Londonderry Times 02/13/2014

Transcription

Londonderry Times 02/13/2014
FREE
HOMETOWN NEWS DELIVERED TO EVERY HOME IN TOWN
February 13, 2014
◆
Volume 15 – Issue 7
A FREE Weekly Publication
Low Turnout, Few Questions
at School District Session
JAY HOBSON
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
ust seventy-one residents, out of 15,944
registered voters, turned out for Saturday’s Londonderry School District
Deliberative Session.
While the purpose of
the meeting is to discuss
the articles on the school
warrant, Moderator Bob
Saur said, little of that
went on. All articles went
to the March 11 secret
ballot unchanged.
Article 2, a $4 million
bond for renovations and
construction, led resident
Al Baldasaro to ask about
the tax impact on the full
amount of the bond over
10 years. The first year
J
impact on a payment of
$65,000 was $0.02 per
thousand.
School District Business Administrator Peter
Curro said the impact
would be “$0.15 for two
years, $0.14 for two years,
$0.13 for two years, and
12 cents so forth and so
on” for the 10 years of the
note. “The last year it’s
$0.12,” Curro said.
Baldasaro asked about
the district’s total bond
debt, and Curro said it
was $16.2 million, well
below the limit at $186
million.
School board member
John Laferriere said that
given the amount of work
to be done, the board con-
sidered it prudent to
bond the projects. “If we
don’t bond, we’re fearful
we will have to do this
year after year, and the
impact to the taxpayer
will be more significant to
the taxpayer than the
bond,” he said.
Resident Ray Breslin
said he didn’t see any
quotes for the work and
Curro said that when they
begin the process of
bonding, they go to
experts to determine
what each project would
cost, then come up with a
figure for the bond total.
“If the bond is approved, then we go out to
bid,” Curro said.
continued on page 8
◆
◆
Town Articles Make Their
Way to the Ballot Unchanged
JAY HOBSON
LONDONDERRY TIMES
100 Days and Counting
South School first graders
Frankie Jarek and Lillian Garrity celebrate the 100th day of school on Monday
by playing a game of Snowball Pass. The four classes of first graders at South
participated in a variety of counting-based games to mark the occasion. See
Photo by Chris Paul
additional photos on page 19.
Student Group Petitioning Board in
Support of Non-Renewed Coach
CHRIS PANTAZIS
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
he people who are
intent on seeing Jon
Rich reinstated as
the Londonderry High
School varsity football
coach keep making it
plain that they aren’t willing to take “no” for an
answer from school superintendent Nate Greenberg
T
or the school board.
After having representatives
address
the
school board and Greenberg directly at each of
the last two board meetings, on Jan. 7 and 30 - but
being told that their
efforts would not alter the
decision both times - a
youthful segment of the
sizable group of Rich sup-
porters is leading the next
volley and keeping the
issue alive.
The LHS Athletic Leadership Council - which
includes some of the top
student/athletes at the
school - has created a
petition and collected
more than 300 signatures
on it stating, “Jon Rich
continued on page 9
————––––––————–◆
oters made no
changes to any warrant articles at Saturday’s Town Deliberative
Session, with all articles
now set to face residents
at the secret ballot election March 11.
The Deliberative Session attracted just 71 residents out of the Town’s
15,944 registered voters.
The session lasted about
two and one-half hours.
Among the articles
eliciting comments was
Article 2, which seeks to
divide the elected Town
Clerk/Tax Collector into
two separate positions.
The elected Town Clerk
would not be eligible for
retirement and medical
V
benefits and would be
part time. The Tax Collector would be appointed.
Town Manager Kevin
Smith said the combined
position currently costs
$140,000. By separating it
in two, the Town Clerk
would receive $30,000
with no benefits and the
tax collector portion of
the job would be absorbed by current staff,
thereby saving $110,000.
Resident Al Baldasaro
asked if a part-time town
clerk would be able to
handle the work. Smith
responded that many
towns have part-time
Town Clerks.
Resident Bob Saur
questioned whether a
part-time clerk would
have time to work elec-
tions. Resident Pauline
Caron said a part-time
Town Clerk was shortchanging residents, as his
or her availability would
be reduced.
Article 4, the fiscal
year operating budget of
$28,054,908, with a default
of $28,086,186, brought a
question from resident
Robert LeBreux, who asked if it included four new
continued on page 10
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POSTAL PATRON
LONDONDERRY, NH 03053
◆
PAGE 2
L ONDONDERRY T IMES
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F EBRUARY 13, 2014
Flea Market’s Former Owner May Still Have Liability
JAY HOBSON
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
he former owner of
a Londonderry flea
market on Route
102 near the Hudson border is being sued by
Coach, Inc., a manufacturer of leather products
such as handbags.
The suit alleges that
Peter J. Sapalis knew of
and did nothing to stop
the sale of counterfeit
Coach products.
Coach claims contributory trademark counterfeiting, contributory trademark infringement, contributory trade dress infringement, contributory
false designation of origin
and false advertising, contributory trademark dilution, contributory copyright infringement, state
common law trademark
infringement and state
common law unfair competition.
According to the United States District Court
for the District of New
T
Hampshire in Coach, et al
vs. Peter J. Sapalis, et al,
the court granted a
motion for summary judgment requested by Sapalis on the last count but
denied it on all other
counts.
According to court
documents, Sapalis sold
his flea market business
to his daughter Alaina
Paul and TABA Enterprises in February 2008. Most
of the evidence presented
by Sapatis and Londonderry Marketplace concerns events surrounding
Sapatis’s sale of the flea
market. In contrast, nearly all the evidence presented by Coach relates
to events occurring after
the sale.
The document states
that since the sale of the
flea market to Paul and
TABA in 2008, Paul has
paid Sapatis $12,000 each
year toward the outstanding balance she owes him
- currently $40,000 although she is unsure
how and when these payments have been made.
Each of Paul’s payments
is completely offset by an
annual gift of $12,000 that
Sapatis makes to Paul,
and none of these transactions have been recorded, nor has interest accrued on the outstanding
balance.
Coach, Inc. alleges in
its civil suit that Sapatis
and Londonderry Marketplace knew or should
have known that copyright infringement and
trademark dilution were
being conducted on the
property owned by Sapatis by businesses selling
“knockoff” goods bearing
the Coach brand.
The complaint states
that “on or about June 26,
2011 an investigator for
Coach visited Londonderry Marketplace and observed approximately 30
different vendors selling
and/or offering for sale
the infringeing products.
The investigator made six
different purchases of the
infringeing products. The
investigator
handed
Defendant Sapatis a cease
and desist order. With
Defendant Sapatis’ permission, the investigator
and Sapatis’ assistant
Linda Morrow handed
cease and desist letters to
the
vendors
selling
and/or offering for sale
the Infringeing Products.”
The complaint further
states that a letter in addition to the June 26, 2011
cease and desist letter
was sent via FedEx by
Coach, Inc. in-house counsel Tiffany Walden to 5
Avery Road and was
signed for by a J. Sapatis.
The complaint states
that on Aug. 13, 2011 a
Coach investigator visited
the Marketplace and
found approximately 200
counterfeit Coach products and bought a counterfeit item.
On April 29, 2012 the
complaint states that
another investigator from
Coach visited Londonderry Marketplace and
observed vendors selling
counterfeit Coach, Inc.
products, which triggered
another cease and desist
letter dated May 14, 2011.
On Oct. 21. 2012, an
investigator from Coach,
Inc. visited Londonderry
Marketplace and observed approximately 12
vendors selling counterfeit Coach products. The
investigator made six different purchases, including a baseball cap, wallet,
belt, two wristlets and a
hat and scarf set.
The complaint states
that with the hand delivered cease and desist letter, the cease and desist
letter handed out to vendors with Sapatis’ permission, and the FedEx cease
and desist letter, Sapatis
knew of the infringements
to Coach’s product, and
subsequent visits by
investigators showed that
Sapatis did nothing to
stop the infringement.
All of the counts stem
from the allegation that
Sapatis knew of the infractions at his business and
by not stopping them,
contributed to the infractions.
Coach in its complaint
asks the court to grant an
injunction restraining Sapatis from: manufacturing, importing or advertising or selling any products that bear the Coach
Trademark or engaging in
any practice or activity
constituting unfair competition with Coach;
engaging in any activity
that might dilute the
Coach brand; requiring
Sapatis to recall from any
distributor and retailers
and to deliver to Coach
for destruction any and
all remaining inventory of
the infringing products;
requiring Sapatis to provide the court and Coach
a written report that he
has complied with the
injunction; directing such
other relief as the court
may deem appropriate;
awarding Coach $2 million per counterfeit mark
per type of infringing
products or alternatively
ordering Sapatis to account to and pay Coach
all profits realized by
their wrongful acts, and
awarding Coach its actual
damages and directing
that such profits or actual
damages be trebled.
The Complaint also
asks that Coach be awarded statutory damages,
actual and punitive damages, attorney fees, investigatory fees and expenses to the full extent of the
law, awarding Coach prejudgment interest on any
monetary award and
awarding Coach further
relief as the court deems
just and proper.
–––– VOTE ––––
Adriana Komst
FOR
Town Clerk/Tax Collector
Truthful and Trustworthy
Paid for by the Committee to elect Adriana Komst.
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L ONDONDERRY T IMES
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
PAGE 3
LHS Students Honor Veterans, Who Honor Others in Return
JAY HOBSON
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
ary Shank, advisor for the National Honor Society
chapter at Londonderry
High School, has been
working with Society
members to raise money
for Harbor Homes, which
provides housing for
homeless veterans. The
students held a Dodge
Ball tournament and
raised $2,000, which a
group of them recently
presented to Harbor
Homes officials.
“We are just amazed at
the incredible generosity
and imaginative fundraising efforts of your
school,” said Peter Kelleher, president and chief
executive officer of Harbor Homes. “Our veterans
are so appreciative of
your gifts to them. We are
always in need, as our veteran population continues to grow. It’s so wonderful to receive such
compassion from our
M
young people and their
teachers and families.”
The donations began,
according to Roger Sampson, a Marine and the
computer support specialist at Londonderry
High, when students became involved with veterans after reading “Sunflower,” which takes place
during the Holocaust, as
previously reported by
the Londonderry Times.
The students asked
Sampson, as a veteran, if
American veterans faced
moral dilemmas, and he
convened a panel of veterans for the students to
question.
The veterans met with
the students and when it
was over, their teacher,
Kelly Giguere, asked one
of her students to design
a thank you card. That
transformed into something all her students, day
and adult education, took
part in.
Sampson delivered the
thank you cards, 150 in
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total, to the veterans who
attended the school’s Pay
It Forward Club’s Veterans Day breakfast.
He presented additional cards to veterans at
Dalianis House, one of the
Harbor Homes facilities
for homeless veterans in
Nashua.
“The veterans were
overwhelmed,” he said,
noting that he was given a
tour of the building and
advised about the veterans’ needs. While they get
food from a food bank,
the homeless families
need furnishings, bedding, silverware, dishes,
pans, laundry soap, pillows, and staples like feminine hygiene and personal products.
Sampson said he decided to see what help he
could procure from some
of the LHS teachers.
“The faculty was so
enthusiastic in their desire to help, and pretty
soon donations were
coming in from students,
parents, teachers and
staff,” he said. “The veterans were overwhelmed.”
Sampson said Shank
told him Harbor Homes
would be the Honor Society’s recipient of its fall
fundraiser.
Sampson plans to
bring more items to Harbor Homes in the spring.
When he was asked
what Harbor Homes
Trent Smith, a member of the Board of Directors of Harbor Homes, second from
left in front row, receives a $2,000 donation from LHS National Honor Society
member Hannah Brownstein, as Peter Kelleher, president and chief executive officer of Harbor Homes, LHS staffer Roger Sampson, National Honor Society members Tianna Federico and Marissa Russell, teacher Kelly Giguere and National
Honor Society advisor and teacher Mary Shank look on. Courtesy photo
might do in return, he
said, “Would it be possible to honor four of our
fallen soldiers who graduated from Londonderry
High School with Bricks of
Honor?” Without hesitation, Kelleher assured
them the four veterans
would be so honored.
Donna Collins of Harbor Homes said the four
soldiers would be honored with bricks engraved
with their names and
placed in a Wall of Honor
at Dalianis House. The
four are: Lance Cpl. Peter
Sora, Class of 2002, who
died during a training
accident; PFC Eric Currier,
Class of 2006, who was
killed in Afghanistan in
2010; Air Force Lt. Peter
Sohm, Class of 2006, who
died in a plane crash near
Goodfellow Air Base in
Texas in 2011; and U.S.
