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Our suspicions have been confirmed: The most recent iteration of health care reform did not have enough votes to pass. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell declared that Republicans were giving up on the proposed replacement as enough members of the party came out against the effort to warrant a no vote on the bill. This further demonstrates the importance of crafting bipartisan legislation to find a viable and sustainable solution. There are few who argue about the high cost of health care in this country. Study after study has placed medical expenses as the top reason for declaring bankruptcy in the United States, outranking job loss and credit card debt. This is a staggering statistic and one that should not exist in this nation. While our lawmakers are busy trying to craft an acceptable law, we as consumers can play a role in reducing costs. We should work harder to educate ourselves on the costs and outcomes of using the system in its current model. Perhaps that means going to the innetwork specialist in Manchester rather than traveling to Boston for out-of-network care. One of the more difficult but vitally important responsibilities we can assume is putting in place end-of-life directives. Research suggests that 5 percent of patients account for 50 percent of the costs in our health care system and lack of clarity around palliative care plays a large part in that statistic. These conversations and documents help identify what kind of care we want if our health needs change. Additionally, they allow us to honor the wishes of our loved ones in their most vulnerable of times. Finally, we should put more emphasis on prevention in this nation. We spend 88 percent, or approximately $1.9 trillion, of our health care dollars on access to care but studies have shown it’s another factor that matters more. Data suggest that it’s health behaviors and social issues that are the largest factors of our health and well-being. Ironically, this is where we spend the least. The jury is still out on what model will be most effective to reduce costs while providing exceptional care. Will it mean a single-payer system? More power for the states to determine the best model for their residents? Medicaid block grants? Our elected officials may hold the final votes but we all have a role to play in this effort. Education, accountability and collaboration should be at the root of this work. This will, hopefully, lead us on a path to successful legislation and finding a solution to improving our current health care system. Allyson Ryder serves as the Associate Director at Leadership NH, and sits on several statewide nonprofit boards and committees. Her email is almryder@outlook.com.
OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 VOL 17 NO 40
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
ON THE COVER 12 READY-MADE VILLAGE Residential facilities and retail shops and services will co-exist at Woodmont Commons in Londonderry — one of several in-the-works “downtowns” being created in New Hampshire towns. We talked to people involved in this and other similar new developments — in Illustration by Tony Luongo. Hooksett, Bedford luongoart.com and Salem — about why they’re building brand new neighborhoods with that old-fashioned downtown feel. ALSO ON THE COVER, Warm up with a quintessential comfort food at a chili festival, p. 36. Milford’s festival is all about pumpkins, while Warner celebrates foliage season, p. 26. And for more fall fun, find an apple orchard or a pumpkin patch where you can pick a peck or grab a gourd, p. 38.
Staff Writers Angie Sykeny asykeny@hippopress.com, ext. 130 Ryan Lessard rlessard@hippopress.com, ext. 136 Matt Ingersoll mingersoll@hippopress.com, ext. 152 Ethan Hogan listings@hippopress.com, ext. 115
INSIDE THIS WEEK
Contributors Allison Willson Dudas, Jennifer Graham, Henry Homeyer, Dave Long, Lauren Mifsud, Stefanie Phillips, Eric W. Saeger, Michael Witthaus.
THIS WEEK 20
NEWS & NOTES 4 A look at flu season; making jet parts in N.H.; PLUS News in Brief. 8 Q&A 9 QUALITY OF LIFE INDEX 10 SPORTS
THE ARTS: 20 ART New exhibition at the Currier. Listings 22 THEATER Arts listings: arts@hippopress.com Inside/Outside listings: listings@hippopress.com Listings for events around town. Food & Drink listings: food@hippopress.com 24 CLASSICAL Music listings: music@hippopress.com “Dvořák New World.”
BUSINESS
Jeff Rapsis, Ext. 123 jrapsis@hippopress.com
INSIDE/OUTSIDE: 28 GARDENING GUY Henry Homeyer offers advice on your outdoors. 29 TREASURE HUNT There’s gold in your attic. 30 CAR TALK Automotive advice. 32 KIDDIE POOL Family fun events this weekend.
Production Katie DeRosa, Emma Contic, Kristen Lochhead, Haylie Zebrowski
CAREERS: 34 ON THE JOB What it’s like to be a...
Publisher Jody Reese, Ext. 121 jreese@hippopress.com Associate Publisher Dan Szczesny Associate Publisher
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.
FOOD: 36 FIRE IN THE FALL CHILI FESTIVAL Where to go appleand pumpkin-picking; In the Kitchen; Weekly Dish; Beer; From the Pantry. POP CULTURE: 46 REVIEWS CDs, books, TV and more. Amy Diaz is steeped in ‘70s (Battle of the Sexes), ‘80s (American Made) and early 1990s (Flatliners) nostalgia but still had to pay 2017 prices for popcorn. NITE: 52 BANDS, CLUBS, NIGHTLIFE Lewis Black; Nightlife, music & comedy listings and more. 53 ROCK AND ROLL CROSSWORD A puzzle for the music-lover. 54 MUSIC THIS WEEK Live music at your favorite bars and restaurants. ODDS & ENDS: 60 CROSSWORD 61 SIGNS OF LIFE 61 SUDOKU 62 NEWS OF THE WEIRD 62 THIS MODERN WORLD
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NEWS & NOTES
Court pauses deportations women suffering from PTSD, some for leaf-peeping, as well as updatAccording to press releases from Congressional delegates, a U.S. District Court for Massachusetts issued a one-month injunction on the deportation of nearly 60 undocumented Indonesian immigrants living in New Hampshire. In a statement, Sen. Jeanne Shaheen said she is “tremendously relieved” by the decision. “The court’s action today provides valuable time to continue making the case for why the Indonesian community should remain in New Hampshire,” Shaheen said. She added that these people have learned our language, found employment and raised families and are integral members of their community. She said it would be “unconscionable” to separate families and send these immigrants, many of whom are Christians, to a Muslim majority home country where they are at risk of religious persecution. The Indonesians had been ordered by Immigration and Customs Enforcement to leave this fall, some as early as late September. Sen. Maggie Hassan and Congresswoman Carol Shea-Porter also released statements praising the court order.
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of whom suffered gang rapes while on deployment, don’t feel safe taking the elevator or greeting other male veterans on their way in. The space reserved for women was also very small, according to the story.
Steve Norton
ed reports and photo opportunities. The most popular activities during the fall include scenic drives and outdoor recreation.
Fewer refugees
A decrease in refugees coming into the state resulting from a proposed refugee cap ordered by the Trump administration could exacerbate New Hampshire’s existing workforce shortage, NHPR reported. The White House’s new travel restrictions include a plan to lower the number of refugees allowed in the U.S. from 110,000 to 45,000. The state usually accepts about 200 new refugees each year. According to the story, Jeff Thielman of the International Institute of New England said a reduction in refugees could further strain workforce needs in the construction, service and transportation industries.
The longtime head of the New Hampshire Center for Public Policy Studies, a local think tank, has resigned from the organization and taken up a post at Elliot Hospital. According to NHCPPS, Norton stepped down at the end of August. He was the executive director of the group for 12 years. The decision to leave was his, according to board chair Eric Herr. The board is looking to hire an interim director for the nonprofit, whose mission is to enhance policy discussions vital to New Hampshire’s future. According to a press release from Elliot Hospital, Norton was appointed president of strategic planning and Blue Ribbon schools government relations. He began his According to a press release new job on Oct. 2. from the state Department of Education, U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos named four schools Next session State lawmakers are preparing in the state among the Blue Ribfor the next legislative session. The bon Schools, based on their high AP reported the re-authorization performance. The schools are the of the state’s Medicaid expansion Academy of Science and Design in program will be a central focus Nashua, Belmont Middle School, next year, according to House Nashua Catholic Regional Junior Minority Leader Steve Shurtleff, a High School and Riddle Brook Democrat. According to the story, School in Bedford. An award cerShurtleff thinks the program will emony in Washington, D.C., is be continued after a close vote, but scheduled for November. Republican Senate President Chuck Morse isn’t so sure. Republicans Indigenous peoples day The Town of Durham wants the will also be focused on building on business tax cuts passed in the last state to adopt a new holiday in lieu session, while Democrats want to of Columbus Day called Indigefocus on workforce training and allocating more liquor sale proceeds to substance abuse treatment.
State Department of Health and Human Services Commissioner Jeffrey Meyers said the Division of Children, Youth and Families is still struggling to hire the employees it needs to field child abuse calls and assess potential cases of abuse and neglect. The Concord Monitor reported the problem is driven by the sheer volume of calls the agency is getting. And hiring efforts have stalled despite increased funding from lawmakers. According to the recommendations in an independent review of the agency published last year, the agency needed an Fall tourism additional 35 employees to handle The New Hampshire Division of the caseloads. Travel and Tourism is projecting a record-breaking fall tourism season. According to a press release, Women vets Female veterans who had been the agency is expecting 9.8 million receiving care at the Manchester VA visitors during the fall, amounting Medical Center are asking for their to about $1.5 billion in spending own entrance and a more accessible during that time. That would be safe space for care, as the facili- a 4- to 5-percent increase of leafty rebuilds itself after catastrophic peepers and dollars over last fall. flood damage to the upper floors The agency has updated its fall folifrom a burst pipe. NHPR report- age tracker at VisitNH.gov, which ed a women’s clinic was located on includes a map and a sliding bar to the sixth floor of the building. But show the peak times and locations HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 4
The zoning board in Loudon has approved a three-day country music concert to take place at the New Hampshire Motor Speedway next August, the AP reported. Organizers expect the event will attract 20,000 visitors.
RECOVERED OWL
CONCORD
The New Hampshire Employment Security building in Concord is set to be sold Goffstown and converted into 109 apartments, the Concord Monitor reported. The seven-story building will also include some street-level retail and offices.
Hooksett
A jury has awarded $274 million in damages to three men in a defamation lawsuit over statements made on a local business’s digital billboards in Manchester. The Mortgage Specialists owner Michael Gill is liable for the damages. The plaintiff’s lawyer said it was the largest jury award in state history.
MANCHESTER
Bedford
Merrimack
Amherst
Authorities are investigating a small plane crash in Milford Nashua. WMUR reported the plane was attempting to land at the Nashua Airport runway but landed in grass, causing it to veer off into a culvert.
nous Peoples’ Day, NHPR reported. The town adopted the holiday itself last month. In a letter sent to Gov. Chris Sununu and lawmakers, town councilors asked state leaders to consider creating the holiday on the second Monday in October, saying it would “create a tribute to the people that assisted the colonists with the knowledge and understanding of how to survive in an unfamiliar new land.”
An injured owl discovered by truckers in New Hampshire last spring has been rehabilitated and was released back into the wild on Sept. 30. The AP reported the owl was struck by the truck while it was traveling between Massachusetts and New Hampshire and it was ensnared between the cabin and the trailer. With the help of New Hampshire Fish and Game, the truckers gently removed the bird, wrapped it in a blanket, placed it in a box and turned it over to rehabilitators based in Epping. The truckers had to wear thick gloves to protect against the strong talons. The bird suffered broken wings and head trauma. It was released in Wilmington, Massachusetts, where the incident took place.
Derry
Londonderry
NASHUA
Overdoses
There have been more than 100 suspected overdoses in Manchester in the month of September, which sets a new monthly record for the city, WMUR reported. American Medical Response counted 105 cases for the month. There were also 10 drug-related deaths last month. That’s the most fatalities in a single month since April 2016.
INDIVIDUAL HEALTHCARE MARKET SHOPPERS
According to an analyst hired by the state to study insurance market trends, premiums for unsubsidized coverage in the individual market will experience an average increase of 52 percent in 2018. The report, prepared by Bela Gorman of Gorman Actuarial for the New Hampshire Premium Assistance Program Commission, found that people who qualify for subsidized coverage will see no change or possibly a decrease in their rates. But those who do not get insurance from employers or discounted by the government could see their prices spike significantly. According to the report, there are about 25,100 people in that market in New Hampshire. Of those, 15,300 are getting insurance through the Healthcare.gov exchange, while 8,900 do not.
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Elliot at River’s Edge | 185 Queen City Avenue | Manchester, NH 0310 Elliot Medical Center at Londonderry | 40 Buttrick Road | Londonderry, NH 03053 Phone: 603-668-3067 | elliothospital.org
117095 HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 5
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Last year’s flu season was one of the worst on record for New Hampshire in terms of mortality, and while it’s too early to say with certainty, some early signs indicate this season might be similar in its severity.
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Deadly strains
Influenza season runs from October through May and is most active from December through February or March. The peak of the season is in January or early February. According to data from the state Department of Health and Human Services on the 2016-2017 season, there were 47 influenzarelated deaths. Of those, 45 were adults and two were children. Beth Daly, chief of the Bureau of Infectious Disease Control, said that was one of the deadliest seasons on record, and it was likely attributable to the strain of influenza that circulated. “Last year, influenza A H3 was the predominant strain that circulated and, when that particular strain circulates, we typically do have more severe influenza seasons,” Daly said. Still, the death reporting process isn’t perfect, she said. Public health officials rely heavily on death certificates that mention influenza. And they combine influenza with pneumonia to create a fuller picture of the problem. “Typically as many as 10 percent of all deaths during the winter are due to pneumonia or influenza in a given week,” Daly said. In a typical year, Daly said influenza can be accounted for about 10 to 20 deaths. But there
have been a number of years where deaths reached the 40s, all of which were driven by the A H3 strain. That strain was predominant in the 2012-2013 and 2014-2015 seasons as well. Nationally, health officials do their best to target the likely strains in vaccines that include an array of viruses. One case of influenza has been detected so far in New Hampshire, according to Daly. “So far we only have one detection and it is an A H3, but that doesn’t mean anything because it’s only one,” Daly said. “Obviously, we’re going to keep our eye closely on that and we’ll know better once we get more specimens in our laboratory as people start to test positive for it.” She said officials will have a clearer picture of the predominant strains around December.
Prevention
The best way to protect yourself and those around you from infection is to get vaccinated, and the earlier, the better. “Now is a great time for people to get vaccinated,” Daly said. Vaccines are recommended for everyone 6 months or older, and especially people from vulnerable populations such as the elderly, children and folks with immune system deficiencies or conditions like asthma, which would be exacerbated by flu symptoms. For those healthy young adults who may think the vaccine isn’t for them, Daly said the disease can still prove fatal to healthy adults. At the least, it can be debilitating and hospitalization can force people to lose work. It’s also prudent to get vaccinated so you don’t transfer the illness to others who are more vulnerable, she said.
F-35 jet
Joint strike fighter is a joint effort in N.H. By Ryan Lessard
news@hippopress.com
The F-35 Lightning II is lauded by defense contractors and lawmakers alike as the future of air defense and a “force multiplier” that increases the effectiveness of the U.S. military. And many of its components are made in New Hampshire, adding jobs and injecting the local economy with hundreds of millions of dollars.
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HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 6
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The jet
The plane descends from a Lockheed Martin design that won the government contract for the Joint Strike Fighter program in 2002. It’s pointed nose resembles a curved loon bill beneath a
Sen. Maggie Hassan. Photo by Ryan Lessard.
long cockpit canopy and nestled between two angular jet intakes. Alongside its sleek, flat hull are two primary wings, two rear wings and two dorsal fins above the rear engine.
According to Bob Rubino, the deputy director of the F-35 program at Lockheed and a former F-18 pilot, the new jet represents the fifth generation of fighter jets in the U.S. military, replacing the F-16, F-18 and the AV-8B Harrier. He said it is characterized by three main capabilities. It will have significant firepower, able to load up to 22,000 pounds of weaponry (compared to the max of 5,000 pounds on an F-16). Rubino calls it “beast mode.” It also has a stealth feature. “It doesn’t make you invisible but it gets you awful close,” Rubino said. And thirdly, it will have enhanced sensors and avionics that network with ground troops and ships at sea to vastly improve a pilot’s situational awareness and information sharing. “It’s a lot like what it was for a flip phone versus a smartphone today,” Rubino said. So far, there are about 40 aircraft active today between 12 bases for both the Air Force and Marine Corps. Lockheed plans to get the Navy its first shipment of jets within the next year or so.
Gentex
A global contractor with a plant in Manchester called Gentex is making the helmet for the pilots and ground crew, including some of the various components within, such as ear protection, laser eye protection, communications and the oxygen mask. The company has 900 employees worldwide, including about 80 in Manchester. Of that, Vice President of Aircrew Systems Robert McCay said, the Queen City plant has about 10 to 15 employees working directly on the F-35 project, which has created about 30 indirect jobs from its supply base. Since the project’s inception in 2002, the Manchester facility has been making the helmet microphones, which get integrated into the oxygen mask at another location, according to McCay. But for the past two and a half years, the plant has been working on making the noise reduction system, which is important because of how loud the engines get. “Our active noise reduction headset embedded in the air crew helmet and our stand-alone digital active noise reduction triple hearing production headset will provide the most advanced hearing protection available, while allowing clear communications in extreme noise fields that the F-35 has to perform in,” McCay said in a speech at a recent event promoting the project at its Manchester location. Thus far, he said, Lockheed has been making the jets at a rate of roughly 50 per year, but that will increase soon. “For us that [amounts] to almost 500 headsets … a year for the aircrew,” McCay said.
Local economy
Temco in Manchester makes the plane’s flare magazines and antenna arrays, according to Temco president Norman Gagne. Rubino said the project has created about 140,000 direct and indirect jobs in the country, and in New Hampshire about 3,500 direct and indirect jobs between about 55 firms. About half of those are small businesses, he said, and of those jobs, about 1,000 are for people working directly on the project. All that production, he said, amounts to an injection of about $500 million into the local economy. And as production ramps up in the coming years, job creation and economic impact are expected to take off in the state. Rubino said they’ll be finishing production of 66 planes this year, which is considered low-rate production for this project, but higher than previous generation jets. Next year, 90 planes will be delivered, and by 2020, they’ll make more than 150, he said. While the additional planes won’t amount to a one-for-one increase in jobs, Rubino does anticipate a significant increase. According to Rubino, each plane will cost between $80 million and $85 million over the life of the project, which is on par with the cost of fourth-generation planes.
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History
Many critics of the F-35 program have called it an expensive boondoggle that will cost the U.S. about $1.5 trillion until it’s phased out in 2070, according to CNBC. The project is about six years behind schedule. According to the Medium.com defense blog “War is Boring,” a test pilot said the jet is less maneuverable than the F-16, making it potentially weaker in a dogfight. According to a report by CNN, at one point, the Air Force had planned to replace the popular A-10 Warthog with the F-35, something experts called a bad idea since the A-10’s mission of close air support for ground troops couldn’t be performed by the faster, newer jet. But pushback from military rank-and-file and from top Washington leaders like Arizona Sen. John McCain and New Hampshire’s former Sen. Kelly Ayotte appear to have won the day. Earlier this year the Air Force announced it would continue the A-10 program indefinitely into the future. Despite first entering the air in the mid-1970s, it’s proven proficient at its mission. “What we’ve heard from our warriors on the ground is how important the A-10 is in these close situations when our troops are pinned down,” Sen. Maggie Hassan said at the Gentex event. “So the Air Force has indicated that they do plan to continue to use the A-10 because of that very specific capability it has, but at the same time we know that the F-35 is going to be a force multiplier because it will have so many different capabilities, one of them being stealth, which is so critically important right now.”
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NEWS & NOTES Q&A
Pumpkins, Apples & Cider Donuts Closing for the season October 15th
Juvenile race relations
The man who gets the call when racist incidents arise Andrew Smith is a Disproportionate Minority Contact Coordinator who works with the state’s Police Academy and the Manchester School District on a number of initiatives aimed at preventing racial disparities in the criminal justice system and teaching kids and adults about the realities of minority discrimination. Recently, he was called in to provide training at the Oyster River Cooperative School District following a couple of racist incidents between students.
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Can you describe your role as the Disproportionate Minority Contact Coordinator? Well, the Oyster River situation is not related to Disproportionate Minority Contact. Disproportionate Minority Contact addresses the over-representation of racial ethnic minorities in the juvenile justice system. So I work with police departments statewide. ... The reason I was referred to Oyster River is because some people that I was working with doing [DMC] work liked the approach, the understanding I have of the relationship between leadership, culture, diversity and the challenges that we’re facing locally and nationwide. … If you’re talking [DMC], the best way to describe our success here is with a program called The Mirror Project. … The program itself mirrors a program that we provide for police on understanding juveniles so that when they encounter them, they do the right thing that’s in the best interest of both the juveniles and the police. As we were doing one of those training programs, a police officer said, ‘You’re teaching us how to understand juveniles. Who’s teaching the juveniles how to understand us?’ That led to … The Mirror Project. That is a program led by police officers, and in Manchester, all of the eighthgraders for the last two years have taken this ... one-hour training program delivered by uniformed police officers. ... It’s gotten national attention and it’s also affected our measurement for over-representation of racial ethnic minorities. We’re recognized federally as the only state in the country where the ethnic minority over-representation has trended down for four consecutive years.
and because our minority population in New Hampshire is less than 10 percent total, the people who have been experiencing discrimination have a hard time because the majority of the Photo by Ryan Lessard. population have not experienced that, so therefore they don’t think it’s real or they think it’s a minor incident. Therein is the essence of the problem.
So, how do you teach juveniles, or how do police teach juveniles and expose them to that idea that it’s a real problem? Well, the thing that I’ve been successful at doing is providing insight-based learning. … Insight-based learning says I’m going to give you some information and by your understanding of that information you gain insight into what the issue is. If I was a classic teacher, I would teach you how to count, I would teach you how to read, I would teach you history [and] ... I will probably give you a test on what I told you. And if you remember and apply what you learned when I taught you that, you’ll do well on the test. … But that’s because I told you. I’ll give you an example of an insightbased learning event. There was a big fish swimming downstream. On his way down the stream, there were two younger fish swimming upstream. The big fish said to the little fish, “Hi there, young fish, how’s the water?” The little fish said, “What’s water?” Now, for people that are in the majority, that have never been discriminated against, they’re like the little fish. You Why do you think relations are apparent- see what I’m saying? ly so tense between whites and minorities They’ve never been out of the water. right now? Exactly. So, that’s insight-based learning. One of the things I explain … is that if you are not offended by what’s going on, it Is that any different to how you teach means that you’ve never been discriminated against. There’s a huge population that police officers or other adults? Adults learn best through insight, particis in that position, so when you have someone that has been discriminated against, ularly successful adults. … Police officers also learn best from other police officers because the world of a police officer is difWHAT ARE YOU REALLY ferent than someone who is not a police INTERESTED IN RIGHT NOW? officer or in a paramilitary environment, Golfing and walking. It gets your mind on which police officers are in. other things. — Ryan Lessard
NEWS & NOTES
QUALITY OF LIFE INDEX Record turnout for mental illness walk NAMIWalks NH saw the largest turnout in its 15-year history, according to WMUR. More than 1,200 people participated in the walk held last Sunday in Concord, which raised awareness about mental illness and funds for the National Alliance on Mental Illness New Hampshire. QOL Score: +1 Comment: NAMI NH provided mental illness support, education and advocacy to more than 15,000 people last year.
Record liquor sales The New Hampshire Liquor Commission set an all-time sales record during the 2017 fiscal year, according to NHPR. Sales hit $698.2 million, which is an increase of 2.92 percent, or $19.8 million, from the previous year. $155.7 million in profits were transferred to New Hampshire’s General Fund to be used for state programs including education, health and social services, transportation, and natural resource protection, and $3 million were transferred to the state’s Alcohol Abuse Prevention and Treatment Fund. QOL Score: +1 Comment: Of the 80 Liquor & Wine Outlet locations throughout the state, the top performing outlet last year for gross sales was outlet No. 76 on Interstate 95 Northbound in Hampton, which made $32 million.
Food insecurity remains high While 2016 Census Bureau data show a decrease in poverty in the state, from 8.2 to 7.3 percent, food insecurity remains higher than pre-Recession levels, according to the New Hampshire Fiscal Policy Institute. Households with an income less than $45,027 for a family of two adults and two children were more likely than households overall to be food insecure, meaning they don’t know where their next meal is coming from. In 2004-2006, the percentage of food-insecure households was 7.4 percent. Between 2014 and 2016, that figure was at 9.6 percent, which is a decrease from the height of the Great Recession, but still higher than before. QOL Score: -1 Comment: Nationwide, 13 percent of households were food insecure from 2014 to 2016.
One of the happiest states According to a study by WalletHub, New Hampshire is the 10th happiest state in the country. It’s also the happiest state in New England. Compared to last year’s happy state index, the Granite State moved up one notch from 11th. The study looked at 28 key metrics divided between emotional and physical well-being, work environment and community and environment. New Hampshire’s safety metric was fifth overall and its community and environment rank was second. QOL Score: +1 Comment: New Hampshire is 15th in adequate-sleep rate. QOL thinks this is likely due to a dearth of young parents. QOL score: 83 Net change: +2 QOL this week: 85 What’s affecting your Quality of Life here in New Hampshire? Let us know at news@hippopress.com.
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SPORTS DAVE LONG’S LONGSHOTS
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Like last week, I’m going to ruffle some feathers today. It has to do with the way many these days can’t mention Tom Brady without adding “the GOAT,” a.k.a. Greatest Of All Time. That’s based exclusively on his winning more Super Bowl rings than anyone else. It bugs me because it’s said as if no one else had anything to do with that, which is so disrespectful. I mean, even in the last two of his five wins, when Brady was clearly at the top of his profession, if Julian Edelman doesn’t make that catch, James White doesn’t get open to catch a record 14 balls and Malcolm Butler doesn’t literally come out of nowhere for his goal line pick, TB’s a pedestrian 3 and 4 in the Big Game. And in the first one, the defense held the most prolific offense in NFL history to just 20 points, while Ty Law scored the first TD on a pick-6 and he threw for a meager 145 yards. Even the final drive’s biggest play was a two-yard dink that Troy Brown turned into a gigantic 23-yard gain. Clearly, he didn’t do it alone. They’re not as convinced over those five in San Francisco, by the way. They say Joe Cool’s being 4-0 in the SB beats Brady’s 5-2. Ditto in Pittsburgh, where Terry Bradshaw was also 4-0. Montana’s regular-season 92.3 QB rating goes up to 95.6 (98.2 as a 49er) in the playoffs. For Bradshaw, it’s 70.9 rising to 83.0. Otto Graham took Cleveland to the title game in every season he ever played, winning seven times. That included beating the Rams 30-28 the year several All-American Football Conference teams joined the NFL in 1950. Seven trumps five, doesn’t it? As does going 10 for 10 to title games. Bradshaw had the greatest defense I’ve ever seen for most of his time in Pittsburgh, while Montana had an underrated defense in SF. For Brady, the defense was
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title game when Indy recovered from 21-3 down late in the first half to win 37-34 with a minute to go. And that was against a three-time Super Bowl winning defense, not the first-time-in-the-SB Falcons. What about stats? Manning has 79 more TD passes, 9,000 more passing yards and was 3-1 vs. Brady in conference championship games. Brett Favre and the still active Drew Brees also have more TD passes. Aaron Rodgers has him in QB rating 104.0 to 97.5. Look, I know how lucky we’ve all been to watch Boston sports’ second-greatest player ever for 17 years. I’m just saying picking the greatest quarterback of all time is more complicated than who won the most rings. Especially when you are playing under the best coach of his era in Coach B, who arguably is a GOAT himself. For Brady, it comes down to the same reason Bill Russell was better than Wilt Chamberlain. Wilt, like Manning, had the overwhelming numbers, but the only way anyone could convince me he was better is if they could magically switch places and Wilt won 12 titles in the 13 years Russell won his 11. And after seeing him lose to the aging Russell in 1968 and again with Jerry West and Elgin Baylor in 1969, I know that wouldn’t have happened. There was just something about him, as there is with Brady. All the great ones have the big hero numbers, but quarterbacking is most about decision-making. So if you want the stat that separates Brady from most others, it’s interceptions. His 155 are nearly 200 less than Favre, 100 less than Manning, Marino and Unitas. Like Starr (138) and Montana (139), he didn’t make the big mistakes that killed Manning and others in the big moment. So, if I can take homer-ism out of it, for me it’s down to Starr, Montana or Brady to start vs. the aliens in a game to save the planet. Email Dave Long at dlong@hippopress.com.
