Hippo 6/8/17

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KNIFE SKILLS P. 37

Q&A WITH AMY RAY P. 50

LOCAL NEWS, FOOD, ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT

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JUNE 8 - 14, 2017

Why buyers are caught in a feeding frenzy for homes and how to buy a house in this tough market

INSIDE: KIDS COMIC CON


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The trick to life Public speaking is something I love to do. I speak to audiences all around the country. In fact, I’m writing my Hippo column on the way to St. Louis, where I will speak to four school districts on education redesign. Sometimes my speaking engagements are commencement addresses to graduating students and their families. This year I will speak at two commencement ceremonies in New Hampshire. So, what advice will I give these graduates? I thought that I’d give you the same advice that I will give them. I will tell them about the trick to life. The trick to life is to find something that you would do for free, and then find a way to get paid for it. Simple, yes? Well, maybe not so simple. I then tell them to fill in the following sentence: “That thing that I would do for free but would love to get paid for is ____.” I inform them about a study that I saw years ago that said that the act of writing it down creates a commitment to yourself that increases the likelihood that you’ll actually achieve this goal by over 80 percent. After they’ve written it down, I tell them to think about their goal. Is it a job that very few people will want and thus fairly easy to achieve, or one that many people will want and thus highly competitive? If it is likely to be competitive, then you have to ask yourself another question, “Why should they pick me?” You need to have a good answer. I then tell them that the winners in life do not let the chips fall where they may, but instead work daily to influence how the chips fall. I ask my audience to envision two columns: a plus and a minus column. In the plus column, write down things that can make achieving your goal more likely. In the minus column, include things that may get in the way of achieving your goal. The lists that students make are always great because they reflect simple logic. The plus column always includes things like working hard, showing up on time, being reliable, over-delivering on expectations, etc. The minuses show the opposites, like being unreliable. I want to end with a big one on the plus list and it’s worth a lot of money over your lifetime. Once again, simple logic. Are you ready? Be nice! Fred Bramante is the past chairman and member of the New Hampshire State Board of Education. He speaks and consults on education redesign to regional, state and national organizations.

JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 VOL 16 NO 23

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 hippopress.com email: news@hippopress.com

EDITORIAL Executive Editor Amy Diaz, adiaz@hippopress.com Managing Editor Meghan Siegler, msiegler@hippopress.com, ext. 113 Editorial Design Ashley McCarty, hippolayout@gmail.com Copy Editor Lisa Parsons, lparsons@hippopress.com Staff Writers Kelly Sennott ksennott@hippopress.com, ext. 112 Angie Sykeny asykeny@hippopress.com, ext. 130 Ryan Lessard rlessard@hippopress.com, ext. 136 Matt Ingersoll mingersoll@hippopress.com, ext. 152 Contributors Allison Willson Dudas, Jennifer Graham, Henry Homeyer, Dave Long, Lauren Mifsud, Stefanie Phillips, Eric W. Saeger, Michael Witthaus.

ON THE COVER 12 REAL ESTATE RUSH Using the most recent numbers from New Hampshire’s real estate pros, we look at how this year’s market compares to years past. The trend is leaning more toward a seller’s market than it has since the housing bubble, with more buyers than there is inventory — particularly in the southern, more heavily populated counties in New Hampshire. The pros also shared tips on how to nab a home when bids are flying. ALSO ON THE COVER, comics are for kids, too, and the second annual Kids Con caters to the younger crowd, p. 26. For adults, check out the Knife Skills workshop at LaBelle Winery, p. 37. And Amy Ray of the Indigo Girls talks about her Four Voices in Harmony tour with Joan Baez, Mary Chapin Carpenter and fellow Indigo Girl Emily Saliers, p. 50.

INSIDE THIS WEEK

NEWS & NOTES 4 Women Inspiring Women; new app for addicts PLUS News in Brief. 8 Q&A 9 QUALITY OF LIFE INDEX 10 SPORTS THIS WEEK 18

THE ARTS: 20 ART Listings McGowan gallery readies to close. Arts listings: arts@hippopress.com Inside/Outside listings: listings@hippopress.com 22 CLASSICAL Piano project concert. Food & Drink listings: food@hippopress.com 24 THEATER Music listings: music@hippopress.com Listings for events around town.

BUSINESS Publisher

Jody Reese, Ext. 121 jreese@hippopress.com Associate Publisher Dan Szczesny Associate Publisher Jeff Rapsis, Ext. 123 jrapsis@hippopress.com Production Katie DeRosa, Emma Contic, Kristen Lochhead, Haylie Zebrowski Circulation Manager Doug Ladd, Ext. 135 dladd@hippopress.com Advertising Manager Charlene Cesarini, Ext. 126 ccesarini@hippopress.com Account Executives Alyse Savage, 603-493-2026 asavage@hippopress.com Katharine Stickney, Ext. 144 kstickney@hippopress.com Roxanne Macaig, Ext. 127 rmacaig@hippopress.com Stephanie Quimby, Ext. 134 squimby@hippopress.com Jill Raven, Ext. 110 jraven@hippopress.com Tammie Boucher, support staff, Ext. 150 Reception & Bookkeeping Gloria Zogopoulos To place an ad call 625-1855, Ext. 126 For Classifieds dial Ext. 125 or e-mail classifieds@hippopress.com. Unsolicited submissions will not be returned or acknowledged and will be destroyed. Opinions expressed by columnists do not represent the views of the Hippo or its advertisers.

INSIDE/OUTSIDE: 27 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. CAREERS: 32 ON THE JOB What it’s like to be a... FOOD: 36 BEYOND ITALIAN Knife skills; Sippin’ for Seals; In the Kitchen; Weekly Dish; Wine; Perishables. POP CULTURE: 44 REVIEWS CDs, books, TV and more. Amy Diaz finally has a good summer movie week with excellent Wonder Woman and the charming Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie. NITE: 50 BANDS, CLUBS, NIGHTLIFE Q&A with an Indigo Girl; Nightlife, music & comedy listings and more. 52 ROCK AND ROLL CROSSWORD A puzzle for the music-lover. 54 MUSIC THIS WEEK Live music at your favorite bars and restaurants. ODDS & ENDS: 60 CROSSWORD 61 SIGNS OF LIFE 61 SUDOKU 62 NEWS OF THE WEIRD 62 THIS MODERN WORLD


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NEWS & NOTES Bills passed

According to press releases from lawmakers and the governor’s office, several bills were passed and sent to the governor’s desk. SB 3, a bill that would create new voting restrictions based on the definition of residency, passed the House. Gov. Chris Sununu said in a statement that the legislation “helps protect the integrity of New Hampshire’s electoral process.” The House passed SB 191, which funds full-day kindergarten by raising money with keno gambling, something that is currently illegal in the state. Sununu, who has made fullday kindergarten funding a priority, praised the bill’s passage. It now heads to the Senate, which has historically rejected keno. Bills that would decriminalize possession of one ounce of marijuana, allow districts to pay for tuition at private schools, and allow people to be charged with homicide of a fetus that has reached 20 weeks are all heading to the governor, who has signaled support for each. Sununu also praised the House for passing Senate bills that would prohibit the state from requiring implementation of Common Core standards, make appropriations to the state’s clean drinking water programs under the Department of Environmental Services and make an appropriation of $30 million to the Department of Transportation that will be used to aid local highway and municipal bridge work.

of nearly half a million dollars. The AP reported the state attorney general’s office charged Katsiantonis of stealing more than $423,000 in meal and rental taxes from a restaurant and bar he owns in Manchester. The charges relate to Grand Slam Pizza and Tommy K’s Restaurant and Bar, going back to 2011. He is scheduled to be arraigned June 15.

VA pain funding

The Manchester VA Medical Center received funding to create an outpatient pain rehab program, NHPR reported. The New England VA office granted the center $378,252, which will be used to hire a nurse practitioner, clinical psychologist and registered nurse. The center has expanded its treatment options in recent years to include things like acupuncture, yoga and chiropractic care.

Drug czar

According to a press release from the governor’s office, the so-called “drug czar” appointed by then-Governor Maggie Hassan, James Vara, will be stepping down from that role and returning to the Justice Department. Vara, who was a drug prosecutor in the attorney general’s office, will be the new AG’s chief of staff upon his confirmation by the Executive Council. Sununu had already hired a second drug advisor, Marty Boldin, in February. And in the same release announcing Vara’s departure, the governor’s office also announced it will be hiring forSununu’s stance mer Manchester police chief David Though two other Republican Mara to replace him. Mara has been governors in New England have serving as interim police chief in voiced their opposition to Presi- Portsmouth. dent Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris Climate New mosque Agreement, Gov. Chris Sununu said The Islamic Society of Greater he stands by the president, NHPR Concord is planning on establishing reported. Sununu, an environmental a permanent mosque in the capiengineer by training, reportedly said tal. The Concord Monitor reported the specific issue is not something the mosque would be located in he’s thought about. Meanwhile, a vacant industrial building on Republican Gov. Charlie Baker of North Main Street. Concord curMassachusetts called the decision rently does not have any mosque. “disappointing” and Vermont Gov. The Society plans to purchase the Phil Scott, also a Republican, called building at 181 N. Main St. and an it “concerning.” abutting house at 9 Pearl St. The plan is to demolish the house and Katsiantonis use the lot for parking. The building New Hampshire state rep and is next door to First Congregational Manchester alderman Thomas Kat- Church, which has agreed to allow siantonis, a Democrat, has been the mosque to use its parking during charged with tax evasion and theft Friday prayers, which can attract HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 4

people from across the state.

BizGen award

BizGen, an organization that gets high schoolers involved in entrepreneurship through pitch competitions, announced the winners of its fourth annual competition. According to a press release, Derryfield Academy students Madison Kochanek and Tyler Crews received the first-place prize of $4,500 for Lily Pods, a technology solution for common pains and cramps. Overall, 70 students and 30 adult volunteers participated in this year’s competition.

Flying Yankee

The historic stainless steel streamliner train that’s been warehoused in Lincoln will not be coming back to Concord after plans to install a permanent display were derailed, the Concord Monitor reported. Volunteers with the Flying Yankee Restoration Group still want to bring the eponymous train to the capital, with long-term plans to create a transportation museum. But the group failed to raise enough money and there were complications with the land they were planning to use near Big Jim’s Home Center, according to the story. The new plan is to put the train on display on state land in Lincoln not far from where it’s being kept.

Hundreds of people turned out to a candlelight vigil in Concord on Saturday, June 3, to remember Sabrina Galusha, a 23-year-old woman who was stabbed and killed four days earlier, the Concord Monitor reported. The circumstances of the stabbing are still a mystery, but police have arrested and charged 20-year-old Daswan Jette for the murder.

CONCORD

A new farmers market in Pembroke was set to kick off for the summer on June 7, the Concord Monitor reported. The market got approval for 26 vendor stands in front of town hall, according to the story.

Hooksett

Goffstown

A local woman named Madeleine LaRose has taken it upon herself to clean up and paint a neglected and vandalized sidewalk planter Bedford in Nashua, the Telegraph of Nashua reported. LaRose is the widow of Dick LaRose, Amherst who ran the Modern Restaurant across the street from the planter, where a plaque Milford honoring the family is located nearby.

Future In Sight, a Concord nonprofit formerly known as the New Hampshire Association for the Blind, received a $300,000 grant from the New Hampshire Department of Education, the AP reported. The money is meant to fund an expansion of technology and teacher training for visually impaired children in the state. Future In Sight will start getting the money in July and will work with the state to develop and roll out the new services, which are hoped to bridge a gap for blind and visually impaired children who don’t have access to technology.

Faith leaders and immigrants rights activists gathered outside the Norris Cotton Federal Building in Manchester June Derryto show 6 for a morning vigil Merrimack support for immigrant families at risk of deportation, the AP Londonderry reported. Immigration and Customs Enforcement offices are located in the building. NASHUA

and plastic pellets. There were no spills and no one was hurt, according to the report. Railroad workers examined the tracks and it took several hours to remove the cars from the street. In the days that followed, Train derailment Two train cars were derailed in workers have been trying to repair Nashua while the train was crossing the tracks, according to followup Main Street on June 1, the Tele- reports by the Telegraph. graph of Nashua reported. The cars being hauled by Pan Am Railways Open Hands A faith-based center called the were carrying sodium hydroxide

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Open Hands Resource Center, which provides services to homeless people and people in need, moved out of its 208 N. Main St. location in Concord on May 30. The Concord Monitor reported the organization will continue to provide hygiene products, food and supplies to homeless camps but it could not stay in the location it’s had for more than six years due to financial troubles.

NH ROADS

According to a new study by researchers at the University of New Hampshire, the state’s roads are likely to deteriorate faster as groundwater levels rise over the current century. Scientists predict the New Hampshire coastline will rise between 4 and 6.5 feet above its current level due to climate change. As oceans rise, so does groundwater, which changes the structural makeup of the ground beneath our roads. With weaker ground material, the state will have to adapt by either building roads with stronger materials or repairing them more frequently.


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NEWS

A community for women Women’s professional organization turns 10 By Ryan Lessard

news@hippopress.com

On May 25, the state’s largest women’s organization, Women Inspiring Women, celebrated its 10-year anniversary, and its founder, Leslie Sturgeon, is taking stock of its growth over the decade. In 1989, when Sturgeon was just 22, she started her first business, which rented office suites and provided association management and office support services. She had attended a business and secretarial school, but entrepreneurialism was in her blood. “Mostly I had grown up in an entrepreneurial family. It was just a lifestyle for me,” Sturgeon said. She said she began developing her leadership skills as a teenager in high school and, in the process, she learned the importance of relationships with other women as mentors. “The reason why I started Women Inspiring Women is because, informally, I was getting together with local women that I looked up to and respected: business owners and teachers and other professionals in the area,” Sturgeon said. After about 18 years in business, she decided to launch WIW in May 2007, to turn what had been informal monthly meet-

Courtesy photo.

ings into a larger, more formal gathering of professionals. “At the time, I thought this would be just a once-a-month get-together in the Lakes Region, which is where I grew up and where my businesses were located,” Sturgeon said. “And, very rapidly, it grew. I was drawing in people from all over the state.” She invited about 750 women to the first launch event, and over the next three years

she expanded the organization to Concord, Manchester, Bedford and Portsmouth, with launch events for each new region. “The main focus is personal and professional development. So it’s education and empowerment. And by education, I mean we might have a speaker on getting out of your comfort zone or mindset issues and time management and things like that. We also touch upon careers and relationships, business — we do a lot of business

programming and business education,” Sturgeon said. She now has about 4,500 women on her mailing list with about 350 of them members who pay the $85 annual fee. Sturgeon estimates about 60 percent of her members are small business owners and the rest are various kinds of professionals. “Actually, my tagline is ‘an organization for fabulous women,’ because really it’s something for everybody,” Sturgeon said. A big part of the group is just creating relationships, so there’s a strong networking component, but not strictly for career purposes. She organizes two day-long WIW events each year. The next is the Inspiring Women in Business event on June 22 in Bedford, which focuses more on business. Sturgeon expects about 150 women to attend. The largest event she holds each year is the New Hampshire Conference for Women, which will be held on Nov. 3 this year. When it started, there were about 250 women in attendance; that has since doubled. The event covers a range of motivational and empowerment topics to help the whole woman. To Sturgeon, the group is more than just a membership organization. “It’s more like a community,” she said.

Taking the next step

Smartphone app aims to connect addicts to treatment By Ryan Lessard

news@hippopress.com

Recent graduates of University of New Hampshire are working on an app that will connect addicts to treatment and recovery services with real-time vacancy information. For 21-year-old Sam Warach, the issue of addiction treatment hits close to home. “When I was, like, 12 years old, I had an older brother who died of an overdose, which really kind of rocked my world. No one in my family really expected it,” Warach said. It took Warach the better part of his teens to grieve the loss of his brother, but he said he walked away with a will to persevere that he took with him into college. He said he was always interested in entrepreneurialism, but a few experiences in school helped focus his efforts. When he was a sophomore, he heard about an opportunity to start a student-run entrepreneurship club. HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 6

“I was one of the first students who sort of hopped on that and said, ‘Yeah, let’s do it,’” Warach said. Later, he took a course on social entrepreneurship, which focused on tackling social problems. His first venture was an app that improves access to local farmers market products, for which he earned a Runner-up Holloway Award at UNH. But his idea for making something that would prevent and mitigate substance abuse was taking root in the back of his mind. He began working on the app, which is dubbed NextStep, in earnest last September. Not having enough skill in the software development area, he recruited the help of a few other students like Max Miller. “It was only getting worse in the public. The overdoses were only rising. In 2016, there were 53,000 overdoses related to opioids,” Warach said. “Something needs to be done.” The way NextStep would work is a user would put in the town they live in and they’ll be given a list of nearby treatment

or recovery centers and it will show which being a potential barrier to access. ones have room for new patients, a process “We’re really just trying to provide he compares to Hotels.com. something that someone can have in their “There is a problem with capacity at a bedroom or wherever they are,” Warach said. Some additional features may also connect users with volunteer recovery coaches, something Warach described as Tinder for sponsors. Right now, he’s hoping to recruit recovery coaches who can volunteer to be available through the app. Folks who are interested can contact him at team@nextstep.world. He’s also trying to raise money for the venture, which he said would ultimately be a not-for-profit company. And Warach said he’s coordinating his efforts with state officials. SAM WARACH The plan is to launch the app in January 2018, just in New Hampshire initially. lot of these centers; however, on average, “And then after a testing period, when in the country, they are under capacity,” we’re sure the technology works the way Warach said. “The idea behind it is that it’s supposed to, and it’s helping people they can find a recovery center regionally … we plan to roll it out in New England that has availability to treat them.” and then hopefully nationwide after that,” And he’s not worried about smartphones Warach said.

... I had an older brother who died of an overdose, which really kind of rocked my world.


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NEWS & NOTES Q&A

Taking the pulse

Dartmouth student revolutionizing polling Terren Klein, a senior at Dartmouth College, is developing a new app for public opinion polling called Pulse, which he says is more accurate and gets participants more engaged than traditional polls. He recently won $100,000 in investments from the Millworks II fund. He graduates on Sunday, June 11.

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HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 8

What makes your way of polling different from traditional polling? I think the [value] to the survey taker with current polling is pretty lackluster to say the least. It’s “give us your private information and … your personal thoughts about things in exchange for nothing in return — maybe a chance at winning a gift card.” But with Pulse, what we’re trying to do is we’re telling them, “Hey, take this survey in order to learn about yourself and your community and yourself within the context of your community and also, if you’re not interested in learning about yourself on that particular topic, we’ll incentivize you with points that are exchangeable for rewards at local or national businesses.” … The thing that surprised me, I guess, is you’re going through this process where everybody hates it. … What we’re trying to do is really turn it on its head. So what is Pulse and how does it work? Pulse is a community-based survey platform that is trying to change the way all organizations collect and understand the opinions of their constituents. And we’re starting with college and high school campuses but ultimately we want to help any organization such as corporations and even local and national governments. The way it works is it’s a centralized platform for your particular community where anyone in the organization can put up a survey and there’s a dual incentive to take that particular survey. The first is, after taking the survey, you get immediate access to results, [broken] down by different demographics, relevance. At Dartmouth, it’s class year, major, gender [etc.], and you also get to actually talk and deliberate over the results with your peers. And the second incentive is Pulse points, which I was referring to before. Is it a smartphone app or a website people go to? So far it’s been a website that is mobilefriendly, and right now we’re transitioning to adding an app for iOS and Android and that will be released over the summer.

What are you really into right now? One of my biggest passions is performing. … At Dartmouth theater, I’m in an improv comedy group. … It’s one of my favorite creative outlets.

How did you get the idea for this? It came from a place of frustration with the current survey-taking process. The connection I made was there was a protest last year. … It really shook the Courtesy photo. whole campus. It was about Black Lives Matter using the library and it really divided the campus because there was no reliable source of public opinion information. What happened was people turned to talk to their friends or anonymous social media platforms and just got a completely distorted view of what everyone thought about what happened, and that only exacerbated the issue. In reality, only 250 people out of 4,400 were even in the library to see what happened. So the connection I made was, wouldn’t it be great if everyone could just click a button and know what everyone thought about a particular issue broken down by every possible demographic that you could possibly be interested in? … Who in this community is hurting the most? Who disagrees with who? And it was that experience combined with working with the office of institutional research, which is the office on campus that conducts surveys. … We were doing a survey with them and that’s when I heard first hand … that the survey culture was just fundamentally broken. … So, fresh off of coming from an internship at a polling firm in D.C. and having to sift through public opinion data all day, I knew how cool this stuff could be and I just realized that, in the current survey-taking process, for one reason or another, they are hiding this information from the people who would really be interested in it: the survey-takers. That’s when the idea happened. Do you plan on expanding this for things like political polling? Yeah. Ultimately, this is just a new way to doing surveys. That’s not restricted to college campuses, so I would think that the first step to doing political polling might not be expanding and sending out a survey to a random sample of Americans because one of the driving factors of getting someone to take our surveys is … to learn about yourself in the context of your community. … Right now, the tighter the community is — a college, corporation, a state, whatever it is — that would probably be the low-hanging fruit that we’d like to tackle first. — Ryan Lessard


NEWS & NOTES

QUALITY OF LIFE INDEX Disaster aid gets approved

Gov. Chris Sununu’s request to the Trump administration for a disaster declaration was granted by the president. NHPR reported federal money will be used to help pay for the damage caused by the nor’easter in March, specifically for Carroll and Belknap counties. QOL Score: +1 Comment: The storm was estimated to have caused more than $2 million in damage.

NH makes Top 10 economy list

According to a ranking by WalletHub, New Hampshire’s economy was eighth overall in the country, compared to all 50 states and the District of Columbia. The study was based on 27 key indicators and broken into three main categories: economic activity, economic health and innovation potential. New Hampshire was first for unemployment, third for percent of jobs in high-tech industries and fourth for GDP growth. QOL Score: +1 Comment: In a separate study by WalletHub, New Hampshire was also ranked the third-best state for jobs.

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Sharing bikes

Starting this week, New Hampshire’s biggest city is home to a bikesharing program, overseen by Cambridge, Mass.-based company Zagster, which operates 150 bike-sharing programs in more than 30 states, according to the Union Leader. Users can pick up bikes from one of the program’s five stations in the Queen City for $2 an hour (or $15 a month or $30 a year) and return them to other stations after use. Stations are at Stanton Plaza, the YMCA of Downtown Manchester on Mechanic Street, The Puritan Backroom on Hooksett Road, City Hall Plaza, 1230 Elm St. and Gateway Park at the entrance to the Millyard from Exit 5 of Interstate 293. QOL Score: +1 Comment: In total, there are about 30 bikes, five per location, featuring front baskets, easily adjustable seats, pedal-powered tail lights and GPS units to discourage theft.

Pride Night at Fenway Park

The New Hampshire Gay Men’s Chorus is booked to sing the national anthem at Fenway Park this Friday, June 9, before the Red Sox take on the Detroit Tigers as part of the baseball team’s Pride Night game. If you miss them this time around, the group also sings at the Minor League Baseball Eastern-Division All Star game hosted by the New Hampshire Fisher Cats Wednesday, July 12, at Northeast Delta Dental Stadium in Manchester, where the chorus has been performing yearly since 2010. QOL Score: +1 Comment: The chorus is on the threshold of its 20th anniversary, with more singers part of the group than ever before. For more information, visit nhgmc.com.

For free!

Last Saturday, June 3, was Free Fishing Day in New Hampshire, at which time New Hampshire Fish and Game allowed anyone to fish without a license. New Hampshire Fish and Game sells an average of 150,000 fishing licenses each year, according to NHPR, but this is a great way to try before you buy. The event happens the first Saturday in June each year, and there’s another the third Saturday in January. QOL Score: +1 Comment: Kids under age 16 can always fish for free. QOL score: 67 Net change: +5 QOL this week: 71

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What’s affecting your Quality of Life here in New Hampshire? Let us know at news@hippopress.com. HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 9


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To me, baseball is a warm-weather sport. Thus, with such lousy weather through most of May and now into June in the spring that just won’t get started, I’ve had a tough time getting into baseball. Especially with the Red Sox playing such uninspired baseball through most of it. Fortunately, we had the Celtics to fill most of that void, but with the NBA finals starting as badly as they did last year I got down to business and took a thorough look at what’s been going on around MLB. Here are a few of the more interesting stories underway. Not that I’m against this, because I love the action, but with 40 players on pace to hit 30 homers as I write this, it makes you wonder if the ball was juiced over the winter. Baseball 101: Since 1920 only three catchers have led the AL or NL in hitting. Who are they? Incidentally, not one of those 40 sluggers is a member of the Red Sox. Speaking of uninspired baseball, most were saying Theo’s young Cubs would dominate the next five years or so. But instead the world champs are hovering around .500 with a hangover from ending the 108-year Cubs curse. The good news is they’re just a game out in the weak NL Central and still have time to shake it off. Albert Pujols just became the ninth player to reach 600 homers. While he hasn’t been the same player in Anaheim of L.A. and the World he was in St. Louis, two of baseball’s biggest records are in sight if he can play until 42. On his current pace he’ll finish the year with 618. Then he’ll need to average 29 homers the next five years to pass Barry Bonds as the alltime leader. What percentage of people not located in the 415 and 628 areas codes do you suppose are not rooting for that to happen? The RBI record is closer, where he’ll need to average just 88 per year to get by

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Hank Aaron’s 2,297. If you don’t think building through the farm system is the way to go, take a look at Houston, a young team coming of age with home-grown stars like Jose Altuve (.323), Carlos Correa (projecting 33 homers and 117 RBI) and Dallas Keuchel (9-0) on pace to win 114. Baseball 101 Answer: The only catchers to lead the league in hitting since 1920 are Ernie Lombardi (.342 for Cincy in 1939 and .330 with the Boston Braves in 1942), Minnesota’s Joe Mauer (who ‘06, ’08, ’09) and Buster Posey (.336 for San Francisco in 2012). Baseball 102: Name the eight players to win three straight batting titles during their career. Incidentally, many see Mauer as a cinch Hall of Famer, but why? He’s won those batting titles, but he’s a middle-of-theorder hitter with just one 20-plus-homer season who’s never knocked in (or scored) 100 runs. Yogi Berra knocked in 100-plus five times and had 11 20-homer seasons and it took him three tries before he made the Hall. Plus, with Mauer not hitting above .277 since 2013 his career .300 average is in danger. It’s a major advantage most don’t have, but after seeing Mauer be the latest top catcher to badly decline upon reaching 30, how long before the Giants say “I like Buster hitting .343 and we better move Posey to first base”? Ever since Larry Bacarria drove my face into the ground in a Babe Ruth League game when I was 14 on a head-first dive to score, I haven’t been a big fan of sliding head-first to any base. But not just because of what Northport, LI, Babe Ruth League’s answer to Johnny Bench did to me. It exposes hands and fingers to jamming or worse — which, if you don’t know, really hurts — and thus is an injury waiting to happen. Latest to learn that lesson the hard way is Mike Trout, whose .337 average

and 16 homers are now lost to the Angels for eight weeks thanks to a head-first slide at second base. Think, people, will you?! Speaking of stupid injuries: Is anyone else in the running to win the 2017 bonehead move of the year besides SF hurler Madison Bumgarner? Or after his injuring his pitching arm falling off a mini-bike should we just give it to him now? Speaking of the Yanks: With 6’7” and whopping 282-pound Aaron (here comes the) Judge leading the AL in homers with 18, is he on his way to becoming the best behemoth slugging outfielder since Frank Howard was sending shivers down the backs of third basemen throughout the AL? Baseball 102 Answer: The eight to win a batting title in three consecutive seasons do not include my guess of Ichiro, but I did get the others after that: Honus Wagner, Ty Cobb, Rogers Hornsby, Stan Musial, Rod Carew, Wade Boggs, Tony Gwynn and Miguel Cabrera. With 40 strikeouts in 27 innings, a microscopic 0.33 ERA and being 4-0, the game’s most versatile reliever is terrorizing the American League. So I’ll ask: Did the Red Sox blow it more with the unhittable Andrew Miller than with any other player the last 20 years when they cheaped out at $9 million in the 2016 off-season to hand him to the Yanks for a measly million more? As Julia Roberts said in Pretty Woman, that was a “big mistake — huge!” Finally, does this count as the Hippo Sports curse? On the very day I said in this column, “Eduardo Rodriguez finally appears to be living up to his promise” especially since “he doesn’t have even one bad outing on the resume,” he goes to the DL after giving up four homers and seven runs while getting bombed in Baltimore thanks to re-injuring the knee that derailed last season with a slip/fall in the bullpen while warming up. Email Dave Long at dlong@hippopress.com.

