Hippo 10/15/15

Page 1

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GRANITE VIEWS FRED BRAMANTE

The gun debate Let me begin with personal perspective: I’ve never owned gun. I don’t oppose other people owning a gun, as long as they get it legally and they are not a threat to innocent folks. I’m a registered Republican. Guns are not a personal priority. In 400 words, I’ll try to share what I think about this complicated subject. There are 300,000,000 guns already out there in America. (Congressional Research Service, 2009). They aren’t going to be confiscated anytime within the foreseeable future. Violent crime is down 49 percent since the 1970s. (Meet the Press, 2015) 61 percent of U.S. gun deaths in America are suicides, virtually double the number of homicides. (Wikipedia) In China, suicide rates are double the U.S. rate (Kiersz, 2014), yet there are virtually no guns. “There is no discernible evidence that shows that more gun laws lead to more or less gun crime” (Robertson, 2015). Over 80 percent of guns used in mass shootings were acquired legally (Mother Jones, 2015). I would welcome further gun-control laws that would make a real difference, but I don’t know what those laws would be. Should we eliminate the gun show loophole? Absolutely! But will that make a real difference in homicides? I say no. Should we reinstate the ban on assault weapons? I say yes. Will that make a significant difference? I doubt it. Assault weapons are already out there, and if we ban them, the bad guys will still get them. What about making it so that seriously mentally challenged folks are reported to the police and monitored so they can’t get access to guns? But how can that happen with privacy rights and doctor/client privilege? I wish I were more optimistic, but if after Sandy Hook Congress can’t even pass universal background checks, something virtually 90 percent of us support, then how can we pass laws that will actually make a difference? Our forefathers never envisioned the weapons available today. Now, let’s envision far more deadly weapons of the future. When future handheld weapons have the ability to take down large buildings, will we then realize that something needs to change? While some of the common suggestions for reform (e.g. background checks, etc) might have a marginal effect, I can’t envision a law that could have a statistically significant impact on homicide rates passing in Congress. Fred Bramante is a former chairman and member of the New Hampshire State Board of Education. He speaks and consults on education redesign to regional, state and national organizations.

OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 VOL 15 NO 41

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. Listings Arts listings: arts@hippopress.com Inside/Outside listings: listings@hippopress.com Food & Drink listings: food@hippopress.com Music listings: music@hippopress.com

BUSINESS Publisher Jody Reese, Ext. 21 jreese@hippopress.com 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.

ON THE COVER 12 PIZZA! New Hampshire loves its pizza, in all styles and with all kinds of topping combos, from simple (pepperoni!) to complex (barbecue pulled pork!). The Hippo got a taste of what some of the many, many local pizza places have to offer, plus how to make your own delicious pie. ALSO ON THE COVER, get a heavy dose of pumpkin as the annual pumpkin regatta returns to Goffstown, p. 25. For more good family fun this weekend, check out Kiddie Pool, p 26. And find out what inspired some unique seasonal brews, p. 36.

INSIDE THIS WEEK

NEWS & NOTES 4 Business taxes; Primary Update; Political Groupies; PLUS News in Brief. 8 Q&A 9 QUALITY OF LIFE INDEX 10 SPORTS THIS WEEK 18 THE ARTS: 20 ART Maxfield Parrish exhibit at the Currier. 22 THEATER Shrek: The Musical 24 CLASSICAL Listings for events around town. INSIDE/OUTSIDE: 26 KIDDIE POOL Family fun events this weekend. 28 GARDENING GUY Henry Homeyer offers advice on your outdoors. 29 TREASURE HUNT There’s gold in your attic. 30 CAR TALK Automotive advice. OTHER LISTINGS: Fairs & Festivals. p. 29 CAREERS: 32 ON THE JOB What it’s like to be a... FOOD: 36 FALL BREWS Jewish food festival; two food fundraisers; In the Kitchen; Weekly Dish; Wine; From the Pantry. POP CULTURE: 46 REVIEWS CDs, books, TV and more. Amy Diaz says yes to the 3-D version of The Walk and no to any version of Pan. NITE: 53 BANDS, CLUBS, NIGHTLIFE The Tubes; Nightlife, music & comedy listings and more. 54 ROCK AND ROLL CROSSWORD A puzzle for the music-lover. 55 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 | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 3


NEWS & NOTES

Van Ostern for gov

Executive Councilor Colin Van Ostern announced his candidacy for New Hampshire governor, making him the only Democrat to enter the race so far. The Union Leader reported he made the announcement at the Manchester-based tech marketing firm SilverTech. Van Ostern has been on the Executive Council since 2012. He works for Southern New Hampshire University and helped launch its College for America. The 36-year-old is married with two kids. So far Executive Councilor Chris Sununu is the only Republican to announce a bid for the corner office, while state Rep. Frank Edelblut is spending $250,000 of his own money to explore a possible bid, and state Senate finance chair Jeanie Forrester is also considering running.

Northern Pass

Despite 52 additional miles of buried power lines in the latest Northern Pass proposal, opposition by environmental groups seems to be continuing undaunted. NHPR reported the National Trust for Historic Preservation is making the case that the project, which would deliver Canadian hydro-electric power through the state, would cut a “destructive path” through the state’s scenic areas and threaten its “historic character.” The trust called the U.S. Department of Energy’s efforts to review the project inadequate and called upon the federal agency to pay attention to the impact on scenic and historic sites. The Union Leader reported the Sierra Club of New Hampshire has sent out a request for property owners on the Northern Pass route holding easements from Ever-

patient being treated for opioid addiction was able to fill about 24 prescriptions for oxycodone from 18 different providers. These data predate the state’s Prescription Drug Monitoring Program, which went live last year and is designed to curb doctor-shopping by tracking preE-ZPass contract Executive Councilors approved scriptions with a central database. a contract for a new company to handle the billing, enforcement and Data hack customer service operations for the About 21,000 New Hampshire state’s E-ZPass system. The Union residents with T-Mobile wireless Leader reported the $52 million, service may have been exposed by six-year contract was awarded to a recent data breach at the ExperiCalifornia-based Cubic Transpor- an credit agency, according to the tation Systems, one of three firms state’s attorney general. The AP bidding for the contract. The com- reported the data included names, pany was said to be more likely to addresses, Social Security numbers provide better customer service and and more. The hack affects those adapt to changing road infrastruc- who had their credit checked by ture and transponder technology. T-Mobile during the first two weeks The company is expected to save of September. The AG warned resthe Turnpike System money over idents to watch their credit closely the full life of the contract, which and suggested placing a security can extend to 14 years. freeze on their credit so their information can’t be used to create a credit card in their name. Those with Doctor shopping An investigative report by NHPR concerns can call 1-888-468-4454. found that doctor-shopping for opioid painkillers like oxycodone was Pipeline route change? rampant among Medicaid recipiAnother change to the Kindents in New Hampshire between er Morgan natural gas pipeline is 2010 and 2013. While the majority being considered by the company, of patients only filled a single pre- and town officials in Merrimack scription or received it from a single fear they are unprepared to respond health care provider, data from the in time to the last-minute changstate show hundreds of patients es. The Union Leader reported the were able to fill prescriptions for change would bring the pipeline’s highly addictive painkillers from route closer to the Everett Turnsix or more prescribers in a single pike, which might address earlier year. During the three-year peri- concerns the town had, according od, 14.6 million individual doses to Kinder Morgan’s project managwere prescribed and 70 percent of er. However, several town officials them contained oxycodone. In one voiced their frustrations during a extreme case, an individual was public meeting with company repable to shop for opioids from 64 pre- resentatives, saying they had little scribers across three states. Another chance to review the alterations as

Mayor Ken Merrifield was reelected for a fifth term in Franklin’s municipal election. The Concord Monitor reported no other mayor in the city’s history has served as many consecutive terms.

source to share the legal documents with the environmental group so its attorneys can review them. Sierra Club is challenging whether it’s legal for Northern Pass to traverse the easements.

CAMPO (gathering place)

CONCORD

Hooksett

Liberty Utilities is weighing Goffstown whether to demolish a historic property in Concord, the AP reported. The circular brick gasholder building on South Main Street was built in 1888 and is believed to be the last of its kind in the country. It is Bedford in need of significant repairs.

The Manchester Zoning Board of Adjustment approved variances for a Florida company to build a Hyatt hotel at the site of a millyard parking lot on Bedford Street. The Union Leader reported the developer plans to build a six-story hotel on half of the lot.

MANCHESTER

Merrimack

Amherst

Town officials in Derry Milford have proposed linking the Derry Rail Trail with the Londonderry Rail Trail. The Union Leader reported it would cost about $150,000 to complete the project.

Derry

Londonderry

NASHUA

Kinder Morgan nears finalizing its ness-oriented search engine that plans before presenting them to fed- is designed to filter better than eral regulators. Google. Coming in second with an award of $30,000 was Nashua-based AlignRevenue, which TechOut winners The annual TechOut competition developed a web platform for busisponsored by the New Hampshire ness-to-business sales. The third High Tech Council and Alpha Loft place winner was chosen by an concluded with three companies audience vote. They chose Slipwinning a collective $100,000. stream Music Player, a smartphone The Union Leader reported the app designed by UNH grads that first place winner, a Durham-based lets friends view and play music company called IndustryMD, won from each other’s playlists. They $50,000. It’s product is a busi- won $20,000.

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HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 5


NEWS

By Ryan Lessard

news@hippopress.com

Problem solvers? The No Labels Problem Solver Convention took place on Oct. 12 at the Manchester Radisson with speeches from eight presidential candidates, five of whom were there in person. Billionaire Donald Trump and South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham were among the first to speak on stage, each sticking to their comfortable formats with Trump sharing anecdotes at the podium and Graham pacing with mike in hand to answer town hall-style questions from the audience. About 2,000 people attended the event, according to WMUR. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, former New York Gov. George Pataki and Ohio Gov. John Kasich rounded out the other Republican candidates who participated. Democrats Bernie Sanders, former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley and former Virginia Sen. Jim Webb took part through live video since they had to participate in the first Democratic debate in Las Vegas the next day. Liberty straw poll Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul won the Republican Liberty Caucus straw poll conducted in Nashua following RLC convention, the Union Leader reported. Paul and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz were the only major candidates who spoke in person at the event. Cruz came in second after Paul with 339 votes to Paul’s 445. Ben Carson came in third with 139 votes. Both campaigns sent out press releases claiming a sort of victory. Paul’s campaign called it proof that he had cohesive support among libertarian voters in New Hampshire while Cruz called his second-place standing an “upset” that showed he was gaining ground among constitutional conservatives. More visits While Democrats sparred during their first CNN debate on Oct. 13, Republicans swarmed the Granite State. The Concord Monitor reported former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, Kasich, Graham, Pataki and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee had events planned across the state.

Making NH competitive Can business tax cuts help the state? By Ryan Lessard

news@hippopress.com

If New Hampshire’s plan to lower business taxes works, the state could end up with a competitive edge over Massachusetts. Last month, the Republican-led legislature and Gov. Maggie Hassan resolved their months-long stalemate over the state’s operating budget, which included tax cuts for businesses — something New Hampshire hasn’t seen for 20 years. In fact, business tax rates have remained unchanged in either direction since fiscal year 2002.

Competing with Mass.

“This has been part of a comprehensive strategy to lower the cost of doing business in New Hampshire,” Senate Majority Leader Jeb Bradley said.

Corporate rates

The phased rollout of business tax cuts

Business Profits Tax

Business Enterprise Tax

8.5%

.75%

8.2%

.72%

7.9%

.675%

Source: NH Center for Public Policy Studies Only businesses making more than $50,000 in gross business income are required to file for BPT and for companies filing at the end of the year, they only file for the BET if they either have more than $200,000 in gross receipts or a $100,000 value tax base. The BET and BPT don’t stack, however. The BET is paid as a credit towards the BPT.

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He said lowering business taxes was an important part of a multipronged effort, but not a silver bullet. Bradley pointed to reports by the Tax Foundation, which ranked New Hampshire 48th for its corporate tax rate. “Having talked to the business leaders around the state that I’ve talked to, I know that the high corporate tax rate is an issue for them,” Bradley said. “When a company, for instance, like BAE, is deciding whether to locate new production in New Hampshire or [elsewhere], all of the business costs ... are a consideration. By making this move, we make ourselves somewhat more competitive.” Bradley set the final rate for the Business Profits Tax, currently at 8.5 percent, to end at 7.9 percent in order to be lower than Massachusetts’ rate of 8 percent. “That was always the primary goal,” Bradley said.

Will it work?

Jeff McLynch at the New Hampshire Fiscal Policy Institute questions how effective business tax cuts will be at enticing businesses since the biggest tax expense for them are actually property taxes, which make up more than 45 percent of their tax burden. Economist Dennis Delay with the New Hampshire Center for Public Policy Studies says there aren’t any conclusive, scientific studies that prove lowering corporate tax rates will make New Hampshire more competitive. But Delay says the benefit will go to the larger employers. “The majority of that tax is paid by larger businesses,” Delay said. “So the benefit of the tax cut is essentially going to go to the large businesses in New Hampshire, not really the small businesses.” This could have a positive impact on job creation, Delay says, but businesses with a national or international scale are likely to

consider many other factors before hiring more people than the tax rate of a single state. And While the Tax Foundation gave New Hampshire a low score for its corporate taxes, the state scored highly for its whole tax structure. The Tax Foundation listed New Hampshire among the top 10 states (7th place) for overall business tax climate in its latest annual index, which looks at other factors like income and sales taxes. Massachusetts was ranked 24th. Bradley says that while the tax cuts alone may not make the difference, judging their effectiveness at attracting businesses must be done in tandem with recent and ongoing efforts to reform workers compensation, healthcare and electricity prices.

The big if

The tax cuts were included in the final budget that was signed into law, which has a couple differences from the vetoed budget. Essentially, the timetable has been accelerated for the first set of cuts, but the second round for the 2018 to 2019 biennium was made conditional. “The compromise that they settled on was to create a trigger,” Delay said. He said if the general fund revenues for the current biennium come in under $4.64 billion, the second round of cuts won’t happen. If the revenue is short of the trigger amount, the rates for the BPT and the BET will remain at 8.2 and .72 respectively. Otherwise, it will lower to 7.9 and .675. Whether the state is able to reach the threshold is an open question. Delay thinks the trigger number was optimistic, but Bradley says it’s attainable. To put it in perspective, the revenue projection the legislature agreed upon when they wrote the original budget was $4.609 billion. So Republicans are betting revenues will be about $38 million higher than projected when you factor in the bigger first-round tax cuts, according to Delay.

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A look at advocacy groups in NH

NH Rebellion Who they are: NH Rebellion was founded in 2014 by Harvard professor Lawrence “Larry” Lessig with an inaugural walk across New Hampshire in January 2014. The walks are inspired by Doris “Granny D” Haddock, the New Hampshire-based octogenarian activist who walked across the country between 1999 and 2000 for campaign finance reform. NH Rebellion is part of Open Democracy, based in Manchester. What they want: The group is advocating for sweeping reforms meant to curb the influence of big money in politics. Current goal: Ultimately, they want to use the New Hampshire primary to make campaign finance reform a major issue in the election at large. VIPs: Larry Lessig is a popular advocate for campaign finance reform and now a Democratic presidential candidate. Daniel Weeks is the executive director of NH Rebellion and Open Democracy. Board members include former New Hampshire Chief Justice John Broderick, former Republican candidate for governor Andrew Hemingway and businessman and former Republican U.S. Senate candidate Jim Rubens. Find them at: 66 Hanover St., Suite 101, Manchester, email is info@nhrebellion. org, websites are nhrebellion.org and questionr.us and phone number is 272-6117. More on NH Rebellion: Daniel Weeks, the group’s leader, says their efforts to ask every presidential candidate for the reforms they would advance seem to be making an impact. “At the beginning of the election season, none of the candidates expect maybe one, Bernie Sanders, … were talking about this voluntarily,” Weeks said. “After now

Daniel Weeks next to his candidate tracker wall. Photo by Ryan Lessard.

getting out in front of every one of the candidates multiple times ... every candidate has said publicly this is a major problem for America, and a majority of the candidates have given us solutions.” Weeks says the group is also unveiling a new pledge for residents and candidates to sign, committing them to advance a prescribed list of reforms, like mandating donor transparency, overturning the 2010 Supreme Court Citizens United ruling, banning the trading of campaign contributions for government contracts and creating a tax incentive system for small citizen donations. Weeks says South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham is the only national Republican to call for a constitutional amendment overturning Citizens United. According to a Bloomberg poll taken last month, 78 percent of Americans want Citizens United overturned. That sentiment was shared across party lines. Among Republicans, 80 percent responded against the ruling, just as 83 percent of Democrats agreed.

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Aluminum Rollator’s Have Arrived

Ashley Preston is a preschool special education teacher at Parker Varney Elementary School in Manchester. She was named the 2016 New Hampshire Teacher of the Year, which puts her in the running for National Teacher of the Year.

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Do you think preschool is finally getting its due recognition? Well, I hope [preschool] starts having more of a moment and getting a little bit more recognition. ... I know for me and a lot of the other preschool teachers, it’s been satisfying and makes us feel really good as a group that we’re getting some recognition for our kids, because they definitely deserve that.

school is really big because kids that don’t go to preschool, then they’re home maybe until they’re 5 years old, then it’s like, ‘Now, I have to Ashley Preston. Courtesy photo. go sit in a desk all day? I don’t really want to do that.’ ... Then we can work on their vocabulary skills, we can work on their basic literacy skills like letter recognition, writing their names, you can do that early math stuff, counting, shapes, patterns, size. All those foundational skills that kids are not entering kindergarten with and that’s just creating struggles further down the line because they’re starting kindergarten unprepared.

Are you sometimes in a position of having to defend preschool? Absolutely. A lot of time. I think a lot of people don’t understand preschool. They don’t understand what it’s all about, really. For some people, I think it’s just not knowing. … They look at it like we’re babysitters and we’re just kind of playing with the kids all day while their parents are at work. We definitely are playing with the kids all day, but what we’re doing is learning and we’re What’s your favorite part of the day? teaching them. That’s how they’re not only I like when I just feel like I’m really in the learning social skills but they’re learning how moment with [the kids], even when it’s just to learn, how to be a good student and those doing a project or if it’s having a dance party. basic, early academic skills. … It all just depends on the moment. What do you do differently in the classroom? I just feel like, getting down to their level, making things fun, taking into consideration what they like and going with that [can] make learning a good time. ... We do yoga. ... We have dance parties. We do a lot of nontraditional preschool activities. We build with cups, we have scavenger hunts. … I like to have a good time with them because they like to come here and they want to learn from me.

What inspired you to become a teacher? I didn’t really set out to become a teacher. I was supposed to go to law school, and then I decided that I wanted to take a year off after college ... because I knew that law school was going to be an intense experience. I ended up getting a job as a paraprofessional at a local elementary school and I just really loved it and decided that that’s what I wanted to do.

What did you like about school as a kid? What’s most important for preschoolI loved reading. I loved anything that had aged kids to learn? to do with reading when I was a kid. And just I think [creating] that love of learning at learning. I liked to learn and I like to learn a young age and that desire to want to be at now as a teacher.— Ryan Lessard

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NEWS & NOTES

QUALITY OF LIFE INDEX

Addiction concerns rank highest

For the first time since the Great Recession (nearly eight years), New Hampshire residents are calling something other than jobs and the economy their No. 1 concern. In the most recent WMUR Granite State poll, 25 percent of respondents in the state called drug abuse the most important problem facing the state, bumping jobs and the economy to second place with 21 percent. Education, health care and taxes were the next three concerns, each with single-digit percentages. Just under half of those polled said they know someone who has abused heroin in the last five years, while 60 percent of those under the age of 35 said the same. QOL Score: -2 Comment: Drugs have ranked between zero and 1 percent for most of the past 14 years. The issue climbed to the top spot over the course of the past year.

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Winter heating bills could be lower

Thanks to lower energy prices, most U.S. households are expected to pay less for heat this winter, the AP reported. In its annual prediction, the U.S. Department of Energy says energy costs this winter should be lower than the last two winters. Residents in the Northeast are traditionally more reliant on heating oil, which, along with propane, is expected to be where most of the savings will be. Homes that use heating oil are projected to pay $459 less than last winter while propane-heated households will pay $322 less than last winter. QOL Score: +1 Comment: Heating oil prices are at a 10-year low, according to the most recent data.

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Where’s the fluoridated drinking water?

Most New Hampshirites aren’t getting stronger teeth from the state’s drinking water. This really happens in other states, according to a survey from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — New Hampshire ranks 43rd in the country for access to fluoride in public drinking water. Montana, Alaska, Idaho and Wyoming were among the few states with lower percentages, as reported by NHPR. About 390,000 New Hampshire residents — less than half the 834,000 on public water systems — have access to it, and communities that have received a Water Fluoridation Quality Award include Concord, Dover, Laconia, Lebanon and Manchester. QOL Score: -1 Comment: According to Dr. Peter Welnak, president of the New Hampshire Dental Society, research shows optimally fluoridated drinking water is a safe and simple way to help prevent cavities, keep tooth enamel strong and protect against tooth decay.

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103072 HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 9


SPORTS DAVE LONG’S LONGSHOTS

Deflate-gate II headed your way Sunday night

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So the football game we’ve all been waiting for since Deflate-gate took flight in January has finally arrived. It will happen in prime time on Sunday when your New England Patriots are in Indianapolis to face the team they were playing on the night the overblown controversy all started. That should lead to another avalanche of stories, regurgitation and of course pontification from the media as anticipation builds for what will be the young season’s marquee game. But even with the buzz, don’t mistake this for a rivalry game, which it once was. What made it so was the annual Tom Brady-Peyton Manning showdown, not anything special in Indy. It stopped being so the second Manning was shown the door by ungrateful owner Jim Irsay and immediately transferred to Denver when he landed there. That’s opposed to say, the Jets, which has been a game circled on the schedule since long before Bill Parcells started the border war, right through the regimes of Herm Edwards, Eric Mangini, Rex Ryan and now Todd Bowles — though I’ll admit it was heightened when Tuna and Rex were leading them into Foxboro. It’s about geography, history, trash talking, and I resign as HC of the NYJ. Even now, NFL employee Jim Kensil, the alleged leaker of mis-information to Chris Mortensen that started the furor, is a Jets alum whose father was once president of you know who. Ditto for the Ravens, who may have employed more societal dregs than any team since the Raiders were the RAIDERS. But they’re tough in big games, make you pay when they lose and have handed the Pats their share of big losses. Besides, how can it be a rivalry when one team dominates the other as the Pats have each time they’ve faced Indy since

Chuck Pagano and Andrew Luck came to town? Losing scores of 43-22, 42-20 and 45-7 don’t exactly suggest being a tough out, especially with the weakling Colt D allowed 655 rushing yards and 13 rushing TDs. And Luck hasn’t exactly had much of that either as he’s completed an abysmal 48.6 percent of his passes with 4 TDs and 7 interceptions. Not exactly the kind of big game performance generally associated with being the “superstar” whiny Indianapolis Star columnist Gregg Doyel called him in August. Even with Manning in the equation the Patriots have won 14 of 20 in the Belichick era, won all six this decade, and hold a 50-29 overall edge. No, in the minds of Patriots Nation this game is just about payback — to wimpy Indy GM Ryan Grigson, who tattled to the teacher on the Pats, and their sleazy owner, who wanted the Pats to pay, presumably for breaking the rules. Of course cheating would also make it easier to explain all those bad losses to a hated opponent, wouldn’t it? It’s also geared toward the expanding vigilant response to the controversy by Roger the Dodger and NFL brass and, of course, the haters, like my New York Giants-loving brother Jamie, who loudly went off in a phone rant last week about “Belichick getting caught cheating three times by the NFL.” When I said, What are they?, he said “that video thing, and I can’t remember the others.” Oh, I get it. Those are the people in the crosshairs for this one. If he felt the balls weren’t up to code I don’t know that I blame Grigson. As I’ve said many times before, cheating is cheating and if you can’t do the time don’t do the crime. Though his version of reporting it earlier in the week is different from how the league said it happened, informed midway through the second quarter. But I don’t think I’d have done it that way, and I can’t see someone like Tom Coughlin or Coach B doing it that way either. I’d probably say

in advance, this is info we’ve been given and I’m sending it on to the league. I do have a problem with the Ravens denying they had anything to do with ratting out the Pats right up until their e-mails to the Colts turned up in the NFL’s investigation. Hence Jonathan Kraft calling the Ravens’ John Harbaugh a “sweetheart” on the radio pregame show a few weeks back. But all that is fan stuff. And while it may conjure similar feeling among the players and Coach B, they’ll never admit it. For them, it is about moving on to Cincinnati. So the Patriots come into this one undefeated, but after not playing all that well while beating Dallas 30-6 on Sunday following their bye week. They had protection problems, and when a team is missing their QB, top runner and best receiver things should be easy. So I’ll call it workmanlike. The Colts, meanwhile, have been in turmoil amid reports that Pagano’s on shaky ground in the final year of his contract despite two straight playoff appearances, because he and Grigson don’t get along. Though after two dismal losses they’ve resurrected things with two lucky wins and a third over overrated Houston. Interestingly the last two came with ancient Matt Hasselbeck at QB, not the injured Luck, who’s lost a little luster off the halo in those bad losses. Although sooner or later, he has to play better against the Pats, doesn’t he? That sets the stage for a game where haters throughout the nation want the Patriots to get stomped and Patriots Nation wants Coach B to channel his inner Otto Graham to rub salt in the wound right up to the final seconds of a blowout win. All of which will most likely lead to gigantic TV ratings. Which is why I’ve said all along that despite all the hand-wringing over the “damage” Deflate-gate did to the NFL, it’s actually been great for business by amping up the drama for this game and the ones to follow anytime the Pats come to town. Email Dave Long at dlong@hippopress.com.

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HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 10

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SPORTS DAVE LONG’S PEOPLE, PLACES & OTHER STUFF

Pinkerton & Bedford go down Big Story: So much for the winning streaks of the two top-rated football teams in the state as both went down in a major upset weekend. Pinkerton Academy’s 17-game winning streak dating back to 2013 came to an end in a 17-7 loss to Winnacunnet on Friday night. A day later, Goffstown knocked Bedford from the ranks of the undefeated with a 27-21 win that would get the approval of the head man in Foxboro. It would be that way as Coach B once was a special teams coach and repeatedly emphasizes the importance of special teams play, and the last two scores in G-town’s big 27-21 win over B-town came on a 78-yard Frankie Castillo Diaz kick return and when Ian Routhier took the loose ball off a Connor Bourque-blocked punt 12 yards for the game-winning score. Sports 101: What injury forced KC Royals star third baseman George Brett out of the line-up on this date in Game 2 of the 1980 World Series with the Phillies? Hot Ticket: The Manchester Monarchs open their 15th season on Friday at the world famous Verizon Wireless Arena when they take on the Brampton Beast at 7 p.m. It’s is their first ever game against

The Numbers

2 – goals and assists from Saylor Clark and Becca Rooney respectively in the Bedford girls’ 4-1 win over Salem that moved the Bulldogs to 10-3. 4 – TD passes from Bishop Guertin QB Jordan Hiscoe to Nick (good) Lorden in BG’s 50-14 win over Manchester Memorial on Friday.