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HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 10
their calling card through 2006. Since 2007 the O has led the way with the D wavering between aging but dangerous through 2009 and downright awful after that, until being a big contributor since 2014. So as Dan Marino can tell you, team make-up matters. Because he didn’t have anything close to that on D and with one 1,000 runner in 18 seasons he got little help from the ground game. John Elway got blown away in his first three SBs. Was he a loser? Or a magician who somehow got mediocre teams to the Super Bowl for an eventual massacre? His two rings came after Denver got Terrell Davis. But if rings matter most, why isn’t Bart Starr a GOAT rival? He won five titles in the 1960s, including the first two Super Bowls when he was MVP. His 90-percent winning percentage (9-1) in the playoffs is much better than Brady’s 73.5. And while Bart’s 80.5 QB rating is much lower than TB-12’s 97.5, that’s attributable to the ground-and-pound way Vince Lombardi’s Packers played in them-thar days. That made TD passes that ramp up the rating considerably less likely, as did playing under the less friendly passing game rules of today. Starr’s QB rating rose to 104.8 in the playoffs, while for Brady it is “only” 89.0. True, he’s got those 25 playoff wins, but in Starr’s day mostly only two teams made the playoffs, which meant getting by really good teams like Johnny Unitas’ Colts, George Halas’ Monsters of the Midway and later the Fearsome Foursome L.A. Rams just to get in. The Pats have just had to win the mostly pathetic AFC East with Brady. The great comeback against Atlanta, you say? Well that was certainly clutch, but he’s not the first guy to author a great playoff comeback. Backup Frank Reich brought Buffalo from down 34-3 for a 41-38 OT win over Houston in 1993, and you’ve heard of Elway’s famed “drive” to break Cleveland’s heart in 1987, right? Heck, Peyton Manning did it to Brady in the 2006 AFC
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HS football story – score BIG! The Big Story: It was quite a weekend for scoring big in high school football, where no fewer than 17 teams scored 40 more points. That includes the Concord-Memorial barn-burner won by the Crimson 49-42, West ending its 23-game losing streak with a 46-6 win over Pembroke, along with epic 72-0 and 81-9 wins by Epping/Newmarket and Campbell over Farmington and Bishop Brady respectively. Sports 101: What batter holds the record for having his swing interfered with by the catcher (his mitt hits the bat) the most times in baseball history? Showdown Game of the Week: In the battle of two top teams in Division II Soccer, Derryfield remained undefeated in moving to 9-0 in handing Hopkinton its first loss in a 4-0 win in Manchester. Andrew Dubreuil was in the middle of most of it as he scored once, assisted on another by Nate Kelsey and induced a Hopkinton own-goal on a corner kick. Jeff Pratt got his 18th goal of the year in the first half, while Oliver Sattler picked up the shutout stopping the only three shots on goal allowed by the D-field D.
The Numbers
3 – goals scored by Hunter Lortie as West got its fourth win behind his hat trick in a 3-1 victory over Milford in soccer action at the beginning of the week. 5 – combined goals from Olivia Stowell (3) and Darby Dupuis (2) in leading the Londonderry girls in a 7-0 win over Salem in NHIAA soccer action. 9 – wins against no loss-
Knick of Time Award: To Goffstown’s Mike Fortin scoring with 2 minutes left in the second overtime off a Noah Charron arching corner kick to make G-town a 3-2 winner over rival Lebanon. Knick of Tyme II Award: To Dartmouth running back Jared Gerbino, who went over for the winning TD as time expired on fourth and one as the Green beat Penn. Sports 101 Answer: The record for a batter having his swing interfered with by a catcher’s glove most often in baseball history is held by none other than Red Sox alum Jacoby Ellsbury. He went past Pete Rose at 29 earlier this month, though surprisingly even though he’s spent much more time he Boston it’s happened to him 16 times (12 in ’16 and four in ’17) in two years alone in NYC. On This Day – Oct. 5: 1908 – White Sox hurler Ed Walsh beats the Tigers 6-1 for his 40th win of the season. 1921 – In the first World Series game broadcast over that new-fangled contraption called radio, the Yankees beat the Giants 3-0. 2001 – Barry Bonds hits his 71st homer to break Mark McGwire’s record of 70 which he would extend to 73.
es and a tie for Central as they got back on track after last week’s tie with Memorial behind a two-goal game from Haris Suljevic with the other coming from Tyler Moreau in a 3-0 win over Bishop Guertin. 36 – low individual high school golf score of the week, carded by Bedford’s Brady Burke at Derryfield CC when B-town was the winner of a tri-match vs.
Manchester’s Memorial and Central. 316 – rushing yards gained by Jaymeson Maheux when he scored four TDs to lead West to its aforementioned 46-6 win over Pembroke. 405 – combined rushing yards of RJ Jenkins (181), Mike Montminy (122) and Mike Loveless (102) on 55 carries as Nashua North literally ran over Merrimack 45-20.
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Sports Glossary
Monsters of the Midway: Name given to the Chicago Bears in the early 1940s and continuing into the ’60s primarily for its intimidating defenses under owner-GM-coach George Halas starting around the time of their astonishing 72-0 beatdown of the Washington Redskins in the 1940 NFL title game. Joe Cool: Most appropriate nickname given to all-time 49er QB all-timer Joe Montana, which he got for being uncannily cool in the hottest circumstances when the Niners were to the ’80s what the Patriots are to the 2000s. L.A. Rams – Fearsome Foursome: Intimidating defensive front of the 1960s L.A. Rams, which included Hall of Fame sack machine Deacon Jones and the great-from-the-secondhe-got-to-the-NFL and later TV actor Merlin Olsen. It also included end Lamar Lundy and the NFL’s first 300-pounder, Rosey Grier, who played for the G-Men in their ’50s-’60s heyday and later was standing right next to Bobby Kennedy when he was shot in an L.A. hotel ballroom just after winning the 1968 California primary. QB Rating: Statistical formula so complex it takes a team of MIT mathletes to explain in a way that mere math civilians and 98.3 percent of the planet have no hope of comprehending. The Drive: John Elway and Denver get it at the Cleveland two-yard line with 5 minutes left and down 23-16. After going 5-7 and running for 20 yards he hits Mark Jackson with 38 seconds left to send it to OT, where Denver later wins.
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HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 11
A look at developments offering out-of-the-box, brand new neighborhoods with that old-fashioned downtown feel
Illustration by Tony Luongo. luongoart.com
Mixing it up
By Ryan Lessard
news@hippopress.com
If you set your GPS to 15 Pillsbury Road in Londonderry, it will likely lead you to Exit 4 on Interstate 93, to a turn at a Wendy’s off Route 102, past a strip mall anchored by a Market Basket and a HomeGoods to a 62-acre patch of dirt and grass. Scattered across the field are piles of black pipes, a trailer office, mounds of soil and backhoes. A dirt road, visible only by the darkened tire tracks of dump trucks, cuts eastward through the center before turning north to an old barn on Pillsbury Road that’s being used as a de facto center of operations for developers who are remaking this blank canvas into a new downtown area. In just a few years, by 2020, that dark strip of dirt will become Main Street for a project called Woodmont Commons, a development that will contain a mix of apartments, retail shops, restaurants, office space and a hotel all packed densely into a walkable neighborhood. As master developer Michael Kettenbach envisions it, the space will be a cool destination for shoppers and diners comingling with those who choose to live there — both young and old. “When you look down the street, you’ll see plenty of balconies, you’ll see plenty of things that change, and you’ll see the road bend and you’ll see it bend again so that your eye focuses on different areas as you’re walking and you never get bored,” Kettenbach said. HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 12
Woodmont Commons construction. Photo by Ryan Lessard.
He said the core of Woodmont, the parcel abutting the Market Basket strip mall, will have a steak house, an American sports bar, an Italian restaurant and a brewery. “I have six restaurants ready to go tomorrow,” Kettenbach said. He also has a handful of retail businesses he’s in active discussion with. So far, they’ve tended to be up-market, such as jewelry stores. The only named tenant so far is 603 Brewery, which will relocate from its current Londonderry site to a much larger building in the center of this downtown. It will have a beer hall inside that will serve pints and burgers. This represents “Phase 1” of the project, which emcompasses a total of about 620 acres of old orchard land on both sides of the highway.
Woodmont Commons is not only the largest development project of its kind in the state right now; it’s also representative of a paradigm shift in urban design that has taken root in other parts of the country in the past 15 years but is just now reaching New England and the Granite State. For decades, the guiding paradigm has been based on keeping a town’s green beans from touching its mashed potatoes. Zoning rules were set up to establish residential areas for apartments or single-family homes, commercial areas for retail businesses, restaurants or offices and industrial areas for manufacturing. But there has been a growing movement to throw out the old book and create a new type of zone called “mixed-use,” which can incorporate many if not all of the uses that were previously segregated into a single development. Big box stores, multifamily dwelling units, cinemas and bars can all coexist in a densely packed area. “Everything within walking difference. That’s the key to good living, in my opinion,” Kettenbach said. Residents will not only be able to walk to their office for work, they’ll also have nearby amenities like a community garden, plenty of green space and possibly a YMCA with sports fields. Similar projects are under construction in other parts of southern New Hampshire, such as at the old Macy’s site in Bedford and the former Rockingham Park site in Salem.
Kettenbach said mixed-use developments provide a sense of community. Some of the unique features of Woodmont will add to that, such as a village district for mail. “So you’re forced to go to open your mailbox at the post office and you see everybody in town,” Kettenbach said. “And that adds to a sense of place.” All mixed-use projects leave behind suburban sprawl in favor of something more tight-knit and aesthetically appealing. While different projects approach the concept of mixed-use zoning in varying ways, Woodmont is trying to recreate the town center as a destination and home. At the same time, designers are taking great pains to retain a very rural and New England feel. “You’re designing an old-concept downtown Portsmouth, if you will, that is brand new,” said Londonderry Town Manager Kevin Smith. The concept, Smith said, is appealing to both young and old residents. Many older folks in the state are downsizing from homes to apartments, while young people are struggling to find affordable housing. The housing issue exacerbates a workforce shortage in the state, but it’s not just about affordability. Many millennials are looking for something that has the best of both the rural and urban worlds — nearby amenities with an old-town atmosphere — and Smith said mixed-use developments may be the answer to that. “And it’s kind of like old is new again. People are looking to live close to downtowns and have amenities close by,”
Smith said. “Certainly, there’s a need for something like that, especially in New England, where it’s still a relatively foreign concept.” Smith said he’s excited about Woodmont, in part because he got to see one of the projects it’s modeled after. “One of the things that got me excited through this whole process is the model, if you will, that they’re designing this after is a development in Huntersville, North Carolina, called Birkdale Village, which is a little outside of Charlotte,” Smith said. Kettenbach said Woodmont is using the same designers from that project, a firm called Shook Kelley. “That’s a great project to see because it’s mature and it’s 15 years old. And it has multi-year waiting lists, not only for apartments but for retail. So it shows you that the model works,” Kettenbach said. Smith said Londonderry already has a “downtown” for locals, which has a Town Common, a municipal building, police station and schools. But Woodmont represents more of a “destination downtown,” for locals, out-of-town shoppers and tourists.
From bushel to bustle
Right now, crews are working to install underground utilities such as water, sewer and electricity in the Phase 1 site, literally laying the groundwork for what will be the downtown center.
Artist rendering of Bedford Market and Main.
Kettenbach said the location of the site was recently pushed north by about 50 feet in order to make room for more green space between buildings and in the median that will run inside the Main Street. In the first phase, the Londonderry Planning Board has approved 286 new dwelling units, a 135-room hotel, about 175,000 square feet of retail, about 120,000 square feet of office space, restaurant space for 568 seats, and a performance and assembly auditorium that seats 486. From there, Kettenbach is in talks with the YMCA to provide the land for them to build a center with sports fields, and he’s
talking with a life care center operator that would bring in a 55-and-older community in a building that would be close to the Y. “That deal is ready to be signed, actually,” Kettenbach said. There will be on-street and off-street parking and one street in the core of Woodmont will offer valet parking for visitors. The look and feel of the place will derive from local architectural influences, from the state’s agricultural and industrial roots. He said there would be lots of stone, brick and wood features, but none of it will be uniform and cookie-cutter. The brewery will be in a building that
somewhat resembles a dairy barn with external grain silos. “All the facades will be quasi-New Englandy,” Kettenbach said. The Statement of Purpose in the project’s master plan describes the downtown area as a “pedestrian-friendly development that, in many respects, will emulate historic, walkable, New Hampshire and New England towns that pre-date the invention of the automobile.” In the next five or six years, Kettenbach wants to build something of a hybrid food court area with three or four test kitchens on either side hosting chefs who, if their dishes pass muster, can earn a spot in some of the esteemed restaurants on the property. That’s something he thinks doesn’t exist anywhere else in the state. Phase 1 is expected to cost about $80 million to build, Kettenbach said. The full buildout of the 620 acres, over the course of the next 10 to 15 years, would likely cost about $500 million. But he said the property would have a market value of about $1 billion. As the project moves on from the first phase, there will be a lot more residential development, including singlefamily homes and townhouses built along the northern and western periphery of the core, downtown area. “Eventually, I’d like to build some lofts for students and young profession- 14
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mont Orchards, which had been the largest apple producer of five orchards in town. It was owned by the Lievens family before they sold it to Kettenbach’s Pillsbury Realty Development around 2008 for about $7 million. Kettenbach said he’d started planning the development of these properties years before that. “It started about 15 years ago and we, or I, put together a number of different properties over the years, knowing that there was going to be a 4A exit,” Kettenbach said, referring to an additional planned exit off I-93 that’s part of the Department of Transportation’s highway expansion plan. At the time, the town hadn’t even created the mixed-use zoning overlay he so heavily relies on now. That was passed in 2010. “About halfway through, it became very apparent that this was going to be a perfect location for a mixed-use project with urbanism, single-family, everything. All types of housing ... all types of offices, all types of light industrial,” Kettenbach said. There was a delay in the project for about a year, Smith said, right after it received approval for its master plan in 2013, because of the family feud over the Market Basket company between Arthur S. and Arthur T. Demoulas. Kettenbach is Arthur T.’s son-in-law. After that matter was settled, things were back on track. Kettenbach, Smith, Gov. Chris Sununu and others held a ceremonial
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13 als. One-bedroom and studio lofts,” Kettenbach said. “That way, we don’t price them out of the market.” He said there’s no plan right now to include subsidized workforce housing in any part of Woodmont. On the land on the east side of the highway that’s zoned for mixed use, Kettenbach anticipates it will be a place to incorporate some light industrial into the mix. But much of the latter-phase details are likely to shift over years of planning. “That’s the beauty of the zoning that we have here, is we can morph and change and build as to what the demands are at any one particular time. If commercial is hot, we’re doing commercial. If retail is hot, we’re doing retail. If office buildings are hot, we’re doing office buildings. If light industrial is going, we’re doing industrial buildings,” Kettenbach said. “That way the project never has a tendency to slow down. It’s always in flux and always developing.” In its full buildout, the town has signed off on 1,439 new residential units, 882,500 square feet of retail, 700,000 square feet of offices, 550 hotel rooms, 300 hospital beds and 250,000 square feet of extended care/ assisted living space. Smith said the deal the town made ensures Woodmont doesn’t use more of the town budget than it puts in. It’s all privately financed without any tax credits or TIF districts. Of the land purchased by Kettenbach, about 220 acres once belonged to Wood-
Geoff Hewes, his wife Tamsin and brewer Dan Leonard started 603 Brewery in 2012 in Campton and started selling their beer in 2013. The three studied mechanical engineering together at UMass-Dartmouth together, where they met. The brewery began as a pet project with Leonard making homebrews. Hewes was drinking the homebrews and Tamsin comes from a long line of entrepreneurs, Hewes said. The business started almost like a professional hobby. By September 2013, they moved to a bigger space in Londonderry, where they are now, and transitioned to work on the brewery full-time. That new space also included a front-end taproom. But now they’re feeling cramped again. They can’t fit many more tanks in their current space and some things need to be stored offsite. At maximum production, they’re able to produce about 6,000 barrels a year, Hewes said. But if they move to the new building in Woodmont, they expect they’ll be able to someday grow production to up to 30,000 barrels. The other big advantage they hope to gain from the new building, which is planned to be roughly 20,000 square feet (about three times the current space), is to serve more than just samples. The beer hall will have a full food-serving license, which is required by the state to serve pints. “The customers are demanding more than
Artist rendering of 603 Brewery in Woodmont Commons.
just samples of your beer. They want a pint of beer and a burger beside it,” Hewes said. But Hewes is careful not to use the moniker of “restaurant” to describe his future beer hall. That’s because his customers are mostly restaurants and he doesn’t want to appear like he’s competing with them. Hewes said he might even create a rotating appetizer menu that features items from some of his clients. They are about a month away from getting the food license so they can test-drive the pints and burgers at their current location. Ultimately, the goal is to make the Woodmont location 603 Brewery’s permanent location for the indefinite future. And Hewes hopes it will be one of the first stops for beer tourists entering the state from points south. “We are looking to become a destination. So, if you come to New Hampshire and you love beer, we want to be at the top of your list,” Hewes said.
move an expanded Tuscan Market and Tuscan Kitchen to the site, along with a new Italian steakhouse and an Italian sports bar. But much of what’s being floated for the second phase is still in flux. “I’d say it changes every two weeks to a month,” Moldoff said. The project is similar to Woodmont in that it closely marries residential and retail so people can have easy access to nearby amenities, but it diverges from Woodmont in that nearly the entire area is thematically linked by Tuscan Brands, from the Italian food to the aesthetic design. Kettenbach’s plans for Woodmont are to ensure designs keep with local architectural norms, but at the same time, he wants to avoid uniformity.
groundbreaking ceremony on June 6. The first buildings will be completed by next year, including the brewery.
Tuscan Village
Meanwhile, other towns in the area are working on similar mixed-use projects. One such project in Salem promises to transport visitors to northern Italy. After repeated efforts by lawmakers to pass a casino bill enabling expanded gambling failed, Rockingham Park in Salem went up for sale and was quickly scooped up by Joe Faro, the owner and CEO of the Tuscan Brands, which includes the Tuscan Kitchen restaurant in Salem. Faro donned the hat of a developer, immediately announcing plans for a mixed-use development he called the Tuscan Village in a 50-acre parcel of land in the northern part of Rockingham. Soon after, in October 2016, he purchased the remaining 120 acres of the property for $40 million and changed his plans. The 50-acre parcel is now known as Tuscan Village North and is currently under construction as the first phase of the project. According to Salem Town Planner Ross Moldoff, Faro sold part of the land to Demoulas Super Markets for $15 million before the town approved its site plans. Tuscan Village North will include a Market Basket, a Ford dealership, about
Market & Main
Artist rendering of Tuscan Village concept.
100 luxury townhouses and a 256-unit apartment complex. An additional 160,000 square feet of retail, restaurants and a bank was approved on Sept. 26, Moldoff said. Moldoff said the townhouses and apartments were sold after the town approved the plans. Construction began on the dealership this fall and the townhouses are expected to be finished between this fall and next year, depending on sales. According to a September report, the
developers expect $9.5 million in annual gross tax revenue, an increase in shoppers (an estimated 45,000 cars per Saturday) and many more residents from a total of 650 new dwelling units. Moldoff said there hasn’t been any significant opposition to the project, to date. The second phase of the project will be in the remaining 120 acres to the south. That will include a cinema, more dining and retail, a bowling alley, a 150-room hotel and another 300 apartment units. Faro will also
Over in Bedford, construction began this year to create a mixed-use walkable shopping and living area known as Market and Main at 125 South River Road, where Macy’s was recently demolished. It’s similar to Tuscan Village in that it will have a cinema inside a centerpiece building, above a restaurant and connected to a parking garage. “Encore has completed their site work,” said Bedford Planning Director Becky Hebert. “And they are stopping additional work on the site until the spring to avoid 16
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15 winter construction and they anticipate pulling building permits in the early spring.” The plan for Phase 1 is to focus on retail buildings first and open them all at once. The second and third phases will include a hotel, offices and medical offices. “It’s designed to be like a walkable downtown shopping district with a main street and storefronts that immediately abut the street with nice pedestrian amenities,” Hebert said. Trader Joe’s was announced as an anchor for the development. According to the site plan, the cinema (Encore Retail announced a deal with Regal Cinemas in August 2016) will be 55,796 square feet with 1,200 seats. There will be more than 33,000 square feet of restaurant space and 112,791 square feet of retail space. The offices, medical offices and 125-room hotel will each be around 50,000 square feet. Hebert said there will be nine buildings, all told. Hebert said the planning board didn’t hear any significant opposition to the project. Unlike Woodmont and the Tuscan Village projects, Market and Main does not have any apartment units, and it’s a smaller parcel of land. However, it’s directly abutting another mixed-use project at the former Wayfarer Inn site, where the Whole Foods was built. And the developers are working closely to ensure the two projects merge seamlessly for pedestrians and shoppers. The Whole Foods area development is called Goffe Mill Plaza, and earlier this year developers (HIR Realty and Jiten Hotel Management) changed plans for a 150-unit apartment building to 133 units. Still, the Market and Main commercial properties are expected to improve the town’s tax revenue, but not right away. The project is located in the South River Road TIF District, according to Hebert. So, for the first several years, the revenues will be used to pay off the bond for road infrastructure improvements. Similar to Londonderry, these mixed-use projects in Bedford are located off an existing commercial strip not far from a major highway and separate from its quiet bedroom community, which is markedly more rural.
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A development project in Hooksett called “Merrimount” has been in the works since it was originally proposed in 2008. After the Great Recession, many of those plans were put on hold, according to Alden Beauchemin, owner of Keyland Enterprises and the project’s developer. But since the economy has largely recovered, things are getting back on track. “It’s still alive,” Beauchemin said. Original plans included a Cabela’s outdoor sporting store, but that deal fell through. He said it’s still largely in the conceptual stage, but he hopes to start by developing
9.5 acres off I93 Exit 11 at the corner of Hackett Hill and Route 3A, on the west side of the Merrimack River. It will include sites for three or four restaurants, a building with 90 to 100 rooms that could serve as either a hotel or an assisted living facility and a seaplane landing on the river. Beauchemin said they’ve already got state and FAA approval for the seaplane landing, which would provide a northern tourism component. From there, he hopes to partner with abutting landowners to build out more residential properties in an additional 30 acres. Unlike other projects like Woodmont, this is not using the mixed-use zoning overlay so far. Instead, the core 9.5 acres is zoned as commercial, which doesn’t include apartments, but does include hotels. The surrounding land is mostly residential, but Beauchemin said he’d like to see some of that converted to mixed-use. “If you want a development to work, you have to have a residential component,” Beauchemin said. It’s too early to say how it will affect the tax base, but he thinks any commercial component is bound to be positive for the town. When the plan was first floated nearly 10 years ago, there were pockets of resistance among Hooksett residents, but the plan was much bigger back then and Beauchemin said they are taking things one step at a time.
The promised land
Kettenbach didn’t have any experience building downtown areas when he started the Woodmont project. He studied them and researched other projects and attended seminars by designers like Shook Kelly and Bob Gibbs of Gibbs Planning. An earlier design of Woodmont had the Main Street running north to south, until Kettenbach was told by Gibbs, who is doing consulting on the project, that the Main Street should run east to west. That way, Gibbs told him, both sides of the street have an equal share of sunlight throughout the day. Some people might get disoriented by massive transformations like these happening in the blink of an eye, but Kettenbach thrives in the ever-changing landscape of this so-far imaginary world. “I don’t have to do this. I’m 68 years old. This is a labor of love for me. I like this. This is a lot of fun,” Kettenbach said. For a hobby, the project is hard work, and before it’s done it will far exceed its most comparable developments as the most ambitious undertaking of its kind the state is likely to see in a generation. The hope of many is that it will become a home for both our aging population and a new influx of young professionals.
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Amoskeag Fishways
FamilyFamily Fun Saturday Programs Night
THIS WEEK
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The annual snowmobile season kicks off with the Northeast Grass Drags and Water Cross event on Friday, Oct. 6, from 2 to 6 p.m., and Saturday, Oct. 7, and Sunday, Oct. 8, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. at 52 Martin Road, Fremont. The three-day festival features snowmobile events including grass drag racing, watercross racing, a freestyle show and side-by-side drag racing. Other attractions include lawn mower racing, a swap meet, an antique and vintage display, helicopter rides and vendors. The event is $15 per person on Friday and $20 per person on Saturday and Sunday. Call 273-0220 or visit nhgrassdrags.com.
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Join the Massabesic Auburn Center (26 Audubon Way, Auburn) for a Full Moon Walk on Thursday, Oct. 5, from 8 to 10 p.m. with Thrive Outdoors Director Jake King. The hike will take guests through the trails, fields and forest of Battery Point in Auburn. There will be a campfire, hot cocoa, marshmallows and a telescope to view the moon before the hike. The cost is $10 and registration is required. Call 668-2045 or email mac@nhaudubon.org.
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To learn more or to register visit www.nhti.edu/tecp_info_night or contact Kelly Moore Dunn, Ed.D., Director at kdunn@ccsnh.edu or (603) 271-6484 x4163.
nhti.edu
Thursday, Oct. 5
Monday, Oct. 9
Thursday, Oct. 5
Head to Manchester Trolley Night for a tour of downtown Manchester’s artistic spaces and museums. From 5 to 8 p.m., an old-style trolley will take passengers to museums and art centers, including the SEE Science Center and the MAA Gallery. The ride is free and passengers can get on and off at any of the 11 designated stops. Patrons are also welcome to take the route in their cars, on their bikes or on foot. Visit manchestertrolley.com.
Amherst Town Hall (2 Main St., Amherst) is hosting a New England Pie: History Under a Crust event with culinary historian Robert Cox on Thursday, Oct. 5, at 7 p.m. Learn about the history of pie since the Europeans first settled in New England. The Amherst Town Library is donating a spread of pies for tasting while learning about the treat’s history. Register for this free event by calling 673-2288 or emailing library@amherstlibrary.org.
Saturday, Oct. 7
Visit the New Hampshire Motor Speedway for the New England Bubble Run on Saturday, Oct. 7, from 9 to 10:30 a.m. (1122 Route 106, Loudon). White-clad participants will run, walk, dance or play through 3.1 miles of bubble bogs. The colorful bubbles change participants’ shirts to every color of the rainbow. Registration is $50 at bubblerun.com.
DRINK: at trivia night It’s a Pop Quiz Hop Shot at the Rockingham Brewery (1 Corporate Park Drive, Unit 1, Derry) on Wednesday, Oct. 11, from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. This is the first trivia night at Rockingham Brewery and it is free to play. Test your frivolous knowledge with a team of friends. There will be beer specials on tap throughout the night. The winning team gets a $25 gift certificate to the taproom. First come first served. Contact 216-2324 or go to facebook.com/rockinghambrewing.