Army Cpl. Tyler Pimpis,
Class of 2009, who was
killed in a motorcycle
crash in Killeen, Texas,
last August.
“The outpouring of
compassion and the desire to help from students
and staff was incredible.
This is really a special
school with special people in it,” Sampson said.
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PAGE 4
L ONDONDERRY T IMES
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
Letters
Editorial
A Sign of Change?
Deliberative Attendance:
Sandown Town
116 voters out of 3,643 registered.
Sandown at Timberlane School
278 out of 3,643.
Hampstead School
70 voters out of 6,033.
Hampstead Town
44 voters out of 6,033.
Derry School
245 voters out of 20,115.
Londonderry Town
71 out of 15,944.
Londonderry School
90 out of 15,944.
Look at the Timberlane numbers for
Sandown. Not great by a long shot, but
so much better than in the past and in
comparison to nearby communities.
Derry gave it a decent shot too. Start of
a trend?
When residents speak out and don’t
take no for an answer, when they write
letters to newspapers and air their
views publicly, they attract attention.
That’s what happened among Sandown
residents upset with school taxes, and
what seems to be developing – just
barely - in Derry.
That still leaves the other towns in
the dust. Hampstead – whose voters
face an ever-increasing $7-plus million
school bond for construction – could
muster only 70 voters at School Deliberative and just 44 at the Town Deliberative. Not much interest there.
Londonderry, which has a $4 million bond on the school warrant, saw
just 71 voters at its School Deliberative,
and 90 at the Town session. Lots of contented taxpayers in town?
But the Timberlane Deliberative
Session brought out the crowds. And
while an attempt to significantly lower
the ever-increasing school budget
failed, it resulted in public debate and
questioning and discussion – and people concerned with how much they
spend on their schools on both sides of
the issue came out to rally for their
viewpoint. Individual citizens dug for
facts and sent them out and kept asking
questions – and asking is the only way
to get the answers needed to make
informed decisions.
Does that mean everyone who
stayed away is delighted with the
money articles on their warrants? Hardly. But people with reasons too numerous to list for not attending, ranging
from “I forgot” to a conflict with a
favorite program on TV, are leaving
what should be citizen decisions
securely in the hands of public officials.
At Deliberatives, residents can voice
their opinions, and have the opportunity, granted under the SB2 form of government - that was after all adopted by
the town’s voters - to alter the financial
aspect of a warrant article. It’s a shame
when the no-shows are in control.
That leaves the Deliberative a
mockery. Lots of people just don’t get
the idea of the personal responsibility
called for by participatory democracy.
And lots of people will be suffering the
consequences come tax time.
The Londonderry Times is a weekly publication. It is mailed to every home in Londonderry
free of charge and is available at a number of drop-off locations throughout the town.
Serving Derry
Serving Chester, Hampstead
and Sandown
Nutfield Publishing, LLC
2 Litchfield Rd., Londonderry, NH 03053
tel: 603-537-2760 • fax: 603-537-2765
send e-mails to: [email protected]
www.nutpub.net
Editor – Leslie O’Donnell
Owner/Publisher – Debra Paul
Art Director – Chris Paul
The Londonderry Times is published through Nutfield Publishing, LLC a privately owned company
dedicated to keeping residents informed about local issues and news in the town of Londonderry. All
articles submitted for placement in the Londonderry Times are welcome and subject to review/editing and/or acceptance by the publisher. Decisions of the publisher are final.
Views contained within submitted and published articles do not necessarily represent the views of the publisher or Londonderry Times. No articles, photographs,
or other materials in the Londonderry Times may be re-published, re-written or
otherwise used without the express permission of the publisher.
Melcher for
Town Council
To the editor:
As a resident for just
under 30 years, I am in
every sense of the word a
product of the Town of
Londonderry. I spent 12
years in our school system, graduating prepared
for further education and
the workforce. I was
involved in the community through Scouting with
local Troop 426. I received
my Eagle after constructing the handicapped
ramp attached to the
Town Common.
My father was known
as “Dan The Milkman” to
many of the residents
while employed with HP
Hood, and now works for
the post office. My mother, Patti, just retired from
the Police Department
after 35 years. My commitment to my community is primarily a product
of these two individuals.
Three years ago, I
decided to get involved in
local elective politics by
running for a seat on the
budget committee. This
past year I was privileged
to serve as the Chair.
I decided to seek a
seat on the Council for
several reasons. I want to
ensure that public safety
is first on the agenda. We
must ensure that there
are 10 fire personnel
staffed on each shift. We
need to monitor staffing
levels at both the fire and
police departments. We
need to ensure our development agreement with
Woodmont is strictly enforced, should we need to
increase staff after construction.
I count roads in the
public safety category as
well. They need to be
reconstructed as appropriate, but moreover
maintained as we go
along to avoid the inflated
cost of reconstruction.
For years, a $1 million
bond was passed by voters each March. This year,
the roadway fund will
receive just $275,000. The
next council needs to
come together and figure
out a realistic plan to
maintain this part of our
infrastructure.
Additionally, we need
to figure out how to retain
our residents. People are
moving out of our town
and state at increasing
rates. Our new graduates
are leaving for college,
and not looking back.
The only way to keep
our residents here is to
ensure there are local
jobs and an affordable living cost. We require an
appropriate mix of housing.
Finally, we have several large developments
coming. We continue to
have discussions on
bringing large businesses
to the airport and Pettengill Road area. And we
have the new Woodmont
development knocking on
the door. There are major
decisions coming in
regards to all of these
areas.
I credit Town Manager
Kevin Smith with focusing
so much of his time on
supporting current businesses and seeking new
businesses to come to
town. We must continue
to increase the tax base
so that residential taxes
can be level-funded or
even decreased.
A ballot in my favor is
a vote for public safety,
open local government,
and an eye towards economic development. I was
humbled by how many
people encouraged me to
run. I would be honored if
you would join them in
voting for me on March
11th.
Please find “Chris
Melcher for Town Council” on Facebook. You can
also email me (cmelch-
[email protected]).
Chris Melcher
Londonderry
————————
Robinson for
Town Council
To the editor:
Dear Voters of Londonderry,
On Friday, Feb. 7, at
our School Deliberative
Session and on Saturday,
Feb. 8, at our Town Deliberative Session, both the
Town and School District
presented fiscally responsible budgets including
cost cutting measures.
Credit should be given to
the Town Council and
School Board for their
fine work.
As Londonderry taxpayers we bear the full
tax burden of funding
both the school and Town
budgets. There are two
budgets but the money
comes out of the same
pocket. Might there be
more cost savings when a
Town Councilor has a
working knowledge of the
school budget?
On March 11, we have
an opportunity to elect
John Robinson as a Town
Councilor who will have
just completed a second
term on the School Board.
I think there is value in
having a Town Councilor
who understands the
details of the school
budget and may be able
to find more ways in
which the Town and
School can share costs.
We are one great Town
and it makes sense to
keep the big picture in
mind.
As a former state representative, John Robinson also understands how
state government works.
That’s useful. Let’s put
the needs of the whole
Town of Londonderry
first and see how much
continued on page 5
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letters as possible. Please e-mail your letters to the Londonderry Times at [email protected].
All letters must include the writer’s name, address and phone number for verification if needed; name and
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and length, and anonymous letters will not be printed.
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L ONDONDERRY T IMES
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
PAGE 5
Town Manager Gives ‘State of the Town’ at Deliberative Session
JAY HOBSON
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
own Manager Kevin
Smith delivered his
first State of the
Town Report at the Town
Deliberative Session on
Saturday.
Smith reviewed the
budget process and requests for funding on the
warrant, and said that in
addition to those, the
town intends to restore
the Undesignated Fund
Balance to a level where it
can be used as a funding
source to enhance the
town’s equipment reserve
program, roadway maintenance and planning for
T
◆
Letters
Continued from page 4
better we can become.
Talk to John about his
vision for the entire community. He’ll tell you
point blank where he
stands on any issue and
he’ll listen, honestly listen
to you.
I believe in separation
of powers in government
additional projects.
“Although the economy continues to improve,
it does so at a very slow
pace,” he said. “We expect
that to continue for the
foreseeable future, however staff continues to
work on projects that will
capitalize on growth in
the non-residential sector
for when economic conditions return to more
steady growth.”
He said the economic
Town Manager Kevin
development staff continSmith addresses those
ue to receive inquiries who attended the Town
about development po- Deliberative Session on
tential at Pettengill Road,
Saturday.
and continue to work with
state and federal officials as well as private industry to secure non-local
◆ funding for that area, notbut everyone is tired of ing its anticipated benedivisive government in fits accrue to the ManWashington. In London- chester-Boston Regional
derry we all work togeth- Airport area and the
er, and that includes entire state.
“As one economic anacouncilor with councilor,
school board member lyst recently opined in
with school board mem- Business New Hampshire
ber and boards and com- magazine, ‘Londonderry
missions with one anoth- is hot right now. I can’t
think of another commuer and volunteers.
nity that has the kind of
Pollyann Winslow
opportunity that LondonLondonderry
derry has.’ And needless
Election Letters
The Londonderry Times will
accept Letters to the Editor pertaining to the March 11
election up to 5 p.m. Monday, Feb. 24, for publication in
the Feb. 27, edition. No letters concerning the election will
be published in the March 6 edition, other than to correct
inaccuracies about the election.
to say, we couldn’t agree
more,” Smith said.
Smith invited residents to visit the town’s
website and consider paying property taxes, motor
vehicle registrations and
dog license fees on line.
Credit card payments are
accepted, both online and
at town hall.
Smith recognized the
service of former Town
Clerk/ Tax Collector Meg
Seymour and former Executive Assistant Margo
Lapietro. “It is with deep
gratitude that we recognize the service of both of
these women,” Smith
said.
Smith noted that serving as Town Manager is
giving him the opportunity to give back to a community that has brought
him and his family so
much over the years. He
thanked the department
heads for making his job
enjoyable.
“I would be remiss if I
did not extend my sincere
appreciation and gratitude towards Police Chief
Bill Hart and the Town
Council. Chief Hart was
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His continued counsel
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Smith also thanked the
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their trust in him and for
their ongoing support and
guidance.
“I look forward to
working with them and
town staff as we continue
to strive to improve the
services that we deliver
to the great people of this
community,” Smith concluded.
OBITUARY
Margaret “Peg” Marrigan
Margaret M. “Peg” Marrigan, 84, of Londonderry died Feb. 5, 2014 at the Elliot Hospital of Manchester after a lengthy illness.
She was born Jan. 7, 1930 in Pawtucket, R.I.,
the daughter of the late Ralph and Martha
(Siewick) Fogarty.
She was a graduate of the Rhode Island School
of Design.
She enjoyed painting and was a watercolor
artist.
She had lived in Londonderry since 1992, formerly living in Orr’s Island, Maine.
She is survived by her brother, Ralph Fogarty
Sr.; one niece, Anne Fogarty; and one nephew,
Ralph Fogarty Jr., all of Londonderry. She was predeceased by her husband, William T. Marrigan, in
1998.
Following cremation, memorial visiting hours
were held Feb. 10 in the Peabody Funeral Homes
and Crematorium, 290 Mammoth Road, Londonderry. To send a condolence or for more information, visit www.peabodyfuneralhome.com.
◆
PA G E 6
L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
Planning Continues for Proposed West Road Dog Park
JAY HOBSON
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
own Manager Kevin
Smith said he sees
no issues with siting
a dog park off West Road.
“The Council asked me
to look into any maintenance that needs to be
done to the land prior to
the park being constructed and I checked in with
our Department of Public
Works,” he told the Coun-
T
cil last week. “(Director)
Janusz Czyzowski said he
doesn’t see any issues
with that land being used,
other than obviously
some trees would have to
come down when they
decide to move forward
with the construction of
the park.
“The area that they’re
looking to design the park
in does not encroach on
the conservation ease-
ment,” he added. “So they
would not have any
issues from the Conservation Commission there.”
Smith said the town is
looking into any possible
liability issues.
He said Primex, the
town’s insurer, has been
contacted about the proposed dog park. “I’m
going to be working with
some members of the dog
park committee so that
we can get clarification on
some of the liability
issues, but so far things
appear to be moving in
the right direction for
them to be able to start
moving forward in collecting donations,” Smith
said.
The committee was to
meet Tuesday, Feb. 11,
after the Londonderry
Times went to press, to discuss the proposal further.
In other business at
the Monday, Feb. 3 meeting, Smith presented Geoff
Hewes and Dan Leonard
of the 603 Brewery, 12 Liberty Drive, Unit 7, as part
of his effort to highlight
local businesses.