Brampton and in the ECHL, as well under their first under new coach and original Monarch Richard Seeley. Knyck of Tyme Award: To Emma Lavasseur for scoring off a Sara (no) Swetland corner kick with 45 seconds left to make Central a 1-0 winner over Londonderry in NHIAA soccer action. Alumni News: Apparently being the Monarchs MVP a year ago wasn’t good enough as the L.A. Kings traded Brian O’Neil to the New Jersey Devils for a 2017 conditional seventh-round pick. Sports 101 Answer: Poor George Brett missed Game 2 of the 1980 series due to a bad case of hemorrhoids. On This Date – Oct. 15: 1965 – Sandy Koufax shuts out Minnesota 2-0 in Game 7 as L.A. wins the World Series just two days after shutting them out 7-0 in Game 5. 1988 – With two outs in bottom of ninth, severely limping Kirk Gibson hits a dramatic two-run HR off Dennis Eckersley to give L.A. a 5-4 win over the A’s in Game 1 of the World Series. 1989 – Wayne Gretzky passes Gordie Howe to become the NHL’s all-time scoring leader.

6 – saves by Memorial goalkeeper Connor Page in a 4-1 win over Bishop Guertin as the goals came from four different scorers. 11 – wins against one loss and one tie for Bedford after a 3-0 win over Salem when Jake Statires pitched the shutout and the goals came from A.J. Pratte, Jake De’Angelo and Richard D’Amico. 12 – wins for Pinkerton to

stay undefeated with a 2-1 come-from-behind whiteknuckler win in OT over Winnacunnet, where Keara Doolin tied it late in the second half and Julia Bousquet won it in OT. 456 – yards of total offense by Merrimack when they thumped Londonderry 41-7 as Justin Grassini threw for 284 yards and a TD to Tyler DeNeill on one of his 10 catches on the day.

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Sports Glossary

Patriots rushing stats vs. Chuck Pagano’s Colts: 2013 playoffs: Pats win 43-22; LeGarrette Blount has 166 yards on 24 carries and 4 TDs including a 73-yard TD run that ices the game. Stevan Ridley runs for 52 yards on 14 carries and 2 TDs. Overall it’s 234 yards on 46 carries. 2014 regular season: Week 11, Pats win 42-20; back-up Jonas Grey runs for 201 yards on 38 carries and 4 TDs. Overall it’s 246 yards on 44 carries. 2014 AFC title game: LeGarrette Blount runs for 148 yards on 30 carries and 3 TDs. Andrew Luck vs. The Patriots: 2013 playoffs: 20-41 for 331 yards, 2 TDs and 4 interceptions. 2014 regular season: 23 for 39, 303 yards, 2 TDs and 1 interception. 2014 playoffs: 12 for 33, 126 yards, no TDs and 2 interceptions. Otto Graham: All-time all-timer who in the late ’40s and into the ’50s was the Tom Brady of the NFL while leading the Cleveland Browns to 10 straight league championship games. Later became HC of the Washington Redskins, where in 1967 he showed a downright Belichickian killer instinct by calling time out in the final minute to kick a “game clinching” FG while leading the New York Football Giants 69-42. Peyton Manning: Future Hall of Fame QB now being given up for (almost) dead by the national media, who see he’s thrown “just” 6 TDs and 7 picks in five games and apparently not that Denver is off to a 5-0 start.

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HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 11


Who doesn’t love pizza? Not many people in New Hampshire, apparently — it’s the state with the most pizza joints per capita. The Hippo talked to local pizza pros about why they think the state might have that distinction, what it’s like

having so much competition and what makes each place unique. There are different styles (New York and Greek and Chicago, for starters) crazy toppings and sauces (think lettuce, ground beef and Thousand Island dressing) and various ways to cook ‘em up (grill, brick oven, or even toaster oven if you’re making your own). Whatever your pizza pleasure, New Hampshire has a slice for you.

Why New Hampshire has the most pizza places per capita By Ryan Lessard

news@hippopress.com

New Hampshire has a lot of pizza places. So many, in fact, that it has the distinction of having the most pizza places per capita in the country. “We do have one on almost every corner, for godsakes,” Pappy’s Pizza co-owner Kasha St. Jean said. For more than 30 years, Pappy’s has served downtown Manchester. St. Jean can remember when Pizza by Charles was virtually the only pizza place in the city, back about 60 years ago. Now, Sean Morgan, the general manager of Pizza 911, counts about 70 in Manchester alone. So why do we have so many?

HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 12

The numbers

Granite Staters love their pizza, and they particularly like their pizza from momand-pop operations. According to PMQ Magazine’s 2014 Pizza Power industry report, New Hampshire had 512 pizza places, which is 3.87 pizza joints per 10,000 people in the state. That number has held steady since the 2013 report. It was as high as 4.09 in 2012 (with 539 stores). Massachusetts was in second place at the time with 3.77 pizza places per 10,000 people. The Bay State has since declined to sixth place. Iowa held second place the past two years with 3.60 in 2014 and 3.64 in 2013. New Hampshire, like most of the states with above average pizza places per capita, favors the independents. The state

Independents reign supreme Most New Hampshire pizza places (over 80 %) have fewer than 10 locations.

has the sixth highest percentage of independent over chain restaurants with 82 percent, which ticked up slightly over the year before. Most of the independent-favoring states are located in the Northeast. All of the New England states plus New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Ohio are in the top 10. Those same states are in the top 15 for most pizza places per capita, plus a few northern midwestern states.

Why pizza?

Source: PMQ Magazine’s2015 Pizza Power industry report.

The science and the stats point to one incontrovertible truth: Humans in America like to eat pizza, particularly in the north. So, as New Hampshire Lodging and Restaurant Association President Mike Somers suggests, part of this is probably just cultural.


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According to PMQ, pizza sales nationwide amounted to more than $37 billion, which is a little more than half a million per restaurant, on average. But Morgan is aware pizza places and restaurants have a high failure rate. Kasha St. Jean at Pappy’s has seen a lot of places come and go over the past three decades. “It’s a lot of work, and they all think they’re going to be rich from it,” St. Jean said. Morgan says the recipe for a successa ful pizza Pizz 015 2 s ’ e place, n i gaz t. Ma r especially in a MQ y repo P : r e t c s r u market as saturated as Sou er ind Pow New Hampshire’s, is having something that makes you different, good quality food, low prices and good service. For St. Jean, there’s another downfall owners often fall into: they change their recipes, sometimes to skimp on ingredients. “We’ve never changed anything. We’ve always kept it the same and that makes a huge difference,” St. Jean said. Not only has her family-owned restaurant kept its recipes the same since it opened in the early 1980s, its pizza recipe is actually the same old recipe that Pizza by Charles used back in the 1950s.

W

“We all seem to like pizza. Good, bad or indifferent, pizza is still pretty good,” Somers said. The cost to open a pizza joint probably helps keep numbers up too. “If you were to open a full-service restaurant, it would be rather expensive to [put in] tables, chairs, the whole bit. Where, you can probably open a pizza joint for a relatively low point of entry, all things being relative,” Somers said. Morgan said Pizza 911 opened its second location just four years after opening the first. “It’s definitely pretty cheap. I actually thought about doing it last year, but I couldn’t pull it together,” Morgan said. “With about $50,000, usually, you can get in [business].” Plus, Morgan added, even though pizza places often sell steak and cheese subs and other sandwiches, pizza is the main breadwinner. “It’s a 10 percent profit from pizza, right there. You can start a restaurant and make something out of it. You can franchise it out if it’s great,” Morgan said.

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At-home pizza making ideas By Kelly Sennott

ksennott@hippopress.com

Whether you’ve got an oven, grill, pan, toaster oven or electric pizza stone (yes, they do exist, and local foodie Susan McLean says they’re awesome), you can make your own pizza just the way you like it. The Hippo talked with local food bloggers McLean (laptop2tabletop.com) and Andrew Toland (pizzanh.com) for ideas about how to be creative, fun or fancy with your at-home pizza making. The good news: It’s kind of hard to completely screw up.

Crust, sauce and cheese

Your pizza’s flavor starts with your bases, and if you want yours to be restaurant quality, Toland suggests going to your favorite pizzeria for advice. Toland, who started a pizza review blog with his wife Deidre Ashe in 2010, is constantly talking with their favorite neighborhood joint, Tano’s Pizzeria in Manchester, for tips and

Savory pumpkin pizza, courtesy of Susan McLean.

techniques, and so far, they’ve been pretty responsive. In fact, when he asked about their dough, the maker on site scooped a bag of what they use — dough with high

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HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 13


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gluten flour — and handed it to Toland to try out. Toland also likes dough from the Portland Pie Company, which he said you can get at most grocery stores, and for cheese, he prefers straight mozzarella, shredded or sliced himself, over packages labeled “pizza cheese.” “I’ve noticed other kinds of cheese don’t melt very well, or maybe they don’t melt consistently. And a lot of times with pizza cheese, the cheese melts very greasy,” Toland said via phone. Of course, it all has to do with your own tastes; the best thing to do is practice and experiment with different ingredients, combinations and proportions. “I’m still searching for a sauce recipe I like,” Toland said. “And I’ve bought every kind of sauce under the sun. But I still haven’t found one I like better than my favorite pizza place’s.” If you’re concerned about gluten or want to forego dough all together, McLean said she’s made a mean wheat-free dough from cauliflower (though you can also do this with zucchini). She squeezes out the moisture with the help of a grater or food processor, cheesecloth, colander and paper towel, then binds it with ingredients like eggs and grated Parmesan cheese. It tastes best fresh — the vegetables get soggy if it sits too long. When in doubt, look online, search YouTube. Toland’s personal favorite resource is thepizzabible.com, an online community of pizza makers (and the official site for Tony Gemignani’s book, The Pizza Bible). If you’re in a real bind and don’t feel like dealing with dough, Toland said pizza can still taste good with alreadymade crust, in which case you only need to worry about toppings.

Toppings

These can make or break a pizza. “Don’t overload it with toppings. You want to taste all the ingredients, but it

doesn’t need to be overwhelming, with 10 different things. You want to see the crust, and you want to taste the crust,” McLean said. Most things will taste OK on pizza, but just as with any cooking recipe, you should have an idea in your head of what you want to taste. Think less mushy, more crunchy. “You do want something to provide a little texture — fresh broccoli on pizza is delicious. It gives it a little crunch without being too soggy,” McLean said.

In the oven

If you want your pizza to resemble that from a restaurant, Toland advises investing in a pizza stone — though maybe don’t invite guests over the first time you use it. “The first pizza I made on a pizza stone was a complete disaster. It got stuck to the pizza peel and flipped over on itself, sauce side down,” Toland said. And so, his tip for beginners: If you’re going to get the stone, get the pizza peel and use cornmeal to prevent stickage. Also, make sure the pizza stone is heated up well — and follow the directions. Toland said he’s noticed pizza steel trending — it’s more conductive of heat and can, obviously, get much hotter than a stone. If you use a cookie sheet or pan, McLean said she uses parchment paper for easy removal. Hotter is better. “If you can get your oven to 450 degrees, you can get a nice, crispy crust, and that can prevent the center from becoming too soggy,” she said.

On the grill

Cooking on the grill gives pizza that charred or smoky taste. Toland uses an outdoor pizza oven (called Uuni, created with the help of a Kickstarter campaign, which cooks pizza super fast and heats up to 840 degrees, according to the website), on which he


likes to make a classic margherita pizza. “We’ve tried barbecue chicken pizzas [on the grill] … and for whatever reason, it doesn’t pop the same way,” Toland said. “The best way on the grill, we found, is to just make little flatbreads, like the kind you would get at any restaurant. Make a strip of dough, put it on the grill, cook it halfway — then take it off, put toppings on and grill the rest of the way.” If you’re short of fancy grill gadgets, McLean said you can do just fine with a grill-top pizza pan that allows air to come through without sticking to grates. She’s even put pizza right on the grill itself, though very carefully and after excess olive oil spray. If you’re wary, this may be a good time to pull out the alreadycooked crust, which will ensure there’s no seepage.

Other ways to get your fix

Traditionally it’s Greek pizza that’s made in the oven, but you can make your own that way if you’re wary of grilling and pizza stone doodads, or even if you’re in a pinch. McLean makes her own Mexican pizza in a pan using tortilla bread as a base, salsa as sauce and taco ingredients as toppings, or just whatever’s left in the fridge: grilled chicken, pulled pork, beans, cheese, jalapeno peppers, guac, sour cream, etc. “It’s really quick. I take the torti-

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Made from scratch in house...give it a try! lla, spray the pan with Pam, put it on the stovetop, and when it gets warm and crispy, I put the ingredients on top,” McLean said. Then there’s the trusty old English muffin pizza, which is especially fun for kids. “That way, you can get the kids involved, scooping out the ready-made sauce and putting on sliced pepperonis and any other toppings and cheese before baking it in the oven,” McLean said. (Or, if you prefer, toaster oven.) Other ideas, courtesy of McLean: use a half pita and give your pizza an Indian feel with curried vegetables and Thai peanut sauce. Or, on the sweeter side, go for dessert pizza; she once made one with brownie batter crust, fresh fruit and drizzled chocolate on top. Other favorite dessert pizza toppings include pumpkin, honey, maple syrup, peanut butter, hazelnut spread, cinnamon, brown sugar, pecans, chocolate, whipped cream, marshmallows. It’s all about research, trial and error. “Pizza is a great comfort food. It’s easy to eat, and again, because it’s so versatile — you can have so many different bases with so many different combinations of toppings,” McLean said.

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McLean’s newest pizza toy is the Breville Crispy Crust Maker, which looks like a fat waffle maker from the outside and cooks pizzas in three minutes. It’s not cheap and is kind of hard to store because it’s big, but in McLean’s opinion, it’s worth it, enabling better temperature control than her at-home oven. Its speed also means her family can make their own individual pies with little time and effort. “It gives fast food a new name,” she said. “We do a make-your-own pizza night at home. I prep the pizza dough, lay it on the parchment paper — people get their own toppings, and boom. It’s done.”

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They may all have sauce, cheese, toppings and a crust, but that doesn’t mean all pizzas are created equal. Depending on who you ask, there anywhere from four to 15 or more styles of pizza represented across the country. “I think there [are] probably New York style, Chicago deep dish, Sicilian is definitely another style of pizza, and then there’s Greek and then there's more traditional Italian pizza,” Jimmy Hartwyk, owner of Skinny's Pizzeria in Manchester, said in a phone interview. Though he thinks most pizza roots can be followed back to one of the core group of styles, he said certain regions shine through with specialties like California style pizzas, which tend to feature very unique toppings (think sushi or goat cheese and bean sprouts).

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“Down south they probably have more savory meats and barbecue-type pizzas and things of that nature,” he said. “Out west you know there are a little more unconventional [styles].” Priscilla Lane-Rondeau, owner of 900 Degrees Neapolitan Pizzeria with locations in Manchester and Epping, said that often the style of pizza one was brought up eating is what one tends toward, which is how regional options create such a stronghold. “We have a lot of Greek style pizza in this area,” she said in a phone interview. “In Connecticut they have more Italian, coal-fired … but it does seem like there's different regions that have a very specific type of pizza.”

Covering the components

While sauce, cheese and toppings play a big role in differentiating the styles of pizza, if Lane-Rondeau had to pick the defining factor, she’d go with crust. “It has a lot to do with the crust, the flour, the dough,” she said. “I think there are three components, the dough, the sauce and the cheese. The ingredients are the topping on the cake, but if you’ve got those three components you can make a good pizza.” Hartwyk learned the art of pizza making in a New York style pizzeria, and continues that “concentration” of foldable, thin crust pizza slices at Skinny’s. He explained that New York style pizza is cooked right on the brick in the oven. “We keep our bricks at about 550 to 600 degrees and when we put the pizza in it comes right off the wooden peel and it goes right onto the brick,” he said. A style popular in New Hampshire is Greek style, which Hartwyk said stands apart due to two main factors — it’s cooked in a pan and uses a cheese blend with a good amount of cheddar. Using an oiled, shallow pan means the thicker crust is on the chewy side and it

Granny Smith Neapolitan pizza from 900 Degrees. Courtesy photo.

tends to be an oily pizza. This is not to be confused with Chicago deep dish pizza, which is cooked in a deeper pan. Neapolitan pizzas made at 900 Degrees mimic those found in Europe, with clean flour, tomatoes, mozzarella and a thinner crust cooked in a wood-fired oven. “[It’s] very, very thin, cooked at a super high temperature and that's more … traditional pizza like if you went to Italy you'd get something closer to that,” Hartwyk said. “Now you might add different types of cheese for some of our other pizzas,” Lane-Rondeau said. “But your basic Neapolitan pizza is the margherita,” she said. And don’t forget that style of pizza and type of pizza are not interchangeable terms — you can get a Greek New York style pizza with feta cheese, olives, onions, tomatoes and bell pepper that’s still cooked in a brick oven with a nice, thin crust.

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If your cheese-and-pepperoni routine has you feeling uninspired, check out these quirky speciality pizzas offered at local pizza shops. From unconventional sauces like alfredo or bourbon barbecue to overloaded toppings and pizza-fied versions of other foods, there’s a crazy pizza for every taste.

Getting saucy

The sauce sets the tone for the whole pizza, and while tomato-based sauce is the most popular and generally compatible, there are countless creative alternatives. Seafood pizzas will often make use of nontomato sauces — for example, the Shrimp Porto Fino from C.C. Tomatoes (Concord), made with lemon pepper cream sauce, or the Bar Harbor from Portland Pie (New Hampshire locations in Manchester and Nashua), which pairs a Pernod alfredo sauce with scallops, bacon and cheese.

Salad dressings are a common alternative to tomato sauce, especially ranch. Look at Foodee’s (Milford) Southwestern “38” Special, made with ranch dressing, sliced tomato, provolone cheese and bacon; Constantly Pizza’s (Concord and Penacook) chicken ranch club pizza with crispy chicken, bacon, tomatoes and ranch dressing; and The Franchise from Pizza 911 (Manchester and Goffstown), loaded with breaded chicken tenders, bacon, cheddar cheese and broccoli on a ranch dressing base. “We play around with different toppings


Go big or go home

An appropriate balance of toppings and flavors is a desired quality in traditional pizzas, but these extreme pizzas are taking a different route. Go all out with Pizza 911’s Onion Lovers, stacked with nothing but Spanish onions, red onions and scallions. For mushroom fans, there’s Portland Pie’s Bradbury Mountain, topped with portobello, crimini and button mushrooms. When it comes to meat, Pizza Mia doesn’t hold back; their meat-lover’s pizza, known as The Heart Stopper, has pepperoni, hamburger, sausage, ham, bacon and extra cheese. Be sure you’re up for the challenge with these extreme spicy pizzas. The Five Alarm Blaze from Pizza 911 has hot sausage, bacon, jalapenos and crushed red pepper flakes. Foodee’s owner John Bowen said Foodee’s spicy pizza, The Sizzler, is not for the faint of heart. “The one a lot of people think, ‘No, thank you’ is probably The Sizzler,” he said. “It’s about the hottest pizza around. With jalapenos, crushed red pepper and hot sausage it’s hard to eat a couple slices without a tear coming to your eye.”

There’s a pizza for that

These pizza shops are proving that you can turn almost anything into a pizza. Head

Pizza 911’s Junior Cadet pizza. Courtesy photo.

to New England’s Tap House Grille (Hooksett) for its chicken alfredo pizza, made with chicken, bacon, broccoli and alfredo sauce, or the barbecue pulled pork pizza, made with their signature bourbon barbecue sauce and garnished with green onions. Enjoy two Italian favorites in one with the sausage lasagna pizza from C.C. Tomatoes, which has Italian sausage, ricotta cheese, tomato sauce and mozzarella. In the mood for seafood? Go for Pizza Mia’s shrimp scampi, which has shrimp, garlic, olive oil, butter, capers and Asiago cheese. Constantly Pizza has a long menu of entrees-turned-pizza, including the eggplant parm, chicken caesar, steak bomb, chicken cordon bleu and pastrami bomb. Skip the Big Mac and get Pizza 911’s imitator pizza the Big Mic instead: meatball pieces, onions, lettuce and pickles on a Thousand Island base. They also have a chicken parmesan, BLT and the mac-andcheese-inspired Junior Cadet. “People sometimes think it’s a kids’ meal, but it’s actually just pizza with mac and cheese bites and french fries,” Stone said. “It was inspired by food that firemen and EMTs might want at a late night shift. I would say it’s one of our most popular nontraditional pizzas.” Craving Mexican food? Foodee’s has you covered with their taco pizza, comprised of taco beef baked with cheese on top of tomato sauce, garnished with onions, lettuce, tomatoes and tortilla chips with salsa and sour cream on the side; or their K-CD-AAAH pizza made with refried beans, nacho cheese, salsa, taco beef and jalapenos. But the Foodee’s pizza that gets the most funny looks, Bowen said, is the Reuben pizza, made with rye crust and Reuben sauce, topped with corned beef, sauerkraut, Swiss cheese and sliced dills. “People consider that the craziest,” he said. “They say, ‘A Reuben pizza? What?’ And we put it on the rye crust so everything about it is just as if you were buying the sandwich.”

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and sauces and just try out random things,” Cameron Stone, Pizza 911 manager, said. “We’ll use ranch or barbecue or Thousand Island for bases. There’s really no limit with pizza.” If you’re looking for something with a bit more kick, try Pizza Mia’s (Bedford) Thai chicken pizza, composed of a spicy peanut sauce and topped with mushrooms, red peppers and pepper jack and Asiago cheese. For an Asian-inspired pizza, go for Foodee’s General Gao’s, made with spicy plum sauce, chicken, red peppers, cheese and sesame seeds.

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HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 17


THIS WEEK

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Join Red River Theatres (11 S. Main St., Concord) for its second annual Ultimate Movie Buff Dinner & Trivia fundraiser from 5:30 to 10 p.m. The theme this year is Sci-Fi. This black-tie event will feature a five-course themed dinner provided by O Steaks & Seafood, a cash bar and a fun movie trivia contest. The first, second and third placing teams will receive prize baskets, and the winning team will be crowned the “Ultimate Movie Buff” and will receive an on-screen ad boasting their movie knowledge. Tickets cost $80 per person, or $600 for a team of eight. Visit redrivertheatres.org.

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Don’t miss the Deerfield Arts Tour on Saturday, Oct. 17, and Sunday, Oct. 18, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. On this free, selfguided tour, you’ll see work from 21 artists and artisans in 15 different studios around town. There will be an opportunity at each studio to enter a free raffle to win a gift certificate toward a purchase from any studio. Visit deerfieldartstour.beadbush.com for the list of participating studios and a tour map. Courtesy Edith Weiler. Eat: Chocolate dinner

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Saturday, Oct. 17

Canterbury Shaker Village (288 Shaker Road, Canterbury) will host a Vintage Car Show from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.. Admire automobiles from many eras, meet with the owners and other vintage car enthusiasts and experience all the tours, exhibits and shopping the Village has to offer. There will be food available for purchase. Admission to the show is free with the cost of regular admission to the Village. A rain date is set for Sunday, Oct. 18. Visit shakers.org.

Head to Dancing Lion Chocolate (917 Elm St., Manchester) on Sunday, Oct. 18, for a Harvest Chocolate Dinner at 3 or 6 p.m. Enjoy unique dishes crafted with local ingredients and paired with chocolate, such as chocolate sushi plates with slices of quail roulade “maki” and long-marinated sirloin in a chocolate lacquer box. There will be nine courses and accompanying live music. The cost is $150 per person. Visit dancinglion.us or call 625-4043.

Drink: Dessert wine

Saturday, Oct. 17

Enjoy a day of pumpkin fun at the New Hampshire Farm Museum’s (1305 White Mountain Hwy., Milton) annual Big Pumpkin Party. From 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., there will be pumpkin games and stories; horse-drawn rides around the farm; pumpkin picking, carving and painting; roasting pumpkin seeds and popcorn over the campfire; treat-hunting; and visits with farm animals. Admission costs $7 for adults and $4 for children. A free pumpkin is included. Visit farmmuseum.org.

Treat yourself at IncrediBREW’s (112 Daniel Webster Hwy., Nashua) Port Splita-Batch Night on Tuesday, Oct. 20, from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Guests will be making Chocolate Raspberry and Salted Caramel Ports. These rich dessert wines can be paired with nuts and cheese, drizzled over vanilla ice cream or enjoyed alone as an after-dinner treat. No winemaking experience is necessary to participate. The cost is $80 for 10 bottles of wine. Visit incredibrew.com.

Saturday, Oct. 17

From 1:30 to 3:30 p.m., YogaBalance Yoga Studio (135 Hooksett Road, Manchester) will be running a Yin Yoga workshop. Participants will learn the basics of Yin Yoga, which blends ancient Indian and Chinese approaches to energy work and healing. The practice involves holding postures for extended periods of time and is especially beneficial for people who suffer from tightness and discomfort in their pelvis and lower back. The cost is $30 per person. Visit yogabalance.info.

Be Merry: With dinner and a movie

Enjoy a fun night in Derry on Saturday, Oct. 17. Adults are invited to grab dinner and stroll along the streets of “1940s” Derry before attending a showing of Casablanca at the Derry Opera House (29 W. Broadway, Derry) at 7:30 p.m. Bring a receipt from a purchase at a participating Derry business for free admission to the movie. The cost is $6 for those without a receipt. Visit facebook.com/thisismyderry.

Looking for more stuff to do this week? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play and online at hipposcout.com.


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HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 19


ARTS Parrish popularity

Latest Currier show analyzes his fame ksennott@hippopress.com

More than 30,000 people attended the Currier Museum of Art’s 1999 exhibition “Maxfield Parrish: 1870-1966.” It was a record number, met only by last fall’s “M.C. Escher: Reality and Illusion,” and this was before the museum’s 2006 expansion. CEO Susan Strickler remembers lines trailing out the door that winter. Staff took turns standing outside with visitors. “One of the staff members had been trained in Disney World about ‘fun meisters’ — talking to people outside, making sure [they know] we know they’re here, and keeping them in good cheer,” Strickler said. Fifteen years later, the Currier decided to go back to Parrish, a long-time Plainfield, New Hampshire, resident, for the museum’s most recent exhibition, “Maxfield Parrish: The Power of the Print,” on view now through Jan. 10. Unlike the 1999 retrospective show that coated the entire museum, this one decorates just one room and narrows in on why Parrish was so popular, within the state and worldwide. “They did a survey in the ‘30s. He was the most-produced American artist, and the third most-produced artist in the world behind van Gogh and Cezanne. Which is pretty impressive,” Samantha Cataldo, Currier assistant curator who organized the show, said during a pre-opening gallery walk-through. “Parrish was a great artist. That’s undeniable. And he was expert in the execution of his paintings and illustrations,” Cataldo said. “He was sort of a wonder kid. … He audited classes with [famous illustrator] Howard Pyle, and Pyle allegedly said, ‘I can’t teach you anything here. Just go out and be an artist.’” One major reason for his popularity, as viewers will see walking through the exhibi-

tion, is print. “He emerged to prominence at a time when color lithography was an emerging technology, and he really embraced that,” Cataldo said. His career started in his mid-20s, when he began illustrating covers for magazines like Harper’s, Life and Time. It was the start of the golden age of American illustration, and Parrish wasted no opportunity to have art plastered on greeting cards, playing cards, posters and advertisements. When he designed a calendar on behalf of the Edison Mazda Lamp division of General Electric, about 20 million calendars were produced between 1917 and 1932, with an estimated 7 billion advertising messages delivered, according to GE. Candy manufacturer Clarence Crane also commissioned the artist to create a painting for the company’s chocolate boxes, with large print order forms placed inside. In a year, Parrish’s royalties exceeded $50,000 when the average yearly income was less than $2,000. When “Daybreak” came out in 1922, it was an estimated 1 in 4 Americans had some version of it. The cobalt blue he used so much in his work is often called “Parrish blue.” The exhibition contains about 75 pieces, with three paintings, the rest print, which come from Currier, Hood Museum of Art and private collections. Cataldo said Parrish was popular because of his style — it was incredibly realistic but with fantastical and idyllic landscapes, like real life only better. Plus, he lived to age 96, and thus had time to get really good at it. Of course, New Hampshirites likely most appreciate Parrish’s use of New Hampshire scenery, even if they were not exact depictions, but rather, landscape composites. “We think that our visitors who saw the retrospective exhibition 15 years ago will enjoy returning to see more and learn more about Parrish, and we hope to introduce Parrish to a new generation as well,” Cataldo said.