The Annual Gateway Hill Fall Festival is being held on Monday, Oct. 9, from noon to 3 p.m. at the Gateway Hills Athletic Field, Research Drive, Nashua. There will be live bluegrass music by High Strung Reunion and Lisa Bastoni. Festivities include face painting, a photo booth, pony rides, a petting zoo, a demonstration by the Nashua Police K-9 and lawn games. The 7th Settlement Food Truck will also have food for sale. Admission is free. Call 598-7500 or visit gateway-hills.com.
BE MERRY: at Riverwalk Goldenoak will play at Riverwalk Cafe (35 Railroad Square, Nashua) on Friday, Oct. 6, from 6 to 9 p.m. Goldenoak is a genrebending roots revival band that tours New England. The indie band is self-described as a modern, woodsy style folk group. Tickets are $12 in advance and $15 at the door. Call 578-0200 or visit riverwalknashua.com/ upcomingshows.
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ARTS Painting Paris
Exhibition features French painter Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec By Angie Sykeny
asykeny@hippopress.com
The decadence, eccentricity and intrigue of 19th-century Paris is captured in the Currier Museum of Art’s newest exhibition, “The Paris of Toulouse-Lautrec: Prints and Posters From The Museum of Modern Art.” More than 100 posters, prints and illustrated books composed by French painter Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec are featured in the show, which is on view now through Jan. 7, 2018. Lautrec lived from 1864 to 1901 and is best known for his innovative commercial images advertising the nightlife establishments and entertainers in Paris at the time, and for his work depicting the culture surrounding Paris’ parks, restaurants Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Aristide Bruant dans son and cafes. cabaret (Aristide Bruant in His Cabaret), 1893, Litho“[His art] tells us so much about that graph. The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Gift of Emilio Sanchez, 1961, Photograph: Thomas Griesel, time. He captured it so well, and in such The Museum of Modern Art, New York. an interesting and inventive way,” exhibition curator Samantha Cataldo said. “I think that’s why people are still so interested in his work. That’s why you still see his prints hung up in college dorm rooms. Even more than 120 years later, they’re still great images.” The collection is drawn from the Museum of Modern Art in New York City and is one of the most comprehensive collections of his work ever assembled for public viewing. Because they are light-sensitive, many of the pieces have rarely been seen. The gallery is roughly divided into six SAMANTHA CATALDO thematic sections of Lautrec’s work: the artist’s life, cafe concert scenes, portrayals of famous performers, images of womOne of the highlights of the collecen, the pleasures of Paris and illustrations tion is Moulin Rouge, La Goulue, painted done alongside composers, editors, play- in 1891, which was Lautrec’s first major wrights and other creative people. poster. It was created as an advertisement
His simplified forms approached caricature, but they always went far beyond that.
20 Art
for the popular nightclub Moulin Rouge and shows can-can dancer La Goulue, clad in a strikingly white petticoat, behind her partner, the silhouetted Valentine le désossé. “People loved it. He more or less became a celebrity overnight,” Cataldo said. “It was such a strong poster and such a big deal that it became an iconic image for both [Lautrec’s] body of work and for that time in Paris.” Another notable work in the show is Aristide Bruant in His Cabaret, painted in 1893, which was an advertisement for a concert at the Ambassadeurs night club featuring the singer Aristide Bruant. The image is that of the singer dressed in black, with a black hat and his trademark bright red scarf. “It’s so bold, yet radically simple with the blocks of color and economy of lines [used to] create the shape and form,” Cataldo said. “His simplified forms approached caricature, but they always went far beyond that. The people of the time could tell immediately who was in the painting because he knew how to capture what the [subject’s] signature features were.” Lautrec is cited as a major influence for many artists who came after him, Cataldo said, particularly in the realm of advertising imagery. “Advertising needs bold images that catch your eye quickly. They have to stand out on the street, and his work really did that,” she said. “He was one of the first artists who knew how to do that, and I think that’s why his art has endured.” The exhibition is accompanied by a series of special events at the museum featuring focus tours, plays, poetry, art demonstrations and a film series exploring some of the many cinematic portrayals of Lautrec and his subjects.
21 Theater
Includes listings for gallery events, ongoing exhibits and classes. Includes listings, shows, auditions, workshops and more. To get listed, e-mail arts@hippopress.com. To get listed, e-mail arts@hippopress.com.
“The Paris of Toulouse-Lautrec” Where: The Currier Museum of Art, 150 Ash St., Manchester When: Now through Jan. 7, 2018; gallery hours are Sunday, Monday and Wednesday through Friday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Cost: Regular museum admission ($15 for adults, $13 for seniors 65+, $10 for students, $5 for youth ages 13 through 17), plus a $5 special exhibition fee More info: currier.org, 669-6144
Focus tours Two focus tours will be held on Sunday, Oct. 22, and Saturday, Oct. 28, at 11:30 a.m. Regular museum admission plus a $5 special exhibition fee applies. Free Lautrec Late Nights On select Thursday evenings the exhibition will be open late hours from 5 to 9 p.m., and will feature special activities. The cost to see the exhibition is $5; general admission to the museum and activities on these nights is free. Oct. 19: Focus tour of the exhibition; artmaking activity; Moulin Rouge (1952) film screening (6:30 p.m.) Oct. 26: Theatre KAPOW one-act farces; New Hampshire Institute of Art creative writing students reading; printmaking demonstration Nov. 9: Focus tour of the exhibition; artmaking activity; French Cancan (1955) film screening (6:30 p.m.) Nov. 16: Yoga Balance gallery meditation (registration required); adult coloring; music; mindful tours; specialty cocktails Dec. 14: Drawing workshop; specialty cocktails; Moulin Rouge (2001) film screening (6:30 p.m.)
22 Classical
Includes symphony and orchestral performances. To get listed, e-mail arts@hippopress.com.
Looking for more art, theater and classical music? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store or Google Play. Art Events • GIORGIANNA ISABELLA Eclectic Avenue member displays and sells original art. Mon., Oct. 9, 5 to 8 p.m. Manchester Maker’s Space, 36 Old Granite St., Manchester. • CENTER FOR ART AND DESIGN GRAND OPENING Public reception for Colby-Sawyer College’s new Center for Art and Design. Guests are invited
to explore the 15,000-squarefoot facility, view the inaugural exhibition and extend the evening with a theater performance. Fri., Oct. 13, 4 to 7 p.m. ColbySawyer College, 541 Main St., New London. Free. Visit colbysawyer.edu. • 13TH ANNUAL ARTWALK WEEKEND The self-led arts tour through downtown Nashua features more than 100 local and regional artists displaying their
HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 20
work plus musical entertainment and activities for kids and adults. Sat., Oct. 14, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and Sun., Oct. 15, noon to 4 p.m. Downtown, Nashua. Visit cityartsnashua.org. • HISTORY OF THE PORTSMOUTH PLAINS: A COMMUNITY ARTS PROJECT Workshop series to transform the historic Plains School into a center for cultural arts and activities. Thurs., Sept. 14
through Oct. 19, 5:30 to 7 p.m. Portsmouth City Hall, 1 Junkins Ave. , Portsmouth. Email info@ pontine.org or call 436-6660. In the Galleries • REMINISCENCES AND OTHER TIMES Includes 25 works by painter, printmaker and scenic designer Marius Sznajderman. On view through Oct. 15. Granite Town Gallery, 42 South St., Milford. Visit
granitetowngallery.com. • “POSSIBILITIES: COMIC ARTS IS NOT A GENRE” Exhibit contains a collection of more than 100 pages of comics in a variety. On view through Oct. 21. NHIA’s Roger Williams Gallery, 77 Amherst St., Manchester. Visit nhia.edu or call 623-0313. • “SOMETHING WILD THIS WAY COMES” Features a variety of work by artists from two
local chapters of the Women’s Caucus for Art. On view through Oct. 13. Whitty Gallery at Wild Salamander Arts Center, 30 Ash St., Hollis. Visit wildsalamander.com. • 20TH ANNUAL OUTDOOR SCULPTURE EXHIBIT On view now through Oct. 15. Mill Brook Gallery & Sculpture Garden, 236 Hopkinton Road, Concord. Visit themillbrookgallery. com or call 226-2045.
ARTS
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NH art world news
• “PLY: A NEW SPIN ON FIBER ART” Featuring eight New England artists who combine traditional textile techniques with a variety of media to create contemporary works of fiber art. On view through Oct. 29. Twiggs Gallery, 254 King St., Boscawen. twiggsgallery.wordpress.com. • “MONET: PATHWAYS TO IMPRESSIONISM” Featuring four Monet masterpieces, each representing a milestone in the artist’s career. On view July 1-Nov. 13. Currier Museum of Art, 150 Ash St., Manchester. Visit currier. org or call 669-6144. • ART OF PETER MILTON, MATTHEW SMITH & MOLLY WENSBERG Show features prints and paintings by three artists. On view August through October. LaBelle Winery, 345 Route 101, Amherst.
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from 5 to 8 p.m. The exhibit will feature pieces that celebrate the artist-mentor relationship and acknowledge the vulnerability and courage it takes to engage fully in critique and dialogue. Visit nhia.edu or call 623-0313 for more information. • Outdoor colors: The New Hampshire Art Association is showing “Inspired by Color” at its Robert Lincoln Levy Gallery (136 State St., Portsmouth) now through Oct. 28, with an opening reception on Friday, Oct. 6, from 5 to 8 p.m. The exhibit features colorful, eye-catching oil paintings created largely en plein air. Gallery hours are Tuesday and Thursday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Wednesday, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Friday and Saturday, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m., and Sunday, noon to 5 p.m. Visit nhartassociation.org. Pumpkins return: The Meredith League of New Hampshire Craftsmen Fine Craft Gallery (279 Daniel Webster Highway, Meredith) has its third annual Glass Pumpkin Patch exhibit on view now through Oct. 31. The collection features glass pumpkins of all sizes and colors, created by juried artists like Jordana Korsen, Lada Bohac, Bob Burch and others. For more information, visit nhcrafts.org/meredith or call 2797920. — Angie Sykeny
Visit mcgowanfineart.com or LaBellewinerynh.com. • “CLEARED FOR TAKEOFF” Third annual juried art show seeks to inspire creativity and enthusiasm for aviation of all kinds. On view through Oct. 15. Aviation Museum of New Hampshire, 27 Navigator Road, Londonderry. Regular admission applies. Visit nhahs.org. • “TERRA INCOGNITA” Featuring the works of artists Becky Darling, Derrick Te Paske and Molly Wensberg. On view through Oct. 26. McGowan Fine Art Gallery, 10 Hills Ave., Concord. Visit mcgowanfineart.com. • “WARM FUZZIES” Features fiber arts such as quilts, fiber sculpture and crocheted and knitted items. On view through Oct. 10. Studio 550 Art Center, 550 Elm St., Manchester. Visit
550arts.com. • LYRICAL RUMINATIONS Includes three series of new paintings by abstract painter and sculptor Lotus Lien. On view through Oct. 15. Granite Town Gallery, 42 South St., Milford. Visit granitetowngallery.com. Openings • “WARM FUZZIES” RECEPTION Exhibit features fiber arts such as quilts, fiber sculpture and crocheted and knitted items. Thurs., Oct. 5, 5 to 8 p.m. Studio 550 Art Center, 550 Elm St., Manchester. Visit 550arts.com. Theater Productions • JANE EYRE thru Oct. 8. Seacoast Rep Theatre, 125 Bow St., Portsmouth. $15 to $38. Visit seacoastrep.org.
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• International art: The closing ceremony for The Andres Institute of Art’s (98 Route 13, Brookline) Annual International Sculpture Symposium takes place on Saturday, Oct. 7, at 2 p.m. For the last three weeks, the public has been invited to watch as international artists create art for the sculpture trails at the Institute. The closing ceremony will include an unveiling and dedication of the completed sculptures at Andres Sculpture Park (98 Route 13, Brookline) followed by a farewell reception at Big Bear Lodge (adjacent to the park). For more information, call 673-8441 or visit andresinstitute.org. • Blooming art: The McIninch Art Gallery at Southern New Hampshire University (2500 N. River Road, Manchester) presents “In Full Bloom,” on view now through Dec. 22, with an artist talk and reception on Thursday, Oct. 5, from 5 to 7 p.m. in the first-floor Learning Commons of the Academic Center. The exhibit highlights the work of artist Bruce McColl, a plein-air landscape and still-life painter who works in pastel, watercolor and oil. McColl has been working on the collection, which consists of 10 paintings, for the last 15 years. Gallery hours are Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., except for Thursday, which is 5 to 8 p.m. Visit snhu. edu or call 629-4622 for more information. • A special pop-up: The New Hampshire Institute of Art will have an MFA pop-up exhibition at 3S Artspace (319 Vaughan St., Portsmouth) on Saturday, Oct. 7, and Sunday, Oct. 8, with a reception on Saturday
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Fall in love with New England Romance Authors’ Book Signing Oct. 14th • 2-5pm
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ARTS
Notes from the theater scene
• Music history humor: Catch Fred Marple and the Speed Bumps in concert at the Peterborough Players Theatre (55 Hadley Road, Peterborough) on Friday, Oct. 6, and Saturday, Oct. 7, at 7 p.m. The Speed Bumps appeared for years as part of Yankee humorist Fred Marple’s hit comedy show Frost Heaves, playing oldies, classic rock and originals, including parodies and audience singalongs, and joining Marple in various comedy sketches. Marple and the band will present a brief history of rock ’n’ roll that condenses several decades of popular music into a few minutes. “Even that may be too long for real music lovers,” Marple said. Tickets cost $15. Call 283-8627 or visit fredmarple.com for more information. • Challenging views: Square Peg Productions presents Yasmina Reza’s God of Carnage at the Hatbox Theatre (270 Loudon Road, Concord) Oct. 6 through Oct. 22. The dark comedy follows two sets of Brooklyn parents who, despite frequenting the same local shops and parks, had never met until a playground altercation occurred between their 11-year-old sons. As they meet to resolve the matter, their conversation devolves and tensions rise as the parents challenge each other’s viewpoints. Showtimes are Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. Tickets cost $17 for general admission and $14 for students and seniors. Visit hatboxnh.com or call 715-2315 for more information. • An unexpected friendship: The Artists’ Collaborative Theatre of New Eng-
• GOD OF CARNAGE Oct. 6 through Oct. 22. Showtimes are Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m., and Sunday at 2 p.m. Hatbox Theatre, 270 Loudon Road, Concord. $17 for general admission and $14 for students and seniors. Visit hatboxnh.com. • STAR OF THE SEA Fri., Oct. 6, 7 p.m. Stockbridge Theatre, 5 Pinkerton St., Derry. Tickets cost $10 to $25. Visit stockbridgetheatre.com. • OUR TOWN Seacoast Repertory Theatre production. Oct. 12 through Oct. 22. Showtimes are Thursday at 7:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. 125 Bow St., Portsmouth. Tickets cost $15 to $20. Visit seacoastrep.org. • LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS Peacock Players production. Oct. 13 through Oct. 22. Court Street Theatre, 14 Court
Fred Marple and the Speed Bumps. Courtesy photo.
land presents The Immigrant Garden at the West End Studio Theatre (959 Islington St., Portsmouth) on Friday Oct. 6, at 7:30 p.m., and Saturday, Oct. 7, and Sunday, Oct. 8, at 2 p.m. The play, which was adapted from the novel by Caroline Wood, takes place in 1910 and follows the story of young Cecily Barnes, who finds a catalog from Mrs. Beauchamp’s Mystical Flower Seed and Herb Emporium and sends off to England for seeds for her flower garden. An exchange of letters between Cecily and Louise Beauchamp blossoms into a friendship and journey of love and self-discovery. Tickets cost $20 for general admission and $18 for students and seniors. Visit actonenh. org or call 300-2986 for more information. • Kids Christmas auditions: The Riverbend Youth Company is having auditions for Best Christmas Pageant Ever on Monday, Oct. 9, and Tuesday, Oct. 10, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the Amato Center for the Performing Arts (56 Mont Vernon St., Milford). Kids in grades 3 through 8 are invited to bring their favorite Christmas story or poem one to two minutes in length to read aloud for the audition. It does not need to be memorized. The show will run Dec. 15 through Dec. 17. Visit svbgc.org/ amato-center or call 672-1002 for more information. — Angie Sykeny
St., Nashua. Visit peacockplayers.org for tickets. • MY FAIR LADY A Manchester Community Theatre Players production. Oct. 13 through Oct. 22. North End Montessori School, 698 Beech St., Manchester. $20 for adults, $18 for seniors and $10 for students. Visit mctp.info or call 800-8383006. • RUN FOR YOUR WIFE A Milford Area Players production. Oct. 13 through Oct. 22. Showtimes are Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m., and Sunday at 2 p.m. Amato Center for the Performing Arts, 56 Mont Vernon St., Milford. Visit milfordareaplayers.weebly.com. Workshops/other • ADULT IMPROV Beginner theatre class. Wed., Oct. 11, Oct. 25, Nov. 8, Nov. 29, Dec. 6 and
Dec. 20, 7 p.m. The Strand Ballroom, 20 Third St. , Dover. $10 per class or $55 for all. Visit theatreunmasked.com/classes. Classical Music Events • AMY BEACH: PIANO TRIO, STRING QUARTET AND PIANO QUARTET The University of New Hampshire Department of Music Faculty Concert Series presents Members of the Halcyon Music Festival. Fri., Oct. 6, 8 p.m. St. John’s Episcopal Church, 101 Chapel St., Portsmouth. Visit unh.edu/ music. • “A MEMOIR TO BING CROSBY” Featuring C.J. Poole and the Clayton Poole Orchestra. Sun., Oct. 15, 4 p.m. Capitol Center for the Arts, 44 S. Main St., Concord. Tickets cost $28 to $38. Visit ccanh.com.
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The works of three classical composers will come together when Symphony NH performs “Dvořák New World,” the first concert of its 2017-2018 season, themed “The Year of Beethoven.” There will be three performances of “Dvořák New World,” on Friday, Oct. 6, Saturday, Oct. 7, and Tuesday, Oct. 10, in Concord, Nashua and Durham, respectively. The concert opens with Beethoven’s Coriolan Overture, followed by Amy Beach’s Symphony in E Minor “Gaelic Symphony” and Antonín Dvořák’s Symphony No. 9 “From the New World.” “There is both diversity and unity, which makes these pieces well suited to be played together,” said Robert Hoffman, continuing education coordinator for Symphony NH and double bass player in the orchestra. “They are full of contrasts and dramatic musical language, alternating emotional content and shifting moods and feelings that is all put together very well.” The Beethoven piece was written in 1807 for Heinrich Joseph von Collin’s 1804 tragedy Coriolan. It musically narrates the story of a military general who is torn between his resolve to go to war and his family’s pleading for him to stay at home. Beach’s Gaelic Symphony was written in 1894 and was the first symphony composed and published by a female American com“Dvořák New World”
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Concerts: Friday, Oct. 6, at 8 p.m. at Concord City Auditorium (2 Prince St., Concord); Saturday, Oct. 7, at 8 p.m. at Keefe Center for the Arts (117 Elm St., Nashua); and Tuesday, Oct. 10, at 7 p.m. at Paul Creative Arts Center at University of New Hampshire (30 Academic Way, Durham) Tickets: $30 for general admission, $27 for seniors and $10 for youth More info: symphonynh.org
poser. Beach, who was born and raised in Henniker, premiered the piece in Boston in 1896. Symphony NH chose it, Hoffman said, in honor of Beach’s 150th birthday anniversary. The performance coincides with a series of events and exhibits hosted by the University of New Hampshire this fall, which celebrate Beach’s life and work. “It’s very important that we honor Amy Beach because of her New Hampshire and Boston connection,” Hoffman said, “She’s not as well known as some of the other composers, but it’s also important that we recognize composers who aren’t as familiar, because some of them have wonderful things to say in their music, and Beach is one of them.” Perhaps the most well-known piece of the concert, Hoffman said, is Dvořák’s symphony “From the New World,” written in 1893, just a year before Beach’s symphony. “A lot of people seem to know it. Even people who aren’t musicians can hum the famous tune,” he said. Both Dvořák’s and Beach’s symphonies were inspired by various folk elements; Dvořák, a Czech composer, drew from American folk while Beach, an American composer, drew from Gaelic folk. “They were very interested in the stylistic ways that folk music expressed people’s emotions and attitudes,” Hoffman said. “They wanted to reproduce the spirit of these songs, so they put their own spin on it and transformed it to be more in line with the type of music they wanted to write.” While there are no solo instrumental moments during the concert, there are moments in which an instrument is featured for a particular melody. The best example of this, and one of the highlights of the concert, Hoffman said, is a “beautiful, haunting melody” in Dvořák’s symphony, played on an English horn. “The interpretation of a piece is about how the melodic lines are shaped,” Hoffman said. “So we pay a lot of attention to the ebb and flow of the melodies. We’re always thinking about what we can do with a melody to give it curve and shape communication.”
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LISTINGS 29 Crafts Fairs, workshops...
INSIDE/OUTSIDE Pumpkin pride Milford’s pumpkin festival returns
29 Health & Wellness Workshops, exercises... 29 Miscellaneous Fairs, festivals, yard sales... 29 Nature & Gardening Hikes, animal events...
FEATURES 28 The Gardening Guy Advice on your outdoors. 29 Treasure Hunt There’s gold in your attic. 30 Car Talk Click and Clack give you car advice. 32 Kiddie pool
By Ethan Hogan
ehogan@hippopress.com
A giant pumpkin competition, scarecrow-building and a haunted trail are some of the highlights of the three-day Milford Pumpkin Festival, happening Friday, Oct. 6, through Sunday, Oct. 8, in Union Square. People from all over New England head to downtown Milford each year to celebrate the Pumpkin Festival — 45,000 people, according to Wendy Hunt, the executive director of the Souhegan Valley Chamber of Commerce. “You get to come down to the historic oval ... and it’s gorgeous,” Hunt said. Gorgeous and potentially scary, for those who like a good fright. The Masonic Lodge will once again erect its Haunted Trail by the river, with a dark tunnel that features scares from makeup-clad spookers (though Hunt said that while the tunnel is frightening, young kids could walk it with their parents). The other main attractions are, as the event’s name suggests, pumpkin-related. The giant pumpkin competition will be held at noon on Saturday,
Family activities this week. 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.
Milford Pumpkin Festival Where: Union Square, Milford When: Friday Oct. 6, from 5:30 to 9 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 7, from 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Sunday, Oct. 8, from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Cost: Attendance is free. There beer tasting tent is $10. There is also food and crafts for sale. Visit: milfordpumpkinfestival.org
Thousand pound pumpkins.
featuring pumpkins weighing in at more than 1,000 pounds. The pumpkins are brought in every year from farms throughout New Hampshire. Hunt said last year’s winner weighed more than 2,000 pounds and broke a state record. “We usually get five or six of those [huge ones], and it’s just about all we have room for,” said Hunt. A separate Milford Grown award is given to the heaviest pumpkin grown in town. For hands-on pumpkin fun, there will be pumpkins covering the community house lawn that kids can paint throughout the weekend. “It has to be 1,000 pumpkins,” said Hunt. Chainsaw artist Jim Flis will carve pumpkins into jack-o’-lanterns on Saturday, creating realistic faces and detailed scenes on the
pumpkins using only his chainsaw. Hunt said the festival lends itself to the enjoyment of the fall weather and foliage, and she noted that some people come to enjoy the festivities without spending any money. “Just walk around and listen to the music, riding the rides, building a scarecrow,” said Hunt. Food and craft vendors will be on hand for those who do want to do some shopping or have a snack or a meal. Middle Street, which circles the oval, will have food vendors set up throughout the weekend serving traditional fair food like kettle corn, hot dogs and cotton candy. “There is more food than you can think of,” said Hunt. A beer tasting tent will feature a selection of beers from local breweries including 603 Brewery, Smuttynose Brewery and Millyard
Brewery and food from Papa Joe’s Humble Kitchen based in Milford. Crafters’ booths will be set up on Middle Street, the oval, Emerson Park and the third floor of the Town Hall. Emerson Park will have rides and activities for kids, including bounce castles and a rock climb wall. There is a talent show split into two groups for adults and kids. Hunt said there will be everything from jugglers and acrobats to pet performances and singing. The winner of the adult competition gets $500 cash and the winner of the kids competition could win prizes like free stays at camps. This will be the 28th annual Pumpkin Festival. Hunt said at least 40 town organizations help with the event, each one responsible for its own part of the festival so the weekend goes smoothly.
Get your program listed by sending information to listings@hippopress.com at least three weeks before
A colorful tradition continues Warner celebrates its Fall Foliage Festival
the event.
By Ethan Hogan
Looking for more events for
ehogan@hippopress.com
the kids, nature-lovers and
This year’s Warner Fall Foliage Festival celebrates its 70-year history and all the volunteers who have helped run it, from Friday, Oct. 6, through Sunday, Oct. 8. “[We’re] paying tribute to 70
more? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play or online at hipposcout.com.
HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 26
years of people in the community working together to pull this thing off,” said John Whalen, board member and volunteer for the festival. The festival celebrates New England’s fall foliage from the perspective of a picturesque New Hampshire town, according to Whalen. In fact, the festival is what made Whalen decide to live in War-
ner in the first place. “We actually attended one of the foliage festivals 18 years ago and it’s one of the main reasons we bought a house here,” said Whalen. “The thing that was so cool is that when you think of a quaint New Hampshire town, that’s what Warner really looks like. Usually, around Columbus Day weekend,
everything is red and gold.” The three-day outdoor event kicks off Friday evening at 6 p.m. with discounted midway rides and a bluegrass performance by The DoBros band at the Main Street Warner stage. Saturday and Sunday host the bulk of the events with parades, entertainment and activities 31
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IN/OUT THE GARDENING GUY
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HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 28
Early autumn is a great time to work in the garden, and it’s not too early to start putting your garden to bed. I can work early in the morning without layers of wool, and my hands don’t need gloves to stay warm. Too often we gardeners wait until later, when frost is on the garden, to clean up. Start now, do a little each day, and the job will not be onerous. Start by removing anything that is ugly. Your bleeding hearts has foliage that is yellow and has collapsed. Cut it out! Peonies may have dark blotches on the leaves, a potential sign of a fungal disease called botrytis, and should be removed. Anything that looks like it is diseased should not go in the compost pile, but in the household trash or on a burn pile for winter. Be sure to cut right to the ground when removing foliage. Yes, you have to bend down a little lower, but the closer to the ground, the better. That way you will be more likely to remove any diseased portions, and it will look better in the spring. I know many gardeners like hand pruners to remove foliage, but I find that a bit tedious. I like a serrated knife. I hold a handful of tops, and with one swipe of my knife I cut through it all. The same group of stems might take a dozen snips. I’m all for speed and efficiency when working in the garden. Other techniques? Hedge shears will make quick work of a big clump of iris leaves. But make sure they are sharp. Modern electric hedge clippers work, too, but I have been known to cut off the cord. I have one 50-foot bed that is 8 to 10 feet wide. I call it my Darwin bed, as plants compete for space. No weeding. It’s full of tall plants like Joe Pye weed, turtlehead, phlox and more. In late October, but before snow, I will run over the entire bed with a riding lawn mower, blade all the way up, engine racing at full throttle. It works! You may wish to leave some flowers for the birds. Nice seed pods on purple cone flowers and black-eyed susans will please the finches in winter, and look great above a thin layer of snow. Decorative grasses will sway in the winter wind, and look good for at least a month or two. You can always clean them up in the spring, or during a winter thaw if so inclined (and wearing wool). As you cut back your perennials you will notice some volunteer plants. Phlox is forever planting itself around my garden, as is great blue lobelia and (dis-) obedient plant. It is natural to say, “Oh, how nice, the phlox is spreading.” But do I really want more phlox? No! If I did want more, I would have planted more. I’d really like a new color, not more of the same. So I’ll dig it up and put it at the end
This phlox continued to bloom into November, so it was one of the last flowers to be cut back.
of the driveway in a throwaway plastic pot. “FREE” will stop traffic. As you cut back, weed! You probably already know some weeds by name, and by root. Some are perennials or biennials with deep tap roots. Others have lateral roots with nodes that send up more weeds. Annual weeds pull up with little effort and have small roots but thousands of seeds. Try not to shake out seeds from weeds that have bloomed and set seeds. They will be back to annoy you for years to come. I bring two tools with me for weeding: a garden fork and a CobraHead weeder. The fork is great for deep-rooted weeds. I plunge it in or step on it to force it into hard soil, then tip it back, loosening the soil. The weed, along with the deep root, will come right out, particularly if the soil is moist. The CobraHead weeder has a single curved tine with a widened tip. It has become an essential tool for me; it’s like a curved finger. I use it to get under a weed. It allows me to lift and loosen soil beneath a weed while I tug on the top. If there are lateral roots, I tease them out, tugging and loosening until I have the entire darn thing. Nothing beats crawling on your hands and knees for finding weeds. You are at their level. But if it’s hard for you to get back up, maybe you’d like to sit on something, particularly if the soil is cold and wet. I sometimes use a 5-gallon pail, but have seen some nice kneeling seats designed for gardeners, and have heard nice things about them. But to each her own. Mulching can be the last step of fall cleanup. Finely ground bark mulch or chipped leaves can be good for keeping down weeds, but don’t use too much. And try to keep it back from the crown, or center growing area of the plant. You can ruin peony’s ability to bloom by covering it with 3 inches of bark mulch. And avoid buying bagged mulch that is “color enhanced.” It has chemicals in it. Go get to work on a nice day. It will save you time in the spring. Read Henry’s blog at dailyuv.com/gardeningguy Email henry.homeyer@comcast.net.