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It’s 8 straight for Bedford Winning Streak of this Century: Talk all you want about the Golden State Warriors going into the NBA finals on a 12-game winning streak. But how about the Bedford tennis team, which won its eighth straight state title and now has five straight seasons with 17 wins and no losses and 98 straight wins overall? That let captain Zach Gould close out his high school career at 65-0 after he beat Sam Grodin in the top-seed match in leading the Bulldogs to yet another state title with a 7-2 win over Derryfield. Sports 101: Twelve Red Sox hitters have led the American League in batting average in a season. How many can you name? Out-of-Town Scores: Nicely done by the Nashua father-son duo of Phil and James Pleat at the USGA National Amateur Four Ball Championship at famed Pinehurst Resort in South Carolina. They shot even par in the two-day stroke competition against a field from across the country to come up just one shot short of getting into the match-play part of the championship.

The Numbers

11 – strikeouts by Kaylee Chouinard in going the distance in Goffstown’s Round 1 win over Portsmouth in the Division II softball tournament as she gave up a run on four hits in G-town’s 11-1 win. 13 – whopping games the New Hampshire Fisher Cats already find themselves out of first place in the Eastern League’s Eastern Division.

Help Wanted: Nice to see out-of-work friend Chip Kelly landed on his feet at ESPN. I’m guessing after axing 100 staffers in a rather high-profile massive firing, his versatility to talk from experience about both NFL and college ball made it a kill-two-birds-with-one-stone hire. Quote of the Week: It comes from NBA legend and logo model Jerry West after he was asked by Dan Patrick about LaVar Ball on his radio show: “I wouldn’t want a father like that.” Sports 101 Answer: The 12 Red Sox players to lead the AL in hitting are Bill Mueller, Manny Ramirez, Nomar Garciaparra, Wade Boggs, Carney Lansford, Fred Lynn, Carl Yastrzemski, Pete Runnels, Ted Williams, Billy Goodman, Jimmy Foxx and Tris Speaker. On This Date – June 8: 1950 – The Red Sox beat the St. Louis Browns by a record 25 runs in a 29-4 pasting. 1976 – Bruins Nation is in mourning after sainted Bobby Orr signs a five-year deal to play for the Chicago Blackhawks. 1992 – Reliever Steve Howe is banned from baseball for drug use for a world record seventh time.

19 – runs scored in a 10-9 playoff donnybrook won by Bedford over Concord in the state softball tournament when Jackie Harrington had a three-hit day and knocked in Audrey Peterson with the game-winning run before getting erased at the plate going for an insidethe-park homer. 52 – points the Big Ballers AAU team coached by the know-it all-yakker gaining national pub by living

Sports Glossary

his life through his kids and who got their HS basketball coach fired lost by to a team from Compton, California in an AAU tournament last weekend. A team that had two of LaVar Ball’s three kids on it, whom he says will soon rule the basketball world. 105 – wins against one loss for the Bedford High since Shawna Morley took over as coach of the boys soccer team at BHS.

Frank Howard: Behemoth 6’7” and 255-pound slugger with the Dodgers and Washington Senators in the 1960s to early ’70s. Didn’t hit soaring fly balls like the upper-cutting average-challenged 6’6” slugger Dave Kingman. Instead he hit vicious line drives that had third basemen begging to play back on the outfield grass. The best was hitting 36, 44, 48 and 44 homers in consecutive years between 1967 and 1970 as the career total marched toward 382. The best nickname was the Washington Monument, and the fact that’s nice to know is he was an All-American hoopster at The Ohio State and Philadelphia took him in the 1958 NBA draft. Washington Senators: Team given the most sarcastically descriptive line for any team by early sports writing legend Charles Dryden: “First in war, first in peace and last in the American League.” Yogi Berra: Greatest catcher and baseball philosopher of them all, whose best Yogism was of the Minneapolis restaurant that no one went to anymore because it was too crowded. In his spare time he was a three-time MVP, 18-time All-Star with 358 career homers and holder of World Series records for most hits, RBI and titles won with Joe DiMaggio at 10. Johnny Bench: Other greatest catcher of them all with 11 20-plus-homer seasons and six with 100-plus RBI. His peak was the highest among all catchers and came in MVP years of 1970 (45- 148) and 1972 (40- 125), and no one was a better defensive catcher.

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Why buyers are caught in a feeding frenzy for homes and how to buy a house in this tough market

*Information in the house boxes: Provided by the NH Realtors Association housing report. All figures are for the month of April.

By Ryan Lessard

news@hippopress.com

When Eva Stenberg of Newport started looking for a house last fall for her two college-age sons and a couple roommates to stay in while they attended school, she had no idea what she was getting herself into. She quickly had to raise her initial price range of $150,000 to $160,000 because all she could find in that range were mobile homes. She passed on a $200,000 home in Epsom because the location wasn’t ideal but has regretted it ever since — as she would soon learn, the competition for starter homes has reached a fever pitch over the past year. “It was no longer people underbidding the requested price, it was people overbidding,” Stenberg said. “The pricing started to creep up on us, so it got harder and harder. And by the time we were in the January, February time frame, the houses were turning in three to five days. We didn’t even know it was on the market and it would already be pending.” HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 12

Each home she encountered was the target of a bidding war. Ultimately, she visited nearly 25 homes before closing on a house in Nottingham for $200,000. On average, Stenberg estimated, they looked at about three to five houses every weekend. “I’d say a lot of them were bought before I could even get an appointment to look at them,” Stenberg said. “There were some that we went to go see and we found out that evening they were pending. We didn’t even have a chance.” What Stenberg encountered is happening across southern New Hampshire, and experts say it’s caused by record low housing supply and growing buyer demand.

Taking stock

The state has fewer available houses on the market than ever before. Accord-

ing to the most recent data released by the New Hampshire Association of Realtors, there were 5,275 houses for sale statewide in April. That’s down from 7,726 in April 2016 and 8,525 in 2015. And it’s the lowest it’s been since they started to track those numbers in 2005. “We don’t physically have enough inventory for buyers who want to buy homes,” said NHAR President Rachel Eames. While demand has gone up in the past year, Bill Ray at the New Hampshire Housing Finance Authority says inventory has not kept up, which makes the supply side the anomaly in this situation. And the problem is not unique to houses. Apartment units are also extremely scarce. Ray said the 2017 rental housing report due later this month will show a continued decrease in the rental vacancy rate. Preliminary numbers show

the vacancy rate for two-bedroom apartments (not counting subsidized units) to be at 1.4 percent, an all-time low. “Since I have been here, in 21 years, I have not seen that,” Ray said. That dynamic is naturally raising rents, which in turn drives more people to seek homes. Robert Tourigny, the executive director of NeighborWorks Southern NH, said the tight housing market combined with the tight rental market has created a perfect storm for prices to skyrocket. “I don’t recall seeing both of them as tight as they are right now. Usually if the home buyer market is really robust then it leaves some vacancies and such in the rental market. And the opposite is true,” Tourigny said. “But right now, what seems like the last few months, the demand on both sides, I think, is unprecedented.” The main reason housing inventory is unusually low is that there aren’t enough new houses being built. Construction virtually stopped during the recession. This was partly due to a mass exodus of con-


tractors during the recession. But for those developers who are still working in this industry, there are many barriers to new building new houses, from local ordinances to land availability and land prices. “Access to financing for the buyers is always a challenge, as well as getting through the development approval process at the local level and zoning requirements,” Tourigny said. And as long as the focus is on building multi-family rental units, Ray concludes that those projects must be more profitable. Right now, Ray said, the highest demand is among houses priced at $300,000 and below, which the Housing Authority defines as first-time homes. But those are not a priority for developers. “We’re not seeing a lot of housing built for sale for under $300,000. In fact, I’m not sure if there’s any,” Ray said. Eames said developers are only building an estimated 20 percent of the housing stock that’s needed.

The market is tightest in the southern counties with the greatest populations: Hillsborough, Rockingham, Strafford and Merrimack. And as the state runs out of houses, more and more people are looking to buy houses.

Buying power

The immediate driver of housing demand in the state is the economic recovery. “What we’ve seen is economic improvement, especially in the southern part of the state,” Ray said. As a result, more people can afford homes than during the recession. According to a March report by the Housing Authority, median household income in 2015 roughly returned to 2008 levels, when inflation is accounted for. The economic recovery also means an uptick in population. Ray said more people are migrating from Massachusetts and looking for homes. The state’s population is expected to increase by 100,000 over the next 25 years, according to Eames. 14

Median household income in 2015 dollars

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There is also increased competition over starter homes in the $200,000-to-$300,000 price range from different age groups. Along with young, first-time homebuyers in their 20s and 30s, the market is also seeing a lot of middle-aged empty-nesters and Baby Boomers who are looking to downsize from a bigger, high-maintenance home to something more manageable. Ray said the older buyers often have a competitive edge. “The downsizers bring equity and as a result they have cash to pay for the houses … and compete better than a first-time homebuyer,” Ray said. Lisa Capicchioni, a senior loan officer at Residential Mortgage Services, has 25 years of experience in the local housing market. As a lender, she’s seen more buyers in their 40s and 50s who were able to sell their houses at a premium and come to buy smaller houses with more capital for down payments and closing costs. And Capicchioni said they don’t even need to put down as much as 20 percent to gain an edge. Even with 5 or 10 percent down, they’re making more appealing offers than the zero-down governmentfinanced loans offered to some first-time homebuyers who can’t afford to make big down payments. The disparity grows more pronounced when a house is in a bidding war. “When you’re talking about first-time homebuyers, they’re more shackled … because they don’t have the ability to keep going up on price,” Capicchioni said.

Still, Ray said, the types of homes firsttime homebuyers and downsizers are looking for don’t always overlap. Downsizers, he said, are often looking for a smaller footprint, but they still want some of the nicer amenities, like granite countertops.

Prices launching

Low supply and high demand mean higher prices, as any Economics 101 class would tell us. But the problem appears to be exacerbated on the demand side by demographic competition and on the supply side by burdensome regulations at the local level and fewer contractors. On top of that, an aging population getting reverse mortgages to stay in their homes longer and a younger population that moved back in with parents and grandparents have kept more houses from going on the market. The last time the market was this hot was during the housing bubble, which saw median prices for single-family homes peak in New Hampshire at about $270,000 in 2005, according to data from the NH Realtors Association. In 2016, prices rose to about $249,000, just shy of 2004 prices. By April, median prices rose to $260,000. Of course, the prices in the early 2000s were inflated by risky lending practices that drove up demand. Right now, Eames said, it’s a “slight” seller’s market because they stand to get asking price in most cases. “It’s not like prices have gone totally crazy,” Eames said. In this case, prices represent real value. As long as people can afford the higher prices, this situation will give sellers the advantage.

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According to data from the April realtors report, sellers were getting 98.1 percent of their listed price. That’s as high as it’s been since 2005. “They’re getting top price, sometimes even over the listed price,” Capicchioni said.

How to nab a house

When it comes to buying a house in this market, especially a first home, people need to be equipped with a combination of the common fundamentals and a few additional skills. For a lot of people, the struggle is caused by the speed with which they need to act. Among other things, it means people aren’t given enough time to mull over the major decision of buying a house. “The market isn’t really allowing them to sit and absorb the numbers. They have to act quickly,” Capicchioni said. And that can mean missed opportunities. Melissa Starkey, the owner of Starkey Realty, said it’s important to be ready to pounce when the right house comes along. “Be mentally prepared to offer right away if you like the house. Don’t make snap decisions that you’re going to regret. But … if you hem and haw it’s not going to be around,” Starkey said. That can make the process more stressful. “I think it adds added stress and pressure for sure,” Eames said. “You’re under the gun to get your offer in and hope it’s the best offer. … People get very anxious.” Whether the buyers have had experience in the housing market before or not, they often have to adapt to the highly competitive environment.

Be flexible

Ryan Tufts, a homeownership counselor at NeighborWorks, said there’s a house out there for everyone, even in this tight market. The trick is being open to change and compromise. “The people who are most successful right now are the most flexible. Maybe it’s not the right part of town they wanted initially or maybe they made some compromise on how great of shape the home was in,” Tufts said. He said virtually all of the people he’s helped counsel through the homebuying process have found a home by being flexible. “If you’re going to come in saying I need a three-bedroom, two-bath on a nice quiet street with a two-car garage, this is my price range, in this part of town — OK, we’d all love that, but you might have to give up some piece of that,” Tufts said.

Eva Stenberg, who bought a house in Nottingham for her two sons, said the trial and error and rapid-fire pace of her search helped to home in on which things she was willing to sacrifice. “You have no ability to make a choice,” Stenberg said. “You had to learn what you were willing to accept and what you weren’t willing to accept so that you could jump on it.” It also took constant vigilance and keeping an open line of communication with her real estate agent, Starkey, and her lender. Christine Paige and her husband Richard needed to downgrade from the 2,900-square-foot house they were renting in Epsom. She is 68 and Richard suffered a stroke, so shoveling their long, winding driveway in the winters became impossible. Paige wanted to get a house near the Seacoast, but she soon found that prices were too high and the houses were not always in good shape. “There were just no homes out there anymore. No good homes,” Paige said. She also didn’t expect the kind of competition they were up against, so, with the help of her realtor, Rachel Eames, and her loan officer, Carol Jordan at Merrimack Mortgage, she figured out a compromise: look at Seacoast area homes farther inland. She settled on a 2,025-square-foot house in Rochester. Paige says she’s a Type A personality and was stressed whenever she hit a bump in the road, like when the Rochester home had elevated levels of arsenic in the groundwater. But she credits Eames and Jordan for jumping in at every step to make the process as painless as possible. The arsenic problem, for example, was resolved by getting an arsenic mitigation system installed. Capicchioni said it often takes first-timers losing out on two or three homes before they begin to reevaluate their approach.

Education

Tufts said one of the best ways to be prepared going into the homebuying process is to get educated on the process. This is especially helpful for first-timers but can also serve as a refresher course for someone who has bought a house before. “For anyone who’s buying a house or interested in learning more about it, the main thing we offer is a workshop that’s geared toward teaching you the fundamentals of home-buying,” Tufts said. In his workshop, Tufts goes over the benefits and downsides of owning a home and figuring out if it’s the right time to buy. The class goes over basic household 16

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15 budgeting, looking at savings, debts and credit scores. Knowing what you can afford is important, Tufts said, because too often people bite off more than they can chew. “The big thing we’ve encouraged throughout whatever the market is like is to really know that you can afford this payment that you’re stepping into and the additional costs of owning a house,” Tufts said. “Maybe their rent and actual mortgage payment might be a little bit equal but usually people are getting a bigger space, they’re going to have a higher utility [cost] so their actual costs are going to go up usually by hundreds of dollars a month in most cases.” Then he brings in a lender to talk about mortgage options and assistance programs, followed by a real estate agent who talks about why it’s important to have an agent, the home search process and what a purchase-and-sale agreement looks like. Finally, Tufts invites an insurance agent, home inspector and someone from a title company to go over the final steps, from making sure the house has good bones to considering different insurance options. “I don’t expect anyone to leave this class a seasoned vet, but I want them to at least have some exposure to what they’re going

For sellers While sellers might have an advantage in this market, that doesn’t mean it can’t be stressful for them as well. Eames said sellers may often think multiple bids is always a good thing, but it can backfire. “There’s also a reverse bidding war,” Eames said. The reverse bidding war, Eames said, is a phenomenon that happens when bidders find themselves in a competitive situation and they have no interest in going back and forth and escalating prices in the process. So buyers will drop like flies and the seller will be left without closing the deal. There are also exceptions to the rule that says this is a seller’s market. David Flanagan is in the process of selling his house in Northwood. Right now, he’s closing a deal to sell it for $310,000. But he didn’t have anything close to a bidding war. After he put his house on the market in April, he did about 10 showings but only got a single offer on the house. He priced it “a little bit high” and then lowered the price after a couple weeks. “My only advice is really to just come up with a good plan … and don’t overprice,” Flanagan said. Eames said the biggest mistake for sellers would be to enter the market with an asking price that shoots way over the mark. If the price is accurate, it will attract more bids, and with more bidders comes higher prices from competition.

to encounter so they can continue their research in an intelligent way,” Tufts said.

Build your team

As buyers like Stenberg and Paige can attest, having a good team behind you can be the difference between failure and success. “Having a strong team is definitely something we would recommend,” Tufts said. Tufts said it’s important to build a good relationship with your real estate agent, lender and possibly a homeownership counselor so that they can communicate with you and sellers and iron out all the difficult parts of the process. Buyers can often lose sight of their own control of the situation, so Tufts said buyers must keep asking questions and make sure their team knows what it is they want. “Don’t forget that you’re the boss in this situation. No one is really getting paid until you buy the house,” Tufts said. Real estate agents and lenders are all very skilled at what they do, Tufts said, so buyers need to pick people they are comfortable with on a social level. “Find someone who talks more your speed and your language to work with you, and who’s available when you’re available,” Tufts said. Availability is key, which is why Tufts recommends sticking with lenders who are local. Local lenders are more likely to pick up the phone when you need them. In a market where time is of the essence, it’s more important than ever to avoid situations where you’re waiting for days for a call back.

Prequalify

When asked what advice she would give to other homebuyers, Stenberg’s very first point is to start the loan process. “Make sure you get prequalified. Find the range. Know your max limit,” Stenberg said. Coming into the home search process with that knowledge will help to narrow your search and inform you when to back away from a bidding war when it starts to exceed your limit. Robert Tourigny at Neighborworks said that while home prices are currently climbing, loan rates are still very good, hovering around 4 percent. “Fortunately, interest rates have remained quite low for an extended period of time,” Tourigny said. But Stenberg cautions buyers to not get carried away by the bidding process. As with many other recent homebuyers, she had to overbid to win her home by a few thousand dollars. But, in the end, she stayed within her price range and was able to do that because she kept in constant contact with her lender and kept sight of what her range was.


Town research

Eames said that one way to stay limber and quick in the search and bidding process is to complete all the necessary research on the town and neighborhood in advance. “Typically, for commuting purposes, buyers will be looking at three towns,” Eames said. If you know what towns you’re looking in, all the research comparing crime statistics, municipal services and school districts can be done already. That way, you’re not scrambling to do extra homework when considering a home in what is likely to be a short window of opportunity.

Wants vs. needs

One of the very first things Eames does when she sits down with a new client is discuss what a buyer wants and needs. Those things vary from person to person but the more an individual can categorize the things they’re looking for into those two columns, the more flexible they will be when it comes time to compromise and make a decision. Eames defines wants as luxury items, amenities like a garden plot or a nice view. Needs, on the other hand will make or break a deal. So, if a buyer conflates wants with needs, they likely won’t find that perfect home in their price range.

Write a letter

In addition to working with an agent to craft the best possible bid and act swiftly in the face of heightened time constraints, a personal letter to the sellers might provide that little extra icing on the cake. Lisa Capicchioni said a personal letter is an opportunity to talk about your story, the things you want for you and your family and maybe your personal struggles. “So [sellers] can look at them as real people,” Capicchioni said. The personal stories may tug at the heartstrings of the seller and help you stand out in a crowded field.

Sell first

If you’re coming into the market already a homeowner and you’re looking to buy a different home, often your bid will come with what’s called a home sale contingency. That’s a way to make sure you can transition seamlessly from one house to the next but it also represents a burden for a seller who may be eager to sell fast. Melissa Starkey said home sale contin-

gencies are a major obstacle to getting a bid accepted in this highly competitive market. A solution may be to sell your existing home first and figure out a temporary living situation while you look for the next home. “One of the questions I ask sellers is, ‘Do you have a place to go?’” Starkey said. Even the highest bid can be overlooked if there’s a contingency attached to it. That’s what happened with the home Christine Paige bought in Rochester. She said their bid was the second highest of five with about $10,000 over the asking price. The reason she got the house was that the highest bidder had a sale contingency.

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Creative capital

For young first-time buyers who are hoping to get a house with no money down, that may be possible in many cases still, but in particularly competitive regions it may be necessary to sweeten the deal with a small down payment. Of course, many people don’t have the kind of liquid capital that requires. So, Capicchioni said, it may require turning to family members for personal loans or cash gifts to raise the money needed. If that’s still not possible, there are assistance programs that can help. The federal USDA rural development loan program provides 100 percent of the home price in certain designated rural areas, according to Tufts. It’s only available to first-time homebuyers. That leaves closing costs, but even then, that cost can be largely covered by the sellers in the negotiations. In New Hampshire there’s also a tax credit program provided through the Housing Authority called the mortgage credit certificate that can provide up to $2,000 in tax credits per year. Tufts said you have to apply for that before you close on your loan and buyers qualify based on a household income level. Upcoming Homebuyer Seminars by NeighborWorks/Hometeam June 10 in Concord July 15 in Manchester Aug. 19 in Salem 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Fee to attend is $69 per household (up to two attendees per household). Visit hometeamnh.org to register.

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HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 17


THIS WEEK

EVENTS TO CHECK OUT JUNE 8 - 14, 2017, AND BEYOND Saturday, June 10

Join the Aviation Museum of New Hampshire for its annual barbecue and fly-in at Nashua Airport (83 Perimeter Road, Nashua) from 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., with lunch served at noon. The event features antique cars, motorcycles, trains and more on display, in addition to aircraft. Admission is $30 for adults, $10 for kids ages 5 to 16 and free for kids under 5. Visit aviationmuseumofnh.org.

EAT: locally grown food The Bedford Farmers Market continues on Tuesday, June 13, from 3 to 6 p.m. at St. Elizabeth Seton Parish (190 Meetinghouse Road, Bedford) and will feature a wide variety of locally grown fruits, vegetables, meat and dairy products and more. Visit bedfordfarmersmarket.org.

DRINK: at Henniker Brewing Join the Henniker Brewing Co. (129 Centervale Road) for its kickoff to summer celebration, on Saturday, June 10, from noon to 4 p.m., which will feature beer samples, food trucks, live music, tours of the brewery and more, as well as the return of Sour Flower, the brewery’s dry-hopped sour ale. Admission is free. Visit hennikerbrewing.com or call 428-3579.

Tuesday, June 13

Friday, June 9

Sunday, June 11 Sunday, June 11

Classic rock legends America perform at the Capitol Center for the Arts (44 S. Main St., Concord) at 7:30 p.m. Tickets range from $45 to $55. Visit ccanh.com or call the box office at 225-1111.

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HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 18

Don’t miss the 10th annual Flat N Fast 5K, which kicks off at Roulston Road in Windham at 8:30 a.m. and finishes at Windham Depot (7 Windham Road). Registration is $25 per person or $90 per family, and race-day registration is available from 7 to 8 a.m. Visit windhamrailtrail.org.

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Maine author Linda Greenlaw will visit Gibson’s Bookstore (45 S. Main St., Concord) at 5:30 p.m. to present Shiver Hitch, the newest novel in her mystery series featuring homicide detective Jane Bunker. Admission is free. Visit gibsonsbookstore. com or call 224-0562.

Join the Wadleigh Public Library (49 Nashua Road, Milford) for a New Hampshire Fish and Game presentation from 6 to 7:30 p.m. featuring conservation officer Todd Szewczyk. He will give an overview of the Fish and Game department, and will talk about fishing, hunting, search and rescue, and New Hampshire wildlife. Admission is free. Visit wadleigh.org or call 249-0645.

BE MERRY: at a health fair Big Kahunas Cafe and Grill (380 Daniel Webster Highway, Merrimack) will host its whole health fair on Sunday, June 11, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. The event includes music, food, vendors, health presentations, yoga demonstrations and more. Admission is free. Visit nhkahuna.com or call 494-4975.