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HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 20

munity Music School Creative Studio: Make Your Own Calendar: Saturday, Dec. 12, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Admission: $12 for adults, $10 for seniors, $9 for students, $5 for youth, free for children younger than 13, free admission Saturdays 10 a.m. to noon for NH residents Contact: 669-6144, currier.org

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ARTS Susan Strickler retires The Currier Museum of Art director and CEO announced recently that she’ll retire in June 2016. Her tenure as director will be the longest in the Currier’s 86-year history. She talked with the Hippo about closing in on her 20-year reign. Two decades strong: I’ve been here 20 years. I remember when I was first hired, Kim Zachos [board president], who was a great mentor at the time, said ‘Oh, you know, we like having directors around for like 10 years.’ But then [when 10 years arrived], he was encouraging me to stay on longer. We were in the process of thinking about the expansion. … At that point, we all wanted to make sure the whole team would be together because it’s quite an undertaking. … One reason I was so attracted to stay here for 20 years is because when we did the addition, we had a new museum with new challenges. Taking the job: I had thought long and hard whether I wanted to be a museum director. Because it becomes very much a lifestyle. … I had been a curator for a good 20 years. I’d had some administrative experience in various museums. … I went away to school for arts administration. I came back and said, I’m going to give it a shot. … When I saw this museum, I thought this was the right place. And I never looked back. Museum potential: I like the nimbleness here. You can get things done. And in this state, I don’t think I realized the impact a single institution can have. … I saw there was a tremendous upside potential. … First of all, we had a wonderful collection. The building that existed was really solid, and the Frank Lloyd Wright House was a tremendous asset. The school was great, and we were on the cusp of buying the former Pearl Manor [where the art school resides now]. Why expansion worked: A dedicated board of trustees. A terrific staff. I can’t say how disruptive closing a museum for 20 months is, but they were all excited about the other side of the expansion. But it’s the dedication and the donors who came through for us. … Whenever you undertake something like that, you can’t underestimate how many contribute. Community outreach: There are things I have found really gratifying. … Trying to make [the museum] more a place for discussion about community issues. … Museums have been chal-

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• Open studio tours: Tis the season for open studios and art tours, and there’s more to see this weekend. The Deerfield Arts Tour (deerfieldartstour.beadbush.com/ tour-map/) highlights 21 artists and artisans in 15 open studio locations (and several selected students from the Deerfield Community School, according to the website). The tour, which occurs Saturday, Oct. 17, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday, Oct. 18, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., is self-led, and you can plan your route by downloading a map via the website. Rosemary Conroy also hosts an open studio event in her woodsy art-making place, Studio Buteo, in Weare on Saturday, Oct. 17, from noon to 4 p.m., and Sunday, Oct. 18, from noon to 4 p.m. The wildlife artist will have many new pieces on display, including portraits of ravens, bears and owls. A percentage of sales benefits the Piscataquog Land Conservancy. For directions, visit rosemaryconroyart.com or call 315-9060. • Grants and donations: Local institutions have been getting some financial love from community members and former students. The New Hampshire Institute of Art just announced it received a $100,000 bequest from Lucinda Biese last spring, which will go toward student scholarships. Biese was an NHIA student (at the time when it was the Manchester Institute of Arts and Sciences) and also donated more than 200 art-related books to the library, with subjects ranging from scholarly art history to how-to. Southern New Hampshire University’s McIninch Art Gallery was also awarded two grants for 2015 and 2016 exhibition programming — one, $10,000, given by the McIninch Foundation, will be used for an exhibition featuring nationally renowned

“Opening Up to Possibility” by Rosemary Conroy. Courtesy image.

photographers Laura Letinsky and Tanja Marcuse. The second, given by the NH Charitable Foundation, will be used to support “Identity Shared,” which addresses the subject of identity and acceptance in the LGBTQ community. • New framing studio in the works: Grace Burr opens a new framing studio and art gallery called Creative Framing Solutions on Hanover Street in Manchester this October. In addition to framing artists’ work, the business will rent space to artists to hold exhibitions. There’s a grand opening event planned for Saturday, Oct. 24; visit creativeframingsolutions.com for more information. • Watson Park public art: Manchester artists Debbie Curtin and Anthony Williams are in the midst of a public art project. They’re painting a 9-by-5-foot kiosk that educates the public about the importance of the watershed area, according to an email from Curtin. They expect it to be completed soon. — Kelly Sennott

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See Shrek: The Musical, Jr. Where: Concord City Auditorium, 2 Prince St. When: Friday, Oct. 16, at 7 p.m.; Saturday, Oct. 17, at 2 p.m.; Sunday, Oct. 18, at 2 p.m. Tickets: $15 Contact: communityplayersofconcord.org Benefit concert: The Jordan T-W Trio perform Saturday, Oct. 17, at 7 p.m. to support CTP

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Jaxon Letendre, who plays Shrek. Courtesy photo.

always an issue. But I just said no. We have to spend the money to make Shrek look like Shrek. … We’re still working on Pinocchio’s growing nose.” The company has saved money by borrowing sets and costumes from the Rochester Opera House and digging through props and costumes from the Community Players of Concord. Dragon will be performed by Katharine Demers, who will wear a Maleficent-like costume and stand at the head of a 20-foot dragon piece that requires eight kids to maneuver, courtesy of the St. Paul’s School’s Nutcracker production. There was high demand for this show among participants, Braz said, with nearly 80 at auditions. She thinks adults especially like Shrek for the storyline. “It’s the message of, accept yourself for who you are, and don’t feel pressure to be something you’re not,” Braz said. Kids probably like this too, but they especially enjoy the slapstick humor. “The kids like the song that has all the farts in it,” Braz said. The younger kids said they enjoy the extra music and character backstories. “[The musical] tells us what happened to Fiona before she was older. And they told us about Shrek when he was younger,” said Madi Barton, 12, who plays young Fiona. Some of the older actors have been performing with the theater group since they were very young. They were a little more familiar with the musical beforehand — Demers said she’d watched it on Netflix “a million times,” and Letendre had been in a Palace Theatre production. They think it’s even funnier than the movie. “I’ve been going here since I was 8 years old,” said Shannon Mullen, a junior who plays older Fiona. “[The musical] is really funny with a lot more physical comedy.” “It’s cooler than animation because with animation you can make [characters] do anything. But we have to figure out how to do that onstage,” Demers said.

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From a synthetic Shrek head and homemade Pinocchio nose to a 20-foot-long dragon costume from China, the Children’s Theatre Project is going all out for this year’s fall production, Shrek: The Musical, Jr. The show is a celebration of the theater company’s 20th anniversary, and Director Karen Braz even extended the age requirement to ensure this year’s turnout included a top-notch collection of experienced actors. The 40-member cast, which hits the Concord Auditorium stage this weekend, ranges in age from 8 to 18. The finished product has been a long time in the making. The original plan was to produce Shrek in 2014, but board members decided to put it off a year and make it part of the big 2015 bonanza — plus, they were spent from 2013’s Beauty and the Beast, and they didn’t want to do this musical half-heartedly. Because it’s no small feat to do it well. From pricy production rights and elaborate fairy tale costumes to the set requirements — the story occurs in various scenes, including a forest, the town of Duloc, Fiona’s tower and the castle — you need time, manpower and proper budgeting to make it work. Working with kids adds another tough element. Auditions occurred at the end of the school year to give them an entire summer to get ready. “Musicals are always a much bigger deal. You have the added music and dance that have to go into the show,” Braz said. “It’s a lot.” But, if a recent rehearsal at the Community Players’ Studio was any indication, cast and crew will be ready come showtime. Parents and volunteers were on site placing final paint colors on sets, and Shrek, played by Jaxon Letendre, was sitting for the first go of his full green make-up. Kids, in between eating dinner and playing outside before dark, moved seamlessly through lines, songs and dances during the night’s run-through. “There’s an expectation people have of seeing these very iconic characters they know so well on the stage,” Braz said. “When we talked about Shrek, we thought, did we really need to get the headpiece you paint green? … We’re a community theater, and budget is

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• Benedict Cumberbatch, live! Well, sort of. The Peterborough Players Theatre (55 Hadley Road, Peterborough) screens a live broadcast of Hamlet from London’s Barbican Theatre on Thursday, Oct. 15, at 2 p.m. The Shakespeare play follows a man forced to avenge his father’s death in the midst of a war, which threatens his sanity and the security of the state. In the title role is Benedict Cumberbatch, star of the BBC Sherlock series and the film The Imitation Game, for which he was nominated for an Oscar. The London production has been sold out since its August debut. Screening tickets are $20, available by calling 924-7585, visiting playerstix.com. If you miss this one, there’s an encore screening Sunday, Oct. 25, at 1 p.m., in Peterborough, and also one at The Music Hall, 28 Chestnut St., Portsmouth, the same time ($19). • Home stretch of Beethoven sonatas: Local pianist Gregg Pauley continues his quest to perform all Beethoven’s piano sonatas in three years with a concert this Friday, Oct. 16, at 7:30 p.m., at the Concord Community Music School Recital Hall, 23 Wall St., Concord. The show, “Beethoven’s Humor,” features pieces that demonstrate the composer’s wit and sense of fun, including Rondo a capriccio, Op. 129: “Rage over a lost penny.” The program will be followed by a reception with artful chocolate courtesy of Dancing Lion Chocolate. Pauley’s Beethoven Project began in 2013 when he set out to perform the “Everest” of piano literature. With only two more performances after this — “The Late Period” Feb. 5 and “A State of Wonder” May 6 — this concert represents the start of his final stretch. Visit greggpauley.com to learn more. • About addiction: Outside the Wire:

Live screening of Benedict Cumberbatch in Hamlet at Peterborough Players Theatre. Courtesy image.

Addiction Performance Project presents Long Day’s Journey Into Night by Eugene O’Neill this Thursday, Oct. 15, at 5:30 p.m., at the Capitol Center for the Arts, 44 S. Main St., Concord, 2251111, ccanh.com. The show stars House of Cards star Maryann Plunkett and consists of dramatic readings of the play’s third act. The play describes the struggle of Mary Tyrone, a woman who abuses prescription painkillers and relapses into a full-blown morphine addiction; it’s widely believed to be an autobiographical play, as O’Neill’s own mother Ella struggled with the addiction most of her life. The participatory event is intended to break down the stigma associated with addiction and promote a healthy dialogue, according to a press release. This is a Spotlight Cafe performance; tickets are $10. — Kelly Sennott

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Goffstown hosts annual Giant Pumpkin Weigh-off and Regatta By Angie Sykeny

asykeny@hippopress.com

FEATURES 26 Kiddie pool Family activities this week. 28 The Gardening Guy Advice on your outdoors. 29 Treasure Hunt There’s gold in your attic. 30 Car Talk Click and Clack give you car advice. 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.

Fifteen years ago, Jim Beauchemin, a member of New Hampshire Giant Pumpkin Growers Association, was trying to figure out how he and fellow growers could get one last use out of their pumpkins instead of just throwing them away at the end of the season. The result was the Goffstown Giant Pumpkin Weigh-off and Regatta, which this year will take place on Saturday, Oct. 17, and Sunday, Oct. 18, in the downtown area. Main events include a largest pumpkin competition, a pumpkin cook-off, a talent contest, a 10K road race and, of course, the regatta — racing giant pumpkin boats in the Piscataquog River. “Goffstown Main Street Program was looking to create a [community event], and I came up with this idea,” Beauchemin said. “I thought of turning pumpkins into boats and racing them down the river. Well, we gave it a try, and 500 people came out that first year to see pumpkins float down a river.” The weekend kicks off on SaturGoffstown Giant Pumpkin Weigh-off and Regatta Where: Downtown Goffstown and the Piscataquog River When: Saturday, Oct. 17, and Sunday, Oct. 18. Weigh-off is Saturday at 11 a.m.; Regatta is on Sunday at 3 p.m. Cost: Free admission. Some activities have a fee. Visit: goffstownmainstreet.org

Courtesy photo.

day at 9 a.m. with a small parade in which the competing pumpkin growers will caravan into town with their giant pumpkins. The weigh-off will begin at 11 a.m., and there are usually at least two dozen pumpkins in the running. Last year’s winning pumpkin was from Nashua and weighed 1,313 pounds. Stop by the town common at 1 p.m. for Goffstown’s Great Talent Competition. Geared toward kids and teens, the competition showcases young singers, dancers, jugglers and others. Judges will rate each performance using scorecards. The contestant with the highest score will be named the winner, but in the case of a tie, it’s up to the audience to decide. Judging for the pumpkin cook-off will begin at 2 p.m. on the town common. All submissions must include pumpkins or pumpkins seeds in some way. Winners will be named in four categories: appetizers/breads, entrees, desserts and kid-made (for contestants ages 12 and under). “You’d have to see it. There’s things you’ve never heard of before,

but they show up,” Beauchemin said. “Pumpkin soups, pumpkin whoopie pies, pumpkin cookies, that sort of thing.” Sunday will commence with the Goffstown Pumpkin Regatta 10K Run at 8:30 a.m., followed by the Kids Pumpkin Patch Relay at 10:15 a.m., both of which are new additions this year. The 10K will launch in Goffstown Village, loop around Glen Lake via the Goffstown Rail Trail, then finish on Mill Street next to Village Trestle tavern, where runners can convene for a post-race party. At the pumpkin relay, kids are invited to form teams and race wagons full of pumpkins up and down the street. Don’t miss the giant pumpkin drop at noon, when a crane will drop a 1,000-pound pumpkin from about 70 feet in the air into the town pool. Activities will begin at the river at 2 p.m., with the 50/50 mini pumpkin race. It works exactly like a rubber duck race; for $5, you can claim a mini pumpkin, about the size of an orange, to contend in the river race.

The owner of the winning pumpkin wins half of the proceeds. The most anticipated part of the weekend, the regatta, will begin at 3 p.m. The boat captains are delegated representatives from various groups, including the “original four” — the board of selectmen, the fire and police departments and Goffstown Main Street Program — which have had a boat every year since the first regatta in 2000. Many captains will wear costumes and decorate their boats accordingly, such as Spongebob on a Krabby Patty or a Star Wars Clone on a spacecraft. The race will begin with the firing of a cannon. Captains must use kayak paddles to navigate around buoys and reach the finish line. The course is about 100 yards. It’s a Goffstown Pumpkin Regatta tradition to have a surprise finale come down the river directly after the race. “No one knows what it will be,” Beauchemin said. “We’ve had a ‘sharknado’ appearance where a bunch of kayaks decorated to look like sharks came down and circled the pumpkins. We’ve had a tug boat come down and chase the pumpkin boats around and try to tip them over. One year, we had Vikings on a Viking ship with T-shirt cannons. We’ve seen it all.” Other festivities that weekend include pumpkin bowling, pumpkin catapulting, a kids’ pumpkin hunt, pony rides, hot air balloon rides, a DJ, food vendors, an art show and more. Most activities and vendors will be available on Saturday from morning until 4 p.m. and on Sunday beginning at noon.

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The Culinary Playground (16 Manning St., Derry) will have a cooking class on Saturday, Oct.17, from 10 a.m. to noon, as part of its Sweet Saturdays series. Kids ages 6 through 10 can learn to make Halloween whoopie pies. The cost for the class is $40. Visit culinary-playground.com or call 339-1664. Go trick-or-treating at Charmingfare Farm (774 High St., Candia) on Saturday, Oct. 17, or Sunday, Oct. 18, between 10 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. This trick-or-treat event is for kids who don’t want to be frightened but still want to wear their costume and have a fun Halloween adventure. There will be six attractions where kids can collect candy and do an activity, including a hay bale maze, a pony ride, a tractor train ride and more. Tickets cost $19 per person. Visit visitthefarm. com or call 483-5623. Join Lil’ Iguana Children’s Safety Foundation for the Halloween Boo-Tacular at Crowne Plaza Hotel (2 Somerset Pkwy., Nashua) on Sunday, Oct. 18, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Enjoy snacks, meet-and-greets with storybook and action characters, a trick-ortreat trail, a dance party and various activities provided by area businesses. Kids are encouraged to wear a Halloween costume to the event. Tickets cost $25 per person. Visit liliguanausa.org/halloween or call 881-9805 for more information or to purchase tickets.

Fall family fun

Head to the Manchester Community Music School (2291 Elm St., Manchester) on Saturday, Oct. 17, for a Fall Fun Festival. From 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., there will be music and dance, a craft and food fair, trick-or-treating, a costume contest and parade, face painting, pumpkin decorating and more. Tickets cost $5 at the door. Admission is free for adults accompanied by a child and for children ages 2 and

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under. All proceeds will benefit the tuition assistance program at the Music School. Visit mcmusicschool.org or call 644-4548. Saturday, Oct. 17, is Windham’s Annual Harvest Fest at Griffin Park (101 Range Road). The fest will begin with a doggie costume parade at noon, followed by various family fun activities like games and face painting from 1 to 3 p.m. A kids’ costume parade will be held at 2:45 p.m., and trick-or-treating in the park from 3 to 4 p.m. Don’t miss the juggler performance from 3 to 4 p.m. Visit windhamnewhampshire.com/departments/ recreation-department or call 965-1208.

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Stop by the Massabesic Audubon Center (26 Deerneck Road, Auburn) for an Autumn Nature Celebration on Saturday, Oct. 17, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. This all-ages event includes live animals, a bonfire, hands-on activities, crafts, live music, vendors featuring natural products, food for purchase and demonstrations through the day. The cost is $15 per family at the door. Call 648-2045 or visit nhaudubon.org. Learn how animals survive in the wild at Fishways Fundays “Scratch, Bite or Run” event on Saturday, Oct. 17, from 12:30 to 2 p.m., at Amoskeag Fishways Learning and Visitors Center (4 Fletcher St., Manchester). Kids ages 4 and 5 and their families are invited for an afternoon of games, crafts and outdoor exploring to help them understand what special features and behaviors animals use to defend themselves. The cost is $8 per family, and advance registration is required. Visit amoskeagfishways.org or call 626-3474.

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Mayor Lozeau with costumed kids at last year’s event. Courtesy photo.

The second annual Gate City Fall Festival and Parade will be held in Nashua Saturday, Oct. 17, with a new float competition and a new rule — anyone marching with a political campaign is required to host a free game or activity at the festival. That way, they “add more to the day than just a bunch of political signs,” said Carolyn Mortellaro, event coordinator. The parade will begin at 10 a.m. at Main Street and will end at Holman Stadium for an afternoon of free family activities, a children’s costume contest, refreshments, live entertainment and more. “It was really [Mayor Donnalee Lozeau’s] vision,” Mortellaro said. “[She thought] it would be wonderful if we had a Main Street parade where kids could dress up and have a fun fall festival. Last year there were 52 floats and 217 kids in costume who marched.” The parade will launch from 300 Main St., proceed north to Concord Street, turn left onto Manchester Street, then left onto Sargent’s Avenue before concluding at Holman Stadium. Participants will include the fire and police departments with their vehicles, the Nashua dog park and Humane Society, dance and theater groups, Nashua and Nashua West Rotary Clubs, Fright Kingdom and many others. Inspired by the creativity of the floats at last year’s parade, the event committee decided to add a float competition. A judge will be watching for the best float at the parade and will announce the winner at the festival. The winner will receive a $500 donation in their name for the charity of their choice, or, if the winning float belongs to a nonprofit, they will receive the prize. At the stadium after the parade, kids partic-

ipating in the costume contest will have their own mini parade where judges will choose the winning costumes in four categories: spookiest, scariest, silliest and most creative. “Last year, we had a Bride of Frankenstein, a [Maleficent], a girl in a dress with a red parasol shaped like a leaf, and there was the toilet [costume]. That kid was so funny,” Mortellaro said. The festival will have live music on stage from local bands the New Englanders and the Cow Hampshire Folk as well as concession stands provided by the Nashua Silver Knights. There will be around 30 free activities for families and kids. Enjoy fall favorites like hayrides, pumpkin-decorating, pony rides, a Ferris wheel and a petting zoo. New this year are the safari rides, which are batteryoperated safari animals for kids to ride. Try your hand at the ring toss, bean bag toss and three-legged race, or check out the carnival classics like face-painting, caricaturists, balloon animals and the photo booth. Kids can even bring their teddy bear or another stuffed animal for a checkup at the teddy bear clinic. “We want to see this [event] grow and become a family tradition for the Greater Nashua community,” Mortellaro said. “The [Winter] Holiday Stroll has had great success and has grown tremendously, and with [the Fall Festival and Parade] celebrated in the prettiest season we have in New England, I think it has every potential [to be as big].” 2nd Annual Gate City Fall Festival and Parade Where: Parade begins at 300 Main St., Nashua. Festival held at Holman Stadium, 67 Amherst St., Nashua. When: Saturday, Oct. 17, parade begins at 10 a.m.; festival runs from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Cost: Free Visit: gonashua.com

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Now’s the time to plant bulbs By Henry Homeyer

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After a long winter like this past one, I am always grateful for my spring bulbs. Many of them pop up and bloom on schedule, no matter how cold and snowy the winter was. I’ve been planting bulbs around my property since the early 1970s, and some of them are still flowering each spring. Others run out of energy and disappear with time. If you haven’t done so yet, now is the time to get some and plant them. First, let’s look at the basics: what makes a bulb plant survive and flourish? Decent soil. It must be well drained. Soggy soil rots bulbs. If you have a heavy clay soil, it will stay wet and is not a good place for bulbs unless you add compost to the planting hole to help it drain better. Planting on a hillside helps, too, as water will drain off a hillside. Bulb flowers take shade better than sunloving perennials. Growing up we had hundreds of daffodils that bloomed along a woodland path behind the house. The leaves got sunshine and re-charged the bulbs before the trees were fully leafed out. Of course if you have plenty of sunshine, all the better. Some people have had great luck planting daffodils in a grassy field or lawn. I’ve done that, but find that the bulb foliage is still green and producing food for the bulb when the lawn needs to be cut. If you cut the foliage too early, your bulbs won’t perform as well. I like to plant daffodils in flower beds between big clumps of hostas. They can bloom early, and then their dying foliage is hidden by the hosta leaves. Some gardeners dig a little hole for each bulb, but that seems like too much work for me, even if you have one of those tools that are made for digging small round holes. I’d rather use my shovel to dig one oversized hole, one big enough for the 25 bulbs or more. For large bulbs like daffodils or tulips a hole 24 to 36 inches long and 18 to 24 inches wide is fine for 25 bulbs. For the big bulbs I dig a hole 6 to 8 inches deep. Then I add compost and some organic fertilizer or “bulb booster” fertilizer and stir it into the bottom of the hole. I place the bulbs on the improved soil, pointy end up, and cover with more improved soil. What about those hungry, bulb-stealing squirrels? They don’t eat daffodils, as they are vaguely poisonous. They may dig a few up to see what you planted, but they won’t eat them. “Yech,” they say, if they inadvertently take a bite. When I interviewed the White House gardener in 1999, he said they planted thousands of tulips each year, despite the rampant squirrels. He said they planted the tulips and covered them with soil, then put down a layer of chick-

Winter aconite. Courtesy photo.

en wire, then more soil. Oh, and he said they fed the squirrels all winter with cracked corn. Squirrels that are not hungry are less likely to try to steal your bulbs. Squirrel welfare. Some people have great luck with tulips coming back, but I consider them annuals. In general, I find that the second year only half the tulips come back to bloom, the third year only half of those come back and so on. But I often plant 100 tulips, all one color for a blast of color in spring. I particularly like the tall ones that bloom a bit later. Maureen is one of my favorite tulips. She is a 28-inch-tall tulip, a creamy white that blooms in May. Menton blooms at the same time and is rose-pink with apricot-pink petal edges and is 26 inches tall. Wow. They make a nice mix. I have already ordered 100 of each! That way I’ll have too many flowers and can give away big bunches of them when they bloom. If you consider your tulips annuals, you can plant them in your vegetable garden and pull them after blooming. Then you can plant tomatoes or something else there. And if you have a deer problem, you can easily fence a small plot for 100 tulips with 4 poles and some bird netting. If you want to mix them into your flower gardens, plant them where you’ll plant annual flowers. When the tulips are done blooming, it will be time to plant annuals. The little bulbs are great early harbingers of spring, particularly snowdrops. Snowdrops are small white globes on 4-inch stems. Mine fight through frozen soil in early March. Some years (when we have deep snow) I shovel snow off the hillside where they appear so they can bloom on schedule. Each year I have more, so now, after decades, I have a thousand or more. Other early bloomers include winter aconite, a small upward-looking six-petaled brilliant yellow flower. Another favorite of mine is glory-of-the-snow. This is a nice blue, with a yellow eye. It blooms shortly after the snowdrops in April. I can’t praise the spring bulbs enough. I consider them essential for my well-being. So order some, or go to your garden center and buy some. You’ll be glad in a few months. Visit Gardening-Guy.com.


IN/OUT TREASURE HUNT

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I have an item that has been in my family for as long as I can remember, going back to the 1950s. It is a brass train whistle about 7 inches tall. It says “Mfg by Kinsley Mfg Co. Bridgeport Ct.” It has what appears to be a serial number of 53663. Anything you could tell me about this would be appreciated.

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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).

Traditions, 418 Shaker Road, Canterbury. Visit oldwaystraditions.net. • HOLIDAY FAIR Baked goods, crafts, kids' activities. Halloween, Thanksgiving and Christmas items. Luncheon from noon to 2 p.m. Sat., Oct. 17, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. First United Methodist Church, 961 Valley St., Manchester. • THE BIG PUMPKIN PARTY Enjoy pumpkin games and stories, roast pumpkin seeds over the fire and pick a pumpkin to carve or paint at the carving station. Sat., Oct. 17, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. New Hampshire Farm Museum,

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A train whistle is a signaling device used to warn people that a train is coming.The older steam whistles such as yours were used with a pull-cord or a lever. Kinsley was just one of a few manufacturers of this type of whistle. This style of whistle seems to be earlier than the 1950s. Judging by the style, I would be more comfortable saying it’s from the late 1800s to the early 1900s. It’s tough to tell from the photo, but it should also have four air chambers (for sound). It should be brass and the serial number you’re reading just identifies the item for the manufacturer. Any antique train memorabilia is collectible today and usually very easy to sell to collectors, especially actual train pieces like your whistle. I’m not sure how your family came to have this, but it’s an interesting piece of history.

