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Hippo the JUNE 25 - JULY 1, 2009 LOCAL NEWS, FOOD, ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT TRANSFORMERS : REVIEW & DORKS DEBATE FREE Cyan Magenta Yellow Black INSIDE: WIN CIR Q UE TIX ON PG.5 Inside ThisWeek BY JODY REESE pUBLISHER’S NOTE Get moving On the Oval in Milford NH 603-673-5381 www.storkorganicbaby.com Derryfield Park, Manchester - Call 668-2300 www.trainingzonenh.com Dinner Dance Cruise Buffet Dinner Featuring Seafood and Dancing to Live Music. From Weirs Beach, June 27 at 7 PM Rock, Roll & Remember Senior discount, Weirs Beach June 29 at 6 PM Family Party Night Kids cruise free, Weirs Beach, July 1 at 6 PM 603-366-5531 • www.cruiseNH.com 0 BANKRUPTCY Money Problems? Bank Foreclosure? Bills Beyond Control? We Are A Debt Relief Agency. (603) 622-6595 Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page From library storytimes and workshops to professional baseball and free movies, we have a list of all the ways you can entertain the kids this summer, including several ideas for free fun and for activities that are fun for family members of all ages. We also have an updated list of day-long camps that can be found at www.hippopress.com (plenty of slots are still available, even during popular weeks in July and August). Cover by staff. HippoStaff Editorial Executive Editor Amy Diaz, [email protected], ext. 29 Contributing Editor Lisa Parsons, [email protected] Production Manager Glenn Given, [email protected] Listings Coordinator ([email protected]) Heidi Masek, [email protected] (arts) Doran Dal Pra, [email protected], ext. 14 Book Editor Lisa Parsons (send listings to her e-mail; books for possible review via mail attention Lisa — books will not be returned) Staff Writers Arts: Heidi Masek, ext. 12 News: Jeff Mucciarone, [email protected], ext. 36 Music: [email protected] Contributors John Andrews, Cameron Bennett, John Fladd, Rick Ganley, Henry Homeyer. Dave Long, Peter Noonan, Marianne O’Connor, Linda A. Thompson-Odum, Tim Protzman, Katie Beth Ryan, Eric W. Saeger, Gil Talbot, Rich Tango-Lowy. To reach the newsroom call 625-1855, ext. 29. Business Publisher Jody Reese, Ext. 21 Associate Publisher Dan Szczesny, Ext. 13 Associate Publisher Jeff Rapsis, Ext. 23 Production Joseph Thomas III Christina Young Circulation Manager Doug Ladd. Ext. 35 Account Executives Charlene Cesarini, Ext. 26 Brian Early, Ext. 31 Alyse Savage, [email protected] Dan Szczesny, Ext. 13 Bob Tole, Ext. 27 National Account Representative Ruxton Media Group To place an ad call 625-1855 Ext. 13 For Classifieds dial Ext. 25 or e-mail [email protected]. 5 Q&A 9 Quality of Life Index 10 Sports 18 THIS WEEK the Arts: 22 Art Art SOPHA; Local Color, listings. 20 Theater Curtain Calls, listings. 24 Classical Events around town in listings. Inside/Outside: 25 Gardening Guy Henry Homeyer helps you with your greenery. 26 Kiddie Pool Weekend events for the family. 27 Car Talk Click and Clack give you their advice. 28 Treasure Hunt There’s gold in them there closets. Other listings: Clubs, page 25; Continuing Education, page 28; Yoga, page 30. 32 Food Our historic kitchens: An exhibit featuring the kitchens of the past PLUS Wine school; Weekly Dish; Food listings; Rich Tango-Lowy helps you shop in Ingredients; Wine with dinner; listings. Pop Culture: 38 Reviews Dorks debate PLUS Reviews of CDs, TV, games, DVDs & books. 42 Movies Amy Diaz gives in to the awesomeness of Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, to the shtick of Whatever Works, to the poop humor of Year One and to the cutesiness of Away We Go but less so to the preachiness of Food, Inc. NITE: 46 Bands, clubs, nightlife Mortuus Ortus; Banshee; nightlife and comedy listings and more. 48 Rock and Roll Crossword A puzzle for the music-lover. 50 Music this Week Live performances in Manchester and beyond. Odds & Ends: 52 52 52 55 55 55 Sudoku Crossword Signs of Life News of the Weird This Modern World Hippo user’s guide Classifieds: 53 Help Wanted 53 Buy & Sell Stuff 53 Apartment Guide 54 Business Directory Unsolicited submissions are not accepted and will not be returned or acknowledged. Unsolicited submissions will be destroyed. DAHAR LAW FIRM 0 12 Kids’ guide to summer June 25 - July 1, 2009 ; Vol. 9, No. 26 49 Hollis St., Manchester, N.H. 03101 P 603-625-1855 F 603-625-2422 www.hippopress.com e-mail: [email protected] Call Us – We Can Help www.dahar.com [email protected] 4 News Money still not growing on trees; protecting historic buildings, new digs for the Nashua Y PLUS more news in brief News and culture weekly serving metro southern New Hampshire. Published every Thursday (1st copy free; 2nd $1). Cyan Magenta Yellow Black 080 Thursdays @ pm Saturdays @ 8am Drop ins welcome $ per class/ for $0 Even as some wonder if there really is an economic recovery underway, gas prices are creeping up. Experts now think that when the economy heats back up gas will easily surpass $5 per gallon, possibly hitting $10 a gallon by 2015. While these types of predictions have been made before and not come true, it seems reasonable for us to consider the possibility and the ramifications to our local economy. It might even be a good idea to start planning for that eventuality. One of the main planning thrusts has been to look at high-speed rail from the Merrimack Valley into Boston. For Concord, Manchester and Nashua this would be a huge boon, though such a rail line wouldn’t come cheaply. New Hampshire has already lost out on millions for the stimulus package because the state turned down the idea of planning a Boston-toMontreal rail line in 2004. Rail does seem to be one of those few issues that unite Republicans and Democrats; and while the state is already dealing with increasing costs and decreasing revenue, rail needs to be on the agenda or we’ll never be ready for $10 gas. In Manchester a group aptly named Manchester Moves is filling in where local government doesn’t do a good job of treading, focusing on turning abandoned rail beds into bicycle and walking trails. Already people are using the trail on the West Side and many more miles could be used up. Trails could be linked up from Goffstown village to Newmarket. What a selling point to retiring Boomers — live in a city, bike into the country. Nashua has the beginnings of an excellent trail system along the river, as does Concord. In fact, it might be possible to link them all up. Of course bicycling is not a reasonable solution to $10 gasoline. Riding to work is only workable a few days a year when you factor in rain and winter. While mass transit, such as trains and buses, is useful to take people into larger cities, such as Boston, they too can’t solve how we’ll get around affordably if gas goes that high. It’s likely a mixture of trails, mass transit and market solutions, such as electric cars, all aided by civic groups and the government, will be the mostly likely and successful solutions. There will be no silver bullet. Media Audit HippoPress is published by HippoPress LLC. All rights reserved. Broadband Internet services provided by 296-0760 J U N E 2 0 0 9 healthychoices Providing information about healthy choices for you and your family. KIDS KNOW BEST! VIDEO CONTEST Be creative and share your family’s healthy tips in a short video. Categories include: • Happy Heart: Show us ways your family uses healthy eating habits or exercise to keep your heart healthy. • SPF is my BFF: Show us ways your family makes sure they apply their sunscreen correctly. • Helmet Head: Show us ways your family makes sure they wear helmets when riding bikes or scooters. At least one child participating in the video must be an established patient of a St. Joseph Healthcare Pediatric or Family Medicine Office. Grand Prize (one in each category) Four tickets to Six Flags New England and a $100 gas card to get you there! Eligible videos will be posted to www.youtube.com/stjosephhospital and winners will be highlighted at Nashua’s Plaza Pics on Friday nights in July at Greeley Park. Visit www.stjosephhospital.com for a complete listing of rules, deadlines, and entry forms! freshfaces EduardoVelez Calderon, MD, Joins Pulmonary Associates EduardoVelez Calderon (Dr. Velez), MD, is board certified in pulmonary diseases, critical care medicine, and internal medicine. Dr.Velez received his medical degree from Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Facultad de Medicina in Bogota, Colombia. He completed an internship and residency in internal medicine at NewYork Medical College–Metropolitan Hospital Center Program in NewYork, NY, and completed a fellowship in pulmonary disease and critical care medicine at Tufts University–St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center in Boston, MA. Dr.Velez’s clinical interests include chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, interstitial pulmonary diseases, and asthma. He is a member of The American College of Chest Physicians. Dr. Velez is also a published author and has done several presentations in the pulmonary field. For more information about Pulmonary Associates or to make an appointment with Dr.Velez, please call the practice at (603) 889.4131. Colonoscopy: Fast Facts During your annual checkup, your primary care provider suggests you schedule a colonoscopy. Immediately you begin to make lists of things to do to avoid making an appointment.You may have heard about the time and preparation the procedure takes, but it is what you haven’t heard that will calm you and give you the confidence to schedule this lifesaving exam. What is a colonoscopy? A colonoscopy is an important screening tool for colorectal cancer, also known as cancer of the large intestine (colon). It is the second leading cause of cancer death in the U.S., but also one of the most preventable. Beginning at age 50, women and men should talk to their primary care providers about scheduling a screening colonoscopy. Too many people each year simply do not have this simple and painless procedure because of false perceptions, and the effects can be devastating. How long will it take? The exam itself takes approximately 30 minutes and is done in an outpatient setting.You will be put into a light sleep with anesthesia during the procedure, so you will need someone to drive you home. How do I prepare? You will be asked to follow a special diet the day before the test.This will make you go to the bathroom a lot to clean out your colon, allowing us to get the clearest pictures possible. Cyan Magenta Yellow Black WIN PRIZES! The first 50 entries will receive four tickets to Chunky’s Cinema Pub. Exceptional people. Exceptional care. How will I feel after? Immediately following the procedure, patients generally feel a little woozy due to the anesthesia and may experience mild gas discomfort.The good news is that you can eat afterward and it is good to drink lots of fluids. If you are age 50 or older, talk with you health care provider about scheduling a screening colonoscopy. Routine Screening Saves a Life When it was time for Patti to receive a screening colonoscopy at the recommended age of 50, she thought nothing of it. Being a registered nurse, she knew the importance of receiving this recommended screening.The screening for Patti revealed a small area of concern, but since Patti was very healthy and had no family history of colon cancer, it was recommended that she return in two years (instead of the recommended ten years) for a followup screening.When Patti returned for the follow-up colonoscopy in June of 2007, she received a diagnosis that no one had expected to hear: colon cancer. Luckily, Mark Mallek, MD, a gastroenterologist at St. Joseph Hospital, had found the cancer in the early stages. After receiving surgery in August, Patti started chemotherapy at the Oncology Center at St. Joseph Hospital.Today, the former marathon runner is on the road to recovery. She credits her recovery not only to the team of health care professionals who provided her care throughout the process, but to the constant messages she received about the importance of getting a colonoscopy. “The best defense against colorectal cancer is routine screenings,” states Dr. Mallek. “Unfortunately, many people are delaying these life-saving screenings due to higher co-pays and deductibles. Finding cancer early gives patients the best chance at survival and avoiding long-term expenses associated with cancer treatments.” The American Cancer Society recommends that all adults begin screening for colorectal cancer at age 50. People at higher risk should begin earlier.Talk to your primary care provider about your risk and when to begin screening. For risk assessment tools or to listen to Patti’s full story, please visit our website at www.stjosephhospital.com. Questions? Call MedCall, the St. Joseph Physician Referral and Resource Service Line, at 1.800.210.9000 www.stjosephhospital.com St. Joseph Hospital, 172 Kinsley Street, Nashua, NH 03061 Save time and pre-register! Call the Appointment Central Pre-Registration Department for hospital scheduled tests at (603) 598.3323. Page | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo NEWS & NOTES News in Brief Names and happenings Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Among the many, many pieces of the $11.6 billion state budget plan drawing attention this week is a measure that would extend the rooms and meals tax to camping. The budget plan also increases the tax from 8 percent to 9 percent. Legislators were expected to vote on the plan Wednesday. The tax would apply to tent camping and recreational vehicles. The Concord Monitor reported nearly 40 people protested the tax Monday, June 22, at the Statehouse. The tax already applied to cabins. U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan announced Monday, June 22, that more than $134.5 million is available for New Hampshire under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act to be used for education reform and to save teacher jobs. The Granite State will be eligible for another $66 million in the fall, a U.S. Department of Education press release said. New Hampshire has already received $42.6 million in stimulus funds, the release said. The whispers are growing stronger for Attorney General Kelly Ayotte to run for Judd Gregg’s Senate seat in 2010. Ayotte, a Republican, has been noncommittal in reports. Democratic U.S. Rep. Paul Hodes announced earlier this year he would run for the seat. According to NHPoliticalReport.com, Nashua businessman Fred Tausch is also a potential contender for Gregg’s seat. The Executive Council unanimously confirmed Carol Ann Conboy to the New Hampshire Supreme Court. Conboy, nominated by Gov. John Lynch, will fill the post of the retired Justice Richard Galway. Conboy, 61, of Bow, has served as an Associate Justice of the New Hampshire Superior Court since 1992. She will be the second woman to serve on the state’s Supreme Court. The Council also unanimously approved Lynch’s selection of Amy Ignatius to serve on the state Public Utilities Commission. Ignatius has served as director of the state Office of Energy and Planning since 2006. The city of Nashua turns 156 years old Saturday, June 27. The Nashua Public Library will air films of the city’s centennial parade in 1953 and its sesquicentennial parade in 2003. Bike swap The first annual Bike Swap in Concord will benefit the Central New Hampshire Bicycle Coalition. People are asked to donate bicycles or bring them for consignment, said Nicholas Coates of the Program for Alternative Transportation and Health. “We’ll take anything and everything,” Coates said, and bikes not sold will be used for programs like a new bike-sharing program or donated to people who lack other transportation. Donate bikes at S&W Sports, 296 South Main St. in Concord, until 8 p.m. Friday, June 26. The sale will take place Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 10 a.m. to noon. For consignment, the owner keeps 75 percent and the Coalition takes 25 percent. Call 228-1441. Money: still not growing on trees State budget process especially painful this year By Jeff Mucciarone [email protected] State legislators were set to vote Wednesday, June 24, on an $11.6 billion state budget. Controversial entertainment and refinancing taxes, along with expanded gambling, didn’t take hold in the plan, but 750 state workers will lose their jobs. “This was an extraordinary