Hewes and Leonard
said they started the
brewery about two years
in Campton.
“Moving down to Londonderry was a big deci-
sion, we had a lot going
on all at once, and we
were a little nervous on
how we would be received, but I gotta tell you
it’s been nothing but a
good reception,” Hewes
said.
Smith gave the pair an
acrylic pyramid with the
Town Seal inside, and a
pin of an apple, representing the town’s apple
orchard heritage.
◆
◆
Second Arrest in Derry Family On Credit Card Fraud Charges
JAY HOBSON
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
elsey Lee Donahue,
20, of Wright Road
in Derry was arrested Thursday, Feb. 6, on
one count of Receiving
Stolen Property and three
counts of Fraudulent Use
of a Credit Card. Her sister Samantha Donahue,
K
21, was arrested last
month for participating in
the same incident.
According to Detective
Chris Olson of the Londonderry Police Department, Kelsey Donahue
used a stolen debit/ATM
card at multiple places in
Londonderry.
“The Receiving Stolen
603.425.5108
603-425-5109
Property charge comes
from her having the
stolen debit/ATM card in
her hand and the Fraudulent Use charges all come
from the times she used
the card before the card
was finally canceled,”
Olson said.
Olson said Donahue
used the stolen card to
rent a hotel room at Sleep
Inn, made a couple of
cash withdrawals, and
bought merchandise at
Tedeschi’s and RMZ
Truck Stop (the Sunoco
gas station across from
Poor Boys). Olson said it
Kelsey Donahue
was surveillance footage
that helped police arrest
both women.
“We used footage from
Tedeschi’s, from RMZ and
from the Sleep In,” he
said. “The victim is a guy
and he didn’t know if he
had left his ATM card
somewhere or if it was
stolen. That was never
actually determined. Once
we found out where the
card had been used, we
went and grabbed all the
surveillance videos and
saw her and her sister
with the card in her hand
making the transactions
the whole time. Sometimes it was her sister
Samantha on the video.
are
These
charges
because we saw Kelsey on
the video with the card.”
Olson said the male victim had been helping out
Donahue and her sister.
“According to his
statement, the victim didn’t know Donahue well
but he was helping her
out as far as a ride goes,”
Olson said. “He was going
to drop them off at the
Sleep Inn, where they
actually used his card
several times.”
Bail was set at $5,000
personal recognizance
with a court date of Feb.
24 at 8:15 a.m. at Derry
District Court.
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◆
L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
PA G E 7
100 Things Learned
The Londonderry Middle School’s Tsunami team sixth
graders spent a good portion of their 100th day of school
Monday creating a book that will be part of the year-end
portfolio cataloging one hundred things they learned. At
left, Alexia Barnett and Kelly Calawa measure ribbon to
bind their book; above, Hannah Gagnon and Jasmine
Brown work on listing their work; and Michael Menslage
Photos by Chris Paul
shows his book’s unique folding.
Mack’s Apples Takes First Prize at Farm and Forestry Expo
JAY HOBSON
LONDONDERRY TIMES
mercial displays. The
Farm and Forestry Expo
has been around for quite
a while and basically presents New Hampshiremade businesses, farming
businesses. The theme
this year was ‘Celebrating
New Hampshire’s Commitment to Agriculture
Education and Forestry.’”
Keller noted that Mack’s
has won five years in a row.
“There were about 100
commercial and educa-
tional exhibitors, and our
booth won the Joseph
Battles Memorial Award
First Place for a commercial exhibit,” Keller said.
“It was an honor for us to
participate and be among
people that have such a
love of the land and such
a commitment and pride
in what they do.”
Staffed by Farm Stand
employees Louise Dromgoold, Sandy Coulombe,
Linda McCullogh, Kathy
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————––––––————–◆
ack’s Apples Farm
Stand took part in
the New Hampshire Farm and Forestry
Expo, held last weekend
at the Radisson Hotel in
Manchester, and took
home first prize for its
booth.
Evelyn Keller, store
manager for Mack’s Apples, said, “Our display
won first prize for com-
M
~ LOVE LINES ~
Happy Valentine’s Day from all of us here at Nutfield Publishing
Cote and Keller, the display focused on the three
components of the expo.
For agriculture, it featured pictures of apples
and Mack’s Moose Hill
Orchards; for Education,
it focused on the education that kids who work at
the farm stand get by
learning about farming;
and for Forestry, it presented how Mack’s maintains its land for crosscountry skiing and walking trails.
The booth included a
hand-lettered board with
photos of the orchards,
and two tables holding
baskets of apples that
were given away, along
with apple recipes.
The Expo sponsors are
the University of New
Hampshire Cooperative
Extension, the New Hampshire Division of Forest
and Lands and the New
Hampshire Department of
Agriculture, Markets and
Food, Keller said.
◆
PA G E 8
L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S
Deliberative
Continued from page 1
Breslin brought up the
project of redoing the
Moose Hill school roof,
which is 12 years old, and
asked why a new roof
would be put on if the
building would eventually
have a second story.
Curro said there are
no plans in the near
future to add floors to
Moose Hill or to use it as a
second middle school.
Article 2 was moved to
the ballot.
Superintendent Nathan Greenberg said the
proposed 66,240,583 general fund operating budget, Article 3 on the warrant, represents a $179,916
or 0.27 percent increase
over the FY 14 budget.
“The (proposed) budget
would result in an estimated flat tax rate increase of $12.66,” Greenberg said. The default
budget is $66,545,528.
Greenberg said a budget is a financial picture of
priorities, programs and
services that a district is
looking to implement or
work on.
Baldasaro asked if
Common Core funding
was in the budget and
Greenberg said there was
no additional spending
for Common Core. “The
money that we’re spending is what we normally
spend for curriculum revisions, staff development
and assessment,” he said.
Baldasaro asked if the
tuitioned students who
come to Londonderry off-
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
set the tax rate and
Greenberg said they did.
Resident Tom Duxbury asked about the
impact the estimated 450plus students who could
come to Londonderry
schools from current
developments under construction in the north end
of town might have, and
Greenberg said this year’s
enrollment is 4,553, with a
projected enrollment next
year of 4,398.
“The issue for us is if
those 450 students come
in the three- to five-year
period, based on the facility studies that we did
earlier this year, we could
probably accommodate
those kids if they came in
at the right places,”
Greenberg said.
However, Greenberg
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said if there were an influx
of growth at the north end
of town, redistricting may
be necessary.
Duxbury also asked
about year-to-date expenses versus the actual budget, and Curro said they
were expecting to come in
$850,000 under the approved budget. Greenberg
said that money goes back
to the taxpayer in the form
of a reduced tax rate next
year.
With no further discussion, Article 3 was
moved unchanged to the
ballot.
No discussion took
place on Article 4, a collective bargaining agreement with custodians,
and resident Maria Newman said the 2.5 percent
increase included in Article 5, the support staff
contract, was justified.
The increase comes in the
second and third years of
the contract and represents a $0.25 per hour or
$0.75 per day increase.
Baldasaro asked why
budget committee members voted against the
contract, and Budget
Committee member Dan
Lekas said he considered
the 2.5 percent too high.
Budget Committee member Mark Aronson said he
thinks the custodians
were a professional group
and could stay within the
rate of inflation, while the
support staff was more of
a volunteer group and
“really make a big difference and deserved a little
bit more. Even though the
contract was the same, I
feel the circumstances are
different.”
Resident Marie Parker
said she approved of the
article, noting it cost less
Superintendent Nathan Greenberg speaks on the
$66,240,583 operating budget at the School Deliberative Session Friday evening. Photo by Chris Paul
than $20 on a $300,000
house. “It represents a
few less coffees,” Parker
said.
The article was moved
to the ballot.
Article 7, which allows
the district to accept federal grants and other
money for its School
Lunch Program and Federal Fund Projects, and is
listed as having no tax
impact, resulted in a comment from Baldasaro that
there was a cost to the
taxpayer, as it was taxpayer dollars paid to the federal government that
were being returned
through grants and subsidies. “This is a no-brainer
to approve the article
because it is our money
coming back to us,” he
said.
The article was moved
to the warrant.
Article 8, which would
raise and appropriate
$500,000 for the School
Buildings Maintenance
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Expendable Trust Fund,
with an estimated tax
impact of $0.14, led Baldasaro to ask if the money
could instead be taken
from overages returned to
the taxpayer.
Curro said $75,000
remains in the unreserved
balance account. “The
town has somewhere
around $2 million,” he
explained. “So when they
take money from surplus,
they already have the
money. We don’t.”
The article was moved
to the ballot.
Article 9, which would
raise and appropriate
$100,000 for the School
District Equipment Capital
Reserve Fund, with an estimated tax impact of $0.03,
prompted Duxbury to say
those costs belong in the
operating budget and not
as a separate article.
Curro said this is a
special revenue fund and
what was not spent was
retained.
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L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
PA G E 9
Baldasaro Decides Against U.S. Senate Run vs. Shaheen
JAY HOBSON
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
tate Representative
Al Baldasaro, R-Londonderry has confirmed that he will not
make a bid for Democratic U.S. Senator Jeanne
Shaheen’s seat. Last year,
he had announced that he
was considering such a
race.
“I took a look into the
fundraising and all that,
and from January up
until the primary there’s
no way with such short
S
notice that I can raise the
$3 million to $4 million
that would be needed to
compete,” he said last
week. “As far as I’m concerned, there are three
candidates that have
been in there since last
year raising money, and
they’re already ahead of
the game, three Republicans - Bob Smith, a former U.S. Senator; Karen
Testerman and former
State
Senator
Jim
Rubens.”
Baldasaro said, “the
bottom line is that Shaheen is no good for the
State of New Hampshire.
“With what she’s done
with disabled veterans by
voting to cut COLA (Costof-Living Allowance) on
retired disabled veterans
instead of cutting her own
pay, what she’s done with
Obamacare and how she
lied about it just like
Obama by saying people
could keep their doctors,
New Hampshire’s being
destroyed,” he claimed.
“We’ve got over 22,000
people who’ve lost their
insurance, more and more
companies are taking fulltime employees and making them part time to
avoid the health insurance law, and we’re going
to have more and more
companies doing that.”
Baldasaro said that he
would not rule out running for higher office, but
emphasized the timing for
fundraising is what’s
keeping him out now.
Regarding a possible
run against Shaheen by
former U.S. Senator Scott
Brown, R-Mass., Baldasaro said he thinks
Brown moved to New
Hampshire because his
mother, who lives in Rye,
is ill.
“He’s bringing in money
to the Republican Party,”
Baldasaro said. “He’s a
good guy but politically I
couldn’t support him.”
Baldasaro said New
Hampshire “needs somebody that will look them
in the eye and tell it like it
is and tell them the truth
and not give BS and step
on our Constitutional
rights.”
He said he favors
smaller government.
“I want government
out of my house, out of
my pockets,” he said.
“They need to stop taxing
the people here in New
Hampshire with all these
taxes that go along with
Obamacare. I am a freedom guy, one who stands
up for liberty and believes
in the constitution.”
The next Londonderry
school board meeting is
set for Tuesday, Feb. 18,
and the petition may be
placed in the hands of the
school board and Greenberg that night.
The LHS football job
has been posted and the
application process has
begun, with Rich reapplying for the job he held for
six years.
At the center of the
upset generated by the
Rich non-renewal as the
Londonderry varsity grid
coach is the belief within
the group that supports
him that his removal was
generated by the behindthe-scenes actions of at
least one school board
member, and had everything to do with the Richled LHS grid teams not
winning enough games.
In the wake of finding
out about his non-renewal, Rich stated to the Londonderry Times and at
least one other newspaper that he thought his
removal from the job was
generated by actions of
the school board. But
mere hours before the
Londonderry Times went
to press with that initial
story, Rich sought out
this reporter and said he
had subsequently met
with Greenberg, who was
taking “full responsibility”
for Rich’s removal.
Rich and his wife are
both employed as teachers at LHS, and the superintendent has said in public that Jon Rich remains a
physical education teacher in the highest possible standing at Londonderry High. But then
come the questions about
why Rich was removed
from his coaching position, which Greenberg
states he simply cannot
answer because they are
a personnel issue.
Contacted about her
group’s petition, Tianna
Federico stated, “As the
Athletic Leadership Council, our job is to help athletes at the high school
have their own voice.
When everything came
out about Mr. Rich not
being hired back, we
quickly learned the reality
of the situation. We saw
the frustration of the football players and knew
that it was our job to help
them. We began talking to
a lot of them and told
them we would help them
in any way they needed.”
When the idea of a
petition came up, Federico took it upon herself to
write it.