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ARTS Last hurrah

McGowan says goodbye with Bruce McColl exhibition By Kelly Sennott

ksennott@hippopress.com

Bruce McColl’s “The Color of Seasons” is the last art show for McGowan Fine Art as we know it today. Tucked away on Hills Avenue in the heart of downtown Concord, the 16-piece exhibition — bright and representative of iconic New Hampshire scenery — is on view June 6 through July 7, with an opening reception Friday, June 9, from 5 to 7 p.m., and an artist talk on Saturday, June 17, from 11 a.m. to noon. Gallery owner Sarah Chaffee announced in late April that the gallery, after 37 years, would close its doors this July, but during a recent visit there were still many pieces to frame and loose ends to tie before signing off. Orders and requests have been flying in. “I think there’s always been this feeling that, I’m a big gallery. I’ve been here forever. I’ll be here forever. So when it was announced, I think a lot of people were shocked,” Chaffee said. “I’m really shocked by how many people are coming out and buying last-minute art purchases. … And now I’m trying to figure out, can we finish all this work by our deadline of July 7?” The gallery began in Mary McGowan’s barn in 1980, starting with corporate art consulting and growing to include a frame “Bruce McColl: The Color of Seasons” Where: McGowan Fine Art, 10 Hills Ave., Concord When: June 6 through July 7; opening reception Friday, June 9, from 5 to 7 p.m., artist talk Saturday, June 17, from 11 a.m. to noon Contact: mcgowanfineart.com, 2252515, art@mcgowanfineart.com

Bruce McColl and Sarah Chaffee during a studio visit. Julie Hamel photo.

shop and art gallery. The Hills Ave. space was designed by her husband, architect Duncan McGowan. Chaffee took over when Mary McGowan retired in 2011. In its closing, Chaffee is most concerned for her “top-notch” staff. Some, like her corporate art consultant Amanda Lacasse, will continue in the field, offering corporate art consulting services privately, but the future is still a little murky for everyone, including her 75 regional artists. For many of them, the gallery is their primary or only representation. “It was a fast and not-fast decision on my part. It’s been a struggle ever since the recession started. There are changing buying habits,” she said. More and more collectors are buying art online. But when budgets were tight, Chaffee felt it was important to not cater to just “what people want,” or what she knew would sell. “I also bring in work that I think people should look at, and I think people should

like. And those types of galleries are few and far between. They tend to operate in big cities where there’s a much bigger population to pull in,” Chaffee said. At the time of her interview, McColl’s pieces were at the gallery in the midst of being framed. All are energetic with color and mark-making, bringing to life his interpretation of Granite State sites in Franconia, Derry, Hopkinton and Appledore Isle, plus Sanibel Island in Florida. For many of the paintings, McColl looked to art history; for example, “Celia Thaxter’s Garden and Babb’s Cove” is like an homage to Childe Hassam’s work. “White Birch, Autumn Winds Beneath Lafayette” was inspired by White Mountain painters featured in the Currier Museum of Art’s fall 2016 exhibition “Mount Washington: The Crown of New England.” “I think it’s interesting, this day and age, how people are looking at history in a different way and challenging [previous

interpretations],” said McColl, who is also director of art education at the Currier Art Center, naming Hamilton as an example. “There’s such a rich tradition of painters going up to the White Mountains. I felt like I was in the presence of many generations of artists.” When outdoor temperatures dropped, McColl turned to floral still lifes, but whenever possible he painted plein air, a rare choice among New England artists because of weather. Cool temperatures cause fingers to tense and media to thicken up, whereas heat causes paints to dry fast. Artists must work quickly. “It’s funny; the work, it is very fast, and you can see there’s a lot of movement in these, but if you look at his strokes, you see they’re well thought out,” Chaffee said. “I think there’s a lot of movement and mark-making.” For McColl, the choice was as much about the art as it was about time outside. “All of us are so attached, in our working lives, to our digital and technological worlds. When I’m outdoors, I’m wonderfully disconnected with that part of my life and completely absorbed in ... experiencing nature with smell and sound and sight. And that, for me, is really transportive,” he said. “When I walk away after a day or two in these landscapes, wrestling with these paintings, I feel energized and revived.” McColl, like the rest of the art community, is sad to see McGowan’s end, calling it the region’s most important and long-standing gallery. But Chaffee said she hopes to continue the business in some way, looking at options to perhaps open a smaller space with a frame shop, because McGowan has been more than just a business. “It’s not just selling the artwork, but it’s really about shepherding an artist’s career,” Chaffee said.

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ARTS

NH art world news

• Curious magic: The Currier Museum of Art’s (150 Ash St., Manchester, currier. org, 669-6144) newest show is “The Curious Magic of Varujan Boghosian,” on view June 10 through Sept. 4. The show features 60 works by the Upper Valley artist, who has “created a singular niche for himself in the contemporary art world,” according to a press release, challenging the viewer to look at common objects in a new way by presenting them in unique contexts. He’s a master draftsman, watercolorist and sculptor of found objects, and the artwork on view ranges from early abstract prints to presentday pieces. You can check out the new show at Free New Hampshire Second Saturday on Saturday, June 10, from 10 a.m. to noon (free admission for Granite State residents). On that day, adults and children can revel in Creative Studio Saturday: Mythical Creatures, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., or check out a focus tour of “The Curious Magic of Varujan Boghosian” that starts at 11:30 a.m. that day. You can meet the artist himself Sunday, June 11, at 2 p.m. during an ARTalk with museum curator Kurt Sundstrom. Regular gallery admission is $15 for adults, $13 for seniors, $10 for students, $5 for youth ages 13 to 17 and free for children younger than 13. • Contemporary impressionism: Award-winning contemporary impressionist artist John Farrar mounts an exhibition of his art at the Andres Institute of Art Visitor Center, 106 Route 13, Brookline, with an opening reception Friday, June 9, from 7 to 9 p.m. The show is on view through Sat-

Art Events • CONCORD ARTS MARKET Starts Sat., June 3, and occurs almost every Saturday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. until Saturday, Sept. 30, at 1 Bicentennial Square, Concord. Visit concordartsmarket.net. • DERRY HOMEGROWN FARM & ARTISAN MARKET June 7 through Sept. 20, Wednesdays from 3 to 7 p.m. at 1 W. Broadway, Derry. Locallymade food, art and crafts. Visit derryhomegrown.org. Open calls • CALL FOR ART For upcoming Studio 550 shows, which change every month and are at the Studio 550 Art Center, 550 Elm St., Manchester. Visit 550arts.com for details on upcoming shows and how to submit pieces or call 232-5597.

“Above and Below,” 2011, by Varujan Boghosian. Collage, 19 7/8 x 15 3/8 in. Museum Purchase: The Henry Melville Fuller Acquisition Fund, 2015.30.3.

urday, June 10, from 1 to 5 p.m. The artist’s work has also been exhibited at the Fitchburg Art Museum. For more information, visit andresinstitute.org/events. • Artisan fair and plein air painting: Bedrock Gardens, 45 High Road, Lee, hosts an open house with an artisan fair Saturday, June 17, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and Sunday, June 18, from noon to 4 p.m. Local artisans will offer wares — jewelry, paintings, pottery, wood pieces, outdoor landscapes — while some artists will be painting on site, with a wet paint sale afterward to benefit the gardens. On Saturday, there will be music by Dale’s Jazz Lab from noon to 2 p.m. Bedrock Gardens is a private garden, not regularly open to the public except for special events like these. Reservations aren’t required, and there’s a suggested $10 donation (free for kids) to visit. Call 659-2993 or visit bedrockgardens.org. — Kelly Sennott

Openings • DAVID POPPIE June artist of the month at Exeter Fine Crafts. 61 Water St., Exeter. Artist who creates pieces from disposable objects. Reception Fri., June 2, 6-8 p.m. Visit exeterfinecrafts. com, call 778-8282. • “THE COLOR OF SEASONS” Featuring paintings by Bruce McColl. On view June 6-July 7, with a reception Fri., June 9, from 5 to 9 p.m. McGowan Fine Art, 10 Hills Ave., Concord. Artist talk Sat., June 17, 11 a.m.-noon about his process. Visit mcgowanfineart. com or call 225-2515. • JOHN FARRAR Awardwinning contemporary impressionist artists mounts exhibit. Andres Institute of Art at Big Bear Lodge, 106 Route 13, Brookline. Opening Fri., June 9, 7-9 p.m. On view through Saturday, June 10, from 1 to 5 p.m.

Visit andresinstitute.org/events. • 8TH ANNUAL SEACOAST OPEN STUDIO ART EXHIBIT June 10-11 and June 17-18, noon-4 p.m., Exeter Town Hall, 10 Front St., Exeter. Framed paintings, matted art, miniatures, cards, bookmarks for sale, cash or check only. • “THE CURIOUS MAGIC OF VARUJAN BOGHOSIAN” Currier Museum of Art. 150 Ash St., Manchester. June 10 through Sept. 4, featuring art by the New Hampshire resident, a master draftsman, watercolorist and sculptor of found objects. Admission $15 for adults, $13 for seniors, $10 for students, $5 for youth. Visit currier.org or call 669-6144. •”ARTWORK BY MANCHESTER’S INNER-CITY YOUTH” Art and essays by more than 30 Manchester youth from Bring It! and Inti Academy,

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Treasures Under The

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ARTS

Creating opportunities

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Sempre Musick Concerto Project features young pianists By Kelly Sennott

a one hour program including reflective contemplation, a love song to God, and group discussion on the day’s theme

• Silent Auction • Children’s Area • Penny Raffle • Free Parking

ksennott@hippopress.com

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Playing an instrument by yourself is one thing. Doing it live on stage with an orchestra is another thing entirely. “With a live orchestra, you can hear all these different instruments. In some ways it’s distracting, but in the end you’re all making music together,” said Mila Filatova, a Manchester-based piano instructor, during an interview in her home studio. But opportunities to play with an ensemble are hard to come by for amateur pianists, whose instruments are less, well, portable. Some of Filatova’s advanced students have performed with local companies like the Nashua Chamber Orchestra or the New Hampshire Philharmonic via successful auditions or by winning competitions, but they’re the exception. So Filatova decided to create an opportunity: the Sempre Musick Concerto Project, which takes the form of a concert Sunday, June 11, at 3 p.m. at Nashua High School South. Nineteen young pianists ages 9 to 18 from Mila Filatova’s Piano Academy will perform music by Mozart, Beethoven, Grieg, Saint Saëns and others, plus a special commissioned work by Robert Edward Smith alongside the Sempre Musick Symphony Orchestra, led by Maestro David Feltner, who also directs the Nashua Chamber Orchestra and the Chamber Orchestra of Boston. Each will perform solos or duets ranging from 3 to 16 minutes. It’s structured not like a traditional children’s concert, but like one you might see in a major metropolitan concert hall, spanning two hours and split by an intermission. Filatova said she produced a similar event in 2012 with 11 piano soloists, which was well-received and had students asking for more. But producing the Sempre Musick Concerto Project concert requires a great deal of work. Only since Filatova began a leave of absence at St. Paul’s School, where she taught until a year ago, has she been able to Sempre Musick Concerto Project

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HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 22

Where: Nashua High School South, 36 Riverside Drive, Nashua (take a left at concrete school sign, go to back of the school) When: Sunday, June 11, at 3 p.m. Admission: Free, donations accepted at the door to defray costs Contact: milafilatova.com

Maxine Park, a piano student of Mila Filatova, performing Mozart’s Piano Concert No. 21 with the Nashua Chamber Orchestra earlier this year. Park is among the young pianists taking part in the Sempre Musick Concerto Project. Courtesy photo.

muster the time and energy to boost opportunities for her 40 private students, from recitals and community service projects to performances at prestigious locales, like the Mount Washington Hotel. This upcoming concert is the biggest of the year for most of her young pianists, including 14-year-old Alessandra Mariano, an eighth-grader at the Academy for Science and Design in Nashua. Mariano learned her piece — the first movement of the Grieg concerto — last summer and has spent the past several months polishing. “One of the harder issues is trying to balance yourself with the orchestra. There are a few parts in the concerto where you want to sound like you’re arguing with the orchestra. You play, and then the orchestra plays. You want it to sound like conflict. And then, in other parts, you have to try and blend in with the orchestra, like you’re accompanying it,” Mariano said. Filatova said her students have performed in Carnegie Hall and abroad. Some are beginners, but most are advanced and take piano seriously, traveling as far as 90 minutes to study with her in the Queen City. Many continue with music after high school, receiving admission to top music schools and college scholarships. Mariano has performed with a symphony orchestra before, but was still nervous and excited for this unique opportunity. “Usually, I get nervous before [a concert], but it’s really exciting because I’ve been practicing a lot,” Mariano said. “If you’re just a solo pianist, you work with the teacher and by yourself. With the orchestra, you get to go to rehearsals, and you have to work with the conductor and other orchestra members. … You get a new experience, working with other people.”


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• Seacoast concerts: The Portsmouth Symphony Orchestra presents a concert, “Scheherazade & The Sorcerer’s Apprentice,” Sunday, June 11, at 3 p.m. at The Music Hall, 28 Chestnut St., Portsmouth. There’s a pre-concert discussion at 2 p.m. Audiences will also get to listen to the orchestra’s concerto and aria contest winners. Tickets are $25. Visit themusichall.org. Women Singing Out! also presents some concerts on the coast this weekend with the Funky Divas of Gospel on Friday, June 9, at 7 p.m., and Sunday, June 11, at 3 p.m. at Christ Episcopal Church, 1035 Lafayette Road, Portsmouth, and on Saturday, June 10, at 3 p.m. at First Parish UCC, 176 W. High St., Somersworth. All the music in the program is designed to lift hearts and help listeners stand strong. Admission is $15. Visit womensingingout.org. • NH resident wins Obie Award: Andy’s Summer Playhouse Artistic Director and Hollis native Jared Mezzocchi won an award for design and multi-media projections for Qui Nguyen’s Vietgone at the 2017 Obie Awards, which recognizes excellence for off-Broadway theater, according to a press release. Mezzocchi is also on the faculty of the University of Maryland’s theater program. Before he starts up again at Andy’s Summer Playhouse this summer, he’ll complete a fellowship at the MacDowell Colony in Peterborough. Visit andyssummerplayhouse.org. • Social event of the season: Bedford Off Broadway presents its spring production of Alfred Uhry’s The Last Night of Ballyhoo directed by Michael J. Curtis

with photos of the young artists by NH photographer Becky Field. Opening reception Tues., June 13, 5-7 p.m. Manchester City Hall, 1 City Hall Plaza, Manchester.

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HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 24

Theater Productions • MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET Palace Theatre production. June 2-June 25. 80 Hanover St., Manchester. Visit palacetheatre. org. Call 668-5588, ext. 127. Tickets $25-$45. • THE LAST NIGHT OF BALLYHOO Bedford Off Broadway production. Fri., June 9, at 8 p.m.; Sat., June 10, at 8 p.m.; Sun., June 11, at 2 p.m.; Fri., June 16, at 8 p.m.; Sat., June 17, at 8 p.m. Bedford Old Town Hall, 3 Meetinghouse Road, Bedford. $12. Visit bedfordoffbroadway.com.

The Portsmouth Symphony Orchestra performs at The Music Hall this weekend. Photo by Virgil Mehalek.

Friday, June 9; Saturday, June 10; Friday, June 16, and Saturday, June 17, at 8 p.m. (plus a matinee showing Sunday, June 11, at 2 p.m.) at the Bedford Old Town Hall, 3 Meetinghouse Road, Bedford. The play takes place in Atlanta, Georgia, in December 1939, when Hitler is invading Poland and Gone With the Wind is in the midst of its world premiere — but Atlanta’s elite are more concerned with who is going to Ballyhoo, the social event of the season. Tickets are $12. Visit bedfordoffbroadway.com. • Audition for a show: The Leddy Center for the Performing Arts holds auditions for Roald Dahl’s Willy Wonka Saturday, June 10, at the theater, 38C Ladd’s Lane, Epping. Artistic Director Elaine Gatchell is looking for men, women and children to fill the roles. Men should prepare “The Candy Man,” and women should prepare “Cheer Up Charlie.” Kids can sing any of the Oompa Loompa songs, but girls auditioning for leads should prep “I Want it Now!” while boys should prep “I Have a Golden Ticket!” Make an appointment by calling 679-2781. Rehearsals begin Sept. 3, and shows are Oct. 20 through Nov. 8. Visit leddycenter. org or email info@leddycenter.org. — Kelly Sennott

• ALL SHOOK UP Palace Youth Theatre production. Wed., June 14; Thurs., June 15; Tues., June 20; Wed., June 21, at 7 p.m. Palace Theatre, 80 Hanover St., Manchester. $14. Visit palacetheatre.org. Call 668-5588. • ONE ACT WONDERS New World Theatre production. June 16-June 25. Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m., Sundays at 2 p.m. Hatbox Theatre, 270 Loudon Road, Concord. $16.50. Visit hatboxnh.com. Tickets $16.50. Classical Music Events • BACH’S LUNCH CONCERT Thurs., June 8, 12:10-12:50 p.m. Concord Community Music School, 23 Wall St., Concord. Featuring faculty members Peggo Horstmann Hodes singing, Kent Allyn on piano, bass and guitar. Visit ccmusicschool.org. Free.

• FUNKY DIVAS OF GOSPEL Women Singing Out! Concert. Fri., June 9, at 7 p.m., Christ Episcopal Church, 1035 Lafayette Road, Portsmouth; Sat., June 10, at 3 p.m., First Parish United Church of Christ, 1035 Lafayette Road, Portsmouth; Sun., June 11, at 3 p.m., at Christ Episcopal Church. Tickets $12-$15. Visit womensingingout.org. • PORTSMOUTH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Concert Sun., June 11, at 3 p.m. at The Music Hall, 28 Chestnut St., Portsmouth. Tickets are $25. Visit themusichall.org or call 436-9900. • COLORS UNSEEN Concert with Manchester Community Music School. Featuring original works composed by adult student at Grace Episcopal Church, 106 Lowell St., Manchester, Wed., June 21, at 7 p.m. Visit mcmusicschool.org or call 644-4548.


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LISTINGS 31 Children & Teens Games, clubs, fun... 31 Clubs

INSIDE/OUTSIDE Kids comic craze

Annual comic convention for kids returns By Matt Ingersoll

Hobby, service...

mingersoll@hippopress.com

31 Continued

After a successful inaugural year in Concord, Kids Con New England is moving to a bigger space with twice as many comic book artists, new activities and returning favorites like kid-friendly panels, open video gaming and “Pirate Camp.” This year, the Granite State’s only comic book convention specifically designed for kids is inviting the next generation of comic book lovers to the Radisson Hotel in Nashua on Sunday, June 11, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. “We’re really trying to promote art education and literacy through comics,” said con organizer and local artist Emily Drouin, who pens the comic book series EPLIS with her husband. “Kids respond very well with the visual aspect of graphic novels and ... through characters. … Much like an animated cartoon show, they still get that simulation with comics, and it’s great to see them get excited about reading as an art form.” Kids Con New England was launched last year after Drouin discovered the need for more activities

Education Classes, seminars, lectures... 31 Crafts Fairs, workshops... 31 Festivals & Fairs County, agricultural... 31 Health & Wellness Workshops, exercises...

FEATURES 27 Kiddie pool Family activities this week. 28 The Gardening Guy Advice on your outdoors. 29 Treasure Hunt

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.

for children at several annual comic book conventions in the region. If you were there last year, you might have encountered princessthemed storytimes, Jedi training, face-painting, a balloon artist and cartoon and comic book-making workshops. All of those features are returning this year, Drouin said, but on a much larger scale. “This new space is three or four times the size [of last year’s] … and we’re using the whole floor,” she said. “We’ll have workshops in two rooms throughout the day and panel rooms with superheroes that kids

Schedule of events

There’s gold in your attic. 30 Car Talk

Kids in cosplay pose at last year’s Kids Con. Courtesy photo.

The general age bracket for the event is 4-12, with most hands-on workshops (coloring, mask making, drawing, etc.) and meet and greets tailored toward the younger crowd, while video game tournaments and panels are more for ages 8 and up. Ongoing activities like face painting, Pirate Camp and Jedi Training are appropriate for all ages.

Other event highlights Jedi training: 10:15 to 11 a.m., 11:15 to 11:45 a.m., 1:30 to 2 p.m. and 2:15 to 2:45 p.m. Mario Kart video game tournament: 11 a.m. to noon Food concessions: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Princess Academy: noon to 12:30 p.m. and 12:45 to 1:15 p.m. Superhero meet and greet: 1 to 1:45 p.m. Pokemon video game tournament: Workshops Learning to draw imaginary crea- 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. Disney Princess magical sing-along tures: 10:30 to 11:15 a.m. and storytime: 3 to 3:30 p.m. Mask-making: 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. Cartooning basics: 11:30 a.m. to Kids and family costume contest: 3 12:15 p.m. to 3:45 p.m. The art of comic book-making: 1 to Group costume photos: 4 p.m. Kids’ Sketch-off: 4 to 4:45 p.m. 1:45 p.m. Face-painting and ballooning: all Build a lightsaber: 2 to 2:45 p.m. day Create a superhero: 2:30 to 3:15 p.m. Pirate Camp with Northeast BucZentangling: 3 to 3:45 p.m. caneers: all day Baystate Ghostbusters meet and greet: all day

HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 26

can ask questions.” Drouin said a majority of the artists appearing at the convention are independent cartoonists and children’s book illustrators, and some even travel from as far away as Pennsylvania, New York and Washington, D.C. But visitors will also meet plenty of artists from right here in the Granite State — like Ed Smith of Londonderry, the selfdescribed “Cartoonist at Large,” who writes and draws superhero and science fiction comics. Others include Michael Mitchell of Tilton, whose specialty is in educational historical comics, and Jesse Lundburg of Laconia, creator of the “Harold the Happy Human Eater” comic book series. “A lot of these people self-publish and print their own comics, as well as do original art and comic book covers,” Drouin said. This year’s workshops and panels will focus on topics like how to draw imaginary creatures, the basics of cartooning and character creation for comics, how to build a lightsaber and more. Also included is a Kids’ Sketch-Off at 4 p.m., when kids compete for the best creation to win prizes. Open gaming featuring Pokemon and Mario Kart will be held throughout the day, with two hours dedicated to tournaments for both games. Sign-ups for the tournaments are available on the day of the event. “We’ll have a couple of caricaturists there and people doing crafts and face-painting too,” Drouin said.

Kids Con New England When: Sunday, June 11, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Where: Radisson Hotel, 11 Tara Boulevard, Nashua Cost: $12 for adults, $10 for seniors, veterans and kids ages 5 to 17, free for kids under 5 Visit: kidsconne.com

Outside on the grounds of the Radisson will be a Pirate Camp held throughout the day featuring members of the Northeast Buccaneers. “They’ll teach kids how to use a play pirate sword and do a swordfight with the captains, how to fire a fake cannon and teach them how to become an honorary member of their ‘pirate brethren’,” she said. “We’ll have them in the lobby [of the hotel] if it rains out.” Also out on the grounds will be a meet and greet with the Baystate Ghostbusters, a nonprofit Ghostbusters fan group based in Massachusetts. Look for characters like R2-D2 from Star Wars and Pikachu from Pokemon, as well as superheroes like Iron Man, Spiderman, Deadpool, Wonder Woman and many more. Costumes are also encouraged for the whole family. A costume contest will be held at 3 p.m., followed by a group photo session with all of the contest participants at 4 p.m. “[The event] is designed for kids, but also for kids at heart, so even adults will enjoy acting like the kids,” Drouin said.


IN/OUT

Family fun for the weekend

Tea time

In a sense

Join Maple Hill Farm (119 Ridge Road, Hollis) for an all-ages multi-sensory hike on Saturday, June 10, from 9:30 to 11 a.m. Educator Brooke Arthur will lead participants on a multi-sensory exploration of the woods and will teach activities for heightened focus in each of the five senses while creating experiential poetry. Families are welcome and no prior poetry-writing experience is necessary. Admission is $5 per family and free to Beaver Brook Association members. Visit beaverbrook.org or call 465-7787.

Join the Millyard Museum (200 Bedford St., Manchester) for an American Girl Doll Tea Party on Saturday, June 10, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Bring your American Girl Doll and enjoy crafts, tea and other refreshments, followed by a guided tour of the museum with your doll. Admission is $10 Oink oink! per person and children must be accompaJoin the Kimball Library (5 Academy nied by an adult. Visit manchesterhistoric. Ave., Atkinson) for a Peppa Pig party on org or call 622-7531. Saturday, June 10, from 11 a.m. to noon. The event will include a screening of PepUse the force pa Pig Muddy Puddles, followed by crafts, It’s Star Wars Night during the New snacks and drinks. Admission is free and Hampshire Fisher Cats game against the no registration is required. Visit kimballliAkron RubberDucks on Saturday, June brary.com or call 362-5234. 10, starting at 7:05 p.m at Northeast Delta Dental Stadium (1 Line Drive, Manches- Strum along ter). There will be appearances by beloved Daniel Saunders of Let’s Play Music! Star Wars characters, as well as music, will appear at the Derry Public Library (64 games and giveaways of R2-D2-inspired E. Broadway) for a ukulele workshop on uniforms. Other festivities include the reg- Saturday, June 10, from 2 to 3 p.m. The ular Saturday night music on the new plaza workshop will be a hands-on introduction stage before and after the game, in addition to the ukulele. No ukulele is required; Saunto a post-game Atlas Fireworks show. All ders will bring a few of his own. The library proceeds from the R2-D2 jerseys will ben- will also offer opportunities to reserve your efit Campaign to Change Direction. Tickets own ukulele. Admission is free and no regto the game start at $12. Visit nhfishercats. istration is required. Visit derrypl.org or com or call the box office at 641-2005. call 432-6140.

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IN/OUT THE GARDENING GUY

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For years I’ve dreamed of going to the Chelsea Flower Show in London — and finally, this year, I went. Air ticket prices are down, the dollar is strong, and I decided there was no better time than now to cross off another item on my bucket list. Some basics: The Chelsea Flower Show is held on the grounds of the Chelsea Hospital in central London, which is now a retirement home for World War II soldiers. The show is bigger than anything in America: It encompasses 11 acres of displays, the vast majority of which are outdoors. That means that full-sized mature trees are installed, and in one case, a garden in a faux stone quarry was installed with blocks of stone stacked up more than 25 feet. The show includes garden displays, rare plants, sculpture, food courts, vendors selling garden paraphernalia, music and much, much more. It has been an annual event since 1913 with the exception of a few years during the World Wars. Tickets for next year’s show go on sale Aug. 1, and although prices are not yet posted, tickets are not cheap; this year a full-day ticket went for £100 ($128). Each year the number of tickets is limited and they generally sell out before the event — this year some determined attendees apparently paid scalpers £500 and more. It’s the Super Bowl of gardening. If you want to go next year, the best plan is to buy a membership to the Royal Horticultural Society, which allows you to attend a day before the doors open to the public, and offers discounted tickets. I go to flower shows to learn. I delighted in seeing new (to me) species of flowers and new ways of combining flowers in the garden. I loved meeting garden experts and artists who created sculpture for the gardens. So what are some of the things I learned? Thistles, which we generally consider weeds, can look great when planted in the garden. There I was in a city of millions, and a thistle, Atropurpureum, was loaded with bees of all sorts! Clearly a great pollinator. Although a quick internet search did not lead me to seeds for that magenta-purple variety I saw there, I did find some seeds for a species native to the U.S. — Cirsium discolor — that is not the weedy pest farmers hate. So I shall order some seeds and try growing it. Alliums were in all their glory at the show. Big, dramatic balls of flowers on 18to 30-inch stems were used in many of the gardens. These are bulb plants in the onion family, and I have a few. I shall look for Allium schubertii, which has an otherworldly pinkish flower head about 16 inches across. Another good one was just labeled with its

Courtesy photo.

variety name, Powder Puff. Angelica is another flower that was often used in the show. This is a 3- to 5-foot-tall purple-leafed flower that I grew 25 years ago, but it is a biennial that does not come back after flowering, and I dropped it from my plant palette. But I have already purchased and planted one since returning from the Chelsea show. It can be very dramatic in the garden. Ferns were used as filler in many of the gardens at Chelsea, and I shall try using them, too. Of course, their gardens only had to look good for six days, so ferns that spread, or get too tall, were not a problem, though they might be in my garden. I have a patch of Japanese Painted Fern, which is great in dry shade. But this summer I will investigate other ferns. Many nurseries sell them, but I admit I haven’t paid much attention to them. Interesting people I met? George Ball, owner of Burpee Seeds, was there. He is a highly knowledgeable (and opinionated) plantsman who is passionate about seeds. I was interested to learn from him that Melania Trump’s grandfather was a Slovenian onion breeder. Mr. Ball pointed out that most vegetable seeds originally came from Europe, which is actually farther north than we are, and hence not good choices here. He believes that modern hybrids, not heirloom seeds originally from Europe, are best. And he told me that in a blind taste test, 4 of 5 times, Burpee’s hybrid Brandyboy beat the heirloom Brandywine, which is one of my favorites for flavor. I am trying it this year, since it ripens earlier, and produces more fruit, according to him. I’ll let you know how mine do in August. At a reception on press day by David Austin Roses for a new rose named after actress Dame Judi Dench, who was there, I met the 91-year-old founder of the company. I was able to thank him for all the beauty he has introduced to the world. The English know how to throw a party. Picnics with Champagne were everywhere. Women wore flowered clothes and elegant garden hats; men wore suits, even in the hot sun. Everyone was very polite. And I got to check off another item on my bucket list. Visit dailyuv.com/gardeningguy.