budget,” Sen. Maggie Hassan, D-Exeter, said Monday. “There are cuts in this plan that no one likes” “It has the good, the bad and the ugly in it,” said Rep. Neal Kurk, R-Weare. He said most of the good is what is not in the budget, such as the gambling bill, a capital gains tax, a death tax and the refinancing tax. Kurk said the bad is the increase of the rooms and meals tax, the tax on gambling winnings, expansion of the business profits tax to include limited liability companies and raising fees. The ugly is relying on more than $400 million worth of one-time money, some of which is federal stimulus funds. Legislators say this year was especially difficult considering the $550 million deficit for the coming biennium. The budget plan would close the Laconia prison, raise the tobacco tax by 45 cents, increase the rooms and meals tax by 1 percent and increase vehicle registration fees. “This budget will do much harm to New Hampshire,” said Sen. Lou D’Allesandro, DManchester. “There’s another way.” D’Allesandro has long pushed for expanded gambling in New Hampshire and said he is hopeful that if this budget goes down, budget writers would give gambling another look. “I think the proposal reflects the really difficult time we’re in but also manages to protect the most vulnerable people in New Hampshire,” Hassan said. “It is a balanced budget leaving no deficit in this fiscal year and no deficit in the next biennium, which in difficult economic times is a significant accomplishment.” D’Allesandro said he wasn’t pleased with the “11th hour” nature of some of the state budget negotiations. He didn’t like the new 10-per- • No Points • No Closing Costs • No Application Fees cent tax on gaming and expanding the rooms and meals tax to include campgrounds. He said Monday he would vote against the budget. Hassan has heard the sentiment of “just cut more” plenty this budget season. But that’s easier said than done. The state budget is about $11.6 billion but that includes all dedicated funds and federal money. The $550 million shortfall was largely in the state’s general fund, which is all taxpayer money. To put it into perspective, closing down the Department of Corrections and the judicial branch in their entireties for one year would only save $175 million, Hassan said. “It was like nothing any of the budget writers on this team had seen before,” she said. Hassan said very few proposals or ideas are new to budget writers. The work begins well before February. Officials are constantly altering proposals to meet the latest revenue estimates. Officials, such as Gov. John Lynch, are also developing alternative proposals to use in case of an impasse. Lynch a few weeks ago tossed out a proposal for a 1-percent refinancing tax as a potential revenue source. Realtors, bankers, developers and people looking to refinance their homes weren’t happy. Officials said the measure seemed counter to government efforts to keep people at risk of foreclosure in their homes. It could have been devastating for developers who often refinance a construction loan several times in a few years. Legislators heard the protest and the measure was never even voted on. Then there was the entertainment tax, a 9-percent tax on movies, concerts and raceway tickets. Some called it a “back-door” sales tax. Hassan says the more ideas there are the better and said Lynch didn’t want legislators to dismiss anything without properly examining it. While the entertainment tax would have fallen on discretionary income, legislators felt they shouldn’t enact it unless they understood it better, Hassan said. “People try to bring out as many options as they can, especially when the budget is as tough as this one was,” Hassan said. “If you don’t raise a lot of ideas and discuss them, you might miss something.” Still, when a tax proposal receives negative backlash, Hassan said, lawmakers can take a public relations hit for just considering a controversial measure. D’Allesandro said legislators will occasionally float bad proposals in hopes of scaring folks into supporting something else that’s less bad. It might work politically from time to time, but D’Allesandro said that can be a dangerous strategy. While the entertainment tax concept has been bounced around since the early 1990s, the refinancing tax was new. Kurk said sometimes officials make proposals in an effort to get ideas or concepts taken more seriously in a future budget year. Hassan said budget writers from the House and Senate are in constant contact over all things budgetary. Officials are also meeting with state agency heads and the public to gauge support for particular measures. If the process has been done right all along, by the time the budget gets to the committee of conference process, there’s very little that surprises negotiators, Hassan said. “The committee of conference is not only reconciling issues, but reconciling them in light of the most up-to-date information,” Hassan said. The last 10 days of negotiations are equal parts sharing information, exchanging positions and attempting to persuade each other. When the two bodies realize they aren’t going to move each other, on say, expanded gambling or a capital gains tax increase, negotiators have to go back to the drawing table, Hassan said. “It’s a fluid process, a very human process,” Hassan said. Correction: In the story “Life on camera” in the June 18-24 Hippo, Ryan Plaisted of MCAM TV-23 in Manchester, pointed out two programs that were particularly successful at the public television station. The article incorrectly quoted Plaisted praising two shows. The article should have referred to The Chef’s Plate and PFG TV with Scorch (the local radio personality mentioned in the piece). Call - 800.367.8862 Click - www.eOcean.com Visit - OUR 38 BRANCHES Ask about our other Home Equity loan products *Ocean Bank offers various APRs on Loans. Your APR (annual percentage rate) will depend on the term of your Loan and the principal amount of your Loan. For example, a 5-year, $50,000 Loan at 5.99% APR (which is the APR in effect as of 6/1/09) will have 60 monthly payments of $966.41. This APR is subject to change without notice. Minimum loan amount is $10,000 and maximum loan amount is $500,000. Please call Ocean Bank for current rates in effect. This is a term loan that will result in a mortgage on your home. Property insurance is required. Flood insurance may be required. Loans are available only for 1-4 family owner-occupied properties and approved condominiums located in New Hampshire and Maine and are not available on cooperatives, second homes or properties listed for sale. Other terms and conditions apply. All terms are subject to change without notice. Consult your tax advisor regarding the deductibility of interest. © 2009 People’s United Bank. Member FDIC. Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page Golf: survival of the fittest TPI is high-tech help for your swing Brian Silfies, who owns One_2_One Brian’s Fitness in Concord, joined with Barry Arvidson of Arvidson Chiropractic Center in Tilton to offer a golf instruction program combining fitness assessments, training and medical treatment. Silfies and Arvidson teamed with Concord Country Club to offer the Titleist Performance Institute’s (TPI) training program. Visit www. golffitnessnh.com. has got stuff they need to work on. Afterward, people get a fitness handicap. People like that. You might be a five for a handicap, but a 15 in golf fitness. It gives them goals. ... You want to get that handicap down. It makes it fun for them. If you do the exercises, when we retest you, hopefully the handicap went down. Q: How does the K-Vest work? It uses two TV screens and a computer. ... It will light up red if you move out of the zone and green if you’re within it. It really helps groove your swing. It reads how much variation you’ve got. ... It gives instant feedback. When you look at a golf swing, what are you keying in on? There’s 13 different tests, each one testing strength, flexibility and mobility and balance. Those are the four key components in golf. ... If anything hurts, we send them to the medical guy and make sure he’s OK to play. ... How typical is it for you to work with someone with swing problems? Everybody has something they need to work on. We’ve taken one guy through the [PGA Tour], club pros, state champions. Everybody How do you fix it? Basically through exercises. You strengthen up the muscles in the core, abdominals, all the muscles in the hips. ... It could be mobility issues with the upper spine. If that doesn’t rotate, the only way to get the golf club back is to pull your shoulders too far. Caring and gentle family dentistry 60 Rogers St. Suite #1-A Manchester, NH 03103 603-669-3680 Hours: M-Tu-Th-Fr 8:30-5:30 Closed Wednesdays Accepting New Patients Most Dental Insurances Accepted! 