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Rt. 125 White Mountain Hwy., Milton. Admission is $7 for adults, $4 for children ages 4 to 17, which includes a free pumpkin for each attendee. Visit farmmuseum.org. • ROCHESTER MAIN STREET ZOMBIE WALK Line up at the Union Street lot to make your way as a zombie horde toward the Common for a bonfire, brains and "Monster Mash" with DJ John Cox. Friday, Oct. 23, at 7 p.m. Line up at 6:30 p.m. DJ starts at 8:45 p.m. Union Street lot, Rochester. Visit rochestermainstreet.org.

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IN/OUT CAR TALK

Get inherited car checked out the same as you would a used car Dear Car Talk: I am a recent widower. My 22-year-old granddaughter is coming to live with me. Her dad (my son) gave her his 2004 Ford Focus. It By Ray Magliozzi has 106,000 miles on it. He did the basics, e.g., changed the oil, bought new tires, got brakes and an alignment. It has the original plugs, and the transmission has never been serviced. What else does this vehicle need to keep it safe and serviceable? It runs fine now. Thanks. — John Well, you don’t say if your son did all the scheduled maintenance on this car during the time he owned it. Ask him. If he did, that’s great. In any case, the best thing to do is to take it to a mechanic you trust, and have it checked out — as if you were buying it as a used car. If you don’t have a mechanic you like, enter your ZIP code and do a search at www.mechanicsfiles.com. That’s a

database of mechanics that other listeners and readers of ours use, trust and recommend. Anyway, your mechanic will check all the basics — belts, hoses, water pump, brakes, steering, exhaust and suspension components. He should be able to let you know if there’s anything unsafe, or anything that needs immediate attention. I’d also ask him to see if he can remove the spark plugs. If they’re original, they might never have been unscrewed from the cylinder head. And over a long time (like 106,000 miles), they can get stuck in there and basically fuse themselves in the cylinder-head threads. Then when you need to change them, you won’t be able to get them out. That’s something I’d want a mechanic to do, because he’ll have a feel for how hard he can push on a tight or sticky plug before it’s likely to break. You don’t want to try that yourself. If the car checks out pretty well, and the plugs are removable, then you just need to follow the maintenance schedule from here on out.

Manchester Adult and Community Learning Fall Semester 2015

Calling all adults, out-of-school youth, in-school youth, businesses, and enrichment seekers. Come check out the new programs that MACL has to offer. You’ve asked and we listened. For the first time adult and community learning will be offering HiSET prep classes for those who need that extra practice and guidance. Also, for our business community we are running two classes that are sure to give your employees’ skills and productivity a boost. Sign your employees up for Microsoft Office in the Workplace and Workplace Skills Training today!

All Classes will be held at Central High School in the Practical Arts Building 3rd floor. One night a week. October 20th October 22nd • Conversational Spanish $135 15wks • Business Math $135 15wks • Pre-Algebra $135 15 wks October 26th

October 21st • Workplace skills Training $50 4 wks • Microsoft Office for the workplace $150 15wks • HiSET Prep Classes $150 15 wks Manchester School District Students please call for special in-school rates. Coming February 1st 2016

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In the back of the owner’s manual, there’s a mileage schedule that tells you when to do what. For instance, at 120,000 miles, it tells you to change the timing belt. I’d recommend that you do that now so your granddaughter doesn’t get stranded when it breaks. Then she’ll hit you up for a ride home in the middle of the night in addition to a new timing belt. Dear Car Talk: Please settle an argument between my housemate and I: Should you fill your tank from the side opposite the pump — i.e., stretch the pump hose across your car? I say you should not do this. — Michael Well, to settle the first argument, it should be “my housemate and me,” Mike. Unfortunately, you lost the second argument, too. If the hose reaches the fuel filler neck and “seats” in there well enough to allow you to activate the fuel pump, you can pump away. Many modern gas pumps still use a

rubber bellows around the filler nozzle that seals the filler hole and captures gasoline vapors, rather than letting them escape into the atmosphere. Those rubber bellows are being phased out, but there are still a lot of them around. On those pumps, if that seal is not formed, the pump won’t activate — and you’ll be standing there listening to the handle go “click, click” without pumping any gas. But if your car is narrow enough, and you park close enough to a pump that you can reach the hose across your trunk and fit it comfortably in the filler neck, you have our blessing, and the blessing of the petroleum industrial complex, Michael.

Used cars can be a great bargain, and reliable, too! Find out why by ordering Click and Clack’s pamphlet “How to Buy a Great Used Car: Secrets Only Your Mechanic Knows.” Send $4.75 (check or money order) to Car Talk/Used Car, 628 Virginia Drive, Orlando, FL 32803.

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IN THIS SECTION

32 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 BJ Hickman, magician.

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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35 JOB LISTINGS

THIS WEEK IN JOBS / CAREERS

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

This week’s Hippo includes plenty of options for a job or career change. • Pitco (Page 31), a manufacturer of kitchen equipment, is seeking employees to work on the third shift of its Bow/Concord plant. • The new N.H. Jobs Corps Center in Manchester (Page 31) is seeking instructors in manufacturing, facilities management, and electrical work. • Wayne J. Griffin Electric, Inc. (Page 32), a wellknown regional contractor, is seeking Electricians and Forepersons with valid NH and MA licensing. • Want to get skills and increase your earning power? Career-changing courses are offered by the School of Mechanical Trades. (Page 32).

N.H. JOB FACTS: Local unemployment rates: • Concord.....................2.9% • Dover......................... 2.9% • Laconia..................... 3.2% • Manchester...............3.5% • Nashua......................4.1% • Portsmouth...............2.4% • Rochester..................3.2% • Statewide.................. 3.6% Source: N.H. Department of Employment Security statistics for August 2015.

We are an 100% Employee Owned Company and offer competitive salary and a comprehensive benefits plan to include, medical, dental, life and vision insurance, STD, LTD, 401(k) plan, holiday, vacation and sick pay.

• Hi-tech customer service your thing? Consider Verizon Wireless (Page 32), which is hiring associates for locations throughout N.H. • FedEx (Page 32) is anticipating this year’s holiday rush by actively recruiting part-time package sorters at N.H. locations. • Merrimack Street Volvo (Page 33), a familyowned dealership and one of the oldest in the state, is seeking their next great salesperson. • If you’d like a job on the slopes, attend the Winter Job Festival (Page 33) at Loon Mountain Resort on Saturday, Oct. 17. • The local American Red Cross (Page 33) chapter is offering scholarships for a Nurse Assistant Training program.

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• Manchester Community College (Page 33) is promoting their upcoming open house on Thursday, Oct. 22, as well as the school’s degree and certificate programs in education. • With the holiday delivery crunch looming, UPS (Page 34) continues to recruit part-time package handlers throughout the area. • The New Hampshire Technical College in Concord (page 34) invites applicants to attend an open house on Sunday, Oct. 25. • Healthcare professionals: check out a huge Healthcare Job Fair (Page 34) from Caring Nurses Staffing Agency and HireNurses.com on Friday, Oct. 23 at the Puritan Conference Center in Manchester. HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 31


CAREERS

What kind of education or you to do a show, whether it’s at training did you need for this job? a school assembly program, or a It was kind of learn on your fair or festival or even a birthday own, as you go, from other magiparty. … At least in my case, I’m cians. I went to Keene State not a big star and I don’t expect College [and] didn’t really know anyone to treat me that way. what I wanted to do. ... I got interested in broadcasting at the local What do you wish you’d college radio station and eventuknown at the beginning of your Courtesy photo. ally two or three other stations. career? But I gave up my real job in radio broadcasting I wish I had known and not feared that one about 20 years ago to do magic full time and it could make a living at what I enjoy doing keeps me busy. … I’ve attended several con- most. I wish I had given up my real job sooner. BJ Hickman is a magician who performs throughout New England. He’s from the ferences and conventions and training sessions Manchester area originally. The Hippo caught up with him by phone between and [am] always learning new tricks. What is your typical at-work uniform? stage performances at the Deerfield Fair. Well, that changes over the season to a How did you find your current job? jacket and tie to just a shirt and tie depending Explain in one sentence what in between shows, and it’s one of my favorite I’m proud to say I’ve never worked a day on where the show is and what the event is. your current job is. places to perform because I grew up in Manin my life. I’ve always enjoyed performing Half the time, I’m working out of the house, I’m a magician traveling most- chester and there’s a lot of people that go to magic shows, and when I was in radio broad- [so] it’s just jeans and a T-shirt. ly throughout New England and this fair from the Manchester area. casting I really enjoyed that. When a lot of occasionally in other parts of the country with people are hoping the day goes by faster, I What was the first job you ever had? an audience participation-comedy-fun magic How did you get interested in this field? wish it would slow down because I just enjoy I cleaned up the Fanny Farmer candy store show for all ages. Like a lot of little boys ... I got interested every minute of it. … I’m very into concen- in downtown Manchester. and there used to be a little magic shop, Jack58929 trating on advertising and promoting. … I — Ryan Lessard How long have you worked there? Booth’s Magic Shop in downtown Manches-HippoPress Manchester found out a long time ago, there’s a lot of marI have been a magician most of my life, ter. I learned a few tricks there and my dad keting and communications which Five favorites 1/4 Page: 4.69”(w) involved, x 5.34”(h) since I was 10 or 12 years old. … When I first introduced me to some other magicians in the Favorite Book: Autobiography of is what I studied in school. started doing shows [it was] for other kids in local area. A couple of them took me under09/03-9/24/15 Harry Houdini school. I stuck with it and have done mag- their wing and let me attend their shows topmc What’s the best piece of work-related Favorite Movie: Houdini (1953) ic shows for 40 or 45 years at a lot of fairs work as a helper. Eventually, I started doing a Favorite Music: 1970s oldies advice anyone’s ever given you? and festivals. I’m speaking to you now at the lot of shows on my own and have done proThe best advice I’ve gotten is to be a regu- Favorite Food: Lobster parking lot of the Deerfield Fair, because I’m grams throughout New England. lar guy and work with people when they book Favorite thing about NH: Opportunity

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for deliveringThe The Hippo, the following routes are available: • largest Reliable van, weekly newspaper in Wed/Thurs - Hippo Runs minivan or Portsmouth / Durham truck with cap New England! Northern Seacoast Area • Proof of insurance YOU WILL NEED:

• Flexible and • Approximately 20 hours-aSpecial week, Runs Friendly personality Mon/Tues/Fri Nashua/Salem • Honest work ethic Windham/Pelham $10 per hour to start.

Contact • MustDoug haveLadd, good,CIrculation verifiable Director 603-625-1855 Ext 135 driving or emailrecord. resume/cover letter to

dladd@hippopress.com • Must be available on Wed/Thurs.

• Veterans/Retirees encouraged to apply! Contact: Doug Ladd at HippoPress 603-625-1855 x135 or email resume to: dladd@hippopress.com

103434

Infant / Toddler Lead Teacher School Age Provider & Youth Coordinator

Learn about these programs and transfer opportunities at our next:

OPEN HOUSE

Thursday, Oct. 22 • 4-7pm

...AND OTHER FINE FREE PUBLICATIONS!

603-625-1855 X35

DELIVERY CONTRACTORS NEEDED! Join the team responsible

Early Childhood Lead Teacher

School Age Special Education

FREQUENT STOPS

Distribution EARN EXTRA CA$H!!! Assistant FUN! EASY & REWARDING!

* Currently the only Early Childhood Education associate degree program in NH accredited by the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC) with full accreditation and no conditions.

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Course features: • • • • •

CPR & First Aid Certification Course Books Lab Books Life Skills for the Professional Career Planning

CALL TODAY TO REGISTER! American Red Cross 603-225-6697 extension 215

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Apply that night and your $20 application fee will be waived!

1066 Front Street, 1066 Front Street, Manchester, NH Manchester, NH (603) 206-8100 206-8100 (603) www.mccnh.edu www.mccnh.edu 101992

HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 33


Where Do You See Yourself?

From earning tips to earning your degree. 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!

Explore NHTI at Open House! Sunday, October 25, 11 am - 1pm

• • • •

Also hiring Temporary Part-Time Package Handlers in Nashua, Manchester, Laconia and Dover! All facilities are hiring Temporary Full-Time Package Delivery Drivers!

Meet Faculty Talk to representatives from Admissions and Student Life Learn about Financial Aid Take a Tour of the Campus

UPSjobs.com/print Text “UPSjobs” to 33733

UPS is an equal opportunity employer – race/color/religion/sex/national origin/veteran/disability/sexual orientation/gender identity.

nhti.edu

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The Largest Nurse, LNA & Healthcare Job Fair in New Hampshire

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See yourself lf on a new pathway h at NHTI. Whether h h it’s ’ d directly l into a career or continuing at a 4-year college or university, envision the future you want - at NHTI.

City of Manchester Now Hiring

HEALTHCARE JOB FAIR

The City of Manchester, NH is hiring the following positions: • Survey Party Chief •Senior Services Specialist •Parking Control Officer (Part Time) •Mircocomputer System Specialist •Laborers • Airport Maintenance Workers • Community Health Nurse, full-time • School Nurse Substitutes • Public Health Specialist • Police Officers Entry Level Police Exam Nov. 2015 No experience necessary •School Crossing Guards

Friday, Oct. 23 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Puritan Conference Center, 245 Hooksett Rd., Manchester Discover New Career Options at a Regional Job Fair Hosted Jointly by Caring Nurses Staffing Agency and www.HireNurses.com.

• On-site Interviews, Giveaways & Networking station • Hospitals, Nursing Homes, Home Care, Colleges & Companies wanting to hire you • Presented by two Nurse-Owned Businesses: Karen O’Donnell, BSN of Caring Nurses Staffing, & Rebecca Love, ANP of HireNurses.com

7:40-8:40am & 2:20-3:20pm School Days Only. Starting pay $13.85 per session

For more information: www.manchesternh.gov/jobs

The City offers an attractive benefits package Human Resources Department CITY OF MANCHESTER One City Hall Plaza Manchester, NH 03101 (603) 624-6543 (Voice/TTY) Fax: 603-628-6065 www.manchesternh.gov Apply online at: www.ManchesterNH.gov

As a healthcare professional, you're in demand! Attend this free job fair on Friday, Oct. 23 and meet the people who want to meet you! Attendees and Vendors: Register online at www.hirenurses.com Caring Nurses For more info, call 603-305-0841 Staffing Agency HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 34

103361

102812

Equal Opportunity Employer

103439


Let them be free Free job postings now available for a limited time!

Careers, Jobs & Gigs

FULL/PART-TIME BOOTH RENTAL Available at salon Ame in Nashua. $625.00 FT, $350.00 PT. PRIVATE ROOMS AVAILABLE. For more info contact Janette @ 603-897-9451 or amesalon@ymail.com ADMINISTRATIVE OPPORTUNITIES Full-time and part-time positions available on the Seacoast. Pay range: $12.00 - $15.00/hr. (DOE). Requirements: 1-2+ years office experience, MS Office. Apply at www.staffingsense.com or send resume to info@staffingsense.com. ACCOUNTING/ADMIN ASSISTANTS Part-time opportunities located on the Seacoast. Pay range: $15.00 $20.00/hr. (DOE). Requirements: 5+ years relevant experience in A/P, A/R, payroll, etc., QuickBooks and accounting degree preferred. Send resume to info@staffingsense.com. LNA/PCA Needed in Milford, NH Available immediately. 2 openings 29.5 hours per week Hours are 8:00AM to 6:00PM $12.00 per hour to start. Mon, Tues, every other Wed and every other Sat. Thurs, Fri, every other Wed and every other Sat Please contact Sherrie 603-769-9357 PASSPORT SUPPORT ASSOCIATES Plentiful opportunities available at the National Passport Center in Portsmouth. Up to $14.21/hr. plus 100% employer-paid benefits. Requirements: U.S. citizenship and high school diploma/GED equivalent. Send resume to jobs-nh@alliedgov.com. ADMINISTRATIVE OPPORTUNITIES Positions available at prominent federal government facility on Seacoast. Up to $13.54/hr. plus 100% employer-paid benefits. Requirements: high school diploma/GED equivalent. Send resume to jobs-nh@alliedgov.com. EXPERIENCED TAX PREPARER Seasonal CPA firm looking for an experienced tax preparer. Seasonal position Jan 15- April 15 Proficiency with Microsoft office required. Lacerte experience preferred and Quickbooks experience a plus. Please submit resumes to: nhtaxprepjob@gmail.com. VINTAGE SPORTS CAR RESTORATION Looking for one energetic person to complete our team in the vintage sports car restoration and fabrication field. Must be neat and organized with a basic mechanical skill set. Experience in welding/ fabrication helpful. A very unique opportunity for the right person to work in a clean & neat shop working on very interesting cars. Call Rainer 509-2225 Ctr. Barnstead PART-TIME SOLDER/ASSEMBLER 20 hours per week. Do you ike to solder electrical components? Have experience in manufacturing? Looking for a great company? We want to hear from you! Please send us your resume: astuart@securecare.com

BAKERY ASSISTANT Part time. Must have leadership qualities, baking experience and excellent customer service skills. Tues. & Wed. 11:00 to 5:30 & Sat. 7:30 to 12:30. Apply in person at Michelle’s Gourmet Pastries, 819 Union St. Also looking for seasonal counter help for Oct., Nov., & Dec. FLAGGERS/TRAFFIC CONTROLLERS PROJECT FLAGGING INC., is currently accepting applications for FLAGGERS/TRAFFIC CONTROLLERS. Must be able to stand for long hours in every climate condition, follow directives and communicate well. Immediate needs in the Portsmouth/ Somersworth/Dover/Seacoast areas and Manchester. • Seasonal, working through the end of November • No Previous Experience necessary • Reliable Transportation and DL Required Please call 603-622-9302 or apply at 21 Londonderry Turnpike, Hooksett NH. Email: Recruiter@NHStaff.com VOLUNTEERS NEEDED Exeter based alternative education program is looking for tutors interested in working with high school aged students in their area of interest (and your area of expertise). If you are able to donate 1-5 hours per week to help young people learn about topics they are passionate about, please email: thepennprogram@gmail.com EXPERIENCED PRESSER FOR DRY CLEANER NEEDED Mon. thru Fri. mornings part time. Must have experience. Paid holidays and summer vacation.$12 an hour starting pay. Call 6256055 and ask for Marcia. DIRECT SUPPORT PROFESSIONALS Full or part-time positions available near Concord. Support clients with daily living & assist with Day Program. Prefer experienced DSPs although training provided. Criminal, driving checks, and driver’s license required. Email resume to CVien@ granitebayconnections.org. For information visit: www.gbcinc.org. MODELS WANTED Seacoast photographer looking for models to team up with to mutually build portfolios. Your level of experience isn’t important, just be dedicated and reliable. I’ve been a photographer for several years now, and am finally at a point where I’m building a professional portfolio (with your help). Be in touch: francredhews@gmail.com CNA/HHA SEEKING EMPLOYMENT Available immediately. Can work up to 12 hours daily. Over 15 years work experience. References and credentials available. Please call 603-366-6822 LAMP REPAIR Around 12 hours per week in Concord. Some electrical experience is required.Please email -lightingpl@aol.com LIGHTING SALES ASSOCIATE 35.75 hours per week in Concord. Set schedule. Saturdays required. Please email - lightingpl@aol.com

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

(Please include a contact name, address, phone number and job title or it will not be published.)

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.

HAIR STYLIST OR NAIL TECH Nashua booth rental. Beautiful, bright salon with a relaxed atmosphere. Easy to find central Nashua private home. Make your own schedule. Rent negotiable! Call 603-889-0075 DIETARY AIDES Warde Rehabilitation and Nursing Center offers PT positions working 3-7 p.m. with competitive wages. Experience preferred but will train. We offer a home-like setting, some flexibility and great staffing ratios. Please email hr@wardehealth.com VETERINARY TECHNICIAN Lockridge Animal Hospital is seeking to add an experienced veterinary technician to our 4 doctor practice. We are looking for someone with leadership, people and technical skills. Resumes via email: vetlah@comcast.net OPEN HOUSE AND JOB FAIR! LIBERTY TAX Saturday Sept 26th @ 297 S. Willow St, Manchester, NH at 3PM-5PM Friday Sept 25th @ 263 Main St, Nashua, NH at 5PM-7PM Saturday Sept 26th @ 263 Main St, Nashua, NH at 10AM-1PM Saturday Oct 3rd @ 263 Main St, Nashua, NH at 10AM-1PM Earn extra income preparing taxes after taking our course. Flexible schedule, convenient locations. Call or email to learn more and register. Our course starts in October for this coming tax season. We will be hiring! Seats are limited so call 603-935-8714 at your earliest convenience. 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 HOUSEKEEPERS Cleaning of guest rooms, replace line & towels, vacuuming, dusting, replacing guest supplies. Bending and lifting are part of the job. Weekend are a must! Health, Dental,401K. Send resume to cherri.dukes @ hawthornmerrimack.com. LICENSED NURSING ASSISTANTS Warde Rehabilitation and Nursing Center offers FT, PT and PD all shifts. Experience preferred but will train. NH LNA License is a must. Competitive rates and bonus opportunities. We offer a home-like setting, some flexibility and great staffing ratios. Please email hr@wardehealth.com AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIAN Vianor Tire in Concord is hiring a full time tech with experience in the auto repair industry. Qualified candidates will need a valid drivers license, NH state inspection license and own tools. Previous experience should include brake systems, suspension, electrical diagnostic, TPMS systems, air conditioning and DTC diagnostic. Alignment knowledge and experience is a plus. Benefits include 401K, vacation, personal days and medical insurance. Contact Harry at 603-224-2393 or at 63 Hall St, Concord NH.

CUSTOMER SERVICE/ COLLECTIONS Looking to hire entry-level customer service rep willing to train. Insurance exp and/or Spanish speaking a plus. Salary and bonus position with benefits. Send resume to webhr@adamsmorse.com. DIGITAL MARKETING SPECIALIST Generate leads to the Sales / Distribution department, assist in Marketing processes, web maintenance and track customer satisfaction. Great company. Excellent benefits. Please Email astuart@securecare.com COWORX STAFFING SERVICEMANUFACTURING POSITIONS CoWorx Staffing has several opportunities in the Nashua, Hudson, Manchester and Londonderry, NH areas. All shifts are available and positions are at all levels of experience.Assemblers, Soldering, CNC, General Labor, Packers, Purchasing, Material Handlers and Quality Control. Please submit resumes to southernnh@coworxstaffing.com or call 603-644-0085 STAFF ACCOUNTS PAYABLE / PAYROLL Local business is looking for general office with some accounting, payroll and billing experience.Good computer & phone skills helpful.Monday-Friday, $680.00 weekly Please send resume: mtbawn@hotmail.com MAS HOME CARE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE is now hiring reliable and compassionate LNA’s and Personal Care Service Providers to service our home care clients throughout New Hampshire. If interested, please apply online atmasmedicalstaffing.com PART-TIME RETAIL ASSOCIATES in Manchester NH. We are a growing small business looking for dedicated team players to become a permanent part of our team. Mature individuals who are enthusiastic, reliable and motivated. Retail experience is a plus but we will train. Store Hours: Monday: Friday 9am-6:00pm Sat: 9am-5pm. Flexible hours but must work 1-2 Saturdays per month. Remit resume to: hr@ colonialmedical.com. Visit our website at www.poyple.com JOB FAIR AT HITCHINER MANUFACTURING Manufacturing positions available on all shifts. Job fair Saturday, September 19th 9-12pm at 594 Elm Street, Milford, NH. Job requirements include high school degree or equivalent and pre-employment drug screening. For more information, please call (603) 673-1100.

WORSHIP LEADERS WANTED to sing/play for church services in Manchester, NH. 1.5 hours on Sunday, 10 AM start. Pay is $30 per musician per Sunday. Inquire with pastor: 603-340-8585 PART TIME BRAND AMBASSADORS Moonlight Meadery seeking candidates passionate about quality craft beverages to promote/ educate. Musts: Polished, Professional, Hard-working, People skills, Positive Team player; Valid driver’s license/transportation; Smart phone/internet access; Weekends/Holidays. NH, MA. Email vanderberg@ moonlightmeadery.com SINGING/DANCING PARTS Open Auditions in family-oriented live production for booking during the upcoming Holiday Season. Professional experience not a must; however ability to dance and a fine, healthy appearance are required. Send inquiry and appropriate photo to nhwoodsman@hotmail.com DRIVERS WANTED Local company looking for individuals in the Southern NH area. We will train you to become a Special Needs Bus Driver. NON-CDL. Compensation for Experience. Call 603-895-9664 ext 150 EXPERIENCED ELDERLY CAREGIVER NEEDED To start work immediately. $18 per hour and up to 5 hours daily Mon-Fri. Please send emails to harry.gibbs003@gmail.com. RNS, LPNS, LNAS, OTS, PTS AND MSWS NEEDED Interim Healthcare, a locally owned and operated homecare/ staffing agency with 35 years experience is currently recruiting for Per Diem RNs, LPNs, LNAs, OTs, PTs and MSWs. Contact Melissa today for more information at 603-668-6956 ext.330 REGISTERED NURSES Join Home Health & Hospice Care’s home care, hospice and private duty teams! Candidates must have strong skills in symptom management, managing patients with co-morbidities, two years acute care, med/surg, IV skills and knowledge or experience with end-of-life care. CPR certified, BSN preferred and NH RN license required. Each position’s responsibilities varies. VIsit www. hhhc.org/current-job-openings today!

SUBWAY IS HIRING Multiple locations, all positions. Competitive pay, matching retirement, quarterly bonuses and opportunities for promotion. Apply online at: mysubwaycareer.com or in store.

PERSONAL CARE ASSISTANTS Home Health & Hospice Care’s Private Duty division is looking for non-clinical PCA’s. PCA will travel between homes, working independently with patients who require assistance in order to remain independent within their homes. Tasks include personal care such as bathing, dressing and transferring, light housekeeping, transportation and companionship. Visit www.hhhc.org/current-jobopenings to learn more today!

SUNDAY SCHOOL TEACHER WANTED $30 - 10:00 to 11:00 every Sunday in Manchester, NH Small mixed class, elementary & middle school ages. Inquire with pastor: 603-340-8585

LICENSED NURSING ASSISTANTS Home Health & Hospice Care is looking for full and part-time or per diem LNA’s for out homecare, hospice and private duty divisions. LNA’s will care for patients in their homes and nursing homes.