IN/OUT TREASURE HUNT

Home • Accessories Gifts • Furniture

Dear Donna, I read your column and thought I might see if you can help with this piece. It’s made out of plaster, I think. It’s 12 inches around. It has been in my family for many years, just hanging. I just cleaned it and now it’s like new again. Do you know what the value might be? Tara from Manchester

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who made it. The more detail, the item the higher the value. I know the smaller novelty pieces range in the $10-to-$15 range. I would think, though, and with past experience, a moon face is a bit more unusual and the value would be in the $80 range. 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, 624-8668).

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Dear Tara, I love your moon face. I have had one or two during my years in the antiques business. I remember when my girls were young they saw them in the shop and thought they were scary. I’ve always enjoyed their quirky faces. The ones I have had were a gold tone and the other black painted. Not sure if they originally came in colors or just got painted over the years. I’m not sure of the origin but I believe they are from the 1950s or 1960s. They could have been a home delivery product. My mother bought several items from a traveling salesman of kitchen chalkware, such as potholders, string dispensers, etc. All of them had the faces even if they were fruit or vegetables. Chalkware also was very popular even in the stores during that same period of time. So unless there is a manufacturer name on it — most have none — it’s hard to tell

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IN/OUT CAR TALK

Why do the pros tighten everything so tight? Dear Car Talk: I’ve changed my own oil for many years now (less and less as I get older and when the outside temperature is cold). It’s one of the few things I can do By Ray Magliozzi anymore. My question: Why do oil places have to tighten the drain bolt and filter so tight? My dad taught me to tighten the drain bolt finger tight and then just a little more; for the oil filter, handtighten it and then turn it another half-turn. I’ve never had either one leak on me. However, when I’m the next one to change my oil after the pros, I have to use a 12-inch pipe as a wrench extender, along with a hammer, to loosen the bolt. I also have to use several varieties of filter wrenches to loosen the filter. How come? — David Well, it could have something to do with your advancing age, David. How often do you have to use that oil-filter wrench these days to open a jar of applesauce? Actually, the reason those guys tend to overtighten the drain plug and filter is due to painful experience. Several years ago, Rocko the oil-change guy got distracted and let some guy drive away with

a loose drain plug. A few days later, the guy was back, demanding that his boss at Pokey Lube pay for his engine — which had seized up. And the boss took it out of Rocko’s paycheck. So ever since then, Rocko says, “OK, Mr. Funnyman, let’s see you leak oil now!” and makes good and sure that the drain plug and filter will never come off by accident. Unfortunately, you can do damage by overtightening things, too. If you overtighten the drain plug, you can strip the threads. And while it’s harder to do, you can damage the rubber gasket atop the oil filter if you really overtighten it. Most likely, though, it’s just going to make it really difficult for the next guy to remove the plug and filter. And I guess Rocko, and his brethren, are counting on someone else being the next guy. But I don’t think they’re doing it maliciously, David. They’re just erring on the side of too tight rather than too loose. There is a happy medium, of course. And you’ve come pretty close to identifying it. In the shop, we tighten the oil plug about as much as we tighten a spark plug. I don’t know what that is, but it’s probably in the neighborhood of 20-30 foot-pounds

of torque. I’d describe it as “hand tight, plus a little more.” And for oil filters, we suggest tightening it as tight as you can get it by hand -- so you turn it until it stops naturally, and then you might be able to twist it another quarter of a turn. And if you have to use a 12-inch breaker bar to get it off, then back off a little next time. Dear Car Talk: I have a friend who owns a 2009 Nissan 350Z. He’s having trouble with the convertible-top mechanism, which puts the top up and down. Periodically, it simply does not work. The cost to diagnose this problem and fix it is estimated to be over $2,000. Can he simply disconnect the automatic mechanism for the top and raise and lower it manually? — Larry It can be done, Larry. But it’s not easy — you don’t just unplug the motor and, voila, you’ve got a manually operated top. There’s a hydraulic motor and a bunch of hydraulic lines, and removing all that stuff is a messy and difficult job. Your friend may be able to get it fixed for a lot less than $2,000. Instead of going to the dealer -- where they’re likely to just replace

the whole system -- he should find a shop that specializes in convertible-top repair. There are shops like that in most major areas, and they do nothing all day but fix convertible tops. That’s the kind of place you want. It’s not my area of expertise. My brother had a ‘74 Caprice Classic Convertible, and when his top stopped working, he just left it down and let the car fill up with water. And then leaves. And then snow. And then, in the spring, a family of raccoons. But we did ask a guy who’s worked on convertible tops for 30 years: James Thompson, of Topless Auto in Chattanooga (who probably has some walk-in customers who are disappointed to discover that he’s in the car business). He says the most common problem he sees with 350Z tops is bad brushes on the lift motor. If that’s your friend’s problem, the brushes may be able to be replaced, or, at worst, he’d need a new lift motor. But either way, it’s well short of $2,000. And it’s much more impressive on dates. You simply push the button and the top goes down. That’s much more elegant than getting out of the car and grunting while you smear bird droppings all over your tuxedo. Visit Cartalk.com.

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HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 30


PLANT SALES • The Fells Historic Estate & Gardens (456 Route 103A, Newbury) will hold its 26th annual plant sale on Saturday, June 10, from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. The sale will include a wide selection of plants from The Fells, as well as garden art products and a table of gently used clay pots, landscape tools and more. Kevin Bragg of Canterbury Plantations will be attending with a selection of his herbs, annuals and vegetables. The Fells will offer free tours of their Main House to all shoppers, beginning at 8:30 a.m. Visit thefells.org or call 763-4789. • Don’t miss the Merrimack Garden Club’s annual plant sale on Saturday, June 10, from 8 a.m. to noon at St. James Church (646 Daniel Webster Highway, Merrimack). The rain-or-shine sale will feature hundreds of perennials donated from local gardens, as well as a raffle and specialty plants grown by local plant owners and collectors. Members of the club will be on hand to guide customers and answer questions. Visit merrimackgardenclub.org. Children & Teens Nature • A WHALE OF A WORLD’S OCEAN DAY CELEBRATION An internationally recognized day to honor the world’s ocean and celebrate all it provides, the Center’s World Oceans Day celebration is a great opportunity for families to have an exciting shared learning experience focused on the important role the ocean plays in our everyday life. Sun., June 11, 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Seacoast Science Center, 570 Ocean Blvd., Rye. $10 for adults, $8 for seniors and military service members, $5 for kids ages 3 to 12, and free for members and kids under 3. Visit seacoastsciencecenter.org or call 436-8043. • HEALTHY RIVERS PRESENTATION A group of young students have been conducting a local river study with the Fishways since January. Find out what they have discovered and learn about the Merrimack River. Fri., June 16, 6:30 to 8 p.m. Amoskeag Fishways Learning and Visitors Center, 4 Fletcher St., Manchester. Free. Visit amoskeagfishways.org or call 626-3474. Clubs Women’s • SHARING OUR LIVES Each meeting will be guided by a theme for that session and set of questions designed to use as a springboard for sharing. Thursdays, June 8 and July 27, 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. Women Supporting Women Center, 111 Water St., Exeter. $10 for members or $15 for non-members. Visit wswcenter.wordpress. com/register or call 772-0799. Continuing Education Certificate/degrees • NEW HAMPSHIRE POLICE CADET TRAINING ACADEMY The Cadet Training Acad-

emy is designed to help young people ages 14 to 20 to develop their skills and knowledge of law enforcement and to define their life skills for the future. Sat., June 24, through Fri., June 30. NHTI, Concord’s Community College, 31 College Drive, Concord. $200 for the one-week, overnight program. Visit nhchiefsofpolice.com/ calevents/cadetacademy or call 863-3240. Professional development • 17TH ANNUAL COUNTRY SCHOOL ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA SCHOOLHOUSE CONFERENCE If you have an interest in the history and preservation of one-room schools, this conference is for you. Sun., June 11, through Wed., June 14. ColbySawyer College, 541 Main St., New London. Visit countryschoolassociation.org. • TED NIGHTS AT THE DERRY PUBLIC LIBRARY The Derry Public Library will be hosting TED Nights this summer. TED Talks are short, powerful talks on a wide variety of topics. Attendees will view TED Talks and discuss them afterwards. Each night will have a different theme. Come for one night or come to them all. Mondays, 6:30 to 8 p.m., June 12, June 26, July 10, July 24, Aug. 14, and Aug. 28. Derry Public Library, 64 E. Broadway, Derry. Free. Visit derrypl.org or call 432-6140. • TIME MANAGEMENT Join certified life coach Diane MacKinnon, M.D. for an interactive presentation where she’ll share her strategies for good time management. She’ll also go beyond tips and hacks to discuss mindset, procrastination and free time. Tues., June 13. Rodgers Memorial Library, 194 Derry Road, Hudson. Free. Visit rodgerslibrary.org or call 886-6030.

Crafts Workshops • QUILLING WORKSHOP Quilling also makes beautiful tree ornaments and gift tags as well as paintings and free-standing sculptures. Sat., June 10, 10:30 a.m., and Wed., June 21, 6 p.m. Pelham Public Library, 24 Village Green, Pelham. Free ($5 tool available for purchase; registration is required). Visit pelhampubliclibrary.org or call 635-7581. • “MAKE & TAKE” BOW TIE PROJECT CLASSES Participants can learn basic woodworking skills while handcrafting a custom bow tie using beautiful hardwoods. No experience or tools needed. Instruction provided by the store’s expert woodworkers and teachers. Sat., June 10, 9:30 a.m., 11:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. Rockler Woodworking and Hardware Store, 373 S. Broadway, Salem. Free instruction and materials. Visit rockler. com or call 898-5941. Festivals & Fairs Events • SOMERSWORTH INTERNATIONAL CHILDREN’S FESTIVAL Featuring music, crafts, food, activities for kids of all ages and more. Sat., June 17, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Memorial Drive, Somersworth. Free. Visit nhfestivals.org or call 692-5869. Health & Wellness Exercise & fitness • BODY READING WORKSHOP In this workshop specifically for teachers, learn to identify the body’s most obvious anatomical landmarks and learn to see restrictions and alignment on different body types and shapes. Fri., June 16, 4:30 p.m. Concord Pilates, 2 1/2 Beacon St., Concord. Visit concordpilates.com or call 856-7328.

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HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 31


CAREERS

Rob Carolan Meteorologist

Rob Carolan of Nashua is the president and CEO of Hometown Forecast Services, which provides weather forecasts to more than 50 radio stations in New Hampshire and across the country, as well as a variety of other facilities like Manchester-Boston Regional Airport and Harvard University. Explain what your current job is. We’ll prepare audio recordings of weather forecasts in our office in Nashua and send them to our radio station clients in email attachments or via an FTP [file transfer protocol] service. … We work with WOKQ, WPKQ, The Shark in Portsmouth … and we serve other radio stations from the Virgin Islands across the U.S. to San Francisco. … We have a relatively small staff, but we have more usually during the snow and ice season, from November through about April.

How long have you been in your career? I’ve been on the radio professionally since 1990, and I founded Hometown Forecast Services in 2001. How did you get interested in this field? I grew up in the Bronx, and when I was 5 years old I went to visit friends in Orange County, New York, in the summer. … I witnessed lightning hitting a tree, and from that moment I was hooked. … I’ve always had an interest in weather, so much that it’s like a sickness.

A BETTER YOU MAKES A BETTER US

ability, you must judge them on their own abilities … and that’s always stuck with me. What do you wish you’d known at the beginning of your career? That I’m in an extremely competitive business. … We’re up against companies like AccuWeather and the National Weather Service, but staying in business for as long as we have has been a testament to the quality of the work that we do. What is your typical at-work uniform? It’s pretty casual here, just jeans and T-shirts.

How did you find your current job? My wife is from New Hampshire and she What was the first job you ever had? wanted to stay here in New England. … We I mowed lawns in my neighborhood in lived in Boxborough, Mass., for a bit before New York when I was 13 years old. moving up here to Nashua. … I knew that I — Matt Ingersoll was going to have to live very close to my WHAT ARE YOU REALLY INTO business because weather is obviously 24/7, RIGHT NOW? so my house is five minutes from my office. What’s the best piece of work-related advice anyone’s ever given you? A former boss once told me that you can’t judge your employees based on your

I love surf fishing. … My job can be stressful, especially during the winter months and severe weather, so I always look forward to taking that first trip after April. … I just came back from the Outer Banks.

CONSTRUCTION JOB FAIR Saturday, June 10th, 2017 10am-4pm The Falls Event Center 21 Front Street, Manchester, NH Join the Employer of Choice

As a member of The Granite YMCA, you are part of a diverse organization of men, women, and children joined together by a shared commitment to strengthen our community through youth development, heatlhy living and social responsibility. Learn how your membership can make us— as individuals and a community— better. For a better you. For a better community.

Interviews & on-the-spot hiring for: • Licensed Blasters & Drillers • CDL A & B Hazmat Drivers • Laborers & Loaders • Mechanics

FOR A BETTER US. The Granite YMCA | www.graniteymca.org Financial assistance available

Employee-owned, great benefits. EOE. www.mdandb.com

Goffstown | Londonderry | Manchester | Portsmouth | Rochester 115342

HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 32

What kind of education or training did you need for this job? I have a degree in meteorology from Lyndon State College in Vermont. … When I first went to college, Lyndon was a rarity [for its meteorology program]. … There were only three in New England at the time, but there are many more of them out there now. … You take classes in calculus, linear algebra and physics, and Courtesy photo. meteorology classes like tropical meteorology, climatology and synoptic meteorology. … I also took classes on broadcasting and statistics.

115293


Open the door to a rewarding career. HEALTHCARE JOB FAIR

Help Wanted

7:00am–10:00am 3:00pm–6:00pm

Belmont Hall & Restaurant, a fastpaced family owned and operated business for 3 generations, is looking for experienced and friendly wait-staff to work morning to early afternoon shifts and 1 night a week in one of Manchester’s oldest and wellknown restaurants. Function hall and catering experience is a plus! Also seeking experienced cooks. Please apply in person at Belmont Hall & Restaurant - 718 Grove St., Manchester. Located on the corner of Grove and Belmont St. in the heart of Manchester. (603) 625-8540

Bring your resumé for on-the-spot interviews!

$50 VISA Gift Card for every qualified applicant!

Now Hiring!

RNs, LNAs, Physical Therapists, MSWs ...AND MORE!

7 Executive Park Dr. • Merrimack, NH 603-882-2941 • www.hhhc.org

115202

Shaw’s Supermarkets is hiring! Come to our JOB FAIR for an on-the-spot interview!

• No experience necessary; will train on the job.

• High school diploma required.

We are hiring for Part Time positions in ALL departments! Various shifts available! All applicants must apply online prior to the job fair at www.shaws.com. Click on the careers section and then choose the “Retail Clerk” position in Hooksett, NH to complete and submit an application.

115330

Open positions at the Bedford School District. Part time shifts 3-4 hours during the school year.

• Meals must meet the goals of the Food Service Program.

Shaw’s Hooksett 1328 - Hooksett Rd | Hooksett, NH 03106

Shaws is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

FOOD SERVICE ASSOCIATES

• We are seeking motivated individuals to help prepare appealing and nutritious meals for children.

Saturday, June 10th | Noon to 5pm

Youʼre in for something fresh.

Bedford, N.H.

Please visit our Website for more information and to apply. http://www.applitrack.com/sau25/onlineapp. * Named No. 2 in U.S. by Forbes Magazine, October 2013.

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114765

Wednesday June 14th

Work for one of the country’s ool districts! * top sch

Work for a Great Community You Can Help Me

The town of

Merrimack wants

Mental Health Crises Are On The Rise...

YOU!

Merrimack Fire & Rescue Join our GROWING TEAM! is accepting applications

Minimum Qualifications:

help us combat this in Greater Nashua

• High School Diploma & Valid Driver’s License

Harbor Homes is building a Mobile Crisis Response Team and we need you!

• NH Firefighter II or Pro Board or Letter of Reciprocity

Shaw'sfor Supermarkets is seeking experienced from: https://apps.nh.gov/blogs/irc/?page_id=201 Career Firefighter/ • Current CPAT or Lateral transfer of full-time career

Paramedics/AEMT/EMTs. Department Managementpersonnel pursuant to State of New Hampshire Division of Fire Standards and Training, Fire 703.01 Our staffing level is increasing and you can be a part • Nationally Registered Paramedic/AEMT/EMT and Store Management of it. Come grow with us! The Town of Merrimack is a

Currently hiring these team positions:

Master’s Level Clinicians MH Peer Support Workers

(Preference given to Paramedics, then AEMTs and EMTs

community of approximately 27,000 residentslocations. and for immediate openings in our Vermont if currently enrolled in an approved AEMT or

is located directly between two of New Hampshire’s These opportunities provideWe freeoffer competitive salaries, quarterly bonus opportunities, and unlimited advancementParamedic potential.program.) largest population centers. Merrimack is a unique Relocation assistance is also available. supervision for licensure To be considered, submit a Town application, (which is blend of commercial, industrial and retail properties

available www.merrimacknh.gov/positionopenings ), Shaw's and Star Market are working to becomeatthe favorite

andof still maintains that small town charm. Wemodel have store locations throughout all Vermont including: Be a part of this innovative to helping food and drug retailer in every state ita operates and is a resume and documentation of FFI formal cover letter, Colchester, Berlin Corners, South Burlington, those with mental health care needs. the Albertson's-Safeway family of stores. Merrimack Fire Rescue is proud an allmember hazardsofdepartment and II, National Registry Card and CPAT (If lateral transfer, Williston, Middlebury, Montpelier, Fair Haven, that provides Advanced Life Support Ambulance, All candidates, please apply onlineinclude at www.shaws.com that you qualify on cover letter) to: Town of Stowe, Waitsfield, Ludlow, Randolph, Use job code # 66120 or 66149 to locate the position fire suppression and technical rescue. Merrimack Merrimack, Attn: Sharon Marunicz - HR, 6 Baboosic Lake and apply. Shaw's is an Equal Opportunity Employer. harborhomes.org/careers Manchester, Derby, Vergennes, and Waterbury. has seen an increase in emergency calls in the last www.shaws.com 5 years. In 2016, we responded to over 2,900 emergency calls.

careers@nhpartnership.org

Also hiring LPNs and RNs, mental health support workers and more. 115294

Road, Merrimack, NH 03054. Application materials must be received no later than Friday, June 16, 2017 at 4:00p.m. No email please. EOE

Why work for the Town of Merrimack? Steady hours, competitive pay, good benefits, great work environment. More info on all positions available online at www.merrimacknh.gov/positionopenings

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HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 33


Work for one of the country’s ool districts! * top sch

Bedford, N.H.

The Radisson Hotel Downtown Manchester is hiring in all areas of the hotel. We have many wonderful opportunities in the hospitality field. Some do not require previous experience.

FOOD SERVICE STOCK/COURIER ASSOCIATES

Structural & miscellaneous steel shop is looking for: Experienced Miscellaneous Steel Installers & a Miscellaneous Steel Detailer Benefits include profit sharing, paid holidays, vacation, & 50% health insurance

• Restaurant • Kitchen • Housekeeping • Banquets

Open positions at the Bedford School District. Part time 30 hours per week position available while school is in session, additional hours available during school vacation periods.

• Moderate lifting required. • No experience necessary, will train on the job. • DOT Physical Card required for driving small box truck. High School Diploma required.

Experienced

Landscapers Needed Immediate opening for a positive and motivated professional. We are seeking applicants interested in joining our team in servicing our high-end residential clients in the NH area.

• Experience in irrigation systems is a plus • Team player with ability to work independently • Valid driver’s license/DOT Card & Clean driving record • Must be flexible in busy season to work long hours and weekends

Please go to www.besthotelcareers.com to view all open positions and complete an application. Radisson Hotel Manchester is committed to providing a comprehensive benefits plan that offers you choices for your physical, mental and financial wellness, creating value in your most important investment- you!

• Receive and stock food deliveries and transport items between schools.

Rate of pay will be based on knowledge, experience and references. This is a full time position. Contact Misty: 603.660.4636

MANCHESTER

115089

The Radisson Hotel Manchester is and equal opportunity employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment and will not be discriminated against on the basis of gender, race/ethnicity, protected veteran status, disability or other protected group status. 115296

APOLLO STEEL, LLC

Mountain View Industrial Park 35 Maria Drive • Jaffrey, NH 03452 [603] 532-1156 Tel.• [603] 532-1169 Fax

Contact us by email at: lynn@apollosteelllc.com

114782

700 Elm St. Manchester 603-625-1000 www.besthotelcareers.com

Please visit our Website to apply: http://www.sau25.net/employment * Named No. 2 in U.S. by Forbes Magazine, October 2013.

Steel Installers & Steel Detailer

Work at The Region’ s Premier Hotel and Conference Center

405 RIVER RD. • WEARE, NH • 603.529.5640 FIRMLYROOTEDNH.COM 114926

Want a New Career? The Job Store is hiring for 60 positions!!

These are temp-to-perm positions and a great opportunity to become a part of one of the world's largest logistics companies. When hired by this company full time,you will receive a pay increase, medical benefits package, paid vacation time, 401k, and tuition reimbursement, plus much more. Always room for growth!!

Walmart’s Distribution Center in Raymond, N.H.

WAREHOUSE ASSOCIATE DETAILS: Compensation: Pay rate is $10.90 per hour. Responsibilities: picking, kitting, auditing, shipping and receiving, and other warehouse duties. FORKLIFT OPERATOR DETAILS: You must have 6 months of recent forklift experience! You will be certified through the company once you start working. Compensation: Pay rate is $11.80 per hour. Responsibilities: bulk picking, loading and unloading trucks, putaway, overall forklift duties, some of these position are over all warehouse duties, not just forklift positions. • You must also pass a drug test and a background check according to client criteria. • High School Diploma required.

SPECIAL OFF Start work by ER and get a $2 July 1st 5 gift card at end of yo ur second day!

Apply online at www.jobstoresolutions.com or at our local office: 373 South Willow St., Unit D2-1, Manchester, NH Walk ins are always welcome. Or call our office at 603-499-4900. Ask us about our incentive programs and referral bonuses. 115295

HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 34

Be a part of one of the largest private distribution networks in the world. With over 1 million square feet, 12 miles of conveyor belts and 5.5 billion cases of merchandise, you will satisfy our customers by ensuring we get the right merchandise to the right store at the right time.

Accepting applications for:

Logistics is truly the heart of the Walmart operation. The Raymond, NH distribution center ships millions of products everyday, while using the latest environmentally-sustainable practices.

Apply online at careers.walmart.com/ Keyword: Raymond, NH

• Freight Handler, Unloader/Processor, Loader, Replenishment Driver, Orderfiller and Yard Driver • Starting at $17.55-$19.65 • Great Benefits • 401k Match • Flexible Schedules

Or apply in person to: Walmart Distribution Center #6030 42 Freetown Road Raymond, NH 03077

Walmart Stores, Inc. is an Equal Opportunity Employer-By Choice.

114943


NOW

HIRING Getting Closer to the Opening of Our Concord Diner!

Looking for Minimum 2 Years Experience! 401(k), benefits, dental, paid time off and a generous discount for you and your family.

Come join our fun work environment!

NEW! 114 Loudon Rd., Concord 61 Lowell St., Manchester, 603.626.1118 63 Union Square, Milford, 603.249.9222 137 Rockingham Rd., Londonderry, 603.552.3091 115297

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HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 35


FOOD More than Italian

Fratello’s hosts new monthly dinner series By Angie Sykeny

News from the local food scene

asykeny@hippopress.com

By Angie Sykeny

Fratello’s Italian Grille is going beyond Italian cuisine with a new monthly dinner series hosted at its events center in the Manchester Millyard. Each dinner, held on the second Tuesday of the month, will feature a unique five-course menu centered around a theme, with each course focused on a different part of the palate. “I think a lot of people know Fratello’s for its Italian-based menu, but the corporate chef and team of chefs come from a variety of backgrounds and have a lot of experience in working with different flavors,” catering director Samantha Limoges said. “Our goal is to show that although we do Italian and we do it well, we can also put out new and interesting modern menu items and give people a different kind of night out.” The series kicks off with the Night in Napa Valley dinner on June 13, which will feature courses paired with Robert Mondavi Collection wines from California’s Napa Valley region. The menu includes quail galantine on

food@hippopress.com

• New hard cider line: Gould Hill Farm (656 Gould Hill Road, Contoocook) recently launched a new line of hard ciders under the name Contoocook Cider Company. The line features four varieties, including Contoocook Blend, a rich, sweet cider with caramel notes; Roxbury Russet, a bottle-condition sparkling cider with a spicy, tart dryness; Cranberry, a sparkling cider that brings together apple and cranberry; and Hampshire Honey, a bottle-conditioned cider with fall wildflower honey from the White Mountains. Three of the varieties contain 6.9 percent alcohol by volume; Roxbury Russet is 9 percent alcohol by volume. The cider is currently available at the farm’s tasting room. Tasting hours are Friday from 4 to 7 p.m., Saturday from noon to 6 p.m., and Sunday from noon to 5 p.m. For more information, call 746-3811 or visit gouldhillfarm.com/contoocook-cider.html. • Summertime brew: Henniker Brewing Co. (129 Centervale Road, Henniker) will have its fourth annual Kickoff to Summer event on Saturday, June 10, from noon to 4 p.m. There will be tours, beer samples, food trucks, games, live music, local food vendors and the return of the brewery’s summer seasonal, Sour Flower, a dry-hopped sour ale with tart, tropical notes of pine, mango and citrus. The beer will be available in four-packs of 16-ounce cans. Admission is free. For more information, call 428-3579 or visit hennikerbrewing.com. • Make a seafood dinner: The 40 Looking for more food and drink fun? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play and hipposcout.com.

