Hippo 09/03/15

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ARTWALK DOWNTOWN WEEKEND P. 22 CRUISING P. 27 LOCAL NEWS, FOOD, ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT

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SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015

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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 2

We lost a friend Sunday night. Denise Roberts, a longtime Union Leader sales rep, friend and friendly competitor, was shot and killed in Manchester as she was out walking. Not much more is known right now. We are in shock that this could happen in New Hampshire to anyone, especially Denise, who was such a kind person. Media sales is a tough business. But in her long career, Denise kept a smile and a genuinely great attitude. Denise first starting working in ad sales in 1983 for George and Dee Little, who published the Goffstown News and other weekly newspapers around Manchester. That company was purchased by the Union Leader in 1993 and headed for a time by our very own Jeff Rapsis. But you didn’t have to be a co-worker to know Denise. She was everywhere in Manchester — a constant figure at local businesses, running in to get ads or see about changes. We’re heartbroken and will miss her dearly. We extend condolences to her many siblings and family members, and to all who knew her, worked with her and appreciated her. Manchester Crimeline is offering a $7,500 reward (with the help of the Union Leader Corp.) for information that leads to the capture and conviction of the person or persons responsible. If you know of anything, please call 603-624-4040. All tips are anonymous.

A new path for our power

Though it’s getting cheaper to install solar panels, New Hampshire utilities are nearing their cap for accepting power generated at people’s homes. This is also called net metering, and it’s one of the huge draws of people adding solar panels. It allows people to “sell” excess power when the sun is shining to the power grid. In New Hampshire, the total amount that the utilities are required to buy is 2 percent of the power used in the state. Massachusetts allows about 4 percent of its power to be created by “independent power generations facilities”— your home’s solar panels. These caps exist for good reason. The grid is expensive to maintain and selling power back to the grid doesn’t help defray the cost of maintaining that power grid that all users (even those with solar panels) need. It is a balancing act to both encourage heavier use of solar power and maintain the grid, just as it is with using the gas tax to pay for roads when more cars are not using gas to drive those roads. The New Hampshire Public Utilities Commission should get ahead of these coming changes and create a new way to pay for the grid while also increasing the amount of power the utilities must buy back from consumers with solar panels.

SEPT. 3 - 9, 2015 VOL 15 NO 35

News and culture weekly serving Metro southern New Hampshire Published every Thursday (1st copy free; 2nd $1). 49 Hollis St., Manchester, N.H. 03101 P 603-625-1855 F 603-625-2422 www.hippopress.com e-mail: news@hippopress.com

EDITORIAL Executive Editor Amy Diaz, adiaz@hippopress.com Managing Editor Meghan Siegler, msiegler@hippopress.com, ext. 13 Editorial Design Ashley McCarty, hippolayout@gmail.com Copy Editor Lisa Parsons, lparsons@hippopress.com Staff Writers Kelly Sennott ksennott@hippopress.com, ext. 12 Allie Ginwala aginwala@hippopress.com, ext. 52 Angie Sykeny asykeny@hippopress.com, ext. 30 Ryan Lessard rlessard@hippopress.com, ext. 36 Contributors Sid Ceaser, Allison Willson Dudas, Jennifer Graham, Henry Homeyer, Dave Long, Lauren Mifsud, Stefanie Phillips, Eric W. Saeger, Michael Witthaus. To reach the newsroom call 625-1855, ext. 13.

ON THE COVER 12 HOW BIZARRE We here at the Hippo think we know a fair amount about New Hampshire, but when we decided to seek out some of the state’s stranger attractions, most of us were surprised by at least some of the 16 cool things we found. Do you know of any others that deserve a shout-out? Email msiegler@hippopress.com.

ALSO ON THE COVER, head to Nashua for its annual ArtWalk (p. 22), or to Manchester for its classic car cruise, Cruising Downtown, which includes fun for the whole family (p. 27). If you’re looking for a night out, check out the live music scene in the Music This Week listings, starting on p. 54.

INSIDE THIS WEEK

NEWS & NOTES 4 A look at Nashua Kitchen & Shelter PLUS News in Brief. 8 Q&A 9 QUALITY OF LIFE INDEX 10 SPORTS THIS WEEK 20 THE ARTS: 22 ART An ArtWalk weekend. 24 THEATER Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story. 26 CLASSICAL Listings for events around town.

INSIDE/OUTSIDE: 28 KIDDIE POOL Family fun events this weekend. Listings Arts listings: arts@hippopress.com 30 TREASURE HUNT Inside/Outside listings: listings@hippopress.com There’s gold in your attic. Food & Drink listings: food@hippopress.com 31 GARDENING GUY Music listings: music@hippopress.com Henry Homeyer offers advice on your outdoors. 32 CAR TALK BUSINESS Automotive advice. Publisher OTHER LISTINGS: Continuing Education p. 28; Crafts p. 28; Jody Reese, Ext. 21 Health & Wellness p. 30; Marketing & Business p. 30; Misc. jreese@hippopress.com p. 30 Associate Publisher Dan Szczesny Associate Publisher Jeff Rapsis, Ext. 23 jrapsis@hippopress.com Production Katie DeRosa, Kristen Lochhead, Meredith Connolly, Emma Contic Circulation Manager Doug Ladd, Ext. 35 dladd@hippopress.com Advertising Manager Charlene Cesarini, Ext. 26 ccesarini@hippopress.com Account Executives Alyse Savage, 603-493-2026 asavage@hippopress.com Katharine Stickney, Ext. 44 kstickney@hippopress.com Roxanne Macaig, Ext. 27 rmacaig@hippopress.com Tammie Boucher, support staff, Ext. 50 Reception & Bookkeeping Gloria Zogopoulos To place an ad call 625-1855, Ext. 26 For Classifieds dial Ext. 25 or e-mail classifieds@hippopress.com. Unsolicited submissions are not accepted and will not be returned or acknowledged. Unsolicited submissions will be destroyed.

CAREERS: 34 ON THE JOB What it’s like to be a... FOOD: 38 PROBIOTIC TALK UnWine’d and Key West Cafe merge; Home brewing; In the Kitchen; Weekly Dish; Wine; From the Pantry. POP CULTURE: 47 REVIEWS CDs, books, TV and more. NITE: 52 BANDS, CLUBS, NIGHTLIFE Hannah Sanders; Nightlife, music & comedy listings and more. 53 ROCK AND ROLL CROSSWORD A puzzle for the music-lover. 54 MUSIC THIS WEEK Live music at your favorite bars and restaurants. ODDS & ENDS: 60 CROSSWORD 61 SIGNS OF LIFE 61 SUDOKU 62 NEWS OF THE WEIRD 62 THIS MODERN WORLD


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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 3


NEWS & NOTES

Joe Biden. Courtesy photo.

Primary update

After weeks of speculation, Vice President Joe Biden is looking more likely than ever to announce his candidacy for president. CNN reported sources close to Biden believe an announcement will happen in the first week of October. He met with Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren earlier in August, which many believe suggests he’s feeling out prominent party members about his possible bid. And sources told Al Jazeera that Biden has been quietly assembling a 2016 campaign team. Biden has been grieving the loss of his son Beau, who died in May. Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is poised to receive a major endorsement from New Hampshire Sen. Jeanne Shaheen in the coming days. The Clinton campaign announced the endorsement will take place in Portsmouth on Sept. 5. She’s had several New England governors stumping for her, including Vermont Gov. Peter Shumlin, NHPR reported. And the New York Times reported the New Hampshire Democratic Party was one of four state parties to sign joint fundraising agreements with Clinton. Some feel this shows tacit endorsement, but officials

with the state party told the Times they are willing to sign similar agreements with other Democratic candidates. Meanwhile, former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley has struggled to catch the limelight, consistently trailing behind Clinton and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders. The Concord Monitor reported he made his eighth trip to New Hampshire recently with several house parties and town halls. He repeatedly highlights his 15 years of executive experience between his tenure as governor and mayor of Baltimore as a differentiator from his Democratic opponents. The AP reported that Sanders said he would be willing to use military force if circumstances demanded it. Republican candidates have been campaigning all across the state, including Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, who was absent for more than a month. At a stop in Littleton, he told voters they should expect to see more of him, NHPR reported. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie was also seen around the state, including in Manchester, where he took the stage at a weekend rally to take aim at heroin addiction. In the coming days, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul and Ohio Gov. John Kasich are expected to make several appearances.

Prescriber training

In Bedford this coming November, a new program designed to reduce the overprescription of opioid painkillers to patients will begin. NHPR reported it will train physicians to prescribe less of the highly addictive drugs. According to a report by the Centers for Disease Control, New Hampshire ranked third after Maine and Delaware in overprescribing drugs like oxycodone and fentanyl. According to the CDC, those drugs are highly linked to heroin, with 45 percent of heroin addicts also addicted to prescription drugs. The training, which will be administered by the Boston University School of Medicine, is one of the 22 proposals made by the state’s drug czar.

A rally in Manchester targeting heroin addiction took place over the weekend. The Union Leader reported several friends and family members of addicts or those who died of overdoses shared their stories.

CONCORD

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Goffstown A couple in Windham is asking wedding guests to forego wedding gifts and donate to a cause that helps homeless LGBT youth. The Union Recorder of Georgia reported they hope to raise $1 million for the Bedford True Love Campaign. Amherst

E-ZPass

State Democrats held an annual summer social at Mack’s Apples in Londonderry, where candidates for New Hampshire’s 1st Congressional District, Shawn O’Connor and Carol Shea-Porter, spoke, the Union Leader reported.

MANCHESTER

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Derry

An activeMilford shooter drill took After it was announced that place Aug. 28 at Daniel the original E-ZPass transponWebster College in Nashua. ders were nearing the end of The Telegraph of Nashua NASHUA their lives and would need to reported the drill included 37 responders from the city and be replaced by Sept. 1, long 22 other agencies. lines were formed at E-ZPass stations. NHPR reported the Department of Transportation is extending that deadline to Nov. 1. As incentive to drivers years ago are nearing the end of tered out west. Eight of them are currently working in Idato swap out their old transpon- their battery life. ho, Oregon, Washington and ders, a discounted toll rate was California. Not all of them are offered for those who do it N.H. Firefighters A team of 20 firefighters fighting fires. Some are servbefore the deadline. After the deadline, the new rate kicks in. from local stations across New ing as paramedics and EMTs. Passenger vehicles will be giv- Hampshire shipped out on a Twenty New Hampshire fireNorthern Pass en a 30-percent discount while recent flight to battle a blaze fighters recently returned from About 5,000 acres of land commercial vehicles will get a in Montana, the Union Leader helping put out forest fires in bought up by Eversource Ener- 10-percent discount. Transpon- reported. Firefighters from the northern California. gy when it was Public Service ders purchased more than nine Granite State are already scatof New Hampshire is back on the table for a number of possible uses with the latest power line route change announced FREQUENT MHT FLYERS LIBERTARIAN PARTY for Northern Pass. The Union A new program at the Manchester-Boston ReLeader reported that the powA federal judge upheld a 2014 state law setgional Airport will make it easier for folks ting time limits on gathering signatures needer company acquired land and who frequently park at the airport’s parking ed to have your political party listed on the easements in the North Counareas. The AP reported the program, which ballot. The Concord Monitor reported this try during a three-year buying began Sept. 1, will be called MHT FASTmeans the Libertarian Party’s effort to be inspree for an original route. But PASS. It will allow drivers to quickly pass in cluded on the ballot has been dealt a serious after the first route change was and out of the parking lot or garage using a blow. The aim of the law was to make sure announced in 2013, 5,000 acres card that will automatically deduct payments only parties with significant support would be from a debit or credit card. Users will be able of the land they bought was no on the ballot. The judge found that to be reato manage their accounts online and drive sonable and not discriminatory, ruling against longer needed. Now, the compathrough a designated lane where sensors will the ACLU, which sued on behalf of the Libny is floating a few ideas for the be installed to scan the cards. ertarian Party. Political parties must secure land’s use such as recreation, 15,000 signatures within about seven months economic development, natuunder the new law. ral resource preservation and logging.

HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 4


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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 5


NEWS

Ground game

How local endorsements help presidential candidates By Ryan Lessard

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Endorsements for presidential candidates — both how many and who they’re from — can tell us a lot about their chances of winning the party nomination. FiveThirtyEight.com, the political blog known for relying on data for its reporting, calls this phenomenon “the endorsement primary,” because traditionally the candidate with the most endorsements from members of Congress and governors ends up being the nominee. The blog even has a point system where members of the House are worth 1 point, Senators are worth 5 points and governors are worth 10. Based on this, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush is enjoying a narrow lead in the highly contested Republican race with 34 points so far. He has the most representatives and three senators backing him. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is in second place with 25 points from two governors and five Congressmen. Interestingly, while Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton appears to be in a close race with Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders when polls are consulted, she has a whopping 320 points in national endorsements. Sanders has zero. Vice President Joe Biden has more points, and he’s not even officially running.

Local endorsements

Endorsements from New Hampshire notables are a different ballgame. Republican strategist and former New Hampshire Attorney General Tom Rath said while all endorsements are about bolstering your legitimacy as a candidate, there’s more to it than that, especially at the local levels. “I think what ... a local endorsement tends to do [is] ground the candidate with a couple of familiar faces so it’s not just a person from out of state coming in here, but somebody who has some folks known in the state who are vouching for them,” Rath said. “That adds credibility to the campaign and it grounds it a little bit in New Hampshire.” Voters in the Granite State like it when a candidate takes the state seriously, and obtaining local endorsements sends the

message that they are doing so, according to Rath. It also gets the candidate’s name in the paper. “The other thing that an endorsement does ... is it gives a candidate a story during a news cycle,” Rath said. “It’s a way to drive coverage for a couple of days. … That’s one of the things you’re always looking to do in a campaign, is try to control the flow of information.”

Scorecards

It’s still too early to be making any predictions based on the Fivethirtyeight scoring system or a scorecard of local endorsements since there are quite a few prominent individuals who have yet to make their choice. And with so many candidates to choose from, folks are watching the Republican scorecards closely. The Boston Globe posted an endorsement tracker online that shows Bush tied with Ohio Gov. John Kasich and former HP CEO Carly Fiorina with six local endorsements each. But the same tracker lists more than 65 Republican officials and operatives who have not yet aligned themselves with anyone. Numbers like these can be deceiving, even with a majority decided, according to former New Hampshire Democratic party chair Kathy Sullivan. “I don’t think that matters so much, saying, ‘I’ve got the most endorsements of people.’ That doesn’t mean anything,” Sullivan said. “What’s important is, do you have people endorsing you who actually bring a level of respect, strategic advice [and] ability to get people to listen to them?” Rath says the ideal endorsers are those who go beyond simply attaching their name to a candidate and giving their seal of approval. What a candidate really wants is an endorser who works for the campaign, making phone calls, appearing with the candidate and volunteering in other ways.

Who endorses

Sullivan says the key endorsements from the state will come from high-level elected officials and strategists. Both know what it takes to win in New Hampshire. Elected officials have a loyal following and, while in office, a ready staff to make phone calls on behalf of a candidate, while strategists bring a list of key connections with the right people and good advice. “For example, a Jeanne Shaheen endorsement means a lot. A Maggie Has-

san endorsement would mean a lot,” Sullivan said. “If Kelly Ayotte were to endorse, I think that would add instant credibility to a candidate.” Sullivan and Rath agree that people like Ayotte and Hassan are less likely to make an endorsement in the primary because they are up for election or reelection themselves. “[Ayotte] is probably the single most sought-after endorsement of anybody in the cycle. She’s also probably the single least likely to endorse,” Rath said. Mayor Ted Gatsas is another highly sought-after endorsement but will likely not weigh in until after the mayoral race concludes in the fall. That said, there are still many who have yet to endorse a candidate. “I think there’s plenty of ‘good gets’ still out there,” Rath said. “A lot of state senators, a lot of people who have been involved in party apparatus, a lot of business leaders and community leaders. There’s a lot of folks out there.” Rath said the endorsement of former U.S. Sen. Judd Gregg is coveted by all Republicans in the race. “He’s a highly respected and very popular office holder,” Rath said. A big fish such as Gregg would warrant a more serious meeting between the man and the candidate, as opposed to the typically informal conversations, according to Sullivan. “If I’m a candidate who would want his endorsement ... I would want to call and make arrangements to sit down and talk with him,” Sullivan said. “I think a little more effort would be made to sit down and have some private time to sit and talk about issues.” And there are those working in the state’s political parties who do not have the luxury of endorsing a candidate during a primary. That includes party chairs and other paid staff members. “Because it’s the New Hampshire primary, because it’s first in the nation, we have an obligation to make sure that every candidate feels that they’re playing on a level playing field,” Sullivan said. But, occasionally, a party chair will step down from their post in order to make an endorsement. “Back in 1999 — in fact, how I became state party chair — I was the vice chair and Jeff Woodburn was the chair. Jeff called and said, ‘I’ve decided I’m gonna have to step down because I want to endorse Al Gore.’ So he actually stepped down so he could do an endorsement,” Sullivan said.


NEWS

Statesman statue

Memorial being created for forgotten N.H. hero By Ryan Lessard

news@hippopress.com

A new statue is going to be erected in front of the state library in Concord of former New Hampshire Gov. John Gilbert Winant, a progressive Republican who later served as U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain during World War II — though the stigma of Winant’s suicide in 1947 led to the obscurity of his many accomplishments.

The statue

Van McLeod, the state commissioner of cultural resources, says the statue will depict Winant standing on the ground with jacket and hat in hand gesturing for the passerby to take a seat on a nearby bench that will be part of the memorial installation. “Our concept from the very beginning was we didn’t want him up on a pedestal, because that was sort of against what he stood for to a large degree,” McLeod said. He said both the statue and the bench will be made of bronze, and the statue will be about 6 feet 6 inches, only about 4 or 5 inches taller than the man himself. McLeod wanted to emphasize the humanity of Winant by making him literally down to earth. He said the artist hired to produce the work, Brett Grill of the University of Missouri, had a number of different images of A model of the Winant statue. Courtesy photo. Winant from different eras to choose from. “He did an enormous amount of research, [School] and kept coming back, was because taking photographs and films, whether it was of the personal relationships that he created stuff that we had or that St. Paul’s School with the people.” McLeod said Winant nurtured the trust of had,” McLeod said. “He actually stopped at the people, simply the FDR library in by being kind and upstate New York listening. and found a lot more “People knew that information.” he cared and that he They settled on would take care of World War II-era them,” McLeod said. Winant. McLeod said “Which is sort they’ve raised about of what he’s best $130,000 of the known for, if you $290,000 needed to will,” McLeod said. complete the project. He’s currently The man “He was a lousy VAN MCLEOD reaching out to other former governors speaker. He was not and ambassadors a good organizer or manager. He was not good with money. He for donations. McLeod said former Gov. failed at all those things from everything Steve Merrill already wrote them a “sizeable I’ve heard, but what he really succeeded at check” for the project. McLeod hopes to unveil the final prodwas to the core of what New Hampshire is all about,” McLeod said. “The reason he uct in June 2016, which for him is already was governor for three terms, the reason he past due. “This is a man who’s been forgotten by was a member of the House and the Senate, and the reason he chose New Hampshire history. And he’s been forgotten by history as the place to be after his stay at St. Paul’s because of his suicide,” McLeod said.

This is a man who’s been forgotten by history. And he’s been forgotten ... because of his suicide.

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A Revelation in Home Heating Smart & Stylish

NEWS & NOTES Q&A

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How long have you operated the rescue farm? We were founded in ‘96, established here on Paradise Lane in ‘97 and became a 501c3 nonprofit in 2002. When you first started, what was the mission of the shelter? The mission’s always been the same. It’s just blossomed into a bush of roses instead of a single one or two. What kind of the animals do you shelter? In ‘97 I had five rescue horses and I was rescuing dogs, cats and parrots or whatever needs us. In 2002, when we became incorporated as a nonprofit, we then had 20 horses and many other animals. Now, we average 60 to 70 horses at a time. We presently have goats, potbelly pigs, mourning doves, cockatiels, guinea pigs, rabbits, a Canadian goose with a crooked bill, another goose that was just hit by a car and dropped off, a bunch of roosters, a bunch of laying hens … cattle. You never know what’s coming, knocking at our door for help. There’s a wild red-tailed hawk that calls it home here. … The first goose that we got was found with a deformed beak in somebody’s backyard, and he’s been with us for about three and a half years. … There’s a production company out of Canada that came down here to our farm and filmed for two days to make a movie out of Crooked Bill. You recently received about 10 puppies by airplane. Can you tell me about that? Pregnant dogs are the first to be euthanized in “kill towns” across the country. So, our focus has been rescuing pregnant dogs out of “kill towns.” Last year, we rescued 21 pregnant dogs and we also rescued puppies that are found on the streets. … In total with the puppies and other dogs, 176 were rescued and adopted out. This year has been absolutely crazy. We just rescued our 33rd pregnant dog for this year and adopted out 314, so we’re almost double Five favorites Favorite Book: The Soul of a Horse by Joe Camp Favorite Movie: Namu, the Killer Whale Favorite Musician: Alabama Favorite Food: A good breakfast Favorite thing about NH: You’ve got everything in New Hampshire.

last year, which was our biggest year. … One of the people who contacted me for help had 10 puppies who were being brought into a kill shelter, and puppies with no vaccines Courtesy photo. being brought into a kill shelter means they’re gonna die. … They gave me an emergency call and said ‘Can you tag these 10 puppies?’ … When a rescue commits to saving animals it’s called the rescue “tagging” the animals. So I did. … [One of them] had a connection with Pilots N Paws. … And Pilots N Paws flew [the puppies] right in and met me at the Concord Airport with the puppies. It was wonderful.

Why do you have your eyes set on rescuing dogs from out of state? When you get way down to like Georgia and Texas, a lot of their shelters are like 95- to 97-percent kill rate. To control the population, the first thing that’s killed is a pregnant dog coming in to them. It goes right out the back door to be euthanized. It’s really hard with our stringent laws to rescue them. … It has to be quarantined where it’s coming from for two weeks, it has to be clean of parasites and they have to get out-of-state health certificates to come to New Hampshire.

Do you expect to see more jet-setting canines arrive in New Hampshire? We actually are seeing if there are any available pilots for the [weekend of Aug. 29]. … The same person who applied to us before … she knows whoever to send it to, a contact, and we’re trying to get some available pilots to come in… with some puppies.

I understand you have a fun naming convention for the puppy litters? Because there’s so many different groups of puppies, we have to have a name for them. So, the ones that Pilots N Paws brought … we didn’t know what to name them. Then we came up with the “Veggie” litter. So you got Squash and Tomato. So, if anybody wants to adopt Tomato, then we [document] ‘Puppy Tomato of the Veggie Litter’ so we can find where they came from. — Ryan Lessard


NEWS & NOTES

QUALITY OF LIFE INDEX Lead paint removal

75

Mental hospital delays

The continuing budget stalemate between Gov. Maggie Hassan and Republican lawmakers will delay the opening of a 10-bed mental health crisis unit at the state’s mental hospital. The AP reported the wing of New Hampshire Hospital was scheduled to open this fall, but the money needed to operate the facility is tied up in the new budget. The last budget had included money to build the crisis unit, but money for staff was going to be in the next biennial budget. QOL Score: -1 Comment: The delay puts continued strain on a mental health system struggling to comply with the terms of a 2013 settlement that set benchmarks that a recent study reported the state is already failing to meet.

Apple season

It’s official — apple season is upon us. Gov. Maggie Hassan was set to pick the first apple of the season at Mack’s Apple Farm on Sept. 2, which is New England Apple Day. And it’s going to be a good season, too, said numerous New England apple growers in a recent article by the Associated Press. According to the U.S. Apple Association, New England production is expected to be about 14 percent higher than last year’s crop, 18 percent above the region’s five-year average. Early spring and summer gave very little frost damage, though the mid-summer drought might have affected some New Hampshire farmers. QOL Score: +1 Comment: Yum.

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The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development is granting the city of Manchester roughly $2.9 million to reduce hazardous exposure to lead paint. The HUD grant from the Lead Hazard Reduction Demonstration Grant Program was announced by Sen. Jeanne Shaheen’s office. The money will help the Manchester Health Department and the housing nonprofit The Way Home to address hazards in 175 units in the city. NHPR reported most of the housing stock in the Queen City was built before 1978, when lead paint was banned by federal law. QOL Score: +1 Comment: Manchester is one of 14 cities across the country to receive similar grants.

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Goodbye railroad ties

The railroad ties that were dumped along the roadside in Salem by Iron Horse Preservation Society in 2012 — pulled as part of a developing downtown railroad project, left there because the organization couldn’t afford to dispose of them — have finally been removed. The ties, which sat in piles on Route 28, angered lots of residents and town officials who said they were an “eyesore” in an Eagle Tribune article. Assistant town manager Leon Goodwin said the town is seeking reimbursement in Rockingham Superior Court for the $40,000 it had to pay a Hudson firm to remove the ties. QOL Score: +1 Comment: A QOL boost for those who live in Salem or travel by Route 28 regularly, but QOL worries the headache these ties have caused will disrupt the progress of the Salem rail trail development, which is why the ties were removed in the first place. Trail construction was supposed to be completed this fall but has been postponed because of rising, unexpected costs, according to the article. QOL score: 86 Net change: +2 QOL this week: 88 What’s affecting your Quality of Life here in New Hampshire? Let us know at news@hippopress.com.

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15th Hole

The Drive:

This baby is a bear. It’s just 400 yards from the white tees but it seems like 600 because it’s straight uphill all the way. (1) To get par you need a solid drive to anywhere in the fairway to hopefully reach the crown of the first hill. (2) From there, it’s a long iron for most and better be straight as there are bunkers on the left and right. Go long and it’s a downhill chip that makes it almost impossible to get close to the pin no matter what you do.

Par 4 400 Yards

The Green:

As tough as it is to get to the green, here’s where the real fun starts. It’s has a big slope from right to left that brings almost every miss 15 feet passed the cup when it’s at the upper right of the green. That makes being below the hole vital, though even still – you’ve still got big breaks going up as well. This is one of the state’s best par 4’s so par, is a job well done.

HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 10

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With a most unusual sports summer coming to a close, let’s clear out what’s been gathering in my cluttered sports mind. In lieu of the whining by the Indianapolis media over Deflate-gate and owner Jim Irsay’s push to keep Tom Brady’s suspension at four games, how great is it that the Pats will have Colts all-timer Reggie Wayne wearing the flying Elvis when they go into Indy for the first time since Deflategate? And, as you probably know, if Brady’s suspension holds, that’s his first game back. Not that you can really tell much from a pre-season record, but anyone else notice besides his brother Keith and me that after an off-season of nothing but upheaval Chip Kelly’s Eagles are 3-0? Has there ever been anything invented that gets sports people in trouble more often than Twitter? Curt Schilling is the latest after his tweet likening the percent of Germans who became Nazis to the percent of Muslims that become extremists. ESPN of course suspended him immediately. Truth, when it comes to the punishment handed out by the people the tweeters answer to, apparently doesn’t really matter, just the perception of what’s being said. Like Ohio State suspending QB Cardale Jones for a game after tweeting that going to class was “pointless.” Considering the high number of dregs his coach Urban Meyer had playing under him at Florida and OSU’s graduation record of their “student-a-tha-letes” over the years in football, it sure seems that’s how the powers think too. They just don’t want the public thinking that way, that’s all. Having said that, on the field it’s Meyer and Nick Saban among coaches in the college game and then there’s everyone else. The Red Sox need to use their payroll advantage to swipe a top starter from a team needing payroll relief like in their deals for Pedro (Montreal), Schilling (Arizona) and Josh Beckett (Florida). So how about Pablo Sandoval (eating $10 million per, yuck) to third base-needy San Diego with Matt Barnes and Wade Miley for James Shields and Craig Kimbrel? And if you’re wondering, Mookie goes to third and JBJ to center. Here’s another one: Hanley Ramirez (to DH), Travis Shaw, Brian Johnson and Deven Marrero or Brock Holt to Chicago in a package for Jose Abreu? Only works if the Chi-Sox are ready for a rebuild. Do the Glory Johnson-Brittney Griner marital fisticuffs finally put to rest the myth that the male is always the aggressor and/or accelerator in domestic assault cases? And given the overwhelming physical advantage the

6’8” Grenier has on the 6’3” Johnson, where’s the usual justifiable moral outrage for that? Guess Steve Kerr made the right decision going to Golden State rather than work for his old coach Phil Jackson as coach of the Knicks where he would have had to run Jax’s beloved tri-angle. Guess he figured good players mean a lot more than running an overrated offensive system that hasn’t won squat with any of his disciples or when Michael Jordan, Shaq or Kobe weren’t running it. This is a little late, but it got big play when Pedro’s book came out earlier in the summer. But, with all due respect to Don Zimmer, 72 years old or not, what was Pedro supposed to do when Zim came rampaging right at him during the wild scene in Game 3 of the 2003 ALCS besides shuck him aside? Thumbs down to Syracuse football for un-retiring the number 44 worn by its great running backs Jimmy Brown, Ernie Davis and Floyd Little. I get the idea it’s nice to see a “special player” wear it, but how do you determine that? It seems like an entitlement thing if given to a freshman or, worse, as a recruiting perk, and switching the number of an upperclassman seems contrived. Warning to Houston’s James Harden, now that he appears headed to being the latest victim of the Kardashian Klan by dating Chloe: As Reggie Bush, Kris Humphries, Lamar Odom, OJ Simpson and Bruce Jenner can tell you, it’s all downhill for sports people who get mixed up with that family. Spurs assistant Becky Hammon’s performance in NBA summer leagues was impressive. The first female to coach in any NBA role led SA to the title in the 23-team Vegas League. And since the Spurs aren’t exactly loaded with lottery picks, coaching probably had something to do with it. The latest in the unending string of athletes acting badly and being saved by their talent is Ty Lawson. His reward for being DUI’d twice in five months was to get out of headedfor-the-lottery Denver in a trade that sent him to point guard-needy NBA contender Houston five days after his second arrest. Wonder what the prize will be if he gets a third DUI? Was Cole Hamels, who threw one at the Cubs five days earlier, the first guy ever traded immediately after throwing a no-hitter in his last game for the team that dumped him? Finally, while I don’t think the Sox owe anyone an explanation, I urge all to sign the online petition to save Don Orsillo’s job after his ousting at NESN as Red Sox broadcaster. Given how seamlessly he worked with 29 different color guys during the many Jerry Remy absences, this seems almost as “it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” dumb as changing Coke’s formula when it was the most popular drink in the world in the 1980s. Email dlong@hippopress.com.


