportation. The views and opinions expressed do not necessarily state or reflect those of the U.S. Department of Transportation. TABLE OF CONTENTS 1.0 INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................... 1 1.1 Background .............................................................................................................................................. 2 1.2 Study Area ................................................................................................................................................ 3 2.0 PROJECT PURPOSE AND NEED ....................................................................... 4 2.1 Purpose .................................................................................................................................................... 4 2.2 Needs ....................................................................................................................................................... 4 3.0 EXISTING CONDITIONS ................................................................................ 5 3.1 Project Site
    [Show full text]
  • A Car That Looks Dirty 10 Months a Year Adirondack Furniture Alchemist
    A car that looks dirty 10 months a year Adirondack Furniture Alchemist Beer Antique wooden sap bucket Apple picker Apples Archer Mayor novels Arlington Covered Bridge Arrow head Attached barns Auger (ice fishing) Bag Balm Bag of King Arthur flour Barn boots Barre Granite Barre Police Blotter Basketball hoop at the Barre Auditorium Beer Bottle Bellows Falls Tunnel Ben and Jerry's Bennington Battle Monument Bennington Church Bennington pottery Bernie Sanders bumper sticker Bicycles: Touring, Mountain, and Cruiser Billings Museum Black Fly Blue Heron Brattleboro Strolling of the Heifers Bread and Puppet Theater Bristol Outhouse Race Butter churn Cabot cheddar Calcified schist from the Ct valley Camel’s Hump Camps on the lake Canoe Carved Abenaki face on the granite riverbed at Bellows Falls Cast iron anything Catamount Trail blue diamond blaze Chainsaw. Champ Cheap Plastic Sled Cider press Clothespin Cochran family Comb Honey Connecticut River Coolidge Homestead Coop membership card Country store Covered bridges Cow pie CRAFT BEER! Creemee Cross country skis Crown Point Road Cupolas Danby Quarries Darn tough socks dead skunks in the road deep snow Deer antlers Deer Rifle Dirt Road Doll with Movable Joints Dousing rod Doyle Poll Drunken UVM student Ear of Indian corn Eat More Kale bumper sticker or t-shirt Estey Organ Ethan Allen Ethan Allen furniture Ethan Allen Homestead Eureka Schoolhouse Fall Foliage Farm stands Farmers market Fiddleheads Fieldstone walls from clearing farmland Fish Tails sculpture along I-89 Fishing Floating Bridge Foliage Train Four leaf lover Frost heave Furniture and other wood products Gilfeather Turnip Gillingham's store in Woodstock GMC lean-to shelter Goddess of Agriculture atop State House Gondolas Granite Granite monuments in Barre Green bags of Green Up Day Green Mountains Green Mountains Green Mt.
    [Show full text]
  • Vermont Catamounts (13-4-1 Overall, 5-3-1 Hea))) Vs
    ESPNU COLLEGE HOCKEY • JAN. 7, 2006 VERMONT CATAMOUNTS (13-4-1 OVERALL, 5-3-1 HEA))) VS... NEW HAMPSHIRE WILDCATS (9-7-3 OVERALL, 7-3-2 HEA))) WHITTEMORE CENTER • DURHAM, N.H. TALE OF THE TAPE VERMONT CATAMOUNTS NEW HAMPSHIRE WILDCATS 13-4-1 (.750) ....................................................... Overall Record ...........................................................9-7-3 (.625) 5-3-1 (.611), 11 points/T-4th .......................Hockey East Record/Place .......................... 7-3-2 (.667), 16 points/3rd 3rd INCH Power Rankings ................................... National Rank .................................. 17th INCH Power Rankings 3.11 GPG (4th HEA/T-24th NCAA) .............. Scoring Offense (Rank) .................. 2.95 GPG (5th HEA/32nd NCAA) 1.67 GPG (1st HEA/3rd NCAA) ................... Scoring Defense (Rank)................... 2.68 GPG (6th HEA/21st NCAA) 25-108; 26.4% (1st HEA/4th NCAA) ...................... Power Play...................... 22-124; 17.7% (4th HEA/26th NCAA) 76-84; 90.5% (2nd HEA/3rd NCAA) ....................... Penalty Kill........................83-98; 84.7% (4th HEA/20th NCAA) Torrey Mitchell, So., F (7-17–24; 4 PPG) ..............Top Scorers ................. Daniel Winnick, Jr., F (9-17–26; 4 PPG) Brady Leisenring, Sr., F (8-13–21) ........................................................... Brett Hemingway, Jr., F (11-12–23; 6 PPG) Peter Lenes, Fr., F (8-4–12; 6 PPG; 3 GWG).............................................................. Brian Yandle, Sr., D (3-13–26) Joe Fallon, So. (11-4-1, 1.61 GAA, .915 sv%) .......Top Goalies ..... Jeff Pietrasiak, Sr. (7-2-1, 2.51 GAA, .919 sv%) Travis Russell, Sr. (2-0-0, 2.02 GAA, .928 sv%) ................................ Kevin Regan, So. (2-5-0, 2.70 GAA, .909 sv%) Kevin Sneddon (Harvard ’92) ........................... Coach (Alma Mater) ...................... Dick Umile (New Hampshire ’72) 43-40-9 (.516), Third season ....................
