Here’s what you can find in this week’s Seven Days, identifiable by a delicious-looking slab of raw meat on the cover…
- A group of custodians at St. Michael’s College will become the first workers at the Colchester liberal-arts school to unionize.
- Hipsters vs. homeowners? Some South Burlington residents are peeved at one bohemian neighbor, who’s turned his home into something of an artist’s paradise.
- Ben & Jerry’s cofounder Ben Cohen is opening a new front in his efforts to fight Citizens United: stamping messages on cash bills.
- Our own Paul Heintz went hunting with Gov. Peter Shumlin — and lived to tell the tale. (That’s the governor pictured in his best blaze orange.)
- And in Fair Game: Diane Snelling plots a run at the Senate’s top leadership job. Plus, Sen. Patrick Leahy pushes back in a new Internet privacy brouhaha, a new fight over the Moran Plant in Burlington and the Upper Valley’s daily newspaper joins the 21st century.


“the question Cohen hears over and over is: âIs it legal?â
Not according to Darlene Anderson, a spokesperson for the federal
Bureau of Printing and Engraving. She says defacement of currency is a
violation of Title 18, Section 333 of the United States Code.
Thatâs one interpretation, according to Cohen,”
LMAO, one interpretation…um one from someone who would know.