SPORTS DAVE LONG’S PEOPLE, PLACES & OTHER STUFF

Upheaval at Saint Anselm The Big Story: It’s what’s going on up on the hill, where Saint Anselm mysteriously lost another athletic director last week when interim AD Phil Rowe resigned just two weeks after taking the job. And there is the expected move to be a Division III program that seems to have a number of the alums up in arms after getting an email from Keith Dickson to his basketball alums calling that move a “sad, sad day.” Sports 101: Who holds the majorleague record for most home runs hit in September? Big Story II: It’s the return of high school sports season. Football kicks off locally with an assault from Nashua teams as Bedford, Memorial and Central take on Nashua North (home), Nashua South (home) and (at) Bishop Guertin respectively on Friday night, while West and Trinity do battle on the west side of town. All the other sports including soccer meanwhile played their first slate of games all through last week. Hot Ticket: It’s the opener for the seventh-ranked UNH football team vs. San Jose St. on the left coast Thursday, Sept. 3. Game time is 10 p.m. and the action can

The Numbers

5 – goals scored by Bedford and none allowed in a 5-0 win over Central to open the soccer seasons when Richard D’Amico had two goals and an assist to lead the way. 6 – goals scored by a picking-up-where-she-leftoff Gabi Brummett to go along with two assists in leading Derryfield to an

be heard on the Wildcat Radio Network. Out-of-Town Scores: Speaking of the U, they have a weird 2015 schedule. It kicks off with three on the road at San Jose, Colgate and Stoney Brook. Then it’s two at home vs. Central Conn. and Elon of North Carolina before a bye. After that it’s two on the road vs. nemesis William & Mary and Delaware, two at home vs. URI and Richmond, and a road game vs. Albany before the annual rivalry game with Maine in Durham. Sports 101 Answer: The September homer record is 17 by Babe Ruth and Albert Belle. Ruth needed all 17 to set his famous single-season record of 60 in 1927. Belle did it in 1995 while becoming the only one to ever have 50 homers (50) and doubles (52) in a season. On This Date – Sept. 3: 1928 – Ty Cobb got his 4,191th and final career hit. 1931 – Dick Motta, NBA coach who originated the phrase “It’s not over till the fat lady sings,” is born. 1957 – Warren Spahn sets record for a lefty pitcher with 41st shutout. 1977 – Japanese slugger Sadaharu Oh hits 756th HR to surpass Hank Aaron’s total.

11-1 romp over Pittsfield in the Cougars’ opening day win. 15 – number Reggie Wayne will wear for the Patriots in the coming year after wearing 87 while being their nemesis the previous 14 years playing for the Colts. 34 – low score carded at Derryfield CC by Memorial’s Garrett Oliver in a three-way match to open the

Sports Glossary

2015 NHIAA golf season when Keene was the winner at 198 and Memorial second a stroke behind followed by Alvirne at 212. 39 – low match scores carded by the Bedford duo of Tim (9½) Weeks and Sean McGadden to lead the Bulldogs to a 204 combined score to top Spaulding (230) and Nashua North (234) at Rochester CC.

Jimmy Brown: While his career record wearing 44 at Syracuse was “just” 17-101, Brown’s arrival sparked the beginning of a great period for SU football. He ran for 982 yards in an eight-game season his senior year and averaged 6.2 per carry. The signature games were running for 197 yards and 6 TDs in a 61-7 rout of Colgate when he also kicked seven PAT, good for 43 points on the day, and running for 132 vs. TCU in the Cotton Bowl when he had 3 TDs and 3 PATs. And all he did after leaving the ’Cuse was become the greatest player in NFL history. Ernie Davis: The second great SU 44, became the first African-American to win the Heisman Trophy in 1961. He tragically died of leukemia before being able to join Brown in Cleveland’s backfield after being drafted by Washington in ’62 and then flipped for Hall of Famer Bobby Mitchell. At Syracuse he went 26-5, including an 11-0 national championship team in 1959, which was, oh by the way, quarterbacked by local lad Don Sarette. Floyd Little: Third in the line of great 44s during the glory years of Syracuse football and only three-time All-American ever at SU. During that time he ran for 2,750, had 51 catches for another 591 yards and scored 39 TDs. He finished fifth in the Heisman voting in 1965 and 1966 before being selected fifth overall by Denver in the first combined NFL-AFL draft in 1967.

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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 11


Of all the things one would expect “The collection just grew and I ended up, to see in a car dealership, a collection based on research, deciding to focus solely of Muhammad Ali sports memorabilia on Ali as opposed to some of the other colisn’t one of them. But that’s what you’ll find lections I had,” Singer said. at Merchants Automotive Group in Hooksett. He has over 75 pieces of Ali memorabilStephen Singer, Merchants president ia. He said one of the most interesting is an X-ray of Ali’s broken jaw, sustained in a emeritus, first heard of Ali in the early 1960s when Ali was on the U.S. fight against Ken Norton. Olympic boxing team, before “The piece is presented in a he became the heavyweight lit shadow box so you would champion of the world. see the X-ray as if you were “But our real interest in your doctor’s office,” he came when he became a said. “And it is hand signed by Ali and Norton.” goodwill ambassador and Another treasure is a comused his success in the boxing world as a springboard to pilation of signatures from make the world a better place,” Ali’s opponents. Singer said in a phone interview. “Ali had 50 opponents during his Photo by Allie career, and about 10 years ago I set “Based on a similar philosophy and Ginwala. out to get the autograph of every one hoping that our success here could be used to make our community a better place, of those fights,” he said. Four years later he had 49 signatures, only Ali became a role model for me personally.” For the past 35 years, Singer’s collection missing Jim Robinson, a little-known fighter. of Ali memorabilia has been displayed in the — Allie Ginwala dealership, partly because he wanted to share Muhammad Ali Collection it with the community, and partly because it Where: Merchants Automotive Group, outgrew the space he had for it in his house. 1278 Hooksett Road, Hooksett A longtime sports memorabilia collector, Contact: 1-800-AUTO-999 Singer didn’t originally intend to create such Visit: singerfamilyenterprises.com/ a singularly focused attraction. He started muhammad-ali. Call ahead to arrange a with an Ali item or two, and then others saw time to see the collection. his collection and decided to contribute. HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 12

The ceremony was held at Hampton Beach with Harry Houdini’s wife as the guest Take a trip to the Tuck Museum in Hamp- of honor. Goody Cole paraphernalia was sold ton and you’ll find five buildings filled with at the event and certified copies of her court local Seacoast history, like exhibits high- documents were burned. Cole’s story and the lighting the area’s early industry, a 1930s event was featured in national newspapers. tourist cabin from Hampton Beach and a In the Tuck Museum’s section of Goody small research library. Contrary to popular Cole artifacts is a vial from the ceremony belief, one thing you won’t find is an urn allegedly filled with dirt from her home with the ashes of accused Hampton site, a Goody Cole doll and comwitch Eunice “Goody” Cole. memorative coin from the In the “early Hampton” ceremony, newspapers clipcorner of the museum sits an pings surrounding the highly urn that many visitors think publicized event, a script contains the ashes of Goody from a radio show about Cole, a woman accused of Cole, chapters of books from witchcraft three times who scholars who have written was taken to court and allegabout witchcraft in New Engedly convicted in the late 1650s. land, and of course the urn. “That is again a misconception,” “These things bring people to Executive Director Betty Moore said Courtesy photo. the museum all the time but they’re of the urn. “The ashes are from the myths,” Moore said of the ashcourt papers and dirt from her home site.” es. “[But] that’s what makes us unique. If In 1938, the “Society in Hampton for the Goody Cole is what gets people in the door, Apprehension of Those Falsely Accusing then that’s the way it is.” — Allie Ginwala Eunice ‘Goody’ Cole of Having Familiarity Tuck Museum with the Devil” organized an event to clear Cole’s name. Where: 40 Park Ave., Hampton “With the radio era, this became big news Open: Sunday, Wednesday, Friday from in 1938,” Moore said. “There was a group 1 to 4 p.m. Cost: Admission is free; donations formed to exonerate Goody Cole and in order appreciated to promote the 200th anniversary of the town Call: 929-0781 of Hampton, they decided to give Goody Visit: hamptonhistoricalsociety.org Cole back her citizenship.”


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Webster was the son of Abigail and Ebenezer Webster, whose graves, among many other Websters’, are just down the road. Ebenezer Webster sold the farm in 1785 to move to more fertile land near the Merrimack River. The property passed through several owners until Judge George Smith gave it back to Daniel Webster in 1851. The historic site is open Saturdays and Sundays, May 23 through Oct. 12, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission is $4 for New Hampshire adults ages 18 to 64, free for everyone else. — Kelly Sennott

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Daniel Webster, a leading American senator and spokesperson for American nationalism, was born in Salisbury, New Hampshire, in 1782. You can see where he grew up at the historic site dedicated to him, 131 North Road, Franklin (934-5057). Inside the small secluded log cabin is an indoor fireplace, antique cookware, an old spinning wheel and old furniture, according to nhstateparks.org. Though much is believed to be original, the fireplace, attached woodshed and well were all rebuilt or restored.

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HIPPO

Tucked away on a small island at the con- 14-year-old boy. It was a massacre. When they fluence of the Contoocook and Merrimack were finished, they had killed and scalped 10 rivers in Boscawen is a national treasure. of the 12 Indians who captured them. The statue seems almost hidden from sight The scalps served as a sort of proof, but they and the public consciousness, but it is a fasci- were also used to collect bounties back then. nating piece of history. Clow says it’s important to remember that As Elaine Clow, historian for the Boscaw- this took place during King William’s War, en Historical Society, explains, it’s the first the first of six colonial proxy wars between statue of a real-life, non-allegorical New France and New England woman in the United States. fought largely between Protes“The monument itself tant and Catholic kings. Both is the first monument sides employed native [depicting] a woman allies in the skirmishes. in the United States. It That particular war was dedicated in 1874,” began when William, Clow said. a Protestant, took the But Clow said it wasn’t English throne after the dedicated to the woman it Catholic King James depicts, Hannah Duston; II was deposed. William it’s dedicated to the courage joined an alliance of Euroand valor of American mothers. pean countries aimed at halting The story of Hannah Duston is Courtesy photo. Louis XIV of France’s expansionist shrouded in mystery, hyperbole and policies. cultural narratives linked inextricably to the New Englanders still freshly recalled the time when Duston lived and the time when raid in Dover eight years before Duston was the statue was commissioned. captured. About 20 colonists were killed and Clow said the statue commemorates an nearly 30 were captured and sold in New event in 1697, when Duston, her newborn France. child and midwife were rousted from their But by the time the statue was erected, 177 home in Haverhill by a raiding party of years had passed and western expansion was Canadian Abenaki natives. on the minds of Americans. Duston and the nurse were to be sold as “Most of it is 19th-century romanticizing slaves in Canada, but the child was murdered of the event,” Clow said. by someone in the raiding party. The island was believed at the time to be “The husband and the other children man- the site of the bloodbath. Duston’s statue aged to escape to another fort,” Clow said. depicts her holding the scalps in her left hand Several days later, Duston returned home and a tomahawk in her right. with her nurse and a handful of Indian scalps. “When she holds the scalps, she holds “We have the actual documents of a tex- them as though they were a bouquet of flowtual diary [written by Judge Samuel Sewell] ers,” Clow said. that happened after the event,” Clow said. Lately, the site has become overgrown But those documents don’t shed much with brush and has been home to illicit light on what led to Duston’s escape and how behavior during the summer months. Graffiti she came to obtain the scalps. and trash have built up, and the statue’s nose As the story goes, Duston was overcome was broken off. Work is being done to clean with rage over the murder of her newborn, up the island, and there have been talks about snatched a tomahawk and began killing the installing signs with more historical informaraiders with the help of the midwife and a tion. — Ryan Lessard

HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 13


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If you’re taking a walk through the town common in Warren, don’t be alarmed by the towering rocket in the center of town. The Redstone Rocket, a retired missile from the Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama, came to the Granite State over 40 years ago thanks to Ted Asselin, a Warren native who was stationed at the Redstone Arsenal in 1970. “He was born in this town and he was in the service and he worked at Huntsville, Alabama, and they were getting rid of the rockets and he said he’d like one,” Janice Sackett, president of the Warren Historical Society, said in a phone interview. Asselin got permission to have the rocket converted into a display piece but was told that if he wanted to move it, he had to do it on his own dime. “I think it cost him a little over a thousand dollars to bring it up and it had to be painted … there was a lot of volunteer help putting it up,” Sackett said. She recalls contributing some money to the donation buckets he had in town but said it was mostly a one-man endeavor with the goal of giving local children the chance to see a rocket up close. “He wanted our kids in this area [to have access to it] because [they’d] never get in that area [Alabama] to see one,” she said.

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Nobody knows for sure who built what’s become known as America’s Stonehenge, at 105 Haverhill Road in Salem, but there are many theories. Some think it was constructed by local farmers in the 18th and 19th centuries. Others say it was built by early American Indians, while some claim it’s the lost monastery wreckage of a migrant group of Irish monks. (Though it’s named after Stonehenge in England, there’s no real cultural connection.) Today, it’s like a maze of man-made chambers, walls, odd stone arrangements and supposed ceremonial meeting places that you can access via a collection of trails in its Salem location run by Dennis Stone and his family. The site became a tourist attraction when his father, Robert Stone, began leasing and bought the 100-plus acres in the 1950s and 1960s, and today it’s accessible for kids and adults. You can actually walk inside some of these old chambers. Stone said in a phone interview he believes the site is a 4,000-year-old megalithic astronomical complex, which was also the belief of William Goodwin, who bought the site in

Courtesy photo.

In 1971 the rocket finally made it to Warren and was set on a piece of property owned by the historical society. It has since become both a symbol of notoriety for the town and a topic of contention for some residents who think it’s an eyesore or don’t think a missile should be placed near a church. Before it was installed in the town common, Sackett took her children to see the rocket. “Somewhere I have a picture of my six boys on it before they put it up,” she said. “It was laying down … and I told my motherin-law they were on their way to the moon if they didn’t behave.” — Allie Ginwala

Photo courtesy of Katherine Stone.

1937 and called it Mystery Hill. Numerous noted archeologists have visited the site, and while some claim it’s all a hoax, radiocarbon analysis points to human occupation of the area from as far back as 2,000 B.C. The grounds cover about 110 acres, which you can access for $12 ($10 for seniors, $7.50 for kids younger than 12, stonehengeusa.com). On the grounds are a couple of alpacas, a gift shop and a 9-minute introductory video about the place. — Kelly Sennott


In the early 1930s, the art department at Dartmouth College was flourishing. Two art history professors invited Mexican artist José Clemente Orozco to become the second artist-in-residence and teach students the art of fresco. When the college commissioned a mural to be painted on campus, they asked Orozco to take on the project, and he agreed. After two years at work, Orozco finished The Epic of American Civilization in 1934. The 3,200-square-foot mural runs the length of the college library ground-level reserve reading room, now known as the Orozco Room. The mural is composed of 24 individual scenes that represent North America’s indigenous and European history. The west wing depicts the origins of the indigenous American civilization, ritual human sacrifice by the indigenous Mesoamericans, the coming and departure of the Mesoamericans’ mythological creature Quetzalcoatl, and the early 16thcentury European invasion of the American continent. The east wing tells of the 16th-century Spanish invasion of Mexico led by Hernan Cortez before abruptly jumping to the 20th

In its heyday, Benson’s Wild Animal Farm (27 Kimball Hill Road, facebook. com/bensons.waf) in Hudson was the longest-running private zoo and amusement park in the United States. First it was an animal training center, founded by John Benson in 1924, and then it opened to the public in 1926 with animal exhibits, a miniature train and games. Then it became a wild animal circus, and in its final life, a zoo, before closing in 1987. The zoo had a wide variety of animals — lions, bears, llamas, birds, elephants — but the most famous was a gorilla named Colossus, a 500-pound dude who would live to age 40. He once ran for president in the New Hampshire primary as a publicity stunt. The zoo closed in 1987 and was dormant until 2009, when the town of Hudson reclaimed the property. Since then, numerous

century, morbidly illustrating the chaos of industry and corruption of societal institutions. The epic concludes in the final two scenes with the apocalypse, where Jesus Christ passes his judgment and destroys modern ideologies, followed by a new, semiutopian world. The mural continues to receive notice. In 2012, Dartmouth College launched an annual lecture series dedicated to the mural and installed new LED lighting to enhance the mural’s color and graphics. In 2013, it was named a national historic landmark by former Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar and National Park Service Director Jonathan B. Jarvis. Last year, the college added a feature to its website that allows people to access an interactive panoramic image of the mural. — Angie Sykeny The Epic of American Civilization Where: Hood Museum of Art by Dartmouth College, 4 E. Wheelock St., Hanover Hours: Tuesday and Thursday through Saturday,10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Wednesday, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., and Sunday, noon to 5 p.m. Cost: Free and open to the public Visit: hoodmuseum.dartmouth.edu

volunteers and reps from the town’s highway department have put in many hours cleaning the park and making it relevant again. But there are still relics of its history on site; in addition to half a dozen buildings left over from its animal farm life, there are remnants from the old gorilla cage (kids sometimes like to go inside, said Jim Barnes, chairman of the Benson Park Committee). The old elephant barn is in the process of being turned into a museum, and where there used to be bird cages, there’s a flower garden, Barnes said. Today people use the park all the time, he said. The property is 165 acres and contains a 9/11 memorial, dog park, Little Free Library, gazebo and more. “I think [the farm] was pretty unique for the area. It attracted a lot of attention,” Barnes said. — Kelly Sennott

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“Gods of the Modern World.” Courtesy of Trustees of Dartmouth College. Photo credit Jeffrey Nintzel.

The New Hampshire Telephone Museum in Warner was opened in 2005, three years after the local independent telephone company MCT Telecom was sold to TDS Telecom. The museum’s executive director, Laura French, says the initial collection came from Dick Violette, a man who had risen to the rank of president and CEO of MCT Telecom and later as chairman of the board. Violette had worked in the telephone industry since 1946. “Throughout the years, Dick and his family had about four generations in the telephone business [and he had] amassed a collection of telephones,” French said. The shareholders of MCT pooled their resources after the buyout to create an endowment to fund the museum. And the collection has since grown. “We have over 1,000 artifacts that includes telephones, switching systems, tools…,” French said. “It also includes phone books and publications.” French said the museum has replicas of Alexander Graham Bell’s invention all the way up to the first smartphone. It has early crank phones and automatic dial phones as well. “We have a fun collection of novelty phones too,” French said. Those include SpongeBob Squarepants phones and Mickey Mouse phones. Violette’s initial collection was joined by the collection of Gary Mitchell of the Woodbury Telephone Company of Connecticut. Violette began his career as a lineman for Merrimack County Telephone Company, which served the Warner, Bradford and Sutton exchanges. In 1959, he went to work for Hopkinton Telephone Company, which served the Contoocook exchange. In the 1970s Violette began working for both companies at the same time; he oversaw their merger in 1977. Since it opened, the museum has hosted more than 7,000 guests from all over the country and the world. — Ryan Lessard

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Tucked away in Milford’s Elm Street Cemetery, adjacent to the Korean War Memorial, is a grave covered with words — about 150 all over the stone, not an inch to spare — that give claim to how Caroline Cutter died in 1838: “Murdered by the Baptist Ministry and the Baptist Churches.” Following this introduction is a detailed rant by her husband, Dr. Calvin Cutter. He names prominent Milford religious leaders who excommunicated the couple before her death. According to Cutter, a deacon and reverend accused her of lying in a church meeting. Another somehow reduced her to poverty in an effort to keep Cutter “down.” It goes on to say, “The intentional and malicious destruction of her life and happiness, as above described, destroyed her life,” and it finishes with a quote by Caroline Cutter herself, her last words before she died: “Tell the truth and iniquity will come out.” According to Milford historian David Palance, Dr. Cutter had gotten into a spat with the nearby Baptist churches. Roxie Zwicker in New Hampshire Book of the Dead: Graveyard Legends and Lore and New Hampshire historian Fritz Wetherbee said Dr. Cutter had been bullying Milford church members into funding the construction of another church in downtown Nashua — a church he’d had built but that had so far been funded on his own empty promises. None of the builders had been paid. Some of the words on the 1838 stone are faded, Palance said; it had been made of marble, beautiful during the period, beaten down now by pollution. Palance often leads tours around the cemetery, particularly during the Milford Pumpkin Festival. Cutter’s is not the only interesting story, but it’s one that gets a lot of attention. It’s Palance’s opinion Caroline Cutter died of depression. “You didn’t have a social life unless it had something to do with the church. She got cut off immediately from all her friends,” Palance said. Caroline Cutter died shortly after giving birth to Carrie Eliza Cutter, who would also die shortly after. According to Zwicker, Dr. Cutter created a big hubbub about this gravestone commission; he had an announcement in the local paper inviting people to come see the unveiling. Hundreds showed up. Oddly enough, according to Palance, Dr. Cutter would move to Massachusetts and marry another woman named Carrie. Together they had a daughter, another Carrie Cutter, who became the first woman to enter the service in the Civil War as a nurse; there’s a plaque honoring her near the site. — Kelly Sennott

When Bob Lawton opened Funspot with “It just happened,” he said. “[My brothhis brother in 1952, he never guessed that er and I] had never been in business before, four decades later it would be the largest so we didn’t know where it was going to go, arcade in the world. but we both had kids and we would see what And with over 600 video games — plus a kinds of games other families liked to play, classic arcade museum, a 20-lane tenpin and so that’s what we worked with, and it just candlepin bowling center, cash bingo, indoor developed from there.” and outdoor mini-golf, a restaurant and a Lawton said Funspot has a surplus of tavern — Lawton said Funspot won’t be about 100 games, which are currently in storage because of space limitations, but relinquishing that title anytime soon. he swaps them periodically to “No one has anywhere near that much,” he said. “And I “keep things fresh.” can assure you, we aren’t finFunspot also has the ished. As long as I hang on world’s largest collection of classic video games, with here we’ll be expanding and continuing to add to our col300 dating back to 1987 lection of video games.” and earlier. Two classics are Lawton grew up in Weirs especially notable: the 1979 and went to college in Vermont. Hercules pinball machine, There, he saw an indoor mini-golf which is the largest pinball park and decided Weirs could also use Courtesy photo. machine ever made, and next to it, the a place for families to have fun. With tiny 1938 Genco Stop & Go pinball, the help of his brother and a $750 loan from which is Funspot’s oldest game. his grandmother, Lawton’s indoor nine-hole The arcade received extra attention when mini-golf course was under way. the first person ever to beat a Pac-Man game After a successful first year, the broth- did it at Funspot in the 1990s. ers began expanding, adding games. For 25 “With a lot of these families, the parents years, they had pinball, rifle galleries and will go right to the old classic games,” Lawold mechanical games, until one day that ton said. “They walk into the room and are changed everything. astounded with the number of games they “An operator from Concord came in and used to play over 20 years ago, and they are started talking about video games he had thrilled to play them again.” — Angie Sykeny all over the state,” Lawton said, “so he said, Funspot waving his arms, ‘Let me get rid of this junk and put in some good games,’ and it shocked Where: 579 Endicott St. North, Laconia me, but I let him put some in, and they made Hours: Open every day year-round more money than any other games I had at except Christmas Day; Mid-June through the time.” Labor Day: Sunday through Friday, 10 Funspot continued to grow, featuring more a.m. to 11 p.m., and Saturday, 10 a.m. to midnight; Labor Day through mid-June: and more games each year, and in the midSunday through Thursday, 10 a.m. to 10 1990s Guinness World Records named it p.m., Friday, 10 a.m. to 11 p.m., and Satthe largest arcade in the world. Lawton said urday, 10 a.m. to midnight. it was never his intent to earn Funspot that Cost: No charge for admission title and that he had no idea his arcade would Visit: funspotnh.com become that big.

Madison Boulder is the largest known glacial erratic in New England, and according to Parks and Recreation New Hampshire, it’s also among the largest in the world. Madison Boulder is made of granite, measuring 83 feet in length, 37 feet in width and 23 feet high (from the ground). Its estimated weight is 5,963 tons. It’s presently surrounded by 17 acres of forest acquired by the state in 1946. Twenty-four years later, the boulder was designated a National Natural Landmark by the U.S. Department of Interior. Glacial erratics are large rocks transported by glaciers from their original location to a place with bedrock of a different type of rock. Geologists have mapped erratics

from places like Mt. Ascutney in Vermont in order to prove this. Until the early 19th century, it was believed the rocks were transported by massive floods. Most of the erratics in New Hampshire landed in their current locations about 10,000 years ago. The most recent glacial movements began about 2.6 million years ago during the Pleistocene Epoch, during which the last ice age occurred. The continental glacier that passed over New Hampshire flowed southward from Labrador. It’s believed Madison Boulder was a chip off Whitten Ledge less than two miles to the northeast. The park is always open and pets are permitted. It can be accessed at the end of Boulder Road, off Route 113 in Madison. — Ryan Lessard


collectors. Recent additions include a taxidermied moose and polar bear. “We still take artifacts,” Ross said. “PeoEarly-1900s dental tools, a stuffed alliple will often bring things in, and we just gator and a pair of mummy hands are make sure they fit with our mission and the just a few of the eccentric items to be idea of the museum.” found at the Libby Museum in Libby Museum hosts varWolfeboro. The museum was ious events and programs designed and built in 1912 by throughout the year, includWolfeboro dentist Dr. Hening a kids’ scavenger hunt, ry Libby after his wife said kids’ summer camps, workhis artifact collection was shops, guest speakers, a becoming too large for their poetry trail, a monthly art house. exhibit and an interactive tour “He was always a curiin which Ross plays the part of ous renaissance man,” Sheryll Courtesy photo. Mrs. Libby. Ross, co-director of the museum, “It’s one of those places you can said. “He would study every minreturn to time and time again, because the ute detail of a peanut or shell or butterfly and then progressed to study animals and programs and exhibits are always changing,” Ross said, “and even though it’s just human skeletons.” The doctor started collecting artifacts one room, there’s so much here that, if you from his travels to different countries. stay for an hour, you still can’t take it all in.” — Angie Sykeny When his patients learned of his hobby,

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2014. Just hours after the news was made public, grieving fans flocked to the sign, turning it into a memorial for the late actor. “The sign represented his time here in Keene,” Blomquist said, “so after he had passed, people who felt a connection with him in the Monadnock region placed flowers and candles in front of the sign.” The filming of Jumanji and the Parrish Shoe sign it left behind has become one of Keene’s trademarks, giving residents something to boast about and drawing nonresident fans to the city. “People around here have used it as sort of a, ‘Hey, this is where Jumanji was filmed,’ and many people who visit ask about it,” Blomquist said. “It’s cool watching the movie and seeing the sign and recognizing Keene.” — Angie Sykeny

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Downtown Keene is filled with signs for art centers, museums, the theater and numerous shops and eateries. But the sign for Parrish Shoes, painted on a brick building just around the corner from Main Street, is not like the others. That’s because the New England mill town footwear factory has never really existed. Scenes from the 1995 movie Jumanji were filmed in Keene. The movie stars Robin Williams as the grown-up Alan Parrish, son of Parrish Shoes owner Samuel Parrish, who has been trapped inside a board game for 26 years. The producers of Jumanji got the approval of the city council and property owner to paint a sign for Parrish Shoes on the wall of the building. When they were finished filming, the producers offered to restore the wall to its original state, but the owner told them to leave it. Keene Public Works Director Kürt Blomquist remembers when Jumanji was being filmed. “It was this great excitement that they were doing a movie in downtown Keene,” he said. “I think the entire community was excited about having Jumanji here.” The sign got more attention following the death of Robin Williams in August

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they started to bring him artifacts from their travels as well. The museum consists of one room divided into sections — natural artifacts, taxidermied animals, Native American artifacts, medical and dental tools, an art exhibit and an area for children with items they can touch, such as rocks, minerals and sand. The exhibits include not only Libby’s original collection, but also new objects presented by modern-day like-minded

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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 17


It would be easy to mistake the pastoral stone ruins deep in the woods of Chesterfield as belonging to an ancient, magical kingdom, but the truth is perhaps even more bizarre. A short hike into the 516-acre Madame Sherri Forest, owned by the Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests, you’ll stumble upon a massive stone stairway, some stone chimneys and a foundation that once belonged to the party house of an eccentric woman who styled herself Madame Antoinette Sherri. According to the book Madame Sherri by Eric Stanway, the house was built in the 1920s after the style of French chateaus and Roman palaces. There was even an old tree by Hippo Readers 5 that grew up through the living room. The Voted BEST FARMERS MARKET Years Running! castle-like mansion was wired for electricity Berries & Summer Veggies and water was brought down nearby Mount Lamb • Honey • Seafood Eggs • Herbs • Venison Wantastiquet through a quarter mile of copNH Wine • Local Ales Jams & Jellies • Potted Plants per piping. Dog Treats Baked Goods • Cheese & Milk The interior was said to be ornately decoGoat Cheese Organic Vegetables Maple Syrup rated with rugs, celebrity portraits and gold Fresh Mushrooms Buddhas. Madame Sherri would reportedly Specialty Produce NH Meats • Cut Flowers sit in a cobra-backed chair smoking cigaSpecial-made Wooden Ware Coffees & More rettes and hold court during soirees. She Homemade Soaps What a difference fresh-picked makes! was rumored to enjoy being driven around in a Packard luxury car wearing only a fur 373 South Willow Street coat. Her chauffeur was supposedly a woman Saturdays, 8:30 - Noon on Capitol Street. NHSouth 373 Willow Street Next toConcord, the UPS Store at Manchester Commons UPS373 Store at Manchester Commons named Tony who dressed as a man. Area South Willow Street May 16th Thru Oct 31stNext to theShopping Little is known for sure about Madame Hours: Monday - Friday - 9:00 am - 5:30 pm Shopping Area NextStreets! to the UPS Store at Manchester Commons Saturday - 9Parking am - 5 pm, Sunday FREE & Plentiful Weekend on- Closed Side WE Sherri, but there areRENT: plenty of rumors. Some 101471 Shopping Area NOW IN MANCHESTER! 14 Celina Ave, #4, Nashua, NH believe she Wheelchairs was an actual “madame” operHours: Monday - Friday - 9:00 am - 5:30 pm Saturday - 9 am - 5 pm, Sunday - Closed WE RENT: Walkers (603) 782-5766 (603) 881-8351 HOURS NOW IN MANCHESTER! Wheelchairs 14 Celina Ave, #4, Nashua, NH Transport Chairs We are located BEHIND the Westside Plaza which is off of HOURS 373 South Willow Street Walkers (603) 782-5766 (603) 881-8351 Route 101A on Amherst Street. We are right Mon-Fri next door to the 9-6 | Sat 9-5 | Sun-Closed Next to the UPS Store at Scooters Transport Chairs U.S. Postal facility on Celina Ave. South Willow Street HOURS Mon-Fri 9-6373 | Sat 9-5 | Sun-Closed Manchester Commons Next to the UPS Store at Scooters

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ating a brothel in the woods; others say she was a regular entertainer of bootleggers and gangsters. Sherri was a French woman who moved to the U.S. in 1911 after marrying her husband, who died in 1924. She worked in the theater business, designing and making costumes, but it’s unclear where her fortune came from. She soon ran out of money and abandoned the house, and it fell into disrepair. The castle burned down in 1962, and Madame Sherri died three years later at the age of 87. Madame Sherri Forest can be accessed by a trail starting at Gulf Road in Chesterfield. Visit nhdfl.org for more details. — Ryan Lessard

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Set $8.95 $39.95 $49.95 1-1:59 p.m. — 13% Offer Expires: 8/31/15 Med Center with Adjustable Wipe Aide Handy Caddy Center Fold 6' $32.95 Talking Clock Blanket Toilet Paper (As Seen On TV) White Table of the Gilmanton Historical sm said of the town. “He was Support Moistener $58.95 $4.99 $59.95 $23.95 $19.95 sm Society, decided to research Military Discount: quite well-known at that you are an active member of Holmes inIfour order to “cut time because newspapers armed forces, we want to thank Iyou for your service by Med Center with Adjustable Wipe Aide Handy Caddy Center Fold 6' what through think is a in those days just loved offering you a 20% discount on Talking Clock Blanket Toilet Paper (As Seen On TV) White Table your entire purchase. lot of distortion of his back-Please Support Moistener $58.95 $4.99 $59.95 murderers.” present your military I.D. $23.95 $19.95 8/31/15 sm ground,” he saidOfferinExpires: a phone Dickey said that although interview. they don’t publicize the placxtra Extra WideExtra WideWide He read old newspaper arties Holmes occupied in his Bariatric Reading Bariatric Reading Eye Eye Rose Lace Lady Lady Rose Lace Reading Eye Bariatric Lady Rose Lace cles, checked various accounts and Courtesy photo. childhood (the house is a privately Talking ScaleScale Glasses/Set 3 3 searched for documents of the man Absorbent Panty king Scale Glasses/Set of 3of of Absorbent Panty Glasses/Set Talking Absorbent Panty owned building), it is a part of the $5.95 $15.95 $5.95 $29.95$29.95$29.95 $5.95 $15.95 $15.95 who grew up in a house that still stands in town’s history. Gilmanton Corner and looks mostly as it did “There have been all kinds of stories writSEEOUR OUROUR SEE OUR SEESEE OUR SEE EE OUR many years ago. ten … local newspapers have done repeated "Made inNH" New Hampshire" "Made inNH" New Hampshire" in "Made in de in"Made New Hampshire" de in NH" Holmes was born into the Mudgett fami- stories about it because it’s such a sensationSEE OUR “Made in NH” SECTION: SECTION ly in 1861, a family whose roots Clarke said al story,” he said. — Allie Ginwala SECTION SECTION SECTION ECTIONSECTION Most Expensive Most Expensive Most Expensive Maple Syrup, date back to 1761. Maple Syrup, Maple Syrup, Hot Sauces ple Syrup, Item Purchased Maple Syrup, Sauces • Maple Syrup Item Purchased ple Syrup, Hot Hot Sauces Item Purchased Hot Sauces Hot Sauces One coupon per customer per day. Cannot combine with other offers. “They were well-respected people in One coupon per customer per day. Cannot combine with other offers. ot Sauces H.H. Holmes Excludes allcombine sale items. Expires & Honey One coupon perExcludes customer per day. with other9/30/15. offers. Excludes allCannot sale items. Expires 9/30/15. Jelly's, & Honey Jelly's, &Honey Honey • Hot smsm town,” Clarke said. “His siblings, [from] Fall Safety & PoypleSauces Jelly's, & Honey all sale items. Expires &Jelly's, Fall Safety &9/30/15. Poyple sm 's, Jelly's, & Honey Fall Safety & Poyple Visit various sites in Gilmanton Corner, One coupon per day. Cannot combine with other offers. what I can see, [were] normal people.” • Jellies the home town of H.H. Holmes. Excludes all sale items. Expires 9/30/15 Holmes went to the Gilmanton Corner Fall Saftey & Poyple See historicalsocietiesnh.org/gilmanton • Honey School (the building is now a workshop) for more details. as well as the Gilmanton Academy, and his We are located BEHIND the Westside Plaza which is off of Route 101A on Amherst Street. We are right next door to the U.S. Postal facility on Celina Ave.