Night in Napa Valley Dinner When: Tuesday, June 13, 6:30 p.m. Where: Fratello’s Italian Grille banquet hall, 155 Dow St., Manchester Cost: $70 per person. Seating is limited. RSVP by Saturday, June 10. Contact: 641-6776, eventsinthemillyard. com More upcoming dinners Buzzing for Beer - Tuesday, July 11 New Hampshire Farmers Dinner - Tuesday, Aug. 15 Tour of Italy - Tuesday, Sept. 12

Stop by for

$8 Martinis at all 3 locations! EVERY THURSDAY • ALL DAY!

Fratello’s banquet hall. Courtesy photo.

a bed of spicy greens, Humboldt Fog cheese and port wine reduction; cranberry conundrum citrus granitee; pan-seared seabass with golden lentils on top of a saffron broth; braised lamb shank with a wild mushroom risotto and grilled asparagus; and Grand Marnier and chantilly creme baumkuchen with a wine cream mousselette and hazelnut croquante. Wines will include a fume blanc, chardonnay, pinot noir and cabernet sauvignon. “California tends to have a lot of earthy and clean flavors,” Limoges said. “We’ll be pairing the menu with higher-end wines that complement those flavors.”

The head chef and a wine representative will talk about each dish, what it does for the palate and why it’s paired with its respective wine. Other dinners in the series will include the Buzzing for Beer dinner, featuring a craft beer-inspired menu paired with flights from New Hampshire breweries; the New Hampshire Farmers Dinner, featuring ingredients from local SAMANTHA LIMOGES farms and beverages from local wineries, breweries and distilleries; and the Tour of Italy dinner, featuring signature dishes from different regions of Italy.

Our goal is to show that ... we can also put out new and interesting modern menu items....

What a difference fresh-picked makes! Berries & Summer Veggies, Eggs, Venison, Herbs, Jams & Jellies, Potted Plants, Baked Goods, Cheese & Milk, Maple Syrup, Specialty Produce, Special-Made Wooden Ware, Homemade Soaps, Lamb, Honey, Seafood, NH Wine, Local Ales, Dog Treats, Goat Cheese, Organic Vegetables, Fresh Mushrooms, NH Meats, Cut Flowers, Coffees & More

The Concord Farmers Market Capitol Street, next to the NH State House Saturdays, 8:30 - Noon - Opening May 6th! 112130

HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 36

City Parking is Free in Concord on Saturdays

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FOOD

Making the cut

Workshop teaches culinary knife techniques By Angie Sykeny

asykeny@hippopress.com

Unless you’ve been to culinary school, it’s possible that you’ve been misusing your kitchen knives all along — which is why LaBelle Winery is offering a chance to learn more effective knife skills during a workshop on Wednesday, June 14. The workshop will answer questions like what kinds of knives to use for different kinds of food, how to use them effectively and how to cut safely. “People really appreciate it because many of them have never had this type of instruction unless they went to culinary school,” said Michelle Thornton, director of sales, business and program development for LaBelle Winery. “We all have a set of knives in our drawers, but do we know how to keep them sharp or how to not get cut? Many people realize they’ve been cutting the wrong way their whole life.” Each participant will be given a set of knives and various fruits and vegetables on which to practice the knife techniques, such as carrots, potatoes, celery, apples and onions. Participants will watch demonstrations of different cutting, slicing and dicing techniques using different types of knives, then try out the techniques on their own, asking questions and receiving personal, hands-on instruction when needed. “There’s a lot of back-and-forth and oneon-one,” Thornton said. “Someone will come over and guide you and show you where to put your fingers and how to move the knife. It’s truly a learning environment.” The class will also feature an integrated wine tasting in which participants can try several varieties of LaBelle wine. Taught by winemaker and winery owner Amy LaBelle and the winery bistro’s Executive Chef Eddie Ceccherini, the class is one of the most-attended programs in The

chocolate and vanilla ice cream with cookie dough and brownie bites!

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

HAYWARDSICECREAM.com | 7 DW Hwy, So. Nashua | 11am to 10pm

Why change?

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

Knife skills class at LaBelle Winery. Courtesy photo.

Winemaker’s Kitchen: Cooking with Wine Instructional Series, a series of cooking programs featuring dishes with wine as the main ingredient. “A few years ago, when giving her instructional cooking classes, Amy realized that when she demonstrated chopping and preparing things with knives, people asked a lot of questions,” Thornton said. “It dawned on her that there was a need for a class to help people better understand those basics.” A second knife skills class focused on creating garnishes and artistic food displays will be held on Wednesday, Sept. 13.

Friday, June 16th

Open Daily at 11am 1292 Hooksett Rd, Hooksett 782-5137 | TapHouseNH.com

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

Sunday Brunch Being Served 10am-3pm Serving Dinner (3pm-10pm) Visit our Build-Your-Own Bloody Mary Bar

Knife Skills Class Where: LaBelle Winery, 345 Route 101, Amherst When: Wednesday, June 14, 6 to 7:30 p.m. Cost: $25. Registration required by June 11. Contact: 672-9898, labellewineryevents.com

$5 Mimosas

Inspired classic American fare in a warm, inviting atmosphere.

Celebrate Father’s Day at the tap house grille

PIG ROAST

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What’s better than beer, beef, ‘n bacon for Dad?

We are open 7 Days Lunch Mon - Sat: 11:30am - 4pm Sun Brunch: 10am-3pm

Dinner

Mon - Thurs: 4pm - 10pm Fri & Sat: 4pm-11pm Sun: 3pm-10pm

Gift Certificates available. 115337

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HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 37


Kitchen

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Father’s Day

Sunday, June 18th Spoil Him with Our Assorted Chocolates All Milk | All Dark | Soft Centers | Home Style Hard & Chewy | Salted Caramels

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Dave Spagnuolo got his start in the food business when he was 13, working in his family’s bakery. He opened his first restaurant when he was 21 and has owned restaurants in Boston, Cape Cod and Florida. Last year, Spagnuolo and his wife, Stacey Murphy, who has also owned restaurants in the past, saw an ad on Craigslist for a building that fit their vision for a new restaurant. There they opened Gale Motor Co. Eatery (36 Lowell St., Manchester, 232-7059, galemotoreatery.com) in April 2016, and they recently opened a second location, the Gale Motor Co. Pitstop, at Mel’s Funway Park (454 Charles Bancroft Highway, Litchfield, 420-8056). What is your must-have cooking utensil? What is your favorite local restaurant A sharp knife and fire. You can’t cut things besides your own? without a knife, and cooking with electricity Mint [Bistro]. Asian is my favorite, and I doesn’t work as well. can always get some sushi or Asian short rib nachos there, and their new menu items are What would you want for your last meal? always impressive. Surf and turf. That’s definitely one of my favorite things. I love steak and lobster tail. What is the biggest food trend in New Hampshire right now? What is your favorite dish on your restauI’d have to say small plates, paired with rant’s menu? craft cocktails and craft beer. That’s a trend The Bao Taco. It’s a steamed bread bun, that has finally hit New Hampshire. A lot of and we put in braised pork belly, hoisin, pick- people are trying to get into those. led red onions and kimchi aioli. People love it. What is your favorite meal to cook at What celebrity would you like to see eat- home? ing at your restaurant? I literally never cook at home. By the time Pearl Jam. I traveled around the world to I get a day off, I’m sick of cooking. see them when I was a young man and had — Angie Sykeny more time. Pit Stop’s Spicy Chili From the kitchen of Dave Spagnuolo

1½ tablespoons celery salt 1½ tablespoons cayenne pepper

2½ pounds ground chuck meat, lean 3 cups peeled plum tomato 1 large onion, small, diced 4 cloves of garlic, sliced thin

Saute onion with oil in a sauce pot until translucent. Add garlic. Saute about one minute to get oils out of garlic. Add meat. Cook until browned. Add tomato. Use wooden spoon to mix together. Add spices. Use spoon to mix all ingredients and let simmer for one to two hours on very low heat. Add mini hot dogs, rolls and some spicy cheese to make spicy chili hot dog sliders.

Spice mix: ⅛ cup cumin ¼ cup chili powder 1 teaspoon white pepper

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FOOD

Seaside sips and bites Cocktail party to benefit marine mammals

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By Angie Sykeny

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GO OD TI M E

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anteed to win a bottle of wine; they range from $10 to $130 in value. There will be dancing and live music by local cover band The Crab Shack Band, lawn games like giant jenga and Connect Four and a heads-or-tails raffle game. “We pack a lot into the three hours,” Stokes said. “We make sure it’s a fun environment and that people have a good time.” Sippin’ for Seals Where: Seacoast Science Center, 570 Ocean Boulevard, Rye When: Thursday, June 15, 6 to 9 p.m. Cost: $50 per person (21+ event) Visit: seacoastsciencecenter.org/events/ sippinforseals Participating vendors

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Enjoy a seaside evening of cocktails and food as a dozen local restaurants and caterers serve sample-sized bites of their signature and specialty menu items and beverage vendors serve cocktails, beer and wine at Sippin’ for Seals. The event, hosted by the Seacoast Science Center in Rye, is happening Thursday, June 15. All proceeds raised at the event will support the Seacoast Science Center’s Marine Mammal Rescue program. “It’s a great time to bring members of the community together who not only love the work we do but also love local food and sampling bites from different restaurants and caterers,” said Marine Mammal Rescue Manager Ashley Stokes, who is coordinating the event. The food being served at the party will include tuna bites and tuna salad on a crustini, hand-cut chips, chicken salad wraps and turkey wraps, grilled cheese quarters, smoked chicken and bacon, lobster bisque shooters, chowders, shrimp tostada and seated beef ribeye. There will also be sweets like cupcakes, macarons, cookies, cake pops, whoopie pies and other assorted desserts, plus a fire pit with s’mores. “There will be a variety of cuisines,” Stokes said. “Not knowing what the palates of 250 to 300 guests will be, we try to have things to accommodate a variety of palates and tastes so that everyone can find at least a couple of things they want to try.” In addition, there will be a signature cocktail created by Atlantic Grill’s master bartender specially for the event. “Two years ago it was a rum punch with Gosling Black Seal rum, and last year it was some kind of ginger martini,” Stokes said. “We try to mix it up and do something different every year.” For $20, guests can purchase a ticket for the Wall of Wine raffle. Every ticket is guar-

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HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 39


Weekly Dish

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Continued from page 36

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Culinary Playground (16 Manning St., Derry) will host a New England seafood dinner couples cooking class on Saturdays, June 10 and June 17, from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. With instruction from a cooking expert, couples will make their own meal from start to finish that will include crab cake sliders with homemade slaw, mussels meuniere, roasted lemon asparagus and strawberry-lemon pudding with pound cake. The cost is $155 per couple; BYOB is welcome. Bring plastic containers for leftovers. For more information, call 3391664 or visit culinary-playground.com. • New Hampshire’s best: New Hampshire Magazine’s 16th annual Best of NH Party takes place on Thursday, June 15, from 6:30 to 9 p.m. at Northeast Delta Dental Stadium (1 Line Drive, Manchester). There will be food and drink samples from more than 65 booths, plus live entertainment and a fireworks display. Tickets cost $65 for adults, $55 per person in groups of six or more, and $19 for kids ages 4 to 10. For more information, visit nhmagazine.com/best-of-nh. • Farmers market openings: Several

Food & Drink Beer & wine making classes • PILSNER Fri., June 9, 6 p.m. Incredibrew, 112 Daniel Webster Highway South , Nashua. $40 per case if you bring your own bottles and $50 with bottles and cap stickers included. Space is limited, and registration is required. Call 891-2477. Visit incredibrew.com. • SEVILLE ORANGE SANGRIA Fri., June 16, 6 p.m. Incredibrew, 112 Daniel Webster Highway South , Nashua. $60. Space is limited, and registration is required. Call 891-2477 or visit incredibrew.com. Beer & wine tasting classes • CHEESE AND WINE PAIRING Part of the Winemaker’s Kitchen Cooking Class Series. Wed., July 12, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. LaBelle Winery, 345 Route 101, Amherst. $25. Call 672-9898 or visit labellewineryevents.com. Beer, wine & liquor dinners • BEER PIG ROAST Five courses from each part of the pig will be paired with five Pipe Dream. Thurs., June 8, 6 to 8 p.m. Pipe Dream Brewing, 49 Harvey Road, Londonderry. $60 per person. Call 404-0751 or visit pipedreambrewingnh.com. • WINE DINNER WITH WINEMAKER CAROL SHELTON Enjoy a five-course meal prepared by Crowne Plaza

summer farmers markets open this week. The new Barnstead Farmers Market (barnsteadfarmersmarket.club) at Maple Street Church (96 Maple St.) starts Saturday, June 10, from 9 a.m. to noon, and continues weekly through Oct. 7. Seacoast Community Marketplace (facebook.com/ seacoastcommunitymarketplace) at Scamman Farm (57 Portsmouth Ave., Stratham) starts Saturday, June 10, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., and continues weekly through Oct. 28. New Boston Farmers Market (newbostonfarmersmarket.webs.com) at the town common (corner of Route 13 and Meetinghouse Road) starts Saturday, June 10, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., and continues weekly through Oct. 21. Merrimack Farmers Market (merrimacknh. gov/farmers-market) at Vault Motor Storage (526 Daniel Webster Highway) opens Wednesday, June 14, from 3 to 6 p.m., and continues weekly through Oct. 11. Manchester Community Market (manchestercommunitymarket.org) at Victory Park (105 Concord St.) starts Thursday, June 15, from 3 to 6:30 p.m., and continues weekly through Oct. 12.

Executive Chef Todd Lytle, featuring special guest winemaker Carol Shelton. Tues., June 27, 7 to 9 p.m. Hunt Club in the Crowne Plaza Nashua, 2 Somerset Parkway, Nashua. $90. Call 204-5569 or visit winenotboutique.com. Beer, wine & liquor festivals & special events • ONE-YEAR ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION Party features live music, food and 20 beers on tap, including the release of several barrel aged beers. Sat., June 10, 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Pipe Dream Brewing, 49 Harvey Road, Londonderry. Call 404-0751 or visit pipedreambrewingnh.com. • KICKOFF TO SUMMER Event features tours, beer samples, food trucks, games, live music, local vendors and more, plus the return of Sour Flower, the brewery’s dry-hopped sour ale, in 16-ounce four-pack cans. Sat., June 10, noon to 4 p.m. Henniker Brewing Co., 129 Centervale Road, Henniker. Free. Call 428-3579 or visit hennikerbrewing.com. Chef events/special meals • WINE CELLAR FARMTO-TABLE DINNER Multicourse meal will feature local ingredients as well as samples of a variety of LaBelle wines. Winemakers Amy LaBelle and Cesar Arboleda will talk about the history of the winery and its wines, and local farmers will share their stories between

courses. Fri., June 16, 7 to 9 p.m. LaBelle Winery, 345 Route 101, Amherst. $95. Includes a complimentary wine pairing. Visit thefarmersdinner.com/event/ labelle-winery-wine-cellar. • BRUNCH & BUBBLES Monthly farm-to-table brunch featuring fresh ham, eggs, pulled pork, a mac and cheese bar, fresh pastries and fruit, quiches, frittatas and more, plus complimentary Sparkling Cayuga with a make-your-own mimosa bar. Sun., 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., June 25, July 9, Aug. 13, Sept. 24 and Oct. 22. Flag Hill Winery & Distillery, 297 N. River Road, Lee. $42. Reservations are required. Call 659-2949 or visit flaghill.com. • FARM-TO-TABLE BRUNCH BUFFET Weekly buffet features seasonal fruit and produce grown at the farm, baked goods and egg and breakfast meats prepared by farm kitchen and bakery staff. Sun., 9 a.m. to noon, June 18 through Aug. 27. Moulton Farm, 18 Quarry Road, Meredith. $16.99 for adults and $9.99 for children age 10 and under. Call 279-3915 or visit moultonfarm.com. • FARM-TO-TABLE DINNER CLUB Monthly four-course dinners prepared with local food and paired with wine or beer samplings from local wineries and breweries. Monthly, last Thursday, 6 p.m. Roots Cafe at Robie’s Country Store , 9 Riverside St., Hooksett. $40. Call 485-7761, or visit rootsatrobies. com.


Celebrating Our

perishables

46th Season

I am always looking for easy snacks and meals. Unfortunately, oftentimes the easiest thing to do is grab something packaged — something processed — rather than something that more resembles real food when we are hungry. Granola bars, crackers, popcorn and chips win out over food that takes a while to prepare. While it makes so much sense time-wise to go to the pantry, our health implores us to reach for perishables — fresh fruit and vegetables, lean proteins and other food that doesn’t come in all that packaging with all those extra ingredients we can’t even pronounce. Easy and quick is key for my life right now. I have two little girls, I’m pregnant and the thought of extensive meal prep makes me want to lie down and take a nap. I came across an Instagram post about sweet potato “toast” and was intrigued. Sweet Potato “Toast” Makes a few slices of toast per potato 1 sweet potato, sliced lengthwise into ¼- to ½-inch slices (this is the hardest part!) sour cream or Greek yogurt 1 avocado, sliced cheddar cheese, shredded

Put your sweet potato slices in the toaster on about medium/high (this is number 5 on my toaster). You will have to re-toast the slices a few times (four or five) before they are done. There will be some browning and the slices will become softer. Top as you like! My recipe is with avocado slices, Greek yogurt and cheddar cheese. I could have added salsa or squeezed some lime over the top. Simple, fast and so easy!

or visit colbyhillinn.com/cookingclasses.htm. • COFFEE BOOT CAMP: HOW TO MAKE THE PERFECT COLD BREW Learn the do’s and don’t’s, as well as different approaches to making awesome cold brew at home. Wed., June 21, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. A&E Coffee & Tea, 1000 Elm St., Manchester. $45. Tickets available at eventbrite.com.

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Fairs/festivals/expos • BEST OF NEW HAMPSHIRE PARTY Sample food and drink from more than 65 booths. Thurs., June 15, 6:30 to 9 p.m. Northeast Delta Dental Stadium, 1 Line Drive, Manchester. Visit bestofnh.com. • ROCK’N RIBFEST 2017 Packed weekend includes entertainment, games and rides. Vendors from across the country bring BBQ, plus ice cream, cotton candy, roasted sweet corn, gourmet baked potatoes and shaved

ice. Fri., June 16, from 4 to 11 p.m., Sat., June 17, from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m., Sun., June 18, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Anheuser-Busch, 221 Daniel Webster Hwy., Merrimack. Admission costs $10 at the gate, $7 in advance. Children age 8 and under are free. Food and beverage priced per vendor, kids’ rides are $10 full day, or per ride. Visit ribfestnh.com. • LAMB BARBECUE Features marinated lamb and other authentic Greek dishes and desserts. Sat., June 17, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saint Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church, 1168 Bridge St., Manchester. Visit stnicholas-man-nh.org. • PORTSMOUTH TASTE OF THE NATION An evening with some of the Seacoast’s best chefs, brewers and winemakers. Wed., June 21, 6:30 to 10 p.m. Strawbery Banke Museum, 14 Hancock St., Portsmouth. $85 for general admission, $150 for VIP admission. Visit ce.nokidhungry.org/ events/portsmouth-taste-nation.

Hampton Beach

9 YEARS

Classes/workshops • NEW ENGLAND SEAFOOD DINNER COUPLES COOKING CLASS Couples will make their own meal from start to finish: crab cake sliders with homemade slaw, mussels meuniere, roasted lemon asparagus and strawberrylemon pudding with pound cake. BYOB welcome. Bring containers for leftovers. Sat., June 10 and June 17, 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Culinary Playground, 16 Manning St., Derry. $155 per couple. Call 3391664 or visit culinary-playground. com. • GLOBAL COOKING WITH LOCAL INGREDIENTS Classes include hands-on cooking instruction, monogrammed apron, take-home recipes and a threecourse dinner party with wine pairings. Mon., 5:30 p.m., June 12, July 10, Aug. 7 and Sept. 11, 3 p.m. Colby Hill Inn , 33 The Oaks St., Henniker. $115 for first class, $95 for additional classes. Registration is required. Call 428-3281

Sweet potatoes are an incredible source of vitamin A, which is critical for bone health and eyesight, not to mention for supporting a healthy immune system. Sweet potatoes are a much better choice than bread if you’re looking for something that will fill you up and sustain you in the nutritional department. Just like toast made with bread, sweet potato toast has a flavor profile that goes with lots of things, so the possibilities are endless. Go with a Mexican food theme like I did below, throw some turkey vegetable chili on top for more protein or go with chicken, red onions, cheddar and barbecue sauce (throw on bacon if you want!). Try this out with your sweet potatoes and I promise you won’t be disappointed. You’ll have a healthy meal or snack, and fast! — Allison Willson Dudas

The Best View of

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Sweet potato “toast”

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FOOD

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HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 41


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I recently sort of went to Bordeaux, France, where I tried some wine from the 2014 vintage. I say sort of because I didn’t, unfortunately, actually get to travel there, but the next best thing was attending a tasting with Guillaume Touton from Touton Selections. To say he knows a little bit about French wine is an understatement, as he was born in Bordeaux and grew up in the wine business. I had a few minutes to sit down with Guillaume before the event, which was at the New Hampshire Liquor and Wine Outlet in Nashua, and he recounted Bordeaux’s 2,000-year wine history and how the style is replicated all over the world. He also noted the location’s geography, which made it an ideal port for trading, and the excellent climate. “You buy a bottle of wine but also some history,” he said, explaining how the labels tell a story of the chateau (which means castle), or winery. Many date back hundreds of years and are still around today. “When I drink a wine, I immediately know the story behind it.” Guillaume explained that here in the United States we really only see good Bordeaux vintages. Years where the wine is not good for whatever reason — environmental or otherwise — it is sold more locally and doesn’t usually make it this far west because it isn’t worth the cost. This vintage we tasted, along with 2015 and 2016, was a good year for Bordeaux. Sadly, the region had a recent frost that completely wiped out the bud growth, which means we will not see a 2017 vintage. The tasting included samples of five Bordeaux wines, ranging in price from $24 to $80. It is also worth noting that some were from the left bank, which is predominantly merlot; others were from the right bank, which is mainly cabernet sauvignon. Here are some tasting notes. All wines are from 2014 and available at any New Hampshire Liquor and Wine Outlet. Chateau d’Aiguilhe: The name means “needle” and it comes from Cotes de Castillon on the right bank. This wine is 80 percent merlot and 20 percent cabernet franc. $23.99 Chateau Prieure-Lichine: This wine is from Margaux on the left bank and is 65 percent cabernet sauvignon, 30 percent merlot and 5 percent petit verdot. This was my favorite wine of the night. $40.99 Chateau Gazin: This is a very interesting wine. The nose on it is pretty off-putting,

Courtesy photo.

but it tastes much different than it smells. I found it got better as I drank it. It is 95 percent merlot and 5 percent cabernet franc. $71.99 Chateau Fombrauge: This wine is also from the right bank and is 90 percent merlot, 9 percent cabernet franc and one percent cabernet sauvignon. I found it to be pretty tannic on its own, but think it would be good with food. The new owner of this chateau revitalized it about 20 years ago and elevated the brand. $26.99 Chateau Beychevelle: This wine is from the left bank and is a blend of 51 percent merlot, 39 percent cabernet sauvignon, 5 percent petit verdot and 5 percent cabernet franc. There is a boat on the label with the sail lowered at half mast in honor of the former mayor who ordered that ships do this to pay homage to him. It is also very popular in China because there is a dragon on the label as well. It is one of the top 10 wines in Bordeaux and was my second favorite wine that we tasted. Guillaume said this wine could easily be aged eight to 10 years. The 2016 vintage is going to be released soon. $78.49 I walked away from this tasting with two bottles of Bordeaux and much more knowledge about the region and its history. I am hoping to visit one day, but for now enjoying wine from the region will have to do. Pick up a bottle at your local New Hampshire Liquor and Wine Outlet, as there are wines priced for all budgets. There are also 2009 and 2011 vintages available in select stores.


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pg44

• San Cisco, The Water A • Nicole Mitchell, Mandoria Awakening II: Emerging Worlds A BOOKS

pg46

• Vote First or Die A • Book Report 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

pg48

• Wonder Woman A • Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie B+ Looking for more book, film and pop culture events? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play or hipposcout.com.

