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Day in Photos - March 20, 2012
Date: 3/20/2012 Album ID: 1435948
Hartford Police Chief Glenn Cutting, photographed yesterday in his office, will retire at the end of March after nearly six years as chief. Cutting said he feels he will leave the department better than he found it, and that advances in technology and tools that officers carry allow them to do better community policing by spending more time in the field. Valley News — James M. Pattersonjpatterson@vnews.comphoto@vnews.com
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Police Chief Glenn Cutting says drugs, including prescription, are Hartford’s “number one safety threat.” Above, a closeup of his badge. Valley News — James M. Pattersonjpatterson@vnews.comphoto@vnews.com
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Ed Gravelle, of White River Junction, casts into the White River as his fishing buddy, Mike Bates, of Enfield, checks his lines at Lyman Point Park in White River Junction yesterday. “It’s nice to get out. Cabin fever,” said Gravelle. “We come down here just to kill time waiting for the ice to go out.” Valley News — James M. Patterson jpatterson@vnews.comphoto@vnews.com
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John Lavoie, left, and Don Lloyd, right, stand for the national anthem prior to Thursday’s Vermont Division III girls basketball semifinal between Windsor and Enosburg at Barre Auditorium. The retirees from Springfield, Vt., travel more than 10,000 miles annually chasing and graphing the sport around Vermont, sharing their data with any who ask. Valley News - James M. Pattersonjpatterson@vnews.comphoto@vnews.com
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Lloyd and Lavoie use their own custom-designed statistic sheets, such as the one below, to record the action they witness in gyms around Vermont.Valley News - James M. Pattersonjpatterson@vnews.comphoto@vnews.com
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Don Lloyd, right, reacts to a play during Thursday’s Vermont Division III girls basketball semifinals at Barre Auditorium.Valley News — James M. Pattersonjpatterson@vnews.comphoto@vnews.com
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At Better Choices for Better Futures at Vermont Law School last week, Shannon Palone, a behavioral coordinator, fits South Royalton eighth-grader William Wuttke, 14, with a pair of “impaired-vision” goggles, which are designed to give the wearer a sense of what it’s like to see when one is under the influence of alcohol.	 Valley News photographs — James M. PattersonValley News - James M. Pattersonjpatterson@vnews.comphoto@vnews.com
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13-year-old Rhiannon Howe of South Royalton listens to Jeopardy-style questions during one of the sessions at the Better Choices for Better Futures workshop.Valley News - James M. Pattersonjpatterson@vnews.comphoto@vnews.com
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Tailor Chapin, 13, of Chelsea, center, reacts to a question during the Jeopardy-style program. With her are, from left, Channing George, 14, of South Royalton; Summer Spaulding, 14, of South Royalton; George Essex, 14, of Strafford; Quinn Thomashow, 14, of Strafford; Trevor Litchfield, 14, of Strafford; Alexis Trombley, 13, of Chelsea; and Buddy Greene, also of Chelsea.Valley News - James M. Pattersonjpatterson@vnews.comphoto@vnews.com
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Rhiannon Howe, 13, adds a wooden block to a row of blocks, each of which was placed by a student and represented something important in their lives they wouldn’t want to give up. After each student had placed three blocks in the row, Second Growth’s Robert Bryant, right, explained  how one choice, for instance a bad decision regarding alcohol or drugs, could lead to the removal of these parts of the students’ lives.Valley News — James M. Pattersonjpatterson@vnews.comphoto@vnews.com
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After building a sort of fort out of hoops on the playground, Canaan Elementary first-graders run to line up to go back to class on Friday. From left are Alanna Cilbrith, Amina Mazur, Bryanna Thurston and Emma Bill.                                                Valley News — Jennifer Hauck
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