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Don’t miss American Idiot, the stage adaptation of punk rock band Green Day’s rock opera, at the Janice B. Streeter Theatre (14 Court St., Nashua). The show’s final dates are Thursday, Sept. 3, through Saturday, Sept. 5, at 8 p.m. Tickets are $18 to $20. Visit actorsingers.org or call 320-1870.

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Sunday, September 13th at 9:40am Holiday Inn, 2280 Brown Ave, Manchester Thursday, September 17th at 7:30pm Holiday Inn, 2280 Brown Ave, Manchester Sunday, September 13th at 10:00am Hampton Inn, 9 Hotel Drive, Dover Wednesday, September 23rd at 7:00pm Exeter Public Library, 4 Chestnut St., Exeter

ECKANKAR Spiritual Chat Saturday, September 19th at 10:30am Plaistow Public Library, 85 Maine Street, Plaistow

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A Walk in the Woods hits theaters today. After spending two decades abroad in Europe, a travel writer returns to the U.S. and sets off to hike the Appalachian Trail with an old friend. Starring Robert Redford, Nick Nolte and Emma Thompson.

Saturday, Sept. 5

Looking for a furry companion? For the Love of Dog is hosting a “Meet & Greet” Rottweiler and Pit Bull adoption event from 10 a.m. to noon at Petco (35 Fort Eddy Road, Concord). Meet adoptable dogs and dogs needing foster homes. Visit 4theloveofdog.org.

Eat: A cigar dinner Head to the Bedford Village Inn (2 Olde Bedford Way, Bedford) on Thursday, Sept. 10, for the Nat Sherman 85th Anniversary Cigar Dinner, hosted by Castro’s Back Room. The evening will include limited-edition cigars, food and drink. Hors d’oeuvres and cocktails will be served at 5 p.m., and dinner will be served at 6:15 p.m. Tickets cost $125, and proceeds benefit local food banks and City Harvest in New York. Call 472-5878 to purchase tickets.

Thursday, Sept. 10

Join author R.A. Salvatore at 7 p.m., at Gibson’s Bookstore (45 S. Main St., Concord) as he discusses his newest fantasy novel, Archmage, which chronicles the continuing story of Salvatore’s popular character Drizzt Do’Urden. Call 224-0562 or visit gibsonsbookstore.com.

Drink: Wine Join LaBelle Winery at the Winemaker’s Kitchen (Merrimack Premium Outlets, 80 Premium Outlets Blvd., Merrimack) Saturday, Sept. 5, through Monday, Sept. 7, for a Wine Festival. Enjoy wine tastings while wine shopping with advice from the experts. Visit labellewinerynh.com or call 672-9898.

Stop by the Nashua Public Library (2 Court St., Nashua) at 2 p.m., for a free workshop about how to prepare for job interviews and improve resumes. Presenter Artie Lynnworth, who has written a book on the subject, will provide down-to-earth tips that can be easily understood and applied. Visit nashualibrary. org or call 589-4610.

Be merry: For football season The Farm Bar and Grille (1181 Elm St., Manchester) will host a tailgate party on Thursday, Sept. 10, from 5 to 8 p.m., to celebrate the first Patriots game of the season, happening at 8:30 p.m. $20 will get you all you can eat off the grill and all you can drink from a Bud Light keg. $35 will get you that plus a Farm hoodie. There will be beer specials, a cornhole game, raffle tickets and prizes. Call 641-3276 or visit farmbargrille. com.

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ARTS Condensed footprint ArtWalk 2015 gets intimate

Attend ArtWalk weekend

By Kelly Sennott

Fancy Friday: Participants can dress up in dresses and suits (or whatever you feel like), get a $10 wristband and enjoy special offers at participating restaurants and bars; proceeds support arts programs, projects and publicity by City Arts Nashua. Wristbands will be available at Margarita’s (1 Nashua Drive, Nashua) from 5:30 to 8 p.m. that night.

ksennott@hippopress.com

Nashua’s ArtWalk gets a bit of a makeover this year. First, City Arts Nashua’s self-led art tour, now in its 11th year, will become condensed — less driving, more walking. Nixed were venues like the Persian Rug Gallery and Glorious Possibilities, which were too far from the city center, said Paul Shea, who’s chairing the ArtWalk board this year. Instead, a few extra artists will decorate the 30 Temple St. location, ArtWalk headquarters for the weekend, and line the bright orange balloon trail connecting participating venues. All the while, outdoor musicians will play. The event spans Friday, Sept. 11, through Sunday, Sept. 13, and will showcase fine art, crafts, jewelry, quilts, 3D art, etc., by more than 100 artists. The goal of these changes, Shea said, was to create a more walkable, intuitive event. “We’re going to have more than 150 balloons marking the way. We have had Downtown Arts Festival, Positive Intersections Where: Le Parc De Notre Renaissance Francaise, Water Street, Nashua When: Sunday, Sept. 13, from noon to 6 p.m. What: Shea said it was intentional to hold ArtWalk on the same weekend as this event, which features the finale of the Art Battle series, organized by Positive Street Art’s Downtown Art Movement, a DJ battle, an art gallery with work by local artists, a dance cypher from Thrive and Hype dance teams, live street entertainment, poetry, etc. Free admission. Visit the Facebook page for details.

ArtWalk regular hours: Saturday, Sept. 12, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and Sunday, Sept. 13, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; no admission required. Venues: 30 Temple St.; Nashua Public Library, 14 Court St.; Le Parc de Notre Renaissance Francaise, Water St.; Picker Building, 99 Factory St., Nashua; and various businesses downtown; visit cityartsnashua.org/artwalk-2015-overview, which also has information about participating artists and event details.

The ArtWalk trail will be blazed with orange this year. Courtesy photo.

balloons in the past, but we wanted to provide folks with the opportunity to experience the ArtWalk without the need for any explicit directions, to create a more intuitive experience,” Shea said. The timing is a little better this year, too; instead of last year’s October weekend — which was also the same weekend as Keene’s former Pumpkin Fest, the New Hampshire Film Festival and, if you’re a rowing fan, the Head of the Charles in Boston — board members decided to strategically time this year’s ArtWalk so it also coincides with Positive Street Art’s Downtown Arts Fest (see box for information). And to create a more family-friendly event, City Arts Nashua partnered with the Gate City Charter School for the Arts, the Boys & Girls Club of Greater Nashua and the Nashua Public Library, who will offer expanded children’s activities at the

22 Art

library, facilitated by the former on Saturday, the latter Sunday (activities include sidewalk mandala chalk art, papier mache art, performance art, etc.). The event is something artists and crafters look forward to every year. Cindy Goodman, a quilter with a studio in the Picker Building, said via phone that she most enjoys meeting visitors traipsing through the venues and seeing the other artists come out of the woodwork for this event. It’s the biggest event she participates in all year. “The Picker Building is a very eclectic building. There are so many different types of artists in that building. It has a wonderful old feel to it. … You have painters and photographers and jewelry makers and woodworkers,” said Goodman, who’s been in the studio about four years along with her daughter, Krystal Manning. “It’s

23 Theater

Includes listings for gallery events, ongoing exhibits and classes. Includes listings, shows, auditions, workshops and more. To get listed, e-mail arts@hippopress.com. To get listed, e-mail arts@hippopress.com.

ArtWalk opening ceremony: Saturday, Sept. 12, at noon, 30 Temple St., Nashua; City Arts Nashua President Kathy Hersh, Mayor Donnalee Lozeau and New Hampshire State Council on the Arts chair Ginnie Lupi will speak. There will also be an information table with maps and details.

a great opportunity to see all the talent in Nashua, which I think a lot of people don’t realize is there.” Shea agreed. “Downtown Nashua has been, for a good number of years now, growing its reputation as a destination for artists and those who enjoy checking out their work,” Shea said. “ArtWalk is another great way for the community, not just in Nashua, but all over the region, to come and see all the great stuff we have going on, and why Nashua is a cultural hub.”

26 Classical

Includes symphony and orchestral performances. To get listed, e-mail arts@hippopress.com.

Looking for more art, theater and classical music? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store or Google Play. Art Events • CONCORD ARTS MARKET Weekly juried outdoor artisan and fine art market. Every Saturday now through Oct. 3 excluding July 4, July 18 from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. Bicentennial Square, Concord. Visit http://www.granitestateartsmarket.com/concord-artsmarket.html. • WEDNESDAY'S WISDOM POTLUCK Presentation by

Antionette Prien Schultze, "The Creative Process of My Life as a Sculptor." Wed., Sept. 9, at 6 p.m. Mill Brook Gallery & Sculpture Garden, 236 Hopkinton Road, Concord. Visit themillbrookgallery.com, call 226-2046. • BECK'S ARTS EXPRESS OPEN HOUSE See studio, make crafts, discounts for art center. Thurs., Sept. 10, at 6:30 p.m. Beck's Arts Express, 491 Amherst St., Unit 25, Nashua.

HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 22

Call 566-1393, email admin@ artsexpressnh.com. • NASHUA ARTWALK Selfled arts tour through downtown Nashua; more than 100 artists will display work. "Fancy Friday" is Fri., Sept. 11, 5:30-8 p.m.; ArtWalk is Sat., Sept. 12, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., and Sun., Sept. 13, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Nashua, NH, Nashua., Visit cityartsnashua.org for a map. • CREATIVE VENTURES GALLERY GRAND OPEN-

ING Ribbon-cutting ceremony, festivities, meet and spend time with resident artists and tour facilities. Fri., Sept. 11, at 3 p.m. Creative Ventures Gallery, 28-1 State Route 101A, Amherst. Visit creativeventuresfineart.com. Fairs • CANTERBURY FESTIVAL Enjoy and traditional arts tions, a juried craft

ARTISAN agricultural demonstrafair and a

farmers market. Sat., Sept. 12, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Canterbury Shaker Village, 288 Shaker Road, Canterbury. Tickets cost $12, $6 for ages 6 to 17, free for children under 5. Visit shakers.org. Openings • GREATER CONCORD PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB PHOTO EXHIBITION Photography show. On view Sept. 1 through Sept. 21. Reception

Thurs., Sept. 3, 5-7 p.m. Kimball Jenkins Estate, 266 N. Main St., Concord. Email concordphotoclub@gmail.com. • "CELEBRATING FLIGHT" Art show juried by Bruce McColl. Featuring 30 pieces of photography, digital media, sculpture, paintings, drawings. On view Sept. 4 through Oct. 18. Reception Fri., Sept. 4, 6-8 p.m. Aviation Museum of NH, 27 Navigator Road, Londonderry. Visit


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Notes from the theater scene

aviationmuseumofnh.org, call 669-4820. • DISCOMFORT FOOD Exhibition curated by Professor Deborah Varat at SNHU's McIninch Art Gallery. Compilation of paintings, mixed media, photography and three-dimensional. Opening reception Thurs. Sept. 10, from 5 to 7 p.m. Exhibition runs from Thurs., Sept. 10, to Sat., Oct. 10. McIninch Art Gallery at SNHU, 2500 River Road, Manchester. Opening reception is free and open to the public. Visit snhu.edu. • "BEYOND THE CALIPER: ADELAIDE MURPHY TYROL" Art show. Sept. 8 through Oct. 9. Reception Fri., Sept. 11, 5-7 p.m. McGowan Fine Art, 10 Hills Ave., Concord. mcgowanfineart.com, 225-2515.

SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 27th 10am-2pm

Rachael Longo (Ismene) and Carey Cahoon (Antigone) in theatre KAPOW’s The Burial at Thebes by Seamus Heaney. Matthew Lomanno Photography.

p.m. and required attendance during Sunday services 9:45 to 11:45 a.m. Music ranges from chant and polyphony to classical works and modern composers. The Diocesan Festival Choir is also accepting singers in all choral areas, with rehearsals Monday nights in preparation for the fourth annual performance of Handel’s “Messiah” in December. To schedule an audition, email ebermani@stjosephcathedralnh.org, visit stjosephcathedralnh.org or call 6226404, ext. 31. The Manchester Choral Society hosts an Open Sing at the Grace Episcopal Church, 106 Lowell St., Manchester, on Saturday, Sept. 12, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., with auditions that day and before the first rehearsal of the season Monday, Sept. 14. Visit mcsnh.org, email canobieque@aol.com. The Rockingham Choral Society invites singers to stop by the Forrestal-Bowld Music Center, Tan Lane, Phillips Exeter Academy, on Tuesday, Sept. 8, at 8 p.m. Visit rockinhamchoralsociety.org. And finally, the Suncook Valley Chorale (non-auditioned) hosts Open Sing events Monday, Sept. 14, at 6:30 p.m., and Monday, Sept. 21, at 6:30 p.m., in the Concord High School music room; anyone who wants to join or is just considering can check it out at this time. Visit facebook.com/suncookvalleychorale, email svcnh30@gmail.com or call 780-4968. — Kelly Sennott

• LABELLE WINERY ART COMMISSION UNVEILING, LECTURE, RECEPTION Reception celebrating/unveling art by master carver William Schnute. Sun., Sept. 13, at 3 p.m. LaBelle Winery, 345 Route 101, Amherst. Free; registration required. Visit labellewineryevents.com. • "NEW ARTISTS: PAINTING AND SCULPTURE EXHIBIT" Featuring work by David Drinon, Debbie Kinson, Chris Pothier, Earl Schofield, Ian Torney, Laurence Young, Beverly Benson Seaman. On view Aug. 14 through Oct. 11. Reception Thurs., Sept. 17, 5-7 p.m. Mill Brook Gallery & Sculpture Garden, 236 Hopkinton Road, Concord. Visit themillbrookgallery.com.

Theater Productions • AMERICAN IDIOT Nashua Actorsingers production. Rated R for mature content, adult language. Thurs., Sept. 3, at 8 p.m.; Fri., Sept. 4, at 8 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 5, at 8 p.m. Janice B. Streeter Theatre, 14 Court St., Nashua. $18-$20. Visit actorsingers.org, call 320-1870. • AVENUE Q Seacoast Rep production. Now through Sept. 13, Thursdays at 7:30 p.m., Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 2 and 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. Seacoast Repertory Theatre, 125 Bow St., Portsmouth. $22-$30. Visit seacoastrep.org. • LETTICE & LOVAGE ACT ONE Festival production. Fri., Sept. 4, at 8 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 5,

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• Thebes is back: This season, theatre KAPOW brings back a couple of its most-loved productions, one of which is The Burial at Thebes. The play, written by Nobel Prize-winning poet Seamus Heaney, will be performed at the Dana Center for the Humanities at Saint Anselm College, 100 Saint Anselm Drive, Manchester. The play is an adaptation of Sophocles’ Antigone, about the never-resolved conflict between a person’s individual rights and the demands of the state. New to this year’s production: a puppet designed and built by a carver in Prague. Collaborating with theatre KAPOW is local Greek musician Sandy Theodorou, whose voice and musical talents will be on display during choral odes through the script, and actors include Peter Josephson, Carey Cahoon, Deirdre Bridge, Rich Hurley, Rachael Longo, Mark Marshall, Colby Morgan and Mark Morrison. Shows are Tuesday, Sept. 8, at 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday, Sept. 9, at 7:30 p.m.; and Thursday, Sept. 10, at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $20. Visit tkapow.com. • Open sing events all around: If you’re in the market for a singing group, now’s the time to start looking. The Concord Chorale hosts an Open Sing on Wednesday, Sept. 9, at 7:15 p.m. at the Concord High School band room (170 Warren St., Concord; use the North Fruit Street side door near the corner of Pleasant Street). At this time, prospective singers can meet the director, preview December concert repertoire and schedule an audition; call 731-2244, email info@concordchorale.org or visit concordchorale.org. The Roman Catholic Cathedral of St. Joseph (145 Lowell St., Manchester) is also looking for new choristers, with rehearsals on Thursday evenings from 6:30 to 8:30

September 11thOctober 3rd

September, 17th at 7:30pm

Call for tickets at 603.668.5588 or online at PalaceTheatre.org Manchester, NH 102616

HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 23


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For years now, the Palace Theatre has been receiving write-in requests for Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story. One of the first “jukebox musicals,” Buddy is “ridiculously popular,” said Artistic Director Carl Rajotte, but until recently, he’d never even seen it before. Its plot mirrors Holly’s real-life rocket jet to fame more accurately than the 1978 film The Buddy Holly Story, but at its center are Holly’s iconic songs, like “Peggy Sue,” “That’ll Be the Day” and “Not Fade Away.” Finally, Rajotte and and Palace President/CEO Peter Ramsey decided it was time to deliver. “After two to three years of getting these emails, I was like, OK, I’ve got to check this out. I’ve seen a couple different versions of it now, and Peter and I thought, this is the time to do it,” Rajotte said during an interview in his office, the wall plastered with cast member headshots (many of whom have performed in Buddy productions across the country, including national tours) and the floor covered with a miniature model set. The show starts Friday, Sept. 11, and runs four weeks — new for the theater, which in past years has put on three-week productions. It’s a risky move, Rajotte said, but especially in the past couple years, third weekend shows have excelled, and there’s been demand for a fourth; even after the last curtain call, people have been calling for show tickets. The musical fits the mold of past Palace openers — upbeat with catchy music — except for that fact that, of course, in real life Buddy Holly’s monumental success was short-lived. He died in a plane crash during a February 1959 snowstorm. He was 22. The first time Rajotte saw the play, he got the chills. “You’re in the middle of a great time, but then it hits you, what happened to this wonderful talent. … He jumped on the scene and went right to the top. He was in the mainstream for only two years. So everything we know about Buddy Holly happened during a two-year span. Which is ridiculous. That’s nuts,” Rajotte said. “But I think it’s an intriguing story because of that. I think, See Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story Where: Palace Theatre, 80 Hanover St., Manchester When: Sept. 11 through Oct. 3 Contact: 668-5588, palacetheatre.org Tickets: $25-$45

when these things happen to people so fast, it’s interesting to see how they grew or why they grew that fast. [This show] gives you a little glimpse of who he was, not just his Jared Mancuso, who plays Buddy. Courtesy photo. music.” Casting was difficult, but Rajotte was able to snag Buddy alums like Jared Mancuso (Buddy Holly) and Mike Brennan (The Big Bopper), Danny Caraballo (Ritchie Valens) and Chica Loya (Maria Elena). “The hard thing about this show is it’s not like your typical musical theater piece, where you have the actors onstage and the band in the pit. The actors had to play the instruments,” he said. Plus, as always, everything needs to be done in two weeks. “It’s going to be a different rehearsal process for me as well. We have to jump right in with the instruments, where normally we wait until the next week to add instruments,” Rajotte said. Theater staff is turning the stage into a gigantic teal jukebox. A 16-foot record will cover the floor, and dotted among the sets will be jukebox playlists. Even the show’s “interior” scenes will be getting a little jukebox flavor, from couches covered with records to the modern-but-retro black, white and red costumes designed by Jessica Moryl. After a very successful 100th-year season, the theater is at the beginning of what members hope will be another. On the menu are four Palace premieres: The Addams Family in October, Rock of Ages (also a New England premire) in March and Billy Elliot: The Musical in June. Other mainstage shows for 2015-2016 include Nunsense A-Men and Singin’ in the Rain in January and April, respectively. “It’s a big year,” Rajotte said. “We’re always looking for new stuff, but it’s just not always available to us because we’re 52 miles outside of Boston, so we get blacked out a lot. … This year, the stars aligned, and we got we wanted. And to close with something like Billy Elliot — I hope it becomes a big Manchester event. I hope everybody comes out to see it. It’s a beautiful story. I remember seeing it — I was just out of college, seeing the movie, and just crying, because it was me.”


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• Creative aging: There are many studies showing that to age well is to age creatively, and as such, the New Hampshire State Council on the Arts and Lifetime Arts host a couple Creative Aging Workshops in the coming weeks, which include topics like best practices in creative aging; teaching artist qualities and qualifications; designing and facilitating creative aging programs; curriculum development and social engagement strategies; and the nuts and bolts of program implementation. The first workshop is open to all NH AIE/AIH roster and teaching artists with experience in an educational setting and will be held at the Kilton Library (80 Main St., West Lebanon, 298-8544) on Wednesday, Sept. 16, from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. (registration $50). The second is open to all New Hampshire teaching artists and artists with an interest working with seniors, and it happens at GoodLife Programs and Activities at the Smokestack Center (254 N. State St., Concord, smokestackcenter. com) on Thursday, Sept. 17, from 10 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. ($50 registration). Registration for both events includes a box lunch. Visit nh.gov/nharts, email frumie@aannh. org or call 323-7302. • Wild art: McGowan Fine Art, 10 Hills Ave., Concord, hosts “Beyond the Caliper: Adelaide Murphy Tyrol” Sept. 8 through Oct. 9, with a reception on Friday, Sept. 11, from 5 to 7 p.m. Tyrol, who has been the arts editor and an illustrator for Northern Woodlands magazine for 20 years, has had at 2 and 8 p.m. West End Studio Theatre, 959 Islington St., Portsmouth. $20. Visit actonenh.org. • DUCK AND COVER Players' Ring season opener. Sept. 4 through Sept. 20, with shows Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays Sept. 6 and Sept. 13 at 7 p.m.; and Sun., Sept. 20, at 3 p.m. Players' Ring, 105 Marcy St., Portsmouth. $15. Call 436-8123, visit playersring.org. • PALACE THEATRE SILVER STARS:THE NIFTY FIFTIES Senior troupe production. '50s style revue. Fri., Sept. 4, at 7 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 5, at 1 p.m. Palace Theatre, 80 Hanover St., Manchester. $10. Call 668-5588. • THE BURIAL AT THEBES Returning by popular demand; theatre KAPOW! production. Tues., Sept. 8, at 7:30 p.m.; Wed., Sept. 9, at 7:30 p.m.; Thurs., Sept. 10, at 7:30 p.m. Dana Center for the Humanities, 100 Saint Anselm Drive, Manchester. $20. Visit tka-

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the opportunity to interpret a wide array of natural subjects, from feral swine to river snot, traveling as far as northern Scotland and the estuary of Cedar Key. Gallery visitors can see some of these subjects in the Concord show. Visit mcgowanfineart.com or call 225-2515. • Creative Ventures Gallery opening: The art studio and classroom space opens to the public Friday, Sept. 11, and there will be festivities to celebrate at the Amherst location, 28-1 Route 101A, Amherst, including a 3 p.m. ribbon-cutting ceremony, a reception with resident artists and tours of the facility. Call 672-2500 or visit creativeventuresfineart.com. • Another open house: Beck’s Arts Express has an open house at the new, sunny studio at 89 Amherst St., Nashua, (the same building as Century 21) on Thursday, Sept. 10, at 6:30 p.m. Visitors can see the studio, make crafts and receive a registration discount for fall programs that evening. Visit artsexpressnh.com or call 566-1393. — Kelly Sennott

pow.com. • A TRAVELING TOY THEATRE FESTIVAL Pontine Theatre production; Trudi Cohen and John Bell, members of Great Small Works, team up with Facto Teatro from Mexico City and Barbara Steinitz from Berlin. Tues., Sept. 8, at 7 p.m. West End Studio Theatre, 959 Islington St., Portsmouth. $18. Visit pontine. org, email info@pontine.org, call 436-6660. • BUDDY: THE BUDDY HOLLY STORY Palace Theatre production. Sept. 11 through Oct. 3. Palace Theatre, 80 Hanover St., Manchester. $25-$45. Visit palacetheatre.org, call 668-5588. • HOT MAMA MAHATMA New Hampshire Theatre Project production. Written and performed by Karen Fitzgerald. Fri., Sept. 11, at 8 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 12, at 8 p.m.; Sun., Sept. 13, at 2 p.m. New Hampshire Theatre Project, 959 Islington St., Portsmouth.

$26. Call 431-6644, email reservations@nhtheatreproject.org. • FINDING FISH PLAYREADING New play by Carlyle Brown about ocean sustainability and a Maine fishing family. Kent Stephen's STAGE FORCE event. Fri., Sept. 11, at 7:30 p.m. Seacoast Science Center, 570 Ocean Blvd., Rye. $12.50. Call 8195341. • NEW HAMPSHIRE COMMUNITY THEATRE ASSOCIATION ONE-ACT PLAY FESTIVAL Productions include Stockholm Syndrome performed by Actorsingers; A Short Walk After Dinner performed by Nashua Theatre Guild; Bob's Date performed by Bedford Off Broadway. Sat., Sept. 12, at 1 p.m. Rochester Opera House, 31 Wakefield St., Rochester. $15 for all three shows. • MARY POPPINS Produced by the Friends of the Amato Center. Fri., Sept. 18, at 7:30 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 19, at 7:30 p.m.; Sun., Sept.