PLAYLIST A seriously abridged compendium of recent and future CD releases

MUSIC, BOOKS, GAMES, COMICS, MOVIES, DVDS, TV AND MORE San Cisco, The Water (Island City Records)

Once again, an Australian band proves its talent won’t be relegated to its own boundaries and can compete worldwide. For three albums now, this indie-rock crew has tabled the same sleepy Columbia House vocal sound as Los Campesinos, except the songs are quanta better and they only need four people instead of seven to get the job done. Their supporting sound palette in this one is a blocky selection of midcareer Prince (“The Kids Are Cool”), No Doubt (“That Boy”) and, in “Sunrise,” a fairly unique take on the Grizzly Bear/Beach Boys idea that’s all hook and no filler. All of these tunes have one or more variations on unrushed, previously explored, throwback summer vibes, as well as subtle nods to hip-hop and Deadmau5 neo-disco, for one example “The Distance,” wherein the bass and drums are miked up Chromeo-style to emulate the stuff Rod Stewart was doing in 1980. A — Eric W. Saeger Nicole Mitchell, Mandorla Awakening II: Emerging Worlds (FPE Records)

Chicago-based jazz flutist Mitchell is keen to add her name to the list of Afro-futurist visionaries that recently added noise-rap outfit Death Grips to the fold. The idea, first espoused by Sun Ra, whose proclaimed “experiences in space” didn’t catch on until the late ’60s, when the hippy movement found they were in agreement with the thought of a society that revolved around a harmonious marriage of technology and peace, nowadays seems as far away as Jupiter. Toward unrolling her own variation, Mitchell uses an odd mix of instrumentalists, including Japanese shakuhachi player Kojiro Umezaki, the result being a concoction that’s simultaneously world, jazz, Zappa and, at rare times, pop. The sci-fi-centric concept behind this is as unsettling as the music itself, one world (run by men) that’s full of injustice and violence, and Mandorla, a more feminine place in which technology is used for the good of all, not just the enrichment of a few. Musically it’s as one would expect, a bit herky-jerky, sometimes hippy-ish, but always a head trip. A — Eric W. Saeger

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• The new-CD-release schedule for June 9 is pretty exciting, don’t you think, with country legend Glen Campbell’s final album Adiós on the docket? But I know all you ’90s kids, you want to know about the new Rancid album, Trouble Maker — isn’t that exciting! Old skateboard “bois” will remember this California band as “the one that actually sounds punk rock” when Green Day and Offspring “revived” the style, and MTV accidentally played Rancid’s “Salvation” instead of whatever grunge song was supposed to be on. “Ghost of A Chance” is one song from this new album, and it’s pretty fast and punky and ... oh, you get the idea, it sounds like half of all the actual punk tunes you’ve ever heard, which means it rules. On Aug. 5, they’ll be at the Brockton Fairgrounds Farmers Market in Brockton, Mass., playing with Dropkick Murphys. • Some PR dude wanted to send me the upcoming new Nickelback album, Feed The Machine, but I lost the email on purpose, it’s totally gone. You may recall how, in 2013, these blockheads were voted 2nd Worst Band of the Nineties by the readers of Rolling Stone, second only to Creed. Right, time to click ’n’ barf, let’s visit the YouTube and barf at whatever monstrosity they’re passing off as a single. Wait, the title track is is almost good, kind of proggy, like Tool, sort of ... wait, why are they trying to look like the Suicide Squad in their video, and why the laser guns? The singing is still wicked annoying. So are the lyrics. I’m closing this window before it gets worse. • Fleetwood Mac alumni Lindsey Buckingham & Christine McVie were the best part of that disgustingly popular super-band, and now they are back, with a self-titled album and a single titled “In My World.” Halfway through this new song, I was like, “Gick, so what, who cares,” but then it started to sink in how awesome it is. I’m not wild about the murky vocal effects on Buckingham’s voice, but his finger-pick quitar style has, believe it or not, gotten even more awesome. These two will probably be awesome when they’re 90 years old. Sorry but it’s true, the song’s awesome, and so are these two almost-90-year-olds. • Country-pop-whatever Lady Antebellum has a new album coming out also, called Heart Break, and now that that’s out of the way, let’s look at French indie-band Phoenix, who will release their sixth LP, Ti Amo, on June 9. The title track is OK, totally like all that Chicago-house disco garbage Steve Aoki and David Guetta were doing for a while there. Wicked super annoying. I don’t care for this stuff. — Eric W. Saeger

19 88.

CDs

POP CULTURE

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Index

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POP

Building stone walls

Buttertwists!

Gardner goes in-depth with new book, Stone Building

More on New England stone walls Toadstool Bookshop: 614 Nashua St., Milford, Saturday, June 10, at 3 p.m. Quincy Bog Nature Center: 131 Quincy Bog Road, Rumney, Wednesday, June 14, at 7 p.m. East Andover Grange Hall: 7 Chase Hill Road, East Andover, Thursday, June 15, at 7 p.m. Contact: Most programs organized by N.H. Humanities Council, nhhumanities.org

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If you live in New Hampshire, you’ve seen the stone walls Kevin Gardner is talking about, skirting around pastures and crisscrossing through local fields and forests. They’re never far from view. “There are lots of stone walls everywhere you go in New Hampshire. Maybe not in the inner city of Manchester or Nashua, but three miles from there, you’ll start to see them,” said Gardner, a Hopkinton resident, now known as the local expert on these structures since writing The Granite Kiss: Traditions and Techniques of Building New England Stone Walls. The book, published by Countryman Press, a division of W.W. Norton & Co., in 2001, touches on history, technique, stylistic development and aesthetics and tackles how and why New England came to acquire its thousands of miles of stone walls. Ever since its publication, he’s kept busy presenting with the New Hampshire Humanities Council, as many as 50 or 60 times per year. Most events include a wall-building demonstration involving tiny stones from a five-gallon bucket. Gardner began building stone walls in his early 20s with his family’s company, Owen Associates, in 1973. From a historical perspective, he found them fascinating, but he also discovered his temperament suited the trade well. “It’s one of those things — you’re either very interested in it or horrified by the prospect of doing it,” Gardner said, laughing. “But it surprises me, even now, how much people are interested in hearing about how we got these walls and how they developed over time.” Of course, nobody is far from the countryside in the Granite State. Many are curious about structures on their own properties, or wonder how people moved these heavy weights in a non-mechanized age. “One of the things that really surprised me … is the enormous range of different organizations that will book this presentation,” he said. “Not just libraries and historical societies, but garden clubs, land trusts, service organizations, retirement communities. It has a broad appeal that I didn’t anticipate.” Some of his most common inquiries were about how to build walls around their land, a demand that has increased as the state has become more populated. “When I started doing this in the early 1970s, people who devoted themselves to it were quite rare. There were a few [build-

ers] in any given place you went to. Now … the residential housing construction boom stimulated demand for landscapers that naturally led to people wanting to put stone work into their landscape schemes around these homes,” he said. Finally, after 16 years, Gardner has a new book with all the answers: Stone Building: How to Make New England Style Walls and Other Structures the Old Way, published in early May. This one is more specific than the first title, complete with instructions and tips. It also addresses problems you might face putting these walls up the “rough” way. At the time of the phone call, Gardner was gearing up for a few presentations on stone walls: at the Toadstool Bookshop in Milford (Saturday, July 10), the Quincy Bog Nature Center (Wednesday, June 14) and the East Andover Grange Hall (Thursday, June 15). After that, he heads to St. Paul’s School to revel in his other passion — theater — where he’ll teach “Shakespeare for Performance” and direct high school productions of The Merchant of Venice and Twelfth Night from June through July. In fact, he’s a man of many interests; for years he worked as an actor and he’s published poetry, songs, essays and news stories. His teaching credentials include gigs at the New Hampshire Institute of Art, the New Hampton School, Plymouth State University and many local high schools. From 1985 to 2010 he was a performance critic, feature writer and producer for New Hampshire Public Radio. Someday, Gardner would like to merge his passions and write something more creative, with characters, plot and a clear storyline, but he’ll ride the stone wall train a while longer. The structures are so important to the New Hampshire landscape, and he doesn’t see local curiosity dwindling anytime soon. “I think people are interested in stone walls because they are interested in where they are,” Gardner said.

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By Kelly Sennott

ksennott@hippopress.com

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A Drama by Matthew Lopez | June 21-July 2 It is April, 1865 and the Civil War is drawing to a close. Caleb DeLeon, a Jewish Confederate soldier, returns wounded from the battlefield to his home in Richmond only to find it in ruins. The house has been abandoned by everyone except Simon and John, two former slaves, who were raised as Jews in the DeLeon home. As the three men reunite, they uncover deep-buried secrets... ties that bind them together and that, ultimately, could cost each man his freedom. An unflinching play about redemption, forgiveness and the lasting scars of slavery. Emotionally Potent...surreal in the layers of meaning...a quiet force.” -New York times The Whipping Man features Taurean Blacque (Driving Miss Daisy, Det, Washington in Hill Street Blues), Robert Douglas and Will Hoewll. Directed by Howard Millman. Rated R. Contains Adult Language and Intense Images.

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In Vote First or Die, political reporter Scott Conroy has published the longest ever Yelp review, not of a restaurant but of an entire state. On barbecue in northern New Hampshire, he writes: “a suspect proposition under even the most ideal of circumstances.” On the Errol Motel in Coos County: “a cozy lodging option if you’re ever in the area to do some snowshoeing or need to dispose of a corpse.” The Mountain View Grand Resort in Whitefield has a “distinct ‘The Shining’ vibe.” Peterborough is a “postcard-perfect town.” Of Popovers on the Square in the state’s “most charming small city,” Conroy writes, “If you’ve never had a popover, I recommend you put this book down right away and get on the road to Portsmouth.” Then there’s the reason for this eclectic road trip: the 2016 election. Conroy, a former writer and producer for The Huffington Post (and co-author of a book on Sarah Palin), spent more than a year traversing New Hampshire while covering the 2016 election. You can’t always tell from the caustic zingers, but he’s developed an affection bordering on respect for the Granite State, and Vote First or Die is a robust defense of its first-in-the-nation primary, which some political observers would like to dump. Conroy has a personal connection to New Hampshire; he wed his wife, Jo Ling Kent, at the Mountain View resort (the details of which you can read in the wedding archives of The New York Times). Moreover, the ceremony was performed by Secretary of State Bill Gardner, so there’s no small amount of bias when Conroy pronounces him a “walking, talking encyclopedia of New Hampshire politics” that every Granite Stater loves. But Conroy, as it turns out, likes most of the residents of New Hampshire that he writes about, from Bill Shaheen, the lawyer and strategist in Dover, to Addy Simwerayi, a Manchester resident who emigrated from the Democratic Republic of the Congo with his persecuted family and met Conroy on a “New Hampshire Rebellion” walk. In fact, it’s the people of New Hampshire and the way they approach the presidential contest that is the most convincing argument for leaving the primary system intact, Conroy says, calling the state “a small but essential island of virtue and discernment in the vast sea of contemptibility that consumes our public life every four years.” Conroy dismisses pundit Mike Barnicle, who trolled New Hampshire and its status in Boston Globe columns in the 1980s and early ’90s, and also the Iowa caucuses which he deems “far more susceptible to shenanigans” than the first primary.

“The perception, earned over many decades, is that New Hampshire is the sober adult in the room left to clean up the mess that the unruly children of Iowa often make. Although it’s an oversimplification, like many stereotypes this one is founded in some truth,” he writes. And although many people consider the 2016 primaries and election as a state-sanctioned carnival (and Conroy admits that he rues its ultimate victor), the election “doesn’t invalidate the underlying principles that have made the New Hampshire primary work for a century,” he writes. “New Hampshire voters really do take their roles in the process more seriously than voters do just about anywhere else. They pay attention. And perhaps far more important, they make the candidates pay attention.” Peppered with anecdotes, Vote First or Die drops names (and places) liberally; The Bridge Café, Spare Time Bowling, the Red Arrow Diner and MoeJoe’s Family Restaurant have cameos here along with a host of others. And Conroy is not just an engaging writer; he proves himself a smart reporter, too. In one of his most interesting anecdotes, Conroy reveals how he managed to remain in the building during a fake “executive session” of the Londonderry Fish and Game Club, staying behind when other media were ousted, and thus was able to hear (and report) how Rand Paul talks when he thinks no reporters are listening. Despite that bit of insight, “Rand Paul proved to be neither the most interesting man in politics nor the most interesting man in his own family,” Conroy writes. He also isn’t a fan of Trump (“a disgrace”), Marco Rubio (“mechanical”), or Dr. Ben Carson, who he says “spoke with a particular kind of inflection that sounded a bit like a late-career Michael Jackson telling a particularly terrifying ghost story.” That’s the essence of Conroy — both caustic and personable, telling interesting stories with memorable flair, such as his description of Hillary Clinton’s first foray into New Hampshire as a 2016 candidate. The trip, he said, “was orchestrated by her handlers, as if she were a rare and precious falcon being put on display before a clumsy group of amateur bird-watchers. ‘You may admire the specimen from afar, but if you should dare move within arm’s reach, you’ll be asked to leave.’” And he described Paul’s offhand dismissal of the United Nations in Londonderry as “discontinuing the international body entirely, like it was an out-of-date toaster.” If you eat, breathe and dream politics, Vote First or Die is a riot; if you don’t, it’s a wickedly funny education. And 10 bucks says Conroy moves to Peterborough some day. A — Jennifer Graham


• An accidental leader: The Music Hall Loft, 131 Congress St., Portsmouth, hosts Manal al-Sharif on Thursday, June 15, at 7 p.m., to discuss her memoir, Daring to Drive, about how she became the accidental leader of the Women2Drive movement, which stunned Saudi Arabia and then the world in 2011. Tickets to the event are $40 and include a copy of the book, a bar beverage and book signing meet-and-greet. Visit themusichall.org or call 436-2400. • Book fest: The National Society of Newspaper Columnists hosts its national conference at the Center of New Hampshire Radisson Hotel, 700 Elm St., Manchester, June 8 through June 11, and for the first time ever, it hosts an open-to-the-public book festival with the New Hampshire Writers’ Project Saturday, June 10, from 4 to 7 p.m. in the sitting room off the lobby. Two dozen national and local authors will greet readers with signed copies of their books, including Rebecca Rule, Dan Szczesny (who is The Hippo’s associate publisher) and others. Visit columnists.com. • Concord’s Abenaki Indians: The Mill Brook Gallery & Sculpture Garden, 236 Hopkinton Road, Concord, hosts its next Wednesdays’ Wisdom Potluck with the Kimball Jenkins Community Art School Wednesday, June 14, at 5:30 p.m., featuring local author Stephen Berwick, who just released his ninth book. His presentation, “We Walk in the Steps of Native New Englanders,” is about the Abenaki Indians who inhabited Concord. The event is free and open to the public; BYO (food, wine, beer or other refreshments). Visit themillbrookgallery.com or call 226-2046. — Kelly Sennott

Books Author Events • ALEXANDRIA MARZANOLESNEVICH Author talks about The Fact of a Body: A Murder and a Memoir. Thurs., June 8, at noon., at Toadstool Bookshop, 12 Depot Square, Peterborough. And that same day at 7 p.m. at Water Street Bookstore, 125 Water St., Exeter. Call 778-9731. • JAMES CREWS Poet talks about The Book of What Stays. Fri., June 9, at 1 p.m. Toadstool Bookshop, 12 Depot Square, Peterborough. Visit toadbooks. com. • LINDA GREENLAW Author talks about Shiver Hitch. Fri., June 9, at 5:30 p.m. Gibson’s Bookstore, 45 S. Main St., Concord. Visit gibsonsbookstore. com. Call 224-0562. Second event Sat., June 17, at 3 p.m., at Toadstool Bookshop, 614 Nashua St., Milford. • KEVIN GARDNER Author talks about Stone Building: How to Make New England Style

Walls and Other Structures the Old Way. Sat., June 10, at 3 p.m. Toadstool Bookshop. 614 Nashua St., Milford. Visit toadbooks. com. • RICHARD RUBIN Author talks about The Last of the Doughboys. Sat., June 10, 7-8:30 p.m. Warner Town Hall, Main St., Warner. • MARTY KELLEY Author talks about Almost Everybody Farts. Sat., June 10, at 1 p.m. Barnes & Noble, 1741 S. Willow St., Manchester, 668-5557. • PETER JANNEY Author talks about Mary’s Mosaic. Sun., June 11, at 5 p.m. RiverRun Bookstore, 142 Fleet St., Portsmouth. Visit riverrunbookstore.com. • DIDI PERSHOUSE Author talks about The Ecology of Care. Sun., June 11, at 2 p.m. MainStreet BookEnds, 16. E. Main St., Warner. Visit mainstreetbookends.com. Call 456-2700. • CHARLES SIMIC Author reads from and signs latest book of poetry, Scribbled in the

Book sales • WEEKLY BOOK SALE Starting May 6. Saturdays 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Hotchkiss Commons Reunion Grange Hall, 81 Main St., Union. Proceeds go to outreach programs of the church. Call 473-2727.

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Dark. Sun., June 11, at 11 a.m. Toadstool Bookshop, 12 Depot Square, Peterborough. Visit toadbooks.com. • ELLEN ZACHOS Author talks about Wildcrafted Cocktail. Tues., June 13, at 7 p.m. Water Street Bookstore, 125 Water St., Exeter. Call 778-9731. • LISA GARDNER Author talks about Find Her. Wed., June 14, at 6:30 p.m. Toadstool Bookshop, 614 Nashua St., Milford. Visit toadbooks.com. • BRENDAN DUBOIS Author talks about Red Vengeance. Wed., June 14, at 7 p.m. Water Street Bookstore, 125 Water St., Exeter. Call 778-9731. • MANAL AL-SHARIF Author talks about Daring to Drive: A Saudi Woman’s Awakening. Thurs., June 15, at 7 p.m. The Music Hall Loft, 131 Congress St., Portsmouth. Tickets $40, include copy of book, bar beverage, book signing meet-andgreet. Call 436-2400. • ERICA BODWELL Author talks about Up Liberty Street. Fri., June 16, at 5:30 p.m. Gibson’s Bookstore, 45 S. Main St., Concord. Visit gibsonsbookstore. com. • JOSH FUNK Author talks about The Case of the Stinky Stench. Gibson’s Bookstore, 45 S. Main St., Concord. Sat., June 17, at 11 a.m. Visit gibsonsbookstore.com. • RICHARD ENNERS Author talks about Heart of Gray. Sat., June 17, at noon. Barnes & Noble, 1741 S. Willow St., Manchester. Call 668-5557. • RIO YOUERS, IN CONVERSATION WITH JOE HILL Authors talk about new thriller by Youers, The Forgotten Girl. Water Street Bookstore, 125 Water St., Exeter. Tues., June 20, at 7 p.m. Call 778-9731. • JULIA GLASS Author talks about A House Among the Trees. Wed., June 21, at 7 p.m. The Music Hall Loft, 131 Congress St., Portsmouth. Visit themusichall.org. Call 436-2400.

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HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 47


POP CULTURE FILM REVIEWS BY AMY DIAZ

Wonder Woman (PG-13)

Gal Gadot fights for truth, justice and the Amazonian way in Wonder Woman, a (finally!) excellent entry in the DC Extended Universe.

The movie unfolds as a prolonged flashback, with Wonder Woman/Diana (Gal Gadot) receiving from Bruce Wayne a hard copy of the photo she’d been digging through Lex Luthor’s hard drive for in Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice. The photo shows Diana in World War I Belgium with a group including a man we will come to know as Steve Trevor (Chris Pine). Then we meet young Diana (Lilly Aspell) and see her childhood on Themyscira, a Paradise Island populated by Amazons, a group of fighting women charged by Zeus with protecting humanity from Ares, the God of War. Diana is the daughter of Hippolyta (Connie Nelson), queen of the Amazons. Hippolyta doesn’t want young Diana to be trained to fight, but Antiope (Robin Wright), Hippolyta’s sister and the head of the Amazonian army, disagrees. Ares was gravely wounded in a long-ago battle but Antiope is certain that one day Diana will have to face him. Eventually, Hippolyta agrees, telling Antiope to train Diana 10 times as hard as any other Amazonian warrior. When we see Gal Gadot-aged Diana, she is a fierce fighter, eventually besting even Antiope with a surprise burst of CGI-bwam-ness. Diana ponders this new ability on a cliff overlooking the ocean where she sees an airplane burst through the magical whatever that keeps Themyscira hidden and crash into the sea. She swims out to the plane and pulls out the pilot: one Steve Trevor, who, after a few squeezes with the Golden Lasso, reveals himself to be an American working for the British as a spy. The Germans who were chasing him also burst through the magical island shield, leading to a fight on the beach between Germans and their guns and Amazonians and their arrows and swords. The Amazonians are more than a match for the soldiers, despite their technological disadvantages. But the battle leaves Diana convinced that Ares is behind this Great War Steve describes. She decides to leave the island with Steve to find and kill Ares and protect the humans she thinks have been led astray by him. They go first to London, to deliver to British higher-ups intelligence Steve has gathered about a German general named Ludendorff (Danny Huston) and Dr. Maru (Elena Anaya), a scientist making poison gas. Though others in the German military and government are ready to sign an armistice with the Allied powers, Ludendorff is convinced they can still win the war

HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 48

Wonder Woman

with an extra deadly poison he is developing. Diana becomes convinced that this Ludendorff is Ares in disguise. When Steve decides to go against British command and run a secret mission to find and destroy the facility making Ludendorff’s weapon, Diana insists on coming with him. To help in the mission, Steve pulls in three old friends: Sameer (Said Taghmaoui), a con-man; The Chief (Eugene Brave Rock), a non-combatant who knows the front, and Charlie (Ewen Bremner), an expert marksman. Also expert marksmen? Patty Jenkins, this movie’s director, and Allan Heinberg, author of the movie’s screenplay. Somehow, magically, they have hit an absolute bullseye when it comes to getting the tone of this character and this movie just right. Diana is earnest and principled and brilliant but unaware of the (1918) modern world. But she is not a dolt or a goodytwo-shoes or a tortured saint (cough, Henry Cavill’s Superman, cough). She’s a strong (physically, emotionally, confidence-wise) woman and a smart woman and, at times, a funny woman. And a woman, not some fakey fanboy idea of what a woman should be. I like that the “woman” part of the Wonder Woman identity seems to have been treated as important. Gal Gadot also gets Wonder Woman just right, playing all her facets — the bravery, the bad-assedness, the woman in love — with a geniuneness that isn’t overly serious. The action is also well-calibrated. There are at least three big set-piece battle scenes that are each wonderful in their own way, with nicely choreographed action and a good balance of “big fighting wide-shot” and individual characters. Even though we know from the movie’s opening (Diana in 2017 Paris) and from the Justice League trailer that runs before the movie that Wonder Woman makes it out of this story A-OK,

the scenes still have stakes and energy. Is Wonder Woman perfect? No, it’s probably too long by about half an hour — though I’d have watched an even longer version if it had more of the gang and their exploits and more Lucy Davis, who plays Steve’s secretary Etta Candy and is also quite awesome. But this movie was a delight to sit through and it gave me hope for the DC Extended Universe. Franchise in trouble? Summer popcorn movies fail to pop? Not enough fun in the action universe? Wonder Woman to the rescue! A Rated PG-13 for sequence of violence and action, and some suggestive content. Directed by Patty Jenkins with a screenplay by Allan Heinberg, Wonder Woman is two hours and 21 minutes long and distributed by Warner Bros.

Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie (PG)

Trouble-making elementaryschoolers accidentally turn their principal into a superhero in Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie, a big, bright animated movie based on the books by Dav Pilkey.

George (voice of Kevin Hart) and Harold (voice of Thomas Middleditch) are best friends and fourth-graders who regularly save themselves and their classmates from the crushing boredom of school with pranks — some aimed at their grumpy principal, Mr. Krupp (voice of Ed Helms). After a prank involving fellow student (and, as he’s later described, class suckup) Melvin (voice of Jordan Peele) is caught on video tape, Krupp finally has the proof he needs to bring the hammer down on George and Harold. Their punishment? He’s going to put them in separate classes, thus destroying their friendship. The boys are determined that will never hap-

pen and, using a hypnosis ring George got in a box of cereal, they hypnotize Krupp. With the sudden and inexplicable power to convince Krupp he’s anything they say he is, they tell him he’s Captain Underpants, the star of many of the comic books the boys have created together. Captain Underpants is relatively heroic, despite flying around in underpants and a red cape and generally resembling a giant baby. As the boys learn when Krupp begins to act as Underpants, he’s also kinda dumb. A snap of the fingers turns the Underpants persona on, a splash of water brings back an angry Krupp. Sometimes, what appears to be Krupp is actually Underpants, whom the boys convince to go “undercover” as Krupp. It’s this version of the principal who hires Professor Poopypants (voice of Nick Kroll), an obvious evil scientist, to serve as the school’s science teacher. Loud and colorful and full of what felt like so many fart jokes, Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie is a really charming movie that does a good job of balancing what feels like realistic kid viewpoints (on friendship, school, the hilariousness of the planet name “Uranus”) with absurd visuals and situations. (And is probably appropriate for, give or take based on your kid’s interest in and tolerance for superhero and supervillain action, kids the age of the fourth-grade leads.) Not to get way too serious for a movie that features a whoopee cushion orchestra and a giant evil toilet, but I really liked how this movie gives boys not just a rollicking action adventure but an emotional adventure too. The George and Harold friendship is important — not just to the story but to George and Harold, and they discuss this fact. And I like that a core part of George and Harold’s friendship is working on creating comic books together. Without getting all messagey about it, this movie is supportive of many good things: boys expressing their emotions, kids making stuff, imagination and a celebration of the fart jokes that are a cornerstone of kid humor. Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie leans in to the jokiness and big silly qualities that seem to be a hallmark for DreamWorks Animated movies and it works wonderfully here. A very kidappealing adventure with well-integrated moments of positive messages, this movie is a welcome start to what could be a fun new series. B+ Rated PG for mild rude humor throughout. Directed by David Soren with a screenplay by Nicholas Stoller (from the books by Dav Pilkey), Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie is an hour and 29 minutes long and distributed by 20th Century Fox.


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MOVIES OUTSIDE THE CINEPLEX RED RIVER THEATRES 11 S. Main St., Concord, 2244600, redrivertheatres.org • Jeremiah Tower: The Last Magnificent (R, 2017) Thurs., June 8, at 2:20 p.m. • Mr. Connolly has ALS (NR, 2017) Thurs., June 8, at 1:30 p.m. • Casablanca (PG, 1942) Thurs., June 8, at 7 p.m. • Churchill (PG, 2017) Thurs., June 8, at 2:05, 5:35 & 7:50 p.m.; Fri., June 9, at 5:30 p.m.; Sat., June 10, at 5:30 p.m.; Sun., June 11, at 5:30 p.m.; Mon., June 12, at 5:25 p.m.; Tues., June 13, at 5:25 p.m. • The Lovers (R, 2017) Thurs., June 8, at 2 p.m.; Fri., June 9, at 5:30 p.m.; Sat., June 10, at 5:30 p.m.; Sun., June 11, at 5:30 p.m.; Mon., June 12, at 5:25 p.m.; Tues., June 13, at 5:25 p.m. • My Cousin Rachel (PG-13, 2017) Fri., June 9, at 1, 3:25, 5:50 & 8:15 p.m.; Sat., June 10, at 1, 3:25, 5:50 & 8:15 p.m.; Sun., June 11, at 1, 3:25 & 5:50 p.m.; Mon., June 12, at 2, 5:30 & 8 p.m.; Tues., June 13, at 2, 5:30 & 8 p.m.; Wed., June 14, at 2, 5:30 & 8 p.m.; Thurs., June 15, at 2, 5:30 & 8 p.m. • Chasing Trane: The John Coltrane Documentary (NR, 2017) Fri., June 9, at 2, 4, 6 & 8 p.m.; Sat., June 10, at 2, 4, 6 & 8 p.m.; Sun., June 11, at 2, 4 & 6 p.m.; Mon., June 12, at 2:10 & 7:35 p.m.; Tues., June 13, at 2:10, 5:35 & 7:35 p.m.; Wed., June 14, at 2:10, 5:35 & 7:35 p.m.; Thurs., June 15, at 2:10, 5:35 & 7:35 p.m. • Princess Mononoke (PG-13, 1997) Thurs., June 15, at 7 p.m. WILTON TOWN HALL 40 Main St., Wilton, 654-3456, wiltontownhalltheatre.com • The Lovers (R, 2017) Thurs., June 8, at 7:30 p.m. • The Dinner (R, 2017) Thurs., June 8, at 7:30 p.m. • Norman (R, 2016) Fri., June 9, through Thurs., June 15, at 7:30 p.m. Additional screenings Sun., June 11, at 2 & 4:30 p.m. • Hidden Figures (PG, 2016) Fri., June 9, through Thurs., June 15, at 7:30 p.m. Additional screenings Sun., June 11, at 2 & 4:30 p.m. • An Officer and a Gentleman

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CAPITOL CENTER FOR THE ARTS 44 S. Main St., Concord, 2251111, ccanh.com • Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (National Theatre rebroadcast) Tues., June 13, at 6 p.m. • Peter Pan (National Theatre rebroadcast) Sat., June 24, at 7 p.m.