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My family and I have a bedroom set that my grandparents bought when they were first married in the late 1950s. It is a grey hardwood set with a head and foot board, a chest of drawers and a dresser with full mirror. Although we do know it is not old enough to be considered antique, we still believe it may have some value on a specialty market. Would you be able to give any advice on what the value of this set may be and how we should go about trying to sell it? We have had it on Craigslist but have not not seen any interest in this style around had any interest in it. here. So for now it would be just considered a used (not even collectible) bedroom Kimberly set. The value would be in the $100 range as a complete set. Possibly a buyer would Dear Kimberly, purchase it to re-paint or repurpose it. Though I don’t know what price range I’m sorry for the not so good news, Kimyou listed the set at on Craigslist, it could berly, and hope you can find the set a good be one of the reasons that there’s no inter- home. est. Second is that there is minimal interest Donna Welch has spent more than 20 years in this style from the 1950s. My grandparin the antiques and collectibles field and owns ents had one so similar. Furniture is a tough market to figure out From Out Of The Woods Antique Center in these days. Some ages, styles and makers Goffstown (fromoutofthewoodsantiques.com). are still selling but others just don’t have She is an antiques appraiser and instructor. the interest yet or possibly might not ever To find out about your antique or collectible, have it. This was a mass-produced style, send a clear photo of the object and information about it to Donna Welch, From Out Of The and as I said, my family had a couple and Woods Antique Center, 465 Mast Road, Goffsalmost every home had a similar set as well. town, N.H., 03045. Or email her at footwdw@ Even though some furniture can sell aol.com. Or drop by the shop (call first, 624depending on what region you’re in, I have
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Workshops • INTRODUCTION TO METAL CLAY This introductory class is for people who are not familiar with metal clay. Metal clay consists of microscopic particles of silver, gold, copper and base metals combined with an organic binder. Sat., Oct. 7, 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. League of NH Craftsmen Nashua Fine Arts Gallery, 98 Main St., Nashua. $46 due upon registration, plus a $35 materials fee payable to the instructor. Visit nhcrafts.org or call 595-8233. • RUGS IN THE SHAKER SPIRIT: STANDING WOOL RUGS This class is about recycling and repurposing the smallest
of wool scraps into folk art rugs. Participants will use a five-inch shirring needle and heavy thread to sew wool strips to make a thick plush piece. Sat., Oct. 7, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Canterbury Shaker Village, 288 Shaker Road, Canterbury. $95. Visit shakers.org. Health & Wellness • NATIONAL FIRE SAFETY WEEK AT THE NEW BOSTON FARMERS’ MARKET In honor of the final day of National Fire Safety Week, the New Boston Fire Department and the New Boston CERT Organizations will be coming to the market to promote fire safety. Visit the market to become informed. Sat., Oct. 14, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. New Boston Farmers’ Market, 2-6 River Road, New Boston. Free. Visit newbostonfarmersmarket.webs.com or call 487-2102. Miscellaneous Religion-related events •ASK A MUSLIM Are you interested in the Muslim faith, looking for clarification on something in the Koran, or simply curious? Join us for a discussion where you can ask a Muslim anything you are
wondering about. Speaker Robert Azzi, an Arab-American Muslim, photojournalist and columnist, will be there to answer. Sat., Oct. 7, 1:30 p.m. Derry Public Library, 64 E. Broadway, Derry. Free. Visit derrypl.org or call 432-6140. Yard sales/fundraisers •2ND ANNUAL HAMPSTEAD TOWN-WIDE YARD SALE Sat., Oct. 7, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Various locations, Hampstead. Call 432-0877. Nature & Gardening Animals/insects • INTRO TO PELAGIC WILDLIFE Enjoy a brief slideshow about some of the wildlife you might see just off of New Hampshire’s coast. Sat., Oct. 7, 3 to 4 p.m. Massabesic Audubon Center, 26 Audubon Way, Auburn. $5. Visit nhaudubon.org or 668-2045. • PELAGIC TRIP Join New Hampshire Audubon aboard MV Granite State, exploring Jeffrey’s Lodge. Sun., Oct. 8, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Massabesic Audubon Center, 26 Audubon Way, Auburn. $90. Visit nhaudubon.org or call 6682045.
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Crafts Fairs • 21ST ANNUAL LINCOLN FALL CRAFT FESTIVAL More than 150 booths of American made arts, crafts, specialty foods, live music and more. Sat., Oct. 7, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sun., Oct. 8, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Mon., Oct. 9, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Village Shops, Town Green, Main Street, Lincoln. Free. Visit castleberryfairs.com.
HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 29
IN/OUT CAR TALK
In old cars, spark timing probably not cause of poor performance would fire when the crankshaft is still 15 degrees of rotation away from when each piston reaches the top. In other words, at 15 degrees the spark plug would fire early. In reality, the timing of the spark is supposed to vary. At idle, it’s supposed to be TDC. But as the engine speed increases, the spark needs to fire earlier so that combustion is already in full swing by the time the piston reaches the top. Otherwise, most of the force of the explosion goes out the tailpipe instead of toward pushing the piston down and making the car move. In older heaps like yours, the spark timing is automatically adjusted by something called an “advance mechanism.” Your El Camino has two: A vacuum advance, which uses the engine vacuum to advance the spark timing, and a centrifugal advance, which uses the rotation of the distributor shaft to advance the timing. And one — or both — of those is broken. I’d put money on the vacuum advance first. Manufacturers do a lot of experimenting to figure out how the spark timing should be set on any given engine. They’re trying to find a balance among power, economy and emissions. So at TDC, where it’s supposed to be, your emissions are good. Well, as good as they got in 1982, which is bad. But your
power and performance stink because your advance mechanisms aren’t advancing the timing when you rev up the engine. So rather than have the timing set back to 15 degrees to simulate a working vacuum advance, go to a nearby nursing home and see if you can find a mechanic who knows what a vacuum advance and a centrifugal advance are. Fix them, and that’ll solve all of your performance and timing problems, Scott — until the next problem arises. Dear Car Talk: I was taught that when changing the oil, it is best to let your truck sit and let the engine cool, so that all the oil drains down into the pan before you drain it out. But I recently read online that you should let the engine run for about five minutes so that the oil heats up and thins out right before you start an oil change. Which way is best? — John Somewhat accurate information online! I’m stunned. The five-minute rule is a good one. You warm up the oil so it’s less viscous and it flows better. That way, less of the old oil remains inside the engine — stuck to the walls of the oil pan and other engine parts. Recently circulated oil also picks up more contaminants and holds them in suspension. So you’ll remove a little more unwanted
gunk when you drain out warm oil. If you want to be really fanatical about it, John, then you’d want the oil to be fully heated up when you drain it out. In that case, you’d want to drive the car for 15 or 20 minutes and get the engine up to full operating temperature, then pull over and immediately remove the drain plug. Then you’d proceed right to the emergency room after the 300-degree oil ran down your arm and seared a pathway down your right flank. That’s why we strongly recommend against getting so fanatical about changing your engine oil, and why we endorse the five-minute rule for DIY’ers. The difference between changing warm and hot oil is not worth the trip to the emergency room and the permanent disfigurement. Alternatively, if you’ve been driving the car and it’s hot, let it sit for at least a good half-hour. Or more. This is the equivalent of sitting in the Jiffy Lube waiting room, catching up on Brad and Jen’s recent breakup in the 10-year-old People magazines. Then put on a pair of gloves, carefully remove the drain plug and get your hand out of the way. And be especially careful when removing the filter. Even “cooled off” oil still can be pretty uncomfortable. Visit Cartalk.com
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Dear Car Talk: I have a 1982 El Camino. Two years ago, because it didn’t pass the California smog test, I had to take it to a designated repair shop. As part of the By Ray Magliozzi repair, the tech told me: “Some fool set the ignition timing to TDC (top dead center), or 0 degrees. I changed it to 15 degrees, where it should be, and it’s running better.” And it did run better. This year I went in for the smog test, and the technician told me, “Some fool set your ignition timing to 15 degrees, so you need to reset it to TDC.” I told him what I had been told two years earlier, and he told me, “The book says it has to be TDC, so you need to set it there or you won’t pass the smog test.” So I had him set the timing to TDC, and I passed the smog test. But the car runs like crap. So I’m thinking about changing the timing back to 15 degrees, where it ran better. I need some expert advice. Thank you. — Scott I’m sure the car’s specification is TDC, or top dead center. That means that each spark plug is set to fire when its piston reaches the very top of the compression stroke. Fifteen degrees before TDC means the spark plugs
HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 30
26 happening throughout various areas around Main Street. Whalen said Saturday’s parade is geared toward kids, with floats designed and made by children. Sunday’s Grand Parade will have fire trucks, a marching band and floats made by sponsors. Whalen said the Woodsmen games that caught his attention all those years ago are still being held today. Men and women compete in wood-chopping-related events like axe throwing and log sawing. During the axe throw, competitors hurl doubleedged axes at a wooden target. “They usually put a can of soda in the middle so when it hits a bullseye, it explodes,” said Whalen. The oxen pulls are another tradition that continues to draw a crowd. Oxen from a local farm drag a metal weighted sled through the dirt in a show of strength. New to this year’s festival is a beer and barbecue tent, which will be next to the main stage so guests can enjoy their drinks during the weekend’s performances. The beer is provided by Amoskeag Beverages of Bow.
Warner Fall Foliage Festival Where: Warner Town Hall, 5 East Main St., Warner When: Friday, Oct. 6, from 6 to 9 p.m., Saturday Oct. 7, from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. and Sunday, Oct. 8, from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. Cost: Parking is $5 and most events are free to spectators. The five-mile race is $25 for advanced registration and $30 for day of registration. An All-U-Can-Ride midway bracelet costs $15 on Friday and $17 on Saturday and Sunday. Visit: wfff.org
ALL THINGS FALL! Mums, asters, ornamental peppers, pumpkins, gourds, cabbages, kales, grasses and more!
Mums on sale! COME SEE WHAT’S NEW!
Pre-order your holiday custom-sized wreaths, garlands, poinsettia, kissing balls and more.
StoneFalls Gardens Courtesy photo.
“It was an element that was always missing and people were asking for,” said Whalen. Other highlights include a 5-mile road race Saturday morning. Whalen said the course has stayed the same for years and many local runners know it by heart. The 1-mile kids’ fun run on Sunday morning has kids wearing costumes and running with their parents. Throughout the weekend, there will be midway rides for kids. Musical entertainment includes Kat Wright, a soul and funk musician whose performance on Saturday is the headlining musical event of the weekend, according to Whalen. Sixty-seven artisans making wooden crafts, postcards, sauces, jams, jellies, mittens, body scrubs, soaps and other New England-based products will be featured at the festival market.
SCHEDULE Friday, Oct. 6 6 to 9 p.m. Midway - $15 All-U-Can-Ride Bracelet 6 to 9 p.m. Family Dance Party 7 to 10 p.m. The DoBros
Bracelet 5 to 6:30 p.m. Country Dinner 7 to 10 p.m. Kat Wright
Sunday, Oct. 8 7 to 9:30 a.m. Country Breakfast 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Crafts & Farmers Market Saturday, Oct. 7 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Library Book and Bake 7 to 9:30 a.m. Country Breakfast 9 a.m. 5-mile Road Race - Registration Starts Sale at 8 a.m. 9:30 a.m. Kids’ 1-Mile Fun Run - Registration at 9 a.m. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Crafts & Farmers Market 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Library Book and Bake Sale 10 a.m. Midway Opens 9:30 to 6 p.m. Oxen/Woodsman Competition 10 to 11 a.m. Kids’ Dance Party 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Studio 2 The Beatles 10 to 11 a.m. KCPA Bye Bye Birdie Young Performer’s Edition Tribute 10 a.m. Midway Opens 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Oxen/Woodsman 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Annie & The Nat- Competition 11:45 a.m. Lobster Dinner & Chicken BBQ ural Wonder Band 11:45 a.m. Lobster Dinner & Chicken BBQ Opens 12:15 p.m. Ice Cream Eating Contest opens 1 p.m. Children’s Parade - Assembles at 1 to 2 p.m. Grand parade (theme: “70 Years 12:45 p.m. of Change”) 2 to 3:30 p.m. East Bay Jazz Ensemble 1 to 2 p.m. Kathy Lowe 4 to 5:30 p.m. Brad Myrick & Friends 2 to 3 p.m. Will Hatch & The Opined Few 2 to 6 p.m. Midway - $17 All-U-Can-Ride 3 to 5 p.m. Questionable Company Bracelet 4 to 8 p.m. Midway - $17 All-U-Can-Ride
184 StoneFalls Rd. Henniker, NH (Follow signs off Route 202/9) 603.428.6161 • StoneFallsGardens.com
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The GAP at GHS Fall Semester 2017 These Courses meet Tuesday or Thursday
Genre
Instructor
Earn Credit
Day
Start and End Dates
Time
Tuition
HiSet/GED - Language
N/A
S. McFarland
N/A
Tuesday
Oct. 10-Dec. 12
6-8pm
$30
Independent GAP - Plato
Elective
B. Carey
1/2
Tuesday
Oct. 10-Dec. 12
3-5pm
$150
Earth/Space Science
Academic
J. Gratton
1/2
Tuesday
Oct. 10-Dec. 12
3-5pm
$150
Geometry
Academic
S. Whitmore
1/2
Tuesday
Oct. 10-Dec. 12
3-5pm
$150
Creative Welding
Elective
R. Caradonna
1/2
Thursday
Oct. 10-Dec. 14
3:455:45pm
$150 + $50
Creative Welding
Elective
R. Caradonna
1/2
Thursday
Oct. 10-Dec. 14
6-8pm
$150 + $50
Film Studies & Analysis
Elective
Griffin Hansen/ B. Ryan
1/2
Thursday
Oct. 10-Dec. 14 3-5:30pm
$150
Civics/Economics
Academic
D. McCain
1/2
Thursday
Oct. 10-Dec. 14
3-5pm
$150
Biology
Academic
N. Lambert
1/2
Thursday
Oct. 10-Dec. 14
5-7pm
$150
HiSet/GED-Math
N/A
N. Bracy
N/A
Thursday
Oct. 10-Dec. 14
6-8pm
$30
English
Academic
P. Galamaga
1/2
Thursday
Oct. 10-Dec. 14
3-5pm
$150
Enrichment
Open to 16+
Web Design - Using Date Base Content Driven Managing System
Enrichment
G. Girolimon
N/A
Tuesday
Oct. 10-Nov. 14
6-8pm
$75
Programming for Robotics
Enrichment
S. Bourget
N/A
Tuesday
Oct. 10-Nov. 28
3-5pm
$75
Career Exploration
Enrichment
A. Lafond
N/A
By Appt.
By Appt.
By Appt.
Free
Creative Welding
Enrichment
R. Caradonna
N/A
Thursday
Oct. 10-Dec. 14
3:455:45pm
$120 + $50
Creative Welding
Enrichment
R. Caradonna
N/A
Thursday
Oct. 10-Dec. 14
6-8pm
$120 + $50
Register By Mail or Call Today! Goffstown Adult Education Program Adult Diploma, GED, Lifelong Learning 27 Wallace Road • Goffstown, NH 03045
Tuition to be paid by cash, check or money order payable to Goffstown School District - GAP
603-660-5302 Bill Ryan • 603.497.5257 (Fax)
Attendance for all credit bearing classes is required. Registration is secured with a payment in full. You will be contacted ONLY if a class is canceled or full.
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HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 31
IN/OUT
BAR & STOOLS
Family fun for the weekend
Fall fests
111868
spend columbus day weekend at peak orchards!
Open Daily & Columbus Day Monday | 10am-4pm Enjoy the experience of picking your own apples in an Old Mountainside Apple Orchard
896 Craney Hill Road Henniker NH 428-3312 Follow the signs to Pats Peak and then follow the U-Pick Apples signs.
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with beautiful foliage views!
Join The Children’s Place and Parent Education Center for a Fall Festival on Saturday, Oct. 7, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Apple Hill Farm (580 Mountain Road, Concord). The free festival will have family-friendly events including games, activities, food, face painting and crafts. Contact organizer Keriann Leonard at tcpnh@thechildrensplacenh.org or call 224-9920. Join the Crossing Life Church (122 N. Lowell Road, Windham) for their annual Pumpkinfest on Saturday, Oct 7, from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. The festival will have family activities including live music, a variety of vendors, hayrides, food for purchase and live music. Performances by chainsaw carving artist Josh Landry will be held at 11 a.m., 2 p.m. and 6 p.m. There will be a special martial arts presentation at noon with sensei Josiah Armstrong and his S.O.W.A. team. The kids’ zone, hosted by the Windham Crossing Learning Center, will have fun fall activities including face painting, crafts and games. Admission is free. Contact the church office at 965-1365 or info@ lifealliance.org.
Spooky stories, sweet story
The Manchester City Library and the Mall of New Hampshire (1500 S. Willow St., Manchester) are hosting a Halloween Storytime event on Thursday, Oct. 5, from 11 a.m. to noon. The event welcomes kids and their families to the children’s play area near the food court at the mall. The theme of the storytime is Halloween with stories about dinosaur trick-or-treats and tiny ghosts. After the stories there will be a buffy ghost craft and a snack. The event is free and par-
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The premiere of the newest show at the McAuliffe-Shepard Discovery Center’s planetarium is on Friday, Oct. 6, from 7 to 9 p.m. (2 Institute Drive, Concord). The film, Life Under the Arctic Sky, is about the northern lights as viewed from the Arctic. The story takes the perspectives of the scientists studying the phenomenon and the indigenous people who hunt and live under the lights. General admission to the center is $10 for adults and $7 for children age 3 to 12, and the planetarium educational films cost an additional $5 per person. Contact 271-7827 or call starhop.com.
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HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 32
Film premiere
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ticipants will receive 10 percent off their purchase at Sbarro pizza. Call the Manchester City Library at 624-6550 or visit manchesterlibrary.org. Visit the Barnes & Noble in Nashua (235 Daniel Webster Highway, Nashua) for storytime and activities featuring the Poky Little Puppy on Saturday, Oct. 7, at 11 a.m. The Poky Little Puppy in a children’s book that tells the story of a curious puppy who digs holes under fences and has to go to bed without any dessert. There will also be activities after story time. The event is free. Call 8880533 or visit stores.barnesandnoble.com/ store/2791.
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IN THE GREATER NASHUA AREA 8 YEARS IN A ROW!
CAREERS
Angela Paris Blogger
Angela Paris of Manchester is a full-time lifestyle blogger. Her blog is called jugglingactmama.com, and she writes recipes and projects for moms. Explain what your current job is. I’m a lifestyle blogger and I write about recipes and crafts you can do, both as an adult and with your children. I have a lot of stuff that’s focused on just moms and also stuff for moms to do with their kids. I really love incorporating my own kids into my posts, so whenever I can do that, I try to do that. How long have you done this? I started blogging as a hobby in 2011, after my daughter was born, and it was just a creative outlet. I loved it so much and I hated my full-time job so much that I was like, ‘I have to figure out how I can
do this and make a living.’ So I started creating content, I started connecting with businesses who needed content, whether it was recipes or just images, or whatever it was … so that I could replace my full-time income from my quote-unquote real job. And I left that job four years ago and I’ve been doing this ever since.
What kind of education or have a million pageviews a training did you need for this? month does not mean you’re I think it’s different for difnot successful. ferent people. I think … there’s a lot of behind-the-scenes-type What do you wish you’d things with blogging that a lot known at the beginning of of people don’t necessarily your career? think about [like] the technical I wish I had taken advanside of things. I’m self-taught tage of the advice I gave about with a lot of that stuff, or I’ve connecting with other bloggers done online training. But and going to those conferences. there’s a lot of great resourcI didn’t start doing that until a es out there, free resources … Courtesy photo. little bit later, probably a year that people who are interested in and a half into when I was blogblogging can take advantage of. There [are] ging full-time. Once I started doing that I also a lot of great conferences and things learned so much more. like that. What is your typical at-work uniform? How did you find your current job? Yoga pants and whatever’s comfortable. In the very, very beginning, I started the I’m all about comfort. That’s probably one same way a lot of mom bloggers start, and of my most favorite aspects of my job, that was just that I was writing about my because I work from my house. kids. … It evolved over time. … As far as finding clients, sometimes they land in my What was the first job you ever had? lap and I get lucky. … Most of the time, I’m My mother owned a bridal shop and I actively pursuing them. worked for her. — Ryan Lessard
How did you get interested in this field? I’ve always been a writer. I went to … college and my degree is in communications and What’s the best piece of work-related I have a minor in visual arts. So I’ve always advice anyone’s ever given you? loved taking photos and I’ve always loved Blogging can be very frustrating to realcooking. … I would say I’m kind of crafty. ... ly be successful at. And I think the biggest I do a lot of shortcuts. I like finding ways to be thing is that you don’t compare yourself crafty without it taking over your life. to other bloggers. Just because you don’t
WHAT ARE YOU REALLY INTERESTED IN RIGHT NOW? As a parent, I’m really all about modeling for my children. And one of the things that’s very important to me is volunteering. I’m the PTA president at their elementary school.
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HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 34
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Now available in the U.S.! An authentic Italian Vegetable Risotto from Casale Paradiso that takes only 20 minutes to cook.
We are a drug and tobacco-free workforce. 25 Water Street, Concord, NH • (603) 228-DINE 304 Daniel Webster Hwy., Merrimack • (603) 429-3463
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HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 35
FOOD Chili out
Chili and music festival at Veterans Park By Matt Ingersoll
News from the local food scene
mingersoll@hippopress.com
By Matt Ingersoll
Whether you prefer a milder flavor or a strong hit of spice, you’ll find a chili that will meet your taste buds’ desires at Intown Manchester’s inaugural Fire in Fall Chili & Music Festival. You can also get a head start on celebrating Halloween — costumes are encouraged and several Halloween-centric vendors will set up shop — and listen to a full lineup of local bands. The festival is happening at Veterans Memorial Park on Sunday, Oct. 8, and is free to attend. Chili samples will be available for $2 per tasting and will be at least 4 ounces, though bigger portions will be available as well. Intown Manchester executive director
food@hippopress.com
• Grand opening at Madear’s: Madear’s (175 Hanover St., Manchester, 206-5827, madears603.com), the only Cajun restaurant in the Queen City, celebrated its grand opening on Sept. 23 with several new menu items for the fall season. The restaurant, which was started by two friends — chef and mixologist Robb Curry and baker Kyle Davis — had its soft opening on July 18. Some of the more unique menu items straight from the Pelican State that you can get at Madear’s include the deep-fried alligator, the Cajun jambalaya, and crawfish double stuffed eggs. For the fall, Madear’s has introduced new menu items like the roasted beet salad, which is made with beets, Brussels sprouts, arugula and goat cheese, the pulled pork sliders, which are served on homemade biscuits with broccoli slaw, and the black drum fish. • Italian eats: Enjoy apple cider, gelato, cotton candy, pumpkin painting, field games, music and more at Tuscan Kitchen’s annual Toscana Fest, happening at the Salem location (67 Main St.) on Sunday, Oct. 8, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The event features traditional Italian culture through gelato, paninis and other artisan Italian foods from Tuscan Kitchen and Tuscan Market, alongside live music and bocce on the property’s courts. Also included will be pumpkin carving, hay rides and more. Local vendors and food trucks will be there to offer various items. Admission is free, with food priced per item and proceeds benefitting the Lazarus House. Visit tuscanbrands.com or call 952-4875. 40 Looking for more food and drink fun? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play and hipposcout.com.
Intown Manchester’s Fire in Fall Chili & Music Festival When: Sunday, Oct. 8, 1 to 5 p.m. Where: Veterans Memorial Park, Elm Street (between Merrimack and Central streets), Manchester Cost: Free admission; chili tastings are $2 per sample Visit: intownmanchester.com
Powder Keg Beer and Chili Fest. Courtesy photo.
Sara Beaudry said people can vote on their favorite chilis for the winners to receive bragging rights. “It’s actually quite a variety of local restaurants, caterers, food trucks … and people from outside [Manchester] who will be making different types of chilis,” Beaudry said. “There will be both meat and vegetarian chilis … with different levels of spiciness.” Other vendors may present variations on chili, like chili dogs or chili fries, she said. Beaudry said there have been other chili-themed festivals and competitions organized by the city in the past in the summer, but this is the first one run by Intown
Manchester and the first happening in October. It coincides with the Manchester Fire Department’s Fire Prevention Parade and the beginning of Fire Prevention Week. “This one is more localized and really meant to focus on New Hampshire chili makers,” she said. The festival will also feature a beer and wine garden, something not seen at previous chili festivals in the Queen City, Beaudry said. With the event happening just weeks before Halloween, many of the vendors will include Halloween-themed arts and craftspeople, psychics, paranormal societies and more. “There isn’t an Intown event or one in Manchester either that’s really Halloween based, so we encourage people to wear costumes,” she said. Live performers will include The Jimmy Lehoux Band, who will be headlining, as well as Rock Spring, The Southern City Band and Walker Smith. Beaudry said Intown Manchester is keeping the first festival simple for now but hopes for it to grow over the next few years. “It’s going to be a great day to bring the family out … and we’ll have it grow and be a larger chili cook-off type of event,” she said.