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20, at 3 p.m.; Fri., Sept. 25, at 7:30 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 26, at 7:30 p.m.; and Sun., Sept. 27, at 3 p.m. Amato Center for the Performing Arts, 56 Mont Vernon Road, Milford. $8 to $18. Visit svbg.org. • THE MERCHANT OF VENICE Open Door Theatre production. Fri., Sept. 18, at 7:30 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 19, at 7:30 p.m.; Sun., Sept. 20, at 3 p.m. New England College Mainstage Theatre, 58 Depot Road, Henniker. $10. Visit nec.edu/events/4132, 4282382. • OVER THE RIVER AND THROUGH THE WOODS Comedy about food and family by Joe DiPietro. Produced by Nashua Theatre Guild. Thurs., Sept. 24, at 8 p.m.; Fri., Sept. 25, at 8 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 26, at 8 p.m.; Sun., Sept. 27, at 2 p.m. Janice B. Streeter Theater, 14 Court St., Nashua. Visit nashuatheatreguild. org, call 882-2189. • SUMMER OF '42 Patrick Dorow Productions. Sept. 25 through Oct. 11. Players' Ring, 105 Marcy St., Portsmouth. $20. Visit playersring.org. • OTHER DESERT CITIES M&M Productions. Thurs., Oct. 1, at 8 p.m.; Fri., Oct. 2, at 8 p.m.; Sat., Oct. 3, at 2 and 8 p.m.; and Sun., Oct. 4, at 2 p.m. Janice B. Streeter Theater, 14 Court St., Nashua. Tickets start at $18. Visit mandmp.com, call 978-228-5506. • JUNIE B.'S ESSENTIAL

Auditions/open calls • AUDITIONS: NEW HAMPSHIRE THEATRE PROJECT YOUTH REPERTORY COMPANY Open to youth ages 10 to 17. Wed., Sept. 2, 4-6 p.m., and Wed., Sept. 9, 4-8 p.m. West End Studio Theatre, 959 Islington St., Portsmouth. To schedule audition, call 431-6644, ext. 4, email info@ nhtheatreproject.org. Workshops/other • ROCHESTER OPERA HOUSE SEASON KICK-OFF PARTY Live entertainment, drinks, hors d'oeuvres, preview of upcoming 2015-2016 season. Wed., Sept. 9, at 7 p.m. Rochester Opera House, 31 Wakefield St., Rochester. $8. Call 335-1992. • ANDY'S SUMMER PLAYHOUSE AUCTION Fine art, services, signed books, NH products, local wine/beer, handcrafted items, overnight stays, etc. to raise

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money for youth theater company. Appetizers, coffee, cash bar. Sat., Sept. 19, registration/silent auction 5:30-7 p.m., live auction at 7 p.m. Keller's Yellow Barn, Old Wilton Center, off Route 101, Wilton. $25. Call 654-2613. Classical Music Events • JENNI COOK, PEGGY VAGTS, PAUL MERRILL Concert part of UNH Faculty Concert Series. Sun., Sept. 13, at 3 p.m. Paul Creative Arts Center, UNH, 30 Academic Way, Durham. Free. • FACULTY JAZZ SEXTET Concert part of UNH Faculty Concert Series. Tues., Sept. 15, at 8 p.m. Johnson Theater, UNH, 30 Academic Way, Durham, Durham. Free. • KEITH POLK MUSIC LECTURE SERIES: ROB HASKINS "John Cage and Zen: What did he know, when did he know it, and why should we care?" with associate Professor Rob Haskins. Thurs., Sept. 17, 4-5 p.m. Paul Creative Arts Center, 30 Academic Way, Durham. Call 862-2404, visit unh.edu/ music. • NH PHIL WITH DAVID KIM Concert featuring violinist David Kim. Sat., Sept. 19, at 7:30 p.m. Stockbridge Theatre, 5 Pinkerton St., Derry. $12-$50. Visit stockbridgetheatre.com, call 437-5210.

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28 Continuing Education Classes, seminars, lectures... 28 Crafts Fairs, workshops... 30 Health & Wellness Workshops, exercises... 30 Marketing & Business Networking, classes.... 30 Miscellaneous Fairs, festivals, yard sales... FEATURES 28 Kiddie pool Family activities this week. 30 Treasure Hunt There’s gold in your attic. 31 The Gardening Guy Advice on your outdoors. 32 Car Talk Click and Clack give you car advice. 34 On the job What it’s like to be a... Get Listed From yoga to pilates, cooking to languages to activities for the kids, Hippo’s weekly listing offers a rundown of all area events and classes. Get your program listed by sending information to listings@hippopress.com at least three weeks before the event. Looking for more events for the kids, nature-lovers and more? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play or online at hipposcout.com.

INSIDE/OUTSIDE Cruisin’ along

Huge car show returns to downtown Manchester By Angie Sykeny

asykeny@hippopress.com

Thousands of car enthusiasts will flock to Elm Street for the 15th annual Cruising Downtown car show on Saturday, Sept. 5, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., put on by the Manchester Rotary Club. The event is the third largest classic car show in New England, featuring over 600 cars. “Car clubs and individuals from all over New England show up with their cars,” Mark Burns, president of Manchester Rotary Club, said. “It will run the gamut of older cars, hot rods, street rods, every car you can imagine that’s considered to be a collectible or antique.” The show will be held on Elm Street and Chestnut Street, from Bridge Street to Lake Avenue. Those areas will be closed to through traffic for the duration of the event. Burns said the police estimated 40,000 attendees last year. This year is expected to be even larger due to special guest Dennis Gage, host of the television show My Classic Car. The show, now in its 20th season, currently airs on Velocity and MAVtv networks and is seen by over 90 million households. Gage will be at Cruising Downtown with a film crew, and he will select five cars to feature on his show. “We’ve had more pre-registrations and more sponsorships than we’ve ever had, and we can only directly relate that to having [Gage] there,” Burns said. “He’s wellknown in the classic car business

A previous Cruising Downtown car show. Courtesy photo.

and many of these people want to come and hopefully get on the show.” There will be two stages with live music — the main stage at the Brady Sullivan Tower and the second at Veterans Park. Performers include Speed Trap from 10 a.m. to noon and Permanent Vacation from 1 to 3 p.m. at the main stage, and The Atomic Raygun from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the park. Live radio during band breaks will be provided by Frank FM (99.1 and 106.3) and The Wolf (93.3). Also at Veterans Park, there will be food vendors and local business vendors, both car-related and not. An awards ceremony will take

place at 3 p.m., where plaques will be awarded for winning cars in various categories. Cruising Downtown is Manchester Rotary Club’s largest fundraiser of the year. Proceeds from the car registration fees and attendee donations will support various youth services in Manchester, including the Manchester Boys & Girls Club, Child and Family Services of NH, NH Food Bank, Manchester Special Olympics and many others. “It’s a great way to end the summer,” Burns said. “The money raised gets put back into the community, and if you’re into automobiles, it’s fun to get the chance to see some very nice cars.”

Cruising Downtown Where: Downtown Manchester, primarily Elm Street, Brady Sullivan Tower parking lot and Veterans Park When: Saturday, Sept. 5, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Cost: $5 donation requested, free for children ages 12 and under Parking: free, behind City Hall along Franklin Street Visit: cruisingdowntown.com Car Registration: Online registration is now closed, but registration will be open the day of the event at Brady Sullivan Tower from 6 a.m. to noon. The fee is $25. Available spaces are first come, first served.

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Don’t miss the 100th annual Hopkinton State Fair, happening Friday, Sept. 4, through Monday, Sept. 7, at the fairgrounds (392 Kearsarge Ave., Contoocook). The fair features agricultural exhibits, a demolition derby, a midway, demonstrations, magic shows, live music and more. Admission is mycowabungas.com or call 625-8008. $10 on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, and $8 Catch a showing of Paul Blart: Mall Cop on Monday. Admission is free every day for 2 at Manchester City Library (405 Pine St., children ages 5 and under. Parking in the fair Manchester) on Friday, Sept. 4, at 3 p.m. lot costs $3. Visit hsfair.org. After six years on the job, goofy mall cop Paul Blart (Kevin James) is taking a wellFall into crafts deserved vacation to Las Vegas with his Visit the Studio 550 Art Center (550 Elm teenage daughter, but when danger strikes St., Manchester) on Saturday, Sept. 5, at their hotel, his vacation gets put on hold. 1:30 p.m., for a family clay workshop. Stu- This film is rated PG and is 94 minutes long. dio instructors will teach you how to create Visit manchester.lib.nh.us or call 624-6550. fall foliage pottery from scratch. Creations will be fired and ready for pickup three to Animal art four weeks later. The cost for one parent and Head to Graffiti Paintbar (2 Cellu Drive, one child is $30, and $40 for two children. Nashua) on Sunday, Sept. 6, from 10 a.m. to Visit 550arts.com or call 232-5597. 12:30 p.m., for a family paint session. The Drop in at the Hooksett Public Library (31 group will paint a sunny giraffe. Plan to Mount St Mary’s Way, Hooksett) on Saturarrive 10 to 15 minutes early to get settled day, Sept. 5, between 9 a.m. and noon, for a before the session begins. This event is open fall craft. Create leaf rubbings to decorate to all ages and costs $35 per seat. Visit grafthe Children’s Room and to take home. This fitipaintbarcalendar.com or call 589-9948. craft is open to kids of all ages. Call 485If you’d rather paint a horse, head to the 6092 or visit hooksettlibrary.org. family studio day at Paint pARTy Studio (63 Range Road, Suite 104, Windham) on Minions & mall cops Saturday, Sept. 5, from 3:30 to 5 p.m. The Join Cowabunga’s Indoor Inflatable Play- group will follow step-by-step instructions. ground (1328 Hooksett Road, Hooksett) on You can copy the pre-painted model or paint Friday, Sept. 4, from 5 to 7 p.m., for a Min- something of your own. This project is recions party. Enjoy Minions games, crafts ommended for children ages 6 and up. The and other interactive activities. Admission is cost is $25 and pre-registration is required. $10 for kids; adults and babies are free. Visit Visit paintpartynh.com or call 898-8800. Continuing Education Professional development • JOB INTERVIEWS/ RESUME WRITING WORKSHOP For people who want to better prepare for job interviews and improve their resumes. Thurs., Sept. 10, 2 p.m. Nashua Public Library , 2 Court St. , Nashua. Free. Call 589-4610. • PUBLIC SPEAKING AND PROFESSIONAL PRESENTATIONS The course is designed for beginners, or those who are looking for tips to improve their public speaking skills. Offers instruction on delivering professional, confident and well-articulated presentations. Participants give several presentations through the day and receive constructive feedback. Sat., Sept. 12, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Nackey S. Loeb School of Communications, 749 E. Indus-

trial Park Drive, Manchester. $50. See loebschool.org or call 627-0005. Crafts Exhibits • QUILT EXHIBIT Exhibit featuring quilts by well-known fiber artist, June Pease. The exhibit will be on display during regular library hours through Sat., Sept. 5. Epsom Public Library , 1606 Dover Road, Epsom. Free. Call 736-9920 or visit epsomlibrary.com. • IKEBANA EXHIBIT AND DEMONSTRATION Come to a demonstration and exhibit of Ikenobo Ikebana, Japanese flower arranging. Demo on Thurs., Sept. 10, 3:30 p.m. Exhibit runs through Sat., Sept. 12. Portsmouth Public Library, 175 Parrott Ave. , Portsmouth . Free. Call 766-1700.

Fairs • APPLE COUNTY CRAFT FAIR Crafters from across the region with exhibit their creations. Hot dogs, hamburgers, pies, cakes, brownies and more will also be available. Sat., Sept. 12, and Sun., Sept. 13. St. Peter's Episcopal Church, 3 Peabody Road, Londonderry. Visit stpeterslondonderry.org. • HAMPTON FALLS CRAFT FESTIVAL Sat., Sept. 19, and Sun., Sept. 20. Town Common, 4 Lincoln Ave., Route 1, Hampton Falls. Free admission. See castleberryfairs.com.

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Fifty years after the reported New Hampshire UFO sighting known as “the incident at Exeter,” UFO researchers are still speculating about what really happened that day. This year’s Exeter UFO Festival will celebrate the 50th anniversary of the incident with UFO-inspired activities, entertainment and lectures in the downtown area, Thursday, Sept. 3, through Sunday, Sept. 6. The festival began six years ago, primarily as a symposium for UFO theorists to meet in the town where the incident took place and exchange ideas, but it has since grown into a family-friendly event. “The festival brings [the incident] notoriety and brings it back to people’s minds,” said Bill Smith, president of Exeter Area Kiwanis, which is organizing the festival this year. There will be more than 10 speaker events covering a variety of topics including the incident at Exeter, stories of other UFO sightings, alien abduction reportings, crop circles, conspiracy theories about government cover-ups and more. The speakers are authors, documentarians, researchers, historians and people with personal stories about UFOs. People will also have the opportunity to go to the exact location where the incident was reported to have happened and listen to a local UFO researcher recount the story. Other festival activities include a famiSchedule Thursday, Sept. 3 Dusk to 10 p.m. - Family sci-fi movie (Swasey Parkway) Friday, Sept. 4 4 to 8 p.m - Exeter First Friday celebration with UFO theme Saturday, Sept. 5 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. - Speakers 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. - UFOs Over Exeter for sale (Krypton Comics, 103 Water St.) 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. - Children’s activities (Founder’s Park) 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. - Groove Lounge Cantina Band (Bandstand) 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. - Lunch (Bandstand) Noon to 2 p.m. - Incident at Exeter UFO site talks every half hour (maps at Town Hall) Noon to 4 p.m. - EAC “Other Worldly” art exhibit (Town Hall) 1:45 p.m. - Exeter UFO Hall of Fame Induction 7 p.m. - “Meet the Speakers” (Hampton Inn & Suites, 59 Portsmouth Ave.) Sunday, Sept. 6 10:45 a.m., 1 and 2:30 p.m. - Speakers Noon to 4 p.m. - EAC “Other Worldly” art exhibit (Town Hall) Noon to 3 p.m. - Lunch (Bandstand)

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Michael Mitchell’s comic book. Courtesy photo.

ly-friendly science fiction movie showing outside, kids crafts and face painting, live music by the Star Wars-inspired Groove Lounge Cantina Band, the Exeter Arts Committee’s “Other Worldly” art exhibit and hot dogs and hamburgers for lunch. If you’re looking for a souvenir, local comic book artist Michael Mitchell will be at Krypton Comics, selling and signing the comic he created in the spirit of the festival and the 50th anniversary. UFOs Over Exeter is a narrative of the incident based on the reports of whom Mitchell considered the most credible sources. The comic is designed with retro artwork to resemble an authentic comic from 1965, the year of the reported sighting. “It’s such an interesting story with twists and turns,” Mitchell said. “We thought it’d be interesting to retell the story in a graphic form and with a retro look to bring it alive and put the audience in the moment of when this event was unfolding.” Smith said the festival is a fun way to celebrate a famous event and a chance to learn more about UFOs from qualified speakers. “Whether people don’t know much about [UFOs], they believe, they’re on the fence, or they’re doubters, they should go and listen and get more information that maybe they didn’t even know existed,” he said. “It’s open to everyone; just bring an open mind.” 6th Annual Exeter UFO Festival When: Thursday, Sept. 3, through Sunday, Sept. 6 Where: Downtown Exeter; all lectures are held at the Town Hall (9 Front St.) Cost: $10 donation for admission to all the festival’s lectures, and a $10 donation for admission to the “Meet the Speakers” event. Visit: exeterufofestival.org

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IN/OUT TREASURE HUNT

Dear Donna, I have this table my uncle gave me when he moved to the Dominican Republic. It looks old and has some numbers inscribed on the back (2675 425 LE 30). I’m hoping you can give me info on what the numbers mean and if the table has any value. Diana r Loc a l Favori t

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Dear Diana, Nice little table you have there. By looking at it I can tell that this style is from the 1920s to 1940s. It’s tough to know the manufacturer from the numbers. They were used for the run numbers on each piece, so that they could match different pieces together from the same run numbers. This was for style, colors and designs. This probably was part of a bedroom set or possibly even a smoking humidor stand. But you would be able to tell that by opening it, and if the inside is copper-lined, then a smoking stand it is. Sometimes the tops held pipes and others held them inside the doors. I have even seen stands similar to this that were actually the sides of vanities converted later into tables. There would be a side that shows attachment to another piece, so again you would be the one to say that. Typical wood for this era was a walnut with several different stain blends and veneered woods to create accents such as those you might see on a door. No matter what your little stand was, it’s now yours and easily could be made to

serve a new purpose today. The value of it would be in the $40 range in today’s market. Remember, this age isn’t considered an antique yet. (An antique has to be over 100 years old, but that doesn’t mean it can’t be collectible.) So it’s just considered used furniture that is made to last.

Donna Welch has spent more than 20 years in the antiques and collectibles field and owns From Out Of The Woods Antique Center in Goffstown (fromoutofthewoodsantiques.com). She is an antiques appraiser and instructor. To find out about your antique or collectible, send a clear photo of the object and information about it to Donna Welch, From Out Of The Woods Antique Center, 465 Mast Road, Goffstown, N.H., 03045. Or email her at footwdw@ aol.com. Or drop by the shop (call first, 6248668).

out the 2 days as well as music, art classes, kids activites, urban street dancing, book signings and more. Demonstrations include Lost Wax Casting/metal jewelry, Stumpwork Embroidery, and Traditional Rug Hooking. Sat., Sept. 12, and Sun., Sept. 13. Downtown, Nashua. Visit nhcrafts.org.

Marketing & Business Networking groups • BUSINESS AFTER HOURS An opportunity to network with fellow chamber members. Appetizers will be served. Thurs., Sept. 10, 5 to 7 p.m. Fiber Studio 161 Foster Hill Road, Henniker Visit hennikerchamber.org.

Health & Wellness Exercise & fitness • FALL WALKING PROGRAM Mondays- Meet at the Whipple St Entrance to Mine Falls. Wednesdays- Meet at the Lincoln Park Entrance to Mine Falls. Fridays- Meet at the Gilson Rd. Parking Lot to the Nashua River Rail Trail. Wed., Sept. 9, through Fri., Oct. 30. All walks start at 9 a.m., Nashua., 589-3370.

Misc Car & motorcycle shows • ANTIQUE & CLASSIC CAR SHOW 21 classes with trophies, 50/50 raffle, giant raffle, food, vendors, Kid Jazz musical group and rest rooms available. Sat., Sept. 12, 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Rain date Sun., Sept. 13. NH Technical Institute, 31 College Drive, Concord. Car entries $15, general admission $3. Visit concordkiwanis.org or call 224-1504.

Wellness workshops • REACH YOUR NATURAL WEIGHT Master Certified Life Coach Diane MacKinnon, M.D. presents a program on a tools and skills that can help you to reach your natural weight. Tues., Sept. 8, 7 p.m. Rodgers Memorial Library , 194 Derry Road, Hudson Free. Call 886-6030.

Festivals & Fairs • CELTIC FESTIVAL The event will feature a ‘Holy Trinity of Events:’ The 1/2 way to St. Patrick’s Day 5k, the St. Baldrick’s fundraising event, and the Irish and Celtic music and arts festival. Sat., Sept. 10, 10 a.m. Wild Rover, 21 Kosciuszko St. , Manchester.

Visit intownmanchester.com. • PARISH FAIR Includes a penny sale, flea market, raffles, a food tent, a chicken tender dinner and more. Fri., Sept. 11, 4 to 8 p.m., Sat., Sept. 12, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sun., Sept. 13, 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. St. Pius X Church, 575 Candia Road, Manchester. Free. Visit saintpiusxnh.org. • HILLSBOROUGH COUNTY AGRICULTURAL FAIR Weekend includes agricultural exhibits, tractor pulls, live music, 4-H shows, amusement rides, a homemade pie auction and more. Fri., Sept. 11, through Sun., Sept 13. New Boston Fairgrounds, Hilldale Lane, Route 13, New Boston. Admission costs $10 for adults, $5 for children ages 6 to 12 and active military and veterans, free for kids under 6. Visit hcafair.com. • WEEKEND ON THE WATER Features a dragon boat race, Concord Crew regatta, Super Tour Duck Boat, a brew festival and rubber duck race. Sat., Sept. 12, and Sun., Sept. 13. Riverfront Part at the Everett Arena, 15 Loudon Road, Concord. Admission is free. Some activities require fees. See concordwow.org.


IN/OUT THE GARDENING GUY

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this I core full-sized tomatoes over the sink and squeeze out seeds and excess juice. Then I cut them in half and toss them in the food processor, which I use to puree them into a thin gruel. I cook the pureed tomatoes in a big enameled cast iron pot at low heat until the contents are thick enough so that I can stand up a spoon in the pot. It takes 2 to 3 hours of cooking to make paste. I let the paste cool all night with the pot lid off, so more moisture evaporates by morning. Then I spoon the paste into ice cube trays and freeze them. When hard, I take the cubes out and put in freezer bags. One cube is a very nice quantity to add to a soup or stew. By freezing the paste in small units, there is no can of tomato paste left in the fridge to go moldy and blue. No odd flavors picked up in the fridge, either. I also make spaghetti sauce. Not much, but I like to have some ready for a quick meal in March. I sauté onions, garlic and fresh green peppers to start with. I add fresh basil, marjoram and parsley from the garden. And of course tomatoes, black pepper and a touch of salt. I can one batch in quart jars each summer — seven jars — and freeze more in quart yogurt containers. Canning must be done properly, cooking the sealed jars for a long time. But if you don’t grow enough tomatoes to put up all of them you want for winter, don’t despair. Most farm stands take orders for tomatoes by the bushel at a very reasonable rate, much less than the per pound rate. So when the late blight nailed my tomatoes some years ago, I bought a bushel from a farmer and put them up. I don’t generally grow a lot of peppers, so I often buy a half bushel of green, yellow and red peppers. I clean and slice them, and freeze in zipper bags. I find they freeze so well that I can even add them to a salad, and having three colors of peppers makes a very attractive winter salad. Put them in the salad right out of the freezer and eat soon after. Gardening is fun, even the weeding. But eating the garden produce is even better. Fresh is best, but come winter, anything is good! Henry is a gardening consultant and garden designer. His website is Gardening-Guy. com.

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It’s a rare gardener who doesn’t grow at least a few tomatoes. We all love them. I eat them at least twice a day in season, and sometimes I even have one with breakfast. But the season is short, so many of us try to put up tomatoes to have their flavor in winter soups and stews. Our grannies slaved over a hot stove in August and September, canning tomatoes. But I have found freezing them is much easier. Here’s what I do: I freeze whole tomatoes in zipper bags. I don’t blanch them or remove the skins. All I do is place clean fresh tomatoes in a gallon freezer bag and suck out the air with a straw, sliding out the straw and pinching the bag shut as I do so. When I want to cook with a tomato, I hold a frozen one under the tap, run hot water over it while rubbing it, and the skin comes right off. I set it aside for a few minutes, then chop it and put in the stew pot. I know it is chemical-free and harvested at peak ripeness. I sometimes freeze cherry tomatoes, and those I toss into the pan with skins on. In winter I long for tomatoes for my noon sandwich. I’ve found that roasting tomatoes first, then freezing, is a good way to have a substitute for fresh tomato in a sandwich. I thickly slice tomatoes and roast them at 350 degrees until they have given off most of their moisture and caramelized nicely. Then I carefully place them in gallon freezer bags in a single layer. When I need a few slices, I break off the frozen slices and put them in my toaster oven on aluminum foil. I heat them at 350 degrees until thawed. They are not the same as fresh, but they’re the best substitute I’ve found. Cherry tomatoes are highly prolific, and I generally have 10 plants or more. Although I eat plenty like candy, right in the garden, I obviously have more than I can eat in August and September. So I cut each in half and put them in my food dehydrator. I set the thermostat at 125 or 130 degrees and dry them for 18 to 24 hours, depending on water content and the ambient air’s humidity. Food dehydrators are great for drying tomatoes, apples, pears, hot peppers and more. My favorite is the Excalibur. It has nine trays, each 15 inches square, and a fan and heater. It uses 660 watts of electricity per hour, which is less than the 1000 watts used by my previous favorite, the NESCO American Harvester. The Excalibur blows sideways across the trays so everything gets dry at the same rate; the NESCO dehydrator blows from the top or the bottom, and one must rotate the trays to get even drying. The trays near the heater dry quickly, those farther away more slowly. I also make a lot of tomato paste. To do

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IN/OUT CAR TALK

When a car is a danger on the road, it’s time to say goodbye Dear Car Talk: I have a 1990 Ford Ranger with 110,000 miles on it. The chassis is thoroughly rusted — in fact, the charcoal canister tube rusted through and fell off. By Ray Magliozzi It leaks oil, burns oil and smells like coolant, which probably means it has a cracked head. The shocks are almost rusted through, and it makes noises when going over bumps (maybe the suspension is rusted through?). I do change the oil every 5,000 miles, but I add oil more often than that. I use it only to haul mulch, coal and wood, but it is my second vehicle, so it is important. It costs only $300 a year to insure, and I drive it fewer than 5,000 miles a year, so I do not need to have it emissions tested (thank goodness, because it stinks). I also do not drive any farther from my home than my insurance’s towing package covers. I plan to drive it until it just gives up the ghost. What should I do to increase the life of it? Are there any recommended things I should be doing besides praying? Should I be concerned about it catching on fire,

since it leaks oil and really stinks? What about the gas lines, since they are rusted, too? Thanks. — Phil You should pray that this thing catches fire, Phil. I know you’re afraid to take it to a bona fide mechanic, because you know the news is going to be awful. But if you want to keep this truck, that’s what you really need to do. You have to find out if this is still a viable, roadworthy vehicle. And I think we both know what the answer’s going to be. At the very least, you need to make sure the brakes are not about to fail, the wheels aren’t about to fall off, the frame isn’t held together by dust and the engine isn’t about to do its impersonation of the Burning Man finale. Seriously, it’s not just that the truck could disintegrate around you if you hit something, leaving your face as the bumper. You also could be — and probably are — a danger to all the other drivers on the road, because if your brakes fail or a wheel falls off, you could take other people with you. So my suggestion is that you thank this truck for its many years of service, say a Hail Mary over it, and drop it off at the 603.627.1611 341 Elm Street Manchester, NH 03101

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junkyard. And instead, buy a used trailer. You say you have another vehicle; if it’s got any kind of decent towing capacity at all, you can put a trailer hitch on it, buy an old trailer and use it to haul your wood, coal and mulch. Or rent or borrow a truck for the times you actually need to haul stuff. But this truck sounds like a danger to you and others. Rather than haul mulch, I think it’s ready to become mulch. Of course, I know you’re going to ignore my advice, Phil. I’ve known determined cheapskates like you -- Exhibit A was my late brother. So when you do ignore my advice, at least wear sneakers when you drive so that when it catches fire, you can run. Dear Car Talk: I park in a parking garage for work, and I have a question about tire wear. I usually park on level 4 or 5, and the only turns that are made are right-handed (clockwise), for both entering and exiting. My question is: Will one side of my tires wear more quickly than the other? Thanks! — Rodney Rodney, it’s really tempting to tell you that every other day you have to drive

backward up and down the ramps just to keep your tire wear even. But the truth is, you don’t have to worry about it. If you were spending all day driving up and down those ramps, then yes, you might wear out the tires on the left side of your car faster than the tires on the right. But the amount of wear your tires get from going up and down those ramps once a day is tiny compared to the wear they get driving around the rest of the time. So you don’t need to do anything. If it’ll make you sleep better at night, one thing you can do is simply rotate your tires on a regular basis to even out the wear. For instance, when you get your oil changed every 7,500 miles or so, you can have your mechanic swap the tires around. I think you’ll find that a lot easier than backing up four or five stories of ramps on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Just don’t ask your mechanic if making all those right turns on ramps is wearing out your left springs faster than your right springs. They’re a lot more expensive to rotate than tires. Visit Cartalk.com.

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IN THIS SECTION

34 On The Job

JOBS/CAREERS Bringing job seekers and companies together Looking for work? Trying to hire people? Use Hippo’s Jobs/Careers section. ► TWO WAYS TO USE HIPPO’S JOBS/CAREERS PAGES: 1. SEND IN A JOB LISTING

This week, meet Jon Pace, gunsmith and sales associate at Granite State Indoor Range and Gunshop in Hudson.

Hippo’s weekly job listings are a great way to get info about your opening in front of our audience of 205,000 people in southern N.H. They’re textonly, maximum 35 words—and best of all, they’re FREE. :) See this week’s Job Listings page for details on how to submit your info for publication.

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Work for a Great Com Having a job fair or open house? Not getting quality pany! • Sign-o n bonus! candidates from look-alike online job postings? Dis- • • Attend our job fa ir! Ping-pon g • Bring yo in break room! play ads can drive attendance at recruiting events, ur pet to work! • We pay cash! and grab the attention of great people—even those GRE COMPA AT who aren’t actively looking, but would NY, IN C. consider a good opportunity if they come across it.

For more about how to use Hippo to recruit great employees in New Hampshire, call Jeff Rapsis at (603) 236-9237.

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Nowg! Hirin Help Us Make Lunch—and Make History! The Common Man’s brand-new New Hampshire-themed Welcome Centers on I-93 in Hooksett are in immediate need of some uncommon co-workers. We’re seeking great people to help us welcome and serve locals, visitors and travelers to our great state.

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36 JOB LISTINGS Looking for work? Need employees? Check out Hippo’s free job postings, available for a limited time only.

N.H. JOB FACTS: Local unemployment rates: • Concord.....................3.2% • Dover......................... 3.1% • Laconia..................... 3.3% • Manchester...............3.8% • Nashua......................4.3% • Portsmouth...............2.5% • Rochester..................3.5% • Statewide.................. 3.7% Source: N.H. Department of Employment Security statistics for July 2015.

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Recruiters: Your best new employees are right here In a tight job market, the Hippo can reach quality people you’re not connecting with on the job boards and other channels.

Hippo’s audience is smart, active, and ready to respond to information about career opportunities, job fairs, sign-on bonuses, and more.

Our print edition reaches 205,000 people in New Hampshire’s southern tier, from Peterborough to Portsmouth, from Nashua to the Lakes Region.

So if you’re not getting enough candidates, or not getting the right kind of people, then it’s time to try something different: the Hippo.

And our online edition reaches about 50,000 more.

For more about recruiting in Hippo, call your ad salesperson, or Jeff Rapsis at (603) 236-9237.

Southern N.H’s Largest Audience HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 33


CAREERS

into general repair, and I’m glad I did because it’s something I’m good at, but down the road I may get into another specialty.

an associate degree in gunsmithing. Then there are certifications I’ve received from some [firearm] manufacturers that certify me as competent to work with that specific firearm.

Jon Pace

What is your typical at-work uniform? It consists of a polo shirt, cargo pants, a good sturdy pair of boots and a sturdy belt.

Gunsmith and sales associate at Granite State Indoor Range and Gunshop

How did you find your current job? Through a friend who recommended As a kid, Jon Pace loved to assemble and disassemble BB guns and pellet guns. me for the position.

Jon Pace. Courtesy photo.

Now, he works as a gunsmith and sales associate at Granite State Indoor Range and Gunshop in Hudson, specializing in gun repair. Granite State offers new and What’s the best piece of work-related pre-owned firearms for sale, gun repair and cleaning, training courses and an advice anyone’s ever given you? indoor range with firearm rentals. You should not get in a hurry. The Explain in one sentence what your current job is. To ensure that customers who come in have a safe experience and receive the correct information in regards to firearms usage, storage and operation. How long have you worked there? Since we opened on Oct. 22, 2014.

motto [in working with guns] is “slow How did you get interested in this is smooth, and smooth is fast.” Doing it field? right may be a little more time-consumEver since I was a little kid I had BB ing, but the more patience you exercise guns and pellet guns and always tinkered58929 in working with firearms, the better your around with them, taking them apart andHippoPress outcome will be.Manchester putting them back together, so I thought1/4 Page: 4.69”(w) x 5.34”(h) if I could make a career out of that one What do you wish you’d known at the 09/03-9/24/15 day, that’s where I’d be best-suited. beginning of your career? pmcHow many different paths in gunsmithWhat kind of education or training ing there are. A person can specialize did you need for this job? in metal engraving, stock work, general I studied at a trade school and obtained repair — there are so many fields. I got

What If You Held A Job Fair And No One Came?