“We had no idea that
the petition would be-
come so large,” she said.
“We truly just intended to
get students to sign it.
Although Mr. Greenberg
and the school board
have expressed that Mr.
Rich will not get his job
back and the decision is
final, a lot of people are
frustrated. The petition is
not to target anyone. It is
to express the loving sup-
port that Mr. Rich has.
People, especially students, desperately want
to be heard, and we felt
that a petition was the
best way to get their voices across.”
Jon Rich’s wife, Crystal, is an English teacher
at LHS, and Federico
wanted it understood that
Mrs. Rich - who serves as
the staff advisor to the
Student Leadership Council - had no prior knowledge of the existence of
the petition in support of
her husband.
“We did this without
the advisory of Crystal
Rich. We purposely did not
involve her in case of controversy,” said Federico.
◆
Coach
Continued from page 1
should not be fired as varsity football head coach
at Londonderry High
School.”
Penned by senior
council member and LHS
all-state field hockey
standout Tianna Federico
- whose mom, Laura, is
the Londonderry High
varsity field hockey coach
- the document states
that Rich “should not be
fired as the head varsity
football coach due to the
fact that he is supportive
and puts his players
ahead of himself. The
well-being of the students
at LHS should always be a
top priority, and by firing
Jon Rich that well-being
will not be a priority any
longer.”
Among the 300 signers
of the petition are former
and current LHS student/athletes and parents. Rich and his suphave
also
porters
received letters of support from New Hampshire
high school football luminaries like Pinkerton
Academy coach Brian
O’Reilly and Exeter High
School’s Bill Ball, whose
stadium
is
school’s
named after him.
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PA G E 10
L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S
Town
Continued from page 1
firefighters and a deputy
chief. Smith said that was
not the case; at the last
Town Council meeting, he
said, money was put in
the budget to cover fire
department overtime but
no new personnel.
Baldasaro asked about
spending on legal services, and Finance Director
Sue Hickey said there was
an overage of about
$250,000 this year. Baldasaro asked if there was
an insurance policy to
cover legal expenses and
Town Council Chairman
John Farrell said there
was no reserve for legal
expenses, but the town
was adequately prepared
for any legal issues.
Smith noted the proposed budget is lower
than the default budget
and represents a 1.6 percent increase in expenditures over the FY 14 budget. The budget went to the
Resident Al Baldasaro
commented on several
articles Saturday.
warrant unchanged.
Article 7 asks voters to
raise and appropriate
$180,000 to upgrade the
Highway Garage. Public
Works Director Janusz
Czyzowski described
through a visual presentation the need for the
upgrades. LeBreux said
the facility was “appalling,” and fellow resident
Greg Warner said the article was a good interim
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
solution but eventually
the facility should be
rebuilt.
Article 12, a citizen’s
petition to transfer management of the Town Forest from the Conservation
Commission to the Town
Manager, with the advice
and recommendations of
the Historic District/Heritage Commission, Conservation Commission
and Town Council, led to
discussion about the liability that could be
incurred by the Town if
volunteers were used for
the cleanup.
Resident Kent Allen,
who initiated the petition,
said the Town Forest
needed a cleanup and the
article would allow that to
happen.
Baldasaro asked if liability wasn’t also incurred
by allowing Beautify Londonderry volunteers to
do clean-ups around town.
Town Attorney Mike Ramsdell said that was different because they were not
asking the town to over-
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see their efforts, while the
petition would put the
volunteers under the
Town Manager’s purview.
Resident Chris Paul,
Londonderry Times photographer, asked for clarification. “Either way, they
are not going to allow volunteers in the town forest, right, because of the
legal aspects of it?” he
said.
Smith said that if the
approval of the Town
Manager were requested,
then the advice of counsel
was that there was added
liability.
Ramsdell reiterated
that not only he but the
town’s insurance carrier
said that once the town
manager is put in charge
under the town’s imprimatur, the likelihood of
lawsuits increases.
Another citizen’s petition, Article 13, which
seeks to amend the U.S.
Constitution to say that
only humans, not corporations, have constitutional rights, and money
is not speech, led Baldasaro to say, “This is a
push in order to get taxpayer money to fund elections.”
Resident Tim Siek-
There were more empty chairs than residents at
Saturday’s Town Deliberative Session.
Photos by Chris Paul
mann said the article was
driven by “the flood of
money into the election
process by public interest
groups, wealthy individuals and unions.”
As the session drew to
a close with Article 15,
transacting any business
that may legally come
before the meeting, LeBreux requested emphatically that the Town
Report be made available
no less than two weeks
before the deliberative
session. Smith agreed to
that arrangement.
All other articles elicited little or no discussion.
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◆
L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
PA G E 11
Pauline Caron, Bob Rimol Honored as Volunteer, Citizen of Year
JAY HOBSON
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
granite award in the
shape of the State
of New Hampshire
was presented to newly
named Volunteer of the
Year Pauline Caron and
Citizen of the Year Bob
Rimol on Saturday.
The awards were presented by Town Council
Chairman John Farrell
and Vice Chairman Tom
Dolan at the start of the
Town Deliberative Session.
In making the presentation to Caron, Dolan
said she had been a Leach
Library trustee since 2004
and volunteered at the
library bookstore.
“During her tenure as
a trustee, she assumed
the treasurer’s position
and she has been treasurer every year except for
2012, when she was chairperson,” Dolan said. “She
is an active member of
the Friends of the Leach
Library, where they raise
funds to help support various library activities, initially to put the library
addition that we all enjoy.
She has also been a member of the Londonderry
Historical Society and the
Heritage Commission and
is an active member of
the Senior Center.”
A
Pauline Caron is presented the Volunteer of the Year Award by
Town Councilor Tom Dolan. Photo by Chris Paul
“I was really surprised
to receive the award,”
Caron said. “I had no idea
that I was going to receive
it.”
Presenting the Citizen
of the Year award to Rimol,
Farrell said, “This person I
met about 13 or 14 years
ago when coaching in
LAFA (Londonderry Athletic Fields Association).
Over the years you observe from afar the dedication to the town, taking
care of everything from
behind the scenes, from
making sure the grass
grows on the fields to making sure the fields are
ready for tournaments and
that all the coaches have
everything they need.”
He added that Rimol
recently became involved
with Londonderry Trailways and played a significant role in getting funding for paving a portion of
the trail.
Rimol said he was a little surprised at receiving
the ward.
“The two main things
that I’ve done over the
years for Londonderry is
that I’ve been the facilities manager for the LAFA
fields and I have put in
hundreds and hundreds
of volunteer hours trying
to improve and manage
the facilities, and the
other is I’ve put in hundreds of hours to develop
ERIK E. PEABODY
Bob Rimol is presented the Citizen of the Year Award by Town
Council Chairman John Farrell.
the rail trail and I will continue to lead the way for
the rail trail. I am very
grateful to the people of
Londonderry for the
award,” Rimol said.
The council also used
the occasion to recognize
board members who have
left or are not seeking
reelection, and town staff
who are retiring.
The following retired
committee members each
received an acrylic clock:
Jay Hooley, Zoning Board
of Adjustment; Bob Ramsey, Cooperative Alliance
for Transportation; Deb
Currier, Supervisor of the
Checklist; Larry O’Sullivan, Zoning Board of
Adjustment; and Don Jorgensen, Manchester-Bos-
ton Airport Authority.
The following retired
committee members received a pen and pencil
set: Amy Finamore, Solid
Waste and Environmental
Committee; Richard Danais, Manchester-Boston
Airport Authority; and
Ken Heneault, Conservation Commission.
Retired town staff receiving a plaque were:
Russ Pickering, Public
Works Department; Patri-
cia Melcher, Police Department and Jack Slade,
Police Department.
Several of the honorees were not in attendance.
The Town Deliberative
Session opened with the
presentation of colors by
Londonderry High School
Color Guard members
Keira Bergeron, Stephanie
Hemenway, Lisa Ober and
Cindy Miller. Vicki Stubbs
sang the National Anthem.
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◆
PAGE 12
L ONDONDERRY T IMES
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
‘Lancer Custom Woodworking’ Begins at Londonderry High
JAY HOBSON
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
ondonderr y High
School woodworking
teacher Tom Ciccarello has started an
independent study that
teaches some of his
advanced woodworking
students not only how to
create with wood, but
how to handle the practical side of being in the
woodworking business.
“A lot of the students
who take the woodworking
classes are talented and
good with their hands,”
Ciccarello said. “Some of
them end up with their
own business or do work
on the side as they get
older, and I do that in the
summer months. I have
my own business, so I figured I’d take some of the
things that I learned from
my business and try to
teach it to them so they
don’t have to learn it the
way I did, by the trial and
error method.”
L
Ciccarello said the
program lasts only one
semester and the students
all had to have the same
schedule to be able to take
the independent study, so
they wouldn’t miss any
scheduled classes. Ciccarello also had to meet
with Principal Jason Parent and Guidance Director
Mike Dolphin, who rearranged Ciccarello’s duty
schedule to allow him to
hold the class.
“As shop teacher, I
often get requests to
make things for the
school as things get broken, so instead of me
doing these things in
between stuff, now we
have a means to do this,
and these students are
taking these projects on
as if we have a business
and those are our customers,” he said. “They
will get the information
from the ‘customer’ as to
what they want, and come
up with any necessary
sketches, figure out a bill
of material, and work up
an actual estimate. We’re
going to treat it like a
business and come up
with some typical overhead expenses that a
business would have.”
Ciccarello said that
“Lancer Custom Woodworking” is in its second
week of the new semester
and has six projects that
have been accepted.
“We put out an e-mail
explaining what we were
doing and we got a lot of
responses,” he said.
“Some we couldn’t take
because we have only the
semester to complete the
projects, but what we
were able to accept was a
bookstand for the school
psychologist, a podium
for an English teacher, a
shelf to hold a collection
for another teacher, a
coat rack with a shelf for a
classroom, some cabinet
doors, and the biggest
project - a duck house to
LHS woodworking teacher Tom Ciccarello and students Sean Montibello, 17,
Mike Griffith, 17, and Jon Deschamps, 17, all seniors, are beginning Lancer
Custom Woodworking, which will teach not only woodworking but the woodworking business. Photo by Jay Hobson
protect the ducks that are
hatched in the courtyard
from the hawks that prey
on the hatchlings.”
Ciccarello said some
of the projects that
weren’t chosen due to
time constraints were a
corner TV cabinet, a sign
for the fire department,
and a glass topped table.
“I’d like this to be
ongoing but we’ll see what
happens,” he said. “The
projects will be worked
just like a business, and
after the drawings and
parts lists are estimated,
we’ll go to the customer
and let them know what
the cost will be. We’ll
charge just a little bit over
cost, and the customer
may say, ‘no, that’s too
expensive,’ or that they
know someone else who
could do it cheaper, but
that’s OK because that’s
part of business, and the
students need to learn
that aspect of being in
business too. When that
happens, we’ll go down
the list and tell people
that we had to turn down
that some time has
opened up and are they
still interested.”
The three students
currently in the class, Jon
Deschamps, Mike Griffith,
and Sean Montibello, all
17, each say they look forward to the experience.
“I like the business
part of the class,” Deschamps said.
“I like that part but I
also like the real world
aspect of it, learning every
part, including working
with customers, estimating and getting to a final
product like the real
world application,” Griffith said.
Montibello agreed and
noted that getting the
experience to take to the
real world will be a great
help for any business.
“All of these guys have
made things before, they
know the tools and the
process, so we can concentrate on the real world
lessons that need to be
taught,” Ciccarello said.
“We’ll run into problems
to be sure, there’s always
problems, but solving
them and giving the customer what they want in
spite of it is part of real
world business.”
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◆
L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
PA G E 13
◆
◆
◆
LONDONDERRY SPORTS
◆
Lancer Icemen Best Astros, Keep the Victories Rolling In
CHRIS PANTAZIS
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
he local adage that
you simply throw
records out the window when rival teams
from Londonderry High
and Pinkerton Academy
face off was proven once
again last Saturday, Feb. 8,
when the Lancer and
Astro hockey teams met
on Pinkerton’s home ice at
The Ice Den in Hooksett.
The streaking Lancers
and the struggling Astros
rolled into the game
seemingly headed in different directions, with the
LHS side having won eight
consecutive games and
Pinkerton having dropped three of its previous
four contests and grasping a record that was well
below the .500 mark.
But records be damned, the LHS contingent
bounded out to a 3-0 lead,
T
Sophomore forward Colby Austin rushes the puck
up the ice during the LHS hockey team’s defeat of
Pinkerton last week. Photo by Chris Pantazis
only to see 3-7-1 Pinkerton fight its way back in
with two goals during the
final eight minutes of the
second period.