MORE CHILI FESTS Want more chili? Here are a couple of other Degrees Neapolitan Pizzeria in Epping, The chili festivals and competitions happening in Cork N Keg Grill in Raymond, the Epoch Restaurant in Exeter and many others. Tickthe Granite State this weekend. ets are $30 in advance and $40 at the door • Dozens of chilis and craft brews will be and include a souvenir tasting glass, 10 beer available for sampling at the sixth annual sample tickets, all-you-can-eat beer samPowder Keg Beer and4.69”wide Chili Festival, x 2.6”which high ple tickets and access to live entertainment. is happening at Swasey HIPPOParkway Horizontal(316 1/8 Water page Kids under the age of 7 will receive free St., Exeter) on Saturday, Oct. 7, from 11 a.m. admission if accompanied by an adult. Visit to 4 p.m. Participants will get to taste and powderkegbeerfest.com or call 772-2411 for vote on their favorite chili. A number of local more details. participating vendors will be there, like 900
Sometimes,
Why change?
you just want
Everyone has his own style. When you have found it, you should stick to it. — Audrey Hepburn
• The 28th annual WHEB Chili Cook-Off is happening on the grounds of the Strawbery Banke Museum (14 Hancock St., Portsmouth) on Sunday, Oct. 8, at 11:30 a.m. and will include a variety of chili dishes provided by dozens of local restaurants. First-, second- and third-place winners in both Judge’s Choice and People’s Choice categories will be announced for the restaurant with the best chili. Admission is $14 for adults and $7 for kids 12 and under. Visit prescottpark.org/ event/chili.
Serving Lunch, Dinner, Happy Hour & Late Night!
Soup
Ours are extraordinary tomato basil soup
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
110 Hanover St. Manchester 606-1189 | hookedonignite.com 117105
HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 36
FRESH • PURE • HEALTHY
VANILLA AND COCONUT SIMPLE SYRUPS. $1 FROM EVERY LATTE WILL GO TO HELP OUR FRIENDS AT MIDWAY CAFE IN THE FLORIDA KEYS! SOME OF THEIR EMPLOYEES AND FAMILY FRIENDS LOST EVERYTHING IN THE HURRICANE.
nutritious nibbles HOT CHAI LATTE WITH ESPRESSO AND PUREED PUMPKIN SAUCE
ORGANIC EARL GREY TEA WITH A BLEND OF VANILLA, LAVENDER AND MINT SIMPLE SYRUPS TOPPED WITH STEAMED MILK
Afternoon Snack
Prepare this recipe on the weekend and store in small airtight containers for quick and easy-to-grab snacks that’ll last all week long. Honey nut cereal, peanut butter, banana chips and chocolate-covered raisins—this snack mix has it all.
A & E Roastery is offering hands-on coffee classes to give you the skills to make the perfect cup of coffee. Don’t miss it!
VISIT US & SHOP OUR ORGANIC COFFEES & TEA FAIR TRADE & SHADE GROWN 603.578.3338 • AERoastery.com • 135 Route 101 A, Amherst •1000 Elm St, Manchester
117220
Honey Nut Snack Mix Serves: 20 (1/2 cup each)
Ingredients: 5 cups Cascadian Farm® Organic Honey Nut O’s cereal 1 cup pretzel sticks 1/4 cup creamy peanut butter 2 Tbsp. Cabot® unsalted butter 1 1/2 cups honey-roasted peanuts 1 1/2 cups dried banana chips 1 cup chocolate-covered raisins or plain raisins
Sunday Brunch Being Served 10am-3pm Serving Dinner (3pm-10pm) Visit our Build-Your-Own Bloody Mary Bar
Directions: 1. Heat oven to 350°F. In large bowl, mix cereal and pretzels. 2. In 1-qt saucepan, heat peanut butter and butter over medium-low heat, stirring occasionally, until melted and smooth. Pour over cereal mixture; toss until evenly coated. Spread in ungreased 13x9-inch pan. 3. Bake uncovered 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. Stir in peanuts. Spread on waxed paper to cool, about 1 hour. 4. Stir in banana chips and raisins. Store in airtight containers.
$5 Mimosas
Inspired classic American fare in a warm, inviting atmosphere. We are open 7 Days Lunch Mon - Sat: 11:30am - 4pm Sun Brunch: 10am-3pm
Nutritional Information Amount per serving: 210 Calories; 12 g Fat; 4.5 g Saturated Fat; <5 mg Cholesterol; 170 mg Sodium; 21 g Carbohydrate; 3 g Fiber; 10 g Sugar; 5 g Protein
Dinner
Thank you to our sponsors for partnering with Hannaford to offer free dietitian services. Our dietitians communicate their own nutrition expertise, views and advice, using carefully selected products in recipes and demonstrations to share information on healthful eating.
Mon - Thurs: 4pm - 10pm Fri & Sat: 4pm-11pm Sun: 3pm-10pm
For more information, visit hannaford.com/dietitians.
109928
114577
HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 37
Call Ahead Seating!
FOOD
Pick your own
Where to go apple- or pumpkin-picking
Fiesta Bagels! With Funfetti Cream Cheese
It’s Fall Time!
TRY ONE TODAY!
We’re cooking up these amazing Sweet Potato Donuts!
Try Our Cronuts Saturdays & Sundays!
REDUCE YOUR WAIT & CALL AHEAD FOR SEATING! OPEN DAILY 7am–2pm • 603-232-1953
Mon 7:30–2 • Tue–Fri 7:30–6 • Sat 8–5 • Sun 9–1
124 South River Road | Bedford, NH
www.PurpleFinchCafe.com
117136
171 Kelley St., Manchester • 624.3500
114215
www.thebakeshoponkelleystreet.com
THEY ARE BACK!
PUMPKIN PANCAKES
WE HAVE WHAT YOU CRAVE! 625-9660 • 136 Kelley St., Manchester • chezvachon.com • Mon-Sat 6-2 | Sun 7-2
Tapas • Full Plates • Raw Bar Drinks • Live Entertainment HAPPY HOUR TUE-THU 4-6PM | TUE TRIVIA SUN 1ST & 8TH $10 FOOTBALL SPECIALS LIVE MUSIC THU-SAT EVENING 583 DANIEL WEBSTER HWY • MERRIMACK, NH 603.262.5886 • PARADISENORTHNH.COM
$3.50 Well Drinks Full Bar!
MON NIGHT SPECIAL EVENTS • 10/16 Jazz Night • 10/23 Glass Painting (check out our website for details)
TUE-THU 4PM-10PM | FRI - SAT 4PM-11PM | SUN 12-8PM 117219
On & Off-Site Catering For All Your Special Events
603-753-6631 | N. Main St., Boscawen | AlansofBoscawen.com HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 38
113750
Weddings | Business Meetings | Birthday’s | Anniversaries Showers | Fundraisers | Graduations | BBQ’s & More
All menus can be served traditional sit-down or buffet style. See menu options on our website!
The fall season is a time for apples and pumpkins, and several Granite State farms offer their land for you to come pick your own. Check out this list of where you can pick your own apples or pumpkins just in time for the harvest season. Do you know of a farm or another place in southern New Hampshire where you can pick your own apples or pumpkins that isn’t on this list? Email food@hippopress.com to let us know! • Apple Annie (66 Rowell Road East, Brentwood, 778-3127, appleannienh.org) PYO apples through October. The cost is $1.75 per pound. Picking hours are daily from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
117303
With honeysugar-butter are back at Chez Vachon!
By Matt Ingersoll
mingersoll@hippopress.com
• Applecrest Farm Orchards (133 Exeter Road, Hampton Falls, 926-3721, applecrest.com) PYO apples through October. The cost is $20 per peck or $35 per half bushel on weekdays, and $25 per peck or $40 per half bushel on Saturdays and Sundays. Picking hours are from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily.
Mack’s Apples in Londonderry.
ing hours are from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily.
• Gould Hill Farm (656 Gould Hill Road, Contoocook, 746-3811, gouldhillfarm.com) PYO apples through mid-October or as they last. The cost is $7 for a half peck, $12 for a peck or $20 for a half bushel. Picking hours are from 10 a.m. • Apple Hill Farm (580 Mountain Road, to 5 p.m. daily. Concord, 224-8862, applehillfarmnh.com) • Hazelton Orchards (20 Harantis Lake PYO apples through October or as they last. The cost is $8 for a half peck, $12 for Road, Chester, 493-4804, hazeltonorone peck, and $24 for a half bushel. Picking chards.com) PYO apples and pumpkins hours are from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. daily. through October as they last. The cost for apples are $15 per peck or $25 per half • Appleview Orchard (1266 Upper bushel. Small pumpkins are $2.50 and largCity Road, Pittsfield, 435-3553, applev- er pumpkins are $15. Picking hours are ieworchard.com) PYO apples through late from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily. November or as they last. The cost is $1.45 • Lavoie’s Farm (172 Nartoff Road, per pound. Picking hours are from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. through mid-October, until dusk Hollis, 882-0072, lavoiesfarm.com) PYO apples and pumpkins through October. The thereafter. cost is 99 cents per pound for apples and • Brookdale Fruit Farm (41 Broad St., 69 cents per pound for pumpkins. Picking Hollis, 465-2240, brookdalefruitfarm.com) hours are from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily. PYO apples through October. The cost is • Lull Farm (65 Broad St., Hollis, 465$30 for a half bushel for all kinds of apples. Picking hours are from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. 7079, livefreeandfarm.com) PYO apples through October. The cost is $15 per peck • Carter Hill Orchard (73 Carter Hill or $30 for a half bushel. Picking hours are Road, Concord, 225-2625, carterhillapples. from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily. com) PYO apples through late October or • Mack’s Apples (230 Mammoth Road, as they last. The cost is $1 per pound for all kinds of apples. Picking hours are 9 a.m. Londonderry, 434-7619, macksapples. to 6 p.m. through late October, and until 5 com) PYO apples and pumpkins through mid-October. The cost for apples is $15 for p.m. thereafter. a peck, $25 for a half bushel and $45 for a • Currier Orchards (9 Peaslee Road, bushel; for pumpkins, all sizes are 50 cents Merrimack, 881-8864, facebook.com/Curri- per pound. Picking hours are from 10 a.m. erOrchards) PYO apples through October as to 5 p.m. daily. 40 they last. The cost is $1.50 per pound. Pick-
They’re back...for a limited time.
How many gallons of beer in a Barrel?
Famous Caramel Apples
Fresh, local apples from Gould Hill Farm dipped in homemade caramel, smothered in chocolate and covered in gourmet toppings.
Buy 2 get 1 Free
TRIVIA Prizes for the top three teams! Wednesdays | 7 - 9pm ANswer: 31
Since 1927
832 Elm St., Manchester, NH • 603-218-3885 13 Warren St., Concord, NH • 603-225-2591 Visit us online at: www.GraniteStateCandyShoppe.com 117043
& KITCHEN
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Dipping 6 Varieties. e t a t S e t i Gran dy Shoppe Get Yours Today. Can
1211 South Mammoth Road, Manchester, NH | backyardbrewerynh.com Open Lunch and dinner, fireside patio, Wed. Trivia and Acoustic Tuesdays.
Your Locally Supplied Butcher Shop
MANGIA SANO
SIMPLE - FRESH - ITALIAN Fresh simple Italian cuisine featuring homemade pasta and traditional Italian fare.
Stop in today & check out our supply of Green Mountain Grills! Local farm raised choice cuts of beef, pork, chicken, lamb, marinated tips, & steaks available. Perfect for throwing on the grill! Catering Specialist - BBQ Pigs - Rotisserie Rentals
Celebrating Over 50 Years of Business! 321 Nashua St • Milford, New Hampshire • (603) 554-8534 Lunch Tuesday through Saturday 11:30am - 2:30pm Dinner Tuesday through Saturday 5pm - 9pm spec
THE STEAK OUT
Our Own Smoked Ham • Beef Roast • Whole Lamb Lamb Legs • Roast Pork Loin • Custom Orders! 116286
116 Daniel Plummer Rd | Goffstown 603.622.0022 | lemayandsonsbeef-bbq.com
115567
HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 39
38 • McLeod Bros. Orchards (735 N. River Road, Milford, 673-3544, mcleodorchards.com) PYO apples through late October. The cost is $14 for a peck bag and $24 for a half-bushel bag. Picking hours are Monday through Friday, from 1 to 5:30 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Pumpkins that are already picked are also on display at the farmstand.
Wine and Food Pairing Event Featuring wines from Argentina Wednesday October 18, 2017 6:30pm
Our Soup
Details on-line or in-store
Is Back for the Season!
Complimentary Wine Tasting
Friday, October 6th • 2:30-5:30pm
Serving Manchester for 21 Years.
815 Chestnut St. Manchester
Check Facebook for Weekly Specials!
Mon–Fri: 9–6 • Sat: 9-4 AngelasPastaAndCheese.com
112093
625•9544
819 Union St., Manchester • 647-7150 • Michellespastries.com Mon 7:30a-2p • Tues-Fri 7:30a - 5:30p • Sat 8a-12p
109882
Deli Sandwiches
• Rossview Farm (85 District 5 Road, Concord, 228-4872, rossviewfarm.com) PYO pumpkins through October. The cost is 40 cents per pound for carving pumpkins and 50 cents per pound for edible pumpkins and squash. Picking hours are Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
• McQuesten Farm (330 Charles Bancroft Highway, Litchfield, 424-9268, facebook.com/McQuesten.Farm) PYO pumpkins through October. The cost is 44 cents per pound for large pumpkins and $2 each for sugar pumpkins. Picking hours are Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
• Scooter’s Farm of Woodmont (25 Woodmont Drive, Hollis, 866-441-1854, scootersofwoodmont.com) PYO apples through Oct. 15. The cost is $10 per onepound bag of apples. Bags available at the farm stand can hold 10 to 12 pounds of apples. Picking hours are dawn to dusk, or generally 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily.
• Meadow Ledge Farm (612 Route 129, Loudon, 798-5860, meadowledgefarm.com) PYO apples through October. The cost is $1.45 per pound. Picking hours are from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily.
• Sunnycrest Farm (59 High Range Road, Londonderry, 432-7753, sunnycrestfarmnh.com) PYO apples through October. Call for cost details. Picking hours are from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily.
Weekly Dish
Continued from page 36 • Spooky meals: The Windham Restaurant (59 Route 111A, Windham) is hosting a special Dining with the Dead event on Monday, Oct. 9, from 7 to 10 p.m., which will feature a presentation by British ghost hunter Steve Parsons of the hit British television show Most Haunted. The multi-course meal will include a garden salad with iceberg lettuce, cucumbers, tomatoes, red onions and peppers and a house dressing as the appetizer; three entree options that include baked scrod with butter, herbs and crushed Ritz cracker crumbs, chicken bianco tenderloins sauteed with broccoli, garlic, lemon and white wine, and marinated sirloin steak tips with garlic mashed potato; a vegetarian eggplant Parmesan special and more. Drinks are not included and meals must be ordered in advance. The cost is $49. Visit windhamrestaurant.com or call 870-9270.
SUNDAYS • 11-2pm
Voted #1 sixteen years in a row! OPEN DAILY AT 11 AM
1292 Hooksett Rd, Hooksett 782-5137 • TapHouseNH.com
HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 40
114026
669-4533
113893
486 Chestnut St., Manchester
Food & Drink Author events/lectures • NEW ENGLAND PIE: HISTORY UNDER A CRUST WITH CULINARY HISTORIAN ROBERT COX With a satisfying variety of savory and sweet, author Robert Cox takes a bite out of the history of pie and pie-making in the region. With interviews from local bakers, classic recipes and some modern twists on beloved standards, this mouthwatering history of New England pies offers something for every appetite. Thurs., Oct. 5, 7 p.m. Amherst Town Library,
• German brews: Join Incredibrew (112 Daniel Webster Highway, Nashua) for its annual Oktoberfest brewing event, which is happening on Wednesday, Oct. 11, at 6 p.m. The brewing event is a salute to classic German beers, like HefeWeizen, Dunkel Weizen, Oom-pah Pilsner, Rogg-n-Roll and much more. The cost to participate is $30 for returning brewers who bring their own bottles and $40 for new brewers with bottles provided. Visit incredibrew.com or call 891-2477. • All about apples: Apple Harvest Day returns to downtown Dover on Saturday, Oct. 7, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The event features food vendors, candy apples, hundreds of crafters, live entertainment and more, as well as the longtime tradition of the WOKQ Apple Pie Judging Contest. Admission is free. Visit dovernh.org/ apple-harvest-day or call 742-2218.
14 Main St., Amherst. Free. Visit amherstlibrary.org or call 673-2288. Beer & wine making classes • ZOMBIE LUST BREWING EVENT One this night, brew the Zombie Lust, which is modeled after one of the top beers in the USA, Zombie Dust. Thurs., Oct. 5, 6 p.m. Incredibrew, 112 Daniel Webster Highway, Nashua. $30 for returning brewers and $40 for new brewers. Visit incredibrew.com or call 8912477.
• OKTOBERFEST BEER BREWING EVENT This popular annual event is celebrated to salute classic German beers. There will be plenty of oompah music and snacks for everyone to share. On this night, learn how to make some of the finest German recipes: Oktoberfest, My Favorite Marzen, Oom-pah Pilsner, Hefe-Weizen and more. Wed., Oct. 11, 6 p.m. Incredibrew, 112 Daniel Webster Highway, Nashua. $30 for returning brewers and $40 for new brewers. Visit incredibrew.com or call 891-2477.
A Halloween Tradition Since 1927...
Cote’s
Molded Pumpkins, Witches & More, Gourmet Chocolates, Freshly Roasted Nuts, our Famous Caramel Apples and a delightful selection of your favorite Halloween confections.
e t a t S e t i Gran dy Shoppe Can
47 Years
116594
832 Elm St., Manchester, NH • 603-218-3885 13 Warren St., Concord, NH • 603-225-2591 Visit us online at: www.GraniteStateCandyShoppe.com
Since 1927
116788
Manchester
Celebrating Our
areness Month w A r
reast Cance
is B r e b cto
HAPPY HOUR
12 - 5 on the DECKS
• LUNCH, DINNER & COCKTAILS • INDOOR / OUTDOOR SEATING • HEATERS FOR OUTDOOR COMFORT • LIVE MUSIC ON WEEKENDS • DAY & NIGHT OUTDOOR DECK • OCEANVIEW SEATING & MORE!
Open Daily Through Columbus Day & Weekends Through Halloween
Tyngsboro, MA
Get Mac! of every Take & Bake sold will go to the NH Breast Cancer Coalition in October!
This October, in observance of Breast Cancer
Awareness month, Mr. Mac’s is proud to announce our Give Hope program! During the entire month of October, we will give $1 from every Take & Bake we sell to the NH Breast Cancer Coalition to help improve the lives of those fighting Breast Cancer.
COME CHECKOUT OUR EXPANDED MENU & NEWLY REMODELED DINING ROOM
117154
O UT DOO R DECK S
12 7 O C E A N B O U L E VA R D • H A M P TO N , N H • S E A K E TC H . C O M • 6 0 3 - 9 2 6 - 0 3 2 4
|
GIVE HOPE...
$1
O
Hampton Beach
Portsmouth
Order Online!
mr-macs.com
We Have Gluten Free!
117160
The Best View of
|
!
46th Season
OCE AN VI E W D I N I N G
Diner
HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 41
IN THE
Kitchen
* 5 OFF Your check of $25 or more $
WITH DERRICK BROOKS
Mon–Thurs 2–5pm
*Manchester locations only. Not to be combined with other offers. Limit 1 coupon per table
Lunch & Servinrg Everyday! e n Din
Derrick Brooks is the restaurant manager of Cabonnay (55 Bridge St., Manchester, 844-946-9473, cabonnay. com), which opened in May and features a variety of farm-to-table meat and vegetarian appetizers, entrees and desserts, as well as an in-house bar with craft cocktails from around the world. Brooks brings several years’ worth of restaurant experience to the new Queen City establishment, which included working at The Marina, and as a gluten-free baker at Against the Grain, both restaurants in Brattleboro, Vt.
3 OFF*LUNCH
$
076978
OOD and a real GO AN F OD XIC E TI M M l a E Re
Mon–Fri, 11–2pm with this coupon
*Manchester locations only. Not to be combined with other offers. Limit 1 coupon per table. Dine in only.
KIDS EAT FREE ON TUESDAYS 2–7pm!
COMBO MEALS #1- #30
LIMIT 2 KIDS PER ADULT ENTREE. DOES NOT INCLUDE DRINK OR DESSERT. DINE IN ONLY.
BUY 1 GET 1/2 PRICE SUNDAYS
(DINE IN ONLY, NOT TO BE COMBINED W/ OTHER OFFERS OR COUPONS)
545 Hooksett Rd., Manchester 628-6899 • 1875 S Willow St., Manchester 623-7705
www.lacar r etamex.com
113899
FARM MARKET
Open Daily 9am-6pm Fresh Picked Apples, Native Corn, Vegetables, Pumpkins, Mums & More!
U-PICK APPLES & PUMPKINS Open Daily 10am-5pm
NH Maple Syrup, Local Honey, James & Jellies, Fruit Pies & More!
www.macksapples.com
230 Mammoth Rd. Londonderry 603-434-7619 • Hotline 603-432-3456
117082
House-made popover
GOING ON NOW!
Sunday Brunch!
4 eggs 1½ cups milk ½ teaspoon salt 1½ cups flour 3 tablespoons melted butter (unsalted)
Oktoberfest Menu
At The
Great fall food and drink specials.
Bonfires and Live music every weekend 10/6 Ryan Williamson 10/7 TBA
NASHUA, NEW HAMPSHIRE
Starts at 7:00am
Breakfast Includes:
Giant Jenga and Cornhole
Eggs Made-To-Order Eggs Benedict Homemade Corned Beef Hash Fresh Baked Pastries & Fruit Make-Your-Own Waffle Station With Toppings!
113907
117057
Come Join Us!
9 Northeastern Blvd. Nashua, New Hampshire IGH.com/HolidayInn HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 42
menu? What is your must-have kitchen item? A grill. That is definitely my favorite My favorite item is the stuffed chicken roulade, which has housemade ricotta thing to cook on. cheese and seasonal veggies on the side. What would you choose to have for your It’s made with guanciale, which is the last meal? cheek of pork, and it’s salted so it provides My last meal would have to be Chinese a nice salty finish to each bite. food. Definitely General Tso’s chicken. What is the biggest food trend in New What is your favorite local restaurant? Hampshire right now? Something I really love seeing is that The Bedford Village Inn provides some delicious food. I love their steak frites, everyone is getting on board with the farmwhich are exquisite, and they have some to-table aspect. I really enjoy the fact that we support local farms and that everything really nice traditional ramen dishes, too. we make is fresh, not from a can or a box. What celebrity would you like to see eatWhat is your favorite thing to cook at ing in your restaurant? Adam Sandler, because I think being a home? local guy, he would understand and appreciI love cooking steak tips marinated with a nice ate what we’ve done here at the restaurant. Worcestershire sauce or a garlic soy sauce. I also love cooking breakfast. I keep it simple with What is your favorite thing on your bacon, sausages and eggs. — Matt Ingersoll
• LIGHT-N-SWEET WINE MAKING EVENT These popular wines offer relaxing at times on the deck or by the fire. On this night you’ll learn to make, bottle and label wine while enjoying some light snacks and wine tasting. Thurs., Oct. 12, 6 p.m. Incredibrew, 112 Daniel Webster Highway, Nashua. $60 per person; each attendee will receive bottles. Visit incredibrew.com or call 891-2477. • SMASHED PUMPKIN BREWING EVENT On this night we will be brewing our clone of a popular Portland, Maine recipe. Full bodied,
Warm eggs in warm water (110 degrees) for 10 minutes. Warm milk to 100 degrees. Mix eggs, milk and salt together, then whisk in all-purpose flour until smooth. Add the melted butter. Portion out batter to make the popovers. Cook at 425 degrees for 15 minutes. Brush tops with butter, then add sea salt. Put back in the oven for 350 degrees for 10 minutes. Eat immediately (batter can be stored safely for up to three days).
pleasant pumpkin undertones and a rush of holiday species highlight this nearly 9 percent beer. Thurs., Oct. 12, 6 p.m. Incredibrew, 112 Daniel Webster Highway, Nashua. $30 for returning brewers and $40 for new brewers. Visit incredibrew.com or call 891-2477. Chef events/special meals • DINING WITH THE DEAD Dining with the Dead returns to the Windham Restaurant, featuring British ghost hunter Steve Parsons of the hit British television show Most Haunted. Mon., Oct. 9, 7 to 10 p.m. The
Windham Restaurant, 59 NH111A, Windham. $49 per person. Visit windhamrestaurant. com or call 870-9270. • HARVEST SUPPER AT UNION CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH This delicious home cooked menu includes corn beef, cabbage, carrots, turnip, potatoes, beets, squash, rolls, home baked pies, coffee and punch. Thurs., Oct. 12, 5:30 and 6:15 p.m. Union Congregational Church Chapel, 80 Main St., Union. $9 for adults and $5 for children. Visit facebook.com/uccunionnh or call 473-2446.
Over 700 selections of beer, cider and mead with friendly and knowledgeable service
pantry
Ideas from off the shelf
2 pounds chicken wings 2 cups buffalo wing sauce 1 packet ranch dressing seasoning salt black pepper fresh chives (optional)
W Y
of the Best 2013
Local Favorite our
Hippo Best of 2014
Read
der s P icks
Local Favorite our
s
Buffalo Ranch Slow-Cooker Wings Recipe adapted from Delish
Rea
s
It was the first week of fall and the temperatures were in the high 80s. As much as I wanted to hunker down with some warm comfort food and settle in for some football, it was just too hot. I nixed everything I wanted to make well before I set foot in the kitchen. Chili and apple pie required too much time in the kitchen; wedding soup and chicken pot pie were faster but, like my other fall favorites, necessitated that the oven or stovetop be on for far too long. On the verge of ordering takeout, I stumbled upon a recipe for buffalo ranch wings. The recipe was pantry-friendly and sounded simple, and the best part was that the wings were made in the slow cooker. Now, I know what you’re thinking: “Wings in a slow cooker? You must be out of your mind.” But bear with me. Not only were these wings delicious, but they’re perfect for tailgates or potlucks — two of my favorite fall pastimes. With a bottle of buffalo wing sauce and a packet of dry ranch dressing mix, these wings take on a recognizable but somehow unique flavor profile. The buffalo sauce offers its traditional smokiness and spice while the ranch cools things down a bit and provides underlying notes of dill and some saltiness. By tossing the ingredients into the slow cooker, I had plenty of time to enjoy some of the games or take the kids outside without worrying about what was for dinner. The key to these wings, though, is finishing them under the broiler or, if you’re tailgating, on the grill. The slow cooker
INNE
R
Buffalo ranch slow-cooker wings
Hippo Best of 2015
ers Picks
Read
ers Picks
115061
FROM THE
Y
FOOD
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What a difference fresh-picked makes! does the bulk of the work, so you only need to pop these scrumptious bites under the broiler for about seven minutes — just enough time to give them that great crunch that accompanies truly crispy wings. And, with the cooking liquid from the slow cooker, there’s no need to make a dipping sauce. However, if you just can’t wait to bite into one of the wings, they’re fully cooked and ready to eat in about two hours (time may vary depending on slow cooker), without any time under the broiler. Normally I tweak recipes or add extra salt or pinches of pepper to taste, but this was one recipe I didn’t really mess with, and I was happy with the finished product. While I skipped adding the chives the recipe called for and added a bit more buffalo sauce, I found the buffalo sauce wasn’t overpowering, and the undertones of ranch snuck into every bite. There wasn’t any need to dip the wings in ranch or blue cheese as they packed plenty of flavor. And while my husband initially tried to talk me out of using the slow cooker for wings, even he was thrilled with the result. The wings were moist and evenly cooked, and the flavor from the sauce really soaked through, helping to turn this recipe into one of my new fall (and warm weather-friendly) favorites. — Lauren Mifsud Liberally season wings with salt and pepper and add to slow cooker. In a large bowl, combine buffalo sauce and ranch dressing mix. Pour the buffalo-ranch mix over the wings, stirring to coat. Cook on high until wings are cooked through, between 2 and 2.5 hours. Heat the broiler and line a baking pan with foil or parchment paper. Pour wings onto the tray and broil until crispy, about 7 minutes. Garnish with chives if desired.