Connect with us

What was the first job you ever had? I was a sales associate at Best Buy. — Angie Sykeny Five favorites Favorite book: American Sniper:The Autobiography of the Most Lethal Sniper in U.S. Military History by Chris Kyle, Jim DeFelice and Scott McEwen Favorite movie: Commando Favorite type of music or musician: Anything from jazz to rock to classic oldies Favorite food: Chick-fil-A Favorite thing about NH: Our state motto

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now aren’t finding you in the blizzard of look-alike online job postings. For more info on getting Hippo’s “On the Job” pages to work for you, call Jeff Rapsis at (603) 236-9237.

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Apply online at AAA.com/careers. AAA is an Equal Opportunity Employer

Where are you headed? If you’re ready to get what you want out of your job—out of your life—well, the smart, fast, fun route is at UPS. With our Earn and Learn program, you’ll get help with your college expenses—a bonus of up to $25,000, for part-time employees. You’re focused on your future, and we’ll get you moving in the right direction. And even after graduation, UPS has many career opportunities available!

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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 35


Let them be free

CAREERS

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FREE TUITION TAX SCHOOL IRS approved. Earn extra income after taking course. Flexible schedules, convenient locations. Register now! Courses start 9/14/15 Call 1-866-871-1040 Liberty Tax Service www.libertytax.com BUZA DAIRY BAR Exciting New Gourmet Ice Cream and Gelato Shop Coming to Concord.Hiring For All Positions. For Hiring Information,Please email gary.dimartino@metrocast.net RELISH AMERICA Exciting New Gourmet Burger Restaurant Coming to Concord. Hiring Full and Part Time for All Positions. For Hiring Information, Please email gary.dimartino@ metrocast.net ACTIVISTS NEEDED Full and part time positions available to help NH Independent Voters to organize the “silent majority” and empower We the People to make our democracy work! Call Peter at 508-395-5984. BOOTH FOR RENT IN BUSY NASHUA SALON Full time/$650 month private room. Available August 1st. Call Janette at 603-897-9451 CONCORD FAMILY YMCA BEFORE AND AFTER SCHOOL GROUP LEADER Before and After School Group Leader available for our Licensed after school programs. Minimum requirements: Be at least 18 years of age, have a high school diploma or equivalent, and have at least one of the following: * experience working with school age children, totaling 600 hours; OR * documentation of at least 3 credits in elementary education, human growth and development, behavior management or recreation or early childhood education, awarded by a regionally accredited college or university; OR * documentation that she or he is a certified coach; OR * documentation from or filed with the BCCL that she or he was qualified as an associate teacher in a school age program on or before the date of adoption of BCCL state licensing rules Please send resume to Sonia Wilks swilks@concordymca.org CONCORD FAMILY YMCA AFTER SCHOOL SITE DIRECTOR Must have ONE of the following qualifications: *BS/BA or Associates Degree in Elementary or Early Childhood Education or Recreation *At least 1,000 hours of child care experience plus 12 credits in education, early childhood education, human growth and development, or recreation OR are a Certified Recreation Director *At least 2,000 hours of child care experience plus enrollment in the above coursework. *Current certification as an Educator by the NH Department of Education. Please send resume to Sonia Wilks swilks@concordymca.org

INDEPENDENT REPRESENTATIVE Unlimited earning potential. Flexible hours. Low start-up investment. Work from home. Sell products every woman needs. Amazing training. 25% COMMISSION. Be your own boss. Contact me today: annthebralady@gmail.com. www.myessentialbodywear.com/ anncummings AUGUST AND/OR SEPTEMBER INSTRUCTOR NEEDED Experienced Instructor teaching/ facilitating Workplace Readiness Skills to unemployed and/or under-employed adults. Teaching/ Trainer experience required, M.Ed, curriculum development preferred. Short-term contractual position (60 hours over 3 weeks). Position available August & September. Send cover letter & resume to: lnicol@ccsnh.edu REAL ESTATE CLOSING PROCESSOR/PARALEGAL Experience with commercial & residential transactions required. Southern NH Title Co/Firm with clients in NH, MA & ME. Competitive pay/benefits. Send Resume to: GOULDILOX603@COMCAST.NET THE HIPPO IS LOOKING FOR AN OUTSIDE SALES REP Join their team of professionals. Must have advertising/sales experience and proven success. Send resume to ccesarini@hippopress.com ROOM & LAUNDRY ATTENDANTS The Duprey Service Company, LLC is seeking both full and parttime dedicated and dependable Room and Laundry Attendants for several of its hotels located in Concord, NH. If you are interested in joining a dynamic and growing team, please forward your resume to bmckerley@foxfirenh.com or stop by one of our hotels: The Residence Inn by Marriott (91 Hall Street); The Courtyard by Marriott (70 Constitution Ave.); The Fairfield Inn by Marriott (4 Gulf Street) or The Comfort Inn (71 Hall Street) to complete an employment application. PART TIME COOKED WANTED. Hopkinton area, experienced breakfast and lunch. 2 days, no weekends. Hours 5:30am to 2:30pm. Positive attitude and good work ethic. Serious inquiries only. Reply to thelads@comcast.net or call 603-591-8088 HVAC TECHNICIAN Seeking HVAC Technician for commercial and residential service and installations, EPA Certification and NH Gas Fitter License a plus. Sign on Bonus and company benefits. Apply online at www.skovronhvac.com fax 603-244-1604 or call 603-674-9885 TAX PREPARERS (Manchester, Nashua, Concord & Portsmouth) Earn more by learning from the pros! Take the H&R Block Income Tax Course to learn how to prepare taxes like a pro. Class times and locations are flexible to fit your current schedule. For details, please email: frederick.neergaard@ tax.hrblock.com

HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 36

• 35 words or less • Ad will run two weeks • E-mail your ad listing to classifieds@ hippopress.com

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Deadline is FRIDAY AT NOON for the following week’s issue. Job ads will be published in Hippo and online at hippopress.com full paper app. Only local job ads placed by local companies will be published for free. Job ads to be published at the discretion of staff. Job ads must be e-mailed to classifieds@hippopress.com to qualify for free promotion.

DIRECT SUPPORT PROFESSIONAL Empower and motivate individuals to do things they never thought possible at The Moore Center in Manchester. Full-time, part-time, and per diem positions available. No experience necessary. Email resume to humanresources@ moorecenter.org. Visit http:// moorecenter.org/moorejobs/ for more information. BOOTH RENTAL AVAILABLE Looking for hairstylists to rent a station in our beautiful new salon. Rent includes, back bar, towels, wax, wax supplies and refreshments. Call 603-722-2761 or 603-682--4571 for more info. PERSONAL CARE ATTENDANT NEEDED (MANCHESTER) Transfers, showers, dressing, meal prep, housekeeping etc. Background checks performed. Negotiable pay. Please call Robin at 603-218-3687 WAITSTAFF New restaurant in Manchester’s prominent mill yard is now hiring WAITSTAFF. Join our team for this exciting July opening! Please submit resumes to foundryrestaurant@yahoo.com LNAS & CAREGIVERS WANTED Right at Home is looking to hire multiple caregivers to help the seniors in Southern NH. Please email Rebecca at rcallaway@rightathome-snh.com or call 603-216-9296. $10.50-11 per hour to start! OPERATIONS MANAGER PUBLIC WORKS The Town of Merrimack, NH is seeking an experienced professional manager for the position of Public Works Operations Manager. The Operations Manager is responsible for the supervision of a union work force of 24 full-time employees and several seasonal employees and overseeing the daily operations of the Highway and Equipment Maintenance Divisions and include planning, scheduling, and coordinating the completion and maintenance of major projects. Please visit www.merrimacknh.gov/ positionopenings to review the complete job description and requirements. The starting wage range for this position is $60,524 to $76,400/ year, DOE, and includes an excellent benefits package including participation in the New Hampshire Retirement System. To apply, submit a formal cover letter, resume, and Town application to Town of Merrimack, Attn: HR – Op. Mgr., 6 Baboosic Lake Road, Merrimack, NH 03054. Open until filled. No email please. EOE. MANAGEMENT TRAINING PROGRAM – NASHUA, NH Medical retailer has a management training program. Candidate must be a good listener, team player, and be open to learning about many products. We offer competitive salaries and full benefits. Submit resume with salary requirements to Colonial Medical Assisted Devices hr@colonialmedical.com PERSONAL CARE ASSISTANT Share a downstairs apartment with a 50 year old woman with developmental disabilities in the Manchester area. She needs

assistance with personal care and everyday life skills. Contact Tammy at 603-893-7286 or go to: Livinginnovations.com DIRECT SUPPORT PROFESSIONALS Make a difference in someone’s life. Help support individuals with developmental disabilities in the community. Living Innovations is hiring in the Derry, Windham and Salem areas. Training provided. Go to: Livinginnovations.com or contact Tammy at 603-893-7286. Also hiring in the Portsmouth, Rochester and Seacoast areas. Training provided. Go to: Livinginnovations.com or contact Tammy at 603-430-5430. FREELANCE WRITERS The Seacoast Scene is looking for freelance writers to do weekly stories on events and people in the Hampton area. Please email Larry@seacoastscene.net a sample of your writing and a brief description of your writing experience. DELIVERY DRIVER / EQUIPMENT INSTALLER Show Room /Warehouse Support Full Time and Year Round. Please review job requirements on line at: www.kittredgeequipment.com Careers > Bow, NH. Very competitive wage with Great Benefits COACHES WANTED The Derryfield School in Manchester, NH, seeks the following professionals: SPRING - Start 3/23/2015 •CREW - (2) Asst. Coaches •LACROSSE - Girls’ JV Head Coach, Boys’ JV Asst. Coach •TENNIS - Girls’ Varsity Asst. •DANCE - Instructor; 3 afternoon per week FALL - Start 8/17/2015 •FIELD HOCKEY - Varsity and JV Asst. Coaches, JV Head Coach Coaching experience and excellent driver’s record required. Competitive stipend provided. Please send your resume and 3 written references EOE to: lmccaigue@derryfield.org. Website: derryfield.org KELLY SERVICES IS HIRING Kelly Services has Direct Hire, Contract-Hire & Contract positions available throughout NH. All levels of experience and shifts available. Please submit resumes to 4065@kellyservices.com or call 603-625-6457. EXPERIENCED PERSONAL CARE PROVIDER In Home Provider Needed in Manchester. Looking for compassionate, dependable, strong person to care for a woman who is wheelchair bound. Work as little as 10 hours or up to 30 hours per week. Background check required. Call 603-858-2223 MAINTENANCE ASSISTANT St. Teresa’s is looking for a Maint Asst to perform routine maintenance and repair on the facility and equipment to include plumbing, plastering, electrical, carpentry, mechanical, etc. Send resumes to stt.hrmgr@nh-cc.org RN’S NEEDED St. Teresa’s is seeking an experienced RN for our 3-11 shift. Long Term Care experience a plus! Send resumes to stt.dns@nh-cc.org

TELECOMMUNICATIONS TECHNICIAN Part Time/Flexible Hours. Most work is Mon - Fri during normal business hours. There is some evening/weekend emergency service work from time to time. Experience with voice & data cabling required. Experience with business telephone systems, network equipment, paging systems, wireless helpful. This is a long term, position. Please e-mail your resume to info@dtscommunications.com. EXPERIENCED DRY CLEANING SPOTTER. E & R Laundry and Dry Cleaners located in Manchester NH is currently accepting applications for an experienced dry cleaning spotter. Please forward your resume to: ghayes@eandrcleaners.com DIRECT SUPPORT PROFESSIONAL Full Time, 30-hour position in the Concord area. Experience helpful. Rate of pay $10.50-$12.00/per hour. Background checks, driver’s license, good driving record and vehicle insurance required. Contact Janet at 603-224-8085 x1813 or jwalsh@ippi.org DIRECT SUPPORT PROFESSIONAL Full time, 30 hr. position in the Concord area. Training provided. Focus includes skill building, personal care and community activities. Driver’s license, auto insurance, and background checks required. $9.00-$10.00/hr. Contact Janet (603) 224-8085 x 1813 or jwalsh@ippi.org. DRIVERS, MOVERS, HELPERS AND PACKERS. Local & Long Distance Moving Company looking for experienced, motivated, reliable Drivers, Movers, Helpers and Packers. Email resume, experience and references to jpack@mcmoving.com. Multiple positions available immediately including Drivers with CDL-A, CDL-B, non-CDL licenses. DISPATCHER/DRIVER SUPERVISOR

Moving & Storage Company offers excellent opportunity for qualified Dispatcher/Driver Supervisor. Provide leadership, and oversee responsibility for our fleet and crews, integrating with other departments to effectively plan loads and schedules. Email resume to jpack@mcmoving.com. DISTRIBUTION ASSISTANT Approx. 20 hours per week. $10 per hour. Must have good and verifiable driving record. Flexible hours. Veterans encouraged to apply. Call Doug at Hippo Press. 603-625-1855 ex. 135 DATA INPUT We are looking for a part-time position for our data department for our new Concord office. Must have a flexible schedule and reliable transportation. Starting pay is $11 hourly. Please call Erin at 366-3369. LAUNDROMAT MANAGER Wash & dry seeking motivated individual to manage small laundromat in Laconia NH. Flexible hours and days. Call 603-325-0241 SERVICE TECHNICIAN The Industrial Water Treatment Co. of Salem NH has an immediate

part time, possibly full time position available. Candidate must be energetic, self starter, have a good work ethic, lift 60lbs, have a valid diver’s license and clean driving record. Min. $13.00/hr. Call Mr. Don Belanger Mon-Fri 603-898-0020 ext. 106 OUTSIDE SALES POSITION AT CHEESECO Full or Part-time in the Concord, Manchester, Nashua Area. Cheeseco of NE, 97 Eddy Rd. Manchester, NH 03102, 641-6023 Apply in person. We are a wholesale food distributor. ASSOCIATE INFANT/TODDLER TEACHERS Green Sprouts in Windham is seeking associate infant/toddler teachers. 9 ECE credits. Contact Deborah at greensproutsllc@aol or call 603-898-0771. SERVICE TECHNICIAN/ASSISTANT TECHNICIAN Immediate openings! Interested in working with your hands, helping people, earning $$$ and being part of the fastest growing company in the property restoration biz? Vocational/construction background a plus. Contact: alecza@burkerestoration.com HEALTH CLUB/FITNESS FACILITY in Central NH seeking qualified motivated professional staff for the following positions; Front Desk, Maintenance, Grounds keeping, Cleaners, Lifeguards, Personal Trainers, Swimming Instructors, Aqua Zumba Instructors and Group Fitness Instructors. Please email your resume to healthclubofconcord@gmail.com INSULATION TECHNICIANS NEEDED! The Green Cocoon is a locally owned, family oriented insulation company. Your hard work will be rewarded! Up to $15/hour depending on experience. Don’t miss out! Go to: thegreencocoon. com/employment-opportunities BARTENDERS Hiring bartenders for weekend night shifts at Turismo Tavern in HillsboroCall 680.4440, email: info@turismotavern.com or apply in person at 55 Henniker Street. PART-TIME CLEAN CUT, APPLIANCE DELIVERY PERSON. Weekday mornings, beginning at 8am from 1 to 3 days per week as needed. Email a resume to: customerservice@glennsappliance. com . Will train, but must be capable of delivering appliances into customers homes with a partner and/or dolly assisted. BARBER WANTED Busy Milford shop. Skilled in all types of hair. Straight edge razor & clipper skills a must. Call to schedule interview. 603-402-0768 EXPERIENCED FLOORING INSTALLER. 2+ yrs exp, reliable transportation, willingness to work, follow directions, own tools a plus and punctuality a must. Fast paced environment driven by deadlines. Most work performed in MA, some in NH. Apply at: mcneilflooring@myfairpoint.net


bite-sized lessons It’s Apple-Picking Season In September, apples are the superfood of the season. With fewer than 100 calories, Match flavors, drop the calories apples are free ofthe fat, sodium, and cholesterol and rich in phytonutrients, With easy and ingredient swaps, canare recreate thecomplement flavors of your antioxidants andsimple fiber. Being sweet and juicy,you apples a perfect to any recipehigher from desserts soups.like Enjoy this simple andcreamy easy salad within lower favorite calorie to dishes, cheesy pizza or pasta, cranberries, pecans, anda apples, is a healthy blend of all fall’s favorite flavors. calorie salads. Swap Reubenwhich Sandwich for this Fresh Express Turkey Reuben Salad without sacrificing taste.

your store dietitians Hannah Millon-Garvey, RD, LD

Craving more? Concord Hannaford

Join your Hannaford dietitians 73 Fort Eddy Rd. for FREE available demos. nutrition classesHannah and isin-store Tuesday, 1 p.m. – 6:30 p.m. Go to hannaford.com/dietitians Friday, 8 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. for upcoming FREE events and a Marilyn Mills, monthly schedule.

MS, RD, LD, CDE Jean Bottillo-Faulis MS, RD Marilyn is available at the following locations and times:

Niskayuna Hannaford Hooksett Hannaford 79 Bicentennial Dr. 3333 Consaul Rd.

Turkey Reuben Salad Serves: 4

Mondays, 10:30 a.m. - 6:30 p.m. Jean is available: Mondays, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. Manchester Hannaford Select Fridays, 2 p.m. –Dr. 6 p.m. 201 John E. Devine Select Saturdays, a.m. – 1 p.m Thursdays, 10 a.m. - 710 p.m.; some Saturdays

East Side Hannaford 859 Hanover St.

Fridays, 10:00 a.m. - 5 p.m.

Salad Ingredients: 1 package Fresh Express® Iceberg Shreds® 2 slices of rye bread 1/2 Taste of Inspirations sliced turkey breast 2 cups sauerkraut, rinsed and drained 1/2 bag Cabot® Light shredded cheddar Serves: 4 2 dill pickles, sliced down the middle and then diced into medium sizes Ingredients:

Apple Cranberry Salad

1pkg. (6.5oz) Fresh Express® Sweet Butter Lettuce Dressing: 1 apple sliced 1/2 fat Thousand 1/2 cup cup low pecans, halved Island Dressing 1/4 cup dried cranberries 1/2make cup bleu cheese, crumbled To croutons: 8 Tbsp. Hannaford Balsamic Dressing 1. Cut bread into 1/2-inch cubes. 2. Bake 15 minutes on a baking sheet at 300° F. Set aside. Directions: Place greens into a large salad bowl and add apples, pecans, cranberries and bleu cheese crumbles. Drizzle salad dressing over salad and enjoy! To make salad: 1. Toss greens, pickles and sauerkraut with dressing. Nutrition Facts per serving: 2. Portion onto 4 plates. Amount Per Serving: 275 Calories; 15 g Fat; 5 g Protein; 8 g Carbohydrate; 3 g Dietary Fiber; 11 g 3. Top with 13 turkey and cheese. Then, top each salad with rye croutons. Total Sugars; mg Cholesterol

Marianne Romano, HeidiRD, Kerman, MPA, CDN RD Colonie Hannaford Heidi is available at the following 96 Wolflocations Rd. and times:

Londonderry Hannaford Marianne is available: 6 Hampton Drive Tuesdays, 9 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Mondays, 9 a.m. – 7 p.m. some Tuesdays, 9 a.m. – 12 p.m. One Saturday per month

Bedford Hannaford 4 Jenkins Road

Tuesdays, 12 p.m. – 6 p.m.

or 1 p.m. – 7Wukitsch, p.m. Patty

MS, RD, CDN

Jessica O’Connell Delmar Hannaford MBA, RD, LD 180 Delaware Ave.

Exeter Hannaford Patty is available: 141 Portsmouth Ave. Mondays & Fridays

To check Jessica’s availability, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. please review her schedule at the Select Saturdays store or on our website.

10 a.m. - 2 p.m.

Recipe Courtesy freshexpress.com Simple Swap: of Add more nutrition to your place by choosing dark leafy greens, like Fresh Express® Baby Spinach and Arugula Blend!

Laura Halupowski RD Patty Delmonico-

Reuben: 657 Calories Turkey Reuben Salad: 300 Calories

Thursdays, a.m. - 5 p.m. MS, RD,10 CDN Fridays 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Some Saturdays

Recipe courtesy of Fresh Express

Nashua Hannaford 175 Coliseum Ave. Schardt,

Albany Hannaford

097448 HIPPO | 900 SEPTEMBER 3 - Ave. 9, 2015 | PAGE 37 Central


FOOD Beneficial bacteria

Beaver Brook hosts probiotic food series By Allie Ginwala

News from the local food scene

aginwala@hippopress.com

By Allie Ginwala

Last month, Beaver Brook Nature Center hosted a class on homemade soda, the first in its new series about fermentation and probiotic foods. Noticing the recent trend of learning more about the benefits of bacteria, the center will host classes throughout the fall about making probiotic foods at home, with the next installment all about pickling on Sunday, Sept. 6. “If there are some people really wanting to work on their gut and health this would give them a number of different skills and recipes and food groups they could work on themselves,” Celeste Philbrick Barr, education and community affairs director, said in a phone interview. While Beaver Brook has offered fermentation-based classes before, this fall will be the first time they’re offered as a series. “Some of these things seemed like oldfashioned, and now it’s cool again,” she said. “It’s kind of bringing it back onto the table so younger people can learn it.” Rivka Schwartz, herbalist and Beaver Brook instructor, will lead the monthly classes, each of which will be a hands-on style, allowing guests to sample and also take home recipes to try on their own. Philbrick Barr and Schwartz worked

food@hippopress.com

• What’s brewing in Manchester: Great North Aleworks (1050 Holt Ave., Manchester), the Queen City’s newest brewery, officially began distributing its 12-ounce cans on Monday, Aug. 31. The 20-barrel production brewery features Smokin’ Rauchbier, IPA and Robust Vanilla Porter, which will be available year-round, along with a fourth seasonal beer (currently Thai Dyed, the summer brew) only offered on draft. Owners and Manchester residents Rob and Lisa North began experimenting with home brewing a number of years ago, became involved with the state’s Brew Free or Die homebrew club and realized that their talent had the potential to be much more than a hobby, according to an article in Heady Times, a quarterly publication of Amoskeag Beverages. The new tasting room will be open for samples along with tours of the production area. Visit facebook.com/greatnorthaleworks for updates. • New home for science series: Science on Tap, a discussion series presented by the SEE Science Center, is moving to The Foundry (50 Commercial St., Manchester) for the 2015-2016 season. The series will kick off on Tuesday, Sept. 8, at 5 :30 p.m. with a discussion called “Humans and Space: Is Mars in the Future?” Hear from a panel featuring Chris Carberry, executive director and co-founder of Explore Mars; Joe Cassady, Aerojet Rocketdyne executive director; and David McDonald, STEM educator and former education director at the McAuliffe-Shepard Discovery Center. The series continues every second Tuesday through June. See see-sciencecenter.org/ visitors/Science-on-Tap. • Update at The Grind: The Grind Rail Trail Cafe will be moving from its location on Manning Street to West Broadway in Derry, once renovations at the new location are complete. The new cafe space is larger, with an outdoor area and walk-up window (just like a drive-through, except it’s for feet and not cars) as well as convenient parking and easy access to Interstate 93. Situated right on the rail trail, the cafe is a popular spot for runners, bikers and parents with strollers. Hoping to open in mid-September, The Grind will expand its menu with more lunch items and grab-andgo foods at the new location. Hours remain the same, 6:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. on weekdays 44

Looking for more food and drink fun? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play and hipposcout.com. HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 38

Upcoming classes Maple Hill Farm, Beaver Brook Nature Center, 117 Ridge Road, Hollis Register at beaverbrook.org

• Pickling: The Traditional, Easy & Probiotic Method When: Sunday, Sept. 6, 2 to 3:30 p.m. Cost: $18

• Fall Fermenting: Make Sauerkraut, Kimchi and Cider Vinegar When: Thursday, Oct. 1, 6:30 to 8 p.m. Cost: $20

• Create your own fire cider

When: Thursday, Nov. 5, 6:30 to 8 p.m. Cost: $15

Learn how to make fire cider this November at Beaver Brook. Courtesy photo.

together to come up with the class topics, chosen based on what foods would be best for the time of year and also what products will be available to use. Since the next class takes place in the height of the harvest season, Schwartz will incorporate a lot of local produce. “You can ferment just about any vegetable,” she said in a phone interview. “It’s [the class] an overview of different things you can ferment and also just seasonal because we’re using seasonal products from this area.” The pickling portion of the class all depends on what she sees fresh at the market that morning, but will most likely include zucchini, turnips or radishes. She’ll also show the class how to make corn relish, mustard and salsa. Apart from introducing people to tasty and healthy recipes to try at home, Schwartz hopes to dispel thoughts that pickling is a tricky process. “A lot of people have in their minds that it must be something difficult to do

[because] you look at pickles at the store and they’re very expensive and you imagine this must be a whole process, but really there’s nothing easier then fermenting,” she said. “A quart of pickles only takes 10 minutes … for someone who wants to do it at home, and it’s very simple.” Following the shift in the seasons, the October class will cover sauerkraut and kimchi with a final class in November about fire cider. “That is an amazing remedy that is great to do in November,” Philbrick Barr said. Made up of horseradish roots, garlic, onion, ginger, chili pepper, cider vinegar and more, fire cider is a tonic used to combat head congestion, a cough, sore throat and other ailments that winter weather brings about. After making it last year, Philbrick Barr is excited to make her own tonic again, which will be ready to use once it steeps for six weeks. During the class, Schwartz will talk about the medicinal benefits of the roots in the fire cider, which can be taken on its own or as a salad dressing.

Concepts combine UnWine’d and Key West Cafe merge

behind the restaurant’s newly installed bar. The words “UnWine’d at Key West Cafe & Grill” and the sketch of a palm tree stood as On a recent Thursday afternoon, UnWine’d the backdrop for the cork bar with a pinstripe owner Scot Kinney was writing with bright- of beach sand laid into the middle, a physily colored chalk on a large blackboard cal expression of the Manchester restaurant’s

By Allie Ginwala

aginwala@hippopress.com

new concept. After running two restaurants for the past year — UnWine’d in Manchester and Key West Cafe in Goffstown — Kinney and his wife Rania are fusing the two concepts together in the Manchester location with


Best Pub • Best Overall Restaurant • Best Menu Item Best Bartender • Best French Fries • Best Burgers Best Trivia Night • Best Beer Selection at Bar or Restaurant

4.69”wide x 2.6” high HIPPO Horizontal 1/8 page

Rejuvenate and refresh

Kinney never saw himself owning two restaurants. In fact, since UnWine’d opened in 2001, patrons have suggested he open another location, but his answer was always no. It wasn’t until he was approached about an opportunity in Goffstown that he considered the possibility. “This did just kind of fall into place with a good opportunity somebody approached us with, and we decided, hey, let’s give it a shot,” Kinney said. Key West Cafe, a breakfast and lunch spot with a Caribbean flair, opened in July 2014. The idea was to make it completely different than UnWine’d in order to keep things interesting and manageable. “I didn’t want to do a dinner place and have two running at the same time,” he said. “I’m very hands-on, I try to be at my businesses all the time, so it made sense to do something breakfast [and] lunch.” After a year in, however, the ebb and flow of the Goffstown business was not where he wanted it to be, so he decided to close and reevaluate. Since UnWine’d is the main business, Kinney thought that instead of just closing in Goffstown, he could merge the two concepts to bring new life to the restaurant in Manchester. He wants to stick with the Key West concept because he’s “always had a little part of Florida in my heart.” “I used to live there. I have a business down there,” he said. “I’m just a very laidback, tropical, Floridian type guy by nature.”

What’s on the menu?

The dinner menu at UnWine’d at Key West: Cafe and Grill will feature one side of Caribbean dishes like fried plantains, Jamaican meat pies and macadamia crusted fish, and one side of UnWine’d menu favorites.

015

132 N Main St, Concord, NH 03301 • (603) 228-6363 • thebarleyhouse.com

Scot and Rania Kinney stand behind the new bar at UnWine’d at Key West: Cafe and Grill.” Allie Ginwala photo.

breakfast, lunch and dinner that will feature UnWine’d favorite dishes and Caribbeaninspired cuisine.

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UnWine’d at Key West: Cafe & Grill 865 Second St., Manchester, unwined.net Re-opening mid-September.

New to UnWine’d are breakfast and lunch options, which are an expanded version of the Goffstown menu. They’ll go from one breakfast burrito to three and also add a third omelet. Sweet and savory crepes and fruit smoothies will also be on the menu. Kinney said there will be a “grab and go” feel for those heading to work in the morning in addition to the sit-down crowd looking for a nice meal and a mimosa. Conch chowder, Cubans and Reubens will be on the lunch menu. “We want people to feel like they’re getting away from the normalcy,” Kinney said. He hopes to conjure a vacation-like atmosphere with tropical drinks, calypso music and little umbrellas.

Why change?

Everyone has his own style. When you have found it, you should stick to it. — Audrey Hepburn

sticking to it Historic Millyard District at 75 Arms Street, Manchester, NH • Lunch: Monday through Friday • Dinner: Nightly at 5pm 6 0 3 . 6 2 2 . 5 4 8 8 Chef/Author/Owner Jeffrey Paige w w w . c o t t o n f o o d . c o m 088745

Turning two into one

UnWine’d will be closed for the beginning of September for renovations. The goal is to reopen in mid-September for breakfast, lunch and dinner six days a week (it’ll be closed on Tuesdays). With the new concept comes a new atmosphere in the restaurant — the space will have two vibes just like the menu. They’re going to open up the area that divides the two sections of the dining room and make it all one level. Guests will have two atmospheres with different decor to choose from while dining — the intimate atmosphere currently associated with UnWine’d and the vibrant playfulness of Key West Cafe. Even with the stark difference in setting, the two spaces will flow. And regardless of which side you sit on, you’ll be able to order from both menus. “The coziness, the quietness … [that atmosphere] is slowly a dying breed but we’re trying to rejuvenate it,” he said. “We’re hoping this is something that’s going to re-spark people’s interest, give them another reason to come in.”

Taste our fresh new menu in our renovated dining room. Authentic Italian cuisine prepared for you by Chef Pasquale himself, who grew up and received culinary training in Italy.