5% Senior Discount Offering: Full Range of Quality Dental Care Mercury-Free Dentistry White Fillings Only! • Repair of Chipped/Broken Teeth • Porcelain Veneers • Teeth whitening • Bondings • Crowns • Implants • Bridges • Dentures • Root canals & extractions Same Day Emergency Service Available* Special Offers*: • New Patient Special, 25% off initial exam, cleaning, and x-rays • Teeth Whitening trays, $100 per arch *Expires July 1, 2009 Long time prosecutors now working for you. Personal Injury Criminal Defense 623-1000 101 Stark Street • Manchester What’s the response been so far? It’s been positive. ... One thing that’s very important is you get with the golf pro, work with the K-Vest, now you’re increasing your range of motion, strengthening, balance. You’re changing everything. You may not play so well at first. We’ve had some concerns over that. We hope that people stick with it. Basically, you’ve got a new body and you need learn to play with it. You’ve got to stick with it. So people aren’t going to see the results on the golf course overnight? Exactly. — Jeff Mucciarone The Hippo is giving away tickets to Cirque du Soleil, which runs Wednesday, July 8, through Sunday, July 12, at the Verizon Wireless Arena in Manchester. Hippo will give away a pair of tickets to four lucky readers! Send your name, address and a daytime weekday phone number to contest@ hippopress.com with the words “Send me to Cirque!” in the subject line by 11:59 p.m. on Tuesday, June 30. Winners will be notified Wednesday, July 1, or Thursday, July 2. Cyan Magenta Yellow Black How did the partnership get started? There are three parts: medical, fitness and a golf pro. Together, we work with golfers to get their body and swing right, to stay injury-free. I’m the fitness guy and we teamed up with the golf pro at Concord Country Club. I guess that’s how we got together. What [can] make a swing go awry? One of the tests we do, a pelvic rotation test — we’re looking to see if you can move your hips and torso separately. If you can’t move separately, there’ll be too much motion. Too much motion and you lose power and you lose accuracy. That’s one example. What we’re looking for is good mobility and good stability. We’ll also check torso stability. You want the torso to stay still while the pelvis is rotating. Maybe you’re good on one side and not so good on the other. Sometimes your hips are fine but the upper body is going with them. We can help you fix it. QUEEN CITY DENTAL DR. MARINA E. BECKER Page | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo Old and valuable Getting NH historic places noticed By Jeff Mucciarone [email protected] Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Regularly receiving requests from communities and property owners, the state Division of Historical Resources must determine which buildings and places are worthy of special distinction, like the Wilton Town Hall, and places that may very well be special or unique but aren’t likely to make the cut. Peter Michaud, of the state Division of Cultural Resources, believes historic preservation programs are underutilized, and the state is hoping to turn that around to get more properties listed. “There’s wonderful resources out there,” Michaud said. The Wilton Town Hall was recently honored with its placement on the National Register for Historic Places. Built in 1884, the Town Hall initially consolidated town functions, including town offices, police, library and an auditorium. Today, the Town Hall is a popular film-viewing destination. The Town Hall made the cut in two areas considered by the National Park Service when determining historical significance: architecture and its association with events in history, Michaud said. “It’s a wonderful example of Queen Anne style,” Michaud said, adding that its role in consolidating town functions was significant as well. Beyond architecture and association with historic events, the Park Service considers asso- ciations with famous or prominent people and archeology. Assuming a smooth process, an eligible property can make the Register in as little as four or five months. Michaud said the state has one property that’s been in the works for a few years now. In many cases, there’s no rush, he said. The state finds out about important places in a variety of ways. Sometimes community members or property owners recognize something of significance and they’d like to see it honored in some way, Michaud said. “We get quite a few calls that way,” Michaud said. “That kicks off the National Register process.” Often the state needs to find out a little bit about a building to determine if it’s worth investing the time and money in the process. The state conducts its own intensive survey. “The survey is a good identification step,” Michaud said. The survey lets community members analyze a property. Perhaps the property is ripe for the National Register or the state’s own register of historic places. State officials want detailed descriptions of properties, historical context and an explanation of overall significance, said Mary Kate Ryan, state survey coordinator. “[The state program] allows us to honor properties that may not have what it takes to be on the National Register, but are nonetheless important to communities and state history and should have some recognition for that,” The Wilton Town Hall was recently placed on the National Register for Historic Places. Michaud said. “It’s another means for recognizing these places.” Maybe the result of the survey is otherwise — perhaps it’s a wonderful property but it’s not matching the criteria. “There are properties that have been looked at within a community, but if you put them under more scientific scrutiny, they wouldn’t make it,” Michaud said. “That doesn’t mean they’re still not important to a community.” Michaud said recognizing properties brings a national recognition, a national context to them. Researchers would have access to information on such places on a national level. Michaud also said there’s a current effort in Washington, D.C., to make historic information digital to allow easier access. Especially in the case of municipally owned buildings, there are federal grants available for renovation work on historic properties. Privately owned historic buildings would be eligible for preservation tax incentives, up to a 20-percent tax credit equal to the total rehabilitation cost, Michaud said. In December the state announced that Concord’s Old North Cemetery had been placed on the National Register for its connection to historic events. The cemetery is also the final resting place of President Franklin Pierce. Visit www.wiltontownhalltheatre.com. Visit www.nh.gov/nhdhr or call 271-3483. Hot on the trail of NH’s cold cases Budget provides federal money for pursuit By Jeff Mucciarone [email protected] It was more than five years ago that Hanson, Mass., native Maura Murray disappeared in Haverhill. It has been 26 years since the bodies of two 15-year-old girls, Diane Compagna and Anne Psaradelis, were discovered by a hunter in Candia. Just two years before that, Kathy Lynn Gloddy’s body was found in Franklin. All these years later, still no answers. There are more than 100 cold cases in New Hampshire. Some may be close to an arrest. Some are currently missing persons cases that, with a little work, would likely soon become criminal investigations as well. Others may never be solved. But with federal funding on the way, the Granite State will have a team of investigators slated solely to work on the state’s cold cases. Rep. Peyton Hinkle, R-Merrimack, sponsored the cold case bill, which passed the Senate three weeks ago. “I think there are cases, with the work of the unit, that we can solve,” said Attorney General Kelly Ayotte. The cold case unit, which will consist of two state police detectives, one full-time prosecutor and one part-time investigator, could be up and running by this fall. Officials will meet with investigators from the major crimes office, prosecutors and local police to evaluate which cases are closest to being solved so the unit can be most productive, Ayotte said. “It’s one of those things [where] there’s a hodge-podge of different organizations and they’re all good people but the problem is, they’re not all connected,” said private investigator and former police officer Seldon Nason. “There has to be some sort of cohesive effort.” Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page Hinkle began thinking about the bill about four years ago when he read a news story about retired police detective Joseph Horak, who has devoted his life to solving the murders of Compagna and Psaradelis. Horak was initially assigned to the case in 1973, but still works to solve the cold case today, even publishing three books about it, the last one including the name of the man Horak believes killed the two girls. “I thought it’s just not right that this case can go all these years and nobody seems to be trying to solve it,” Hinkle said. Just last year, Hinkle read an article about a Manchester man who was arrested as the result of the work of a cold case unit in Maine. Maine police officers had had a man under suspicion for quite some time, and with officers staying on top of the case, he finally admitted to the murder, Hinkle said. “When I read that, I thought old cases can be solved,” Hinkle said. “That gave me the idea of putting together a cold case unit for state police.” Hinkle began making phone calls to law enforcement officials trying to get a sense of where they were on old cases. He found officers in the state police’s major crimes unit to be so bogged down with more current cases, it was hard for them to make time to pick up the pieces on older cases. Hinkle found a similar impression at Ayotte’s office. “There are current cases that come in that need immediate attention,” Ayotte said. Nason said some of these cases simply need manpower. “Certainly the most important trait is having somebody at least doing the work,” said Nason, who is president of the New Hampshire League of Investigators. Since he drafted the plan, Hinkle has done further investigation of the state’s cold cases, gathering evidence from Murray’s family and from the Massachusetts-based Molly Bish Foundation, which offers support in finding missing persons. “There’s a long list of cold cases both in New Hampshire and Vermont,” Hinkle said. “When I first got involved I had no idea it was this big. Some of the private investigators have been just donating their own time to work on these cases free of charge to family members. They were very helpful.” “To me the hero in all this is Joe Horak,” Hinkle said. “He’s been so persistent through the years. He’s retired but he’s still continued to work on this.” There are several cases in New England where private investigators are working pro bono on missing persons cases. “I’m surprised somebody didn’t do this a long time ago,” said private investigator and former state trooper John Healy. Healy has spent countless hours attempting to find information on the whereabouts of Murray, who seemingly disappeared after a minor car crash on Route 112 in Haverhill. “I’m excited. I’m very happy.” Healy explained cases can go cold pretty easily. “At some point you run out of sources,” Healy said. “You’re stuck until new sources come along at some point. Sometimes you don’t have sources. Sometimes people don’t cooperate. State police are understaffed and so busy. When you run short of sources, and leads start to peter out, and then another case and another case and another case gets piled on your desk, you just reach the proverbial dead end.” Solving cold cases isn’t easy but one key ingredient that a cold case unit could use is a change in relationships. Over time, people can have a change of heart, guilt weighs on them or perhaps close friends have a falling out. “Memories change and relationships change,” Healy said. “Somebody might lie to you three days after an event to protect a friend. Seven years later, maybe somebody has done harm to you and you’re not worried about that allegiance anymore.” A few years ago, a woman provided needed information on a 1985 murder in Hooksett that lead to an arrest and a conviction, Healy said. “That’s a perfect example,” he said. While relationships can change over time for the better in terms of an investigation, time also leads to another hurdle — death. Nason said he’s had several witnesses and suspects die in a 23-year-old cold case in Windham. When private investigators come across something they think could be evidence or otherwise useful to a case, they forward it to the prosecuting attorney. It’s one-way communication, Healy said, adding it should be that way. The frustrating part for investigators and family is that it’s hard to know if they are finding useful information or something police already found or know about. Officials can’t provide families with those details as it could compromise investigations, Healy said. “We don’t sit down and have team meetings,” Healy said, adding private investigators can also serve as buffers between law enforcement and grieving families who may not understand police protocols. “We’re trying to be an additional resource.” Private investigators also try to keep media up to date on cases, as any story might hit a nerve with the right person, Healy said. Healy figured on most cold cases the odds are about 50/50 that investigators have someone in mind as a suspect. “Suspecting is a lot different than being able to prove it in a court of law,” Healy said. Nason said he’s usually considering a particular person as a suspect, but often the evidence just isn’t there to support an arrest. Gathering the evidence comes down to money. Law enforcement need to justify the cost of generating that evidence. Police might want to indefinitely tail a particular suspect but manpower might not allow it, Nason said. “Often times there is a viable suspect, but because of resources, financial abilities, there just isn’t enough evidence,” Nason said. It’s not like the stories on television in shows like CSI or Law and Order. There are some criminals who are smart enough to cover their tracks or to plan out a crime. But most incidents are crimes of opportunity or passion, Nason said, and crimes fitting those molds typically leave evidence. “It all goes back down to time and manpower, working the streets,” Nason said. “Putting your feet on the street, talking to people, just being persistent.” In the Murray case, Healy said investigators keep widening the circle and re-interviewing witnesses, sometimes four or five times. Repeated interviews can be tough on witnesses, Healy said. Cold case investigations are also about people skills. Considering witnesses have been hounded by police, media and private investi- gators, gaining their trust and helping them see that it’s worthwhile to talk again can be challenging, Nason said. “We interviewed a potential witness in the Maura Murray case for the third time,” Healy said. “By accident, we just went up there and ran into him. He gave us a piece of information he didn’t give before because nobody asked the right question. Sometimes you just don’t ask the right question. People want to share. They want to be honest. We just didn’t ask the magic question.” The most important thing is getting out there and doing the old gum-shoe work on the streets. Persistence is key, Nason said. Especially for older cases, witnesses have relocated so tracking them down and subsequently visiting them can grow costly. Nason said he recently traveled to Tennessee to meet with a witness in a cold case. A private investigator has to justify that type of trip to a paying client, knowing he might not turn up anything. The state