1-2 years experience with ADL’s personal care and end-of-life care experience preferred. Certification in hospice/palliative care a plus. NH LNA license and CPR certification required. Apply today at www.hhhc.org! FEMALE BARBERS & STYLISTS NEEDED Female Barbers & Stylists needed Manscape, a hot new men’s salon (Barber, Billiards and Gentlemen’s Lounge), is looking for licensed female barbers & stylists. Full/Part time positions available. A fun place to work! Please call Mark at (603)624-HAIR LPNS, MNAS & LNAS Opening soon, ROSE MEADOW ACRES in New Boston is hiring now for all shifts. Visit www.rosemeadowfarm.com to learn more. Send resumes to: hr.rosemeadow@hotmail.com or call Heather Preston at 487-3590 FT ACADEMIC INSTRUCTORS, FT ADVANCED MFG. INSTRUCTOR, FT FACILITIES MAINTENANCE INSTRUCTOR, AND FT ELECTRICAL INSTRUCTOR NH Job Corps Center, Manchester, NH. M-F: 7:45 AM - 4:45 PM. Must have electrical exp. For more information or to apply, email resume to Walter at wcarino@adamsaai.com or call 603-621-9552. PT BUSINESS COMMUNITY LIAISON DIRECTOR NH Job Corps Center, Manchester, NH. 20 hrs./wk., flexible schedule. Must have political/community exp. For more information or to apply, email resume to Walter at wcarino@adamsaai.com or call 603-621-9552. NEW RESTAURANT HIRING Full & Part time positions, Front of house staff. Email resume to: FUNKTION931@gmail.com or apply in person 10-4pm 931 Elm St. Manchester, NH MERRY MAIDS CLEANER Residential Cleaning in Manchester, Concord & surrounding areas. Must have reliable car & drivers license. Paid mileage. $10.00 - $15.00 per hour. Weekly pay. No nights/weekends. Applications accepted at 303 Belmont St. Manchester 6244132 Merry Maids is a drug free workplace. EVENING CAREGIVER Man seeks to share his Manchester apartment with a Non- Smoker. Free rent and basic utilities in exchange for care from 8pm to 8am 7 days per week, though hours can be negotiable. Position includes assistance with transfers to and from wheelchair, some personal care as needed, occasional help with light tasks, and emergency help during the overnight hours. Training available and day hours are yours to do whatever. Background check mandatory. Please contact Anna @ 774-7178 or Maggie @ 753 – 9883. ALL RESTAURANT POSITIONS NEW RESTAURANT in Manchester opening next to the Verizon in Sept. We’re looking for full and part time experienced staff for all positions. Contact Michelle@ queenspubandgrille with updated resume and contact information.

HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 35


FOOD “Fall”ing for brew

Get a taste of unique autumn seasonals at local breweries By Allie Ginwala

News from the local food scene

aginwala@hippopress.com

By Allie Ginwala

As the leaves change, so do the local beer offerings, including plenty of pumpkin ales and Oktoberfest brews. While those capture a certain taste of fall, exploring other flavor profiles can keep your palate engaged throughout the season. The Hippo spoke with three local breweries about what makes a good fall beer and how they’ve branched out with unique seasonals.

food@hippopress.com

• Local shop wins TV showdown: Manchester’s Queen City Cupcakes (790 Elm St., Manchester, qccupcakes.com) recently competed on Sugar Showdown, a new show on the Cooking Channel. After two rounds of competition against two other cupcake shops, Queen City Cupcakes came away as the winner. The episode “Alien cupcakes” aired on Oct. 1 and is now being shown On Demand. • Showcase week continues: If you haven’t checked out Greater Merrimack Valley’s Restaurant Showcase week, there is still time to get a taste of flavorful fall menus. The sixth annual event continues until Sunday, Oct. 18, with 23 restaurants in nine different towns participating. Previously held in August, this year’s fall showcase allowed for the addition of a “battle of the butternut,” where restaurants have the opportunity to show off their creativity by incorporating butternut squash into a dish. The showcase includes a prix-fixe, two-course lunch beginning at $10.14 and a prix-fixe three-course dinner beginning at $24.15. For a list of restaurants and menus see merrimackvalley.org/ restaurant-showcase-week. • Pounds of produce: Over 5,000 pounds of fresh produce from New Hampshire farms have been donated to the New Hampshire Food Bank in Manchester and The Friendly Kitchen in Concord, thanks to a collection effort by The New Hampshire Farm Bureau Young Farmers. According to a press release, 3,172 pounds were collected in September on top of just over 1,900 pounds in August, which provided a total of 4,200 meals. The donations are being collected in conjunction with the 42

Looking for more food and drink fun? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play and hipposcout.com.

Flat Breads

Seasonally brewed

For many beer drinkers, going from summer to fall means finding heavier beers with more body and deeper colors. “You see a little more smoke and earth coming into the flavors,” JT Thompson, minister of propaganda for Smuttynose Brewing, said in a phone interview. “For summer beers it’s more slightly unusual ingredients like citrus or lighter fruit flavors and in the fall that’s when people dig a little bit deeper into the spice rack.” A firm believer in the seasonality of drinking beer, Thompson said weight and flavor profile should shift as the weather gets colder More fall beer fun On Saturday, Oct. 17, Redhook Ale Brewery (35 Corporate Drive, Portsmouth) will host the 7th annual New Hampshire Brewfest, featuring 50 brewers and 150 brews. General admission sessions will be held from 1 to 4 p.m. and 6 to 9 p.m. to make sure that the location doesn’t get too crowded, Prescott Park Administrative Assistant Linh Hua said. A VIP session from noon to 4 p.m. will give guests a more intimate experience and time to chat with the brewers and sample select beers. Participating breweries range from local to national with Dogfish Head Craft Brewed Ales, Allagash Brewing Company, Brooklyn

($40 day of). Admission includes a 5-ounce souvenir sampler cup, beer samples and live entertainment. See prescottpark.org/event/nhbrew-fest or nhbrewfest.com.

Beer: Chestnut Saison, Frankenlager Brewery: Smuttynose Brewing, 105 Towle Farm Road, Hampton, smuttynose.

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

& so much more! sticking to it

Serving Breakfast & Lunch | M-F | 7:30-3pm

Jefferson Mill, Lower Level

670 N. Commercial Street, Manchester, NH

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HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 36

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Fine Crafted Teas

Manchester, greatnorthaleworks.com Great North Aleworks opened in Manchester in late August and instead of just sticking to their three year-round beers for the first months of business, North launched right into brewing seasonals. “It’s a great opportunity to do something special in the marketplace that is more targeted for the season,” he said. “We like to keep it interesting and fresh here at the brewery and I think it’s good for not only our customers, but for the employees to have an opportunity to explore new styles and explore different things.” Cranberry Wit is a Belgian-style wheat ale that was developed four years ago as a homebrewing project. “My wife and a friend of hers, they occasionally get together and do a little homebrewing and they wanted to do a cranberBeer: Cranberry Wit Belgian ry beer, but a cranberry stout,” Style Wheat Ale North said. Brewery: Great North AleThinking those flavors were not Courtesy photo. works, 1050 Holt Ave., Unit 14, suited for one another, he suggested they try a wit beer instead. After brewing it a couple of times, they realized it was a natural pairing. Brewery, Maine Beer Company, Wachusett “The more I think about it, a wit beer being Brewing Company and more. a little tart and a little spiced wheat beer, often “I would say [beers are from] kind of all with orange peel and coriander, to me [is the] around the U.S., but we do have a lot from New England and we want to showcase the perfect canvas for cranberry to accentuate local ones as well,” Hua said. Prescott Park’s that tartness,” he said. The Prop and Dos Amigos Burritos are among Find Cranberry Wit on tap in Great the food vendors offering bites to complement North Aleworks’ tasting room through early the afternoon of beer. Tickets cost $45 for 2.6” high December, when they’re4.69”wide planningx to switch VIP ($50 day of), $35 for general admission HIPPO Horizontal 1/8stout. page over to the winter seasonal, a chocolate

Why change?

Smoothies, Gourmet Coffees, Hand Crafted Lattes

Pasta Bowls

in favor of more robust beers. Joe Ruotolo, owner, operator and head brewer for Border Brewery, agrees. “Any beer that’s heavier, that’s chocolatey, nutty, maybe even with a little bit of spice like cardamom, nutmeg, holiday spices,” he said in a phone interview. Rob North, owner and brewer of Great North Aleworks, aims for solid drinkability in his beers, but also for the ability to pair well with food. His idea for a fall seasonal is one that can bridge the variability of autumn in New England, suited both for warmer days and to serve at the table for Thanksgiving. “When I think fall I think of some of the holidays coming up in November, but we also [get] some of those hot days of Indian summer,” North said in a phone interview.

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


it in specialty beer shops around the state.

BRUNCH Sunday • 10am-2pm

Full Breakfast Menu, Made to Order Available.

“NEW”

make your own r a Bloody Mary B Kids love our

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2014

c

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Sensational Sunday Brunch

interview. “And everyone really [was], so we came back and took recommendations from people, and we tweaked it a little bit.” The festival will feature Jewish food favorites like kugel, stuffed cabbage, matzo ball soup, rugellah, teiglach and strudel, along with this year’s additions of corned beef and pastrami sandwiches. Though the L’Chayim Jewish Food Festival is only in its second year, Temple Adath Yeshurun hosted a slightly different event a decade ago that was part of the inspira- 38

Build your own Bloody Mary Bar Make yours the best you’ve ever had! House made Bloody Mary Mix. Great selection of fixings.

Football Season!

Alli Beaudry Live Sunday 10am - 3pm

Extending our Sunday closing hours for Pats 1pm games.

able Avail Now ordering e Onlin 5% off Hours: M–W: 6a-9p | TH: 6a-10p | F–SAT: 6a-11p | SUN: 7a-3p

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www. HudsonNorthSideGrille.com

of

Readers Pi

62 Lowell St, Manchester, NH

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Creative Lunch | Shareable plates for dinner Relaxing and Enjoyable happy hour 931 Elm Street Manchester, NH 782-5365

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On a recent Thursday morning, Cate Tanzer, Ruthie Gordon and Rabbi Beth Davidson were busy cooking at Temple Adath Yeshurun, preparing for the second annual L’Chayim Jewish Food Festival, taking place in Manchester on Sunday, Oct. 18. “Last year … we said we’ll try it and wing it and see if people are interested,” Cate Tanzer, festival co-chair, said in a phone

E NN R

o Hipp

Saturday

097783

Free Off-Street Parking Available

7:30 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. 8:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.

BIG SCREEN CARTOONS!

Festival returns to Manchester temple By Allie Ginwala

Monday - Friday

Hot Buffet | Salad Bar Pastries | Desserts Chocolate Fountain | Meats | Fruits | & more!

Bring on the brisket aginwala@hippopress.com

Cafe Classics with a twist!

Introducing

WI

Beer: Jalapeno IPA, Peanut Butter Stout Brewery: Border Brewery, 224 North Broadway, Salem, borderbrewsupply.com For Joe Ruotolo, brewing is all about standing out. “Anything that’s different is popular,” he said. “Our lineup changes every other week... because people want different things all the time and that also brings customers coming back to see what Joe brewed up next.” Along with a pumpkin beer and vanilla Thanksgiving Porter, Ruotolo brews a peanut butter stout and a jalapeno IPA — which he sometimes mixes together to create a brew called “spicy nut.” By brewing them separately and mixing together the finished products, he can have two different yeast profiles, which is what changes the flavor of the beer. Sometimes his fall seasonals are so popular they become year-round options, like the vanilla bourbon oak stout, brewed with vanilla bean and bourbon soaked oak chips, and the peanut butter stout, which tastes “like an adult Reese’s cup.” When asked exactly how he gets the peanut butter flavor into the beer, Ruotolo said it’s a trade secret that he’ll never tell — despite the fact that he is asked that question all the time. Stop by the tasting room to try a brew or fill up a growler.

ks

com While most New Hampshirites are familiar with Smuttynose Brewing, which recently moved to its new location in Hampton, some may not be aware of the company’s R&D facility, called Smuttlabs. “It’s really about experimenting, and people want to know what’s new and cool and happening,” Thompson said. “We have the ability to do beers that are experimental and playful.” The latest release from Smuttlabs is Chestnut Saison, a farmhouse-style beer with roasted chestnuts, cinnamon and nutmeg. Smuttynose also has a pumpkin ale, its core fall seasonal since 2003, and Frankenlager, the first beer brewed in the new brewhouse. “It’s fall themed,” Thompson said of Frankenlager. “It’s a maltier lager, light and golden color, but a little sweeter with a heavier body. And the name and branding, that’s fun beer for fall.” Thompson noted that finding the right balance in flavors for a fall beer lineup is important. With the pumpkin ale as the most popular this time of year from Smuttynose, the idea with adding Frankenlager was to make sure patrons have flavor options for the season. “And with Smuttlabs … it’s about creating a complete profile to hit the different niches in the market,” he said. Smuttynose Pumpkin Ale and Frankenlager are currently available, and Smuttlabs Chestnut Saison will be released Oct. 19. Find

HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 37


37 tion for this festival.

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“We wanted to bring it back and with more food,” Tanzer said. “Manchester is just a diverse community and we all express our culture through our food,” Rabbi Davidson said in a phone interview. “Highlighting Jewish food was a way for us to highlight our [culture] and I think particularly in this day and age the more people that know about the cultures that make up our community, the better our community is.” Many people within the Jewish community attended last year, though Davidson was surprised at the turnout from the community in general. With the diverse crowd, she said adding an educational component, like tours of the sanctuary, would be a great way to introduce people to the temple and Jewish culture. “We had so many people from outside the Jewish community, and they had never tasted stuffed cabbage or the matzo ball soup,” Tanzer said. “We’re having gallons of matzo ball soup.” L’Chayim Jewish Food Festival When: Sunday, Oct. 18, from noon to 3 p.m. Where: Temple Adath Yeshurun, 152 Prospect St., Manchester Free admission. Food priced per item. See taynh.org

Foody fundraisers Soup and cupcakes for a cause By Allie Ginwala

aginwala@hippopress.com

Two food-focused fundraisers return to Manchester this weekend, giving guests the chance to help out community organizations while sampling from local restaurants and bakeries.

Clash of the Cupcakes

Since 1927

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They’re preparing for a big crowd with 180 pounds of brisket, 100 pounds of pastrami and corned beef deli meat, 10 pounds of sweet noodle kugel and 50 to 60 pounds of cabbage. Gordon, co-chair for the festival, said the most popular items at last year’s festival were brisket, stuffed cabbage and matzo ball soup. “Because they smell so good, [it’s] no surprise at all,” she said in a phone interview. “The brisket and the stuffed cabbage, the smell of that is so savory.” Most of the food will be prepared in advance. On the day of the event, about two dozen people will be onsite to take orders and answer questions. Guests can enjoy their brisket and kugel in the temple’s social hall or take it in a togo container to enjoy at home during the football game. “We made sure it wasn’t going to be the same time at the Patriots game,” Davidson said, noting that the festival ends at 3 p.m., well before the game starts. Corned beef, pastrami and brisket by the pound were the most popular takeaway items last year, though stuffed cabbage, matzo ball soup and more will be ready and served in to-go containers. “This is a great opportunity to get your food, take it home and enjoy the game,” Tanzer added.

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On Friday, Oct. 16, head to the Derryfield Country Club for the chance to see local bakers face off in a cupcake decorating competition during this year’s Clash of the Cupcakes. “What we do is we invite area bakers and they bring baked cupcakes already prepped Mikayla Allain (left) helps Benson’s Bakery & Café and have 30 minutes to decorate them onsite,” owner Emily Erickson decorate their entry in last year’s Jennifer Sanders, volunteer services director Clash of the Cupcakes. Courtesy photo. for Southern New Hampshire Services, said bakers and their assistants artfully assemble in a phone interview. Guests spend the half hour watching the cupcakes while enjoying light hors d’oeuvres and a signature cocktail from the Derryfield Eat up, help out — a cupcake martini, of course. Clash of the Cupcakes Once time is up, cupcakes are given to the When: Friday, Oct. 16, from 6 to 9 p.m. judges and others are cut into four pieces for Where: Derryfield Country Club, 625 guests to try. Boxes of two cupcakes will also Mammoth Road, Manchester be available for people to take home. Cost is $15 per person. See snhs.org. This year, Benson’s Bakery Cafe 40


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38 in Hudson, Carina’s Cakes in Derry, Cupcakes 101 in Bedford, Sophisticakes in Windham and Bite Me Kupcakes in Merrimack will each bring 75 cupcakes to decorate and present for the chance to win the people’s choice and judges’ choice award. “Some bakers use the event to showcase their best cupcake and then some really take the opportunity to create [something] totally different, so I’ve definitely seen a good combination of both,” Sanders said. Inspired by the TV show Cupcake Wars, mixing food and fundraising is a great way to get the community involved. “I think that people love to eat [and] during the 30 minutes where they’re decorating the cupcakes you can feel the energy coming from the bakers so I think it’s a combination of energy in the room and eating cupcakes,” she said. Proceeds from the event benefit Southern New Hampshire Services’ Retired and Senior Volunteer Program, a national service project in which volunteers 55 and older participate in programs such as osteoporosis prevention, minor home repairs for disabled and senior individuals, working with local schools to read to children and teach about nutrition and physical activity, and providing companionship for homebound seniors.

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Empty Bowls

150 Bridge St. Manchester 622-4044

On Sunday, Oct. 18, New Horizons for New Hampshire will hold its annual Empty

Tues-Fri | Breakfast 7a-11a | Lunch 11a-2p | Sat Breakfast only 7a-1:30p | Sun Breakfast only 7a-Noon

Willkommen

Empty Bowls When: Sunday, Oct. 18, from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Where: Brookside Congregational Church, 2013 Elm St., Manchester Buy a handmade ceramic bowl for $20 to fill with soup from local restaurants. Child bowls $5. See newhorizonsfornh.org.

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Food Fairs/festivals/expos • ZINGMOJO: FESTIVAL OF LOCAL FRESHNESS Experience ZingMojo and MegaFood with live music, local produce, food and vendors, factory tours, kid's crafts and more. Sat., Oct. 17, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at MegaFood, 11 Delta Drive, Londonderry. Free admission. See megafood.com. • CHOCOLATEFEST CHALLENGE 20th annual event highlights the area's chocolatiers and pastry chefs. Sun., Oct. 18, from noon to 3 p.m. Mount Sunapee Resort, 1398 Route 103, Newbury. Cost is $12 for adults, $10 for students and seniors, free for children 5 and under. Visit lakesunapeenh.org. • DIABETES AWARENESS EVENT Featuring a cooking demo and tasting with Cake Boss winner Dana Herbert, Mediterranean meal ideas, olive

Bowls at Brookside Congregational Church. The New Hampshire Potters Guild makes and donates hundreds of bowls for guests to choose from before sampling soups from local restaurants. “They’re beautiful, they are many different colors,” Michelle Casale, development director for New Horizons for New Hampshire, said in a phone interview. “Many people come and buy more than one bowl and give them out as holiday gifts.” New Hampshire Potters Guild typically starts making the next batch of bowls right after the previous event, selling 400 to 450 bowls each year. “They are all unique, each one is individually made and no two are alike,” Casale said, noting that the earth-toned ceramic bowls come in many shades like blue and green. “We usually have 16 participating restaurants and our [guests] are charged $20 when they arrive at the event, and that gives them the choice of one bowl and unlimited soup to sample.” This year’s restaurants include Angela’s Pasta & Cheese Shop, Taj India, Red Arrow Diner, Jerome’s Deli, Piccola Italia Ristorante, Billy’s Sports Bar & Grill and more. “We try to keep it interesting, having a wide variety from broth soups to cream soups to seasonal,” she said. “What always goes fast is the seafood chowders.” Guests can enjoy live entertainment while sitting and eating at long tables, talking with the friends and family they came with or those they just met. “The premise of Empty Bowls international is that there will be no empty bowls for anyone. We’re helping to fight hunger,” Casale said. “This is our primary food-based fundraiser and it’s always a hit. People look forward to it year after year.” Funds raised benefit New Horizons for New Hampshire, which operates a homeless shelter, food pantry, and soup kitchen.

oil sampling and Q&A session. Thurs., Nov. 12, from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. St. Joseph Hospital, 172 Kinsley St., Nashua. Free. $5 donation requested to be donated to American Diabetes Association. See stjosephhospital.com or call 595-3168. • OLD FASHIONED THANKSGIVING Enjoy living history farmhouse tours with costumed role-players, hot cider, pumpkin pie, horse-drawn wagon rides and popcorn over the campfire. Sat., Nov. 21, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. New Hampshire Farm Museum, Rt. 125 White Mountain Hwy., Milton. Admission is $10 for adults, $5 for children. Visit farmmuseum. org. Chef events/special meals • TASTE OF CONCORD Sample from 35 restaurants and enjoy live cooking demos, music, a silent auction and this

year's top chef competition. Thurs., Oct. 15, from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Grappone Conference Center, 70 Constitution Ave., Concord. Cost is $30 per person. See tasteofconcord.com. • HARVEST (CHOCOLATE) DINNER Features unique dishes crafted with local ingredients, paired with chocolate. Sunday, Oct. 18, with seatings at 3 and 6 p.m. Dancing Lion Chocolate, 917 Elm St., Manchester. $150 per person. Call 625-4043 for reservations. See dancinglion.us. • THE FARMERS DINNER At Stages at One Washington. Event features a four course meal sourced from local ingredients. Local farmers will share their stories between courses. Sun., Oct. 18, from 4 to 7 p.m. Stages at One Washington, 1 Washington St., Suite 325, Dover. Cost begins at $99. Reservations required. Visit thefarmersdinner.com.


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HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 41


IN THE

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What is your must-have kitchen item? but is really, really good is the chuck eye that A nice, sharp dicing knife. It’s always easi- comes out of beef. You receive only about er if your knife is sharp. two slices at the beginning on the chuck roll that still has the eye of the ribeye connected What would you choose for your last to it, and it’s generally priced under a chuck meal? steak. But it’s a very, very tasty, all around I would probably say a nice big ribeye good cut of meat, and it’s not overly priced. steak. Most professional meat cutters or chefs will notice this eye still within the chuck. Favorite dish at a local restaurant? Well, La Carreta Mexican [Restaurant] in What is your favorite meal to cook at home? Nashua, and I’m gonna have to go with the Probably my most favorite meal is in the chile colorado. morning, and it takes me back to my southern roots. It’s sausage and gravy over biscuits. And What celebrity would you like to share a generally I like to use Jimmy Dean hot [saumeal with? sage], and it goes great with a cup of coffee. Donald Trump. What is your favorite cut of meat? What is the most uncommon meat you’ve My most favorite cut of meat would have ever eaten or prepared? to be a bone-in ribeye steak. I would have to say a cut that’s overlooked — Allie Ginwala Mex tex chicken From the kitchen of Tex Trumphour

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Sterling “Tex” Trumphour is no stranger to butcher shops. A third-generation meat cutter, he started working in his family’s meat market in Texas when he was 12 years old. He came to New Hampshire to work as a meat manager for Stop ‘n Shop, but when the chain decided to leave the state he got the needed push to do what he’d always wanted — open his own store. At The Happy Butchers (222 Elm St., Milford, 554-1339, thehappybutchernh. com), Trumphour strives to revitalize the tradition of the neighborhood butcher shop, where customers and staff know each other and stop by not only for high-quality meat and prepared meals to go, but also for the chance to chat and catch up with their local butcher.

Family pack of boneless, skinless chicken breast, approx. 3 pounds El Paso taco seasoning package Can of mushroom soup Medium-sized container of picante sauce Sour cream

Arrange the chicken at the bottom of a crock pot. Shake package of taco seasoning over the top of it. Add the mushroom soup and picante sauce and cook on low for eight hours. Then add desired amount of sour cream and shred. Use in rollups or as a side dish.

Weekly Dish

Continued from page 36

603.672.0500 Route 101 Amherst, NH Open Daily Serving lunch, dinner and Sunday brunch TheBlackForestCafe.com HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 42

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Harvest For All campaign, a partnership with the American Farm Bureau Young Farmers & Ranchers Program and Feeding America. Ten New Hampshire farms donated a wide range of produce this year, including tomatoes, cabbage, apples, zucchini, peppers, corn and winter squash. To donate, visit nhfarmbureau.org and look for Harvest For All or contact Josh Marshall (editor@nhfarmbureau.org, 224-1934). • Chocolate-covered fun: Fulfill all of your chocolatey dreams at the 20th annual ChocolateFest Chocolate Challenge on Sunday, Oct. 18, from noon to 3 p.m. at Mount Sunapee Resort (1398 Route 103, Newbury). Check out

tasty treats from area chocolatiers and pastry chefs and vote for your favorite. Sponsored by the Lake Sunapee Region Chamber of Commerce, tickets cost $12 and children under 5 are free. See lakesunapeenh.org/chocolatefest. • New liquor store location: A 9,000-square-foot NH Liquor & Wine Outlet on Ridge View Lane in Plymouth is set to open at the end of next summer, according to a press release from the NH Liquor Commission. The new location in the Riverside Landing development will replace the current outlet on Tenney Mountain Highway, open since 1987.


098855 HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 43


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I listen to the same radio talk show every morning on my way to work. Normally, the show is filled with celebrity interviews, crazy antics and a healthy dose of insanity. The other morning was no different, except a comment from the disc jockey turned into a 10-minute conversation about chili — and callers were quick to chime in on how chili is made in their home states. I had never really thought about the regional recipes for chili. I’ve only made it once or twice because I hate beans, and always thought it wasn’t chili without beans. However, while listening to the show, I learned that Texas chili is bean-free, and chili from Wisconsin is made with noodles. So that night as I was trying to think up something for dinner, I randomly did an online search for Texas chili recipes. I was amazed with the different articles featuring dozens of recipes, but I wanted something simple and classic. I eventually stumbled on former first lady and Texas native “Lady Bird” Johnson’s recipe for Pedernales River Chili. The recipe was simple and pantryfriendly. Garlic, cumin, oregano and chili Pedernales River Chili Courtesy Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson 4 pounds chili meat (coarsely ground round steak or well-trimmed chuck) 1 large onion, chopped 2 cloves garlic 1 teaspoon ground oregano 1 teaspoon cumin 6 teaspoons chili powder 1 ½ cups canned whole tomatoes 2-6 generous dashes of hot sauce 2 cups hot water • FARM BRUNCH BUFFETS At Moulton Farm. Outdoor brunch featuring dishes made with ingredients grown on the farm. Buffet includes seasonal fruit, baked goods, egg and meat dishes. Sun., Oct. 18, Nov. 15, 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. • CASINO MURDER MYSTERY DINNER Featuring Boston's mystery dinner theatre, The Mystery Cafe, at Labelle Winery. Proceeds benefit the Front

powder comprise the main pantry ingredients. Canned tomatoes, hot sauce and salt and pepper are all on hand in my pantry and went into the chili as well. And no beans! After a few taste tests during the cooking process, I added more hot sauce and chili powder than the recipe called for, aiming to impress the hubby with something spicier than I would normally make. The original recipe would have been great over cornbread, or topped with traditional chili toppings like sour cream, scallions and cheese. But I decided to take some inspiration from the state of Wisconsin and added noodles to my chili. While adding the noodles made the dish hearty, it was also a bit heavy. The finished product reminded me a bit too much of goulash or American chop suey with some extra spice. Despite the similarities to the goulash I make regularly, this chili ended up being pretty delicious. The extra heat really amplified the flavors of the dish, and it’s certainly one I’ll be making again. But maybe I’ll leave the Wisconsin influence for a different dish. — Lauren Mifsud Salt to taste Place meat, onion and garlic in a large, heavy pan or Dutch oven. Cook until light in color before adding the oregano, cumin, chili powder, tomatoes, hot sauce, salt and hot water. Bring to a boil and reduce heat, simmer for about 1 hour. Skim off fat during cooking. *If you’d like to use noodles, cook according to package directions and add to chili before serving.