Ristorante

Just 15 minutes from Manchester! 143 Raymond Rd, Candia, NH 603-483-5005 | PasqualeInCandia.com 102156 HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 39


FOOD

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Learn the basics of homebrewing

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Whether your dream is to open a brewery someday or you just want an IPA made to your exact specifications, you can learn the ins and outs of home brewing beer at Oscar Foss Memorial Library on Thursday, Sept. 3, during a class led by veteran home brewer Justin Umlah. Umlah began brewing almost a decade ago because he wasn’t happy with the beer selection on the shelves. “Ten years ago, good beer was not everywhere, and it was definitely not economically priced, and I thought it would be a clever idea to start making my own,” he said in a phone interview. His current home brew setup is a half barrel (15 gallons), and lately he’s been brewing IPAs and Belgian-style beers — he prefers IPAs while his wife enjoys the Belgians. He’ll make anywhere from 10 gallons to 15 gallons a batch, depending on the type of beer. With no classes available at the time, he learned how to home brew by reading books and doing lots of hands-on, trial-anderror learning. “It was all books written by crazy people that just took a hobby way too far,” he said. “[A] big reason I’m doing the class is [to tell] anybody getting into brewing [that they] should not take the path I took.” During the class, Umlah will focus on the Home Brewing Basics When: Thursday, Sept. 3, from 7 to 8 p.m. Where: The library meeting room at Oscar Foss Memorial Library, 111 S. Barnstead Road, Center Barnstead Cost: Free Call: 269-3900 to register Visit: oscarfoss.org

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*Use code: SUMR2015. Expires 09/07/15. Cannot be combined with any other offer. Restrictions may apply. See store for details. Edible , Edible Arrangements , the Fruit Basket Logo, and other marks mentioned herein are registered trademarks of Edible Arrangements, LLC. © 2015 Edible Arrangements, LLC. All rights reserved. ®

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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 40

theme of “keep it simple.” “We’ve got four basic ingredients,” he said. “Stick to those and learn how to use them, then go off.” Umlah has showed people how to brew in an individual setting, but never as a formal class before. He’s working on developing his own course with beginner, chemistry and advanced class options to cover all aspects of the process and equipment involved. He hopes to turn the inaugural standalone class at Oscar Foss Memorial Library into a series. Umlah said he designed this Home Brewing Basics class so that “if somebody walked in and said, ‘I don’t know what the differences in beer are,’ I can take it from there.” He’ll talk about the simple ingredients involved and show the class malt and hops (including some fresh hops from his garden). He’ll go over the cleaning process, which is “ultimately 90 percent of the job,” he said, how to start with equipment most people already have in their kitchens, and of course the brewing process. He’ll wrap up the class with time for questions and book recommendations to help get started. “Hopefully by the end of this one-hour class they can say OK, this is how you have to do it,” he said.

Mon 7:30a-2p • Tues-Fri 7:30a - 5:30p • Sat 8a-12p

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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 41


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Brad Roberts started working at Fremont Pizzeria Restaurant (431 Main St., Fremont, 895-6313, fremontpizzeria. com) five years ago when his brother and cousin, who both worked at the pizzeria, suggested he join the team. He began as a dish boy and worked his way up, going from cooking on the line to making pizzas to his current position as head cook. Of all the dishes he makes on the menu of gourmet sandwiches, pastas, subs and seafood, he really enjoys the pizza-making process, from opening the dough to adding the toppings.

603-753-6631 | N. Main St., Boscawen | AlansofBoscawen.com

Willkommen

Favorite restaurant besides your own? What is the most unique pizza you’ve I’d say the Tuckaway Tavern in Rayever eaten? mond is definitely my second favorite. I think actually one of our best pizzas here is the homestyle pizza. ... Instead of What celebrity would you like to share a pizza sauce it’s a Bolognese sauce as the a pizza with? base, and then there’s shredded cheese on Probably Bradley Cooper. top and then there’s some Romano sprinkled on. What is your favorite meal to cook at home? What is your favorite pizza topping or Chicken broccoli alfredo. I think that’s topping combination? just a unique dish. Back in the day when I was a dish boy … a manager that worked here … came What would you choose for your last up with this great idea of a Big Mac piz- meal? za. It has all the ingredients as a Big Mac, Big Mac pizza from Fremont Pizzeria. It the Thousand Island as a base and then is not on our menu, but you could ask for it … hamburger and cheese. It comes out of and we’d make it. the oven [and] you put lettuce and tomato — Allie Ginwala Honolulu flatbread From the kitchen of Fremont Pizzeria Pomodoro sauce Pizza cheese Pizza dough Pineapple chunks Pulled pork

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250 Commercial St. Manchester, NH HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 42

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Food Fairs/festivals/expos • HAMPTON BEACH SEAFOOD FESTIVAL 60 Seacoast restaurants bring their best seafood. Other activities include live entertainment, a lobster roll eating contest, arts and crafts vendors and fireworks. Fri., Sept. 11, through Sun., Sept. 13 at Hampton Beach. Admission costs $5 on Friday and Sunday, $8 on Saturday. Children under 12 are free. Visit hamptonbeachseafoodfestival.com. • JACKSON HILL CIDER DAY Grind apples and press cider, enjoy apple treats, watch artisan demos, visit with animals from Spencer-Peirce-Little Farm and see live music and theater performances. Sat., Sept. 12, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Jackson

First oil and season pizza dough and grill it on a charbroiler until you get nice grill lines and the dough crisps. Then put pomodoro on the flatbread and pizza cheese. Spread pulled pork over the top and sprinkle some pineapple chunks as desired. Sprinkle a bit more pizza cheese over the top and bake in the oven at 350 degrees for about 6 minutes or until the cheese browns.

House, 76 Northwest St., Portsmouth. Cost is $6, $3 for children. Visit historicnewengland. org. • GLENDI Festival of Greek food and drink, crafts and live music. Fri., Sept. 18, to Sun., Sept. 20. St. George Greek Orthodox Cathedral, 650 Hanover St., Manchester. Free admission. Food and gifts priced per item. See saintgeorgeglendi.com. • PASSPORT CRAFT BEER AND FOOD PAIRING TOUR ON TAP Stroll the historic grounds at Strawbery Banke Museum while sampling pairings of over 20 craft beers and bites from local restaurants and food purveyors. Event benefits NHPTV and Strawbery Banke. Sat., Sept. 19, from 5 to 7:30 p.m. Strawbery Banke Museum,

14 Hancock St., Portsmouth. Tickets cost $75, $30 for designated drivers. Purchase tickets at nhptv.org/passport. • NH COFFEE FESTIVAL A celebration of all things coffee with a latte throwdown and coffee-themed games and goodies. Sat., Sept. 19, from noon to 4 p.m. in downtown Laconia. See facebook.com/NHcoffeefestival. • THE GREAT NEW HAMPSHIRE PIE FESTIVAL Enter a pie in the contest, watch demos and pie eating contests, take a horse drawn wagon wide or farm tour. Sun., Sept. 20, from noon to 4 p.m. New Hampshire Farm Museum, Rt. 125 White Mountain Hwy., Milton. Admission is $10 for adults, $5 for children. Free if you bring a pie for the contest. Visit farmmuseum.org.


Burgers, Beer & Ball Games ls cia e p s t S urs. s rink p D e l S Th ct

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SAT. SEPTEMBER 5TH JIMMY’S DOWN

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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 43


Weekly Dish

Continued from page 38

SEPTEMBER Freshly Cut Family Buys k Economy Pac $ 99 9 ck 4 2 lb s G ro un d C hu 00 r e g $ 9 r u b m a H ks ic st 4 m ru D 2 lb s

Pack

4 lbs Gro und Ch uck 4 lbs Gro und Ro und 3 lbs Gro und Sir loi n $

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P ak c k 0 0 o b m C o ound Chuc $ 8 9 3 lb s G r S i r l o i n 3 lb s N y i c k e n Te n d e r s a s t lb s C h en Bre 3

k ls Chic

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• SCHNITZELFEST NH Enjoy traditional German cuisine, vendors and live music. Sat., Sept. 26, from noon to 5 p.m. Butler Park, 5 Central Street, Hillsborough. Meal tickets cost $12, $25 for five beer tokens. See schnitzelfestnh.org. Chef events/special meals • M/S MOUNT WASHINGTON LOBSTERFEST CRUISES Enjoy a sunset cruise featuring a lobster dinner and buffet of summertime food, live music and dancing. Sat., Sept. 5, from 6 to 9 p.m.; Sat., Oct. 3, from 5 to 8 p.m.

Home Port, 211 Lakeside Ave., Weirs Beach/Laconia. Tickets cost $54. Visit cruisenh.com. • NAT SHERMAN 85TH ANNIVERSARY CIGAR DINNER Event includes limited edition cigars, food and drink. Proceeds benefit City Harvest New York. Thurs., Sept. 10, at 5 p.m. The Bedford Village Inn, 2 Olde Bedford Way, Bedford. Tickets cost $125. Call Blowin' Smoke Cigars (472-5878) to purchase tickets. • TAILGATE PARTY Kickoff the Patriots' new season with raffles and prizes, all-you-caneat grill and drink options and

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outdoor patio dining. Thurs., Sept. 10, from 5 to 8 p.m. The Farm Bar & Grille, 1181 Elm Street, Manchester. $20 and $35 per person ticket options. Visit farmbargrille.com. • FARM BRUNCHES At Moulton Farm. Outdoor brunch offered select Sundays through September with seasonal fruit, baked goods, egg and meat dishes. Sun., Sept. 13, Sept. 27, from 9 a.m. to noon. Moulton Farm, 18 Quarry Road, Meredith. Cost is $14.99 per adult, $9.99 for children 10 and under. Visit moultonfarm.com or facebook. com/MoultonFarm.

The Never Boring Steakhouse

Two Courses

All Hood Milk

orchards hosts from the Mack Family. • Wine release: Copper Beech Winery (146 Londonderry Turnpike, Building 3, Unit 3, Hooksett, copperbeechwinery.com) announced in a press release that Country Crabapple, a limited-edition wine crafted from New Hampshire crabapples, is once again available. The winery hosts free tastings the first and last weekend of every month from noon to 5 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday. Stop by to try seasonal wines Country Crabapple, Melisi Heritage Apple and Fresh Peach.

c

603-669-9460

62 Lowell St, Manchester, NH

www.gauchosbraziliansteakhouse.com

100672

il

2 lb s Lo nd on B ro ig hs 2 lb s C hi ck en Th ho ps 2 lb s B nl s P or k C on 2 lb s Sh ur fi ne B ac D og s 2 lb s Sh ur fi ne H otnd er s 2 lb s C hi ck en Te

and 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on weekends. Find them on Facebook for more updates. • Bring on the apples: On Wednesday, Sept. 2, Gov. Maggie Hassan was expected to mark the 7th annual New England Apple Day with a ceremonial “first apple picking” at Mack’s Apples in Londonderry, according to a press release. Each state in the region celebrated the beginning of the harvest season by visiting local orchards. Gov. Hassan was accompanied by Commissioner of Agriculture Lorraine Merrill, President and CEO of the US Apple Association Jim Blair and


Early Bird Special

FROM THE

pantry

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Ideas from off the shelf

September Featured Items

Ricotta cheese

Chorizo, ricotta and greens in French dough Recipe adapted from “What Should I Eat for Breakfast Today” 1 puffed pastry 1 small container ricotta cheese Chorizo or salami, few thin slices 1 handful yellow cheese, grated 1 handful rucola or other greens (I chose spinach) 1 teaspoon herbs Salt and pepper for taste

CAMPO (gathering place)

size, so you could grab one and go on your way out the door. I opted to use salami instead of chorizo, primarily because I found it first in the grocery store. Also, because I was using leftover lasagna cheese filling, which already had three cheeses in it, I chose not to add the grated yellow cheese. Similarly, I went light on the herbs, salt and pepper, as the cheese mixture already contained plenty. The finished product was as good to eat as the pictures on the blog looked. The light airiness of the puff pastry prevented the dish from being too heavy. The salami and cheese combo provided a mixture of salty and savory that was utterly delicious. I was happy I had the leftover ricotta mixture, as I do think it added an extra layer of flavor with the multiple cheeses. However, I’ll be making this again with just ricotta and shredded cheese and am curious to see whether the results are equally delicious. Either way, I’m thrilled I now have a recipe to use for my leftover lasagna cheese filling, especially one that’s perfect for breakfast the next morning. — Lauren Mifsud

815 Chestnut St. Manchester

625•9544

Chestnut’s 102599

Over the weekend I made lasagna. Every time I make the dish, I end up with more cheese filling than I know what to do with but always feel guilty about just throwing it in the trash. This time, I got smart. I saved the excess ricotta-heavy mixture and went searching for fun recipes that utilized the cheese. I mostly found other pastas and pizzas, but I didn’t want anything too heavy or sauce-based. And then I found this amazing recipe for chorizo, ricotta and greens in French dough. I found the recipe on the “What Should I Eat for Breakfast Today” blog by Marta Greber. The photos looked good enough to eat, and the recipe seemed simple enough to recreate. Plus, I had almost all of the ingredients on hand and would be able to use up the remainder of my ricotta cheese mixture. I was happy to find a recipe that I could make for something other than dinner as well. This savory breakfast option will quickly be rotating into my weekly menu, as it only took a few minutes to throw together and about 20 to bake. This recipe would be ideal for houseguests, especially if you have a full day planned. It’s not heavy, and the pieces are practically bite

Grafton Village 1 Year Chedder Cinnamon Apple Ravioli Benvolio Pinot Grigio Benvolio Toscana

Mon–Fri: 9–6 • Sat: 9-1 AngelasPastaAndCheese.com

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Something for everyone Friday & Saturday evenings, Hanover St closed to traffic - plenty of outdoor seating! 110 Hanover St. Manchester | 606-1189 | hookedonignite.com 100397

Our Chefs Take Fresh Food Seriously! From the boat to your plate.

1 egg Thaw the puff pastry according to package directions. Once thawed, spread a layer of ricotta cheese over the pastry, followed by the slices of salami and greens. Top all with the grated cheese, herbs and salt and pepper to taste. Roll length-wise, keeping the wrap tight. Cut into approximately 1-inch slices, and coat with a light egg wash. Bake at 330 degrees for 20 to 25 minutes or until puff pastry is golden brown and flaky.

Chef Trottier and staff on a recent fishing trip. Now that’s a special daily catch.

Cafe Classics with a twist!

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Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.

Saturday 8:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.

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LUNCH  DINNER

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RestaurantTeknique.com

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waterworkscafe.com

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FOOD

HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 45


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For all of your barbecues, clam bakes and celebrations

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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 46

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Live Free & Wine a success Joined by two friends, I enjoyed the recent Live Free & Wine Festival put on by the New Hampshire Winery Association. Fifteen state wineries were joined by several other vendors at the event held at Flag Hill Winery in Lee. The association hadn’t held this event for a few years, but it is clear it made some significant improvements after its first try. By changing locations and breaking up the tasting times into two sessions, this event was very successful from my perspective. We attended the noon session, and everyone appeared to be having a great time. It was busy but not overly crowded. We only waited a few minutes at each table and were able to interact with the winemakers and staff. The day was very warm, but there was a nice breeze flowing through the tents, which blocked out the hot sun. The Flag Hill vineyards provided a beautiful backdrop for the event. Clearly, a vineyard is a natural location when you are sipping wine, and this location is very picturesque. I finally had the chance to try Sweet Baby Vineyard’s Farm Stand White before it is gone again. This wine is a blend of five New Hampshire-grown grapes and is quite refreshing. I have not had a chance to try their Barn Door Red yet, but I am hoping I can catch some from the next batch, to be released this fall. Moonlight Meadery has a new Summer Love mead that has flavors of orange and honey. Anyone who likes creamsicles will enjoy this, and I could imagine it being very tasty poured over vanilla ice cream. Each one of us tried a different mead and we were all equally happy with our selections. It was very nice to meet the crews from The Vineyard at Seven Birches from North Haverhill and Appolo Vineyards in Derry, as I have not made it to their wineries yet. I enjoyed Seven Birches’ riesling and apple wines and hope to make the trek north to visit them — I hear they also have cider donuts! At the Appolo table, I tried their Brianna wine, which is the name as well as the grape. I learned something new, as I had never heard of this before. After some research, I learned that this grape is fairly new, having been bred in 1983 in Wisconsin as a hybrid grape. I’d like to try this wine again when my palate hasn’t been hit by several other wines, as I think it skewed my experience. If you missed this event, plan to attend the next one as it was a very enjoyable experience.

Courtesy photo.

Sparkling wine party

Start your Labor Day weekend off right and head to Hermit Woods Winery in Meredith this Friday night for their Sparkling Wine Release Party. They will be pouring their new releases from 7 to 9 p.m. For $10, you can taste some of their still and sparkling wines, and enjoy live music and hors d’oeuvres. When I spoke with Ken Hardcastle, coowner and winemaker, earlier this summer, he said he was working on several sparkling versions made from some of their favorites, including cider, crabapple, apple, kiwi and three honey wines. The still versions of these are impressive, so I am really looking forward to trying the sparkling versions. There is just something so refreshing and pleasant about a glass of bubbly. Visit hermitwoods.com for more information.

New release at Copper Beech

Anyone in the Manchester area will be happy to know there is a nice little winery in close proximity. Lin, the owner and winemaker at Copper Beech, makes a nice selection of fruit wines out of her winery in Hooksett. I recently received an email noting that her Country Crabapple wine is now back in stock. This is a great wine for fall, as it is “bold, crisp and tart, offdry and a little bit puckery” according to the description. Made from 100 percent New Hampshire crab apples, it is in limited supply, so head over to the winery and get some before it is gone. Copper Beech is open the first and last weekend of every month from noon until 5 p.m. Visit copperbeechwinery.com.


POP CULTURE

Index CDs

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MUSIC, BOOKS, GAMES, COMICS, MOVIES, DVDS, TV AND MORE AC Slater, Take the Night (Owsla Records)

Night A • Painted Palms, Horizons C BOOKS

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• The Kindness A • Children’s Room • Out Next Week Includes listings for lectures, author events, book clubs, writers’ workshops and other literary events. To let us know about your book or event, e-mail Kelly Sennott at ksennott@ hippopress.com. To get author events, library events and more listed, send information to listings@hippopress.com. Looking for more book, film and pop culture events? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play or hipposcout.com.

In a display of the same level of competitive workaholism endemic to house producers, Los Angeles tech producer Slater has been dropping tons of mixes and singles over the last few years, most notably in the company of Far East Movement, Big Sean and Moby. But his bum-rushing of the L.A. underground scene doesn’t stop there, as he’s actually had the self-assurance to allow one gasping reviewer to anoint him “The King of Heavy Bass House in America,” a signature hip-hop move that fits well with this honky’s rap undertow — this ain’t no euro-disco, that’s for sure, especially with sentiments like “let that booty free” getting (politely) pounded into your head. The feel is half runway-model-house and half garage, his go-to block-rockin’ weapon a steeldrum sample that salutes the UK underground. The cool thing about all this is that people who hate either techno or rap (if not both) could dig it. A — Eric W. Saeger Painted Palms, Horizons (Polyvinyl Records)

We discussed this band’s debut album, Forever, in these pages two years ago. Like that one, this album wants to be hooky and bright, but their Shins fetish sort of precludes that possibility, and with all the cheeseball Breakfast-Clubbing synths and whatme-worry anti-tude, it reads like She Wants Revenge doing Simple Minds karaoke, or vice versa. They’re based in San Francisco nowadays, not that that’s really supposed to change something; there’s really very little going on here, an aural snapshot of a couple of guys who really dig how the hipster patrol discovered the Beach Boys. Horizons is sincere enough, I’ll give it that, and it’s cleaner than Forever, but in the area of vocal-line strategy, singer Christopher Prudhomme isn’t any better than any other electro or goth kid blessed with a voice that doesn’t suck, taking wild stabs at notes in the hope of nailing down something. These guys are out of strikes. C — Eric W. Saeger

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• Jeez, where the heck has Ben Folds been, or does his publicist not tell me about his new stuff because [s]he hates my guts? What did I ever do, but who cares, I am a forgiving person who loves all people and things, and so I will go to the Internet machine and listen, so that I can tell my fans what I think about his upcoming new album, So There. As you know, Folds is the Van Cliburn of this generation, a piano sub-genius who makes wonderful records that are… wait, the video for the single has been up for over a month, and no one has commented about it? Maybe Ben Folds is actually the Van Cliburn of the generation before you guys, and not you. If that’s the case, I don’t quite have to love this thing the way I usually love all people and things, so let’s listen to this idiotic lump of quirk-pop. Oh, by the way, there is a piano concerto in three movements on this album, performed with the Nashville Symphony. No, I don’t know why. OK, the song I found, “Capable of Anything,” is very quirky, with fluttering flutes and a Billy Joel-gone-twee feel. Do I detest it? No, not really. • Whoa, here’s something for fans of basically every band that’s ever made records — it’s the new self-titled Hollywood Vampires album! Look, it’s Johnny Depp, playing guitar and looking all hemped out, in this teaser video! Alice Cooper is singing! Holy cats, it’s Joe Perry, the fake Native American from Aerosmith! Even the famous fake knight, Sir Paul McCartney, is in on this — look, there he is, laughing about losing a million dollars in a beer-pong game or whatever cracks up these rich people! Wow, this song totally kicks butt, at least when Alice is singing and Joe Perry isn’t pinching high notes. Maybe it’ll be a real band with lots of albums, maybe? Naw, this won’t last long, someone will eat all the caviar-flavored Doritos and there’ll be a sad breakup, you just know it. • Any of you old people out there remember when Jewel was a big deal, in the ’90s? I think she’s from Alaska, which, along with the fact that she never got braces for her teeth, somehow gave her this weird street cred among suburban 20something girls. Wait a second … yup, Wiki says she was raised in Alaska. Her and that whiny waifish voice, man, I just couldn’t fricking … you know, love her the way I love all people and things. So, away to torture my ears with the title track from her new LP, Picking up the Pieces. Jeez, sounds like early Kellie Pickler, really country-ish, but no, now she’s doing that annoying thing where she sings really loudly and really well. Don’t you hate that? • Thought I forgot you, my metal friends? Heck no! Three words: New Slayer album! Titled Repentless, it will take the edge off all your anger, about … well, you know, all your anger and metal angst! Don’t you hate the greedy Powers That Be, who use big stupid words like “unrepentant”? I sure do! Let’s sing together, my black-leather Animaniacs. Ready? “Graaaahhh!” — Eric W. Saeger

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Lyme author Jessica Lahey knew there was an audience for her book, The Gift of Failure: How the Best Parents Learn to Let Go So Their Children Can Succeed, when her earlier article on the topic went viral. The mom, teacher and writer had taught all over the Upper Valley — Hanover High School, Crossroads Academy and, in the past year, at a drug and alcohol rehab for addicted adolescents — and was writing in an education blog a couple years ago when she decided she wanted a larger audience. She sought advice from friends and family and submitted a story, “Why Parents Need to Let Their Children Fail,” to The Atlantic. That January 2013 piece described an overparenting study from the Queensland University of Technology by Judith Locke, but it started with a narrative about one of her first experiences with the issue as a new teacher years before. She’d had to call a student’s mother to inform her she would be initiating disciplinary proceedings against her daughter for plagiarism. The mother, enraged, explained it wasn’t her daughter who lifted the paragraphs from the website; it was she. She’d written her daughter’s paper. The story “exploded,” Lahey said via phone a couple weeks before the book’s Aug. 11 release. Soon, Lahey was doing national TV interviews and contributing regularly for both The Atlantic and The New York Times, where she now writes in a parenting blog, “Motherlode,” every Wednesday. Lahey had been trying to break into the writing industry for years, but now publishers were coming up to her. Eleven publishers, in fact. Part of the demand, Lahey suspects, came from her perspective as both a teacher and a parent, which is how she she came to fully realize the effect parents were having on their children. She was really thrown into awareness when her sons began entering the grades she taught: middle school. Kids were terrified of failing, and parents — including herself — were at fault. Lahey’s written The Gift of Failure in a way she hopes is both informative and

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helpful. It’s part memoir, part research, part how-to. Her favorite books, she said, have always been the ones in which writers try something, screw up and report back about what works and what doesn’t. That’s what she’s done here, with thanks to her guinea pig sons, ages 16 and 11, whom she always checks with before she writes about them. “The books that are on the market about over-parenting are great. I love them. But they’re the kinds of books — you finish them, and then you feel bad as a parent,” Lahey said. “Experts love to tell us, according to research, what works and what doesn’t work, but I tend to listen to people who have tried it in their real life. … I really like it when people are honest about their mistakes and talk about the lessons they learned.” This text is meant to engage, to start a dialogue. “One thing doesn’t always work for all kids and all parents. So I’d like to be able to engage in conversation,” she said. She’s had time to work out the kinks of the book; she was in a horse accident, which put off the release a year (it was supposed to come out August 2014), but in retrospect, the time off allowed her to really delve into the project and plow through an in-depth edit, not to mention build up publicity and a platform with The New York Times and The Atlantic. She’s been working in schools part-time during the book’s release but hopes to go back to full-time in 2016. “My husband suggested that nobody was going to read about teaching. I was grateful he was wrong,” Lahey said. “I always wanted to write. But I love, love, love teaching. I’m a writer and a teacher. I don’t think I can give one or the other up.”


The Kindness, by Polly (Bloomsbury, 290 pages)

Samson ically ill — cancer is implied — and now all Julian has left of her The protagonists of Polly Samson’s The — and his family — is Kindness sound like they belong to the a single tiny shoe that House of Duggar, the “19 and counting” had been caught in a reality-show family where, save for the hammock. Julia, too, mother, everyone’s name starts with a J. has vanished, leaving Julian and Julia — was this really behind little but “an necessary? old man of twenty-nine But don’t write off The Kindness for before the double hit of excessive alliteration or a too-earnest nicotine and coffee” and attempt to make the couple seem existen- a dog that lives by the tially one. It is an achingly beautiful love door in a constant “state story, satisfyingly complex, that at times of dashed optimism.” seems more poetry than prose. It is not a What happened to surprise to learn that the author’s writing Mira unfolds slowly, as credits include not only short stories but Julian trudges forlornly also song lyrics. through memories. What happened to Julia Samson’s gift of language is evident in is the bigger question that remains until the opening sentence: the point of view changes more than halfLucifer flew well for her in the fad- way through the book — and even then, the ing light, falling through the sky when she answers are so subtle that they may be lost summoned him and away again towards a on the casual reader. Those who persevere great bruising sunset. untangle a mystery. Samson plots like Dan Lucifer is no fallen angel, but a hawk Brown but describes like Longfellow. that belongs to Julia’s abusive husband. People wandering through town “with She’s taken the bird out to dinner (a rab- proud bellies” appear “slow and drunk as bit he must catch himself) on the hill where if the sunshine is something that must be she first met Julian, a man eight years waded through.” younger, who’d fallen in love with her A moon glints in a window “like a peepupon sight, as if “he’d summoned her from ing Tom.” In a hospital cafeteria, everything the depths of his hangover. Wished her into tastes “faintly of hand sanitizer.” being. Ta-dah!” And here is Julian, examining sperm Within a chapter, Julia’s husband had under a microscope, “his very own uniarrived home unexpectedly and cruelly verse composed entirely of comets” : driven her from the house, and before we “They seem so purposeful, so bright and can recover from that, Samson delivers full of promise, that for a moment he felt the reader eight years in the future where sad for each and every one of them, for Julia and Julian had moved in together at their urgency, for the messages they would his childhood estate, and had a child, a girl never get to deliver.” named Mira. Samson’s writing credits are among the Mira, however, had taken catastroph- more interesting of contemporary novel-

ists. She has written two short story collections and another novel (Out of the Picture), and contributed lyrics to two Pink Floyd albums as well as two solo records from David Gilmour. (She is married to Gilmour, a guitarist for Pink Floyd.) Her life history also includes time spent as newspaper journalist, and a period of homelessness after the birth of her first child (she has four). Such richness of experience comes through in her writing. At 53, hers is a mature voice, conversant in both love and loss, able to craft a carousel of deeply flawed yet sympathetic characters (well, sympathetic except for Julia’s first husband). Karl is Julian’s college friend, a wouldbe physician fiercely protective of his friend; Katie, Julian’s first girlfriend now a single mom who may still have designs on him; Jenna, Julian’s steely mother, who celebrates each birthday by swimming a mile in a river. (The sun wouldn’t dare not shine on her birthday, Julia drily notes). There are few truly auxiliary characters in this lush landscape; all have a hand, however inadvertent, in what transpires in the family’s collapse. The Kindness is the literary exposition of the old adage “No good deed goes unpunished.” It explores how an act meant for good can cascade into a waterfall of pain. An ambiguous ending mildly disappoints but does not negate the pleasures of a finely crafted and memorable story. A — Jennifer Graham

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• Book launch: The Concord Public Library (45 Green St., Concord, 225-8670, concordpubliclibrary.net) hosts a book launch celebration for author Helen Brody and photographer Leslie Tuttle’s new book, New Hampshire Women Farmers: Pioneers of the Local Food Movement, on Wednesday, Sept. 9, at 6 p.m. Both author and photographer will talk about the book and take audience questions. Women featured in the book will join in for a Q&A, while Gibson’s will provide a book sale and signing. • National Library Card month: If you still don’t have a library card, you’re the reason the American Library Association made September Library Card Sign-up Month. Meant to be a reminder for parents and kids especially that a library card is the most important school supply of all, the observance launched in 1987 to meet the challenge of then Secretary of Education William J. Bennett: “Let’s have a national campaign … every child should obtain a library card — and use it.” If you don’t already have a card, you’re missing out on free books, movies, magazines, museum passes — find out what else at your local library. • Yankee Magazine turns 80: The New England lifestyle magazine published right here in New Hampshire turns 80 this September. It was founded in 1935 in Dublin and remains a family-owned, independent magazine publisher (also responsible for the ever-famous The Old Farmer’s Almanac). It started at the height of the Depression with just 14 official subscribers, all relatives, and today it boasts 300,000, with a total audience of nearly 2 million, according to a recent press release. — Kelly Sennott

Books Author Events • BARBARA DAVIS Author visits to talk about new book, Summer at Hideaway Key. Thurs., Sept. 10, at 7 p.m. Water Street Bookstore, 125 Water St., Exeter. Visit waterstreetbooks.com, call 778-9731. • DANA OWENS Author talk about Shotgunned. Thurs., Sept. 10, at 6:30 p.m. Plaistow Public Library, 85 Main St., Plaistow. Call 382-6011, visit plaistowlibrary.com. • PAULINE HAWKINS Author event for Uncommon Core. Thurs., Sept. 10, at 6:30 p.m. RiverRun Bookstore, 142 Fleet St., Portsmouth. Visit riverrunbookstore.com, call 431-2100. • R.A. SALVATORE Fantasy author talks about newest novel, Archmage. Thurs., Sept. 10, at 7 p.m. Gibson's Bookstore, 45 S. Main St., Concord. Call 2240562, visit gibsonsbookstore. com.