Londonderry wound
up claiming a 4-3 victory
in the contest, but the 102 Lancers definitely knew
they’d been in a battle
and that a rematch
between the two squads
could be every bit as riveting.
“There’s not a whole
lot of difference between
the first and 10th place
teams this year, and I
don’t think there’s a
whole lot of difference
between us and Pinkerton, other than the fact
that we’ve been more
consistent,” said LHS
coach Peter Bedford.
LHS senior forward
Curtis Harper scored
three goals and assisted
on one, his fellow senior
forward Eric Coburn
scored once and assisted
on all three of Harper’s
tallies, and their junior
line-mate Cooper Roy was
good for two assists as
the top Londonderry
offensive line notched a
combined 10 points in
pushing its side to its
ninth consecutive victory.
Harper potted each of
the Lancers’ first three
goals - the first on a
power-play with 3:05 left
in the first period and the
second two in the first six
minutes of the second
period - as Londonderry
drove out to a seeminglycommanding 3-0 lead.
But Pinkerton sliced
its deficit back to 3-2 with
tallies with 7:15 and 1:54
left in the middle stanza.
Coburn made it a 4-2
game on Coburn’s goal a
little less than five minutes into the third stanza,
but the Astros got back to
within a marker with just
1:32 left in regulation
time. But 4-3 was where
the final score ended up.
Londonderry finished
the game with a 35-30
advantage in shots on net,
with Lancers’ keeper Joe
McGrath ending up with
27 saves.
And the LHS icemen
bounced their winning
streak up to 10 consecutive games this past Monday night, Feb. 10, with a
7-2 walloping of the Nashua South Purple Panthers
at the Conway Arena in
the Gate City.
Londonderry dominated play throughout most
of the game - finishing
with a whopping 50-17
advantage in shots on net
- but it was still technically a game after two periods had been completed.
continued on page 15
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◆
PA G E 14
L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
Lancer Boy Cagers Bounce Win Streak Up to Five Games
CHRIS PANTAZIS
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
he Londonderry
High boys’ basketball squad had to
work a bit harder for one
of its most recent wins,
but the wins still kept
right on coming for firstyear coach Nate Stanton
and his charges.
The now 10-2 Lancers
T
were a full 26 points better than the Nashua North
High Titans in Nashua
early last week, but they
found themselves with
their hands full to overflowing in a slim win over
an Exeter crew that
entered the game with a
record below the .500
mark.
The Lancer bunch
Lancers’ freshman guard Caleb Green looks to get
past an Exeter defender during the LHS crew’s
tough win over that opponent last week.
Mr. Cardello’s
8 Week
Program
Starts 3/4/14
bounced its winning
streak up to four games
and its divisional record
to a stellar 9-2 by manhandling the host North
Titans by a 71-45 tally in
the Gate City on Tuesday,
Feb. 4.
Londonderry sprinted
out to a 24-9 lead in the
first quarter, and by halftime the locals’ lead sat at
18 points at 43-25. And
Stanton’s squad buried
any comeback hopes the
Titans might have held by
outscoring the opponent
by a big, 21-7 tally in period number three.
Cody Ball led the LHS
attack by tossing in 17
points - including a trio of
three-point buckets - and
Max Coleman (11 points)
and Caleb Green (10) also
finished in double figures
in points. All in all, the
Lancers sank eight threes,
adding to Nashua North’s
considerable list of frustrations on this particular
evening.
But anyone who headed to the LHS gym two
evenings later expecting
to see the 9-2 Lancers
manhandle the visiting, 56 Exeter High Blue Hawks
was doubtless surprised,
and got to see four
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intense quarters of basketball and a tight finish.
The hosts bagged a 6256 win in the end, but the
victory wasn’t in the
Lancer bag until the very
final seconds of play.
The Exeter bunch
exhibited plenty of mental
toughness, intensity, and
athleticism in forcing its
host right to the wall in
order to snag the slim victory.
“Exeter is a much better team than what their
record says, and they’re a
tough team that doesn’t
go away,” said Stanton.
“They have good shooters and they don’t quit,
and I’m proud of how my
guys fought through
adversity and learned
how to close out a tough
game.”
Stanton’s squad “won”
every quarter, statistically speaking, but only by
the slimmest of margins.
The hosts outscored their
guests by a margin of 1211 in the first period, and
by a tally of 20-19 in the
second to carry a 32-30
advantage to halftime.
The Lancers were,
once again, a single point
better than Exeter in the
third quarter (17-16), carrying a 49-46 lead into the
last eight minutes of regulation time.
The pesky Blue Hawks
collected a lead of 52-51
with 4:10 left to go, and
got their advantage up to
54-51 a moment later
before LHS junior standout Ball sank a big three-
point bucket to make it a
54-54 game with 2:55
showing on the game
clock.
Ball put his Lancers up
to stay with an authoritative drive to the basket
with 1:31 left, and the
hosts never lost the lead
again despite Exeter’s
best attempts to make the
remaining time plenty
uncomfortable for their
hosts.
“Defensive stops down
the stretch won us the
game and put us in position to capitalize at the
foul line,” said Stanton.
Ball led the victors
with 22 big points, Drew
Coveney collected 14, and
Jake Coleman was good
for nine.
◆
◆
Londonderry Skiers Stand
Out at Mount Sunapee
CHRIS PANTAZIS
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
ondonderry High
School’s boys’ and
girls’ ski teams both
closed out their regular
seasons with strong performances at the Mount
Sunapee Ski Resort in
Newbury on Thursday,
Feb. 6.
The Lancer guys placed
three athletes among the
top 20 finishers and finished third as a team, and
Lady Lancers’ stalwart
Jaiden Evarts bagged a top
10 finish to help her squad
to fourth place overall.
That crew also had three
L
girls go top 20.
BOYS
The LHS males had
Keith Foley finish a
superb sixth overall and
Jon Klutsch end up ninth
on a strong day of competition. Eryk Bean added to
the success by winding
up 18th overall.
“Having three boys in
the top 20 and two in the
top 10 is a great accomplishment for our boys’
team,” said coach Chelsea
Hunnewell.
Oan McGrath wound
up 29th overall, Andrew
Hodkinson was 30th, Connor McGrath placed 32nd,
and Ryan Domitrz finished 42nd for Londonderry.
GIRLS
Evarts placed eighth
overall, Cassidy Litch
wound up 13th, and Emily
Mariano was just two
spots behind her in 15th
as the Lady Lancers
notched those three top
20 finishes. Kristyn Riley
claimed 25th place and
Sarah Rettig ended up
30th.
Both Londonderry contingents entered this
week looking forward to
the state championship
meets at Sunapee.
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◆
L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
PA G E 15
LHS Girl Hoopsters Push to 11-1 With Two More Victories
CHRIS PANTAZIS
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
fter the frustration
and upset connected with the Londonderry High girls’ basketball squad’s loss to the
rival Pinkerton Academy
crew at LHS two Fridays
ago had ebbed away,
coach John Fagula’s Lady
Lancers got back down to
the business of winning.
With star senior guard
Aliza Simpson still out of
the LHS lineup with an injured right knee, the team
is putting loads of effort
into making itself go without its prime catalyst on
the court. And sometimes
the final products have
been impressive, while
others times, not so much.
Regardless of any artistic
merits or the lack thereof,
however, the Londonder-
A
ry crew ended last week
with a stellar 11-1 record.
There’s no rule written
that a victory has to be
aesthetically pleasing to
count, and the Lady Lancers benefitted from that
fact Tuesday night, Feb. 4,
at home against the
Nashua North Lady Titans.
Londonderry snared a
51-38 win over the North
crew, which began the
night with a strong 7-2
record. In the wake of
their daunting loss to
Pinkerton in Ball Family
Trophy play the previous
Friday night, the fact that
the Lady Lancers claimed
a win over North was significant. But the host
team’s performance was a
bit ugly, particularly during the sloppy first half.
Fagula’s force netted
14 of the first 16 points,
and it looked as though a
blowout was in the offing.
But some incredibly sloppy passing, weak rebounding, and a lack of
focus the rest of the way
helped North score six of
the last eight points of the
period to leave LHS with a
16-8 lead going into period two.
The second quarter
was back and forth all the
way, with the Lady Titans
outscoring their hosts by
a 14-9 margin to go to halftime with the Lady Lancers grasping a slim, 25-22
advantage.
But the Londonderry
crew left Fagula with
some positives - despite a
total of 26 turnovers on
the night - by winning the
third and fourth quarters
to snag the victory.
The Lady Lancers led
just 1:40 after the opening
faceoff, and Jason Parker
had the lone assist.
The LHS lead grew to
3-0 during the first six
minutes of period two,
thanks to markers from
Donnelly (assist to Alex
LaPlante) and Lucas
Poulin (from Curtis Harper), but Nashua got on the
board and gained some
momentum with a goal of
its own with 3:07 left in
the stanza.
But Harper grabbed
the momentum back for
his side on a power-play
goal with less than a second left in the period, and
he scored two more times
in the third period to bag
the hat-trick. After a third
LHS goal in the stanza,
Nashua tallied once more.
The Lancers skated away
with another lopsided victory to their credit.
◆
◆
Hockey
continued from page 13
The locals enjoyed a
20-6 advantage in shots
on in the first period, but
they only got one of their
shots past Nashua’s senior goalie A.J. Bender during those 15 minutes.
The tally was collected
by Nick Donnelly in a
short-handed situation
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by seven points (38-31)
going into quarter four
after outscoring their
guests by a 13-9 margin in
the third period, and they
won the fourth quarter by
a 13-7 tally as they put the
win to bed.
Junior forward Casey
Evans paced the LHS
charge with 17 points and
seven rebounds, and
freshman guard Kelsey
Coffey was good for 11
points. The talented ninth
grader sank a couple of
huge three-point shots the last bucket of the
third quarter and the first
of the fourth - to give Londonderry the massive
boost it needed.
“There’s no question
that we needed this win
tonight. We needed a positive after the loss the
other night,” said Fagula.
“To lose two in a row
would have put some
questions in some people’s minds.”
And the Lancer girls
built upon that victory
beautifully, traveling to
the seacoast Thursday,
Feb. 6, and collecting a 6639 walloping of the host
Exeter High Lady Blue
Hawks.
The visitors led 15-10
after one quarter, and by
Londonderry High senior cager Jordan Marett finds
her way past a Nashua North Lady Titan during
her team’s win over that squad last week. Photo
by Chris Pantazis
halftime their advantage
had grown to 11 points at
27-16.
The locals then outscored their hosts by a
39-23 margin in the second half to snare the lopsided win.
A total of 10 players
contributed points to the
fine LHS win, with junior
forwards Tara Burke (21
points) and Evans (10)
leading the charge and
senior Taylor Collins tallying eight. Ashley Berube
notched 13 rebounds and
five blocked shots, and
court general Jackie Luckhardt dished out nine
assists.
Spring League
Registration Under Way
INFORMATIONAL MEETING & IN-PERSON REGISTRATION
SATURDAY, MARCH 8th • 11 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Londonderry High School Cafeteria
Look for our booth at the “Meet the Business” chamber event.
• Spring League Runs May 3rd – June 28th
• Challenger Soccer Camp August 4-8
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603-432-2961
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For more information on registering, coaching, sponsoring, refereeing,
volunteering or summer soccer camp please contact Patti Maccabe at
[email protected] 603-867-9799.
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◆
PA G E 16
L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
Britting Helps LHS Gymnasts to Best Score of the Season
CHRIS PANTAZIS
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
tandout Maddie Britting helped her Londonderry High gymnastics squad close out its
regular season in noteworthy style at Pinkerton
Academy this past Monday night, Feb. 10.
The Lady Lancers’
stalwart took first place
on vault with a score of
S
9.2 and the top spot in the
floor exercise as well with
an 8.5 - with a strong third
place finish in the allaround to boot - as she
helped her contingent to
its best overall team
score (126.8) in the last
regular season match of
the 2013-14 campaign.
The LHS crew ended
up second behind the
host Pinkerton Academy
Athletes of the Week
Week of Feb. 3
Dorina Neveu, Junior,
Unified Basketball
This spirited junior has
had an outstanding season
so far with the LHS unified
hoop team, scoring a total
of 42 points in three games.
She is fast on the court and
a great team player.
Lady Astros and their
stellar team score of 137.8
at the eight-team event,
but the Lady Lancers
have every reason to feel
good about what they’ve
achieved as they roll into
the state title meet at
Salem High this coming
Saturday, Feb. 15.