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Last week’s ridiculous 90-degree weather notwithstanding, it’s now officially fall. And that means I give you explicit permission to drink fall beers. I’m still not mentally prepared to talk about pumpkin beers just yet, but that’s really more my problem. I am ready, however, to talk about non-pumpkin fall seasonal beers — beers that honor and celebrate the harvest season. I’m talking about brews with heavier malts, deep amber hues, and complex, nutty, sweet flavors. I really credit fall seasonal beers — and various brown ale styles — for pulling me into the craft beer world to begin with years ago. The smooth flavors and rich malts are downright tantalizing. These are beers you drink on a crisp, cool evening in your most comfortable armchair as a reward for raking your entire lawn. These beers are about flavor and complexity and celebration. Before we became obsessed with hops, I’m pretty sure people liked beers that featured malts. And fall is a reminder that malts are OK. You can still drink IPAs — part of the beauty of IPAs is that you can drink them all year long — but there are other beers and in fall many of those other beers shine in their malty, rich complexities. Years ago, I remember being excited each fall the first time I’d see a Samuel Adams Octoberfest at my local beer store. It was like a beacon symbolizing that it was time to turn our backs on ultra-light summer beers and turn instead to malty offerings, like Oktoberfest-style beers. Fortunately, New Hampshire breweries feature no shortage of fall seasonal offerings for all of us to enjoy and explore. Here are five New Hampshire-made fall beers to whet your whistle as you celebrate the harvest:
Fall beers, like the Oktoberfest brews pictured here, feature rich malts and amber hues.
locally produced maple syrup and, at 7 percent alcohol by volume (ABV), is a perfectly warming choice for a cool fall evening. Octoberfest and the Smoked Festbier by Flying Goose Brew Pub & Grill (New London): First, I try new Oktoberfests whenever I can and I’m rarely disappointed. Oktoberfest beers boast bold malts and rich aromas. Flying Goose’s Smoked Festbier is particularly intriguing, a “slightly smoky, golden lager” with a lower ABV than the traditional Marzen, the Oktoberfest style. Stammtisch by Liar’s Bench Beer Co. (Portsmouth): This is another Oktoberfest offering, complete with rich notes of caramel and toffee but without the sweetness. I’m intrigued by a drier variety of this fall staple. Sometimes that sweetness and that richness can be a bit much, particularly if you’re enjoying the beer with food. On paper, the Stammtisch seems to be an interesting alternative. Fall Line by Tuckerman Brewing Co. (Conway): This sounds a little different and I like it — an unfiltered “wet hopped harvest ale with an earthy sweet aroma.” I’m interested to taste how the hops and the sweetness play together. You should be intrigued by that too.
Opa’s Oktoberfest by Moat Mountain Flap Jack by Henniker Brewing Co. Smokehouse and Brewing Co. (North Con(Henniker): A maple double brown ale? Yes way): At Moat Mountain, the brewers focus please. This fall seasonal is brewed with on developing authentic brews, which makes their Oktoberfest offering particularly intriguWhat’s in My Fridge ing. You would note the difference between domestic Oktoberfest-style brews, comJack’s Abby Sunny Ridge Pilsner: When pared to German breweries, such as Spaten or it was literally 90 degrees a couple weeks Paulaner. To me, the malts are even more proback, I picked up a six-pack of the Sunny Ridge so I had something lighter around nounced in the authentic German offerings. and because I thought my wife would like I’ll be on the lookout for this one. it. I think she did, but she did say, “A little strong,” when she tried it. Admittedly, the beer has more character than you might expect from a traditional pilsner — but for me it was an excellent, easy-drinking option for a surprise heat wave.
Jeff Mucciarone is a senior account executive with Montagne Communications, where he provides communications support to the New Hampshire wine and spirits industry.
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POP CULTURE
Index CDs
pg46
Lanterns B • Nosaj Thing, Parallels A pg48
• Caesar’s Last Breath C+ • Book Report Includes listings for lectures, author events, book clubs, writers’ workshops and other literary events.
Seventh album from the Anchorage, Alaska, quartet, which has quietly accumulated such achievements as tour slots with Alice in Chains, Atreyu and Fear Factory as well as a spot on the Resident Evil: Apocalypse soundtrack. A nice epic sob-story about the singer’s divorce is the final point to ponder when considering this stuff for your list; metal albums always have more punch when the bandleader’s life is in a temporary state of ruin. In the end, though, it’s a good-not-great mishmash of microwaved sounds stripped from their influences, with singer Brock Lindow nicking everyone from Tom Araya and Staley Hetfield to your basic black-metallers and Cookie Monsters, some nu-metal middle-ground covered while he’s at it. That’s not to say the riffs aren’t heavy — they are, but the stoner factor is a bit lacking, which wouldn’t matter, but to start a ripping-heavy song like “Better to Burn” with disposable Dashboard Confessional chords isn’t my idea of disruptive innovation. B — Eric W. Saeger Nosaj Thing, Parallels (Innovative Leisure Records)
To get author events, library events and more listed, send information to listings@hippopress.com. FILM
MUSIC, BOOKS, GAMES, COMICS, MOVIES, DVDS, TV AND MORE 36 Crazyfists, Lanterns (Spinefarm Records)
• 36 Crazyfists,
BOOKS
PLAYLIST A seriously abridged compendium of recent and future CD releases
pg50
• American Made B • Battle of the Sexes B+ • Flatliners CLooking for more book, film and pop culture events? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play or hipposcout.com.
The nom-de-DJ of barelyabove-ground Los Angeles tech emperimentalist Jason Chung, Nosaj Thing is a project that aims to explore the well-covered dualities of man, such as “emotion vs. technology,” “nostalgia vs. right now” and so on and so forth. How he gets there is through innovative hip-hop beatage which in this album’s case is expressed through a lonely, waterlogged pseudo-piano arpeggio decorated with forlorn cheese (“Nowhere”) to begin with anyway. You all know by now I’m not a fan of minor-key depression-ward stuff, but Steve Spacek’s 1970s-soul vocal on “All Points Back To U” is instantly haunting, anchoring down a ghostly array of synth lines that really fit together exquisitely if a bit too Nintendo for my constitution. The big sell here is the single “Way We Were,” featuring the smoky Roberta Flack-ish vocal of Zuri Marley cooing over a brilliantly seductive pattern of bloop-glitch and stifled trap, a no-brainer for after-party chill. A — Eric W. Saeger
• Ah shaddap, it’s those Led Zeppelin wannabes-and-never-wills The Darkness, with a new album to bother me, called Pinewood Smile, due out Oct. 6! These guys have to be getting old by now, because the first time I sputtered a bunch of insults in their direction was in 2004. They have to be getting too old to do this anymore, they have to. But in the meantime, get the barf bag and let’s see what this new stuff sounds like on YouTube. The new single, “All the Pretty Girls,” features a pretty decent guitar sound, and the singer, whatsisname, screams like the guy from Deep Purple used to, during the Civil War or whatnot, but then it becomes Dexy’s Midnight Runners doing emo again, same old thing, and I need the barf bag. • Wolf Parade is one way of saying “Some bands can’t decide if they want to be Modest Mouse or Gang of Four, and you can usually tell if a band is still fighting over it when they can’t even manage to cobble together a coherent Wikipedia page after 14, count ‘em, years.” It’s also another way of saying, “Hmph, another indie band from Canada, what’ll they think of next,” and that’s where their new album Cry Cry Cry comes in. There were two advance singles to choose from, and unfortunately I chose “You’re Dreaming,” a slightly Buzzcocks-punky song that would have been cool if they’d left out the cheesebag keyboard. But then it would have just been even more generic, so forget it, leave the stupid keyboard in there. • Former Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher is still being weird, like when he walked off the Lollapalooza stage after 20 minutes in August, then “made up for it” by releasing the song “For What It’s Worth” the next week. I’m not really “hip” to the gears and cogs of this weirdo’s “relationship” with his fans, but if you’ve put up with him this long, you may as well buy his new LP, As You Were, when it comes out on Oct. 6. Teaser single (the whole album is streaming, but come on, do I look like I want to do that?) “For What It’s Worth” sounds pretty much like Oasis’s “Wonderwall,” meaning he’s still ripping off that one song his brother wrote, but the hook is weak and I must get away from this song immediately. • The Black Dahlia Murder are back with more hamsterwheel borderline-math metal, this time with an album called Nightbringers. The title track isn’t very complicated, but the riff is cool. Actually this is like prog-black-metal. Your spazzy kitten might like it, maybe? — Eric W. Saeger
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Now showing
NH Film Festival returns with more than 100 films By Angie Sykeny
asykeny@hippopress.com
A short documentary about a taxidermist and her peacock and a feature-length drama starring Willem Dafoe are among the more than 100 films that will be shown at the New Hampshire Film Festival, happening Thursday, Oct. 12, through Sunday, Oct. 15. Film screenings as well as filmmaker panels, filmmaking workshops, parties and other activities will be held at various locations throughout Portsmouth during the four-day event. Festival Executive Director Nicole Gregg said the New Hampshire Film Festival attracts around 10,000 attendees and is the “largest, longest-running and most prestigious film festival in the state.” “These are experienced filmmakers, many [of whom] are making the circuit to festivals all over the world and have New Hampshire on their list,” Gregg said. “People come from all over for this festival, some internationally. We’ll be hosting a lot of out-of-town guests, for sure.” The film lineup includes short films and feature films in a variety of genres, including animation, documentary, comedy, drama, horror, mystery, thriller and others. More than 30 of the films were produced in New Hampshire or are affiliated with New Hampshire in some way. One of those films is It’s Criminal, a feature documentary about a group of Dartmouth College students who worked with a group of incarcerated women in Unity, New Hampshire, to write and perform a play based on the women’s lives and experiences. “It’s about what happens when you bring together people with and without privilege. … It’s a difficult story, but a hopeful one. They were able to overcome those differences and bonded in this beautiful way,” the filmmaker Signe Taylor said. “I think that when you dig deep into a local story like that, you find one that’s universal. This is a story that’s happening around the U.S, that’s relevant and resonates with people.” Other New Hampshire documentaries at the festival look at the issue of homelessness (404 Not Found), the life of a local veteran (An American Solo), the Monadnock region’s response to climate change (From Hurricane to Climate Change), a community rallying around a high school principal with ALS (Mr. Connolly Has ALS), stories of people affected by opiate addiction (The Heroin Effect), the collapse of the historic cod population (Sacred Cod:
New Hampshire Film Festival. Courtesy of Michael Sterling Photography.
The Fight for a New England Tradition) and more. Gregg said this year’s festival will have many interactive opportunities for attendees. “It’s not just the typical viewing experience; it’s a whole other level,” she said. “There are so many layers: the films, the panels, the special guests, the networking opportunities, the afterparties, the friendships that are made and the reunions that are had. People will really get to mingle with the filmmakers and ask questions and learn more about the films that goes beyond just seeing it.” At the It’s Criminal screening, for example, there will be a Q&A panel with some of the women in the film who are no longer incarcerated, Dartmouth College professors and one of the students. “You’ve just witnessed this really long story about personal change with these characters, and then they step off screen and you get to actually talk to them,” Taylor said. “It’s quite powerful.” New Hampshire Film Festival When: Thursday, Oct. 12, through Sunday, Oct. 15, all day Where: Film screenings and events take place at Portsmouth locations: The Music Hall (28 Chestnut St.), The Music Hall Loft (131 Congress St.), 3S Artspace (319 Vaughan St.), Moffatt-Ladd House (154 Market St.), and Discover Portsmouth Center (10 Middle St.) Tickets: Day passes cost $25 for Thursday and $40 for Friday, Saturday and Sunday, and include entry to every screening for that day, plus admission to all panels and workshops. Weekend passes, which include entry for all four days, cost $100. VIP passes, which include premium and advanced seating at every screening and priority entrance to all ceremonies and parties, cost $225. More info: nhfilmfestival.com
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POP CULTURE BOOKS
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Sam Kean is your kinda rambly, very knowledgeable grandfather talking science over coffee in Caesar’s Last Breath, which brings some amazing natural philosophy together with some in-depth people stories. It starts strong with the incredible sciencey stuff, like “An average molecule of air at 72oF zips around at a thousand miles per hour.” In the endnotes for Chapter 1 there’s a citation of “‘Complete Vaporization of a Human Body,’ Journal of Interdisciplinary Science Topics 2, no. 1 (2013).” But alas, we are not soundly in Mary Roach territory. Caesar’s Last Breath is much more history of science than science. Perhaps I would have expected this if I’d read Kean’s earlier books. From the title, I was hoping he would be decoding the secrets of air for us. Maybe a third or less of the book is actually about air; most is about humans’ attempts over the centuries to figure out air or make it do what they want. The reader can take home the point that the detailed makeup of air and its components is important — the configurations of molecules in our atmosphere account for why Mount Saint Helens happened the way it did, and why hot air balloons work, and why hurricanes hurricane, and so on. Understanding these things can give us steam engines and fertilizer and anesthesia. But in Kean’s telling, the science of Mount Saint Helens’ is taken over by a rather long and sad story of a geezer who thought he could withstand its eruption (see Journal of Interdisciplinary Science Topics reference above). The wonder of hot air balloons is overshadowed by minutia on how two dudes discovered argon. And the chapter about anesthesia is labeled with a cartoon model of nitrous oxide and titled “The Wonder-Working Gas of Delight,” but it’s a tale of “post-traumatic nightmares of being flayed alive” and Kean’s somber observation, “Personally, I can’t think of any worse torture than anesthesia awareness.” Maybe they should’ve called it “decoding and being terrified by the secrets of the air around us.” For all his rambling discourses, Kean does not mince words when he has a point to make — he calls James Watt’s steam engine “a bunch of crap cobbled together” — and once in a while he leaves the details alone: “Now, the physics here gets pretty gnarly (trust me).” But there is a great deal of infor-
mation here, maybe too much, or too disparate, for one book. It might have worked better as a lot of long magazine articles — here’s a mini dual biography of Lavoisier and Priestley, here’s Alfred Nobel conducting research on explosives, let me tell you about the invention of wrought iron and the building of the Tay bridge, “the Titanic of architecture.” I had not heard of the Tay bridge disaster — or if I had, I’d forgotten it — and it’s an interesting thing to know about. It just doesn’t fit anything I was hoping to get out of a book with the title of this one. (The bridge collapsed in the wind. Wind — air — there you go. But, I mean, kind of a stretch, right?) The “Caesar’s Last Breath” reference is to the idea, which I for one first encountered in John Allen Paulos’ 1988 book Innumeracy, that you very likely just inhaled a molecule that was exhaled by Julius Caesar in his dying breath. It’s a matter of probability and how many molecules of air exist in our atmosphere and how they dissipate. Which is why I expected this book to talk more about air molecules, not so much about how “Caesar fought back at first, but after the first few stabs the marble floor beneath his sandals grew slippery with blood.” Sam Kean does have a long resume of magazine articles and has logged time with public radio’s Radiolab, which seems just about right for the tone of Caesar’s Last Breath. Taken as separate stories, each one having plenty of colorful tangents and supporting detail, this material would work better. C+ — Lisa Parsons
POP CULTURE BOOKS
Books Author Events • JENNIFER VAUGHN Author presents Echo Valley. Sat., Oct. 7, 1 to 3 p.m. Books A Million, 76 Fort Eddy Road, Concord. • ROBERT KANIGEL Author discusses Eyes on the Street, plus a screening of Citizen Jane. Tues., Oct. 10, 7 p.m. The Music Hall Loft, 131 Congress St., Portsmouth. $30. Visit themusichall.org. • SY MONTGOMERY & ELIZABETH MARSHALL THOMAS Authors talk about Tamed and Untamed: Close Encounters of the Animal Kind. Tues., Oct. 10, 7 p.m. Gibson’s Bookstore, 45 S. Main St., Concord. Visit waterstreetbooks. com. • JOYCE MAYNARD Author talks about The Best of Us: A
Book sales • OCTOBER BOOK SALE Books for sale ranging from $0.50 to $2. Sat., Oct. 14, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Goffstown Public Library, 2 High St. , Goffstown. Visit goffstownlibrary.com. • BOOK SALE Shop a wide selection of books, audiobooks, DVDs and more. Sat., Oct. 14, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Pelham Public Library, 24 Village Green, Pelham. Visit pelhampubliclibrary. org. Lectures & discussions • SGT. PEPPER’S LONELY HEARTS CLUB BAND Multimedia presentation explores the classic Beatles album. Wed., Oct. 11, 7 p.m. Nashua Public Library, 2 Court St., Nashua. Free. Visit nashualibrary.org. • MY GRANDMOTHER ASKED ME TO TELL YOU SHE’S SORRY Book discussion. Thurs., Oct. 12, 6:30 p.m. Pelham Public Library, 24 Village Green, Pelham. Free and open to the public. Visit pelhampubliclibrary.org.
Other • LONG STORY SHORT: HOME FOR THE HOLIMemoir. Thurs., Oct. 12, at 7 DAYS Non-fiction storytellp.m. Gibson’s Bookstore, 45 S. ing series. Wed., Nov. 8. 3S Main St., Concord. Visit gib- Artspace, 319 Vaughan St., sonsbookstore.com. Portsmouth. Visit 3sarts.org. • MARIANNA O’CONNOR Author presents Haunted Hikes Writers groups of New Hampshire. Thurs., Oct. • BOSCAWEN WRITERS 12, 6:30 p.m. James A. Tuttle GROUP Meets monthly. Library, 45 Main St., Antrim. Last Mon., 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Call 588-6786. Boscawen Public Library, 116 • JENNIFER HAIGH Author N. Main St. , Boscawen. presents Heat and Light. Fri., Oct. 13, 7 p.m. Nashua Public Library, 2 Court St., Nashua. $10 in advance at mktix.com/ npl or the library front desk and $12 at the door. Visit nashualiLooking for more book, brary.org or call 589-4610. film and pop culture • SY MONTGOMERY & events? Check out HipELIZABETH MARSHALL po Scout, available via THOMAS Authors talk about the Apple App Store, Tamed and Untamed: Close Google Play and online Encounters of the Animal Kind. at hipposcout.com Sat., Oct. 14, at 2 p.m. Gibson’s
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Railway memoir: Gibson’s Bookstore (45 S. Main St., Concord) will host Joe McQuaid as he presents his book Cog Days: A Boy’s Life and One Tragic Summer on Mt. Washington on Saturday, Oct. 7, at 4 p.m. McQuaid, who is now the publisher of the New Hampshire Union Leader and Sunday News, spent his teenage years in the White Mountains, working on the Mt. Washington Cog Railway for the Teague family. His memoir tells the story of one terrible summer that claimed the lives of Colonel Teague and a daughter and ended with the worst accident in the Cog’s 150-year history. Visit gibsonsbookstore.com or call 224-0562 for more information. Stories in the Millyard: Award-winning author and poet Kathy Brodsky will hold a storytime at the Millyard Museum (200 Bedford St., Manchester) on Saturday, Oct. 7, at 10:30 a.m. Brodsky is the author of 10 picture books for children and one book for adults in print. She will read from two of her books, Highwire and Winner Is, and will host a signing following the storytime. This event is free with museum admission ($8 for adults, $6 for seniors ages 62 and up and for college students, $4 for kids ages 12 and up and free for kids 12 and under). Visit kathybrodsky.com or call 622-7531 for more information. A grandmother’s letters: Pelham Public Library (24 Village Green, Pelham) will have a book discussion of My Grandmother Asked Me to Tell You She’s Sorry on Thursday, Oct. 12. From 6:30 to 7:45 p.m. The book follows Elsa, a seven-year-old girl who takes refuge in her grandmother’s stories. When Elsa’s grandmother dies, leaving Elsa a series of letters apologizing to the people she has wronged in her life, Elsa embarks on a story of her own to deliver the letters. Call 635-7581 or visit pelhampubliclibrary.org for more information. — Angie Sykeny
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Bookstore, 45 S. Main St., Concord. Call 224-0562. Visit gibsonsbookstore.com. • JOYCE MAYNARD Author talks about The Best of Us: A Memoir. Sat., Oct. 14, 2 p.m. Gibson’s Bookstore, 45 S. Main St., Concord. The Toadstool Bookshop, 12 Depot Square, Peterborough. Visit gibsonsbookstore.com. • ARCHER MAYOR Author presents Trace. Sat., Oct. 21, 3 p.m. Gibson’s Bookstore, 45 S. Main St., Concord. Visit gibsonsbookstore.com or call 2240562.
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HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 49
POP CULTURE FILM REVIEWS BY AMY DIAZ
American Made (R)
King and those like Kramer who hold up the glass ceiling. B+ Rated PG-13 for some sexual content and partial nudity. Directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris with a screenplay by Simon Beaufoy, Battle of the Sexes is two hours and one minute long and distributed by Fox Searchlight Pictures.
An airline pilot gets tangled up with the CIA in American Made, a Charlie Wilson’s War-ish, true-ish story from the 1980s.
At least as this movie tells it (a caveat for all discussed here), the late 1970s find Barry Seal (Tom Cruise) bored with his TWA pilot gig and making a few extra bucks smuggling Cuban cigars. This legal laxity attracts CIA agent Schafer (Domhnall Gleeson), who proposes that Barry start his own airline service. His cover will be airline consulting but his real work will be taking surveillance photos of Sandinista military installations. Eventually, his work includes exchanging cash for intelligence from a Panamanian colonel named Noriega (Alberto Ospino). His regular trips to Central and South America also capture the attention of Colombian businessmen, including Jorge Ochoa (Alejandro Edda) and Pablo Escobar (Mauricio Mejia). Seeing an opportunity for extra cash, Barry decides to smuggle cocaine as a side gig to the CIA work. Soon, Barry is caught up in a web that includes both the Medellín cartel and the CIA and its attempt to arm the Contras. He runs guns, drugs and eventually even Contra soldiers themselves, secretly brought to his CIA-gifted massive plot of land in Arkansas. So flush he can’t even find physical space for all the cash, Barry never convinces his wife, Lucy (Sarah Wright), that his work is legal even if he maybe believes that helping the CIA fight communists is a get-out-of-jail-free card. For a while, it works. A raid by the DEA, ATF, Arkansas state police and FBI agents is smoothed over after a call from the Arkansas governor and Barry walks free. Of course, when we see Oliver North (Robert Farrior) enter the mix, we know Barry’s luck will run out. Barry Seal, as Tom Cruise plays him, is a light, charming guy. He comes across as a happy goofus, though smart enough to know how to play his role and to stay one step ahead of everyone until he can’t. Cruise shines here in a way that is as good as but refreshingly different from his best roles of recent years — the hustling, middle-aged version of his Top Gun persona, maybe. He seems to be enjoying this character and the character has the energy to pull all the weird-but-true(ish) elements together and make them work as a believable story and Barry work as a believable person. The movie itself has a light, bubbly feel, which is odd to say about a movie that (not unlike Charlie Wilson’s War) features a story about dodgy American covert action and its horrible unintended consequences. That the movie is able to pile on so much history (the Cold War; politics in Central and South America, and call-outs to Reagan, both Bushes, Clinton, North and Fawn Hall — kids, ask Wikipedia) without getting bogged down or HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 50
Flatliners (PG-13)
Medical students play chicken with death in Flatliners, a remake of the 1990 movie.
American Made
too self-important is due largely to Cruise. Between Barry’s onscreen action and narration that walks us through events, he is in nearly every scene and his sunniness makes the craziness oddly entertaining. I don’t know how close the story tracks to actual history (Slate has a good look at fact versus fiction) but American Made offers a good study of the mindset of a time and an engaging process story. B Rated R for language throughout and some sexuality/nudity. Directed by Doug Liman with a screenplay by Gary Spinelli, American Made is an hour and 55 minutes long and distributed by Universal Pictures.
Battle of the Sexes (PG-13)
Tennis star Billie Jean King faces Bobby Riggs on the court and sexism off in Battle of the Sexes, a movie centered on the 1973 tennis match.
We meet King (Emma Stone) as she struggles with Jack Kramer (Bill Pullman), head of tennis officialdom, to get women tennis players the same prize money as men. She and Gladys Heldman (Sarah Silverman, whose performance is a pleasure to watch) form their own professional circuit, the Virginia Slims Tour — a scrappy organization fueled in part by King’s fame. Bobby Riggs’ (Steve Carell), meanwhile, struggles with post-athletic-peak life. Unfulfilled by a boring office job, Riggs plays and bets on tennis games with rich guys, to the dismay of his wife, Priscilla (Elizabeth Shue), who wants him to go to Gamblers Anonymous and settle down. When he sees King’s tour, he thinks not about the politics but the potential for a show: as the male chauvinist, he could gin up excitement for a man-versuswoman (and therefore Men versus Women) tennis match. Though Billie Jean and her husband Larry (Austin Stowell) outwardly appear to have a more solid marriage than the Riggs’, Bil-
lie Jean faces personal turmoil while on tour. She meets and begins an affair with Marilyn Barnett (Andrea Riseborough). Beyond what the relationship means to her marriage or the feelings for women she hadn’t previously dealt with, King worries about what, in the bad old days of the early 1970s, this relationship could do to the public goodwill and sponsorships for her fledgling tour. Battle of the Sexes features solid performances: Emma Stone does a good job conveying King’s ambition, both as an athlete and as a woman seeking recognition, and the swirl of emotions connected to her feelings for Marilyn and for Larry and her fear about what this new relationship could mean for her career and even her relationship with her parents. Also strong is Steve Carell’s performance. His Riggs rides the line between sad-sack and huckster optimist. Riggs could have been onenote but Carell makes him a complex person. And even more than with Riggs, Austin Stowell’s role as devoted husband Larry could have been very thin. Stowell is able to let us see Larry and understand the kind of relationship the Kings have in a way that really brings more poignancy to this section of the story. As a rousing tale that blends athletic ability with societal change, it’s the romance story line and King’s first steps on the road to being able to live openly that delivers the movie’s uplift. King can’t celebrate the match by publicly kissing her girlfriend but today, according to the end title cards, she happily lives with her partner. That the kind Larry is remarried and has children, to whom Billie Jean is a godmother, makes that “happily ever after” complete. The other struggle of the movie, the struggle for equal respect for women in the public sphere, is a far less straightforward “win” but interesting in how the movie presents it. The match between King and Riggs, as King even says in the movie, is a show (though one she can’t afford to lose). The real battle is between
Nearly a decade ago, Courtney (Ellen Page) caused a car accident that resulted in the death of her sister. Now a med student, she spends her off-hours studying near-death experiences and trying to learn ... well, here’s my first problem with this movie. Her obsession with the accident and her sister seems to indicate that she wants to find a “heaven,” a place you reunite with loved ones. But her approach is to document brain activity moments after clinical death. When she ropes fellow students Sophia (Kiersey Clemons) and Jamie (James Norton) into a flatlining experiment, she’s all jazzed about finding the scientific basis for stories about tunnels and white lights. This might seem like a minor difference but it feels like the Courtney backstory and the Courtney-spurred plot don’t exactly fit with the rest of the movie. If she just wants to briefly die and look for sis, the movie’s entire plot seems unnecessary. Anyway, Sophia and Jamie get tricked into watching Courtney die and when her revival doesn’t go as planned, fellow students Ray (Diego Luna) and Marlo (Nina Dobrev) find themselves involved as well. When Courtney comes back, she describes the experience as, like, trippy, man, and she appears to have heightened memory and focus. Sophia, who feels like she’s sinking at med school, is eager to benefit from some of that brain enhancement, as is the hyper-competitive Marlo. Jamie, a rich party bro, just wants a good high. The students take turns dying — except for Ray, who thinks they’re nuts but feels obligated to keep them from accidentally killing themselves. The obscure-fact-remembering and Rubik’s-cube-solving awesomeness, however, comes at a price. Those who flatlined are also seeing and hearing things, things connected to people they wronged. Torn up by guilt, they have a hard time telling what’s real and what isn’t. More horrible, though, is the thought that some spooky thing has come with them from the Other Side. Normally, I tend to think horror movies could examine the “what if this is just in my head” idea longer, because the idea that the strangeness is actually a delusion is way more terrifying than a girl climbing out of the TV. But here, I feel like the attempt to have it both ways — supernatural or psychological thriller, you choose! — muddies the 51
POP CULTURE FILMS
JUDGE THE SHORTS You too can be a movie awards judge by voting for Best Film and Best Actor among the 10 short-film finalists in this year’s Manhattan Short film competition. Locally this weekend, the shorts screen Friday, Oct. 6 at 7 p.m.; Saturday, Oct. 7, at 2 and 7 p.m., and Sunday, Oct. 8, at 2 p.m. at NHTI in Sweeny Auditorium, 31 College Drive in Concord. Tickets cost $10. The films hail from around the globe and include two comedies (Fickle Bickle, Perfect Day), a horror movie in the vein of The Babadook (Behind), two stories based on fascinating events from history (Hope Dies Last; Viola, Franca), an utterly charming action movie based on a true story (Just, Go!), a drama about current events (Mare Nostrum), a bleak but bittersweet sci-fi (8 Minutes), a visually cool animated movie (In A Nutshell) and an action movie that feels like, in the best way, a blend of Guy Richie’s sensibility and the Taken movies (Do No Harm, which features an actress named Marsha Yuan, pictured, whose performance might be my second favorite female action hero of the year after Gal Gadot’s Wonder Woman). Voting worldwide started at screenings last weekend. After movie-goers’ votes are tallied, winners will be announced Monday, Oct 9. See manhattanshort.com.