• STEFANY SHAHEEN Author talks about Elle & Coach. Daughter of Senator Shaheen. Sat., Sept. 12, at 1 p.m. Toadstool Bookshop, 614 Nashua St., Milford. Visit toadbooks.com. • LORRIE THOMSEN Author signs A Measure of Happiness. Sat., Sept. 12, 1-3 p.m. Nashua Barnes & Noble, 235 DW Highway, Nashua. Call 888-0533. • JOHN MARSHALL Author visit to talk about Wide-Open World: How Volunteering Around the Globe Changed One Family's Lives Forever. Sat., Sept. 12, at 1 p.m. Barnes & Noble, 1741 S. Willow St., Manchester. Call 668-5557. • HELEN BRODY, LESLIE TUTTLE Pair talk about new book, New Hampshire Women Farmers: Pioneers of the Local Food Movement. Sun., Sept. 13, 2-3 p.m. MainStreet BookEnds, 16 E. Main St., Warner. • BARBARA J. TURNER Book launch event for author's new

book, Zoot Suit Riots: Clothes, Culture and Murder. Sun., Sept. 13, at 1 p.m. Rodgers Memorial Library, 194 Derry Road, Hudson. Call 886-6030, visit rodgerslibrary.org. • STEFANY SHAHEEN Author talks about Elle & Coach. Daughter of Senator Shaheen. Tues., Sept. 15, at 7 p.m. Water Street Bookstore, 125 Water St., Exeter. Visit waterstreetbooks.com, call 778-9731. • BARON WORMSER Author event for poetry book, Unidentified Sighing Objects. Tues., Sept. 15, at 7 p.m. RiverRun Bookstore, 142 Fleet St., Portsmouth. Visit riverrunbookstore.com, call 431-2100. • MIMI WHITE Talk about new collection of poetry, The World Disguised as This One. Tues., Sept. 15, at 5:30 p.m. West End Studio Theatre, 959 Islington St., Portsmouth. Call 436-6660, email info@pontine.org. • AURORE EATON Author talks about The Amoskeag Manufacturing Company: A History of Enterprise on the Merrimack River. Wed., Sept. 16, at 7 p.m. Derry Public Library, 64 E. Broadway, Derry. Visit derrypl.org. • LOCAL AUTHOR FAIR Local authors in attendance, including special guests Katherine Towler and James Patrick Kelly. Wed., Sept. 16, 6-8 p.m. Portsmouth Public Library, 175 Parrott Ave., Portsmouth. Call 766-1711. • ALICE HOFFMAN Author talks about The Marriage of Opposites. Wed., Sept. 16, at 7 p.m. The Music Hall Loft, 131 Congress St., Portsmouth. Tickets $42, include book, bar beverage, book signing meet-and-greet. Call 436-2400. • DARCY CUNNINGHAM Author event about From Despair to Dignity: A Step-ByStep Guide for Transforming the Lives of Women and Children -Successful NGO Creation Using the Maher Method. Wed., Sept. 16, at 6:30 p.m. RiverRun Bookstore, 142 Fleet St., Portsmouth. Visit riverrunbookstore.com, call 431-2100. • MARGARET PORTER Author talks about/reads from new novel, A Pledge of Better Times. Thurs., Sept. 17, at 6:30 p.m. RiverRun Bookstore, 142 Fleet St., Portsmouth. Visit riverrunbookstore.com, call 431-2100.

Hipposcout Looking for more book, film and pop culture events? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play and online at hipposcout.com


POP CULTURE FILMS

MOVIES OUTSIDE THE CINEPLEX Looking for movie reviews? Amy Diaz is taking a short break from popcorn and Junior Mints. She’ll be back next week with fresh reviews on the movies of the second half of 2015. Until then, check out her past reviews online at hippopress.com (click on Pop Culture and then “Film” and then the “more” arrow at the bottom of the box for her most recent reviews).

RED RIVER THEATRES 11 S. Main St., Concord, 2244600, redrivertheatres.org • Mr. Holmes (PG, 2015) Thurs., Sept. 3, at 2:05, 5:25 & 7:50 p.m. • Best of Enemies (R, 2015) Thurs., Sept. 3, at 2:10, 5:30 & 7:30 p.m. • The End of the Tour (R, 2015) Thurs., Sept. 3, at 2, 5:35 & 8 p.m. • Mistress America (R, 2015) Fri., Sept. 4, at 2, 4 6 & 8 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 5, at 2, 4 6 & 8 p.m.; Sun., Sept. 6, at 2, 4 & 6 p.m.; Mon., Sept. 7, at 2, 5:30 & 7:35 p.m.; Tues., Sept. 8, at 2, 5:30 & 7:35 p.m.; Wed., Sept. 9, at 2, 5:30 & 7:35 p.m.; & Thurs., Sept. 10, at 2, 5:30 & 7:35 p.m. • Phoenix (PG-13, 2015) Fri., Sept. 4, at 1:30, 3:45, 6:15 & 8:30 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 5, at 1:30, 3:45, 6:15 & 8:30 p.m.; Sun., Sept. 6, at 1:30, 3:45 & 6:15 p.m.; Mon., Sept. 7, at 2:05, 5:35 & 7:50 p.m.; Tues., Sept. 8, at 2:05, 5:35 & 7:50 p.m.; Wed., Sept. 9, at 2:05 p.m.; & Thurs., Sept. 10, at 2:05 p.m. • Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine (R, 2015) Fri., Sept. 4, at 3:15 & 7:30 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 5, at 3:15 & 7:30 p.m.; Sun., Sept. 6, at 3:15 p.m.; Mon., Sept. 7, at 2:10 & 7:30 p.m.; Tues., Sept. 8, at 2:10 & 7:30 p.m.; Wed., Sept. 9, at 2:10 & 7:30 p.m.; Thurs., Sept. 10, at 7:30 p.m. • Mr. Holmes (PG, 2015) Fri., Sept. 4, at 1:15 & 5:30 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 5, at 1:15 & 5:30 p.m.; Sun., Sept. 6, at 1:15 &

5:30 p.m.; Mon., Sept. 7, at 5:25 p.m.; Tues., Sept. 8, at 5:25 p.m.; Wed., Sept. 9, at 5:25 p.m.; & Thurs., Sept. 10, at 2:10 p.m. • Tiger Tiger (NR, 2015) Thurs., Sept. 10, at 6:30 p.m. WILTON TOWN HALL 40 Main St., Wilton, NH 03086, 654-3456, wiltontownhalltheatre.com • Mr. Holmes (PG, 2015) Thurs., Sept. 3, at 7:30 p.m. • Phoenix (PG-13, 2014) Fri., Sept. 4, through Thurs., Sept. 10, at 7:30 p.m. Additional screenings Sun., Sept. 6, at 2 & 4:30 p.m. • Ricki and the Flash (PG-13, 2015) Fri., Sept. 4, through Thurs., Sept. 10, at 7:30 p.m. Additional screenings Sun., Sept. 6, at 2 & 4:30 p.m. • State Fair (1962) Sat., Sept. 5, at 4:30 p.m. CAPITOL CENTER FOR THE ARTS 44 S. Main St., Concord, NH 03301, 225-1111, ccanh.com • Everyman (National Theatre Live broadcast) Wed., Sept. 9, at 6 p.m. MANCHESTER CITY LIBRARY 405 Pine St., Manchester, NH 03104, 624-6550, manchester. lib.nh.us • Paul Blart: Mall Cop 2 (PG, 2015) Fri., Sept. 4, at 3 p.m. • Sadie Thompson (1928) Tues., Sept. 8, at 6 p.m., silent film with music by Jeff Rapsis • World Trade Center (PG-13, 2006) Wed., Sept. 9, at 1 p.m. • Home (PG, 2015) Fri., Sept. 11, at 3 p.m. MILFORD DRIVE-IN Route 101-A, Milford, 6734090, milforddrivein.com Screen 1: Minions (PG, 2015), at 7:30 p.m.; Jurassic World (PG-13, 2015), at 9:15 p.m.; and Straight Outta Compton (R, 2015), at 11:30 p.m. Screen 2: Inside Out (PG, 2015) at 7:30 p.m., Ant-Man (PG-13, 2015), at 9:20 p.m., Spy (R, 2015) at 9:20 p.m. MAINSTREET WARNER STAGE Jim Mitchell Community

Park, 16 E. Main St., Warner • Genetic Roulette Sept. 29 at 7 p.m. CINEMAGIC 1226 Hooksett Road, Hooksett, NH 03106, 644-4629, cinemagicmovies.com/loc_Hookset.asp • How to Change the World (documentary, 2015) Wed., Sept. 9, at 7:30 p.m. CINEMAGIC 11 Executive Park Drive, Merrimack, 423-0240, cinemagicmovies.com • How to Change the World (documentary, 2015) Wed., Sept. 9, at 7:30 p.m. NASHUA PUBLIC LIBRARY NPL Theater, 2 Court St., Nashua, NH 03060, 589-4611, nashualibrary.org. • The Anonymous People (documentary, 2013) Thurs., Sept. 10, at 7 p.m. THE MUSIC HALL 28 Chestnut St., Portsmouth, NH 03801, 436-2400, themusichall. org, Some films are screened at Music Hall Loft, 131 Congress St., Portsmouth • Infinitely Polar Bear (R, 2014) Thurs., Sept. 3, at 7 p.m. •Tangerine (R, 2015) Fri., Sept. 4, at 7 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 5, at 7 p.m.; Sun., Sept. 6, at 7 p.m.; Tues., Sept. 8, at 7 p.m.; Wed., Sept. 9, at 7 p.m. • Mr Holmes (PG, 2015) Fri., Sept. 4, at 7 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 5, at 7 p.m.; Sun., Sept. 6, at 3 p.m.; Tues., Sept. 8, at 7 p.m.; Thurs., Sept. 10, at 7 p.m. • The End of the Tour (R, 2015) Sat., Sept. 12, at 7 p.m.; Sun., Sept. 13, at 7 p.m.; Tues., Sept. 15, at 7 p.m.; Wed., Sept. 16, at 7 p.m.

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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 51


NITE ’Cross the pond Local music news & events

By Michael Witthaus

English folksinger begins quick tour in New Hampshire By Michael Witthaus

mwitthaus@hippopress.com

mwitthaus@hippopress.com

• Hysterical: NBC’s Last Comic Standing is a great launching pad for many comedians, including Dan Crohn, whose jokes about family, friends and teaching fourth grade landed him in the top 100 in Season 9 of the show. He performs on the Seacoast with Sam Ike (Improv Boston), Alana Susko, Tawanda Gona (Blacknificence) and Bryan Muenzer; Josh Day hosts. Comedy night is Friday, Sept. 4, at 7 p.m., at Stone Church, 5 Granite St., Newmarket. Tickets $5 in advance. • Rustical: Now in its sixth year, the Pawtuckaway Takedown Festival has grown into a well-rounded gathering featuring regional favorites like Dan Blakeslee and People Skills to Nat Baldwin of Dirty Projectors. This year’s event includes 13 acts in all, and an array of performances including puppetry and gymnastics. It culminates with a re-enactment of the film Back to the Future. Pawtuckaway Takedown Festival is Saturday, Sept. 5, at noon at Lakeview Drive in Nottingham. See pawtuckawaytakedown.com. • Motorway: Along with over 500 classic cars and TV star Dennis Gage at this year’s Cruising Downtown event are musical acts playing on two stages. Performers include rockabilly ravers Atomic Raygun, decadesspanning cover group Permanent Vacation and family band Zanois, the latter playing a joyful hybrid of punk and Zappa-esque progressive rock. Cruising Downtown is Saturday, Sept. 5, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Elm Street in downtown Manchester. Tickets are $10. See cruisingdowntown.com. • Canadiana: The best from north of the border is showcased at Up, Down & Away – Best New Canadian Music Fest 2015. Acts include Joel Plaskett Emergency, the scintillating married duo Whitehorse, jazzy singer Jenn Grant and Nova Scotia-based roots singer-songwriter Old Man Leudecke, winner of multiple JUNO awards (Canada’s Grammy). Attend Up, Down & Away on Sunday, Sept. 6, at 5 p.m. at Prescott Park, 105 Marcy St., Portsmouth, 436-2848. Admission to the show is free, but a $5 or $10 donation is recommended.

In February, Hannah Sanders released her first album, a gorgeous collection of traditional English folk songs spiced with American roots music. Called Charms Against Sorrow, the record is far from a debut, however. It’s the culmination of a musical lifetime, one that Sanders tried to suppress but couldn’t. Born in Norwich, England, Sanders grew up in a musical family. Her mother sang at the local folk club in the early 1970s, a time when performers like Pentangle and Fairpoint Convention were leading the genre’s revival. Her stepfather’s record collection included rare Dylan bootlegs and early Nic Jones LPs. “We used to call it his pension, and we were never allowed to touch it,” she said recently. “It was filled with so much great stuff.” As a teenager, Sanders and her siblings toured the continent with her parents’ band, The Dunns. “Singing, busking, playing — you name it, we did it,” she said. But it had worn thin by her 20s. “Living on the road is hard; you’re only as good as your last gig,” she said. “I was ready to do something else, so I went back to college.” Academic life led her to Boston. She taught at Emerson College and let music remain in the past. “I didn’t have room … until I had my kids, when I had lots — endless boring

Follow on Twitter: @hipponitemusic Listen on Spotify: spoti.fi/11v1t3b Want more ideas for a fun night out? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play and online at hipposcout.com. HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 52

Hannah Sanders New Hampshire tour dates Friday, Sept. 4, 9 p.m., Portsmouth Book & Bar, 40 Pleasant St., Portsmouth (trio with Liz Simmons and Katie McNally) Friday, Sept. 11, 7:30 p.m. at Franklin Opera House, 316 Central St, Franklin (Dual CD release show with Low Lily) – tickets $14-$18 at franklinoperahouse.org More: hannahsandersfolk.com and lowlily.com Night Life Music, Comedy & Parties CHARLIE BOURBON at Wakefield Opera House (2 High St., Sanbornville 522-0126) on Thursday, Sep. 3, 7 p.m. $15 - Internationally known for amazing guitar performances that take blues, Spanish, Middle Eastern, and Russian stylings into uncharted territories. UNCLE TERRY'S SWISCH WAGON at Main Street BookEnds (16 E. Main St., Warner 456-2700) on

Hannah Sanders. Courtesy photo.

time,” she said. “I would walk up and down Jamaica Plain pushing the stroller, and as a source of inspiration I started singing again to myself … all the songs of my teen years.” One night, some friends took Sanders to an Irish session hosted by Liz Simmons and Flynn Cohen; the husband/wife duo coaxed her into doing a song. “I literally hadn’t sung anything outside of my kitchen for maybe a decade,” she said. “I think Liz saw something before I even saw it myself. … She helped me find my voice, and I owe her a lot.” Sanders and Simmons soon were playing together regularly, eventually working in the studio. Just like that, Sanders was all in, a full-time musician. “I tried to be like a normal person, but it didn’t go so well,” she said with a laugh.

Friday, Sep. 4, 6 p.m. Blend of original bluegrass, folk and Americana often referred to as "porch-grass." SINGLES DANCE at Daniels Hall (Route 4, Nottingham 942-8525) on Friday, Sep. 4, 8 p.m. iIteractive DJ JoAnn, BYOB, $12 admission includes light buffet and drink setups. JIM LAUDERDALE at Red & Shorty's (4 Paul St., Dover 7673305) on Friday, Sep. 4, 8 p.m. $40 - After his performance during

Now living back in England, Sanders made the new disc in a country cottage with Ben Savage from The Willows producing. On the 11-song collection, Sanders’ singing voice evokes Joni Mitchell’s Blue period, as does her fingerpicked acoustic guitar work, which is rich and textured, particularly on “Bonnie Bunch of Roses-o” and “Lord Franklin.” Both are venerable folk tunes, and Sanders views her interpretive role as both a joy and a responsibility. “I think that is one of the beauties of traditional music; you’re just the carrier of the song,” she said. “But it’s not about me, the song has a life of its own and it’s your job to carry it on. You are part of the canon of this material … but the music is bigger than me. I’m more than happy with that.” Sanders plans a whirlwind tour to support the stateside release of Charms Against Sorrow — eight shows over 10 days in six states. Simmons and fiddler Katie McNally join for many, including opening night at Portsmouth’s Book & Bar. “I did that gig with Liz the last time I was in the States and just loved it,” she said. “It had everything I wanted — lovely food and books everywhere … and a lovely audience. I’m really excited to kick off my tour there.” She’s co-billed with Simmons’ and Cohen’s band Low Lily, also promoting a new record, at Franklin Opera House on Sept. 11. Simmons is looking forward to again making music with her friend, including a house concert in Freeport, Maine, where they’ll revisit material from last year’s EP, World Begun. “Hannah and I share a unique musical bond, having grown up (although an ocean apart) in similar childhoods traveling with musician parents, and surrounded by folk music,” Simmons wrote in a recent email. “When I heard her sing and play for the first time, I knew she had something really special, and felt I just had to collaborate with her and bask in her glow. She’s also a joy to tour with.” Echoed Sanders, “We’re definitely kindred spirits.”

‘Snowmaggedon’ in February of this year, Jim Lauderdale promised to come back and see us, well he’s made good on his promise. THE GREENLIGHTS at Main Street BookEnds (16 E. Main St., Warner 456-2700) on Saturday, Sep. 5, 7 p.m. Mixing elements from many schools of music for a new type of rock. Powerful vocals, backed by creative, strong instrumental performances. KYOTY W/ VULTURES OF

CULT & AVIATOR at 3S Artspace (319 Vaughan St., Portsmouth 7663330) on Saturday, Sep. 5, 9 p.m. $10 - 3-piece instrumental band based in Dover known for their thunderous presence and kinetic live performances. EUGENE DURKEE III at Farmer's Market (896 Main St., Contoocook 748-3018) on Saturday, Sep. 5, 12 p.m. Live music accompanies local farmers, bakers and brewers selling their wares.


ROCKANDROLLCROSSWORDS.com BY TODD SANTOS

Puzzled Again Across 1. Jimi Hendrix “__ depression is touching my soul” 6. Silent, about star’s secret 9. ‘World Clique’ Dee-__ 13. Big concert venue 14. John Lennon’s widow Yoko 15. What Ashlee Simpson did on SNL 16. Country singer Rimes 17. British electronica musi-

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Amherst LaBelle Winery 345 Rte 101 672-9898 Auburn Auburn Pitts 167 Rockingham Road 622-6564 Bedford Bedford Village Inn 2 Olde Bedford Way 472-2001 Copper Door 15 Leavy Drive 488-2677 Shorty’s 206 Rte 101 488-5706 Belmont Lakes Region Casino 1265 Laconia Road 267-7778 Shooters Tavern Rt. 3 DW Hwy 528-2444

Pit Road Lounge 388 Loudon Road 226-0533 Red Blazer 72 Manchester St. 224-4101 Tandy’s Top Shelf 1 Eagle Sq. 856-7614 True Brew Barista 3 Bicentennial Sq. 225-2776 Contoocook Covered Bridge Cedar St. 746-5191 Claremont New Socials 2 Pleasant St. 287-4416 Deerfield Nine Lions Tavern 4 North Rd 463-7374

Derry Drae Boscawen 14 E Broadway #A Alan’s 133 N. Main St. 753-6631 216-2713 Halligan Tavern 32 W. Broadway Bow 965-3490 Chen Yang Li 520 South St. 228-8508 Dover 7th Settlement Brewery Bristol Back Room at the Mill 47 Washington St. 373-1001 2 Central St. 744-0405 Asia Purple Pit 28 Central Sq. 744-7800 42 Third St. 742-9816 Cara Irish Pub Rumor Mill 50 S Main St, 217-0971 11 Fourth St. 343-4390 Dover Brick House 2 Orchard St. 749-3838 Concord Fury’s Publick House Barley House 1 Washington St. 132 N. Main 228-6363 617-3633 Cheers Sonny’s Tavern 17 Depot St. 228-0180 83 Washington St. Granite 96 Pleasant St. 227-9000 742-4226 Top of the Chop Hermanos 1 Orchard St. 740-0006 11 Hills Ave. 224-5669 Makris East Hampstead 354 Sheep Davis Road Pasta Loft 225-7665 220 E. Main St. 378-0092 Penuche’s Ale House 6 Pleasant St. 228-9833

Thursday, Sept. 3 Amherst LaBelle Winery: Joel Cage Bedford Copper Door: Paul Rainone Boscawen Alan's: John Pratt in Lounge Concord Cheers: Frenchie Granite: CJ Poole & The Sophisticated Approach

Laconia Anthony’s Pier 263 Lakeside Ave. 366-5855 Baja Beach Club 89 Lake St. 524-0008 Broken Spoke Saloon 1072 Watson Rd Epping Old Salt 866-754-2526 Holy Grail 409 Lafayette Rd. Faro Italian Grille 72 64 Main St. 679-9559 926-8322 Endicott St. 527-8073 Telly’s Ron’s Landing 235 Calef Hwy 679-8225 379 Ocean Blvd 929-2122 Fratello’s 799 Union Ave. 528-2022 Tortilla Flat Savory Square Bistro Margate Resort 1-11 Brickyard Sq 32 Depot Sq 926-2202 76 Lake St. 524-5210 734-2725 Sea Ketch 127 Ocean Naswa Resort Popovers Blvd. 926-0324 1086 Weirs Blvd. 11 Brickyard Sq. Stacy Jane’s 734-4724 9 Ocean Blvd. 929-9005 366-4341 Paradise Beach Club The Goat 322 Lakeside Ave. Epsom 20 L St. 601-6928 366-2665 Circle 9 Ranch Wally’s Pub Patio Garden 39 Windymere 736-9656 144 Ashworth Ave. Lakeside Ave. Hilltop Pizzeria 926-6954 Pitman’s Freight Room 1724 Dover Rd 736-0027 94 New Salem St. Hanover 527-0043 Exeter Salt Hill Pub Pimentos 7 Lebanon St. 676-7855 Tower Hill Tavern 264 Lakeside Ave. 69 Water St. 583-4501 Canoe Club Shooter’s Pub 27 S. Main St. 643-9660 366-9100 Weirs Beach Lobster 6 Columbus Ave. Pound 772-3856 Henniker 72 Endicott St. 366-2255 Country Spirit Francestown 262 Maple St. 428-7007 Lebanon Toll Booth Tavern Pat’s Peak Sled Pub Salt Hill Pub 740 2nd NH Tpke N 24 Flander’s Road 2 West Park St. 448-4532 588-1800 888-728-7732 Gilford Ellacoya Barn & Grille 2667 Lakeshore Road 293-8700 Patrick’s 18 Weirs Road 293-0841

Hillsborough Mama McDonough’s 5 Depot St. 680-4148 Turismo 55 Henniker St. 680-4440

Hooksett Asian Breeze 1328 Hooksett Rd 621-9298 New England’s Tap Hampton House Grille Bernie’s Beach Bar 1292 Hooksett Rd 73 Ocean Blvd 926-5050 782-5137 Boardwalk Inn & Cafe 139 Ocean Blvd. 929-7400 Hudson Breakers at Ashworth AJ’s Sports Bar 295 Ocean Blvd. 926-6762 11 Tracy Lane 718-1102 Breakers By the Sea Capri Pizza 409 Ocean Blvd 926-7702 76 Derry St 880-8676 Millie’s Tavern JD Chaser’s 17 L St. 967-4777 2B Burnham Rd 886-0792 North Beach Bar & Nan King Grille 931 Ocean Blvd. 222 Central St. 882-1911 967-4884 SoHo 49 Lowell Rd 889-6889 Goffstown Village Trestle 25 Main St. 497-8230

Londonderry Coach Stop Tavern 176 Mammoth Rd 437-2022 Stumble Inn 20 Rockingham Rd 432-3210 Whippersnappers 44 Nashua Rd 434-2660 Loudon Hungry Buffalo 58 Rte 129 798-3737 Manchester A&E Cafe 1000 Elm St. 578-3338 Amoskeag Studio 250 Commercial St. 315-9320 Breezeway Pub 14 Pearl St. 621-9111 British Beer Company 1071 S. Willow St. 232-0677

Cactus Jack’s 782 South Willow St. 627-8600 Central Ale House 23 Central St. 660-2241 City Sports Grille 216 Maple St. 625-9656 Club ManchVegas 50 Old Granite St. 222-1677 Crazy Camel Hookah and Cigar Lounge 245 Maple St. 518-5273 Derryfield Country Club 625 Mammoth Rd 623-2880 Drynk 20 Old Granite St. 641-2583 Fratello’s 155 Dow St. 624-2022 Ignite Bar & Grille 100 Hanover St. 494-6225 Jewel 61 Canal St. 836-1152 Karma Hookah & Cigar Bar 1077 Elm St. 647-6653 KC’s Rib Shack 837 Second St. 627-RIBS Midnight Rodeo (Yard) 1211 S. Mammoth Rd 623-3545 Milly’s Tavern 500 Commercial St. 625-4444 Modern Gypsy 383 Chestnut st. Murphy’s Taproom 494 Elm St. 644-3535 N’awlins Grille 860 Elm St. 606-2488 Penuche’s 96 Hanover St. 626-9830 Portland Pie Company 786 Elm St. 622-7437 Shaskeen 909 Elm St. 625-0246 Shorty’s 1050 Bicentennial Drive 625-1730 South Side Tavern 1279 S Willow St. 935-9947 Strange Brew Tavern 88 Market St. 666-4292 Thrifty’s Soundstage 1015 Candia Road 603-518-5413 Tin Roof Tavern 333 Valley St. 792-1110 Wild Rover 21 Kosciuszko St. 669-7722

Wally's Pub: Frank City Party Londonderry (DJ/Go-Go Dancers) Coach Stop: Paul Luff Whippersnappers: Chuck & Hanover John Canoe Club: Rowley Hazard Exeter Pimentos: Thursday Night Live Salt hill Pub: Irish Trad' Session Manchester Randy Miller/Roger Kahle Central Ale House: Jonny FriGilford day Blues Laconia City Sports Grille: DJ Dave Patrick's: Paul Warnick Holy Grail Lakes: Mike Morris, Derryfield: Mugsy Duo Hampton Fratello's: Jazz Night Lebanon Boardwalk: Ryan Williamson Karma: DJ Midas, SP1 & Reed on drums Sea Ketch: Cory Brackett/Steve Salt hill Pub: Celtic Open Session KC's Rib Shack: Brad Bosse Tolley Milly's: Lakes Region Big Band Dover 7th Settlement: Sister Speak Cara: Bluegrass w/ Steve Roy

HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 54

Zaboo 24 Depot St. 782-8489

Country Tavern 452 Amherst St. 889-5871 Fody’s Tavern Mason 9 Clinton St. 577-9015 Marty’s Driving Range Haluwa Lounge 96 Old Turnpike Rd Nashua Mall 883-6662 878-1324 Killarney’s Irish Pub 9 Northeastern Blvd. Meredith 888-1551 Giuseppe’s Ristorante O’Shea’s 312 DW Hwy 279-3313 449 Amherst St. 943-7089 Peddler’s Daughter 48 Main St. 821-7535 Merrimack Portland Pie Company Homestead 641 DW Hwy 429-2022 14 Railroad Sq 882-7437 Riverwalk Jade Dragon 515 DW Hwy 424-2280 35 Railroad Sq 578-0200 Shorty’s Pacific Fusion 356 DW Hwy 424-6320 48 Gusabel Ave. 882-4070 Stella Blu Tortilla Flat 70 E. Pearl St. 578-5557 594 Daniel Webster Wicked Twisted Hwy 262-1693 38 East Hollis St. 577-1718 Milford Aden China New Boston 437 Nashua St. Molly’s Tavern 672-2388 35 Mont Vernon Rd Chapanga’s 487-2011 168 Elm St. 249-5214 Clark’s on the Corner 40 Nashua St. 769-3119 Newbury Goosefeathers Pub J’s Tavern 63 Union Square 554-1433 Mt. Sunapee 763-3500 Salt Hill Pub Lefty’s Lanes 1407 Rt 103 763-2667 244 Elm St. 554-8300 Pasta Loft New London 241 Union Square Flying Goose 672-2270 40 Andover Road Shaka’s Bar & Grill 11 Wilton Rd 554-1224 526-6899 Tiebreakers at Newington Hampshire Hills 50 Emerson Rd 673-7123 Paddy’s 27 International Drive Union Coffee Co. 430-9450 42 South St. 554-8879 Valentino’s Newmarket 28 Jones Rd. 672-2333 Stone Church 5 Granite St. 659-7700 Nashua Three Chimneys 110 Grill 27 Trafalgar Sq. 943-7443 17 Newmarket Rd. 868-7800 5 Dragons 29 Railroad Sq. 578-0702 Newport Amsterdam Salt Hill Pub 8 Temple St. 204-5534 58 Main St. 863-7774 Arena 53 High St. 881-9060 Peterborough Boston Billiard Club Harlow’s Pub 55 Northeastern Blvd. 3 School St. 924-6365 943-5630 Burton’s Grill Pelham 310 Daniel Webster Shooters Highway 116 Bridge St. 635-3577 888-4880

Murphy's: Chris Taylor N'awlins: Boo Boo Groove Penuche's: Red Sky Mary Portland Pie: Acoustic Series Strange Brew: Amorphous Band Wild Rover: Joe Mack Band Zaboo: Ryan Nichols/DJ Harry Meredith Giuseppe's: Tim Theriault Merrimack Homestead: Jeff Mrozek

Milford Aden China: DJ Brian Chapanga's: Brad Bosse Jam Tiebreakers: Brian Weeks

Moultonborough Castle in the Clouds: Jazz at Sunset - Brad Myrick/Joey Pierog

Nashua Arena: College Night with DJ Hizzy Country Tavern: Ted Solovicos Fratello's Italian Grille: Doug Mitchell


Plaistow Crow’s Nest 181 Plaistow Road 974-1686 Racks Bar & Grill 20 Plaistow Road 974-2406 Portsmouth Blue Mermaid Island 409 The Hill 427-2583 British Beer Company 103 Hanover St. 5010515 Cafe Nostimo 72 Mirona Rd. 436-3100 Demeters Steakhouse 3612 Lafayette Rd. 766-0001 Dolphin Striker 15 Bow St. 431-5222 Fat Belly’s 2 Bow St. 610-4227 Grill 28 200 Grafton Road 433-1331 Hilton Garden Inn 100 High St. 431-1499 Lazy Jacks 58 Ceres St. 294-0111 Martingale Wharf 99 Bow St. 431-0901

Portsmouth Book & Bar 40 Pleasant St. 427-9197 Portsmouth Gas Light 64 Market St. 430-9122 Press Room 77 Daniel St. 431-5186 Red Door 107 State St. 373-6827 Redhook Brewery 1 Redhook Way 430-8600 Ri Ra Irish Pub 22 Market Sq 319-1680 Rudi’s 20 High St. 430-7834 Rusty Hammer 49 Pleasant St. 319-6981 Thirsty Moose 21 Congress St. 427-8645 Raymond Cork n’ Keg 4 Essex Drive 244-1573 Rochester Gary’s 38 Milton Rd 335-4279 Governor’s Inn 78 Wakefield St. 332-0107 Lilac City Grille 103 N. Main St. 3323984

Radloff’s 38 North Main St. 948-1073 Smokey’s Tavern 11 Farmington 330-3100 Salem Barking Bean 163 Main St. 458-2885 Black Water Grill 43 Pelham Rd 328-9013 Jocelyn’s Lounge 355 S Broadway 870-0045 Sayde’s Restaurant 136 Cluff Crossing 890-1032 Seabrook Castaways 209 Ocean Blvd 760-7500 Chop Shop 920 Lafayette Rd 760-7706

Suncook Olympus Pizza 42 Allenstwon Rd. 485-5288 Tilton Black Swan Inn 354 W Main St. 286-4524 Warner Local 2 E Main St. 456-6066 Weare Stark House Tavern 487 S Stark Hwy 529-7747

Somersworth Hideout Grill at the Oaks 100 Hide Away Place 692-6257 Kelley’s Row 417 Route 108 692-2200 Old Rail Pizza Co. 6 Main St. 841-7152

Portland Pie: Acoustic Series Claremont Riverwalk Cafe: Balkun Broth- New Socials: Sirsy ers Concord Newmarket Makris: Off Duty Angels Stone Church: Jordan Tirrell- Tandy's: DJ Iceman Streetz Wysocki & Jim Prendergast - (105.5 JYY) Irish Derry Plaistow Drae: Jen Whitmore Racks: Blues Jam w/ Steve Devine Dover Cara: Club Night w/ DJ Portsmouth Shawnny O Dolphin Striker: Gretchen and Dover Brickhouse: Eyenine, the Pickpockets Seth on Grey St, A Minor Fat Belly's: DJ Flex Revolution, Lonely Ghosts ColRudi's: Jeff Auger & Jim Lyman lective/El Shupacabra/Special Thirsty Moose: Cloud Nine Guests Fury's Publick House: Mother Rochester Superior Governor's Inn: Tony Santese Top of the Chop: Funkadelic Smokey's Tavern: Evan Brock Fridays

Sunapee One Mile West Tavern 6 Brook Road 863-7500 Sunapee Coffee House Rte. 11 Lower Main St. 229-1859

West Lebanon Seven Barrel Brewery 5 Airport Rd 298-5566 Windham Common Man 88 Range Rd 898-0088 Jonathon’s Lounge Park Place Lanes, Route 28 800-892-0568

Hillsborough Turismo: Otis & the Elevators

Hot Tubs and Spas Comfortable, relaxing, low maintenance hot tubs by Marquis.