“This was our highest
team total this year, and
we are very happy with
how the girls did tonight,”
said LHS co-coach Emily
Panacopoulos. “The floor
was tough and we had
some falls, but we will
work hard this week to
make improvements and
hopefully do our best at
states this weekend.”
Along with Britting’s
first place magic on vault,
the Lady Lancers received strong work from
Jill McIntire, Molly Koon,
and Emily Raymond in
that event.
Britting, McIntire, and
Jordan Dufresne were
stalwarts on the bars,
Maddie Baumann had an
excellent beam routine,
Steph Pestka, Koon, and
Taylor MacKenzie all
joined Britting in doing
well in the floor exercise,
and the locals also got
fine competitive efforts
from Michaela Giandello,
Isabella Hernandez, Rachael Grady, Skylar Roy,
Jessi Pignone, and Camille Lamont.
The Monday night
meet was the team’s senior night. The team will
lose Isabella Hernandez,
Michaela Giandello, Molly
Koon, Emily Raymond,
and Steph Pestka, all of
Lancer gymnast Maddie Britting scored an 8.5 on
whom competed at the
floor and a meet-high 9.2 on vault on Monday
event.
evening at Pinkerton Academy. Photo by Chris Paul
◆
Jean-Luc Lemieux,
Junior, Wrestling
This star grappler - a
transfer from Pinkerton
Academy - has been a true
standout in his 132-pound
class this winter, going
undefeated in rolling his
career record to 34-0 and
helping his Lancers to a
great, 11-1 team record with
multiple tournament wins.
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◆
Lancer Wrestlers Wallop Two More Opponents
CHRIS PANTAZIS
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
either the Manchester Central nor
the Concord High
wrestling teams were up
to competition with
coach Jim Marron’s Londonderry High grapplers
in matches last week.
The Lancers simply
hammered the Central Little Green by a 59-6 count
in Manchester last Friday,
Feb. 7, during a make-up
meet that was canceled
N
due to snow and bounced
the visiting Concord High
Crimson Tide by a 47-24
tally at LHS the next
morning at a quad meet
the team hosted.
At the Central event,
Londonderry bagged its
10th dual-meet win of the
campaign by winning
bouts all over the place.
Mitch Rose (126 pound
grappler), Jean-Luc Lemieux (138), Colin Reardon
(145), Will Bean (160),
Kyle Byrd (170), Sebast-
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ian Roszczenko (182),
Richard Bilodeau (195),
Tim Wilson (285), and Ryan
Cabezas (113) all battled
their way to individual
wins to assure their
squad of the team win.
The LHS crew then
played host to a Concord
team that was 9-1 in dual
meet action coming into
the Saturday match, and
Londonderry won 10 of 14
bouts en route to the
decisive group victory.
Pins came from Lon-
donderry’s Bean, Mahdi
Achab at 220 pounds,
Tyler Byrd at 106 pounds,
Rose, Lemieux, and Jon
Young in the 152-pound
bout.
Other Lancer victories
came from Kyle Byrd,
Cabezas, and Jake Barr in
the 145-pound bout.
The team was schedlued to meet rival Pinkerton Academy last week,
but that meet was resceduled for Friday, Feb. 14, at
PA due to illness.
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although it also involves a comprehensive grappling
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arm locks, and choking and strangulation techniques.
Moreau's Training Center in Londonderry, NH is able to
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matter what the goal.
Accepting new enrollment through
March 15 for students ages 5-12.
A new judogi/uniform will be given to the
first 10 students who register for a 1 month
trial with no contractual obligations.
Please contact Tom Moreau at 421-4753 or stop by our gym
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◆
L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
PA G E 17
Pinkerton Academy Will
Keep the Ball Family Trophy
CHRIS PANTAZIS
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
o matter what happens in the forthcoming wrestling
and spirit competitions
involving the Pinkerton
Academy and Londonderry High teams, the Derry
school will maintain possession of the Ball Family
Trophy for a third consecutive year.
Headed into this Friday’s (Feb. 14) wrestling
match between the teams
from LHS and Pinkerton which had to be postponed for a week due to
N
widespread illness on the
academy team - the
Astros grasped a 6-4 lead
over their Lancer rivals in
the annual Ball Family
games, which pit the
academy’s winter varsity
teams against the varsity
squads from LHS.
Rolling
into
the
wrestling event, Pinkerton had collected wins in
boys’ and girls’ skiing,
girls’ basketball, girls’
gymnastics (this past
Monday night), boys’
track, and boys’ swimming. Londonderry had
claimed wins in boys’
◆
hoop, ice hockey, girls’
track, and boys’ swimming.
It’s predicted that Londonderry will win Friday’s
wrestling match rather
handily, which would
make the Ball Trophy
count 6-5 in Pinkerton’s
favor. And even if the Londonderry spirit squad is
somehow able to defeat
the Pinkerton spirit juggernaut at the spirit championships on March 16,
the best the Lancers could
do would be a 6-6 tie,
which would keep the trophy in Pinkerton’s hands.
◆
Military —––——
U.S. Air Force Airman
First Class Rose Yannetty
of Londonderry completed basic training at Lackland Air Force Base, San
Antonio, Texas in September 2013, and on Jan. 30,
2014, graduated from
technical training in Air
Traffic Control with the
81st Training Wing at
Keesler Air Force Base,
Biloxi, Miss.
After a short leave and
recruiter assistance period in New Hampshire, she
will report to her new
position in Air Traffic
Control at Luke Air Force
Base, 56th Fighter Wing,
Arizona. Luke Air Force
Base is the largest fighter
wing in the U.S. Air Force,
with 138 F-16s.
She is a 2012 graduate
of Londonderry High
School and an alumna of
the LHS Marching Lancer
Band and LHS swim team.
While at Keesler AFB, she
was Drum Captain of the
Keesler Blue Knights
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Big Decisions
On Thursday, Feb. 6, outstanding Londonderry High
senior student/athletes Maeve Holland, left, and Kayleen Walberg signed
their letters of intent to attend and play sports at colleges of their choice.
Holland will play both lacrosse and soccer at the University of Richmond in
Virginia, and Walberg will play soccer at Merrimack College in North
Andover, Mass.
Town Hall Stays Open
During Latest Snowstorm
JAY HOBSON
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
lthough local schools
and the senior center closed, Town
Hall remained open during
Airman First Class
last week’s snowstorm.
Rose Yannetty
Town Manager Kevin
Smith
took advantage of
Drum and Bugle Corps.
the
opportunity
to ride
Yannetty is the daughalong
with
a
snowplow
ter of Joseph Yannetty
and Gina Accardi, both of driver for about three
hours during the WednesLondonderry.
A
day, Feb. 5 storm. “It was a
real eye-opener as to what
is involved in clearing the
roads and making them
safe,” he said. “It takes
about four hours to complete a route and then it
starts all over again until
the storm is over.”
Londonderry resident
Josh Judge, who is a meteorologist at WMUR, said
Londonderry received
about 8 inches of snow
during the storm.
Derry Fire Battalion
Chief Jim Roger said there
were several minor accidents related to the
storm. A more serious
accident on Interstate 93
required
northbound
ambulance service to
transport the victim to
the Elliot Hospital (see
related story page 23).
◆
PA G E 18
L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
Local Students Focus on Jazz at All-State Festival
KATHLEEN D. BAILEY
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
aniel Reynolds, a
senior at Timberlane Regional High
School in Plaistow, had no
trouble reeling off the jazz
music artists that inspire
him. “For the vibes, it’s
Milt Jackson and Gary
Burton. For the trumpet,
Dizzy Gillespie and Miles
Davis. For the sax, John
Coltrane,” he said.
Not exactly household
names, at least not in
households with teenagers. But the 109 high
school students from across the state who
descended on Pinkerton
Academy last week aren’t
your average teens. These
students, the cream of
high school musicians,
came to Derry to celebrate the first uniquely
American form of music
as Pinkerton hosted the
New Hampshire All-State
Jazz Festival for the fifth
year.
Londonderry students
qualifying for the jazz festival included: Erin Conti,
Madeleine Doris, Steph
Conti, Rachel Hanssen,
Daniel Cain, Marc Lussier,
D
Joseph Conti, Keith Perry
and Matthew Marzola.
On Friday the students
fanned out across the
Stockbridge Theatre for
rehearsals with one of
four groups: Jazz Choir,
Honors Jazz Choir, Jazz
Band or Honors Jazz
Band. On the main stage,
David Riviello conducted
the Honors Jazz Band in a
lively,
Cuban-flavored
number. Reynolds was on
the xylophone, tapping
his feet to the rhythm, as
other students played the
piano, bongo drums,
standing bass, trumpets,
trombones and clarinets.
Each section took its turn
for a solo, and then they
all came together for an
exuberant, triumphant
finale.
Riviello praised them
with a crisp nod, then it
was on to the next number. “All right - ‘My Foolish Heart,’” he called out.
The midcentury ballad
began with a plaintive
trombone line, reinforced
by a brace of golden trumpets, and then all the
instruments came together in a swelling of sound
for a song these children’s
grandparents might have
danced to. The students,
in their jeans and flannel
shirts, could have been
wearing tuxedoes, and
the dim Stockbridge Theatre could have had the
elegance of a nightclub in
the ‘40s or ‘50s.
Tom Quigley, head of
the Fine Arts program at
Pinkerton, said the school
has hosted All-State Jazz
for about five years.
Why do student musicians like jazz? “It challenges them,” Quigley
said. “It challenges them
harmonically, in the sense
of improvisation, they
have the opportunity to
create something on the
spot, and they have the
opportunity to play some
difficult music.”
Kenneth Clark of Timberlane chairs the AllState Jazz committee. He
said the music appeals to
teens because of its
“inherent dance rhythms,
swing, the Latin beat.” Students also love the ability
to improvise, Clark said.
They enjoy the AllState program, he said,
because they enjoy playing music with other stu-
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dents who take it seriously. “They get to play with
the best in the state,” he
said. “By the time they get
here, they’re just pumped. They’re into it - I don’t
know how else to put it.”
Pinkerton band director Mike Adams is the
auditions chair for AllState Jazz. “The kids who
make it are the ones who
work the hardest,” he
said.
Clark added, “It’s also
the ones most interested
in music, who listen outside of class.”
In another part of the
building, teacher Joseph
Schaeffer demonstrated a
saxophone riff to the Jazz
Band, and a group of girls
clustered around a grand
piano and practiced
scales with Honors Jazz
Choir director Larry
Lapin. The songs on the
program bespoke a gentler era: “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams,” “Be Careful, It’s My Heart,” “Long
Ago and Far Away.” Composers ranged from the
Gershwins and Oscar
Hammerstein to Dizzy
Gillespie to Irving Berlin.
Each student has to
undergo an audition in
October, Quigley said. It’s
a rigorous program that
ranks them and ranks
them again: there’s an
“honors” level at All-State
Jazz that is a cut above
being selected for the program.
Clark said the program
is in its 32nd year in New
Hampshire. In October
450 students tried out, to
try to win one of 100 or so
spots.
Mitchell Bull, a baritone sax player from Merrimack, said during a
break that he’s been playing music for 7 1/2 years.
He tried out for Jazz AllState because he’s interested in becoming a professional musician, “and I
need all the experience I
can get.” He chose this
particular All-State program because he doesn’t
get to play jazz that much,
he said, noting, “With the
band, it’s mostly classical.”
Bull likes jazz because
of its “inherent free-spiritedness. With classical
music, it’s ‘This is how it
Proudly serving
Derry since
1998
is.’ Jazz is a little more
‘twisted,’ a little more
fun.”
Reynolds said he started playing piano in third
grade. “I love jazz,” he
said, “because you can
express yourself and do
what you want to do. The
solo has to follow certain
chord changes - but after
that, it’s up to you.”
Quigley said the music
department is holding its
annual flea market this
Saturday in the Shepard
Auditorium. It’s a 20-year
tradition, he said, in
which students set up
their own tables and sell
their own “stuff.” Their
profits go to a cashier,
who deposits money in
their account for one of
two biannual trips. The
students go to either
Orlando or New York City
every two years, Quigley
said, and this year is their
turn in The Big Apple. The
sale is from 7 a.m. to 2
p.m.
In addition to Schaefer,
Rivello and Lapin, David
Piper was also a teacher
at the festival, conducting
the Jazz Choir.