Door Agency. Tickets include casino gaming, appetizers, a three-course dinner and the performance. Tues., Oct. 27, at 5 p.m. LaBelle Winery, 345 Route 101, Amherst. Cost is $60 per person before Oct. 8, $75 person after. VIP wine cellar reception (takes place before the dinner) is $125 per person. Purchase tickets at casino-murder-mystery. eventbrite.com. • SCARY SCARY NIGHT To benefit City Year. The private Halloween event with transform the restaurant into a haunted mansion with dancing, live music, cocktails, heavy

hors d'oeuvres, costume contest and a fortune teller. 21+ event. Costumes are required. Thurs., Oct. 29. Entry at 7:20 and 7:40 p.m. Copper Door Restaurant, 15 Leavy Drive, Bedford. Cost is $125 per person, $175 for VIP. See copperdoorrestaurant.com for reservations. • MURDER MYSTERY DINNER THEATER Get-A-Clue Productions performs The Secret of Cell Block Seven. Hart's Catering will provide the meal. Fri., Oct. 30, and Sat., Oct. 31, at 6 p.m. Castle in the Clouds, 455 Old Mountain Road, Moultonborough. Cost is $55 per person.


DRINK

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First, we sampled the pinot grigio, which is the brand’s newest offering. It is 100-percent stainless steel aged and has a small addition of an Italian grape to add creaminess. Cheryl recommends enjoying it well-chilled. Next, we sampled the chardonnay. The label has what Cheryl calls a flavor cue to indicate what you will experience: apples and citrus. I enjoyed this wine, as it is lightly oaked but not overly oaked like some chardonnays. Cheryl said they give extra care to the pinot noir, a delicate grape, often harvesting at night when it cools down in California. It is finished with a touch of sangiovese and has nice smooth tannins. This is a great wine for non-red wine drinkers. The cabernet sauvignon has a new label featuring the breast cancer ribbon and notes the company’s sustainability. It also has a touch of sangiovese. I appreciated its bigger, bolder body and depth but still found it easy to drink with smooth tannins. Cheryl described it as robust, with a nice mouth feel. The petite sirah is being tested in several stores across New Hampshire. This wine has a touch of zinfandel and some nice tannins. It is complex, finishing with a nice smokiness. Cheryl stressed the brand’s quality and value (you can purchase it for less than $10 right now in NH Liquor & Wine Outlet stores). And a portion of proceeds from all purchases in October will be donated to the NHBCC.

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Earlier this year, the New Hampshire Liquor Commission launched a fine wine tasting series to expose guests to premium wine offerings while raising money for charity. An early September event benefitted Concord Hospital’s Payson Center for Cancer Care, and two additional events raised money for the New Hampshire Breast Cancer Coalition. I recently had the chance to sit down with two guests of honor who were here for the events held in Portsmouth and Concord. Cheryl Indelicato, HandCraft Wines proprietor from California, and Dr. Sheri Y. Prentiss, national speaker, public health expert and breast cancer survivor, talked about how they got involved in this cause and what brought them to New Hampshire. “I really feel that living well also means giving back. Being a registered nurse, and my grandmother was a breast cancer survivor in the 1960s, I really felt that it went hand in hand and this was a platform I wanted to get back to,” said Cheryl, part of a third-generation vintner family. HandCraft was started in 2012 and is currently marking their 91st harvest. She said she always wanted to start her own brand and this one pays homage to her Italian heritage with a small addition of Italian vartietals blended with the other grapes. Cheryl met Sheri at a Susan G. Komen three-day event in San Francisco and the two became fast friends. Sheri’s story is a pretty amazing one to hear. A physician by trade, she survived breast cancer and decided she wanted to get behind causes that she believed in and live in the moment. “I was sitting there one day and I decided, ‘I’m [going] to live.’ And shortly thereafter, it settled in me what ‘live’ meant,” Sheri said. No longer able to practice medicine, she stumbled upon a posting by Susan G. Komen for a national spokesperson. Among a field of 500-plus candidates, she earned the position and is currently in her fifth year. She is also an author, having written a book on her experiences. “It’s a brand that doesn’t just allow an individual to share a wonderful glass of wine with a family member or a friend,” Sheri said of Cheryl and HandCraft. “When you purchase a bottle of HandCraft, you are making a difference locally and abroad, because she is very generous.” So how is the wine? I found it very approachable, pleasant and easy to drink.

494 Elm St. Manchester • 644-353 • MurphysTaproom.net HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 45


POP CULTURE

Index CDs

pg46

Mindless Self Indulgence, PINK (Metropolis Records)

• Mindless Self Indulgence, PINK B• River Tiber, When the Time is Right A BOOKS

pg48

• Fear of Dying B 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. FILM

MUSIC, BOOKS, GAMES, COMICS, MOVIES, DVDS, TV AND MORE

pg50

• The Walk B• Pan D Looking for more book, film and pop culture events? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play or hipposcout.com.

This New York City electro-punk band has always stood on the edge of some measure of superstardom, during which time (18 years now) they’ve consistently put the kibosh on real success by simultaneously being a ferocious cyber-punk organism with hooks and a joke band. They easily have the talent to go in the direction of, say, God Lives Underwater or something of that sort, but just when you start bobbing your head and feeling like you want to take a jolly baseball bat to a mailbox, singer Jimmy Urine starts with some sort of jackwagon nonsense. This LP, mostly comprised of “long-lost” recordings from their earliest days, documents the roots of their whatever-ness, starting with a sturdy but ultimately disposable rub of Depeche Mode’s “Personal Jesus,” complete with electroshock-blast guitars, staccato rhythms and Urine’s raging yet annoyingly complacent caterwauling. Then there’s “Memory of Heaven,” a speed-hardfloor mess that had me wishing Urine would just shut up and leave the comedy to Weird Al. I mean, if you’ve been dying for MSI to show some teeth, this is it, but someday I’d really like to hear something from this crew that wasn’t drawn in hurried crayon. B- — Eric W. Saeger River Tiber, When the Time is Right (self-released)

Here we have a new way of looking at trip-hop — let’s call it “deep trip-hop,” owing to the Baptist-choirlevel soul that comes along with these laconic beats. Former Berklee student Tommy Paxton-Beesley had this EP funded by Muchfact, a Canadian organization that seems focused on helping out musicians who deserve a little financial boost, which this guy certainly does (jeez, the New Pornographers got some help from this thing too?). This year found Paxton-Beesley receiving lots of love when Drake’s “No Tellin’” sampled his then-unreleased “No Talk,” leading to instant A-list status in the Toronto scene. I can’t speak to that part, but the kickoff tune here, “No Talk,” certainly is a strange and beautiful animal, made of bedroom soul, a little Bon Iver and some Nintendo-synth that actually grows on you. Closing number “Waves” sounds like some lost track from a 1980s Cars album; “Let You Go” ups both the glitch and Drake factors simultaneously to nice effect, if questionable accessibility, not that that should dissuade you. A — Eric W. Saeger

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HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 46

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PLAYLIST A seriously abridged compendium of recent and future CD releases • Desiccated rock ’n’ roll corpse Rod Stewart has apparently been trolled by a bunch of Jackass-watching brats into making a new album, called Another Country. Basically everyone has a Rod Stewart song they can tolerate, I think. Like, I can deal with “Forever Young.” What about you? Maybe you can dig on the new “Love Is” single from this new album. Look, lots of fiddle players and people in long skirts and crazy whippy hair, all smiling as though they think people will buy this album at all the malls and stores, like they used to. It sounds like Celtic Woman doing an Irish song about the Titanic, but with Rod Stewart. • I like the noise-rock band Joanna Gruesome, but now it’s time for me to go find a YouTube or something of their namesake, Joanna Newsom, because her new LP Divers is coming straight for us. She’s a harp player, as in harp, not harmonica, so I assume I’ll be hearing some more of her quirky harp and quirky polyrythmic nonsense, over the Internet wires, in just a second here. Ah, here’s something, a video for the new single “Sapokanikan.” Boy, her voice is even more quirky and moonbatty than ever. It’s like Glinda the Good Witch on acid, doing an unplugged-piano version of something Vampire Weekend taped over because it was so annoying. For the sake of my health I must leave this video, post haste. • Have we talked about 5 Seconds of Summer before? I swear we have. Sounds Good Feels Good is the title of this Australian pop-punk band’s next album, and it will be available at your life-after-peoplelooking abandoned strip mall. There is a teaser video, full of horrible boyband-emo gobbledygook that will make you almost miss Good Charlotte. Gack, these dweebs can’t move on to their tattoos-drinking-and-regret stage quickly enough to suit me. • Hmm, country-pop princess Carrie Underwood — is she the one with the husband who left her for a boy, or is she the one who just got divorced, or is she the other one with some other problem? Honestly, how do you people keep up with all this nonsense? Wait, let me read this stuff here, even though I couldn’t care less about some shrinkwrapped American Idol fraudster who became the new Monday Night Football girl. Let me educate myself a little before I … ha ha, she’s married to a hockey player, and when the guy got traded from Ottawa to Nashville, the hockey fans demanded that her songs be banned from Ottawa’s radio stations because she was obviously in on the conspiracy to keep the Ottawa Senators in their rightful place as practice obstacle-cones for the good teams. Storyteller is her new album, and the single is “Smoke Break,” a dumb-truckin’ NASCARcountry “story song” about being a broke single mom. If you play it backward, there are all sorts of insults aimed at the Ottawa Senators. — Eric W. Saeger

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Vermont stories

Howard Frank Mosher continues with God’s Kingdom By Kelly Sennott

ksennott@hippopress.com

When Howard Frank Mosher and his wife Phillis moved to Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom in their early 20s to take teaching jobs, they discovered a wealth of stories waiting to be told. They realized this while listening to their apartment landlady talk about her years as a dairy farmer during the Depression, when she and her first husband began making and selling moonshine illegally to avoid bankruptcy. Her story had phantom elements, two dead husbands and an out-of-the-blue marriage proposal. “I looked at my wife, and she looked at me. We both knew I was going to write stories in the Northeast Kingdom. It was an epiphany for me,” said Mosher, who’s now in his 70s. The landlady’s story would eventually become Where the River Flows North. All Mosher’s books have ties to the region, including his latest, God’s Kingdom. “In Vermont, we really are cut off from much of the rest of New England in a way that enabled the people of this area to develop their own culture,” Mosher said. “I think what that has resulted in is a group of self-sufficient and independent-minded group of people. And as I try to show in God’s Kingdom, there are advantages and disadvantages to that.” For one, it provokes wariness and suspicion of outsiders. During the interview, Mosher recounted racism in 1968, the year the first African American family moved to the village. The minister, his wife and children had come from California to get away from riots, and a week after they arrived, a

handful of locals shot through their front windows. This story became A Stranger in the Kingdom in 1989. “Instead of investigating the suspects of the shooting, the state police and local newspaper editor and local state’s attorney cockatooted some charges against the minister, accusing him of committing adultery with a white house guest,” Mosher said. God’s Kingdom is a sequel to Stranger and looks at the after-effects of this event through a young man, years later, coming of age in the Northeast Kingdom and discovering his family’s involvement in that case. Many of Mosher’s stories have been translated to the big screen by Vermont filmmaker Jay Craven who, like Mosher, recognizes and admires the quirkiness and way of life in the Northeast Kingdom. The filmmaker always shoots on site and has said in a past Hippo interview he loves the larger-than-life characters and sense of place in Mosher’s books, which are pretty true to form. It’s because of this quirkiness Mosher was surprised no writer had tackled these parts before. “I think Robert Frost spent the summer in the Northeast Kingdom in the 1940s, but since then, nobody had written the stories of the Northeast Kingdom. At 21 years old, I wasn’t really old enough to begin writing them, but I certainly was ready to hear them,” Mosher said. Meet Howard Frank Mosher MainStreet BookEnds: 16 E. Main St., Warner, Sunday, Oct. 18, at 2 p.m. Barnes & Noble: 1741 S. Willow St., Manchester: Saturday, Oct. 24, at 1 p.m. Barnes & Noble: 45 Gosling Road, Newington, Friday, Oct. 30, at 7 p.m. Water Street Bookstore: 125 Water St., Exeter Wednesday, Nov. 4, at 7 p.m. Gibson’s Bookstore: 45 S. Main St., Concord Thursday, Nov. 5, at 7 p.m. Contact: howardfrankmosher.com

Fall Allergies?

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A Safe Trick or Treat! October 29th • 5-7pm Horse Drawn Ride Music • Raffles • Giveaways • Fun New This Year! Costume Parade Line up starts @ 4:45 pm Parade starts @ 5:00 pm Magic show @ 6:00 pm

First 100 children in costume lined up will receive a free ticket to Santa’s Big Party at Charmingfare Farm ($19.00 value)

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HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 47


POP CULTURE BOOKS

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Fear of Dying, by Erica Jong (St. Martin’s Press, 273 pages)

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   HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 48

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Erica Jong has written eight novels and seven books of poetry. Name one, other than Fear of Flying. Thought so. Although she is one of the most celebrated female writers of her generation, Jong’s name is synonymous with the 1973 novel in which the irrepressible Isadora Wing seeks meaning and fulfillment in zipless, er, fornication. The book was a bible of second-wave feminism and sold 27 million copies. Jong’s other titles, which include Shylock’s Daughter and Any Woman’s Blues, all made the New York Times bestseller list but were not nearly so memorable. Then came a stroke of marketing genius: a life-spanning trilogy of fear. The memoir Fear of Fifty came out in 1994. Fear of Dying is new this fall. It is not, as fans might have hoped, the adventures of Isadora at 60, but those of her best friend. Isadora bops in and out, dispensing love and wisdom. Vanessa Wonderman, a retired actress married 15 years, is going through an endlife crisis, the sort realized when Baby Boomers are sandwiched between aging parents and needy adult children. Both of Vanessa’s parents are bed-ridden, awaiting the inevitable, and though her mother’s “cheerful dementia is studded with piercing insights” and “fierce truth-telling” Vanessa suspects her parents’ decline is taking years off her own life. Meanwhile, her daughter, Glinda (forever mad that she was named after a witch) is five months pregnant, and Vanessa’s doting but increasingly dull husband is hospitalized for an aneurysm, unlikely to help their already flagging sex life. Inspired by her friend Isadora’s earlier work and philosophy, Vanessa decides to seek satisfaction on a website called zipless dot com. (Apparently, this is set in the post-Ashley Madison era.) Soon she is meeting strange men in hotels, and Isadora, who has turned out to be somewhat of a prude while accelerating toward eternity, tut-tuts on the sideline, yammering about the importance of connection and joy. Jung’s voice is light and comical — between us girls — except for the occasional forays into “between us Democrats,” when she delivers tired and scolding tirades: “How can you believe in God after the

Holocaust, the Vietnam war, Iraq, Afghanistan?” and “Witness the Holocaust, we, again?, Hurricane Katrina, the earthquake in Haiti, 9/11 and Abu Ghraib. Witness school shootings and our inability to stop them. God is disappointed in us. We failed each test. We are not kind enough or good enough to be saved.” The ardent Hillary supporter may say “Preach it, sister.” Or, just as likely, stop nagging and write. When she does, Jong writes with the ease with which the glib talk, creating characters that are glitzy as vaudeville, but recognizable as your own mother. Here is her description of Vanessa’s: “Her cheeks are sallow and crosshatched with a million wrinkles. Her eyes are rheumy and clotted with buttery blobs. Her feet are gnarled and twisted, and her thick-ridged toenails are a jagged mustard color. Her nightgown keeps opening to reveal her flattened breasts.” Jong’s gift of description and dialogue is matched by her philosophical asides. She ponders how modern adults cling to dying parents because they themselves are not yet ready to be the grown-ups, and how aging reveals the wisdom of the body, and how parents are transformed from irritants to gods upon death. “Death begins the harvest — the harvest of pain, of administration, of clerical work. And the gradual transformation of a difficult parent into a demi-saint. “Scratch demi. Parents get nobler and nobler after they die. They also get funnier and more endearing. They come to deserve your desperate love.” The book’s flaw, besides a formulaic simplicity and predictable conclusion, is the 1-percent world Vanessa and her tribe inhabit. As much as Fear of Flying, this seems a book of the 1970s, when a conversation about a friend buying an outof-service Concorde (“That [expletive] will get to Paris in three hours while we take six!”) is a value-neutral exchange to have. It’s a gilded book by a gilded author about gilded people who flirt with wisdom at an advanced age. It has too great an ancestral lineage, and is too skillfully crafted, to fail. But charming though it may be, it’s a zipless read that, unlike its forebears, hoes previously cultivated ground. B — Jennifer Graham


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

Good Fortune

Celebrating 35 years Pasta for a Cause In October we will donate $1 to the NH Food Bank for every pound of fresh pasta sold

Complimentary Wine Tasting Friday 10/16 3-6pm

815 Chestnut St. Manchester 622-8789

2264 Candia Rd. Manchester | BonsaisRestaurant.com

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• YA novel in the spirit of True Grit: New Hampshire author Erin Bowman visits Gibson’s Bookstore, 45 S. Main St., Concord, this Friday, Oct. 16, at 5:30 p.m., to talk about her latest book, Vengeance Road, about heroine Kate Thompson, whose father is killed by the notorious Rose Riders because of a mysterious journal that reveals the secret location of a gold mine. In response, the 18-year-old disguises herself as a boy and takes to the gritty plains looking for answers and justice. Visit gibsonsbookstore.com or call 224-0562. • Make your own books: Twiggs Art Gallery at Cornerstone Design (254 King St., junction of Routes 3 & 4, Boscawen) hosts a handful of bookmaking workshops in the next two months. The first, “Advanced Bookmaking Workshop,” is Friday, Oct. 16, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Instructed by Gail Smuda, participants will learn how to make sewn books using folded paper and a Japanese binding, plus a simple slip case for a hand-bound book (bring the book you want to make a case for); cost is $60 plus a $10 materials fee. There’s a “Funky Technique Tag Book” mixed media workshop Saturday, Oct. 17, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. ($45, $10 materials) in which SherRee West teaches “Tim Holtz” distressing techniques — participants will leave with a tag book that can be used for photos and journaling — and a little later, there’s a “Mini Accordion Scrapbook” mixed media workshop Saturday, Nov. 28, from 1 to 4 p.m., also taught by West ($45, plus $10 for materials). Visit twiggsgallery.wordpress.com for details or call 975-0015. • Literary pumpkins: Show off your literary and pumpkin-decorating skills in a literary pumpkin contest at the Wadleigh Memorial Library (49 Nashua St., Milford) next week. The rules: You can paint, embellish or decorate your pumpkin as you choose; however, carved gourds will not be accepted. Bring your pumpkin to the library Oct. 16 through Oct. 27 during regular hours. Grand prize winners will be announced Thursday, Oct. 29. Email refdesk@wadleighlibrary.org or call 249-0645. — Kelly Sennott

Good Times Good Friends,Good Food

It’s just about curl up & read a good book time. Let us help you pick out a few new favorites.

Concord’s Indie Bookstore since 1898. 45 South Main St., Concord, NH | 603-224-0562 | gibsonsbookstore.com

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Book Report

Books Author Events • DAVID MINDELL Author talks about Our Robots, Ourselves. Thurs., Oct. 15, at 7 p.m. RiverRun Bookstore, 142 Fleet St., Portsmouth. Visit riverrunbookstore.com, call 431-2100. • DARCIE DENNIGAN, FRANNY CHOI Poetry readings. Thurs., Oct. 15, at 6 p.m. New Hampshire Institute of Art, 148 Concord St., Manchester. • SETH DICKINSON, ILANA C.MYER, FRAN WILDE Authors talk about books, The Traitor Baru Cormorant, Last Song Before Night and Updraft respectively. Thurs., Oct. 15, at 6:30 p.m. Milford Toadstool Bookshop, 614 Nashua St., Milford. Call 673-1734, email advertising@mtoad.com. • J. DENNIS ROBINSON Author/historian presents "Case Closed on the 1873 Smuttynose Ax Murders" based on research from book, Mystery on the Isles of Shoals. Thurs., Oct. 15, at 7 p.m. Rye Public Library, 581 Washington Road, Rye. Call 964-8401. • JOJO WHITE Boston Celtic legend and his biographer Mark C. Bondanza talk about Make It Count: The Life and Times of Basketball Great JoJo White. Thurs., Oct. 15, at 7 p.m. Nashua Public Library, 2 Court St., Nashua. Free. Copies of book available for signing. Visit nashualibrary.org/visit/directions, call 589-4610. • PETER ZHEUTLIN Author talks about Rescue Road. Fri., Oct. 16, at 6:30 p.m. Toadstool Bookshop, 614 Nashua St., Milford.

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POP CULTURE BOOKS

Teachers Week • Oct 12-18 at all 3 stores! 25% off everything* for all educators & staff

Seth Dickinson, Ilana Myer & Fran Wilde Thu, Oct. 15, 6:30 pm

Three wonderful debut SF-Fantasy authors visit on their Fall Flights of Fantasy Tour to chat and sign copies of their new books. Details on our website. Meet them here and say you knew them ‘when’!

Peter Zheutlin

Fri, Oct 16, 6:30pm

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HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 49


POP CULTURE FILM REVIEWS BY AMY DIAZ

WILTON TOWN HALL THEATRE

The Walk (PG-13)

(603) 654-FILM (3456)

www.wiltontownhalltheatre.com

French wire walker Philippe Petit becomes obsessed with walking on a wire between the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in The Walk, a movie based on the true story of the 1974 stunt.

2 Week - Lily Tomlin “GRANDMA” Every evening 7:30 & Sun mats. 2:00-4:30 nd

1st NH “MEET THE PATELS” Every Evening 7:30 Sun mats 2:00 & 4:30 SATURDAY AFTERNOON LIBRARY CLASSIC FILM Rex Harrison, Doris Day, Myrna Loy Edge-of-the-seat suspense thriller

“MIDNIGHT LACE” (1960)

Sat 4:30 pm – Free Admission – Donations to Charity SUNDAY DOCUMENTARY FILM SERIES

“MOTHER NATURE’S CHILD”

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HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 50

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Petit (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) always loved the tightrope walk. As a child, he became enamored while watching a performance by a circus that came to his town. When he’s older, he trains on and off with the head of the tightrope-walking troupe, Papa Rudy (Ben Kingsley, doing an accent that my brain could never quite understand). Making a living as a street busker in Paris, Petit starts dreaming of walking between the two towers when he sees a newspaper story about them being built. He performs an attention-getting walk between the two towers of the Notre-Dame de Paris Cathedral and then sets out planning his walk in New York City. He gathers a small crew of friends/admirers who help him, including musician Annie (Charlotte Le Bon) and photographer Jean Louis (Clemont Sibony). The challenges — aside from the obvious “not dying” — include finding a way to brace the wire so it can take Petit’s weight and the weather so high up in the sky and finding a way to get all the necessary equipment up 100 stories to the top of both towers, one of which isn’t finished yet. (Its completion is the motivating factor of the stunt — Petit believes that the walk needs to happen before the tower is completed). And, because this is an unauthorized stunt, Petit and his crew need to get everything in place and Petit out on the wire before anybody realizes what they’re doing or else the police will shut it down and make future attempts impossible. I had an odd reaction to the very end of The Walk, one that retroactively colors my feelings about the movie that came before it. My first thought, as I was watching the movie’s closing scenes, was “ew” and my second thought was “oh, man, I’m not going to cry over this nonsense, am I?” I didn’t, but the movie seemed to be working hard to get me there in a way that reminded me of the sentimentality of this movie’s director Robert Zemeckis’ Forrest Gump. It’s a difficult needle to thread, finding a way to end the movie in a way that is about Petit and his walk and the towers with-

AT THE MULTIPLEX

Coming soon Oct. 16: Goosebumps (PG) Jack Black is R.L. Stine in this riff on the kids’ horror books; Crimson Peak (R) Guillermo Del Toro does gothic horror with Mia Wasikowska, Tom Hiddleston and Jessica Chastain; Bridge of Spies (PG-13) Steven Spielberg directs and Tom Hanks stars in this Cold War tale. Oct. 23: Steve Jobs (R) Aaron Sorkin writes, Danny Boyle

The Walk

out being about that other part of the towers’ history. The movie does it less than expertly, laying on the final image of the golden towers a little too thick. The drama does not need Zemeckis’ underlining to make it poignant. Setting aside the ending, The Walk is a solid film, not perhaps as good at Man on Wire, the 2008 documentary about Petit’s stunt that I remember as even more nail-biting in some ways, but solid nonetheless. This isn’t Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s best role and yet it’s still vastly better than any given performance by many a similar-aged actor. He is one of those rare actors whom you can never quite forget is actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt but who can still meld enough with each role that you don’t care and can buy the performance. He allows us to believe in Petit’s obsession with grand wire-walks and to believe that his passion for what he sees as his art is great enough that he can convince others to help him. And that’s no easy feat — would you be eager to help somebody do their art if you knew one of the outcomes (one of the likely outcomes) was that you would be an accomplice to his death? His Petit narrates the movie as well, appearing to stand on the torch of the Statue of Liberty with the Towers in the background. For a variety of reasons, I could have had less of this, but it doesn’t get in the way as much as it could have done. What The Walk does, especially in 3-D, which I how I saw the movie, is give you a sense of Petit’s stomach-churning position so high in the air, supported by what appears to be nothing. With one exception (something

directs, Michael Fassbender stars and Seth Rogen co-stars — in, I tell you, I am so in!; Room (R) The hugely popular novel by Emma Donoghue gets this adaptation starring Brie Larson and Jacob Tremblay; Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension (R) Yes, they made more of these; Jem and the Holograms (PG-13) The cartoon watched by your younger X-ers and older millennials is, for

always has to come right at you at least once in a movie like this, it seems, or the effects guys don’t feel they got their money’s worth), the 3-D of this movie is fairly subtly used. It makes you feel the distance from the ground (really feel it — I don’t have a problem with heights but I’m pretty sure I grabbed the arm of my seat) and the precariousness of one shaky wire suspended so far up. The Walk is a fun little movie about a magical moment that captures the whimsy of that moment as much as the step-by-step of how it was created. And if it gets you to watch the even more entertaining documentary about the event, so much the better. BRated PG for thematic elements involving perilous situations, and for some nudity, language, brief drug references and smoking. Directed by Robert Zemeckis with a screenplay by Zemeckis & Christopher Browne (based on the book To Reach the Clouds by Philippe Petit), The Walk is two hours and three minutes long and distributed by Tristar.

Pan (PG)

An orphaned Peter arrives in Neverland for the first time in Pan, the completely unnecessary origin story for Peter Pan.