THE MUSIC HALL 28 Chestnut St., Portsmouth, 436-2400, themusichall.org, Some films are screened at Music Hall Loft, 131 Congress St., Portsmouth • David Lynch: The Art Life Thurs., June 8, at 7 p.m. • CatVideoFest Fri., June 9, at 7 p.m. • My Scientology Movie (NR, 2015) Fri., June 9, at 7 p.m.; Sun., June 11, at 4 p.m.; Tues., June 13, at 7 p.m.; Sat., June 17, at 7 p.m. • Sherlock Jr. (1924) Sat., June 10, at 7 p.m., followed by music by Oyster River High School orchestra • A Quiet Passion (PG-13, 2016) Tues., June 13, at 7 p.m.; Thurs., June 15, at 7 p.m. • Norman (R, 2016) Fri., June 16, at 7 p.m.; Sat., June 17, at 7 p.m.; Thurs., June 20, at 7 p.m.; Wed., June 21, at7 p.m.

MANCHESTER CITY LIBRARY 405 Pine St., Manchester, 6246550, manchester.lib.nh.us; some films at the West Branch, 76 Main St., Manchester, 6246560 • Kelly’s Heroes (1970) Wed., June 14, at 1 p.m. • Moana (PG, 2016) Wed., June 21, at 1 p.m. BEDFORD PUBLIC LIBRARY 3 Meetinghouse Road, Bedford, 472-2300, bedfordnhlibrary.org • Thursday Theater Thurs., June 8, at 2 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. O’NEIL CINEMAS 24 Calef Highway, Epping, oneilcinemas.com, 679-3529 • Summer Kids Series Every Monday & Wednesday at 10 a.m., for kids 11 and younger admission is $1, for all others, $2; Storks (PG, 2016) is June 26 & 28 PETERBOROUGH COMMUNITY THEATRE 6 School St., Peterborough, pctmovies.com • Beauty and the Beast (PG, 2017) Thurs., June 8, at 7 p.m. • Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 (PG-13, 2017) June 9 through June 15, Wed., Sat. and Sun. at 2:30 & 7 p.m., Thurs. and Fri. at 7 p.m. • Scanners Thurs., June 8, at 3 p.m., free admission, part of Thing in Spring • Eraserhead Fri., June 9, at 3 p.m., free admission, part of Thing in Spring • Fantastic Planet Sat., June 10, at 11:30 a.m., free admission, part of Thing in Spring • Black Panthers Sun., June 11,

ROCHESTER OPERA HOUSE 31 Wakefield St., Rochester, rochesteroperahouse.com, rochestermfa.org/film, 332-2211, 335-1992 • Rochester Independent Film Festival Sat., June 24, & Sun., June 25

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HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 49


NITE Sing out

Folk supergroup’s brief tour hits New Hampshire

Local music news & events

By Michael Witthaus

By Michael Witthaus

mwitthaus@hippopress.com

• Open doors: A no-cover show stars original rockers Ajar Project. The Wilton quartet performs new songs and selections from its first two albums. Musically, they’re a moving target, mixing heavy, fuzz-tone-laden licks with intricate, jazz-like playing. Go Thursday, June 8, 9 p.m., Penuche’s Music Hall, 1087 Elm St., Manchester. More at facebook. com/ajarproject. • Chuckle on: Tickle your funny bone with an evening of standup comedy. Stephen Bjork mines the everyday for laughs, gratefully avoiding vulgarity; the Boston comic still manages to touch on everything from shopping to cannibalism. Ryan Gartley opens. Go Friday, June 9, 8 p.m., Pitman’s Freight Room, 94 New Salem St., Laconia. Tickets are $20 at pitmansfreightroom.com; the show is BYOB. • Rolling in: Laconia Motorcycle Week includes plenty of music. Laconia’s newest venue offers two acts a day, starting with an afternoon set of country from April Cushman Band, followed by AC/DC tribute band Dirty Deeds; others on tap include Eric Grant (June 11), Houston Bernard (June 13) and Annie Brobst (June 15). Go Saturday, June 10, 1 p.m, Whiskey Barrel, 546 Main St., Laconia. See whiskeybarrelnh.com • Brew brunch: Enjoy acoustic music from singer-guitarist Quincy Medaglia, part of the Sunday Brunch series at the tap house. There are worse ways to show solidarity with the citizens of Great Britain than having a breakfast of bangers and mash washed down with Newcastle Brown Ale. Go Sunday, June 11, 1 p.m., British Beer Co., 1071 S. Willow St., Manchester. See britishbeer.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.

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On Earth Day 1992, Joan Baez, Mary Chapin Carpenter and the Indigo Girls — Amy Ray and Emily Saliers — performed at Foxboro Stadium in Massachusetts. The same group closed out Newport Folk Festival a few months later, this time with a name, Four Voices in Harmony. It would be their last official show for 25 years. In February, the Four Voices announced a 10-date tour, with a penultimate stop at Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion in Gilford. In a recent phone interview, Amy Ray talked about the supergroup’s beginnings, performing at Baez’s Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction and planning for the tour planning. How did the Four Voices tour come together? We’d been touring with Joan a little bit over the past couple of years and we’d also done some shows with Chapin, so we were just trying to do something again, all four of us. … Then when Joan was going to do the Rock Hall of Fame, she asked us to come and play with her in support of two songs she was doing.

Courtesy photo.

bigness of the whole event. We’re not used to that, we just kind of do our thing ... but I think that for Joan to get in was a big deal, important and good for women. Who else do you think should be in there? Carole King, as a great writer of huge hits ... Kate Bush, Sonic Youth. I had a list in my head — Siouxsee and the Banshees are not in there. I try to think of people that directed a vision and a change of culture at some point. … Kate Bush is a great example of someone who is massively accomplished, kind of a prodigy, and she really changed things. When you look at women — and men — stylistically as songwriters, she had a massive influence on what is happening today. I was glad to see Pearl Jam get in — they recognized SleaterKinney, Brandi Carlile. ... They’re always great at being feminist.

What was it like playing at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame? We did “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down,” which is in our DNA and pretty easy, but we’d never done “Deportees” so we were How do you see the current role of protrying to learn harmonies at the last minute, test music? timing and all that. A big part was nerves; it’s Well, it’s so different now. Joan and I defalso a huge place. You get awestruck by the initely have those conversations all the time about what the role of the protest song is now, Four Voices – Joan Baez, Mary because I think she feels there are not as many Chapin Carpenter & Indigo Girls people singing in that way, and it’s not the same When: Friday, June 16, 7 p.m. kind of voice. ... Songs have a different place Where: Bank of NH Pavilion, 72 Meadin it, and I haven’t figured it out yet. I think owbrook Lane, Gilford it’s important to write about what is going on Tickets: $29.75-$69.75 at banknhpaviland talk about it and be informed and still have ion.com live performance together because that is how

What can people expect at the Four Voices show? I have no idea. We’re in the beginning stages. I’m sure we’ll do “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right” and “Night They Drove Old Dixie Down” — stuff we have always done. … When we’re all up there at the same time, we’ll have five Chapin songs and five Joan songs, six or seven Indigo songs that we all learn together. We’re picking what those are. Then each person has a few solo songs. … We’re just working on what we think would be fun to do.

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There are still songs out there. I think people are writing them, everybody is. But how do you write that song that galvanizes people and is easy to sing and has a melody and says something that is timeless but can be specific as well? It’s very hard to write a song that catches on like that, and how do you get it to catch on with such a different way of disseminating music and information? Because it’s all these different things going on at one time, and all these different songs. I think that’s good too but it’s hard for everybody to know the same songs right now.

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Breezeway Pub 14 Pearl St. 621-9111 British Beer Company 1071 S. Willow St. 232-0677 Laconia Bungalow Bar & Grille Anthony’s Pier 333 Valley St. 263 Lakeside Ave. 518-8464 Penuche’s Ale House Amherst East Hampstead Millie’s Tavern 366-5855 Cactus Jack’s 6 Pleasant St. 228-9833 Pasta Loft LaBelle Winery 17 L St. 967-4777 Baja Beach Club 782 South Willow St. Pit Road Lounge 345 Rte 101 672-9898 220 E. Main St. 378-0092 North Beach Bar & 89 Lake St. 524-0008 627-8600 388 Loudon Road Grille 931 Ocean Blvd. Broken Spoke Saloon Central Ale House 226-0533 Auburn Epping 967-4884 1072 Watson Rd 23 Central St. 660-2241 Red Blazer Auburn Pitts Holy Grail Old Salt 866-754-2526 City Sports Grille 72 Manchester St. 167 Rockingham Road 64 Main St. 679-9559 409 Lafayette Rd. Faro Italian Grille 72 216 Maple St. 625-9656 224-4101 622-6564 Telly’s 926-8322 Endicott St. 527-8073 Club ManchVegas Tandy’s Top Shelf 235 Calef Hwy 679-8225 Ron’s Landing 50 Old Granite St. 1 Eagle Sq. 856-7614 Bedford Tortilla Flat 379 Ocean Blvd 929-2122 Fratello’s 799 Union Ave. 528-2022 222-1677 True Brew Barista Bedford Village Inn 1-11 Brickyard Sq Savory Square Bistro Holy Grail of the Lakes Crazy Camel Hookah 3 Bicentennial Sq. 2 Olde Bedford Way 734-2725 32 Depot Sq 926-2202 12 Veterans Square and Cigar Lounge 225-2776 472-2001 Popovers Sea Ketch 127 Ocean 737-3000 245 Maple St. 518-5273 Copper Door 11 Brickyard Sq 734-4724 Blvd. 926-0324 Margate Resort Derryfield Country Club 15 Leavy Drive 488-2677 Contoocook Stacy Jane’s 625 Mammoth Rd Covered Bridge Shorty’s Epsom 9 Ocean Blvd. 929-9005 76 Lake St. 524-5210 Naswa Resort 623-2880 Cedar St. 746-5191 206 Rte 101 488-5706 Circle 9 Ranch The Goat 1086 Weirs Blvd. Whiskey 20 Farmer’s Market 39 Windymere 736-3111 20 L St. 601-6928 366-4341 20 Old Granite St. 896 Main St. Belmont Hilltop Pizzeria Wally’s Pub Paradise Beach Club 641-2583 746-3018 Lakes Region Casino 1724 Dover Rd 736-0027 144 Ashworth Ave. 322 Lakeside Ave. Fratello’s 1265 Laconia Road 926-6954 366-2665 155 Dow St. 624-2022 Claremont 267-7778 Exeter Patio Garden Foundry Taverne on the Square Pimentos Shooters Tavern Hanover Lakeside Ave. 50 Commercial St. Rt. 3 DW Hwy 528-2444 2 Pleasant St. 287-4416 69 Water St. 583-4501 Salt Hill Pub Shooter’s Pub 7 Lebanon St. 676-7855 Pitman’s Freight Room 836-1925 94 New Salem St. 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 527-0043 Tower Hill Tavern Jewel 133 N. Main St. 753-6631 4 North Rd 463-7374 264 Lakeside Ave. 61 Canal St. 819-9336 Francestown Henniker 366-9100 Karma Hookah & Derry Bow Toll Booth Tavern Country Spirit Cigar Bar Drae Chen Yang Li 740 2nd NH Tpke 262 Maple St. 428-7007 Weirs Beach Lobster Pound 1077 Elm St. 647-6653 520 South St. 228-8508 14 E Broadway #A 588-1800 Pat’s Peak Sled Pub 72 Endicott St. 366-2255 KC’s Rib Shack 216-2713 24 Flander’s Road 837 Second St. 627-RIBS Halligan Tavern Bristol Gilford 888-728-7732 Lebanon Midnight Rodeo (Yard) Back Room at the Mill 32 W. Broadway Ellacoya Barn & Grille Salt Hill Pub 1211 S. Mammoth Rd 965-3490 2 Central St. 744-0405 2667 Lakeshore Road Hillsborough 2 West Park St. 448-4532 623-3545 Purple Pit 293-8700 Mama McDonough’s Stark Brewing Company 28 Central Sq. 744-7800 Dover Patrick’s 5 Depot St. 680-4148 Londonderry 500 Commercial St. 7th Settlement Brewery 18 Weirs Road 293-0841 Tooky Mills Rumor Mill Coach Stop Tavern 625-4444 50 S Main St, 217-0971 47 Washington St. 9 Depot St. 176 Mammoth Rd Murphy’s Taproom 373-1001 Goffstown 464-6700 437-2022 494 Elm St. 644-3535 Asia Concord Village Trestle Turismo Penuche’s 42 Third St. 742-9816 Barley House 25 Main St. 497-8230 55 Henniker St. 680-4440 Stumble Inn 20 Rockingham Rd 96 Hanover St. 626-9830 Cara Irish Pub 132 N. Main 228-6363 432-3210 Penuche’s Music Hall 11 Fourth St. 343-4390 Hampton CC Tomatoes Hooksett 1087 Elm St. Dover Brick House 209 Fisherville Rd Ashworth By The Sea Asian Breeze Loudon 206-5599 2 Orchard St. 749-3838 295 Ocean Blvd. 753-4450 1328 Hooksett Rd Hungry Buffalo Portland Pie Company Fury’s Publick House Cheers 926-6762 621-9298 58 Rte 129 798-3737 786 Elm St. 622-7437 1 Washington St. 17 Depot St. 228-0180 Bernie’s Beach Bar Salona Bar & Grill 617-3633 Granite 73 Ocean Blvd 926-5050 Hudson Manchester 128 Maple St. 96 Pleasant St. 227-9000 Sonny’s Tavern Boardwalk Inn & Cafe AJ’s Sports Bar 624-4020 83 Washington St. Hermanos 139 Ocean Blvd. 929-7400 11 Tracy Lane 718-1102 A&E Cafe 1000 Elm St. 578-3338 Shaskeen 742-4226 11 Hills Ave. 224-5669 Breakers at Ashworth River’s Pub Amoskeag Studio 250 909 Elm St. 625-0246 Top of the Chop Makris 295 Ocean Blvd. 926-6762 76 Derry St 880-8676 Commercial St. Shorty’s 1 Orchard St. 740-0006 Breakers By the Sea 354 Sheep Davis Road JD Chaser’s 1050 Bicentennial Drive 225-7665 409 Ocean Blvd 926-7702 2B Burnham Rd 886-0792 315-9320 625-1730 Thursday, June 8 Claremont Ashland Taverne on the Square: Erik Common Man: Jim McHugh & Boedtker Steve McBrian (Open) Concord Auburn Granite: CJ Poole Duo Auburn Pitts: Open Jam w/ Hermanos: Mike Morris Gordy and Diane Pettipas Penuche’s Ale House: Turnsoul True Brew: Dusty Gray Original Bedford Copper Door: Triana Wilson Dover Fury’s: Wheel of Awesome Boscawen Alan’s: John Pratte Exeter Station 19: Thursday Night Live HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 54

Gilford Londonderry Patrick’s: Bill Noland, Holly Furlone Coach Stop: Kim Riley Manchester Central Ale: Jonny Friday Blues City Sports Grille: DJ Dave Hanover Derryfield: Jimmy & Marcelle Salt hill: Irish Trad’ Session Foundry: Marco Fratello’s: Jazz Night Randy Miller/Roger Kahle Jewel: Let There Be House Hillsborough KC’s Rib Shack: Mark Huzar Turismo: Line Dancing Manchvegas: Open Acoustic Jam w/ Jim Devlin Murphy’s: Charles A Duo Lebanon Salt hill: Celtic Open Session Penuche’s Music Hall: Ajar Project Hampton CR’s: Don Severance

Burton’s Grill 310 Daniel Webster Highway 888-4880 Country Tavern 452 Amherst St. 889-5871 Dolly Shakers 38 East Hollis St. 577-1718 Fody’s Tavern 9 Clinton St. 577-9015 Fratello’s Italian Grille 194 Main St. 889-2022 Mason Marty’s Driving Range Haluwa Lounge Nashua Mall 883-6662 96 Old Turnpike Rd Killarney’s Irish Pub 878-1324 9 Northeastern Blvd. 888-1551 Meredith Giuseppe’s Ristorante O’Shea’s 312 DW Hwy 279-3313 449 Amherst St. 943-7089 Peddler’s Daughter 48 Main St. 821-7535 Merrimack Portland Pie Company Homestead 641 DW Hwy 429-2022 14 Railroad Sq 882-7437 Riverwalk Jade Dragon 515 DW Hwy 424-2280 35 Railroad Sq 578-0200 Shorty’s Pacific Fusion 356 DW Hwy 424-6320 48 Gusabel Ave. 882-4070 Stella Blu Tortilla Flat 70 E. Pearl St. 578-5557 594 Daniel Webster Thirsty Turtle Hwy 262-1693 8 Temple St. 402-4136 Milford New Boston J’s Tavern 63 Union Square 554-1433 Molly’s Tavern 35 Mont Vernon Rd Lefty’s Lanes 487-2011 244 Elm St. 554-8300 Pasta Loft Newbury 241 Union Square Goosefeathers Pub 672-2270 Mt. Sunapee 763-3500 Shaka’s Bar & Grill 11 Wilton Rd 554-1224 Salt Hill Pub 1407 Rt 103 763-2667 Tiebreakers at Hampshire Hills 50 Emerson Rd 673-7123 New Castle Wentworth By The Sea Union Coffee Co. 588 Wentworth Rd 42 South St. 554-8879 422-7322 Moultonborough New London Castle in the Clouds 455 Old Mountain Road Flying Goose 40 Andover Road 478-5900 526-6899 Nashua Newington 110 Grill 27 Trafalgar Sq. 943-7443 Paddy’s 27 International Drive 5 Dragons 29 Railroad Sq. 578-0702 430-9450 River Casino Newmarket 53 High St. 881-9060 Riverworks Boston Billiard Club 164 Main St. 659-6119 55 Northeastern Blvd. Stone Church 943-5630 5 Granite St. 659-7700 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 Wild Rover 21 Kosciuszko St. 669-7722

Shaskeen: Iconoclasm Shorty’s: Kieran McNally Strange Brew: Night of Bluegrass Whiskey’s 20: DJs Shawn White/ Ryan Nichols/Mike Mazz Wild Rover: The Hallorans Meredith Giuseppe’s: Jim Tyrrell Merrimack Homestead: Justin Cohn Milford J’s Tavern: Jeff Mrozek

Nashua Agave Azul: DJ K-Wil Ladies Night Country Tavern: Tom Keating Fody’s: DJ Rich Padula Fratello’s Italian Grille: Ryan Williamson Riverwalk Cafe: Chris Hersch and the Moonraiders Shorty’s: Sean Von Clauss Newmarket Stone Church: Irish Music w/ Jordan Tirrell-Wysocki & Jim Prendergast


Three Chimneys 17 Newmarket Rd. 868-7800 Newport Salt Hill Pub 58 Main St. 863-7774 Peterborough Harlow’s Pub 3 School St. 924-6365 Pelham Shooters 116 Bridge St. 635-3577 Pittsfield Molly’s Tavern 32 Main St. 487-2011 Plaistow Crow’s Nest 181 Plaistow Road 974-1686 Racks Bar & Grill 20 Plaistow Road 974-2406 Portsmouth Blue Mermaid Island 409 The Hill 427-2583 British Beer Company 103 Hanover St. 501-0515 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 Raymond Cork n’ Keg 4 Essex Drive 244-1573 Rochester Gary’s 38 Milton Rd 335-4279

Governor’s Inn 78 Wakefield St. 332-0107 Lilac City Grille 103 N. Main St. 332-3984 Revolution Tap Room 61 N Main St. 244-3022 Radloff’s 38 N. Main St. 948-1073 Smokey’s Tavern 11 Farmington 330-3100 Salem Black Water Grill 43 Pelham Rd 328-9013 Jocelyn’s Lounge 355 S Broadway 870-0045 Sayde’s Restaurant 136 Cluff Crossing 890-1032 Seabrook Castaways 209 Ocean Blvd 760-7500 Chop Shop 920 Lafayette Rd 760-7706

Belmont Lakes Region Casino: DJ Mark Boscawen Alan’s: Center of Gravity Claremont Taverne: Conniption Fits Concord Area 23: Acoustasaurus

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 Salt Hill Pub 5 Airport Rd 298-5566

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

Makris: Dave Berry Band Peterborough Harlow’s: Rear Defrosters w/ Pit Road Lounge: Wiseguy Tandy’s: DJ Iceman Streetz Eastern Mountain Time Harlow’s: Bluegrass Night Derry La Mia Casa: Soul Repair Coffee Factory: Dave LaCroix Plaistow Racks: Rock Jam w/ Dave Dover Dover Brickhouse: Rock for the Thompson Arts - Citronella, Marvel Prone, Red Tail Hawk and PeopleLike You Portsmouth Fury’s: Lovewhip British Beer: Brian Gray Top of the Chop: Funkadelic Dolphin Striker: Erin’s Guild Fridays Fat Belly’s: DJ Flex Latchkey: James Gilmore Gilford Portsmouth Gaslight: T.M.F.I. Patrick’s: Dueling PIanos Red Door: Green Lion Crew Andre Balazs/Jim Tyrrell Schuster’s: Dan The Muzak Man Seabrook Chop Shop: Spent Fuel Hampton CR’s: Steve Sibulkin Windham Savory Square: Bob Halperin Common Man: Triana Wilson Wally’s Pub: Walkin The Line Friday, June 9 Hooksett Auburn Asian Breeze: DJ Albin Auburn Pitts: Fire in the Field

Sunapee Sunapee Coffee House Rte. 11 Lower Main St. 229-1859

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

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Manchester British Beer: Austin Pratt Bungalow: Under Fire / The Press War / Dreamer & Son / Paper Monsters / Missing The Action / Transitions Derryfield: Kamryn & Brian Richard/Without Paris Foundry: Justin Cohn Fratello’s: Bob Rutherford Jewel: Como Brothers / DJ Darren Roy KC’s Rib Shack: Clint Lapointe Murphy’s: RC Thomas/Joe Sambo Duo Penuche’s Music Hall: Mo Bounce Shaskeen: Zion 1 Strange Brew: Eric Lindberg & Mike Fioretti Whiskey’s 20: DJs Jason Spivak & Sammy Smoove Wild Rover: John Ridlon Duo Meredith Giuseppe’s: DJ Bob Merrimack Homestead: Steve Tolley Biergarten: Mark Huzar

Laconia Paradise: Chris Lester/The Bars Whiskey Barrel: Martin & Kelly Milford J’s Tavern: 21st & 1st Lebanon Pasta Loft: Bob Pratte Salt Hill Pub: Alex Smith & The Tiebreakers: Rich Kumpu and Mountain Sound Robert Allwarden Londonderry Coach Stop: Jeff Mrozek Pipe Dream: Young Folk

Nashua Country Tavern: Kim Riley Dolly Shakers: Revolver HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 55


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216 Maple St., Manchester • 625-9656 • sparetimeentertainment.com HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 56

Milford Pasta Loft: Fat Back Nashua Agave Azul: DJ Roberto Tropical Saturday Boston Billiard Club: DJ Anthem Throwback Country Tavern: Mark Huzar Fody’s: Shelby Greenberg Band Fratello’s: Jeff Mrozek Haluwa: Slakas Riverwalk: Dwight & Nicole Stella Blu: Wooden Soul Newbury Salt Hill Pub: Flew-Z

Hampton Community Oven: Alex Zachary The Goat: Searching for Clarity Wally’s: Stefanie Jasmine Band

Newmarket Stone Church: Back Yard Tire Fire + Six Fox Whiskey w/ Good Trees River Band

Hanover Salt Hill Pub: Andrew Merzi

Newport Salt hill Pub: Alex Smith & The Mountain Sound

Laconia Paradise Beach Club: Chris Lester Whiskey Barrel: April Cushman Band 1p + Dirty Deeds (AC/DC Tribute) 8p Lebanon Salt Hill Pub: Better Days Londonderry Coach Stop: Paul Luff Pipe Dream: Undersea Manchester Bungalow: Atsuko Chiba, Zanois, Caving, Ponder, Patrick Evans Derryfield: Sundogs/Chad LaMarsh Band Foundry: Brad Myrick Fratello’s: Rick Watson KC’s Rib Shack: Gardner Berry Murphy’s: Tom Emerson/Ellis Falls Penuche’s Music Hall: Souled Out Show Band Shaskeen: Never Fade Away Strange Brew: Erik “Fingers Ray” Gustafson Whiskey’s 20: DJ Hizzy/Shawn White Wild Rover: Color & Friends Meredith Giuseppe’s: Putnam/Pirrozzoli Guitar Duo

Peterborough Harlow’s: Bunny’s a Swine/ Rick Rude La Mia Casa: Lock, Stock, & Heavy Rock Portsmouth British Beer: Chris White Trio Dolphin Striker: Good Lord The Lifting Hilton Garden: Cormac McCarthy Latchkey: Groove Street Band Martingale: Jody & Rob Portsmouth Book & Bar: Abrielle Scharff Portsmouth Gaslight: Max Sullivan Trio/k Stolen Mojo /DJ Koko/Austin Pratt/Rick Watson Red Door: Audio Prophecy Ri Ra: Amanda McCarthy Band Rudi’s: Will Ogumundson Thirsty Moose: Dom Colizzi + Dylan Brann Seabrook Chop Shop: Leaving Eden West Lebanon Salt Hill Pub: Brian Warren Sunday, June 11 Ashland Common Man: Chris White Solo Acoustic

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TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS

To: Wilson Rodriguez formly of and now parts unknown Case Number: 659-2016-TR-00038 659-2015-JV-00095; Initial Hearing Terminate Parental Rights

A petition to terminate parental rights over your minor child(ren) has been filed in this Court. You are herby cited to appear at a Court to show cause why the same should not be granted. Date: August 01, 2017 Courtroom 6 -9th Circuit Court- Nashua 30 Spring Street, Nashua, NH Time: 9:30am - Time Alloted: 30 Minutes A written appearance must be filed with this Court on or before the date of the hearing, or the respondent may personally appear on the date of hearing or be defaulted. CAUTION You should respond immediately to this notice to prepare for trial and because important hearings will take place prior to trial. If you fail to appear personally or in writing, you will waive your right to a hearing and you parental rights may be terminated at the above hearing.