50 water. The movie could have worked as a “thing from the Other Side” movie or as a “death makes you look at yourself” movie or as a “death changes your brain and now you’re superhuman and also bonkers” movie. Any of those would have worked as a concept (though the general blahness makes me doubt any of this could have worked as a movie). As it is, the movie feels rushed, the
characters feel thin and the suspense is more frustrating than scary or contemplative or whatever it was they were going for. CRated R for violence and terror, sexual content, language, thematic material, and some drug references. Directed by Niels Arden Oplev with a screenplay by Ben Ripley, Flatliners is an hour and 50 minutes long and distributed by Sony Pictures.
Saturday, Oct. 21st 5:30pm
11 South Main St. Concord Red River Theatres is turning 10 and we are celebrating with a fun night of movie trivia, delicious food from O Steaks and Seafood, and great people! Tickets are $75 per individual and $600 for a table of 8. Tickets available over the phone, in person, and online! All proceeds support non-profit Red River Theatres.
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MOVIES OUTSIDE THE CINEPLEX RED RIVER THEATRES 11 S. Main St., Concord, 2244600, redrivertheatres.org • Stronger (R, 2017) Thurs., Oct. 5, 2, 5:25 and 8 p.m.; Fri., Oct. 6 and Sat., Oct. 7, 12:50, 3:10 and 5:30 p.m.; Sun., Oct. 8, 12:50 and 3:10 p.m.; Mon., Oct. 9, through Thurs., Oct. 12, 2:10 and 5:35 p.m. • Wind River (R, 2017) Thurs., Oct. 5, 2:05 p.m. • Beach Rats (R, 2017) Thurs., Oct. 5, 2:10, 5:35 and 7:40 p.m. • Bonnie and Clyde (NR, 1967) Thurs., Oct. 5, 6 p.m. • Victoria and Abdul (PG-13, 2017) Fri., Oct. 6, and Sat., Oct. 7, 1, 3:25, 5:50 and 8:20 p.m.; Sun., Oct. 8, 1, 3:25 and 5:50 p.m.; Mon., Oct. 9 through Thurs., Oct. 12, 2, 5:25 and 7:50 p.m. • Battle of the Sexes (PG-13, 2017) Fri., Oct. 6, and Sat., Oct. 7, 12:45, 3:15, 5:45 and 8:15 p.m.; Sun., Oct. 8, 12:45, 3:15 and 5:45 p.m.; Mon., Oct. 9, and Tues., Oct. 10, 2:05, 5:30 and 8 p.m.; Wed., Oct. 11, 2:05 p.m; and Thurs., Oct. 12, 2:05, 5:30 and 8 p.m. • Rebel in the Rye (PG-13, 2017) Fri., Oct. 6, and Sat., Oct. 7, 7:50 p.m.; Sun., Oct. 8, 5:30 p.m.; Mon., Oct. 9, through Thurs., Oct. 12, 7:50 p.m.
WILTON TOWN HALL 40 Main St., Wilton, 654-3456, wiltontownhalltheatre.com • The Trip to Spain (2017) Thurs., Oct. 5, 7:30 p.m., through Thurs., Oct. 12, 7:30 p.m., and Sun., Oct. 8, 2 and 4:30 p.m. • Wind River (R, 2017) Thurs., Oct. 5, 7:30 p.m. • Blade Runner 2049 (R, 2017) Fri., Oct. 6, through Thurs., Oct. 19, 7:30 p.m., and Sun., Oct. 8 and Oct. 15, 2 p.m. • Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958) Sat., Oct. 7, 4:30 p.m. CAPITOL CENTER FOR THE ARTS 44 S. Main St., Concord, 2251111, ccanh.com • Norma (The Met: Live in HD) Sat., Oct. 7, 12:55 p.m. • Yerma (National Theatre Live) Tues., Oct. 10, 6 p.m. MANCHESTER CITY LIBRARY Main Branch, 405 Pine St., Manchester, 624-6550; West Branch, 76 Main St., Manchester, 6246560, manchester.lib.nh.us • The Blind Side (PG-13, 2009) Wed., Oct. 11, 1 p.m. NASHUA PUBLIC LIBRARY NPL Theater, 2 Court St., Nashua,
589-4611, nashualibrary.org • The Lego Batman Movie (PG, 2017) Sat., Oct. 7, 2 p.m. • The Zookeeper’s Wife (PG-13, 2017) Tues., Oct. 10, 7 p.m. NEW HAMPSHIRE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE 31 College Drive, Sweeney Auditorium, Concord, 271-6484, ext. 4115, nhti.edu • Manhattan Short Film Festival Fri., Oct. 6, 7 p.m.; Sat., Oct. 7, 2 and 7 p.m.; Sun., Oct. 8, 2 p.m. THE MUSIC HALL Historic Theater, 28 Chestnut St., Portsmouth; Loft, 131 Congress St., Portsmouth, 436-2400, themusichall.org • Menashe (PG, 2017) Thurs., Oct. 5, 7 p.m. • Citizen Jane (2017) Tues., Oct. 10, 7 p.m.
Hipposcout Looking for more book, film and pop culture events? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play and online at hipposcout.com
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HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 51
NITE Ranting through fictional times Lewis Black tries to keep it together
Local music news & events
By Michael Witthaus
mwitthaus@hippopress.com
By Michael Witthaus
• Oasis: During a career that began in 1960s Greenwich Village, Maria Muldaur released over 40 albums, earned multiple Grammy nominations, had a hit with “Midnight at the Oasis” and toured as a vocalist in the Grateful Dead. See her perform an intimate show at one of the region’s top listening rooms. Go Thursday, Oct. 5, at 8 p.m., Riverwalk Cafe, 35 Railroad Square, Nashua. Tickets $28 at riverwalknashua.com. • Folky: A wide range of traditions are represented at the 2nd Annual Folk Extravaganza, including Irish masters Makem and Spain, veteran protest songwriter Tom Paxton and young troubadour (and Granite State native) Tristan Omand. Maine folk legend Dave Mallett and fellow Down Easters Schooner Fare round out the show. Go Friday, Oct. 6, at 6 p.m., Palace Theatre, 80 Hanover St., Manchester. Tickets $35 at palacetheatre.org. • Awesome: Return to the days when video killed the radio star at an ’80s Dance Party. Hosted by DJ Matt Feehan, the weekly event promises plenty of Cyndi Lauper, Culture Club, Loverboy and pre-plastic surgery Michael Jackson — all the music that made for the last innocent decade, relatively speaking. Dinner and cocktails start at 5 p.m., with dancing from 7 to 9 p.m. Go Sunday, Oct. 8, Stella Blu American Tapas, 70 E. Pearl St., Nashua. Call 578-5557 for more information. • Magical: Enjoy tableside prestidigitation with Houdana the Magician, now a weekly feature with dinner at a Londonderry eatery. Houdana is the nom du presto of Dana Halloran, a Granite State sleight of hand specialist with over 40 years of experience. Funny and fascinating, his act is also family-friendly. Go Wednesday, Oct. 11, from 6 to 7 p.m. at Harold Square, 226 Rockingham Road, Londonderry. More at haroldsquarenh.com.
FREE JUNK CAR REMOVAL! We will pay up to $500 for some cars and trucks.
Lewis Black When: Sunday, Oct. 15, 7 p.m. Where: Capitol Center for the Arts, 44 S. Main St., Concord Tickets: $49.50 to $62.50 at ccanh.com
Lewis Black. Courtesy photo.
Capitol Center for the Arts on Oct. 15. Much of his act focuses on politics, and in a talk given at the Chautauqua Institution in August, he discussed the challenge of mining humor from unreal reality. “We’re living in fictional times,” he told the audience. During the interview, Black expanded on this idea. “As a person, it’s intolerable, but as a comic at least I can escape into my imaginary world and do that,” he said. Doing it requires “trying to find context for this nonsense. Part of the act has become, what is my job supposed to be now? What am I supposed to be doing? I’ve been replaced. Reality and satire are intersected, so how am I supposed to make this stuff funnier?” He’s among the vanguard of what could be called hard news comedy, humorists who educate and illuminate. By the Jon Stewart era of the Daily Show, “essentially all we did was collate and basically point out what was going on; reality had already reached a point where it didn’t take much to satirize it,” Black said. “A guy would say, ‘Well, I didn’t say that,’ then we’d play the tape and just comment on that.” Then came the first Daily Show spinoff, The Colbert Report.
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W E S E L L PA R T S ! HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 52
It doesn’t take much to set Lewis Black off — an aggravating news article or a mealymouthed politician on TV can do the trick. He once told comedian Bill Maher that if someone hands him a paper at 10 o’clock with something in it that bothers him, he’ll be off and running in three minutes. In a recent interview, a seemingly innocuous question about the origins of his popular Daily Show segment Back in Black managed to quicken his blood vessels. “You picked a scab with that one,” Black said, “and I’m letting it run all over.” What began with Black doing improv ranting with original show host Craig Kilborn evolved into the show’s longest-running segment. The arrival of two new producers claiming to not understand where Black fit into the show nearly ended it. “I was upset because I had helped establish it ... and I’m really kind of independent of everything there,” Black said. “They would take stuff I wrote and edit it out, because both producers didn’t get that part of what made me funny. I established myself as a standup comic in terms of attitude.” Black held on, the producers eventually left, and Black’s trademark causticity continues on the Daily Show, six or seven times a year. “You can’t beat it,” he said. “It’s like having a commercial — I’m Lewis Black, and I’ll be in your town soon.” To that end, Black appears at Concord’s
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“An extraordinary moment in time,” Black said. “Basically a guy who was improving for all intents and purposes a right-wing talk show host and commentator, and a portion of the public didn’t know it was satire.” With a trip to New Hampshire upcoming, Black commented on the recent trip of voting fraud czar Kris Kobach to the state. “I work as an ambassador to the ACLU for voting rights, and I believe in voting rights,” he said. “Yesterday, I read there is a better chance of being hit by lightning than committing voter fraud, so that’s really all you need to know.” It wasn’t all he had to say on the topic, though. “Forty-two percent of the American people voted last time, and you’re going to tell me we have people going, ‘I can’t wait to vote three times’? Just because he says it, doesn’t make it real,” he said. “Every attorney general from both sides have said there’s no fraud in their state. What needs to be done is figure out how to make it easy to vote, how to secure our vote. Why not worry about the Russians hacking our machines, worry about the goddamn machines we’re voting on? You’re wasting time, money and energy.” Black is sputtering and spitting fire, at one point trying for a New Hampshire appropriate “snakes in the woods” analogy that doesn’t quite take. “I can’t come up with a metaphor,” he said in exasperation. “It came up over the horizon, but it died in my arms.” It’s a bit like listening to his act, typically improv that begins with a few toggle points. “I basically write on stage and then I keep what I like, throw out what I don’t and come back the next night,” he said. “I’m creating new stuff that I’ll be doing in New Hampshire by the time I get there. So I’m kind of going on stage now. I’m saying, ‘Here’s something I’m thinking about’ — like snakes in the woods.”
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ROCKANDROLLCROSSWORDS.com BY TODD SANTOS
I GOT SOUL BUT I’M NOT A PUZZLER 15. Composition built around recurring theme 16. Like battle of band losers 17. Killers “Peace of mind is __ to find” 18. ‘89 Great White smash ‘__ __ Twice Shy’ (4,6) 20. Hall & Oates & Black Sabbath songs
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I U H T P O H O P R E E T E W A I L N O S T A N
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Want more music, comedy or big-name concerts? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store or Google Play.
Alton JP China 403 Main St. 875-8899
Bow Chen Yang Li 520 South St. 228-8508
True Brew Barista 3 Bicentennial Square 225-2776
Tortilla Flat 1-11 Brickyard Square 734-2725
Amherst LaBelle Winery 345 Route 101 672-9898
Bridgewater Bridgewater Inn 367 Mayhew Turnpike 744-3518
Ashland Common Man 60 Main St. 968-7030
Bristol Back Room at the Mill 2 Central St. 744-0405 Kathleen’s Cottage 91 Lake Street 744-6336 Purple Pit 28 Central Square 744-7800
Contoocook Covered Bridge Cedar St. 746-5191 Farmer’s Market Town Center 369-1790
Epsom Circle 9 Ranch 39 Windymere Drive 736-9656 Hilltop Pizzeria 1724 Dover Rd. 736-0027
Atkinson Merrill’s Tavern 85 Country Club Drive 382-8700 Auburn Auburn Pitts 167 Rockingham Rd 622-6564 Auburn Tavern 346 Hooksett Rd 587-2057 Barrington Dante’s 567 Route 125 664-4000 Bedford Bedford Village Inn 2 Olde Bedford Way 472-2001 Copper Door 15 Leavy Drive 488-2677 Shorty’s 206 Route 101 488-5706 T-Bones 169 South River Road 623-7699 Belmont Lakes Region Casino 1265 Laconia Road 267-7778 Shooters Tavern Rt. 3, 528-2444 Boscawen Alan’s 133 N. Main St. 753-6631
Deerfield Nine Lions Tavern 4 North Road 463-7374
Exeter Station 19 37 Water St. 778-3923
Derry Coffee Factory 55 Crystal Ave 432-6006 Francestown Drae Toll Booth Tavern 14 E Broadway 216-2713 740 2nd NH Tpke N 588-1800 Dover Claremont Cara Irish Pub Common Man Gilford 11 Fourth St. 343-4390 Patrick’s 21 Water Street Dover Brick House 542-6171 18 Weirs Road 293-0841 Taverne on the Square 2 Orchard St. 749-3838 Schuster’s Tavern Falls Grill & Tavern 2 Pleasant St. 680 Cherry Valley Road 421 Central Ave. 287-4416 293-2600 749-0995 Fury’s Publick House Goffstown Concord 1 Washington St. Area 23 Village Trestle 617-3633 State Street 881-9060 25 Main St. 497-8230 Sonny’s Tavern Barley House 132 N. Main 228-6363 83 Washington St. Greenfield 742-4226 Cheers Riverhouse Cafe 17 Depot St. 228-0180 Top of the Chop 4 Slip Road 547-8710 1 Orchard St. 740-0006 Common Man 1 Gulf Street 228-3463 Hampton Dublin Granite Ashworth By The Sea 96 Pleasant St. 227-9000 DelRossi’s Trattoria 295 Ocean Blvd. 73 Brush Brook Rd Hermanos 926-6762 11 Hills Ave. 224-5669 563-7195 Bernie’s Beach Bar Makris 73 Ocean Blvd 926-5050 East Hampstead 354 Sheep Davis Rd Boardwalk Inn & Cafe Pasta Loft 225-7665 139 Ocean Blvd. 220 E. Main St. Penuche’s Ale House 929-7400 378-0092 6 Pleasant St. Breakers at Ashworth 228-9833 295 Ocean Blvd. 926-6762 Epping Pit Road Lounge Cloud 9 Holy Grail 388 Loudon Rd 225 Ocean Blvd. 64 Main St. 679-9559 226-0533 601-6102 Popovers Red Blazer Community Oven 11 Brickyard Square 72 Manchester St. 845 Lafayette Road 734-4724 224-4101 601-6311 Telly’s Tandy’s Top Shelf CR’s Restaurant 235 Calef Hwy 1 Eagle Square 287 Exeter Road 679-8225 856-7614 929-7972
Logan’s Run 816 Lafayette Road 926-4343 Millie’s Tavern 17 L St. 967-4777 Purple Urchin 167 Ocean Blvd. 929-0800 Ron Jillian’s 44 Lafayette Road 929-9966 Ron’s Landing 379 Ocean Blvd 929-2122 Savory Square Bistro 32 Depot Square 926-2202 Sea Ketch 127 Ocean Blvd. 926-0324 The Goat 20 L St. 601-6928 Wally’s Pub 144 Ashworth Ave. 926-6954
The Bar 2B Burnham Rd 943-5250
Derryfield Country Club 625 Mammoth Road 623-2880 Laconia Foundry 405 Pub 50 Commercial St. 405 Union Ave 524-8405 836-1925 Broken Spoke Saloon Fratello’s 1072 Watson Rd 155 Dow St. 624-2022 866-754-2526 Jewel Margate Resort 61 Canal St. 836-1152 76 Lake St. 524-5210 Karma Hookah & Naswa Resort Cigar Bar 1086 Weirs Blvd. Elm St. 647-6653 366-4341 KC’s Rib Shack Paradise Beach Club 837 Second St. 627-RIBS 322 Lakeside Ave. Murphy’s Taproom 366-2665 494 Elm St. 644-3535 Patio Garden Penuche’s Music Hall Lakeside Ave. 1087 Elm St. 206-5599 Pitman’s Freight Room Salona Bar & Grill 94 New Salem St. 128 Maple St. 624-4020 527-0043 Shaskeen Tower Hill Tavern 909 Elm St. 625-0246 264 Lakeside Ave. Shorty’s 366-9100 1050 Bicentennial Drive Hanover Whiskey Barrel 625-1730 Canoe Club 546 Main St. 884-9536 Stark Brewing Co. 27 S. Main St. 643-9660 500 Commercial St. Jesse’s Tavern Lebanon 625-4444 224 Lebanon St 643-4111 Salt Hill Pub Strange Brew Tavern Salt Hill Pub 2 West Park St. 448-4532 88 Market St. 666-4292 7 Lebanon St. 676-7855 TGI Fridays Skinny Pancake Londonderry 1516 Willow St. 644-8995 3 Lebanon St. 540-0131 Coach Stop Tavern Whiskey’s 20 176 Mammoth Rd 20 Old Granite St. Henniker 437-2022 641-2583 Country Spirit Pipe Dream Brewing Wild Rover 262 Maple St. 428-7007 40 Harvey Road 21 Kosciuszko St. Pat’s Peak Sled Pub 404-0751 669-7722 24 Flander’s Road Stumble Inn 428-3245 20 Rockingham Road Meredith 432-3210 Giuseppe’s Hillsboro 312 Daniel Webster Hwy Tooky Mills Loudon 279-3313 9 Depot St. 464-6700 Hungry Buffalo 58 New Hampshire 129 Merrimack Hillsborough 798-3737 Homestead Mama McDonough’s 641 Daniel Webster Hwy 5 Depot St. 680-4148 Manchester 429-2022 Turismo British Beer Company Jade Dragon 55 Henniker St. 680-4440 1071 S. Willow St. 515 DW Hwy 424-2280 232-0677 Merrimack Biergarten Hooksett Bungalow Bar & Grille 221 DW Hwy 595-1282 Asian Breeze 333 Valley St. 792-1110 Tortilla Flat 1328 Hooksett Rd Cafe la Reine 594 Daniel Webster Hwy 621-9298 915 Elm St 232-0332 262-1693 DC’s Tavern Central Ale House 1100 Hooksett Road 23 Central St. 660-2241 Milford 782-7819 City Sports Grille J’s Tavern 216 Maple St. 625-9656 63 Union Sq. 554-1433 Hudson Club ManchVegas Pasta Loft AJ’s Sports Bar 50 Old Granite St. 241 Union Sq. 11 Tracy Lane 718-1102 222-1677 672-2270
Shaskeen: Dwarf Canon/Jake McVie & the Countertops Shorty’s: James Medaglia Strange Brew: Seldom Playrights Manchester Hanover Bungalow: Volumes, Too Close Whiskey’s 20: DJs Shawn White/ Salt hill Pub: Irish Trad’ Session to Touch, Sylar, At the Heart of It Ryan Nichols/Mike Mazz Randy Miller/Roger Kahle Central Ale: Jonny Friday Blues Meredith Skinny Pancake: Brother City Sports Grille: DJ Dave Giuseppe’s: Tim Theriault Brothers & Oliver the Crow Foundry: Marco Valentin Exeter Fratello’s: Jazz Night Boscawen Merrimack Alan’s: John Pratte Station 19: Thursday Night Live Hillsborough Jewel: Kung Fu / Swimmer Turismo: Line Dancing Manchvegas: Open Acoustic Homestead: Amanda Cote Jam w/ Jim Devlin Claremont Gilford Penuche’s Music Hall: College Milford Taverne on the Square: Charlie Patrick’s: Acoustic Acts ft: Eric Lebanon J’s Tavern: Peter Fogarty Duo Grant Salt hill: Celtic Open Session Night - DJ Stef Chronopoulos Thursday, Oct. 5 Concord Ashland Granite: CJ Poole Duo Common Man: Jim McHugh & Penuche’s Ale House: Hoot 8 Steve McBrian (Open) True Brew: Dusty Gray Open Original Auburn Auburn Pitts: Open Jam w/ Epping Gordy and Diane Pettipas Telly’s: Gardner Berry
HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 54
Hampton CR’s: The Last Duo Wally’s Pub: Avatar
Londonderry Coach Stop: Karen Grenier
Shaka’s Bar & Grill 11 Wilton Road 554-1224 Tiebreakers at Hampshire Hills 50 Emerson Road 673-7123 Union Coffee Co. 42 South St. 554-8879 Moultonborough Buckey’s 240 Governor Wentworth Hwy 476-5485 Castle in the Clouds 455 Old Mountain Road 478-5900 Nashua 110 Grill 27 Trafalgar Sq 943-7443 5 Dragons 28 Railroad Sq 578-0702 Agave Azul 94-96 Main St. 943-7240 Boston Billiard Club 55 Northeastern Blvd. 943-5630 Burton’s Grill 310 Daniel Webster Hwy 688-4880 Country Tavern 452 Amherst St. 889-5871 Dolly Shakers 38 E. Hollis St. 577-1718 Fody’s Tavern 9 Clinton St. 577-9015 Fratello’s Italian Grille 194 Main St. 889-2022 Haluwa Lounge Nashua Mall 883-6662 Killarney’s Irish Pub 9 Northeastern Blvd. 888-1551 O’Shea’s 449 Amherst St. 943-7089 Peddler’s Daughter 48 Main St. 821-7535 Pig Tale 449 Amherst St. 864-8740 Portland Pie Company 14 Railroad Sq 882-7437 Shorty’s 48 Gusabel Ave 882-4070 Stella Blu 70 E. Pearl St. 578-5557 Thirsty Turtle 8 Temple St. 402-4136 New Boston Molly’s Tavern 35 Mont Vernon Rd 487-2011
Union Coffee: Eric Gagne Nashua Agave Azul: DJ K-Wil Ladies Night Country Tavern: Johnnie James Fody’s: DJ Rich Padula Fratello’s: Triana Wilson Riverwalk Cafe: Maria Muldaur w. Jonah Tolchin Shorty’s: Kieran McNally Newmarket Stone Church: Irish Music / Parsonsfield (late)
New London Flying Goose 40 Andover Road 526-6899 Newbury Goosefeathers Pub Mt. Sunapee Resort 763-3500 Salt Hill Pub 1407 Rt 103 763-2667 Newmarket Riverworks 164 Main St. 659-6119 Stone Church 5 Granite St. 659-7700 Newport Salt Hill Pub 58 Main St. 863-7774 North Hampton Barley House Seacoast 43 Lafayette Rd 379-9161 Northwood Tough Tymes 221 Rochester Rd 942-5555 Peterborough Harlow’s Pub 3 School St. 924-6365 La Mia Casa (Wreck Room) 1 Jaffrey Road 924-6262 Pittsfield Main Street Grill & Bar 32 Main St. 436-0005 Plaistow Crow’s Nest 181 Plaistow Rd 974-1686
Racks Bar & Grill 20 Plaistow Road 974-2406
Thirsty Moose 21 Congress St 427-8645
Chop Shop 920 Lafayette Rd. 760-7706
Portsmouth British Beer Co. 103 Hanover St. 501-0515 Cafe Nostimo 72 Mirona Road 436-3100 Demeters Steakhouse 3612 Lafayette Rd. 766-0001 Dolphin Striker 15 Bow St. 432-5222 Fat Belly’s 2 Bow St. 610-4227 Grill 28 200 Grafton Road (Pease Golf Course) 433-1331 Hilton Garden Inn 100 High St. 431-1499 Latchkey 41 Vaughan Mall 766-3333 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 Redhook Brewery 1 Redhook Way 430-8600 Ri Ra Irish Pub 22 Market Square 319-1680 Rudi’s 20 High St. 430-7834
Raymond Cork n’ Keg 4 Essex Drive 244-1573
Sunapee Anchorage 77 Main St. 763-3334 Sunapee Coffee House Rte. 11 & Lower Main St. 229-1859
Peterborough Harlow’s: Bluegrass Night La Mia Casa: Soul Repair Plaistow Racks: Rock Jam w/ Dave Thompson Portsmouth Dolphin Striker: Family Affair Fat Belly’s: DJ Flex Martingale Wharf: TBA Rochester Revolution: Jeff Hayford Seabrook Chop Shop: Spent Fuel Weare Stark House Tavern: Ryan Williamson Fri 06 - Mikey G Friday, Oct. 6 Auburn Auburn Tavern: The Deviant Belmont Lakes Region Casino: DJ Mark Claremont Taverne on the Square: Ben Fuller
Rochester China Palace 101 S. Main St. 332-3665 Gary’s 38 Milton Rd. 335-4279 Governor’s Inn 78 Wakefield St. 332-0107 Lilac City Grille 103 N. Main St 332-3984 Mel Flanagan’s Irish Pub & Café 50 N. Main St. 332-6357 Radloff’s 38 North Main St. 948-1073 Revolution Tap Room 61 N Main St. 244-3022 Smokey’s Tavern 11 Farmington Rd 330-3100
Suncook Olympus Pizza 42 Allenstown Rd. 485-5288 Tilton Rio Burrito 276 Main St. 729-0081 Winni Grille 650 Laconia Road 527-8217 Warner Schoodacs Cafe 1 East Main St. 456-3400 Weare Stark House Tavern 487 S. Stark Highway 529-0901
Salem Jocelyn’s Lounge 355 S. Broadway 870-0045 Sayde’s Restaurant 136 Cluff Crossing 890-1032
Windham Common Man 88 Range Road 898-0088 Old School Bar & Grill 49 Range Road 458-6051
Seabrook Castaways 209 Ocean Blvd 760-7500
Wolfeboro Wolfeboro Inn 90 N Main St. 569-3016
Concord Area 23: First Friday - Scott Solsky & Friends Pit Road: Murphy’s Law Tandy’s: DJ Iceman Streetz True Brew: Granite State Revival Derry Coffee Factory: Dave LaCroix Drae: Jen Whitmore Dover Fury’s Publick House: Truffle Top of the Chop: Funkadelic Fridays Epping Holy Grail: Barry Brealey Telly’s: Clint LaPointe & Paul Costley Gilford Patrick’s: Dueling Pianos ft: Matt Langley vs Jon Lorentz Schuster’s: Dan The Muzak Man Hampton CR’s: Wendy Nottonson Duo Ron’s Landing: Karen Grenier Savory Square: Max Sullivan The Goat: Searching for Clarity
Wally’s Pub: Third Man High Hanover Salt Hill Pub: Rory Loughran Skinny Pancake: Auguste and Alden Hooksett Asian Breeze: DJ Albin Chantilly’s: Nicole Knox Murphy
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Hudson The Bar: Mitch Pelky Valentino’s: Brad Bosse Laconia Pitman’s: James Armstrong Blues Lebanon Salt Hill: Wheel of Awesome/ Octoberfest
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CIGARETTES
©2017 SFNTC (4)
Londonderry Coach Stop: Kim Riley Pipe Dream Brewing: Jose Sambo at Pipe Dream Brewing Manchester British Beer: Austin Pratt Bungalow: SleepSpirit w/ Under Fire, Dreamer & Son, Acadia, Ebonhart & Transitions Derryfield: Eric Grant Band
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New Hampshire Hippo Express 10-06-17.indd 1
HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11,9/28/17 2017 |8:36 PAGEAM55
NITE MUSIC THIS WEEK Foundry: Chad Verbeck Fratello’s: Jeff Mrozek Jewel: Hope For The Hollow Karma: Double Take Penuche’s Music Hall: Boneshakerz Shaskeen: Czarface Strange Brew: Bruce Marshall Whiskey’s 20: DJs Jason Spivak & Sammy Smoove Wild Rover: Erins’ Guild Meredith Giuseppe’s: Michael Bourgeois/DJ Dancing Merrimack Homestead: Sam Robbins Jade Dragon: Red Sky Mary