Physical and Occupational Therapy
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March 1st we will be in our new Derry location
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◆
L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
PA G E 19
Centennial Mark Celebrated at South
South Elementary School
first graders celebrated
the 100th day of school on
Monday with a variety of
activities. Far left and
clockwise, Rebecca Harfield tosses a “snowball” in
the Snowball Toss; Shreya
Ganapathy passes a snowball to William Travis; a
classroom of students
take part in 100 exercises;
and Riley Maki tosses a
snowball while Ben Wallace waits his turn.
Photos by Chris Paul
Dr. Jim Haas
4 Manchester Ave, Derry
603-434-1586 • haasdentalnh.com
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◆
PA G E 20
L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
AROUND TOWN
New Policy for Around Town: This section is meant to be used to announce free events to the communities.
If your group or non-profit is receiving money for what they are publicizing, there will be a charge of
$30.00/week per paper. All Around Town/Calendar Items will be held to 100 words maximum; anything over
will incur a charge of $30.00/week for up to another 50 words. All free announcements in the Around
Town/Calendar section can run a maximum of 3 weeks. Deadline for submissions is Friday at 3 p.m.
Additionally: We will run the full versions of any calendar items online free of charge at www.nutpub.net.
Please send items to [email protected].
Kindergarten
Registration for the
2014-2015 school year is taking place at Moose Hill
School. Any Londonderry
resident with a child who
will be 5 years old by Sept.
30, 2014 can enroll the child
at Moose Hill Kindergarten.
Call the school at 437-5855,
visit between 8:30 a.m. and 4
p.m. weekdays, or email
director Bonnie Breithaupt
at [email protected] to request a registration packet, or go online at
w w w. l o n d o n d e r r y. o rg .
Kindergarten has two ses-
sions, from 8:45 to 11:20
a.m., and from 12:30 to 3:05
p.m. The session is determined by the child’s
address. For further information, call Moose Hill at
437-5855. EXP227
on Gerrish Community Center, 39 West Broadway,
Derry. Model structure
building tips and techniques
and modeling on a budget
will be discussed. Admission is free.
Women’s Club
Old Home Day
The next general meeting of the Londonderry
Women’s Club is Wednesday, Feb. 19, for a night at
the movies (movie to be
announced). Anyone interested in joining the club is
welcome to attend. The club
is a civic and social organization that has been
involved in the community
for over 40 years, and meets
the third Wednesday of
each month, September
through May. It is a way to
meet new friends and get
involved in the community.
For more information, call
Trish at 421-0566 or email
[email protected] or visit:
www.londonderrywomensclub.com. EXP213
The Londonderry Old
Home Day Committee seeks
ideas on how to make the
115th Londonderry Old
Home Day five-day celebration more fun. Anyone interested in planning events
and working with their
neighbors is invited to
attend the next committee
meeting on Feb. 20 at 7 p.m.
at Town Hall, and decide
which sub-committee to
work with: Finance, Marketing, Baby Contest, Parade,
Outside Activities, Senior
Night or Booths. Meetings
are the third Thursday of
every month through July.
For more information, visit
www.oldhomeday.com. EXP220
Concord Comedy
Model Railroad Fun
Night
The Seacoast Division of
the National Model Railroad
Association will hold its
Derry Model Railroading
Fun Night on Friday, Feb. 14,
from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Mari-
The Community Players
of Concord present “Kong’s
Night Out,” a comedy by
Derry resident Jack Neary.
Featuring 1930s silliness,
slapstick, and art deco fashion, this farce is an inventing
of hilarious happenings in
◆
the hotel suite next door the
night Ann Darrow (Fay
Wray) was taken by King
Kong. Performances are at
the Concord City Auditorium, 2 Prince St., Concord
on, Feb. 14 and 15 at 7:30
p.m. and Feb. 16 at 2 p.m.
For information and discounted, advance ticketing,
visit http://communityplayersofconcord.org, or call
Box Office chair Dave
Murdo at 344-4747.
Fighting Fraud
Learn how to recognize
fraud, outsmart scammers,
prevent fraud, and be wary
of scare tactics in a program
presented by the Londonderry Elder Affairs Committee on Wednesday, Feb. 26,
at 6 p.m. at the Leach
Library, 276 Mammoth
Road. The free presentation
is by AARP New Hampshire’s volunteer fraud fighters. EXP220
Scavenger Hunt
During February vacation, Monday, Feb. 24
through Saturday, March 1,
the Children’s Room at the
Leach Library will offer an
in-library scavenger hunt.
Stop by the Children’s Room
desk for a list of items to
find around the building.
Turn in the completed hunt
for a raffle ticket and a
chance to win a prize. EXP220
Great Stone Face
April 12. Voting for the
books from the list starts
Monday, April 14, at 9 a.m.
and concludes at closing
Saturday, April 19. The raffle
is open to children in grades
4-6. Stop by the Children’s
circulation desk for a list of
the nominated books. EXP220
Farm Fun
The Leach Library presents a children’s program
on “Farm Fun” on Tuesday,
Feb. 18, from 4 to 5 p.m. Participants will hear stories of
farm animals and will learn
what life on a farm is like. All
participants will leave with
a red bandana. Advance regFlume, Isinglass
Come to the Leach istration is required. To regLibrary during February ister, call 432-1127 or stop
and March and vote on your by the Children’s Room. EXP213
favorite Flume and Isinglass
nominated book titles. The Hospital Bingo
American Legion Post 27
Flume award is geared to
of
Londonderry
will be rungrades 9-12, and the Isinning
bingo
for
patients at
glass is for grades 6-9.
the
Veterans
Administration
Receive a raffle ticket for a
chance to win a Barnes & Hospital in Manchester
from 7 to 8:30 p.m. on Feb.
Noble gift certificate. EXP220
24. Donations are appreciated, or stop by and help out.
Musquash Field Day
The Londonderry Con- The Post will be serving
servation Commission and pizza and diet soda as well
University of New Hamp- as providing $150 in prize
shire Cooperative Extension money. EXP220
co-sponsor the 22nd annual
Musquash Conservation Area Legionnaires Sought
American Legion Post
Field Day from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. Saturday, Feb. 15. Snow 27, 6 Sargent Road, is seekor no-snow, hike out to the ing new Legionnaires who
landing for refreshments have the appropriate miliaround an open fire, explore tary service dates. Additionthe woodlands, and visit cel- ally, the Post welcomes men
lar holes and learn about whose fathers or grandfawinter botany and local thers are eligible for memwildlife from the county bership as well as women
forester. Practice on snow- related to qualified memshoes provided by Eastern bers. These two groups can
Mountains Sports, weather join the Sons of the Americonditions permitting. The can Legion and Ladies Auxilevent is free. Park at the end iary, respectively. The Amerof Hickory Hill Road off High ican Legion’s mission is to
Range Road. For accessibili- provide assistance to veterty accommodations, call ans, children and the comRockingham County UNH munity. For more informaCooperative Extension at tion about the happenings
at Post 27, visit www.al
679-5616. EXP213
post27.com. EXP220
The New Hampshire
Great Stone Face Award
nominees are books selected by librarians for children
in grades 4-6. Starting in
February, participants receive one raffle ticket for Holiday Closure
every book read from the
The Leach Library will Voter Registration
The Supervisors of the
list of nominated titles. Raf- be closed Monday, Feb. 17,
Voter Checklist will meet at
fle tickets can be earned for Presidents Day. EXP213
Town Hall Saturday, March
through closing Saturday,
1, from 10 a.m. to noon to
◆ Songs of Old New
register voters and correct
Hampshire
On Thursday, Feb. 13, at the checklist. Anyone who
7 p.m., the Leach Library has not previously regiswill host a free evening of tered may do so for the
forest.”
Town/School election. Proof
Saur noted that in Lon- songs from New Hampof citizenship, identity, and
shire’s
past,
presented
by
donderry’s early years,
residency is needed, or affithe area now known as traditional music inter- davits may be signed. This
Musquash was home to preter Jeff Warner. He plays is the last day for anyone
concertina, banjo, guitar,
farms. Cellar holes of
bones and spoons, and has not previously registered to
those early homesteads toured nationally for the do so before the March 11
are still visible today.
Smithsonian Institution. War- Town/School election.
Musquash Field Day Saturday
JAY HOBSON
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
he 23rd annual
Musquash Field Day
will be held this
coming Saturday from 10
a.m. to 2 p.m., “snow or
shine.”
Hikers new to the
Musquash can park their
cars at the bottom of Hickory Hill Drive and walk a
short distance to the welcome kiosk, where volunteers will be awaiting
them with maps and
snowshoes if desired.
Snowshoes are being
loaned by Eastern Mountain Sports.
T
TrailLondonderry
ways President Bob Saur
said the Musquash conservation land was purchased in 1979 and had
600 acres at the time.
“Now it’s grown to over
1,000 acres,” Saur said.
Saur said it is “an easy
mile walk” from the trailhead to the site where free
hot dogs, apple cider and
cookies will be available.
“It looks like we’ll have
great snow cover,” he
said. “During the day we’ll
be having nature walks,
and there’ll be a naturalist
from (state) Fish and
Game to talk about the
“There’s about a dozen
cellar holes out there,” he
said. “If you go to census
records, you see the progression from farming to
shoemaking, and then the
farms are abandoned as
people leave Londonderry
to work in the mills. (But)
the cellar holes are still
there.”
ner will present songs and
stories that, in the words of
Carl Sandburg, tell us
“where we came from and
what brought us along.”
Audience members will
hear songs from lumber
camps, sailing ships, and
textile mills. The event will
be held in the library’s
lower-level meeting room.
Light refreshments will be
served. EXP213
Bereavement Support
Group
A bereavement support
group is offered for those
who are grieving the loss of
a spouse. The focus is on
mutual support, learning
about the grieving process
and ways to cope with loss.
The group starts Thursday,
Continued on page 21
◆
L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
PA G E 21
Family Promise Celebrates First Anniversary with Fundraiser
PENNY WILLIAMS
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
amily Promise of
Greater Rockingham
County, a non-profit
organization that provides homeless families
with safe housing in local
churches, celebrates its
one-year anniversary with
a
Valentine
Dessert
Extravaganza, set for 2 to
4 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 16, at
Brookstone Event Center,
14 Route 111 in Derry.
Betty Gay of Salem,
publicist for the group,
said that in addition to
F
desserts, cheese and
crackers and fruit round
out the menu, along with
teas, coffee and hot chocolate. Musicians will perform, and raffles and
silent auctions will be
held to raise money for
Family Promise. Financial
donations are welcome.
Prizes will be given for
the prettiest hat, the most
Victorian outfit, or the furthest traveled, she said.
“Sign up to set a tea table
and compete for the prettiest at $1 per vote,” Gay
added. “Besides having a
shower, do laundry, care
for their preschool children and work on seeking
employment and housing.
The families receive job
skill education and training on nutrition, budgeting, and parenting. Schoolaged children attend their
home schools.
Family Promise provides van transportation
between the host congregation locations and the
Day Center, and as needed for appointments.
Vicki McKinney-Vareschi
is the Day Center director.
great time, everyone will
be celebrating the first
anniversary of Family
Promise of Greater Rockingham County as it provides temporary housing
for homeless families with
children, while helping
them find safe, permanent
housing.”
To reserve a spot at the
Valentine Dessert Extravaganza, call 432-0400 or
email [email protected].
Reservations are required. Doors open at
1:30 p.m.
Family Promise serves
Chester, Derry, Londonderry, Hampstead, Sandown,
Atkinson, Auburn, Danville,
Fremont, Kingston, Newton, Pelham, Plaistow, Raymond, Salem and Windham. No homeless shelter
exists in any of those
towns, although officials
say the area has at least
158 homeless families.
Family Promise is part
of a national organization,
the Interfaith Hospitality
Network. For one week at
a time, on a rotating basis,
the 11 local host congre-
gations provide overnight
lodging, meals and hospitality for three to five families from 5:30 p.m. to 7
a.m. The host congregations are staffed entirely
by volunteers.
Support congregations,
which cannot host families but want to help, provide financial support
and/or volunteers. Congregations host families
four to six times a year.
The organization also
operates a Day Center in
Derry where families go
from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. to
Living with Cancer
Hematology at Parkland
Medical Center, Overlook
Medical Center, 6 Tsienneto
Road, Lower Level, Suite
101LL, Derry. Cancer-related
topics will be discussed.