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Laconia Holy Grail Lakes: Sweetbloods Paradise Beach Club: Tigerlilly Pitman's Freight Room: Dance Night With the Brickyard Blues Band Tower Hill: Axis NH

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Manchester City Sports Grille: DJ Dave Derryfield: Fat Bunny/Stomping Melvin Drynk: DJs Jason Spivak & Sammy Smoove Seabrook Gilford Fratello's: Amanda Cote Chop Shop: Artty Raynes Patrick's: Doug Thompson KC's Rib Shack: Joe Mack ManchVegas: Houston Bernard Weare Goffstown Band Stark House Tavern: Lisa Village Trestle: Rose Kula's Murphy's Taproom: MB Guyer Solo Acoustic Jam Padfield/Tim Theriault N'awlins: Guitar Jazz Project Windham Hampton Penuche's: Kick The Ladder/ Common Man: Chris Lester Bernie's Beach Bar: Paul Kennedy Drive Rainone Shaskeen: Dead Prez Friday, Sept. 4 Boardwalk Inn: James Dozet Strange Brew: Tom Ballerini Belmont Ron's Landing: Karen Grenier Tin Roof: Fridays With Frydae Lakes Region Casino: DJ Russ Savory Square: Chris Hayes Zaboo: Dueling Pianos Sea Ketch: Ricky Lauria/Ross Boscawen McGinnes Merrimack Alan's: Brad Myrick Duo Wally's Pub: Clownshoe Homestead: Jd Ingalls Bristol Hanover Purple Pit: Color feat. Matt "The Canoe Club: Rowley Hazard Axe" Langley Salt hill Pub: Josh Gerrish

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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 55


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Concord Tandy's: DJ Iceman Streetz (105.5 JYY) Derry Hilltop Spot: Brad Myrick Dover Cara: Club Night w/ DJ Shawnny O Fury's: Freestones Epping Tortilla Flat: Clint Lapointe Gilford Patrick's: John Anthony Goffstown Village Trestle: Problem Child (AC/DC tribute)

Portsmouth Blue Mermaid: Seth Gooby Demeters: Chris O'Neill & Gina Alibrio Martingale Wharf: Jimmy & Marcelle Portsmouth Book & Bar: Hannah Sanders & Liz Simmons Portsmouth Gaslight: D-Comp Trio/DJ Koko P/SEV/Malcolm Salls Ri Ra: Soul Collective Rudi's: Jarrod Steer Trio Thirsty Moose: Business Time

Hampton Bernie's Beach Bar: Mamadou Boardwalk Inn: Amanda McCarthy Sea Ketch: Leo and Co/Steve Tolley The Goat: American Ride

Rochester Governor's Inn: Mike Morris Radloff's: Dancing Madly Backwards Duo Smokey's Tavern: Chris Way Somersworth Old Rail Pizza: The Deviant

Hudson JD Chaser's: Michael Spaulding at JD Chaser's

Weare Stark House Tavern: Delanie Pickering Saturday, Sept. 5 Bedford Shorty's: Sev Belmont Lakes Region Casino: Eric Grant Band Bristol Back Room at the Mill: Wayfayrers Purple Pit: Draa Hobbs Trio

Hanover Canoe Club: Rowley Hazard Salt hill Pub: Vagabonds Hillsborough Turismo: Amos Fortune

Laconia Holy Grail Lakes: Bill Noland Naswa: Slippery Sneakers Zydeco Band/DJ Terry Paradise Beach Club: Tigerlilly Tower Hill: Axis NH Lebanon Salt hill Pub: Please Don't Tell Londonderry Whippersnappers: Chad LaMarsh Loudon Hungry Buffalo: Double Dose Manchester City Sports Grille: Among the Living

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Thursday, Sept. 3 Sat., Sept. 5 Derry Manchester Halligan Tavern: JT Headliners: Steve Haabersaat/Nick Laval- Guilmette lee/Jay Chanoine Plymouth Londonderry Flying Monkey: Chris Tupelo Music Hall: Distefano Dave Andrews/Rick D’Elia Monday, Sept. 7 Concord Newmarket Penuche's: New EngStone Church: Dan land Comedy Awards Crohn /Sam Ike

Derryfield: Jimmy's Down/MB Padfield Duo Fratello's: JD Ingalls KC's Rib Shack: Amanda Cote ManchVegas: Mugsy Murphy's Taproom: Brad Bosse N'awlins: Rob Wolfe Trio Penuche's: Chromatropic Shaskeen: Tim Barry/Cactus Attack/Miketon and the Nightblinders Strange Brew: Lisa Marie & All Shook Up Zaboo: Dueling Pianos Merrimack Homestead: Lachlan Maclearn Milford Aden China: DJ Brian Lefty's Lanes: Justin Cohn

Nashua Boston Billiard Club: DJ Anthem Throwback Fratello's Italian Grille: Paul Luff Haluwa: Queens Over Kings Peddler's Daughter: Chris Hawk & Kenny Sukari Riverwalk Cafe: Mr. Nick & the Dirty Tricks Stella Blu: Rampage Trio

Newbury Salt hill Pub: Sullivan Davis Hanscom Band

Newmarket Stone Church: Uncle Ezra's Hiccups Newport Salt hill Pub: Flew-Z

Portsmouth British Beer: Boneshakerz Demeters: Wendy Nottonson Fat Belly's: DJ Provo Hilton Garden: Chris Hayes Martingale Wharf: Los Sugar Kings Portsmouth Book & Bar: Roy Sludge Trio Portsmouth Gaslight: Deck - Conniption Fits/DJ Koko P/ Corey Brackett/Chris Lester Ri Ra: Bling Cherry Rudi's: Rob Gerry & Mike Effenberger Thirsty Moose: Timberfakes

Wed., Sept. 9 Manchester Murphy's Taproom: Laugh Free or Die Shaskeen: Al Park

Friday, Sept. 11 Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom: Sebastian Maniscalco

Newmarket Rockingham BallThurs., Sept. 10 room: Paul Gilligan/ Derry Chris Pennie/Michelle Halligan Tavern: Sean Mortenson Sullivan Sat., Sept. 12 Manchester Headliners: Tom Hayes


Rochester Smokey's Tavern: Matt Gelinas

Hanover Canoe Club: Rowley Hazard

Rudi's: Jazz Brunch With John Fransoza

Salem Barking Bean: Dave LaCroix

Hillsborough Mama McDonough's: Bosse

Rochester Lilac City Grille: Brunch Music at 9:30am Radloff's: James McGarvey

Weare Stark House Tavern: Decatur Creek Sunday, Sept. 6 Bedford Copper Door: Joe McDonald Concord Hermanos: Brad Myrick

Manchester Derryfield: Rob & Jody (deck) Drynk: Beach Bash w/ Sammy Smoove KC's Rib Shack: Gardner Berry Murphy's Taproom: Brad Myrick/Paul Rainone Penuche's: Amanda McCarthy Shaskeen: Rap night, Industry night Strange Brew: One Big Soul Sit Session

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Manchester Derryfield: D-Comp (deck) Drynk: Sammy Smoove & DJ Gera Fratello's: Chris Lester Milly's: Manchuka Murphy's Taproom: Brad Bosse Shaskeen: Brett Wilson Strange Brew: Peter Parcek Merrimack Homestead: Paul Luff

Newmarket Stone Church: Bluegrass Jam w/Dave Talmage Peterborough Harlow's: Celtic Music Night Portsmouth Press Room: Larry Garland Jazz Jam Wednesday, Sept. 9 Dover Fury's Publick House: Amulus Gilford Patrick's: DJ Megan Hanover Canoe Club: Rowley Hazard Manchester Derryfield: Peter Higgins (deck) Fratello's: Phil Jacques

Murphy's Taproom: Chelsey Carter Tin Roof: DJ Vicious Zaboo: Dance Music w/ Guest DJs Merrimack Homestead: Nate Comp Tortilla Flat: Brad Myrick

Nashua Country Tavern: Charlie Chronopolous Jam Fratello's Italian Grille: Justin Cohn Portsmouth Red Door: Red On Red w/ Evaredy (Ladies Night) Ri Ra: Erin's Guild Rudi's: Dimitri Solo Piano Thirsty Moose: Hot Like Fire

Rochester Lilac City Grille: Ladies Night Music Radloff's: Tony Santesse Ladies Night

Get the crowds at your gig Want to get your show listed in the Music This Week? Let us know all about your upcoming show, comedy show, open mike night or multi-band event by sending all the information to music@hippopress.com. Send information by 9 a.m. on Friday to have the event considered for the next Thursday’s paper.

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NITE CONCERTS Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion at Meadowbrook 72 Meadowbrook Lane, Gilford, 293-4700, meadowbrook.net Capitol Center for the Performing Arts 44 S. Main St., Concord, 225-1111, ccanh.com The Colonial Theatre 95 Main St., Keene, 352-2033, thecolonial.org Dana Humanities Center at Saint Anselm College 100 Saint Anselm Drive, Manchester, 641-7700, anselm.edu/dana The Flying Monkey 39 S. Main St., Plymouth, 5362551, flyingmonkeynh.com Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom 169 Ocean Blvd., Hampton Beach, 929-4100, casinoballroom.com

Leddy Center 38c Ladd’s Lane, Epping, 679-2781, leddycenter.org Lowell Boarding House Park 40 French St., Lowell, Mass., lowellsummermusic.org Lowell Memorial Auditorium East Merrimack Street, Lowell, Mass., 978-454-2299, lowellauditorium.com The Middle Arts & Entertainment Center 316 Central St., Franklin, 934-1901, themiddlenh.org The Music Hall 28 Chestnut St., Portsmouth, 436-2400, themusichall.org The Old Meeting House, 1 New Boston Road, Francestown Palace Theatre, 80 Hanover St., Manchester, 668-5588, palacetheatre.org

Prescott Park Arts Festival 105 Marcy St., Portsmouth, prescottpark.org, 436-2848 Rochester Opera House 31 Wakefield St., Rochester, 335-1992, rochesteroperahouse.com Stockbridge Theatre Pinkerton Academy, Route 28, Derry, 437-5210, stockbridgetheatre.com Tupelo Music Hall 2 Young Road, Londonderry, 437-5100, tupelohall.com Verizon Wireless Arena 555 Elm St., Manchester, 644-5000, verizonwirelessarena.com Whittemore Center Arena, UNH 128 Main St., Durham, 8624000, whittcenter.com

• Sierra Leone’s Refugee Allstars Thursday, Sep. 3, 8 p.m. Music Hall Loft • Keb' Mo' Thursday, Sep. 3, 7:30 p.m. Flying Monkey • Tom Dean/Open Mic Thursday, Sep. 3, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Comedy - Dave Andrews/Rick D’Elia Friday, Sep. 4, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Johnny A Saturday, Sep. 5, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Little Big Town Saturday, Sep. 5, 8 p.m. Meadowbrook • David Wax Museum Saturday, Sep. 5, 7 p.m. Prescott Park • Keb' Mo' Saturday, Sep. 5, 8 p.m. Casino Ballroom • Eilen Jewell Sunday, Sep. 6, 8 p.m. Tupelo • The Mavericks Sunday, Sep. 6, 8 p.m. Casino Ballroom • Della Mae Wednesday, Sep. 9, 7 p.m. Prescott Park • Death Cab For Cutie Thursday, Sep. 10, 8 p.m. Verizon Wireless Arena • Sebastian Maniscalco Friday, Sep. 11, 8 p.m. Casino Ballroom • Rick Emmett (Triumph) Acoustic (also 9/12) Friday, Sep. 11, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Ani DiFranco Friday, Sep. 11, 8 p.m. Music Hall • Oran Etkin Friday, Sep. 11, 8 p.m. Music Hall Loft

• Martha Redbone Roots Project Friday, Sep. 11, 2015, 7 p.m. Cap Center • Rik Emmett Guitar Workshop Saturday, Sep. 12, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Ryan Clauson Saturday, Sep. 12, 8 p.m. Music Hall Loft • Scorpions/Queensrÿche Sunday, Sep. 13, 8 p.m. Meadowbrook • Psychedelic Furs & The Church Sunday, Sep. 13, 8 p.m. Casino Ballroom • Mike Peters of the Alarm Monday, Sep. 14, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Long Run - Eagles Tribute Wednesday, Sep. 16, 7:30 p.m. Palace Theatre • Alli Beaudry CD Release Show Wednesday, Sep. 16, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Lucius Thursday, Sep. 17, 8 p.m. Music Hall • Suede Thursday, Sep. 17, 8 p.m. Tupelo • René Marie Thursday, Sep. 17, 8 p.m. Music Hall Loft • Charlie Musselwhite Friday, Sep. 18, 7:30 p.m. Flying Monkey • Savoy Brown 50Th Anniversary Celebration Friday, Sep. 18, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Tremonti & Trivium Saturday, Sep. 19, 8 p.m. Casino Ballroom • The Wiggles Saturday, Sep. 19, 2015, 1 p.m. Cap Center • Jon Butcher Axis: Early Axis & Jimi Hendrix Saturday, Sep.

19, 2015, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Crash Test Dummies Sunday, Sep. 20, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Bank Red Sky Sunday, Sep. 20, 2015, 2 p.m. Cap Center • Quinn Sullivan Thursday, Sep. 24, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Joan Armatrading Solo Thursday, Sep. 24, 8 p.m. Music Hall • Dave Chappelle Thursday, Sep. 24, 2015, 7 p.m. Cap Center • Tom Cochrane Friday, Sep. 25, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Truck Friday, Sep. 25, 2015, 6 p.m. Cap Center • Charlie Farren Saturday, Sep. 26, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Tusk: Fleetwood Mac Experience Saturday, Sep. 26, 7:30 p.m. Flying Monkey • Three Days Grace Saturday, Sep. 26, 8 p.m. Casino Ballroom • Farao Saturday, Sep. 26, 8 p.m. Music Hall Loft • Martina McBride Saturday, Sep. 26, 2015, 8 p.m. Cap Center • Edwin Mccain Sunday, Sep. 27, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Alan Doyle Sunday, Sep. 27, 2015, 7:30 p.m. Cap Center • Buddy Guy Thursday, Oct. 1, 8 p.m. Casino Ballroom • Jordan Tirrell-Wysocki Trio/ David Surette & Susie Burke Thursday, Oct. 1, 2015, 7:30 p.m. Cap Center

Extended hours for

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Celtic Festival

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Sunday, Sept. 13, 2015 at 10am 1/2 Way to St. Patrick’s Day 5K Road Race by Millennium Running

Saint Baldricks Foundation Fundraiser

Head shaving, Corn Hole contest, Fireball Cinnamon Whiskey Wing Challenge & more!

Irish Music & Arts Festival Joe Deleault & Jet Set with other great Irish acts!

McGonagle School of Irish Dance • Granite State Cloggers • Cunniffe Irish Dance Academy • NH School of Scottish Arts • Seacoast Irish Cultural Association • Celtic Crossing • I Hoop 4 Fitness • New England Picture • Historic Highlanders • Indoor Ascent Rock Climbing • Amoskeag Rugby Team • The Barley House Wolves, Hurling Team • Celtic Scarves by SMM Designs • Massage Table by Lisa Champagne • Psychic 099876 Readings by Danielle Dionne

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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 59


JONESIN’ CROSSWORDS BY MATT JONES

“Free Kee” — another freestyle rife with words 17 Comedian who once stated “I’m the luckiest unlucky person” 18 “___ hound dog lies a-sleepin’ ...” (folk song line) 19 Blue book composition 20 Grow in status, perhaps

HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 60

57 Cartoonish cry while standing 22 Pre-calculator calculator on a chair 23 Game full of zapping 58 She released the albums “19” 28 Grass wetter and “21” 29 Tethered 59 In the costume of 30 High poker cards 34 By all odds Down 38 Incan sun god 1 Bit of dust 39 Disc jockeys, slangily 2 Flavoring for a French cordial 40 Cpl.’s underling 3 Gastropub supplies, maybe 43 Metric measures of area 4 Europe’s tallest active volcano 44 Finish up 47 Jodie Foster thriller with 5 Sailor’s greeting 6 Oscar Wilde’s forte locked doors 7 “This American Life” radio host 48 Beyond gung-ho 8 Honest sort 53 Sharp as ___ 9 Lingual bone that’s not attached 54 Whet to any other bone 56 Peony part 10 Always, in music 8/27 11 Tentative offer 12 Junkyard dog’s warning 13 Chaotic mess 14 NAFTA part 21 Simpsons character that all members of metal band Okilly Dokilly look like 22 Take top billing 23 City SSE of Sacramento 24 “Author unknown” byline

25 It may be in a pinch 26 Machine at the gym 27 “V for Vendetta” actor Stephen 31 Line feeder 32 Peut-___ (maybe, in Marseilles) 33 Sound of an air leak 35 Venue for testing out new jokes, perhaps 36 Gamers’ D20s, e.g. 37 Blue Jays’ prov. 41 Capricious 42 Headquarters, for short 44 Like some communities 45 Maternally related 46 Sprayed via inhaler, perhaps 47 Letter after Oscar 48 Assortment behind the bartender 49 Succulent houseplant 50 Modem’s measurement unit 51 “___ possibility” 52 “Disco Duck” man Rick 55 End of the holidays? ©2015 Jonesin’ Crosswords (editor@jonesincrosswords.com)

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SIGNS OF LIFE was trying to answer a very simple question: Do I want to see this person again? And to answer that, we don’t need an entire evening. We really need only a few minutes. Speed dating could be just the thing. Aries (March 21 – April 19) What you avoid when you don’t meet someone face to face are all the confusing and complicated and ultimately irrelevant pieces of information that can serve to screw up your judgment. Watch out for irrelevant information. Taurus (April 20 – May 20) What people say about themselves can also be very confusing, for the simple reason that most of us aren’t very objective about ourselves. Consider the source. Gemini (May 21 – June 20) What if we stopped scanning the horizon with our binoculars and began instead examining our own decision making and behavior through the most powerful of microscopes? Either way, use lens cleaner. Cancer (June 21 – July 22) My guess is that many of you have the same impression of Tom Hanks. If I asked you what he was like, you would say that he is decent and trustworthy and down-to-earth and funny. But you don’t know him. You’re not friends with him. Face it. You are not friends with Tom Hanks. Leo (July 23 – Aug. 22) If you see alphabetized CDs, a Harvard diploma on the wall, incense on a side table, and laundry neatly stacked in a hamper, you know certain aspects about that individual’s personality instantly, in a way that you may not be able to grasp if all you ever do is spend time with him or her directly. Alphabetized CDs, a Harvard diploma on the wall, incense on a side table and laundry piled all over the place would tell a different story entirely.

NITE SUDOKU By Dave Green

5

8 5

2 9 8 2

7

6

4 5 2 6

9 1 2 8 Difficulty Level

7 8 5 1 9/03

2015 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

1 6 4

3 9

SU DO KU

Difficulty Level

4 7 8 9 1 2 6 5 3

5 9 7 3 6 1 2 8 4

8 2 1 4 7 5 3 9 6

3 4 6 2 8 9 7 1 5

Dave Andrews & Rick D’Elia

Fri, Sept. 4 8:00 p.m. $18-$23 RS-Tables

JOHNNY A Sat., Sept. 5 8:00 p.m. $30-$35 RS-Theater

EILEN JEWELL Sun., Sept. 6 7:00 p.m. $20-$30 RS-Theater

MIKE PETERS of The Alarm

Mon., PAULA COLE Sept. 14 8:00 p.m. $30-$45 RS-Theater

Wed, Sept. 16

8/27 2 1 3 6 5 8 9 4 7

NIGHT OF COMEDY

ALLI BEAUDRY

Fill in the grid so that every row, every column, and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 through 9. Last week's puzzle answers are below

6 5 9 7 3 4 1 2 8

It’s All About the Music

“The Voice From Within” CD Release Party

9 6 5 1 4 3 8 7 2

7 8 2 5 9 6 4 3 1

1 3 4 8 2 7 5 6 9

2015 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

All quotes are from Blink, by Malcolm Gladwell, born Sept. 3, 1963. Virgo (Aug. 23 – Sept. 22) Have you ever tried to keep track of twenty different emotions simultaneously? You’ll be doing alright if you can just keep track of one or two. Libra (Sept. 23 – Oct. 22) … it is quite possible for people who have never met us and who have spent only twenty minutes thinking about us to come to a better understanding of who we are than people who have known us for years. Forget the endless “getting to know” meetings and lunches, then. If you want to get a good idea of whether I’d make a good employee, drop by my house one day and take a look around. You will enjoy some “getting to know” time. Scorpio (Oct. 23 – Nov. 21) Can a marriage really be understood in one sitting? Yes it can, and so can lots of other seemingly complex situations. Don’t overthink it. Sagittarius (Nov. 22 – Dec. 21) When it comes to the task of understanding ourselves and our world, I think we pay too much attention to those grand themes and too little to the particulars of those fleeting moments. You’re due for a fleeting yet meaningful moment. Capricorn (Dec. 22 – Jan. 19) Most of us have difficulty believing that a 275-pound football lineman could have a lively and discerning intellect. We just can’t get past the stereotype of the dumb jock. You will meet someone who defies stereotypes. Listen to their story. Aquarius (Jan. 20 – Feb. 18) We live in a world that assumes that the quality of a decision is directly related to the time and effort that went into making it. A quality decision is needed. Pisces (Feb. 19 – March 20) Everyone who sat down at one of those tables

7:30 p.m. $20 GA

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KIM SIMMONDS & SAVOY BROWN 50th Anniversary Celebration

Fri., Sept. 18 8:00 p.m. • $30-$45 • RS-Theater

THE JON BUTCHER AXIS Featuring Early Axis Hits and the Music of Jimi Hendrix

Sat., Sept. 19

Y&T

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CRASH TEST DUMMIES Acoustic Duo

Sun., Sept. 20 7:00 p.m. $30-$45 RS-Theater

QUINN SULLIVAN Thurs., Sept. 24 8:00 p.m. $25-$35 RS-Theater

TOM COCHRANE of Red Rider

Fri, Sept. 25 8:00 p.m. $35-$45 RS-Theater

CHARLIE FARREN

Thurs., Sept. 17

Sat., Sept. 26

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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 61


NEWS OF THE WEIRD BY CHUCK SHEPHERD

Barnyard theater

Live Music Friday September 4th

Rose Kula’s (Acoustic Jam)

Saturday September 5th

Problem Child

(AC/DC Tribute Band) Every Sunday

Blues Jam 3pm-7pm

2 for 1 Burgers Every Tuesday

Bright ideas

Taverntainment Texas Hold Em’ League

Play for Free-Every Thursday Night 2 Games Nightly 6:30 and 8:30

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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 62

Highly committed people

• Impersonating a police officer in a traffic stop is not uncommon, but Logan Shaulis, 19, was apparently so judgmentimpaired on May 30 that he set up his own elaborate “DUI checkpoint” on Route 601 near Somerset, Pennsylvania, complete with road flares, demanding “license, registration and insurance” from driver after driver. The irony of the inebriated Shaulis judging motorists’ sobriety was short-lived, as real troopers soon arrived and arrested him (on DUI, among other charges). • A woman identified only as Zeng, age 39, was finally imprisoned in August in Urumqi, China 10 years after she was convicted of corruption. Availing herself of a traditional “probation” option in Chinese law for expectant mothers, Zeng had remained free by getting herself pregnant Suspicions confirmed The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (and proving it) 14 times during the 10 in Alexandria, Virginia, has an award- years (although only some of the fetuses winning “telework” program allowing were carried to term). patent examiners flexible schedules, leading half of the 8,300 to work at The Americanization of China After five students drowned while home full-time despite a 2014 Washington Post report on employees gaming the swimming in a reservoir in China’s Yunsystem. In August, the agency’s inspec- nan province, parents of two of them tor general exposed several of the most sued the reservoir’s management comridiculous cases of slacking off, including pany, complaining that it should have one examiner who was paid for at least 18 posted signs or barricades or, even betweeks’ work last year that he did not per- ter, guards to keep kids from frolicking form and that his manager did not notice. in the dangerous waters. According to (The examiner, who had been issued nine an August report, the management compoor-performance warnings since 2012 pany has now countersued the parents, and who had flaunted his carefree “work- demanding compensation for the addiday” to co-workers for years, abruptly tional water-treatment measures it was resigned two hours before a meeting on forced to undertake because the reservoir the charge and thus left with a “clean” had been “polluted” by their children’s personnel record.) Wrote the Post, “It’s corpses. a startling example of a culture that’s maddening.” British director Missouri Williams brought an adaptation of Shakespeare’s King Lear to the London Courtyard art facility in August for a one-week run, centered on a human actor struggling to stage the play using only sheep. The pivotal character, Lear’s daughter Cordelia, famously withholds flattering Lear (thus forgoing inheriting the kingdom), and her silence forever tortures Lear and of course silence is something sheep pull off well. Actor Alasdair Saksena admitted there is an “element of unpredictability with the sheep,” but lauded their punctuality, calmness and lack of fee demands. Williams promised another Courtyard run for King Lear With Sheep in the fall.

Only China and Iran execute more prisoners, but Saudi Arabia also has a soft side for jihadists. Saudis who defy a ban on leaving the country to fight (usually against the common enemy, Syria’s Bashar al-Assad) are, if they return, imprisoned at a maximumsecurity facility in Riyadh, but with liberal short “vacations” at “Family House,” hotel-quality quarters with good food, playgrounds for children and other privileges (monitored through guest-satisfaction surveys). Returning jihadists also have access to education and psychologists and receive the equivalent of $530 a month with ATM privileges. The purpose is to persuade the warriors not to return to the battlefield once released, and officials estimate that the program is about 85 percent effective.

Turtle adventures

(1) A female Yangtze giant softshell turtle, believed to be the last female of her species, was artificially inseminated in May at Suzhou Zoo in China through the efforts of animal fertility experts from around the world. She is thought to be more than 100 years old (as was the last male to “romance” her, although their courtship produced only unfertilized eggs). (2) The Times of London reported in July that Briton Pamela Horner, seeking her “escaped” tortoise Boris (even though, as they say, he couldn’t have gone far), found “tortoise porn” on YouTube (mostly, mating sounds) to play in the yard and lure him back.

Recurring themes

(1) Wrong Place, Wrong Time: Late one night in July, police in Phoenix were chasing a speeding truck whose driver eventually lost control and careened into a house near Mulberry Drive. As officers were checking for victims (it turned out no one was home), they discovered a large quantity of suspected marijuana and opened an investigation of the super-unlucky residents. (2) Right Place, Right Time: Shane Peters’ cherished 2004 Dodge Durango broke down on the road in Livingston, Texas, in June, but before he could return to tow it, a thief hauled it away. About a month later, Peters’ wife spotted the familiar Durango in town and with the help of police got it back with (courtesy of the thief) a newly repaired drive shaft and three new wheels (and the thief’s drug supply, but police seized that). Visit weirduniverse.net.


EXPERIENCE DINNER and a show! KEB’ MO’ - Thur, Sept 3 Grammy Winning Blues Master

LOS LOBOS - Fri, Sept 4

With Girls Guns and Glory Opening

OLATE DOGS - Fri, Sept 25

“America’s Got Talent” Season 7 Winners

TUSK - Sat, Sept 26

Ultimate Fleetwood Mac Experience

104.9 The Hawk Concert Series

MONSTER ENERGY TOUR - Sat, Sept 5 JON BUTCHER AXIS: EXPERIENCED - Sat, Oct 3 Featuring Chris Distefano of MTV’s “Girl Code” & “Guy Code”

Celebrating the Music of Jimi Hendrix

LADIES NIGHT & bareMINERALS EVENT - Thur, Sept 17

KEVIN GRIFFIN - Fri, Oct 9

Presented by The Spa at the Common Man Inn

Voice of Better Than Ezra

Looking Ahead

104.9 The Hawk Concert Series

CHARLIE MUSSELWHITE - Fri, Sept 18 With Mr. Nick & The Dirty Tricks Opening

THE POWER OF PLACE - Wed, Sept 23

Documentary Film Screening and Panel Discussion

10/10 - Kashmir 10/17 - Peter Wolf of J. Geils Band 10/23 - BJ Thomas 11/13 Lee Ann Womack 11/14 Ani DiFranco 11/21 The Yardbirds 11/27 Warren Miller 11/28 - Marshall Tucker Band 12/12 Phil Vassar 12/18 Manhattan Transfer New shows added regularly! Complete listing at flyingm onkeynh.com.

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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 63


HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 3 - 9, 2015 | PAGE 64

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