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Milford J’s Tavern: Brok/Travis Pasta Loft: Small Town Stranded Shaka’s: Paul Driscoll
Thirsty Moose: Adam Robinson Rochester Magrilla’s: Pete Peterson Radloff’s: Dancing Madly Backwards Duo Seabrook Chop Shop: Maiden New England Sunapee Sunapee Coffeehouse: Oliver The Crow Weare Stark House Tavern: Mikey G West Lebanon Salt Hill Pub: Club Soda Saturday, Oct. 7 Ashland Common Man: Audrey Drake
Moultonborough Buckey’s: Rusty Bones
Auburn Auburn Tavern: Luke Johanson
Nashua Country Tavern: Soulshine Fody’s: Justin Cohn Fratello’s: Paul Luff Haluwa: Fatha Groove Peddler’s Daughter: GoodFoot Riverwalk Cafe: The Wild Ponies w. Goldenoak Thirsty Turtle: Farenheit Friday - DJ D-Original
Bedford Shorty’s: Marc Wydom
New Boston Molly’s: John Chouinard/TBD
Bow Chen Yang Li: Don Bartenstein Bridgewater Bridgewater Inn: The Bars Bristol Back Room: Monica Rizzio
Goffstown Village Trestle: Dan Morgan Band Hampton Community Oven: Everett Pendleton/Tristan Omand The Goat: Pat Foley Band Wally’s: Secondhand Serenade Hanover Salt Hill Pub: Night Shift Duo Skinny Pancake: Walker Adams & David Bailis Hudson The Bar: Nicole Knox Murphy (Alex Eldridge Benefit) Laconia Whiskey Barrel: Alec MacGillivray Lebanon Salt Hill Pub: The Squids Londonderry Coach Stop: Gardner Berry Pipe Dream: Vinyl Night Stumble Inn: Southern City Band/Three Chords and the Truth Loudon Hungry Buffalo: Craig Kendall & Unleashed
Newmarket Stone Church: Twisted Pine & Joe K. Walsh
Concord Area 23: BeefStu Tandy’s: DJ Iceman Streetz True Brew: Solo Saturday
Newport Salt hill Pub: Jim Hollis
Contoocook Farmers Market: Mary Fagan
Plaistow Crow’s Nest: Blackheart Racks: The Dominic Frizzi Band
Dover Brickhouse: Murphy’s Law/ Damn Garrison/ Meanmugg Fury’s: People Like You
Manchester Bonfire: Shana Stack Band Bungalow: Dreamwell, Funeral Attire & Rainsound Derryfield: Never In Vegas Foundry: Charlie Chronopoulos Fratello’s: Sean Coleman Jewel: Strange Machines w/ After Funk Penuche’s Music Hall: Zero to Sixty Shaskeen: Alcoa Strange Brew: Howard Randall Whiskey’s 20: DJ Hizzy/Shawn White Wild Rover: Amanda Dane Duo
Portsmouth 3S Artspace: Pile w/ Rick Rude & Greed Island Grill 28: Scharff Brothers Martingale Wharf: JG and The Meggatones Gaslight: Wizecrackaz Ri Ra: James Gilmore Rudi’s: Barbara London The Goat: Alec MacGillivray
Epping Holy Grail: Groove Lounge Telly’s: Tim Theriault
Meredith Giuseppe’s: David Lockwood/ DJ Dancing
Epsom Circle 9: Country Dancing
Merrimack Homestead: Lachlan MacLearn Biergarten: Justin Cohn
Newbury Salt Hill Pub: Doug Lantz
Bristol Purple Pit: Victor Roland Vargas Mousaa
Gilford Patrick’s: Tribute to Grateful Dead ft: Peter Brunette
COMEDY THIS WEEK AND BEYOND Friday, Oct. 6 Manchester Derry Chunky’s Pub: Mike Tupelo: Graig Murphy Koutrobis and Paul Keenan Monday, Oct. 9 Saturday, Oct. 7 Concord Concord Penuche’s: Punchlines Cap Center: Steven Wright
HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 56
Schuster’s: Dan The Muzak Man
Milford J’s Tavern: Seamus & Taylor
Wednesday, Oct. 11 Manchester Shaskeen: Kwasi Mensah/Tooky Cavanaugh Murphy’s Taproom: Laugh Free Or Die Open Mic
Merrimack Merrimack Biergarten: Ha-Has and Hops Humpday Saturday, Oct. 14 Nashua Chunky’s Pub: Mike Koutrobis
HIPPO
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• ADVERTISE to 10 Million Homes across the USA! Place your ad in over 140 community newspapers, with circulation totaling over 10 million homes. Contact Independent Free Papers of America IFPA at danielleburnett-ifpa@live.com or visit our website cadnetads.com for more information • Reader Advisory: The National Trade Association we belong to has purchased the above classifieds. Determining the value of their service or product is advised by this publication. In order to avoid misunderstandings, some advertisers do not offer employment but rather supply the readers with manuals, directories and other materials designed to help their clients establish mail order selling and other businesses at home. Under NO circumstance should you send any money in advance or give the client your checking, license ID, or credit card numbers. Also beware of ads that claim to guarantee loans regardless of credit and note that if a credit repair company does business only over the phone it is illegal to request any money before delivering its service. All funds are based in US dollars. Toll free numbers may or may not reach Canada. Toll free numbers may or may not reach Canada. HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 57
Pasta Loft: Dance Hall Epidemic Shaka’s: Joe McDonald
West Lebanon Salt Hill Pub: Chad Gibbs
Moultonborough Buckey’s: Ossipee Mountain Boys
Sunday, Oct. 8 Ashland Common Man: Chris White Solo Acoustic
Nashua Agave Azul: DJ Roberto Tropical Saturday Boston Billiard: DJ Anthem Throwback Country Tavern: Jeff Mrozek Dolly Shakers: Drop Dead Gorgeous Fody’s: Rabbithole Fratello’s: Kieran McNally Haluwa: Fatha Groove Peddler’s Daughter: Heartbeat City Riverwalk Cafe: Echotest Stella Blu: Sean Coleman New Boston Molly’s: Shelf Life/Dan Murphy Newbury Salt Hill Pub: Sirsy
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Newmarket Stone Church: Broccoli Samurai, Skyfoot
Plaistow Crow’s Nest: Sygnal to Noise Racks: Sound Decision Band
Moultonborough Buckey’s: Carolyn Ramsay & Co.
Monday Madness
Weare Stark House: Lauren Hurley
Thursday’s All You Can Bowl
Free Pizza Slices Included! | 9pm-12am $15 per person
(includes shoes)
Karaoke with DJ Dave Toni (Acoustical)
216 Maple St., Manchester • 625-9656 • sparetimeentertainment.com HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 58
Nashua Agave Azul: DJ Rich - Smokin’ Sunday Pig Tale: Amanda Cote Riverwalk Cafe: Odds Bodkin: Heartpounders Stella Blu: 80s Dance Party
Manchester Central Ale: Jonny Friday Duo Fratello’s: Rob Wolfe or Phil Jacques Meredith Giuseppe’s: Lou Porazzo Merrimack Homestead: Doug Thompson Nashua Fratello’s: Chris Lester Newmarket Stone Church: Seacoast Blues Jam with Wild Eagle Blues Band Portsmouth Dolphin Striker: Old School Ri Ra: Oran Mor Tuesday, Oct. 10 Dover Fury’s: Tim Theriault and Friends Sonny’s: Soggy Po’ Boys Gilford Patrick’s: Paul Luff hosts Manchester Backyard Brewery: Amanda Cote Fratello’s: Amanda McCarthy Penuche’s Music Hall: Jed and Mark Open Shaskeen: Brett Wilson Strange Brew: Brad Bosse Whiskey’s 20: Sammy Smoove & DJ Gera Meredith Giuseppe’s: Michael Bourgeois
Newbury Salt hill Pub: Ben Fuller
Merrimack Homestead: Ted Solovicos
Newmarket Stone Church: Bureaux Cats
Nashua Fratello’s: Justin Cohn
Bluegrass
North Hampton Barley House: Great Bay Sailor Portsmouth British Beer: Bruce Marshall Redhook Brewery: Seacoast Salutes - Greg & Morning Buzz Ri Ra: Irish Sessions Rudi’s: Will Ogumdoson & Guest Thirsty Moose: Mockingbirds Seabrook Chop Shop: Acoustic Afternoon
Newmarket Stone Church: Bluegrass Jam North Hampton Barley House: Irish Session Peterborough Harlow’s: Celtic Music Jam Portsmouth Press Room: Jazz Jam w/ Larry Garland & Friends Seabrook Chop Shop: Bare Bones
Get the crowds at your gig
Sat. 10/7
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SPARE TIME SPECIALS
Seabrook Chop Shop: Inner Child
Thursday-Saturday
Manchester British Beer: Joe Sambo Bungalow: Amanda McCarthy, Bri Bell, Sam Robbins Shaskeen: Rap, Industry night Strange Brew: Jam
Milford Union Coffee: Phil & Wil
Unlimited Bowling | 8pm-11pm
$10 per person (includes shoes)
Laconia Pitman’s: Delfeayo Marsalis with the Tall Granite Big Band
Peterborough Harlow’s: Phileep
Rochester Magrilla’s: John Irish
Unlimited Bowling | 9pm-12am
Goffstown Village Trestle: Wan-tu Blues Band & Jam
Meredith Giuseppe’s: Open Stage with Lou Porrazzo
Raymond Cork n Keg: Paul Lessier
$10 per person (includes shoes)
Dover Cara: Irish Session w/ Carol Coronis & Ramona Connelly Dover Brickhouse: Jazz Brunch Sonny’s: Sonny’s Jazz
Newport Salt hill Pub: Groove Sum
Portsmouth 3S Artspace: Matthew Stubbs and the Antiguas / Ruby Rose Fox Beara Irish Brewing: Kevin Jones British Beer: The Drift Latchkey: Ashley Dawn EP Release Party Martingale: The RetroActivists Portsmouth Gaslight: Joe Sambo & The Goons Press Room: Press Room Jazz Lunch Ri Ra: Reckless Rudi’s: Jeff Auger The Goat: Paige Davis Thirsty Moose: Inside Out
Sunday Funday!
Barrington Nippo Lake: Taylor River
Monday, Oct. 9 Hanover Canoe: Marko The Magician Salt hill Pub: Hootenanny
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 MUSIC THIS WEEK
Gilford Patrick’s: Cody James - Ladies Night Hanover Skinny Pancake: Bow Thayer Hillsborough Turismo: Blues Jam w Jerry Paquette & the Runaway Bluesmen
Nashua Country Tavern: Andy Brink Fratello’s: Ted Solovicos
Manchester Bungalow: Fister/Un/Willzyx/ Dim/Nycterent Penuche’s Music Hall: Tom Ballerini Jam
Portsmouth 3S Artspace: Joshua Davis Dolphin Striker: George Belli Solo/Duo Ri Ra: Erin’s Guild
Meredith Giuseppe’s: Paul Warnick
Rochester Lilac City Grille: Tim Theriault - Ladies Night
Merrimack Homestead: Mark Huzar
Tom Kiefer (Cinderella) Thursday, Oct. 12, 8 p.m. Tupelo Derry Classic Albums Live – Dark Side of the Moon Friday, Oct. 13, 8 p.m. Tupelo Derry Colin Hay Saturday, Oct. 14, 8 p.m. Cap Center Blue Öyster Cult Saturday, Oct. 14, 8 p.m. Flying Monkey Artimus Pyle Band Saturday, Oct. 14, 8 p.m. Tupelo Derry Lewis Black Sunday, Oct. 15, 8 p.m. Cap Center Peter Wolf & the Midnight Travelers Sunday, Oct. 15, 8 p.m. Tupelo Derry
Gift Cards Available!
From Manchester’s Original Auto Glass Company
Plaistow Racks: DJ Sensations
Seabrook Chop Shop: Guitar-a-oke & Cocktails
NITE CONCERTS Garrison Keiller Friday, Oct. 6, 8 p.m. Cap Center Steven Wright Saturday, Oct. 7, 8 p.m. Cap Center Travis Tritt Saturday, Oct. 7, 8 p.m. Flying Monkey Buddy Guy Saturday, Oct. 7, 8 p.m. Tupelo Derry Julie Fowlis Wednesday, Oct. 11, 8 p.m. Cap Center Tape Face Wednesday, Oct. 11, 8 p.m. Colonial Theatre JJ Grey And Mofro Wednesday, Oct. 11, 8 p.m. Tupelo Derry Temptations Thursday, Oct. 12, 8 p.m. Cap Center
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Rusted Root Thursday, Oct. 19, 8 p.m. Tupelo Derry Heart By Heart Friday, Oct. 20, 8 p.m. Colonial Theatre Johnny Clegg – The Final Journey Saturday, Oct. 21, 8 p.m. Cap Center Smithereens Saturday, Oct. 21, 8 p.m. Tupelo Derry Howard Jones Sunday, Oct. 22, 8 p.m. Tupelo Derry Mary Chapin Carpenter Wednesday, Oct. 25, 8 p.m. Tupelo Derry Anna Nalick Thursday, Oct. 26, 8 p.m. Tupelo Derry
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Laconia Whiskey Barrel: Twiztid Londonderry Coach Stop: Chris Lester Harold Square: Houdana the Magician (Tableside Magic)
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HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 59
JONESIN’ CROSSWORDS BY MATT JONES
“Outsider Knowledge” — I think you’ll see the appeal Across 1 Leave out 5 Manufacture skillfully 10 “Dear” columnist 14 Austrian physicist Ernst 15 Vietnam’s capital
23 Dorm floor supervisors, for short 16 Like leafless trees 24 Driveway goo 17 Burn-soothing plant 25 Brownish eye color 18 Beermaking phase 28 Curve in the water? 19 BBQ side dish 20 Puts the past behind with fond 34 Annoyed persistently 35 Certain collars or jackets memories 36 Dict. spelling designation 37 “Who is John ___?” (“Atlas Shrugged” opener) 38 Rattles off 39 Say nay 40 Jackie O’s husband 41 It’s propelled by a paddle 42 Europe’s “The ___ Countdown” 43 It’s usually used to cross your heart 45 Bohemian 46 Chicago hub, on luggage tags
9/28
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HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 60
25 “Horrible” Viking of the comics 26 Arcade console pioneer 27 1983 Woody Allen mockumentary 28 Isabella II, por ejemplo 29 “Let’s do this!” 30 Cast ballots 31 Decathlon tenth 32 Moms’ moms, affectionately 33 In a boring way 38 “Well, ain’t that just something!” 39 Ice Age canid that shows up on “Game of Thrones” Down 41 PC key below Shift 1 “The Wire” character Little 42 Subway rider’s payment 2 Bamako’s country 44 “I kid you not!” 3 Computer program symbol 47 Number of bears or pigs 4 Epithet for Alexander, Peter, or 48 Multiple award-winner Moreno Gonzo 49 Dram or gram, e.g. 5 Mass confusion 50 McKinnon of “The Magic 6 Barilla rival School Bus” reboot 7 Have ___ to pick 51 Love, personified 8 Times New Roman, e.g. 52 Bills picturing Hamilton 9 Uses an Allen wrench, maybe 53 Megacelebrity 10 Suck up 54 Delightful 11 Shagger’s collectible 55 Drained down to 0% 12 Country singer Paisley 56 “Impressive!” 13 Archery bow wood 21 Caramel addition, in some ice ©2017 Jonesin’ Crosswords cream flavors 22 Corn purchases (editor@jonesincrosswords.com) 47 Green Day drummer ___ Cool 48 Hightail it 56 Shiraz, for one 57 Egger-on 58 “Garfield” beagle 59 Musical Redding 60 Make amends (for) 61 “Livin’ La Vida ___” (#1 hit of 1999) 62 Brightness measure 63 “Siddhartha” author Hermann 64 Ran away
SIGNS OF LIFE
NITE SUDOKU
6 5 9 3 1 5 9 4 8
Difficulty Level
4 5
5 2 8 7 6 9
5 2 3 5
1 5 4 7
10/05
2017 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
8
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to work for art’s sake, not for personal fame. Personal fame is secondary, at best. Aries (March 21 – April 19) These are times of commerce more than of art. If art can be made profitable commercially, well and good. If not, it starves in a garret along with the artist. Commerce and art will combine nicely. Taurus (April 20 – May 20) Stories of kings and their magnificence breathe ever of romance, but kings could not be magnificent were it not for the labour of the conscientious common people, those who go daily to their task, asking nothing better than to live their little span in humble endeavour. You can have humble endeavor and romance. Gemini (May 21 – June 20) Identifying tapestries is like playing a game, like the solving of a piquant problem, like pursuing the elusive snark. I know of no keener pleasure than that of standing before a tapestry for the first time and giving its name and history from one’s own knowledge, and not from a museum catalogue or a friend’s recital. It does feel nice to know things. Cancer (June 21 – July 22) What place had an acre of tapestry in these little rooms? How could yards of undulating colour hang over walls that were already overlaid with the most exquisite low relief in wood that has ever been carved this side of the Renaissance in Italy? No place for it whatever. So, out with it — the fashions have changed. And they’ll change again. Leo (July 23 – Aug. 22) When night is well started in its flight … one lover of the silence and the solitude, loath to give away to soft sleep the quiet hours, this one remains behind when all the others have flown bedward, and to him the neighbouring tapestries speak a various language. A little quiet time would be beneficial. Virgo (Aug. 23 – Sept. 22) Talent there must be, but even that is without avail if patience lacks. It’s a virtue.
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SU DO KU
Fill in the grid so that every row, every column, and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 through 9. Last week's puzzle answers are below
9/28 9 3 1 6 5 4 7 2 8
8 4 6 9 7 2 5 1 3
Difficulty Level
7 2 5 3 8 1 6 4 9
5 6 3 1 4 9 8 7 2
2 8 4 7 6 3 1 9 5
1 9 7 5 2 8 4 3 6
4 5 9 2 1 6 3 8 7
3 7 8 4 9 5 2 6 1
6 1 2 8 3 7 9 5 4
9/28
2017 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Quotes are from The Tapestry Book, by Helen Churchill Candee, born Oct. 5, 1858. Libra (Sept. 23 – Oct. 22) He was a man of talent ... and as such must be untrammelled; but here was given him a work where personal discretion was not allowed, where he must copy tone for tone, shade by shade, the myriad indefinite blendings of the brush. It is this practice, pursued to its end, that has made of the tapestry weaver a mere part of a machine, and tapestry-making a lost art …. Don’t let anyone stifle your creativity. Scorpio (Oct. 23 – Nov. 21) So long as one word continues to have more than one meaning, civilised man will continue to gain false impressions. It’s OK to ask for clarification. Sagittarius (Nov. 22 – Dec. 21) Tapestries are not to be bought lightly, as one buys a summer coat, to throw aside at the change of taste or circumstance. They demand more of the buyer than mere money; they demand that loving understanding and intimate appreciation that exists between human friends. Put some thought into your shopping. Capricorn (Dec. 22 – Jan. 19) We, with our minds stocked with the history and romance of tapestry, yet want to know just how it is made in every particular, just how the loom works, how the threads are placed. Go ahead, show them how you do what you do. Aquarius (Jan. 20 – Feb. 18) It is no small satisfaction in our work-a-day life to live amidst beauty, to be sure that every time the eyes are raised from the labour of writing or sewing — or of bridge whist, if you like — they encounter something worthy and lovely. Surround yourself with art. Pisces (Feb. 19 – March 20) Regardless of what a man’s longing for fame may have been in the Middle Ages, he let his works pass into the world without a sign upon them that portrayed their author. … The artist was content to sink individuality in the general good,
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PENUCHES M U SIC HA L L
Live Music - No Cover
Serving Full Menu until 11pm everyday
Open Mic Every Tuesday & Wednesday Every Thursday College Night w/ DJ D.Stef All Tall Well Drinks for Ladies $1 from 9-10pm
Friday 10/6 Boneshakerz
Saturday 10/7 Zero to Sixty
Friday 10/13 Outta Bounds
NEWS OF THE WEIRD BY ANDREWS MCMEEL SYNDICATION
Audacious
Kristi Lyn Goss, 44, former administrative assistant to the Garland County (Arkansas) judge, went all out when she racked up about $200,000 worth of debt on the county credit card between 2011 and May 2016, according to The Hot Springs (Arkansas) Sentinel-Record. Among the many items Goss purchased on the county’s account were tickets to Arkansas Razorbacks games, sequined throw pillows and a tuxedo for her dog. Goss pleaded guilty on Sept. 11 to six felony fraud counts; her sentencing is scheduled for Nov. 22. Garland County Judge Rick Davis issued a statement at Goss’s arrest noting that he had “inherited” her from a former judge.
Incumbent mayoral candidate Charles Pender erected his campaign signs in Corner Brook, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, on Aug. 30, but when he woke up on Aug. 31, he found that they had been vandalized — with hot dogs. CBC News reported that someone had cut round holes in the signs and inserted hot dogs to look as if Pender was smoking a cigar. Pender called it “minor mischief” but noted that the signs are expensive. He called the police, but he feels it’s unlikely the frank bandit will be caught. He hopes to turn the incident into a good laugh with a “bun-raiser” later in the election season.
Friday 10/20 Woodland Protocol
Recalculating ...
See the music calendar at PenuchesMusicHall.com 1087 Elm St, Manchester | 206-5599 HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 62
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Saturday 10/21 The Voice
Smooth reactions
A movie stuntman in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, England, put his skills to work when a potential buyer of his Mercedes Benz tried to take off with the car on Sept. 13. The Telegraph reported that Matt Spooner met the “buyer” and gave a test drive in the car, but the thief wouldn’t get out and started to take off. So, Spooner told reporters, “I ran round to the front and asked him politely to step out. I then ended up on the front of the vehicle and it began to move.” The driver entered a highway, but when he finally slowed down, Spooner let go and “skidded off to the side of the curb,” suffering cuts It’s complicated As Hurricane Irma bore down on Florida and bruises to his face. While Spooner crein early September, the Pasco County Sher- ates stunts for film crews, he advises, “It’s a iff’s Office announced that registered sex bad plan to do them yourself.” offenders, who would not be able to shelter with other citizens, “need someplace to Exploitation 101 go just like any other citizen.” The Tampa Jerry Sargeant, 39, of Cheltenham in Bay Times reported that sex offenders were Gloucestershire, England, who claims on directed to Wiregrass Ranch High School his website to be able to cure cancer via in Wesley Chapel. Pasco County Sheriff’s Skype, has been convicted in Westminster spokesman Kevin Doll noted that offenders Magistrate’s Court of violating the U.K.’s found in other shelters where children were 1939 Cancer Act, which prohibits advertispresent were subject to arrest, but said the ing services that “offer to treat any person predator shelter would welcome offenders for cancer.” The Daily Mail reports that from other counties. In nearby Polk Coun- Sargeant, who calls himself “The Facilitaty, officials were not so generous, telling sex tor,” says he discovered his talent for “Star offenders, “If you are a predator, find some- Magic” when he saw a woman’s soul fly out where else to go,” and announcing that they of her body during a car accident in Romawould be checking IDs at the door and arrest- nia. He also claims to have flown to Alpha ing anyone with an outstanding warrant. Centauri on a spaceship and returned to Earth just minutes later. Sargeant’s healing
Campaign follies
Saturday 10/14 Souled Out Showband
car into the river. Easton police reported that sessions cost 90 pounds for 15 minutes, but Bishop was uninjured, but he did receive he told police that appointments can go up citations for multiple traffic offenses. to an hour because “you can’t put a time on magic.” He will be sentenced on Nov. 8.
Well, it WAS dark ... Gabriel Bishop of Sellersville, Pennsylvania, put all his faith in his car’s GPS system on the evening of Sept. 9, even as it directed him to follow a bike path running alongside the Lehigh River in Easton. According to Lehighvalleylive.com, when the path led under a low bridge, Bishop realized his mistake and tried to back up, but ended up rolling his
Life imitates cartoons
The Fremont (California) Police Department responded late on Sept. 17 to a Safeway store where 39-year-old Adam Kowarsh, armed with a French baguette, was on a rampage. According to SFGate, workers told Kowarsh he needed to pay for his items and leave the store, but when one employee tried to calm him, Kowarsh responded by pushing him and then hitting him across the face with the baguette. The Safeway employee was unhurt, but Kowarsh was charged with suspicion of battery and a parole violation.
No pain, no gain
Archaeologists in Cambridgeshire, England, have discovered the remains of a nearly 200-year-old colony of utopians espousing “free love and wife-swapping,” according to Metro News. The Manea Fen community, established in 1838 by Methodist minister William Hodson, who championed a community free from marriage, money or monogamy, once numbered 150 members, but lasted only 25 months before succumbing to “personality clashes and objections to the practice of free love.” Lead researcher Dr. Marcus Brittain believes “they got the wrong people, they had no labor skills and put in no time and effort, they were drunk, they went into local brothels, and thought they could build a utopia without breaking a sweat.” Visit newsoftheweird.com.
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HIPPO | OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2017 | PAGE 64
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