Peter (Levi Miller), an orphan in World War II London, is, along with other boys from his orphanage, whisked away, via floating pirate ship, in the night and taken to a mine filled with other orphan boys from various places and times. The locale is Neverland and the mineworkers are digging for fairy

some reason, a live-action movie. But is it truly outrageous?

together into something bigger than the sum of its parts. C+

Reviewlets Black Mass (R) Johnny Depp, Joel Edgerton. Interesting story bits, a somewhat better than average Depp performance and a sprinkling of Benedict Cumberbatch are not enough to give this James “Whitey” Bulger biopic a story that pulls

The Intern (PG-13) Anne Hathaway, Robert De Niro. De Niro reenters the workforce at age 70 as an intern at an Internet company. OK-ish chemistry between Hathaway and De Niro and a few interesting ideas about the modern workforce do not add up to a movie’s worth of fun. C


dust, which they find in small crystal-like chunks. The pirate Blackbeard (Hugh Jackman), dictator of the mine, hunted the island's fairy kingdom to extinction and is now essentially strip-mining Neverland for the last bit of fairy dust. As we eventually learn, Blackbeard is using the fairy dust to sustain his own eternal life and without it he looks like Hugh Jackman in questionable aging makeup, I mean, a very old man. (This seems like a terrible plan, by the way. Why make extinct the beings that create the thing you need? Either this is some sort of very clunky environmental metaphor or it's just a poorly thought out plot point.) When Peter finds a chunk, he has it stolen before he can turn it in and the kerfuffle he kicks up over getting credit for the find leads to his being forced to walk the plank. Luckily for him, on the way down the very long drop from plank to ground, Peter realizes he can fly. Blackbeard thinks this is a sign that Peter is the, heavy sigh, Chosen One who will unite the native peoples and remaining fairies of Neverland and lead the war against him. Fellow miner James Hook (Garrett Hedlund) sees Peter as a possible ticket out of the mine and works to free him from Blackbeard's clutches. The two eventually make their way to the island's native peoples, whose princess is Tiger Lily (Rooney Mara). She believes that Peter might indeed be the savior they've been waiting for. Even though Hook is all "I ain't in this for your revolution, Princess" he sort of sticks around to help Peter, all the while planning his escape from Neverland. Full disclosure: I missed the first 10 minutes of this movie, though nothing I saw in any of the minutes after made me think those were the 10 minutes that brought it all to life. One of the many problems with Pan is a problem that most of the Peter Pan adaptations in recent years have had. I'll call it the Hook Problem. Captain Hook, or in this case pre-captain Hook, is the way more interesting character than Peter. This was true whether he was crazy old Dustin Hoffman in Hook or sexypants Colin O'Donoghue of Once Upon a Time or the Hook played by Jason Isaacs in the rather straightforward Peter Pan movie from 2003 where Isaacs also played Mr. Dar-

ling, the children's father (and the movie, if the trailer and my memory can be believed, was a lot more about Wendy and her ambivalence about approaching adulthood than about Peter). Here, Garrett Hedlund's proto-Hook, with a strange Yosemite Sam-ish accent, is your Han Solo reluctant-hero type. He isn't the Chosen One but he appears to be the one guy in the mines with the gumption to attempt an escape. The future adventures of Hook, who here displays heroic qualities but who we know will also develop villainous ones, and his Chewbacca-like sidekick Smee (Adeel Akhtar) hold way more swashbuckling possibility than Peter and his band of orphans. Miller does fine for most of the movie but the more confident Peter got the less I enjoyed his performance, which points to another problem with Peter as a character, and specifically as the focus of an origin story: He is on the road to becoming a static character (the boy who never grows up) who is full of himself. The Peter Pan cockiness has a tendency to be extremely wearing when delivered by a child actor. He's not, like Hook, on the road to villainy but on the road to being an irritating hero. Wheeee. Pan has other flaws. Rooney Mara is the least fun possible choice for Tiger Lily. You feel that she is being hunted by pirates in part for being a massive buzzkill. The special effects are not great. When Peter finally did a lot of serious flying in the movie's final act, I found myself doing a lot of wincing. There are a lot of little details (the rallying song of the mine workers is Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit" in a moment that weirdly seems to rip off Moulin Rouge; everything about the graphics for the "beautiful" mermaids is super creepy) that seem to be about adding whimsy but that come off not at all as whimsical but instead as forced and sort of exhausting. I'll give Pan the benefit of the doubt and say it has a few bits with promise. Sadly, no amount of believing or clapping your hands will make this movie soar. D Rated PG for fantasy action violence, language and some thematic material. Directed by Joe Wright with a screenplay by Jason Fuchs, Pan is an hour and 51 minutes long and distributed by Warner Bros.

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POP CULTURE FILMS AMC Tyngsboro 440 Middlesex St., Tyngsborough, Mass., 978-649-4158. Chunky’s Cinema & Pub 151 Coliseum Ave., Nashua, chunkys.com Chunky’s Cinema & Pub 150 Bridge St., Pelham, 635-7499 Cinemagic Hooksett 1226 Hooksett Road, Hooksett,

644-4629, cinemagicmovies.com Cinemagic Merrimack 12 11 Executive Park Dr., Merrimack, 423-0240, cinemagicmovies.com Flagship Cinemas Derry 10 Ashleigh Dr., Derry, 437-8800 AMC at The Loop 90 Pleasant Valley St., Methuen, Mass., 978-738-8942

O’Neil Cinema 12 Apple Tree Mall, Londonderry, 434-8633 Regal Concord 282 Loudon Road, Concord, 226-3800 Regal Hooksett 8 100 Technology Drive, Hooksett Showcase Cinemas Lowell 32 Reiss Ave., Lowell, Mass., 978-551-0055

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RED RIVER THEATRES 11 S. Main St., Concord, 2244600, redrivertheatres.org • Mississippi Grind (R, 2015) Thurs., Oct. 15, at 2 p.m. • Grandma (R, 2015) Thurs., Oct. 15, at 2:05 & 5:35 p.m.; Fri., Oct. 16, at 1 & 5:35 p.m.; Sat., Oct. 17, at 1 & 5:35 p.m.; Sun., Oct. 18, at 1 & 5:35 p.m.; Mon., Oct. 19, at 2:05 & 5:35 p.m.; Tues., Oct. 20, at 2:05 & 5:35 p.m.; Wed., Oct. 21, at 2:05 p.m.; & Thurs., Oct. 22, at 2:05 p.m. • Meru (R, 2015) Thurs., Oct. 15, at 7:30 p.m.; Fri., Oct. 16, at 3 & 7:30 p.m.; Sat., Oct. 17, at 3 & 7:30 p.m.; Sun., Oct. 18, at 3 p.m.; Mon., Oct. 19, at 7:30 p.m.; Tues., Oct. 20, at 7:30 p.m.; Thurs., Oct. 22, at 7:30 p.m. • Meet the Patels (PG, 2015) Thurs., Oct. 15, at 2, 5:25 & 7:45 p.m.; Fri., Oct. 16, at 1:30 & 5:40 p.m.; Sat., Oct. 17, at 1:30 & 5:40 p.m.; Sun., Oct. 18, at 1:30 & 5:40 p.m.; Mon., Oct. 19, at 2:10 & 5:30 p.m.; Tues., Oct. 20, at 2:10 p.m.; Wed., Oct. 21, at 2:10 & 5:30 p.m.; Thurs., Oct. 22, at 2:10 & 5:30 p.m. • The Second Mother (R, 2015) Fri., Oct. 16, at 3:15 & 7:35 p.m.; Sat., Oct. 17, at 3:15 & 7:35 p.m.; Sun., Oct. 18, at 3:15 p.m.; Mon., Oct. 19, at 7:20 p.m.; Wed., Oct. 21, at 7:20 p.m.; & Thurs., Oct. 22, at 7:20 p.m. • He Named Me Malala (PG-13, 2015) Fri., Oct. 16, at 1:15, 3:30 5:45 & 8 p.m.; Sat., Oct. 17, at

CAPITOL CENTER FOR THE ARTS 44 S. Main St., Concord, 2251111, ccanh.com • Verdi’s Otello (Met Live in HD) Sat., Oct. 17, at 12:55 p.m. • Giselle Sat., Oct. 17, at 7 p.m.

NASHUA PUBLIC LIBRARY NPL Theater, 2 Court St., Nashua, 589-4611, nashualibrary.org. • The Spongebob Movie: Sponge Out of Water (PG, 2015) Sat., Oct. 17, at 2 p.m. • Me and Earl and the Dying Girl (PG-13, 2015) Tues., Oct. 20, at 7 p.m.

THE MUSIC HALL 28 Chestnut St., Portsmouth, 436-2400, themusichall.org; Loft is at 131 Congress St., Portsmouth • New Hampshire Film Festival Thurs., Oct. 15, through Sun., Oct. 18, all day in multiple venues, nhfilmfestival.com

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NEW HAMPSHIRE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE 31 College Drive, Sweeney Auditorium, Concord, 2716484, ext. 4115, nhti.edu • Inherent Vice (R, 2014) Fri., Oct. 16, at 7 p.m.

WILTON TOWN HALL 40 Main St., Wilton, 654-3456, wiltontownhalltheatre.com • The Second Mother (Portuguese with subtitles) Thurs., Oct. 15, at 7:30 p.m. • Grandma (R, 2015) Thurs., Oct. 15, through Thurs., Oct. 22, at 7:30 p.m. Additional screening Sun., Oct. 18, at 2 p.m. • Meet the Patels (PG, 2015) Fri., Oct. 16, through Thurs., Oct. 22, at 7:30 p.m. Additional screenings Sun., Oct. 28, at 2 & 4:30 p.m. • Midnight Lace (1960) Sat., Oct. 17, at 4:30 p.m. • Mother Nature’s Child (documentary, 2011) Sun., Oct. 18, at 4:30 p.m.

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• Jupiter Ascending (PG-13, 2015) Fri., Oct. 16, at 3 p.m. • Forrest Gump (PG-13, 1994) Wed., Oct. 21, at 1 p.m.

1:15, 3:30 5:45 & 8 p.m.; Sun., Oct. 18, at 1:15, 3:30 & 5:45 p.m.; Mon., Oct. 19, at 2, 5:25 & 7:45 p.m.; Tues., Oct. 20, at 2, 5:25 & 7:45 p.m.; Wed., Oct. 21, at 2, 5:25 & 7:45 p.m.; & Thurs., Oct. 22, at 2, 5:25 & 7:45 p.m. • The Bride of Frankenstein (NR, 1935) Tues., Oct. 20, at 6 p.m.

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NITE Tubular anniversary By Michael Witthaus

mwitthaus@hippopress.com

• Horn emeritus: A native of pre­-Castro Cuba, Arturo Sandoval studied classical trumpet at age 12, later becoming a protégé of jazz master Dizzy Gillespie. Sandoval is now a leading light of Latin jazz, renowned for his horn skills along with work in the classical world as a composer, pianist and frequent teacher of young musicians. Sandoval performs Thursday, Oct. 15, at 7:30 p.m. at Stockbridge Theatre, 5 Pinkerton St., Derry. Tickets $15 to $­ 30 at stockbridgetheatre.com. • Boston twang: Fans of Luke Bryan and Eric Church will enjoy Houston Bernard Band, which earned a New England Music Award nomination this year for Best Country Band. See them Friday, Oct. 16, at 9 p.m., at Club ManchVegas, 50 Old Granite St. Manchester. See facebook.com/ HoustonBernardBand. • Fiddle man: There’s a strong case that Jordan Tirrell­-Wysocki is New Hampshire’s most versatile musician. Tirrell­-Wysocki’s trio performs an evening of Celtic and contemporary music to benefit the Children’s Theatre Project on Saturday, Oct. 17, at 8 p.m. at Concord City Auditorium, 2 Prince St., Concord. Tickets $10 at concordcityauditorium.org. • Ghoulish: Dan Blakeslee’s Halloween side project Doctor Gasp & the Eeks is a longtime Seacoast tradition, appearing in Manchester for the first time. A treat for young and old, the masked singer-guitarist channels Bobby Boris Pickett and Disney’s Haunted Mansion narrator Paul Frees as he plays a mix of seasonal favorites and wacky originals. Doctor Gasp 13th Annual Halloween Spectacular is Wednesday, Oct. 21, at 7 p.m. at Modern Gypsy, 383 Chestnut St., Manchester. See doctorgasp.com. 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.

Theatrical rockers celebrate four decades By Michael Witthaus

mwitthaus@hippopress.com

2015 marks 40 years since the The Tubes released their eponymous first album, with its instant classic, “White Punks on Dope.” A decade of hits followed, including “Prime Time,” “Talk to Ya Later” and the chart-topping “She’s a Beauty.” Apart from a late 1980s to early ’90s hiatus, the band’s toured throughout. Lately, though, lead singer Fee Waybill detects an uptick of interest. “It’s like everybody remembers all of a sudden,” Waybill said recently from his SoCal home. “We played to 12,000 people in Ottawa and the place went nuts! We haven’t been to Canada in 20 years — I don’t even like Canada — but they convinced us to do a one-night stand. We toured Europe; every night was packed and they asked us to come back next March. ... All of a sudden it’s a big deal and we’re selling out wherever we go.” Made up of theater majors, graphic designers and other artists, the band’s trailblazing live act set the standard for much of what followed. Alice Cooper, Genesis, Kiss and others had elaborate stage shows, but kinetic theatricality set the Tubes apart. Waybill pointed to the difference between The Tubes and Alice Cooper’s acts as indicative. “Alice pretty much doesn’t do anything,” Waybill said. “He stands in the middle and with his snake or spear and it all happens around or to him. We had all the dancers and everything; everybody was involved.” Their secret weapon was a young Kenny Ortega, bound for future movie fame with The Tubes When: Thursday, Oct. 22, 8 p.m. Where: Tupelo Music Hall, 2 Young Road, Londonderry Tickets: $40-$55 at tupelohall.com

see these shows was endless. It’s where my directing and choreography really took off.” Success begot success, radio airplay mushroomed, gigs got bigger, rehearsals grew longer and staging became ever more elaborate — and expensive. “It was just insane,” Waybill said. “At one point we had a giant blue tubular city where we had these 10-foot-across blue tubes connected to towers that were like 30 feet tall, each with a quick change room so I never had to leave the stage [and] we didn’t give a whole lot of thought to the cost.” The grueling pace of touring burned out some of the band members. Four of the original seven remain today: Waybill, guitarist Roger Steen, drummer Prairie Prince and bass player Rick Anderson. Bill Spooner and Michael Cotten stopped touring, and Vince Welnick died in 2006. Though one of the band’s biggest production numbers featured Waybill as drug-addled English rock star Quay Lewd teetering in giant platform shoes, the Tubes singer never touched anything stronger than ginseng. “Prairie and I used to buy a box of black tar goo, and we would take it every night because we were just so beat to crap,” Waybill said. “Luckily, I never hurt my voice, and it’s way better now than it was back then.”

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Xanadu, Dirty Dancing, Newsies and the High School Musical trilogy. When he first met the band, Ortega was mainly a dancer, fresh off a national tour with the rock musical Hair. The Tubes had hired the all-female comedic group Leila & the Snakes as stage dancers and were trying to create their show. “We kind of floundered around with these girls, not knowing what to do,” Waybill said. “Kenny saw us and said, ‘Let me be the choreographer.” The band rented out the 100-seat Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco’s Marina District to rehearse and record videos to play in six giant (for the era) monitors they took on tour. “It was like a constant workshop,” Waybill said. “We were constantly working, changing, fixing and improving; by the second album, we kind of got the hang of it.” In an Entertainment Weekly interview earlier this summer to promote his new Disney film The Descendants, Ortega recalled working with the band. “They were a fantastic group of artists and musicians that pioneered early music video, and we were the first people to really bring theater into our concerts,” he said. “Our shows were subversive, scary, shocking, beautiful. Mick Jagger came, Elton came, Bowie came — the list of artists that came to

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Local music news & events

HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 53


ROCKANDROLLCROSSWORDS.com BY TODD SANTOS

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53. Anthrax 'Born __ Idiot' 54. Faces 'Ooh __ __' (2,2) 55. 'Stuck In The Middle With You' cowriter Joe 56. 'You Can Tune A Piano, But You Can't __ Fish' 57. Anthrax-covered Queen song 'It's __' 58. Anthrax "We don't care for writing __"

HIPPO | OCTOBER 1559. - 21,Kelly 2015 Rowland | PAGE 54 'Lay It __ __' (2,2)

103253


Want more music, comedy or big-name concerts? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store or Google Play.

Capri Pizza 76 Derry St 880-8676 JD Chaser’s 2B Burnham Rd 886-0792 Nan King 222 Central St. 882-1911 SoHo 49 Lowell Rd 889-6889

Manchester A&E Cafe 1000 Elm St. 578-3338 Amoskeag Studio 250 Commercial St. 315-9320 Breezeway Pub 14 Pearl St. 621-9111 Penuche’s Ale House Amherst East Hampstead Millie’s Tavern British Beer Company 6 Pleasant St. 228-9833 Pasta Loft LaBelle Winery 17 L St. 967-4777 Laconia 1071 S. Willow St. Pit Road Lounge 345 Rte 101 672-9898 220 E. Main St. 378-0092 North Beach Bar & Anthony’s Pier 232-0677 388 Loudon Road Grille 931 Ocean Blvd. 263 Lakeside Ave. Cactus Jack’s 226-0533 Auburn Epping 967-4884 366-5855 782 South Willow St. Red Blazer Auburn Pitts Holy Grail Old Salt Baja Beach Club 627-8600 72 Manchester St. 167 Rockingham Road 64 Main St. 679-9559 409 Lafayette Rd. 89 Lake St. 524-0008 Central Ale House 224-4101 622-6564 Telly’s 926-8322 Broken Spoke Saloon 23 Central St. 660-2241 Tandy’s Top Shelf 235 Calef Hwy 679-8225 Ron’s Landing City Sports Grille 1 Eagle Sq. 856-7614 Bedford Tortilla Flat 379 Ocean Blvd 929-2122 1072 Watson Rd 866-754-2526 216 Maple St. 625-9656 True Brew Barista Bedford Village Inn 1-11 Brickyard Sq Savory Square Bistro Faro Italian Grille 72 Club ManchVegas 3 Bicentennial Sq. 2 Olde Bedford Way 734-2725 32 Depot Sq 926-2202 Endicott St. 527-8073 50 Old Granite St. 225-2776 472-2001 Popovers Sea Ketch 127 Ocean Fratello’s 222-1677 Copper Door 11 Brickyard Sq 734-4724 Blvd. 926-0324 799 Union Ave. 528-2022 Crazy Camel Hookah 15 Leavy Drive 488-2677 Contoocook Stacy Jane’s Covered Bridge Shorty’s Epsom 9 Ocean Blvd. 929-9005 Holy Grail of the Lakes and Cigar Lounge 12 Veterans Square 245 Maple St. 518-5273 Cedar St. 746-5191 206 Rte 101 488-5706 Circle 9 Ranch The Goat 737-3000 Derryfield Country Club Farmer’s Market 39 Windymere 736-9656 20 L St. 601-6928 Margate Resort 625 Mammoth Rd 896 Main St. Belmont Hilltop Pizzeria Wally’s Pub 76 Lake St. 524-5210 623-2880 746-3018 Lakes Region Casino 1724 Dover Rd 736-0027 144 Ashworth Ave. Naswa Resort Drynk 1265 Laconia Road 926-6954 1086 Weirs Blvd. 20 Old Granite St. Claremont 267-7778 Exeter 366-4341 641-2583 New Socials Shooters Tavern Pimentos Hanover Paradise Beach Club Fratello’s Rt. 3 DW Hwy 528-2444 2 Pleasant St. 287-4416 69 Water St. 583-4501 Salt Hill Pub 155 Dow St. 624-2022 Shooter’s Pub 7 Lebanon St. 676-7855 322 Lakeside Ave. 366-2665 Ignite Bar & Grille Deerfield Boscawen 6 Columbus Ave. Canoe Club 100 Hanover St. 494-6225 Nine Lions Tavern Alan’s 772-3856 27 S. Main St. 643-9660 Patio Garden Lakeside Ave. Imago Dei 133 N. Main St. 753-6631 4 North Rd 463-7374 Pitman’s Freight Room 123 Hanove St. Francestown Henniker 94 New Salem St. Jewel Derry Bow Toll Booth Tavern Country Spirit 61 Canal St. 836-1152 Drae Chen Yang Li 740 2nd NH Tpke 262 Maple St. 428-7007 527-0043 Tower Hill Tavern Karma Hookah & 520 South St. 228-8508 14 E Broadway #A 588-1800 Pat’s Peak Sled Pub 264 Lakeside Ave. Cigar Bar 216-2713 24 Flander’s Road 366-9100 1077 Elm St. 647-6653 Halligan Tavern Bristol Gilford 888-728-7732 Weirs Beach Lobster KC’s Rib Shack Back Room at the Mill 32 W. Broadway Ellacoya Barn & Grille Pound 837 Second St. 627-RIBS 965-3490 2 Central St. 744-0405 2667 Lakeshore Road Hillsborough 72 Endicott St. 366-2255 Midnight Rodeo (Yard) Purple Pit 293-8700 Mama McDonough’s 1211 S. Mammoth Rd 28 Central Sq. 744-7800 Dover Patrick’s 5 Depot St. 680-4148 Lebanon 623-3545 7th Settlement Brewery 18 Weirs Road 293-0841 Tooky Mills Rumor Mill Salt Hill Pub Milly’s Tavern 50 S Main St, 217-0971 47 Washington St. 9 Depot St. 2 West Park St. 448-4532 500 Commercial St. 373-1001 Goffstown 464-6700 625-4444 Asia Concord Village Trestle Turismo Modern Gypsy 42 Third St. 742-9816 Barley House 25 Main St. 497-8230 55 Henniker St. 680-4440 Londonderry Coach Stop Tavern 383 Chestnut st. Cara Irish Pub 132 N. Main 228-6363 176 Mammoth Rd Murphy’s Taproom 11 Fourth St. 343-4390 Hampton CC Tomatoes Hooksett 437-2022 494 Elm St. 644-3535 Dover Brick House 209 Fisherville Rd Ashworth By The Sea Asian Breeze Stumble Inn N’awlins Grille 2 Orchard St. 749-3838 295 Ocean Blvd. 753-4450 1328 Hooksett Rd 20 Rockingham Rd 860 Elm St. 606-2488 Fury’s Publick House Cheers 926-6762 621-9298 432-3210 Penuche’s 1 Washington St. 17 Depot St. 228-0180 Bernie’s Beach Bar New England’s Tap Whippersnappers 96 Hanover St. 626-9830 617-3633 Granite 73 Ocean Blvd 926-5050 House Grille 44 Nashua Rd 434-2660 Portland Pie Company 96 Pleasant St. 227-9000 Sonny’s Tavern Boardwalk Inn & Cafe 1292 Hooksett Rd 786 Elm St. 622-7437 83 Washington St. Hermanos 139 Ocean Blvd. 929-7400 782-5137 Loudon Salona Bar & Grill 742-4226 11 Hills Ave. 224-5669 Breakers at Ashworth Hungry Buffalo 128 Maple St. Top of the Chop Makris 295 Ocean Blvd. 926-6762 Hudson 58 Rte 129 798-3737 624-4020 1 Orchard St. 740-0006 Breakers By the Sea 354 Sheep Davis Road AJ’s Sports Bar Shaskeen 225-7665 409 Ocean Blvd 926-7702 11 Tracy Lane 718-1102 909 Elm St. 625-0246 Thursday, Oct. 15 Bedford Copper Door: Paul Rainone Boscawen Alan's: John Pratt in Lounge Concord Granite: CJ Poole & The Sophisticated Approach Hermanos: Richard Gardzina Penuche's Ale House: Mindseye Dover 7th Settlement: Jake Davis

Salt hill Pub: Irish Trad' Session Cara: Bluegrass w/ Steve Roy Dover Brickhouse: Kelly Ravin/ Randy Miller/Roger Kahle Bow Thayer/The Rugged Lebanon Fury's: Cloud Nine Salt hill Pub: Celtic Open Session Epping Londonderry Telly's: Dan Walker Coach Stop: Steve Tolley Exeter Manchester Pimentos: Thursday Night Live Central Ale House: Jonny Friday Blues Gilford City Sports Grille: DJ Dave Patrick's: Paul Warnick Fratello's: Jazz Night Hanover Karma: DJ Midas, SP1 & Reed Canoe Club: TBD

on drums Milly's: Lakes Region Big Band N'awlins: Boo Boo Groove Penuche's: Red Sky Mary Portland Pie: Acoustic Series Shaskeen: AdapterAdapter Shorty's: Kieran McNally Strange Brew: Bruce Marshall Sessions Wild Rover: Jimmy & Marcelle Duo Zaboo: Ryan Nichols/DJ Harry Merrimack Homestead: Justin Cohn

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 Zaboo 24 Depot St. 782-8489

Moultonborough Castle in the Clouds 455 Old Mountain Road 478-5900

Nashua 110 Grill 27 Trafalgar Sq. 943-7443 5 Dragons 29 Railroad Sq. 578-0702 Arena 53 High St. 881-9060 Boston Billiard Club 55 Northeastern Blvd. 943-5630 Burton’s Grill 310 Daniel Webster Highway 888-4880 Mason Country Tavern Marty’s Driving Range 452 Amherst St. 889-5871 96 Old Turnpike Rd Dolly Shakers 878-1324 38 East Hollis St. 577-1718 Meredith Fody’s Tavern Giuseppe’s Ristorante 9 Clinton St. 577-9015 312 DW Hwy 279-3313 Fratello’s Italian Grille 194 Main St. Merrimack 889-2022 Homestead Haluwa Lounge 641 DW Hwy 429-2022 Nashua Mall 883-6662 Jade Dragon Killarney’s Irish Pub 515 DW Hwy 424-2280 9 Northeastern Blvd. Pacific Fusion 888-1551 356 DW Hwy 424-6320 O’Shea’s Tortilla Flat 449 Amherst St. 943-7089 594 Daniel Webster Peddler’s Daughter Hwy 262-1693 48 Main St. 821-7535 Portland Pie Company Milford 14 Railroad Sq 882-7437 Aden China Riverwalk 437 Nashua St. 35 Railroad Sq 578-0200 672-2388 Shorty’s Chapanga’s 48 Gusabel Ave. 882-4070 168 Elm St. 249-5214 Stella Blu Clark’s on the Corner 70 E. Pearl St. 578-5557 40 Nashua St. 769-3119 Thirsty Turtle J’s Tavern 8 Temple St. 402-4136 63 Union Square 554-1433 Lefty’s Lanes New Boston 244 Elm St. 554-8300 Molly’s Tavern Pasta Loft 35 Mont Vernon Rd 241 Union Square 487-2011 672-2270 Shaka’s Bar & Grill Newbury 11 Wilton Rd 554-1224 Goosefeathers Pub Tiebreakers at Mt. Sunapee 763-3500 Hampshire Hills Salt Hill Pub 50 Emerson Rd 673-7123 1407 Rt 103 763-2667 Union Coffee Co. 42 South St. 554-8879 New Castle Valentino’s Wentworth By The Sea 28 Jones Rd. 672-2333 588 Wentworth Rd 422-7322

Milford Aden China: DJ Brian Chapanga's: Joe McDonald

Shorty's: Brad Bosse

Newmarket Riverworks: Elijah Clark Stone Church: Free'Stones/Jordan Nashua Tirrell-Wysocki & Jim Prendergast Arena: College Night with DJ - Irish Hizzy Country Tavern: Soulshine Peterborough Fratello's Italian Grille: Bob Harlow's: Bluegrass Night Rutherford Portland Pie: Acoustic Series Plaistow Racks: Blues Jam w/ Steve Devine Riverwalk Cafe: Savage Tones Blues Jam HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 55


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Are you interested in quitting mArijuAnA? do you also smoke tobacco?

Dartmouth has a new treatment research program that might help,

Newington Paddy’s 27 International Drive 430-9450

All cAlls And pArticipAtion Are confidentiAl. The program involves:

• Persons age 18 to 65 • comPrehensive assessment • incentive Program for quitting marijuana

Newmarket Riverworks 164 Main St. 659-6119 Stone Church 5 Granite St. 659-7700 Three Chimneys 17 Newmarket Rd. 868-7800

• individual and comPuter-assisted counseling • Program for tobacco smoking if interested

103181

Please call ( 855) 290-2822 if you are interested in learning more about this study.