IMPORTANT RIGHTS OF PARENTS

THIS PETITION IS TO DETERMINE WHETHER OR NOT YOUR PARENTAL RIGHTS OVER YOUR CHILD(REN) SHALL BE TERMINATED. TERMINATION OF THE PARENT/ CHILD RELATIONSHIP MEANS THE TERMINATION SHALL DIVEST YOU OF ALL LEGAL RIGHTS, PRIVILEGES, DUTIES AND OBLIGATIONS, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE LOSS OF ALL RIGHTS TO CUSTODY. VISITATION AND COMMUNICATION WITH YOUR CHILD(REN). IF TERMINATION IS GRANTED, YOU WILL RECEIVE NO NOTICE OF FUTURE LEGAL PROCEEDINGS CONCERNING YOUR CHILD(REN).

You are hereby notified that you have a right to be represented by an attorney. You also have the right to oppose the proceedings, to attend the hearing and to present evidence. If you desire an attorney, you may notify this Court within ten (10) days of receiving this notice and upon a finding of indigency, the Court will appoint an attorney without cost to you. If you enter an appearance, notice of any future hearings regarding this child(ren) will be by the first class mail to you, your attorney and all other interested parties not less than ten (10) days prior to any scheduled hearing. Additional information may be obtained from the Family Division Court identified in the heading of this Order of Notice. If you will need an interpreter or other accommodations for this hearing, please contact the court immediately. Please be advised (and/or advise clients, witnesses, and others) that it is a Class B felony to carry a firearm or other deadly weapon as defined in RSA 625.11, V in a courtroom or area used by a court.

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114507

HELP WANTED We are GROWING at Granite State Independent Living and looking for caring and compassionate people who have personal care experience to assist our physically disabled consumers in their homes. Various shifts available and will train the right people. $10.25 per hour. Please go to www.gsil. org, click on Careers, and scroll to Home Care Attendants (Statewide) and click on the Pre-Screen Application.

HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 57


GENUINE, PERSONAL MATCHMAKING Let us help you find your soulmate!

Bedford Copper Door: Tinderbox Concord Hermanos: State Street Combo

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Hanover Skinny Pancake: Pickin’ Party with Dave Clark Hudson River’s Pub: Acoustic Jam Laconia Whiskey Barrel: Bike Week Tattoo Cowboys + Eric Grant

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Manchester British Beer: Quincy Medaglia Bungalow: Carnivora / Winter’s Burden/Light It Up/All Quiet Ire/Whispers of Andromeda/ Don’t Blow It Derryfield: Chad LaMarsh KC’s Rib Shack: Ted Solovicos Murphy’s Taproom: Justine Bethune/Peter Fogarty Penuche’s Music Hall: Reggae Shaskeen: Rap, Industry night

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America’s Got Talent Las Vegas Headliners

Milford Union Coffee: Phil & Will Nashua Agave Azul: DJ Rich Pig Tale: Cormac McCarthy Riverwalk Cafe: Itchy Feet

THE NEW ENGLAND TOUR

Newbury Salt hill Pub: Chris Powers

FRIDAY, JUNE 9

Newmarket Stone Church: Bureaux Cats

Veteran’s Park

Manchester, NH

SATURDAY & SUNDAY JUNE 10 & 11

Bluegrass

North Hampton Barley House: Great Bay Sailor Portsmouth British Beer: Brad Myrick Dolphin Striker: Dave Gerard Portsmouth Gaslight: Brad Bosse/Bolt Hill Bluegrass Band Ri Ra: Irish Session

Flying Monkey

Plymouth, NH

Seabrook Chop Shop: Kim & Mike/ Donny plays Johnny Cash

Monday, June 12 Concord Hermanos: State Street Combo Hanover Canoe: Marko The Magician Salt hill Pub: Hootenanny Manchester Bungalow: Visceral Disgorge/ Seeker/Conforza/The Waking Life/The Last King Central Ale: Jonny Friday Duo Derryfield: Austin Pratt Fratello’s: Rob Wolfe or Phil Jacques Murphy’s: Sam Robbins

Newmarket Stone Church: Bluegrass Jam North Hampton Barley House: Irish Session Peterborough Harlow’s: Celtic Music Jam Portsmouth Dolphin Striker: Dana Brearley Press Room: Jazz Jam w/ Larry Garland & Friends Seabrook Chop Shop: Bare Bones

Meredith Giuseppe’s: Lou Porrazzo

Wednesday, June 14 Bedford T-Bones: Paul Luff

Merrimack Homestead: Chris Cavanaugh

Concord Hermanos: Paul Heckel

Nashua Fratello’s: Triana Wilson

Dublin DelRossi’s: Celtic, old timey jam

Newmarket Stone Church: Stormy Mondays: Wild Eagle Blues Band

Gilford Patrick’s: Cody James - Ladies Night

Portsmouth Dolphin Striker: Old School Ri Ra: Oran Mor

Hanover Skinny Pancake: Bow Thayer

Tuesday, June 13 Concord Hermanos: Mike Stockbridge Dover Fury’s Publick House: Tim Theriault and Friends Sonny’s: Soggy Po’ Boys Gilford Patrick’s: Paul Luff hosts Hampton Wally’s Pub: Rob Benton Laconia Whiskey Barrel: Gone By Sunrise Manchester Bungalow: Ghost Key, Young Graves, Funeral Attire, Anyone Anyway, Crafter & Search Derryfield: Paul Lussier Fratello’s: Ted Solovicos Murphy’s: Joe Sambo Strange Brew: Todd Trusty Whiskey’s 20: Sammy Smoove & DJ Gera Meredith Giuseppe’s: Michael Bourgeois Merrimack Homestead: Clint Lapointe Nashua Fratello’s: Amanda Cote

Hillsborough Turismo: Blues Jam, Jerry Paquette & Runaway Bluesmen Laconia Whiskey Barrel: Rory Scott Londonderry Coach Stop: Karen Grenier Manchester Derryfield: Sam Robbins Fratello’s: Phil Jacques Murphy’s: Austin Pratt Meredith Giuseppe’s: Paul Warnick Merrimack Homestead: Mark Huzar Nashua Country Tavern: Heartstrings Fratello’s: Kelise Hinds Plaistow Racks: DJ Sensations Portsmouth Dolphin Striker: Jon Plaza Ri Ra: Erin’s Guild Rochester Lilac City Grille: Tim Theriault - Ladies Night Seabrook Chop Shop: Guitar-a-oke & Cocktails

FOR TICKETS & INFORMATION GO TO www .RECYCLEDPERCUSSIONBAND. com HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 58

115274

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


NITE CONCERTS Rochester Opera House 31 Wakefield St., Rochester 335-1992, rochesteroperahouse.com SNHU Arena 555 Elm St., Manchester 644-5000, snhuarena.com Stockbridge Theatre Pinkerton Academy, Route 28, Derry 437-5210, stockbridgetheatre.com Tupelo Music Hall 2 Young Road, Londonderry 437-5100, tupelohall.com

Tab Benoit Thursday, June 8, 8 p.m. Flying Monkey Gaelic Storm Friday, June 9, 8 p.m. Flying Monkey Everclear w/ Vertical Horizon and Fastball Saturday, June 10, 7 p.m. Casino Ballroom Another Tequila Sunrise: Tribute to the Eagles Saturday, June 10, 8 p.m. Colonial Theatre Recycled Percussion Saturday, June 10, 8 p.m. Flying Monkey Strafford Wind Symphony Saturday, June 10, 8 p.m. Rochester Opera House Albert Cummings Saturday, June 10, 8 p.m. Tupelo Derry America Sunday, June 11, 7 p.m. Cap Center Recycled Percussion Monday, June 12, 8 p.m. Flying Monkey An Evening with Diana Krall Wednesday, June 14, 7:30 p.m. Music Hall

Joan Osborne w/ Amber Rubarth Thursday, June 15, 8 p.m. Tupelo Derry Four Voices - Joan Baez, Mary Chapin Carpenter & Indigo Girls Friday, June 16, 7 p.m. Bank of NH Pavilion Michael Franti & Spearhead Friday, June 16, 7:30 p.m. Boarding House Park Josh Ritter w/ Amber Rubarth Friday, June 16, 8 p.m. Tupelo Derry Bryan Adams Saturday, June 17, 8 p.m. Bank of NH Pavilion Vince Gill Saturday, June 17, 7:30 p.m. Boarding House Park Mike Zito Saturday, June 17, 8 p.m. Tupelo Derry Barenaked Ladies Sunday, June 18, 7 p.m. Casino Ballroom New Breed Brass Band Sunday, June 18, 7:30 p.m. Music Hall Loft

Lake Street Drive with Suitcase Junket Sunday, June 18, 6 p.m. Prescott Park Blood, Sweat, and Tears featuring Bo Bice Sunday, June 18, 8 p.m. Tupelo Derry Third Eye Blind/Silversun Pickups Tuesday, June 20, 8 p.m. Bank of NH Pavilion Rocks Island Blues Band Tuesday, June 20, 7 p.m. Franklin Opera House Kurt Vile with Julie Bryne Wednesday, June 21, 6 p.m. Prescott Park Sam Hunt/Maren Morris Friday, June 23, 7 p.m. Bank of NH Pavilion Dark Desert Eagles Friday, June 23, 8 p.m. Tupelo Derry Eaglemania Saturday, June 24, 8 p.m. Flying Monkey BJ Barham Saturday, June 24, 8 p.m. Music Hall Loft

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536-2551, flyingmonkeynh.com Franklin Opera House 316 Central St., Franklin 934-1901, franklinoperahouse.org The Music Hall 28 Chestnut St., Portsmouth 436-2400, themusichall.org The Music Hall Loft 131 Congress St., Portsmouth 436-2400, themusichall.org Palace Theatre 80 Hanover St., Manchester 668-5588, palacetheatre.org

112619

Capitol Center for the Performing Arts & Spotlight Cafe 44 S. Main St., Concord 225-1111, ccanh.com The Colonial Theatre 95 Main St., Keene 352-2033, thecolonial.org Dana Humanities Center 100 Saint Anselm Drive, Manchester 641-7700, anselm.edu/dana The Flying Monkey 39 S. Main St., Plymouth

HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 59


JONESIN’ CROSSWORDS BY MATT JONES

“Snappy Comebacks” — get your return on investment 16 Marriage starter 17 Gloss over, vocally 18 Grab a belief? 20 Pizza ___ (2015 meme) 21 Disturbance 23 Low tattoo spot

24 Bar tests? 26 Holes in Swiss cheese 27 “M*A*S*H” character’s cutesy Disney Channel series? 31 Four-award initialism 32 Charmed 36 The whole thing 37 Airwaves regulatory gp. 40 Planetarium depiction 41 Call for Lionel Messi 42 Northern California draw 45 One of four on a diamond 46 Brothel owner on a pogo stick? 50 Word in multiple “Star Wars” titles 53 Neighbor of Morocco 54 Acid in proteins, informally 56 ___ District (Lima, Peru beach resort area)

6/1

27 Make a mad dash 28 Give creepy looks to 29 Tattled 30 “Snatched” star Schumer 33 Word before kill or rage 34 “Let It Go” singer 35 Consider 37 “Learn to Fly” band ___ Fighters 38 Barry Manilow’s club 39 Increasingly infrequent dashboard option 43 Full of complaints Down 44 Political placards in your yard, e.g. 1 Lyft competitor, in most places 2 Bauhaus song “___ Lugosi’s Dead” 45 Sheep’s sound 47 Made out 3 “Don’t bet ___!” 48 Miracle-___ (garden brand) 4 ___ Soundsystem 49 “Goodbye Pork Pie Hat” bassist 5 Stanley Cup org. 6 Sailors’ uprising Charles 7 “A Little Respect” synthpop band 50 Brand name in the smoothie world 8 They get greased up before a birthday 51 Server piece 9 A.L. Central team, on scoreboards 52 Morose song 10 Schnauzer in Dashiell Hammett 55 Gumbo veggie books 57 Uninspired 11 Swear word? 58 B in Greek Philosophy? 12 “Hello” singer 59 Genesis setting 13 Completely, in slang (and feel free 61 DOE’s predecessor to chastise me if I ever use this word) 63 It comes after twelve 19 Calendario starter 22 Slick stuff ©2017 Jonesin’ Crosswords 24 Frequent chaser of its own tail (editor@jonesincrosswords.com) 25 Mt. Rushmore loc. 57 Maggie Simpson’s grandpa 60 Queen of paddled boats? 62 Injured by a bull 64 Ginormous 65 The first U.S. “Millionaire” host, to fans 66 Bring together 67 Part of IPA 68 Having lots of land 69 Ford Fusion variety

88 Market St. Manchester 603.666.4292| Hours: 4pm-1am Everyday HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 60

115191

Across 1 Horseshoe-shaped fastener 6 Center of attraction, so to speak 11 Like some answers 14 Judge’s place 15 Kazakhstan range


All quotes are from Reflections: Life After learned to call each other and ask if, in truth, the White House, by Barbara Bush, born June they are attending. Many times they are not. 8, 1925. Everyone else is not doing it. Sagittarius (Nov. 22 – Dec. 21) Anyone Gemini (May 21 – June 20) I had not can start their own website and many have. cooked in twelve years, so it is not surpris- I have more people tell me something they’ve ing that my pasta was NOT too good. In fact, heard, and I’ll say, “How interesting. That’s it was dreadful. George W. was polite, but his not true.” Then they’ll tell me they saw it on dad said, “I like my pasta rare.” Have your the Internet. … It is all about being accountpasta the way you like it. able. Sadly, many writers are not. Hold your Cancer (June 21 – July 22) My good sources accountable. friend and neighbor, Mildred Kerr, and I Capricorn (Dec. 22 – Jan. 19) We went went to Luby’s cafeteria for lunch. A perfect- to a dinner one night and I sat at the “I don’t ly strange, attractive woman came over, put know” and “What did you say?” end of the her face in mine, and said, “Aren’t you some- table. You’ve got to hold up your end of the body? I know I know you.” She never took conversation. a breath and continued, “Are you a teacher? Aquarius (Jan. 20 – Feb. 18) We did some Have you waited on me in a store? Didn’t you campaigning with Jeb, separately and together. Jeb is an inspired speaker and, in truth, is help me at Sears? Everybody is somebody. Leo (July 23 – Aug. 22) Vince Gill is a the best in the family — but don’t tell the others really fine golfer. Many entertainers take up I said this. Everybody’s got their own skills. golf because they have all day in strange Pisces (Feb. 19 – March 20) For years towns to wait around for their evening perfor- I struggled through books that I didn’t like mances. Good time to pick up a new hobby? very much. For every good book I read, I Virgo (Aug. 23 – Sept. 22) Half our fam- am ashamed to say I read some awful ones. ily were Astros fans … and half were Ranger Finally, I have matured, and if I don’t like it fans because of Uncle George. … My dream after 100 pages, I put it away. There are so was that the Astros and the Rangers would many books that I want to read. Stick with the be in a World Series, and then I couldn’t lose. good ones. Aries (March 21 – April 19) … I went to Get ready for some friendly competition. Libra (Sept. 23 – Oct. 22) Back during nearby Portland to shop for bedspreads and a the 1988 election, I had told George that if he few things we needed to make our guesthouse didn’t become president, not to worry, there a little more comfortable. I also went to a trewere ten things I really wanted to do and mendous bookstore to stock up for reading for couldn’t do if he were president. One was for the Greek cruise we were about to take…. We our springer spaniel, Millie to have puppies. then went on to Sam’s Club, a great, mind-bog“Easy,” he said, and Millie did have six pups gling store. Your mind is going to be boggled. Taurus (April 20 – May 20) ...I took to while we were in the White House. Having swimming a mile a day which I had done at puppies is never easy. Scorpio (Oct. 23 – Nov. 21) When the the White House. … I am slowing down. I call comes about a big first lady event, and used to swim a mile in forty minutes and now you are told that “all the other first ladies it takes me an hour. It’s not the speed, it’s the are attending and you must come,” we have quality of the work. By Dave Green

5

9

6

2

4

1 8 8

3 4 6 1 2

4 5 4 8 Difficulty Level

1

7

5

9 6

9 2 6/08

2017 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

7

SU DO KU 6/1 2 1 6 7 5 8 9 4 3

Difficulty Level

8 4 3 2 9 1 6 5 7

4 3 5 1 8 6 7 9 2

9 2 1 5 4 7 3 8 6

6 7 8 9 2 3 5 1 4

Custom framing your Diploma, Graduation Photos, Caps, Tassels, Athletic Achievements, School Memories, Awards & More

Declaration of Principles

In Spiritualism there is no dogma or creed, but we use this Declaration of Principles to explain what we are aspiring to spiritually, and what the underlying beliefs are that Spiritualists share.

775 Canal St., Manchester

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• We believe in Infinite Intelligence • We believe that the phenomena of nature, both physical and spiritual, are the expression of Infinite Intelligence. • We believe that a correct understanding of such expression and living in accordance therewith, constitute true religion. • We affirm that the existence and personal identity of the individual continue after the change called death. • We affirm that communication with the so-called dead is a fact, scientifically proven by the phenomenon of Spiritualism. • We believe that the highest morality is contained in the Golden Rule: “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.” • We affirm the moral responsibility of individuals and that we make our own happiness or unhappiness as we obey or disobey Nature’s physical and spiritual laws. • We affirm that the doorway to reformation is never closed against any soul here or hereafter. • We affirm that the precepts of Prophecy and Healing are Divine attributes proven through Mediumship

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HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 61


NEWS OF THE WEIRD BY CHUCK SHEPHERD

Can’t possibly be true

LowellSummerMusic.Org No Ticket Fees

Saturday, June 10

TROMBONE SHORTY & ORLEANS AVENUE Friday, June 16

MICHAEL FRANTI & SPEARHEAD Saturday, June 17

VINCE GILL Friday, July 7

RANDY NEWMAN Sunday, July 9

MELISSA ETHERIDGE Friday, July 14

THE O’CONNOR BAND with MARK O’CONNOR Friday, July 21

GRAHAM NASH Saturday, July 22

RYAN MONTBLEAU Fri-Sun, July 28-30

LOWELL FOLK FESTIVAL Friday, August 4

AMOS LEE Sunday, August 6

DAWES Saturday, August 12

LYLE LOVETT & HIS LARGE BAND

Leading economic indicators

Friday, August 18

BUDDY GUY Saturday, August 19

DAVID GRISMAN SEXTET Sunday, August 20

STEPHEN STILLS & JUDY COLLINS Saturday, August 26

CLASSIC ALBUMS LIVE: SGT. PEPPER Thursday, August 31

BRUCE HORNSBY Friday, September 1

ROSANNE CASH

(1) Andrew Bogut, signed as a free agent by the NBA’s Cleveland Cavaliers in March and expected to be a key player in the team’s quest to defend its league championship, checked into his first game and played 58 seconds before crashing into a bench and breaking his leg. For that 58 seconds, the Cavs owe Bogut $383,000. (2) Jose Calderon signed as a free agent with the Golden State Warriors in March, but the NBA-leading Warriors changed their mind (for unforeseen reasons) two hours after the deal and released Calderon. For his 119 minutes as a Warrior (6:06 p.m. to 8:05 p.m.), Calderon was paid $415,000.

Police report

Art Activities, Natural Snacks, Stage Show, Trolley

Wednesdays & Thursdays July 5, 6, 12, 13, 19, 20, August 2, 3, 9, 10

114256

HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 62

• The inexplicable ease with which foreign hackers attack U.S. computers and security systems is finally grabbing the attention of officials. In a March Washington Post report, a technology expert from Britain’s King’s College London told a reporter of his astonishment to realize that the “security chips” on Congressional staff members’ identification badges are fake: The badge “doesn’t actually have a proper chip,” he said. “It has a picture of a chip.” Apparently, he added, “It’s (there) only to prevent chip envy.” • Suzette Welton has been in prison in Alaska for 17 years based almost solely on now-debunked forensic evidence, but the state’s lack of a clemency process means she cannot challenge her life sentence unless she proves “complete” innocence. Evidence that the fire that killed her son was “arson” was based not on science but on widely believed (but wrong) folklore on how intentional fires burn differently than accidental ones. (The bogus arson “trademarks” are similar to those used to convict Texan Cameron Todd Willingham, who suffered an even worse fate than Welton’s: Willingham was executed for his “arson” in 2004.) • Reverence for the lineage of asparagus continues in epic yearly Anglican church festivities in Worcester, England, where in April celebrants obtained a special blessing for the vegetable by local priests as a costumed asparagus pranced through the street praising the stalks as representing “the generosity of God.” Critics (including clergy from other parishes) likened the parades to a Monty Python sketch, and “an infantile pantomime,” with one pleading plaintively, “Really, for (God’s) sake,” can’t the Church of England offer “more dignified” worship?

• In May, as Taunton, Massachusetts, police were about to arrest Amy Rebello-McCarthy, 39, for DUI after she left the road and crashed through several mailboxes (with the crash causing all of her tires to deflate), she, laughing, told officers there was one other thing:

She had a bearded dragon in her bra (where it was riding while she drove). The lizard was turned over to animal control. • Felicia Nevins complained to reporters in May that the Pasco County (Florida) Sheriff’s Office had improperly drawn attention to her on a matter of a purely personal nature that she had called for help, concerned that the sperm she was storing for in-vitro fertilization (kept under liquid nitrogen in a thermos) might explode. Deputies had placed the details (but not her name) on the office’s Facebook page, but the Tampa Bay Times deduced her name from public sources.

Bright ideas

Skills: (1) In May, the British tribunal dealing with student cheating rejected the appeal of a law student who was caught taking an in-class exam with her textbook open (permitted) but containing handwritten notes in the margins not permitted, but written in invisible ink legible via the UV light on her pen. (2) On testing day in March for Romania’s 14- and 15-year-olds, administrators of the country’s popular DEX online dictionary, acting on suspicion, changed the definitions of two words likely to be improperly looked up by cheaters during the exam. “(H)undreds” of school searches for the words took place that morning, but administrators were still mulling an appropriate punishment for the cheaters (who were, of course, easily identified by their misapplication of the suspect words).

Awesome!

• India’s Supreme Court approved an order recently that forced bars and liquor stores to close down if they were located less than 500 meters (1,640 feet) from state or national

highways. India Times reported in April that the Aishwarya Bar in North Paravoor, Kerala, is still (legally) operating at its old location even though it is clearly within the 500-meter restricted area. The owner explained that since he owns the land behind the bar, too, he had constructed a “serpentine” wooden maze in back and front that requires any entering customer to take the equivalent number of steps it would take to walk 500 meters. (A tax office official accepted the arrangement.) • Canadian Anton Pilipa, 39, who suffers from schizophrenia, was discovered safe in the Amazon rainforest state of Rondonia, Brazil, in November 2016, which was the first sighting of him since his disappearance in March 2012. He was unable to communicate well and had no ID or money, but his family has actively been searching for him and believe the only way he could have traveled from the family home in Scarborough, Ontario, to Brazil (6,300 miles) was by hitchhiking or walking. (Bonus: The area in which he was found is noted for alligators and snakes.)

A News of the Weird classic

Secrets of Highly Successful Business Owners: When Michelle Esquenazi was asked by a New York Post reporter in September (2013) why her all-female crew of licensed bounty hunters (Empire Bail Bonds of New York) is so successful at tricking bail-jumpers into the open, she offered a euphemism for a female body part. “It’s timeless,” she counseled. “Of course he’s going to open his door for a nice piece of (deleted).” “The thing about defendants is no matter who they are (of whatever color), they’re all dumb. Every single last one of them is stupid.” Visit weirduniverse.net.


It’s All About the Music

EXPERIENCE DINNER and a show!

MUSIC HALL

NIGHT OF COMEDY

TOTO

Frank Santorelli & Chris Pennie

Fri., June 9

TAB BENOIT - Thurs, June 8 Acclaimed Louisiana Bluesman

LOS LONELY BOYS - Thurs, July 13 American Chicano Rock Trio

Theatre Seating

Table Seating

Sat., June 10

BARRY GOUDREAU’S ENGINE ROOM

Fri., June 30

8:00 p.m. $20-$25

GAELIC STORM - Fri, June 9 THE SUBDUDES - Fri, July 14 High-Energy Celtic Rock

New Orleans Roots Rockers

8:00 p.m. $28-$40

Table Seating

JOAN OSBORNE Opener: Amber Rubarth

Theatre Seating

NIGHT OF COMEDY Orlando Baxter & Drew Dunn

Sat., July 1

Thurs., June 15

RECYCLED PERCUSSION - June 10 & 11 Three Shows • NH’s Own Junk Rockers

8:00 p.m. $18

8:00 p.m. $45-$55

LISA LOEB - Sat, July 15

GRAMMY-Nominated Singer-Songwriter

Table Seating

Table Seating

JOSH RITTER

Opener: Amber Rubarth

MARC COHN

Fri., July 7

Fri., June 16

EAGLEMANIA - Sat, June 24 World’s Greatest Eagles Tribute Band

JIM MESSINA - Fri, July 21 Country-Folk-Rock Legend

MIKE ZITO

Opener: Gina Sicilia

Films & Looking Ahead

TALKING DREADS - Sat, July 8

Reggae-Caribbean Tribute to Talking Heads

GRAHAM NASH - Wed, July 12 Two Time Rock & Roll Hall of Famer

6/14, 15, 16, 17, 18 - “The Wa ll” 7/23 - Booker T Jones 7/27 - Clint Black 7/28 - Mary Black 8/4 - 7th Anniversary Bash w/Entra 8/19 - Medium Cindy Kaza in 8/24 - Mayer Kirby Mayer Aco ustic Group 8/25 - Bacon Brothers 8/26 - The Machine Perform s Pink Floyd 9/15/17 - John Waite 9/21/17 - John Popper of Blu es Traveler 9/23 - Ten Years After 9/28/17 - UFO & SAXON

8:00 p.m. $45-$65

8:00 p.m. $35-$55

Theatre Seating

Theatre Seating

JOHN CAFFERTY & THE BEAVER BROWN BAND Opener: Dan Lawson

Sat., July 8

Sat., June 17

8:00 p.m. $35-$55

8:00 p.m. $25-$30

Theatre Seating

Table Seating

JOHNNY A

Sat., June 24

RICKY SKAGGS & KENTUCKY THUNDER

Wed., July 12

8:00 p.m. $30-$35

8:00 p.m. $45-$60

Table Seating

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HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 63


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• Hair becomes thicker and less dry • Improved sleep • Women, in addition, also benefit from relief of hot flashes, reduced vaginal dryness, increased bone density, and fewer headaches

Southern New Hampshire’s Premier Medispa since 2006

603-894-0070 | Check out our website for services, pricing, before and after images, and videos! RenewMediSpa.com The Windham Towne Shoppes 29 Indian Rock Rd. - Route 111, Windham, NH (2 miles from exit 3 off I93)

HIPPO | JUNE 8 - 14, 2017 | PAGE 64


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