would have far more resources in that regard, Nason said. If nothing else, a cold case unit would consolidate the flow of information. A lot of attention is rightfully given to providing closure to families who have suffered a tragedy. Cold cases also present a public safety issue. The longer a case goes unsolved, the longer a dangerous person remains free. Nason said violent offenders typically re-offend. “What’s the cost of a human life?” Nason asked. “That’s what it all comes down to.” Welcome St. Joseph Hospital is pleased to welcome Karim Yacoub, MD to SJ Internal Medicine - Sky Meadow, located at 387 East Dunstable Road in Nashua. Dr. Yacoub earned his medical degree at Cairo University Hospital in Cairo, Egypt. He completed a residency in internal medicine at the University of Illinois School of Medicine-Michael Reese Hospital in Chicago, IL and a fellowship in geriatric medicine at the University of WisconsinMadison Medical School in Madison, WI. Board Certified: Clinical Interests: Internal Medicine Geriatrics Heart & Lung Disease Preventative Medicine SJ Internal Medicine is affiliated with St. Joseph Hospital, southern New Hampshire’s largest acute care hospital and trauma center. To make an appointment please call (603) 891-2161 or learn more at www.stjosephhospital.com Breaking ground this fall off Exit 5 By Jeff Mucciarone [email protected] The YMCA of Greater Nashua is getting a new home in the Gate City. The YMCA, which also has facilities in Merrimack, is moving forward with a capital campaign to help raise the $10.1 million needed to build a new facility just off Exit 5 of the Everett Turnpike, next to Stellos Stadium, said CEO Mike LaChance. The YMCA has been in its current downtown location at 17 Prospect St. since 1964. In existence locally for 122 years, the Prospect Street building will cost too much to renovate — $4.5 million — considering needed upgrades to meet ADA compliance laws, LaChance said. The YMCA was first located on Temple Street in Nashua before moving to its current location. LaChance is hoping to break ground on the new YMCA this fall and to have a completed building in fall 2010. “So this is the next evolutionary step, moving to a new site,” LaChance said, adding the YMCA has entered into an agreement with the City, in which Nashua owns the land and the YMCA will own the building. The existing facility, along with costly renovation, also has limited parking, with just 79 spaces, LaChance said. “That just doesn’t meet our need.” After deciding to build a new YMCA building, officials worked out a deal to sell the existing property to Southern New Hampshire Medical Center, which sits next door. The proceeds from the sale would help finance new construction. Capital campaign volunteers and workers are striving to raise $3 million. The balance of the cost would be debt-financed, LaChance said. “It’s been great so far,” LaChance said of capital campaign efforts. “We’ve got some 0 great volunteers to help with the campaign. Things are really happening.” The volunteer corps includes Hudson residents Portia, 8, and Nina Butrym, 9, who sold lemonade to kick off their first fundraising event two weeks ago for the capital campaign. The youngsters pledged to raise $1,000 and raised about $500 Sunday, June 14, selling lemonade. LaChance said the two were inspired by their mother, Jenny Butrym, who works for the campaign. Portia and Nina, after deciding they wanted to help, spent a day or so with a notebook writing down ideas for how they could raise money. So far, lemonade has been a success, LaChance said. The new building will be a little more than 40,000 square feet, compared to the current 55,000-square-foot building. LaChance said a detailed review revealed the YMCA could be a more efficient facility in terms of space, even if it increases its membership by as much as 50 percent. Soon to be outside downtown, LaChance said offering a public transportation option is important as well. The new facility will feature a bus stop right at the YMCA. “No matter where you live, you can get there via public transportation,” LaChance said, adding there has been a perception that lots of people walk to the YMCA currently. The YMCA has found that largely not the case, he said. The new building will be family-oriented, including features such as a family aquatic pool in addition to the typical six-lane pool, and a family adventure center. There will also be studios for dance, yoga, pilates and other group exercise classes. The building will include an after-school childcare center, a multi-purpose room for seniors and a large wellness facility. Visit www.nmymca.org. Call 880-6049. Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Nashua YMCA to move Page | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo 8 for business An occasional look at new shops, services and more Textbooks galore TEEN YOGA 8 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black SWITCH TO FREE CHECKING MERRIMACK STYLE. There are lots of reasons to switch to Our Basic Checking account offers: free checking at The Merrimack: • Free Online Banking and Bill Pay • Free ATM or Debit Card • No monthly fee • No minimum balance requirement • No transaction charges • No foreign ATM charges Outstanding value and exceptional service from a community bank you can trust. That’s Merrimack Style. Call 225-2793 to learn more. The Book Cellar has opened a new store in Manchester that will provide an outlet for students looking to sell used textbooks. University bookstores typically don’t buy back books that have changed editions, which leaves many students out of luck. That’s where The Book Cellar, which has a general bookstore in Nashua, comes in. The new store is located at 1279 South Willow St., next to Daddy’s Junky Music. “We’ve always dealt with textbooks,” said manager Loralee Reyes, who added the store has been selling textbooks online for about 10 years and The Book Cellar is about two years old now in Nashua. The Book Cellar is owned by Milford resident Allard Deu, who has been in the book industry for more than 25 years. The Manchester location, which opened May 2, not only buys and sells used textbooks; it also carries new editions. The store focuses on technical and professional-level books, Reyes said. “We wanted to get closer to the students around here,” Reyes said. Nashua is a little too far away for many students attending college in the Manchester area. The location, right off the highway and close to the mall, makes for a promising business, Reyes said. Reyes said the life cycles of textbooks can be short, even for math books. New editions can pop up every couple years. “They are so expensive,” Reyes said, and accordingly, she’s seen more students shopping around to save on their books. The Book Cellar can save students up to 40 percent off the cost of current editions. Older editions that still may be sufficient for a course could save students up to 80 percent, Reyes said. Whereas school bookstores won’t take older editions, The Book Cellar can still get something for the books’ reference value. “We’ll buy pretty much anything,” Reyes said. And while there are online deals for textbook-shoppers, students are sometimes under time constraints to begin reading a book before they fall behind in their studies waiting for books to be shipped to them. The Book Cellar gives students the real thing right away. “It is a problem,” Reyes said of the wait for shipping. “...It might take a week, or they get the wrong book. I’ve heard all the horror stories. With us, you can look on the Web site and see if we have it at either retail store.” Visit www.bookcellaronline.com. For the Manchester store, call 836-5000. The Nashua retail store is located at 34 Northwest Blvd., Unit 10A; call 881-5570. — Jeff Mucciarone Powering up Banking As It Should Be. www.TheMerrimack.com ™ Member FDIC Member SUM Program PROUD TO BE A CORNERSTONE OF THE COMMUNITY. Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 8 Joe Goodwin is trying to give back. He says he wants to help put New Hampshire on the map in terms of fitness and athletics. Goodwin opened Powerhouse Fitness at 18A Russell Ave. in Goffstown in February. Along with one-on-one training at his Goff- stown studio, Goodwin is trying to get more involved with high school and college athletic teams. He says many New Hampshire coaches and athletes lack expertise in proper training and conditioning. That’s one of the places his new business fits. The other end of Powerhouse Fitness is working with non-athletes looking to make a life change or to simply shed a few pounds. A certified nutritionist and master professional trainer, Goodwin attended Suffolk University and had been working at the Boston Sports Club in Boston. Now, the 22-year-old Stratham native is taking what he’s learned back to the Granite State. So far, Powerhouse Fitness is doing well. Along with teaching athletes and coaches how to properly train, he also works with athletes on proper nutrition. “I grew up playing basketball — my whole family did,” Goodwin said. He said he saw the level of athlete from other areas of the country and he found that New Hampshire athletes simply didn’t compare. They were at a disadvantage, he said. “A majority of New Hampshire players who have potential are just not taught the correct way to train until they’re actually in college,” Goodwin said, adding that players from other parts of the country have been training properly at that point for up to 10 years. Three years ago when Goodwin went to Indiana, 12- to 14-year-old kids were getting up every day at 5:30 a.m. to train, he said. “You don’t have that knowledge with the correct training ... as other states,” Goodwin said. And if people are training incorrectly, injuries will likely happen, he said. Furthermore, if athletes don’t train properly coming back from injuries, the problem area is only going to be more susceptible to reoccurring injuries in the future, Goodwin said. In New Hampshire, Goodwin sees many coaches who are volunteers. He’s hoping he can lend a little guidance to coaches and players so they can get the most out of their abilities. “Some people who have that potential just need a little more,” Goodwin said. He’s trained college athletes in basketball, track and field, hockey, football and soccer, so he’s open to working with any athlete. But in his studio in Goffstown, the majority of the people he works with are non-athletes, and he says that’s just as important. He said there are two sides to the business. “This is also for people who need to get in shape for health reasons or to just feel better,” Goodwin said. “The majority of people who do go to the gym train improperly,” Goodwin said. “They don’t get the results they want. They have no motivation left and they stop coming.” Goodwin said he doesn’t want people wasting their time at the gym without guidance and without results, while also risking injury. Visit www.nhpowerhousefitness.com. Call 770-5143. — JM Quick change Sick of waiting at the mechanic for an oil change? Motivated Automotive Maintenance Specialists will come to you. Celebrating its first birthday, the vehicle maintenance company has seen business spike recently despite the tough economy, said Kate Shaw, who co-owns the business with Keith Mochida. Based in Nashua, Motivated Automotive offers a few different oil change packages, checks air conditioners and provides air conditioner charges, replaces filters, rotates tires and replaces windshield wipers. “We do most of the preventative vehicle maintenance that an express place would do,” Shaw said. “Everything we need is in our van.” Mechanics do an inspection of the vehicle, making clients aware of anything that might be broken or headed in that direction. All in all, the company’s mechanics are usually in and out within about 30 minutes, depending on the work that’s done, Shaw said. “They listen for the ticks, the dongs and the ding,” Shaw said, adding that although the company doesn’t perform repairs, its mechanics will provide advice and referrals. The company got started about 16 months ago. Mochida, who had been out of work, and Shaw, who had been self-employed for several years, had been discussing business opportunities. After a day of driving around to job interviews, Mochida took note of a variety of mobile businesses — dry cleaning, dog grooming, windshield replacement. “Why not us?” Shaw asked. Mochida had previously worked as a computer engineer, but had extensive experience as a mechanic during his time in the Navy and helping his grandfather growing up, Shaw said. “He threw the idea out there,” Shaw said. “We did the research. We liked it. We thought we could make this work.” In Shaw’s experience as a mother taking care of kids and trying to run errands, getting to car appointments was always a hassle, even at express places. “You never know if you’ll have to wait 10 minutes or two hours,” Shaw said. “To me from that perspective, it sounded fantastic. It sounded like something we could market, especially with the time crunch families are under.” The company typically operates from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday for individual customers, but will operate before and after hours for clients with fleets of vehicles. With two vans and two mechanics per van, teams travel as far as Boston’s Seaport to the south and currently as far as Concord to the north, Shaw said. For entities like rental car companies, Motivated Automotive can be particularly helpful. Instead of having to pay an employee to drive a car to a mechanic for maintenance, which would turn into lost revenue, a company can have Motivated come right to the location and perform services while the vehicle isn’t being used. “Our goal is to put more trucks on the road, putting more local people back to work,” Shaw said. Depending on where the client is, Motivated Automotive usually books individual appointments a week in advance. A basic oil change costs $39.95, with no additional fees, unless more extensive work is requested. The basic package includes an oil change, replacing the oil filter and topping off fluids. They do not charge installation fees for things like air filters or light bulbs. Motivated Automotive recycles all its oil rags, filters and waste oil. The company partnered with the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation and is donating $5 for every “Red Carpet Oil Service,” which is the top-level package, costing $54.95, and includes vacuuming, window-washing and a safety inspection, on top of the basic service. The donation program will continue until next March. Call 800-808-2752. Visit www.motivatedservice.com and fill out a contact form for a chance to win a year’s worth of Red Carpet Oil Services. — Jeff Mucciarone June 25, 2009 QoL QUALITY OF LIFE INDEX Be on the look out for E. coli In case there are residents in the habit of treating a bowl of raw Nestle Toll House cookie dough like a bowl of ice cream, the state Department of Health and Human Services is asking those folks to stop it, at least temporarily. Due to concerns of E. coli contamination, Nestle has recalled all of its prepackaged Toll House cookie dough. The state has identified two cases of E. coli related to the recall, one in March and one in May. Both have recovered. Officials are still investigating the outbreak, a DHHS press release said. Typically cooking the product as directed will kill the bacteria but consumers are advised to discard any recalled cookie dough, the release said. QOL score: -1 Comment: There are plenty of other brands of cookie dough, along with homemade varieties, that still allow for the E. coli-free consumption of raw eggs. DRL Personal Assistant Want to spark things up? We can help you make him jealous! Brake for animals Test drive a vehicle, or have yours serviced at Saturn of Manchester (170 Auto Center Road, Manchester) on Saturday, June 27, between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Saturn of Manchester will donate $5 to the Animal Rescue League per test drive or service for Pet Adoption Day. Dogs, cats and other pets that need families will be at the dealership that day, and the Animal Rescue League (rescueleague.org, 472-5714) will also have a QOL score: +1 Comments: Let’s hope they don’t get loose in the parking lot. Back in the game At least temporarily, the Merrimack Youth Association (MYA) will maintain its town funding, preserving youth sports, the Telegraph reported this week. Last month, the Merrimack Town Council had proposed phasing out direct town funding to the MYA over the next five years. On Monday, June 22, the MYA reportedly reached a one-year agreement to continue public funding, which currently makes up about 22 percent of its $485,000 budget. Cutting funding would have caused the MYA to substantially raise user fees, the article said. QOL score: +1 Comment: One less increase to worry about — for now. 1100 Hooksett Road #108, Hooksett 641-9600 www.MySalonThairapy.com Imagine having options and deductibles to choose from. in 1984 too? Visit us on your birthday and receive % 25 OFF! Last week’s QOL score: 50 Net change: +1 QOL this week: 51 What’s affecting your QOL? Tell us at [email protected]. 