The group is offered by
oncology social workers
Barbara Umansky and Jodi
Hanley. For more informa-
tion, contact Barbara Uman- odist Church; Feb. 16, noon
sky at 537-2060 or Jodi Han- to 1 p.m., lunch, Seventh Day
ley at 890-2760. EXP220
Adventist Church; Feb. 16, 5
to 6:30 p.m., dinner, Etz
Free Meals
Hayim Synagogue; Feb. 20, 5
The Community Meals to 6:30 p.m., dinner, West
Network offers free, family- Running Brook Middle
friendly meals in Derry on: School; Feb. 23, noon to 1
Feb. 15, 5 to 6:30 p.m. din- .m., lunch, Seventh Day
ner, St. Luke’s United Meth- Adventist Church. EXP220
◆
◆
Around Town
continued from page 20
Feb. 6, from 12:30 to 2 p.m.
at the Lahey Center for
Oncology and Hematology
at Parkland Medical Center,
Overlook Medical Center, 6
Tsienneto Road, Suite 101LL,
Derry and will meet weekly
for six sessions. Registration
is required by contacting
oncology social workers Barbara Umansky at 537-2060,
ext. 4, or Jodi Hanley at 8902760. Attendance is free. EXP220
An ongoing support
group for people living with
cancer and their support
person is currently running
the first and third Wednesday of each month from
12:30 to 2 p.m. at the Lahey
Center for Oncology and
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◆
PA G E 22
L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
◆
◆
Classified Advertising
◆
◆
READERS ARE CAUTIONED that we occasionally run ads that require an initial investment or money in advance. We urge our readers to “do their homework” before responding to any ad, check out the advertiser thoroughly and verify their claims to your total
satisfaction. Only then should you proceed at your own risk. We try to screen ads that require you to send money before receiving a product or service. But these efforts are no substitute for your own investigation, and we don’t endorse or guarantee any claims
made in any of the ads we publish. If you want more information about claims made in ads on subjects such as work at home opportunities, travel or vacation specials, purchasing land or vehicles from government surplus or below wholesale, loans or other
credit opportunities (including credit repair), or weight loss and other health products and services, we urge you to contact the Office of Attorney General, Consumer Protection Bureau, 33 Capitol Street, Concord, NH 03301 (603-271-3641) or the Better Business Bureau at 603-224-1991. Publisher is not responsible for any loss of business if an ad does not run, and we reserve the right to revoke any ad if deemed necessary. No refunds will be given for prepaid ads.
◆ ◆
◆
◆
Local Classifieds
National/Regional Listings
LOCAL LISTINGS FOR LOCAL READERS
Find Ads from Around New England and Across the Country
CLEANING SERVICE
A clean house is a happy house! For
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Call:
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To Our Readers and Advertisers: Nutfield Publishing would like to thank our advertisers
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◆
Manchester Police Arrest
Londonderry Burglary Suspect
JAY HOBSON
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
ames Fowler, 31, of
Walnut Street in Manchester was arrested
by Manchester police on
a Londonderry warrant
alleging that he had broken into Wallboard Supply
Company on Old Mammoth Road in 2013.
The arrest was made
Tuesday, Feb. 4.
Londonderry Detec-
J
tive Chris Olson said
police asked Wallboard
officials if there had been
any recent terminations,
and found that Fowler
was a former employee
who had been terminated.
“He broke back in and
basically what he did was
he used a forklift to punch
a hole in the wall,” Olson
said. “He gained entry
into the building and
there was a room he was
trying to get into and
couldn’t get in, so he used
the forklift to push
through the wall. Some of
the Sheetrock residue was
on the floor. He also took
a fire extinguisher and
sprayed it all over the
scene to try and cover up
his tracks, but there was a
shoe impression in the
fire extinguisher dust.”
Cash bail was set at
$10,000.
◆
L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S
Londonderry Police Log
Selections from the Londonderry Police Logs
Monday, Feb. 3
9:49 p.m. Christopher Lee
Harkness, 32, Woodhenge
Circle, Londonderry arrested for two counts of
Simple Assault and one
count of Obstructing Report of Crime or Injury.
Bail set at $2,500 cash,
with Feb. 4 Derry Circuit
Court date.
10:39 p.m. Leah A. Mullen, 37, Lancelot Court,
Salem arrested on Londonderry warrant for four
counts of Fraudulent Use
of Credit Card. Bail set at
$1,000 cash, with Feb. 24
Derry Circuit Court date.
Tuesday, Feb. 4
2:08 p.m. James Fowler,
31, Walnut Street, Manchester arrested on a
Londonderry warrant for
Burglary. Bail was set at
$10,000, with Circuit
Court date of Feb. 5.
4:19 p.m. Burglary reported that occurred on Clark
Road between 8:30 a.m.
and 3 p.m. Tablet gone,
jewelry box gone through,
money taken.
Wednesday, Feb. 5
8:13 a.m. Caller said
someone shot out some
of the front windows on
Wire Belt Company of
America, Harvey Road.
10:21 a.m. Town Highway
reports vehicle prohibiting snow removal on
Wedgewood Drive and
Hovey Road.
11:19 a.m. Highway foreman reports car in middle
of Currier Drive, impeding
snow removal.
11:44 a.m. Mail truck
stuck in snow on Jake
Road.
12:34 p.m. Vehicle impeding snow removal on
Meadow Drive and Twin
Isles Road.
12:35 p.m. Vehicle impeding snow removal on
South Road at Grove
Street.
12:42 p.m. Vehicle impeding snow removal on
Holly Lane.
1:10 p.m. Vehicle impeding snow removal on Button Drive.
1:11 p.m. Vehicle impeding snow removal on Cort-
land Street.
1:11 p.m. Vehicle impeding snow removal on Mercury Drive.
1:23 p.m. Vehicle impeding snow removal on Lancaster Drive.
3:42 p.m. Londonderry
Fire toned out for possible chimney fire on Boyd
Road.
8:30 p.m. State Highway
reporting they are trying
to plow Park and Ride
South on Garden Lane,
but vehicles there are
doing donuts.
Thursday, Feb. 6
5:19 p.m. Caller reporting
gunshots in area between
Tokanel Drive, Gilcreast
Road and South Road.
8:38 p.m. Derry Police
has Kelsey Lee Donahue,
20, Wright Road, Derry in
custody on Londonderry
warrant for one count of
Receiving Stolen Property
and three counts of Fraudulent Use of Credit Card.
Bail was set at $5,000 personal recognizance, with
Derry Circuit Court date
of Feb. 24.
◆
F EBRUARY 13, 2014
Friday, Feb. 7
4:48 a.m. Christopher
Louis Plummer, 49, Cross
Road, Londonderry arrested for Disorderly Conduct and Disobeying an
Officer. Caller reported
sedan driving up and
down Constance Drive
with music blaring and
flashing its lights. Second
caller reported the same,
saying operator flashing
headlights into houses.
Plummer’s bail was set at
$2,000 personal recognizance, with Derry Circuit
Court date of Feb. 24.
7:30 a.m. Londonderry
Fire responding to report
of building fire on Constitution Drive. Steam from
building; no smoke or fire.
8:10 a.m. Caller on Checkerberry Lane reporting
theft of registration from
unlocked car.
8:52 a.m. Car gone
through, nothing taken,
on Checkerberry Lane.
Car was unlocked.
9:13 a.m. Car gone
through and change taken
on Hunter Mill Way.
9:45 a.m. Change taken
from unlocked car on Wilson Road.
9:48 a.m. Cars gone
through on Wilson Road.
1:03 p.m. Unlocked cars
gone through on Hunter
Mill Way.
1:31 p.m. Manager at Market Basket, Garden Lane
reports panhandler in
parking lot by stop sign.
2:01 p.m. Theft of registration from unlocked car
on Wilson Road.
4:45 p.m. Vehicle ransacked during day on
Auburn Road. Vehicle
unlocked.
4:51 p.m. Adam Webster,
37, 4 Loren Road, Salem,
NH turned himself in on
Londonderry warrant for
Conduct After an Accident, False Report on
Accident, Criminal Trespass and Reckless Operation. Bail set at $3,000 personal recognizance, plus
$40 bail commissioner
fee, with Derry District
Court date of Feb. 24.
Saturday, Feb. 8
5:35 p.m. Criminal mischief to vehicle in parking
lot on Highlander Way.
Sunday, Feb. 9
9:51 a.m. Caller on Wilson
Road reports house egged
for fourth time.
10:57 a.m. Car egged on
Auburn Road.
11:01 a.m. Trucks broken
into at Premium Vending
PA G E 23
Inc., Ricker Avenue.
3:34 p.m. Ashlee M. Provencher, 29, Ash Street,
Londonderry arrested for
Conduct After an Accident. Personal recognizance bail set at $1,000,
with Derry Circuit Court
date of March 3.
Monday, Feb. 10
12:03 a.m. Burglary reported taking place at
Bockes Road residence.
Caller heard banging downstairs in living room. Dispatch called Windham
Police to assist. Officer
heard noise in barn, requested K9 unit to respond. Subject seen running from area into
woods. Officer found
fresh prints in snow heading eastbound toward
Mammoth Road. Three
Hudson units on scene. K9
starting track. Sean Paul
Koehler, 24, Bockes Road,
Londonderry arrested for
Burglary and Attempt to
Commit Motor Vehicle
Theft. Cash bail set at
$10,000, with Derry Circuit Court date of Feb. 10.
5:27 a.m. Neighbor on
Cross Road reporting
loud music disturbing the
peace.
◆
◆
Police Dog Tracks Bockes Road Home Burglary Suspect
JAY HOBSON
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
ean Paul Koehler, 24,
was arrested by Londonderry police Feb.
10 about 3 a.m. on a charge
of Burglary and Attempted
Motor Vehicle Theft.
Londonderry Police
received a call from a resident who said someone
was in her home on Bockes Road. The caller stated
that she was in her bedroom and heard “banging
downstairs” in her living
room.
Officers Keith Lee,
Jason Archambeault, Sgt.
S
Nicholas
Pinard
Jr.,
Charles Nickerson, K9
Officer John Perry with
“Mingo” and George Mottram were dispatched to
the scene.
According to police,
the closest unit to the
address was north of the
police station and dispatch called Hudson for
assistance as well.
Detective Chris Olson
said Archambeault heard
something in the barn
upon his arrival and K9
Officer Perry responded
to the area where the subject was running into the
Sean Paul Koehler
woods.
According to Olson,
Lee noticed and advised
the other officers that
there were fresh footprints in the snow heading east toward Mammoth
Road.
“We had asked the
Hudson officers to set up
a perimeter with some of
our own officers. We had
called them because it
was so close to the Hudson line. We wanted the
perimeter set up so the
suspect couldn’t get too
far while we were waiting
for the K9 officer and
Mingo to arrive,” Olson
said.
Olson said a couple of
officers reported seeing
fresh footprints in the
snow and another officer
reported seeing fresh
tracks in a driveway on
Bockes Road. The tracks
led into a neighbor’s yard.
“K9 continued to track
the whole way and led
officers up the stairs to
the front door of the residence on Bockes Road,”
Olson said.
Olson said they were
familiar with the address,
as Koehler had been
arrested before on similar
charges.
“We spoke to a woman
at the address and we
spoke to Koehler and we
were able to determine
that Koehler was respon-
sible for the burglary and
on the attempt of the theft
of the motor vehicle,”
Olson said. “Koehler had
broken into the house and
found the women’s car
keys. He filled a pillowcase with bottles of alcohol and took her car keys
to the garage, where he
put the pillowcase and
bottles of alcohol and flat
screen TV he had taken
into the back of the SUV.
That’s where the attempted theft of a motor vehicle
charge comes from.”
Cash bail was set at
$10,000.
◆
◆
I-93 Crash Closes Portion of Highway During Storm
JAY HOBSON
LONDONDERRY TIMES
————––––––————–◆
ondonderry Fire Battalion Chief Jim
Roger said a portion
of Interstate 93 was closed briefly so ambulance
crews could reach a single vehicle accident in the
northbound lane south of
L
exit 5 on Wednesday, Feb.
5, at 12:30 p.m..
“We believe the accident was the result of a
medical problem,” Roger
said. “The state police were
on scene before us and the
accident completely blocked the highway because it
was in the northbound
passing lane south of exit 5.
The State Police made sure
the road was secured and
they brought us down the
wrong way down I-93. We
got onto I-93 northbound at
exit 5 and drove south in
the northbound lane,
which got us there faster in
a more direct end effective
manner.
“It was a case of good
interagency cooperation
and communication,” Roger
added.
Roger said a snowplow driver in a red pickup truck appeared to
have had a medical emergency that may have
caused the accident.
“When we got there,
he was blue and not
breathing,” Roger said.
“He had taken out some
guard rails on the passing
lane side of the highway,
and no other vehicles
were involved. He regained consciousness and
was alert on the way to
the hospital.”
Roger said it could
easily have been a multivehicle accident but they
were lucky in that traffic
was slow moving due to
the storm.
The road was reopened
by 1:30 p.m., Roger said.
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