Newport Salt Hill Pub 58 Main St. 863-7774 Peterborough Harlow’s Pub 3 School St. 924-6365

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HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 56

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Concord Pit Road Lounge: Street Legal Red Blazer: Randy Arrant Tandy's: DJ Iceman Streetz (105.5 JYY) True Brew: Supernothing CD Release Party

Rochester Smokey's Tavern: Evan Brock

Contoocook Covered Bridge: Alternate Tunings Derry Drae: Jen Whitmore

Friday, Oct. 16 Bedford Shorty's: Kieran McNally

Epping Holy Grail: Last Duo Telly's: Corey Brackett

Belmont Lakes Region Casino: DJ Russ

Gilford Patrick's: Dustin Ladale

Boscawen Alan's: Gardner Berry

Goffstown Village Trestle: Brian Maes

Bow Chen Yang Li: Fuzz Box

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Rochester Gary’s 38 Milton Rd 335-4279 Governor’s Inn 78 Wakefield St. 332-0107 Lilac City Grille 103 N. Main St. 3323984 Revolution Tap Room 61 N Main St. 244-3022

Weare Stark House Tavern: Lisa Guyer Dover Solo Cara: Club Night w/ DJ Shawnny O Windham Fury's: Van Burens Common Man Windham: Kim Top of the Chop: Funkadelic FriRiley days

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Portsmouth Dolphin Striker: Kate Redgate & Tim McCoy Fat Belly's: DJ Flex Red Door: Green Lion Crew Rudi's: Dimitri & Guest Thirsty Moose: The Cornerstone

Seabrook Chop Shop: Artty Raynes

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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 Oar House 55 Ceres St. 436-4025 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

1/8/2013

6:00:32 PM

Kelley’s Row 417 Route 108 692-2200 Old Rail Pizza Co. 6 Main St. 841-7152 Sunapee One Mile West Tavern 6 Brook Road 863-7500 Sunapee Coffee House Rte. 11 Lower Main St. 229-1859 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 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 Red’s Tavern 22 Haverhill Dr. 437-7251

Savory Square: Dave Gerard Wally's Pub: Shakedown Hanover Canoe Club: Jonathan Kaplan Henniker Country Spirit: Pullstarts Hillsborough Turismo: Crimes in Graceland Hooksett Asian Breeze: Off Duty Angels Laconia Paradise Beach Club: Stevie P Pitman's: The Bel Airs Londonderry Coach Stop: Kim Riley

Manchester City Sports Grille: DJ Dave Derryfield: Mugsy Drynk: DJs Jason Spivak & Sammy Smoove Fratello's: Ted Solovicos Karma: Hana Khan ManchVegas: Houston Bernard Band Milly's: Cask Mouse/These Wild Planes/Tigerman WOAH/ Meaghan Casey


NITE MUSIC THIS WEEK

Merrimack Homestead: Brad Bosse Pacific Fusion: The Voice Milford Chapanga's: Karen Grenier Pasta Loft: Ryan Brooks Kelly Nashua Country Tavern: Olde Salt Dolly Shakers: Boys of Rockingham Fody's: Wheatly Matthews Fratello's Italian Grille: John Abrams Haluwa: Party Train Band O'Shea's: Olde Salt Peddler's Daughter: Beneath The Sheets Riverwalk Cafe: Freevolt Stella Blu: RC Thomas New Boston Molly's: Justin Cohn Newmarket Riverworks: Jim Gallant Stone Church: Bella's Bartok/ Hunter Peterborough Harlow's: Ghosts of Jupiter Plaistow Racks: Act-in Up Portsmouth Birdseye Lounge: Wild Adriatic Blue Mermaid: Mystery Tramps Dolphin Striker: Now is Now Fat Belly's: DJ Cootz Martingale Wharf: Don Campbell Duo Portsmouth Book & Bar: Elroy Portsmouth Gaslight: DJ Koko P//Sev/Clint LaPoint Press Room: Club D'elf

Red Door: Ms DJ Lotus Ri Ra: Cover Story Rudi's: Yvonne Alburt & Guest Thirsty Moose: Groovin' You Rochester Radloff's: Dancing Madly Backwards Duo Smokey's Tavern: Tom Emerson Seabrook Chop Shop: Southern Rock Experience Suncook Olympus Pizza: Nicole Knox Murphy Saturday, Oct. 17 Bedford Shorty's: Sonic Boomers Belmont Lakes Region Casino: Fried Cactus Boscawen Alan's: Doug Mitchell Bow Chen Yang Li: Hana Kahn Concord Hermanos: Kenny Weiland Penuche's Ale House: Ron Noyes Band Pit Road Lounge: Wise Guy Tandy's: DJ Iceman Streetz (105.5 JYY) True Brew: Feisty Pants Derry Halcyon Club: Nicole Knox Murphy Dover Cara: Club Night w/ DJ Shawnny O Dover Brickhouse: Two Cow Garage/Mutts/Miketon and the Night Blinders Fury's Publick House: Strange Machines Epping Holy Grail: Rob & Dan Telly's: Tim Theriault Tortilla Flat: Brad Bosse

The New Loft Event Center & Music Hall

Epsom Hilltop Pizzeria: Shameless Gilford Patrick's: Justin Jaymes

Presents

Goffstown Village Trestle: Post Road Rebellion

Frank Santos Jr. www.FrankSantosJr.com

Hampton Cloud 9: Serani Savory Square: Mel & John Wally's Pub: Baked Naked

Thursday, November 5th 8pm

Hanover Canoe Club: Sabrina Brown & Fred Haas

$15 Tickets on sale now at Eventbrite.com & at Pasta Loft

Hillsborough Turismo: The Dating Game Hooksett Tap House Grille: Jessie's Band Hudson JD Chaser's: Michael Spaulding Laconia Paradise Beach Club: Stevie P Londonderry Coach Stop: Lachlan Maclearn Manchester City Sports Grille: Rachel Band Derryfield: Among The Living Fratello's: Steve Tolley Karma: The Hallorans ManchVegas: Last Kid Picked Midnight Rodeo: Country Mile Band Milly's: Maganahan's Revival/ Black Diamonds/Ghost In The Attic/Floating Lighthouse & 7 more Murphy's Taproom: Conniption Fits N'awlins: Big Easy Salona: Cold Comfort Shaskeen: KRS-One Strange Brew: Seldom Playrights Wild Rover: Crossfire Duo Zaboo: Dueling Pianos Merrimack Homestead: Paul Luff

Live Music in the

Comic Hypnotist

Country Strong Saloon Friday, October 16th Ryan Brooks Kelly Friday, October 23rd Annie Brobst Music

Pasta Loft Restaurant 241 Union Sq. Milford NH 603-672-2270 103421

SIMULCAST WAGERING ON THOROUGHBRED, HARNESS AND GREYHOUND RACING

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Murphy's Taproom: Jimmy's Down N'awlins: Guitar Jazz Project Penuche's: Second Hand Smoke Shaskeen: Daryl Hance Powermused Strange Brew: Gina & the Communicators Tin Roof: Fridays With Frydae Wild Rover: Pop Farmers Zaboo: Dueling Pianos

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HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 57


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We will pay up to $500 for some cars and trucks.

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BUY NEW ENGLAND 877-423-6399 • 860-423-6391 • communitypapersne.com

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VIAGRA VIAGRA!! 52 Pills for Only $99.00. Your #1 trusted provider for 10 years. Insured and Guaranteed Delivery. Call today 1-877-560-0675. PETS/ANIMALS AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS: Started in obedience and housebreaking. Also young trained adults available. All vet checked and up-to-date on health care. (603)763-2877 Springfield, NH

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HELP WANTED HIRING IMMEDIATELY PRODUCTION ASSEMBLERS!

Hiring immediately on multiple shifts! Full Time (Mon – Thu) and Part Time (Fri –Sat). EOE. Call Suzy at 603.249.7281 or apply online at www.randstadstaffing.com.

GOURMET VEGETARIAN COOKING CLASS

...AND OTHER FINE FREE PUBLICATIONS!

YOU WILL NEED:

Realtors® and Vacation Rental Agents

The following routes are available:

Wed/Thurs - Hippo Runs Portsmouth / Durham Exeter / Seacoast Area Mon/Tues/Fri - Special Runs Greater Manchester Area

Contact Doug Ladd, CIrculation Director 603-625-1855 Ext 135 or email resume/cover letter to

dladd@hippopress.com

HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 58

GOURMET VEGETARIAN COOKING CLASS Monday, October 19 - 6:00pm Concord, NH $25 - Preregistration Appreciated 603-224-1361 COOK, EAT & SOCIALIZE!

AFFORDABLE 2 & 3 BEDROOM APARTMENTS IN HISTORIC MILL BUILDING!

394 Second Street, Manchester Includes: Utilities & Parking! Apartment is fully applianced—including a dishwasher! Laundry on site. Convenient to shopping centers, highway & downtown.

Families in Transition

Applications available at 122 Market St. Call 641-9441 with questions Apartment is income eligble. Section 8 welcome! Equal Housing Opportunity.

Milford Aden China: DJ Brian Chapanga's: Justin Cohn Shaka's: Phil Jacques Union Coffee: Timothy Jackson Scott & Civil Culture Nashua Arena: Rene Rancourt/Sopranos Dinner Boston Billiard Club: DJ Anthem Throwback Dolly Shakers: Michael Troy Fody's: Milk Street Station Fratello's Italian Grille: Ted Solovicos Haluwa: Party Train Band O'Shea's: Ghost Cats Peddler's Daughter: Colm O'Brien Riverwalk Cafe: Parsonfield Stella Blu: Matt Richardson Thirsty Turtle: Midnight Jump Newbury Salt hill Pub: Alex Smith and The Mountain Sound Newmarket Stone Church: Opa's Oompah Band/Funky Divas of Gospel Peterborough Harlow's: Duncan Pelletier Plaistow Racks: Watson Rd Portsmouth Blue Mermaid: Joe Young Demeters: Chris O'Neill & Gina Alibrio Dolphin Striker: Brick Yard Blues Fat Belly's: DJ Provo Hilton Garden: Pork Low Mainers Martingale Wharf: George Belli & the Retroactivists Portsmouth Book & Bar: Liz Frame and the Kickers Portsmouth Gaslight: DJ Koko P/Clint LaPointe/Josh Foster Press Room: Tarbox Ramblers Red Door: Audio Prophecy & Anton M Ri Ra: Red Sky Mary Rudi's: Bryan Killough Trio Thirsty Moose: Fighting Friday White Heron Tea: Marisa Kang Raymond Cork n Keg: Rosie Rochester Smokey's Tavern: Monkey Fist Incident

Salem Barking Bean: Dave LaCroix Jocelyn's: The Deviant

Monday, Oct. 19 Concord Hermanos: Eric Chase

Seabrook Chop Shop: Live Bullet (Seger Tribute)

Hanover Canoe Club: Tableside Magic

Sunday, Oct. 18 Bedford Copper Door: Jim Devlin Concord Hermanos: Kenny Weiland Dover Cara: Irish Session w/ Carol Coronis & Ramona Connelly Dover Brickhouse: Jazz Brunch Sonny's: Sonny's Jazz Gilford Patrick's: Justin Jaymes Hanover Canoe Club: Scottish Pipes Hillsborough Mama McDonough's: Bosse

Brad

Manchester Central Ale House: Peter Fogerty/Phil Jacques/On2 Drynk: Beach Bash w/ Sammy Smoove Shaskeen: Rap night, Industry night Strange Brew: One Big Soul - Sit Session Meredith Giuseppe's: Open Stage with Lou Porrazzo Nashua Burton's Grill: Aaron Chase Riverwalk Cafe: Doublenecks Guitar Duo/The Joshua Incident & Sam Burchfield Thirsty Turtle: Rob Benton Newmarket Stone Church: Bureaux Cats

Bluegrass

Portsmouth Dolphin Striker: Don Severence Press Room: Triple Trios Red Door: Green Lion Crew Rudi's: Ms. Sharon Jones Rochester Lilac City Grille: Brunch Music at 9:30am Radloff's: James McGarvey

COMEDY THIS WEEK AND BEYOND

Manchester Central Ale House: Jonny Friday Duo Fratello's: Rob Wolfe or Phil Jacques Merrimack Homestead: Doug Thompson

Nashua Fratello's Italian Grille: Kim Riley

Newmarket Stone Church: Wild Eagles Blues Band Portsmouth Dolphin Striker: Old School Press Room: Mike Stockbridge Red Door: Matt O'Neil/Grebes Ri Ra: Oran Mor Tuesday, Oct. 20 Concord Hermanos: Brad Myrick Dover Fury's Publick House: Tim Theriault Sonny's: Soggy Po' Boys Hanover Canoe Club: Bruce Gregori

Manchester Drynk: Sammy Smoove & DJ Gera Fratello's: Brad Bosse Jewel: Twiztid Milly's: Manchuka Shaskeen: Tom Deniston Strange Brew: Peter Parcek Merrimack Homestead: Paul Luff

Nashua Fratello's Italian Grille: Malcolm Salls Newmarket Stone Church: Bluegrass Jam w/ Dave Talmage Peterborough Harlow's: Celtic Music Night Portsmouth Dolphin Striker: Jim Dozet

Thursday, Oct. 15 Friday, Oct. 16 Saturday, Oct. 17 Shaskeen: Jared Hudson Concord Nashua Logan/Kara Klenik Soho: Comedy on Pur- Cap Center: Lisa Lam- Chunky's Pub: Mark pose panelli Riccondonna Nashua Arena: Comedy on Londonderry Hampton Beach Wednesday, Oct. 21 Purpose - Alana Susko Tupelo Music Hall: Casino Ballroom: Manchester Paul Gilligan/Ryan Nick Offerman & Murphy's: Laugh Free Friday, Oct. 23 Gartley Megan Mullally Or Die Open Mic Chunky's: Mitch Fatel


Dover Fury's Publick House: People Skills Gilford Patrick's: DJ Megan Hanover Canoe Club: Ted Mortimer

Manchester Fratello's: Phil Jacques Tin Roof: DJ Vicious Zaboo: Dance Music w/ Guest DJs Merrimack Homestead: Ted Solovicos Tortilla Flat: Chelsey Carter

Portsmouth Dolphin Striker: Cormack McCarthy Press Room: Nick Phaneuf and Stu Dias Red Door: Red On Red w/ Evaredy (Ladies Night) Ri Ra: Erin's Guild Rudi's: Dimitri Solo Piano

Nashua Country Tavern: Charlie Chronopolous Jam Fratello's Italian Grille: Amanda Cote

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

We are a large record/music store and museum. Over 100,000 records, CDs, DVDs, and more!

NITE CONCERTS Capitol Center for the Performing Arts 44 S. Main St., Concord, 225-1111, ccanh.com Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom 169 Ocean Blvd., Hampton Beach, 929-4100, • Arturo Sandoval Thursday, Oct. 15, 7:30 p.m. Stockbridge Theatre • Kat Edmonson Friday, Oct. 16, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Motley Crue/Alice Cooper Saturday, Oct. 17, 7 p.m. Verizon Wireless Arena • Chris Barron Of The Spin Doctors Saturday, Oct. 17, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Peter Wolf Sunday, Oct. 18, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Crystal Bowersox Monday, Oct. 19, 8 p.m. Tupelo

Get CA$H for your old records!

casinoballroom.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

• David Sedaris Tuesday, Oct. 20, 7 p.m. Silver Center • The Tubes Thursday, Oct. 22, 8 p.m. Tupelo • George Winston (also 10/24) Friday, Oct. 23, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Godsmack - Sold Out Friday, Oct. 23, 8 p.m. Casino Ballroom • Godsmack Saturday, Oct. 24, 8 p.m. Casino Ballroom • Jamantics Reunion Saturday, Oct. 24, 7:30 p.m. Cap Center • James Otto Sunday, Oct. 25, 8 p.m. Tupelo

• Denny Laine/Peter Asher Band on the Run Sunday, Oct. 25, 7:30 p.m. Cap Center • Steve Blunt & Friends (Kid's show) Sunday, Oct. 25, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Gallagher w/Artie Fletcher Saturday, Oct. 31, 8 p.m. Tupelo • California Guitar Trio Sunday, Nov. 1, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Rise Against Sunday, Nov. 1, 8 p.m. Casino Ballroom • Natalie MacMaster & Donnell Leahy Wednesday, Nov. 4, 7:30 p.m. Cap Center

Packed with thousands of gift ideas... come and treasure hunt!

CDs • DVDs • RECORDS • COMICS • MUSIC GEAR ELECTRONICS • HOME & OFFICE STUFF!

A Rock n’ Roll Museum in a Bargain Warehouse Mon, Tue: 10-6pm, | Weds, Thurs, Fri: 10-8pm | Sat: 10-6pm, Sun: 12-6pm

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Oct. 17th & 18th join us for The GIANT Pumpkin Regatta Saturday Oct. 17th

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Live Music

Friday Oct 16

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JONESIN’ CROSSWORDS BY MATT JONES

“Bill and/or Ted’s Excellent Adventure” — fellow travelers 16 Credit card figure 17 “___ silly question... “ 18 Arrest 19 Person using a certain wrench? (Ted/Ted) 22 Celebratory poem 23 “Before” to poets of old

HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 60

24 Linger in the tub 25 Ballooned 26 +, on a battery 28 “King Kong” actress Fay 30 “Baudolino” author Umberto 32 Beer menu option 33 Dispatches 35 All-out 39 With 41-Across, what happens when a train worker puts in overtime? (Bill/Bill) 41 See 39-Across 43 First name in perfumery 44 Anxious feeling 46 Movie studio locale 47 “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” director Lee 49 “Believe ___ Not” 50 Baton Rouge campus, briefly

10/8

51 Artificial grass 54 In ___ (harmonized) 56 “What can Brown do for you?” sloganeer 58 “Kill Bill” actress Thurman 59 Castle entrances reserved only for horsemen? (Ted/Bill) 63 Flower’s friend 65 “Blazing Saddles” actress Madeline 66 “A Shot at Love” reality star ___ Tequila 67 Add to your site, as a YouTube video 68 Emanate 69 2015 award for Viola Davis 70 Hilarious people 71 Board + pieces 72 A majority of August births

Down 1 “Scientific American Frontiers” host Alan 2 Mr. Coward 3 Shaker contents 4 “C’mon in!” 5 Folk song that mentions “with a banjo on my knee” 6 Murray’s “Ghostbusters” costar 7 “The Princess and the Frog” princess 8 “An Affair to Remember” costar 9 “The Subject Was Roses” director Grosbard 10 Not important

11 In a separate place 12 Keep the issues coming 14 Angkor ___ (Cambodian landmark) 20 Stephanopoulos and Brokaw 21 ___ out an existence 25 Subculture known for wearing black 26 Subject of a Magritte painting (or is it?) 27 “Bloom County 2015” character 29 Stephen of “The Crying Game” 31 Dance 34 Be flexible, in a way 36 Does some face recognition? 37 Love, deified 38 Q followers 40 Piece of lettuce 42 Lance of the bench 45 1978 Cronyn/Tandy play, with “The” 48 “Press Your Luck” network 51 Edible root 52 Taste whose name means “savoriness” in Japanese 53 “First Blood” mercenary 55 “Uh-oh!” 57 “Slumdog Millionaire” actor Dev 59 Part of DINK 60 Big bang beginner 61 Fuzzy red monster 62 Recites 64 Venture capital?

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SIGNS OF LIFE competence; they’ll chop your sentences short and stupidify your writing. Competence is up to you. You’re on your own out there with those man-eating semicolons. You have the competence. Now use it. Taurus (April 20 – May 20) Too many people who yatter on about “you should never use the passive voice” don’t even know what it is. Many have confused it with the verb to be … which doesn’t even have a passive voice. And so they go around telling us not to use the verb to be! Most verbs are more exact and colorful than that one, but you tell me how else Hamlet should have started his soliloquy, or how Jehovah should have created light. When you’re learning something new, don’t rush to conclusions about it. Gemini (May 21 – June 20) You might also think about these matters: Is the story clear? Do we learn enough about the people and the situation — do we need more information? Or less? The key is to give just the right amount of information. Cancer (June 21 – July 22) One of the marvelous things about that marvelous thing the novel is its many-voicedness, its polyphony. All kinds of people get to think, feel, and talk in a novel, and that great psychological variety is a part of the vitality and beauty of the form. You will have a chance to meet all kinds of people. Leo (July 23 – Aug. 22) Do we expect somebody to fix our kitchen sink without tools? Do we expect somebody to stand up and play the violin without having learned how to play the violin? Writing a sentence that expresses what you want to say isn’t any easier than plumbing or fiddling. It takes craft. Now’s a good time to practice your craft. Virgo (Aug. 23 – Sept. 22) Those of us who were brought up to be unaggressive in conversation are liable to use qualifiers — adjectives and adverbs such as rather, a little, which soften or weaken the words they modify. In conversation they’re OK; in written prose they’re bloodsuckers — ticks. Consider your words carefully.

2 3 Difficulty Level

3 8 1

9 4 3 5 7 8 2 10/15

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

SU DO KU

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

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Difficulty Level

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All quotes are from Steering the Craft: A 21st-century Guide to Sailing the Sea of Story, by Ursula K. Le Guin, born Oct. 21, 1929. Libra (Sept. 23 – Oct. 22) For the moment, forget all the good advice that says good style is invisible, good art conceals art. Show off! This could be your time to shine. If not, you’ll still have fun. Scorpio (Oct. 23 – Nov. 21) Some adjectives and adverbs have become meaningless through literary overuse. Great seldom carries the weight it ought to carry. Suddenly seldom means anything at all; it’s a mere transition device…. Somehow is a super-weasel, a word that betrays that the author didn’t want to bother thinking out the story…. Take responsibility! Watch out for super-weasels. Sagittarius (Nov. 22 – Dec. 21) Always, in the last analysis, on your own or in a group, you are your own judge, and you make your own decisions. The discipline of art is freedom. You’ll have to answer to yourself. Capricorn (Dec. 22 – Jan. 19) Jane Austen’s prose is still near enough to the balanced style of the eighteenth century that it may sound stately or overcomposed to a modern ear; but read it aloud, which you’ll find surprisingly easy, and you’ll hear how vivid and versatile it is and feel its easy strength. Versatile, easy strength — that’s what you’re going for. Perhaps a wool blend? Aquarius (Jan. 20 – Feb. 18) Some people who are ambitious about their writing and work hard on it in other ways breezily dismiss punctuation. Who cares where a comma goes? You do. Pisces (Feb. 19 – March 20) Good grammar is pretty much like good engineering: the machine works because the parts do. Careless grammar is bad design plus sand in the gears and the wrong size gaskets. Make sure your machine is running smoothly. Aries (March 21 – April 19) As for the stuff in your computer that pretends to correct your punctuation or grammar, disable it. These programs are on a pitifully low level of NITE SUDOKU

10/08

HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 61


NEWS OF THE WEIRD BY CHUCK SHEPHERD

Democracy blues

Randy Richardson, 42, vying unopposed for the Riceville, Iowa, school board (having agreed to run just because he has two kids in school) failed to get any votes at all as even he was too busy on election day (Sept. 8) to make it to the polls (nor were there any write-ins). To resolve the 0-0 result, the other board members simply appointed Richardson to the office. Riceville, near the Minnesota border, is a big-time farming community, and registered voters queried by The Des Moines Register said they just had too much fieldwork to do that day.

14 YEARS!

Leading economic indicators

BBQ RIBS

The serpentine queue extended for blocks in September in Lucknow, India, after the state government of Uttar Pradesh announced 368 job openings (almost all menial) eventually resulting in about 2.3 million applications, 200,000 from people with advanced degrees (even though the $240/month positions required only a fifth-grade education, according to an Associated Press dispatch). About 13 million young people enter India’s job market each year.

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HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 62

Thailand’s “Last Resort Rehab” at the Wat Thamkrabok Temple about 100 miles north of Bangkok resembles a traditional drug-detox facility (work, relaxation, meditation) except for the vomiting. At the “Vomit Temple,” Buddhist priests mix a concoction of 120 herbal ingredients that are nasty, according to the temple’s methamphetamine addicts interviewed for a recent Australian TV documentary. Said one, of the rehab agenda: “Vomiting is at 3 p.m. every day. Foreigners must vomit for the first five days. The vomiting is intense.” • People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals filed a federal lawsuit in California in September on behalf of an endangered crested black macaque that wandered up to an unattended camera on a tripod and clicked a selfie. The camera belonged to photographer David Slater, who claimed copyright to the photo even though “Naturo” actually snapped it. The shot might be valuable to Naturo since it has become viral on the Internet. (Though the photo was taken in Indonesia, Slater’s publisher is based in California.) • Jose Banks, now 40, filed a $10 million lawsuit in 2014 against the federal government because jailers at Chicago’s high-rise Metropolitan Correctional Center failed to guard him closely enough in 2012, thus enabling him to think he

could escape. He and a cellmate had rappelled 17 floors with bed sheets, but Banks was re-arrested a few days later. Still, he claimed that the escape caused him great trauma, in addition to “humiliation and embarrassment” and “damage to his reputation.” (In September, the U.S. Court of Appeals turned him down. Wrote the judges, “No one has a personal right to be better guarded.”)

Recurring themes

in Jerusalem backfired, September, YNet News). “Swedish Porn Star Jumps Into Spanish Bullfighting Ring to Comfort Dying Bull” (Malaga, Spain, September, The Local).

Readers’ choice

(1) In August, Che Hearn, 25, who police said had just shoplifted electronics items from the Wal-Mart in Round Lake Beach, Illinois, was picked up while on foot near the store. Police found that Hearn had actually driven his car to the Wal-Mart but that while he was inside shoplifting, a repo agent (who had followed him to the store) had confiscated it. (2) Astronaut Edgar Mitchell (the sixth man to walk on the moon) told a reporter in August that “my own experience talking to people” has made it clear that extraterrestrials are trying “to keep us from going to war” with Russia and that U.S. military officers have told him that their test missiles are “frequently” shot down “by alien spacecraft.”

Many in conservative Jewish communities still practice the tradition of Kaporos on the day of atonement, but the critics were out in force in New York City’s Borough Park neighborhood in September to protest the ritual’s slaughter there of 50,000 chickens. (A synagogue raises money by “selling” chickens to members, who then have butchers swing the chickens overhead three times, thus transferring the owners’ sins to the chickens. Ultimately, the chickens are beheaded, supposedly erasing the humans’ sins. Protesters ask why not just donate money.) A judge refused to block the ritual but ordered police to enforce the sanitation laws gov- A News of the Weird classic erning the beheadings. New Zealand’s Waikato National Contemporary Art Award in September (2009) Foreign Press headlines (worth the equivalent of $11,000) went to “London Zoo Monkey-Keeper and Dane Mitchell, whose installation conMeerkat-Keeper ‘Fought Over Llama- sisted merely of the discarded packaging Keeper’” (a British human love triangle, materials he had gathered from all the othSeptember, The Guardian). “Man Suffer- er exhibits vying for the prize. Mitchell ing From Constipation for 10 Years Has named his pile “Collateral.” (Announce11-Pound Stool Removed” (Chengdu, ment of the winner was poorly received by China, August, Central European News). the other contestants.) “Naked Spanish Clowns Anger Palestinians” (a pro-Palestinian demonstration Visit weirduniverse.net.


102832

101223

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103284

HIPPO | OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2015 | PAGE 64


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