    [Show full text]
  • 2017-18 WCHA WEEKLY RELEASE Week Ten (Games of Nov
    R 2017-18 WCHA WEEKLY RELEASE WEEK TEN (GAMES OF NOV. 22-26, 2017) / wcha.com @wcha_whockey @wcha_whockey /WCHAWomensHockey Matt Hodson ● o: 952-681-7668 ● c: 612-801-2808 ● [email protected] WESTERN COLLEGIATE OPENING FACEOFF HOCKEY ASSOCIATION • Three of the Top-Six: The Women's League of the Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA) continues to have a strong • FOUNDED 1999 • presence in the USCHO.com and USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine polls, with three of the top-6 teams. 2950 Metro Drive, Suite 102 • 16-0-0 Wisconsin remains the unanimous No. 1 in both polls, followed by No. 5 Ohio State and No. 6 Minnesota. Bloomington, MN 55425 • Alone Among the Unbeatens: While playing the nation's second-toughest schedule to date, Wisconsin is the last unbeaten 952-681-7947 NCAA Division I program standing at 16-0-0, two wins shy of matching the best start in program history (18-0-0 in 2015-16). • UW's last six wins have come against ranked opponents. The Badgers won a pair of one-goal contests Oct. 28-29 at MEMBER TEAMS No. 6 Minnesota for their first sweep of the Gophers in Minneapolis since Jan. 5-6, 2007. Wisconsin then took care of Bemidji State University then-No. 4 Ohio State on Nov. 4-5 at LaBahn Arena, before winning twice on the road Nov. 10-11 at then-No. 7 Cornell. University of Minnesota • Sophomore Kristen Campbell, a transfer from North Dakota, has started all 16 of UW's games. She leads all D-I goalies University of Minnesota Duluth in wins, goals-against average (0.94) and save percentage (.951), while she is tied for second with four shutouts.
    [Show full text]
  • Global Gateway Program
    Global Gateway Program 2016-17 globalgateway.uvm.edu A prestigious, historic ‘Public Ivy’ university Ranked among the top 10 Rising Stars by Forbes magazine, the University of Vermont is recognized for its academic excellence and great overall value. As the fifth oldest university in New England, the University of Vermont is steeped in tradition yet very forward-thinking. We pride ourselves on offering a strong liberal education in a beautiful, intimate educational setting. The University of Vermont (UVM) attracts curious, self-starting, engaged and community-focused students who are motivated to achieve. Our students consistently receive national and international awards, and 91% of our graduates are employed or in graduate school within six months of graduation. Academic quality is central to our success, and our distinguished faculty are internationally recognized for their research, scholarship and creative activity. With a choice of over 100 majors including business, education, engineering, environment, health, and life sciences, our students have access to a broad range of studies in cutting edge fields and traditional disciplines. We encourage our students to raise their aspirations and find their passion, while we help them achieve their goals through support programs such as our popular Career Center. Surrounded by mountains, the University of Vermont’s vibrant campus overlooks stunning Lake Champlain. Our hometown was named the #1 college town in the country by Travel + Leisure magazine. Burlington is a safe, culturally rich
    [Show full text]