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| Tracking the Lives of Glaciers Glacier Bay researchers are working to reconstruct the history of glaciers over the last 10,000 years by Kirsten Gehlbach FOR THE JUNEAU EMPIRE Published Sunday, January 21, 2001. Reprinted with permission. Photography by Kirsten Gehlbach When Daniel Lawson looks out over the icebergs bobbing in Glacier Bays Johns Hopkins Inlet, he observes more than the calving of a tidewater glacier. more |
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| Skiffing through Glacier Bay, Alaska with Modern Day Explorers by Kirsten Gehlbach Published in the Holiday 2000 issue ofThe Quechee Times. For the lucky modern day explorer in southeast Alaska, the view from the aircraft will provide more than awe-inspiring mountains stretching their long charcoal ridges into a sea of white clouds. One hopes the sea will part, as it did this early July day, to reveal the white snowfields, light turquoise glaciers, and blue-green fjords of Glacier Bay, Alaska. |
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| French Wing Addition for the Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests by Kirsten Gehlbach U.S. Green Building Council awarded the French Wing at the Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests Conservation Center a Gold certification in the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) program. Designed by Banwell Architects, the French Wing is the first project in New England to earn this certification. The French Wing is one of only a dozen buildings nationally to receive a Gold certification. more |
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| A Warm Welcome by Kirsten Gehlbach Published in the June 2003 issue ofTimber Homes Illustrated. Steve and Cyndy knew exactly what they wanted when they designed their barn-style home. Were frustrated innkeepers, Cyndy says. We wanted this home to feel like an inn with the kitchen as the focal point, lots of space to entertain and large guestrooms to retreat to. more |
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| Follow The Pied Piper of Davids House Published in the Foliage 2003 issue ofThe Norwich Times. Why volunteer? Why at Davids House? The answers, though varied for a group of Quechee residents, have a common themeto offer comfort, lend an ear to a parent, bring a smile to a childs face, make a difference to a family, fill a need to serve the community, and because the Pied Piper of Volunteers at Davids House, Rochelle Berliner asked. more |
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| A LEEEP Forward for Learning Published in the Holiday 2002 issue ofThe Norwich Times. Imagine a classroom where students learn to formulate questions and find different ways to seek answers. Open space where children record discoveries in written journals and sketchbooks. A place where its okay to get wet and muddy when you search for minnows, salamanders, and animal tracks. more |
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| A Measure of Success Celebrating Our Pro Published in the Winter/Spring 2002 issues of The Quechee Times and The Norwich Times. There are all kinds of ways to measure success. In golf, some might measure success in yards or scores or the money list, yet Jeff has achieved much, much more, said Scott Peters, longtime friend of Jeff Julian, former Quechee Club assistant pro and first Vermonter to play on the PGA Tour. Yes, we are proud that he was the first local guy on the PGA Tour, but he has achieved a much greater success, shown by the outpouring of support from the people of this community. more |
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| Blazing a New Trail of Service Published in the Fall 2001 issue ofThe Norwich Times. Ask four Norwich high school students what they did over summer vacation and youll hear descriptions that include hard work, awesome, rewarding, and fun. Each student spent a month as a member of a conservation work crew at a national park or forest across the country for the Student Conservation Association (SCA). Though they havent yet moved mountains, each one blazed a new trail and changed lives through service to nature. more |
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| Women on Wheels Published in the Summer 2000 issue ofThe Norwich Times.
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| Larger than Life The Art that Jack Built Published in the Foliage 2000 issue ofThe Quechee Times. My work is for the enjoyment of lovers of humor and to the annoyance of all others, said sculptor Jack Dowd. His larger-than-life characters include limited edition butlers represented in 10 galleries nationwide including the Gallery on the Green in Woodstock. Other work includes Earth Angel, a critically-acclaimed New Orleans-style street performer with wings and a halo that he had hoped to display on the street outside the gallery in Woodstock. He is also noted for Dot and Charlie, a heartwarming retired couple waving from their camper; an Asian tourist adorned with cameras (one with a super long lens) and a Goofy hat; and a startling and award-winning punk from the Biker Series, sculptures combining real props with his life-size wood figures. more |
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| Who is Bob? Published in the Summer 2000 issue ofThe Norwich Times.
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