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Cannot be combined with any other offers or discounts except Payback$. 08 Page | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo Cyan Magenta Yellow Black pet micro-chipping station set up. 10 Dave Long’s Hippo Sports LONGSHOTS Finding the right plan is as easy as A, B, C for Celtics All Sports Radio WGAM Has Got GAME! 10 TEAMS: Boston Red Sox - Baseball Cyan Magenta Yellow Black New England Patriots - Football Manchester Monarchs - Hockey LOCAL TALK: 3pm - 7pm Every Weekday with Mike Mutnansky, Rich Keefe and Pete Tarrier 10am - 1pm Saturday The Saturday Morning Sports with Dave Long NATIONAL TALK: 9am - 12N Dan Patrick 12N - 3pm Jim Rome The NBA draft is Thursday, but with it regarded as the weakest in years and the Celtics picking somewhere in the 50s it doesn’t have many on the edge of their seats. But, as generally is the case, the rumor mill is grinding away and surprisingly Rajon Rondo seems to be at the middle of most of them. The most popular is Rondo going to Memphis for the second pick that they’d use on Spanish point guard Ricky Rubio, who had everyone but me agog over him during last summer’s Olympics. I’ll freely admit I’ve had my misses on guys (UCLA’s Ed O’Bannon comes to mind) and since Danny Ainge is a great judge of talent even I’d listen to him before I’d listen to me. But unless Steve Nash materialized to start, as Rubio developed, it doesn’t make sense, since the Big Three doesn’t want to go into maybe their last shots at a title with a rookie point guard in tow. Danny and Doc apparently have issues with Rondo’s occasional on-court inconsistency and off-court maturity. But while what I’m saying could be moot when you read this, I’m betting they’re sending a message and aren’t real serious about trading a rising NBA star. So with that said, let’s get to getting the team back in position to win another NBA title. They’ve got three ways to approach it, with Kevin Garnett being the key piece to all three. They need to determine how long KG with be a top 5 player (two years), one in the top 10 as the inevitable slip takes place (year three) and a top 20 player (year four and five maybe) and then lay out a plan around the answers to those three questions. The other big issue is salary cap maneuverability. Since the Big Three are over it by themselves, they don’t have any. That’s why they got nothing done at the trading deadline because none of the remaining players were making enough money to balance off the salary of a veteran who could help. Thus they need to address that too. Plan A – Go for it again and the future be damned: You only get so many shots at the brass ring so ride the Big Three hard for another year with the notion Ray Allen won’t be back when his contract expires in 2010. Then use their $5.5 million salary cap exemption to fill in the holes on the bench for a guy who can play defense at the three while scoring a little and for some size behind Kendrick Perkins, and KG. It also means it’s a one- (or maybe two-) and-done approach. But it gives them the best chance to win it next year. Possible Options: Two free agents who come to mind are Grant Hill and Antonio McDyess. They’re near the end but still have a little left in the tank and are high-character guys who’ve already made a lot of money so maybe they’ll come for less to go for a ring. The biggest issue is they’ll have five of their top eight in their middle 30s, which equates to high risk in the injury department, and if they come at the wrong time of the year, that’s trouble. Plan B – Extend it to a three-year target: My guess is KG will be a top 10 player in year three. So if you go this way you need a two guard for year two and three. So it means looking to trade Ray Allen now to a team in search of the salary cap space he’ll provide for the vaunted 2010 free agent class. It could also get them younger and give better contractual control for his replacement since Ray’s up in 2010. It may also offer the opportunity to add depth if it’s a two-for-one or a larger deal involving Brian Scalabrine’s $3.3 million salary. But it’s trading a guy who’s obviously still got game who, while not playing well against Orlando, had a great season and playoff vs. the Bulls when he scored 51 in a game. That also means his trade value may never be higher than it is right now. Possible Options: Milwaukee (Michael Redd), Detroit (Richard Hamilton), Houston (Tracy McGrady) are three big names whose teams want to cut payroll, clear space for 2010 or have done well when he’s been out with injuries so it might be time to move on. Only Hamilton, who might help attract McDyess, would create the salary cap maneuverability they need, so my pick is him. Plan C – Extend it to Garnett’s five-year window: This one involves building the team around Garnett and the young core of Rondo, Kendrick Perkins and Big Baby Davis while seeking salary cap maneuverability by trading Paul Pierce. Yes I know he’s a lifelong Celtic and I love Pierce. But that’s exactly how I felt when the original Big Three began to decline and then lived through TWENTY years of NBA irrelevancy before last year. Sorry, not willing to do that again. I want to see them win now and position themselves to win after this Big Three is a very pleasant memory. Because of the pounding he gets from taking it to the basket and rebounding in a position that requires quickness, he’ll be the first of the three to decline. And, while it’s true he made some big shots in the playoffs, he looked slow and unfocused for long stretches as well. He’s got two high-level years left. So with the knowledge that his value may never be higher, as Branch Rickey says: “I’d rather trade a guy a year too early than a year too late.” It’s risky because it’s doubtful they’ll get back in one guy the kind of scorer he is now. So they need to get the kind of deal Harry Sinden got when he did the unthinkable by sending Phil Esposito to the Rangers for Brad Park and Jean Ratelle. Young’ns and non-hockey folks check the glossary for the particulars. But in short, he traded an A+ and C player for a younger A- and B+ that kept them strong in the short term and in contention after Espo declined. Possible Options: Eric Gordon and Marcus Camby from the Clippers. Gordon won’t be as good as Pierce, but he scored 16.5 as a rookie and adds another low-cost high-ceiling young’n to the core. Camby gives them size, experience, solid defensive skills and an expiring $10 million contract to go with Allen’s expiring deal to give them $26 million coming off the cap as Dwayne Wade, Chris Bosh and LeBron James become free agents in the summer of 2010. I’m leaning to Plan C because it gives the best chance to be good for a five-year period and because of the possibility of Wade, who is as good as Kobe and younger. But if Rondo’s gone by now, all bets are off and it’s back to the drawing board for me. Dave Long can be reached at dlong@ hippopress.com. He hosts Dave Long and Company from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. each Saturday on WGAM – The Game, 1250-AM Manchester, 900-AM Nashua. SUMMER IS ALMOST HERE! Tired of unwanted body fat and clothes that don’t fit? TAKE IT ALL OFF! We’ll help you drop the weight, sculpt beautiful arms and shoulders, tighten abs, tone your legs and have the energy of a teenager! 00 ALL SPORTS ALL THE TIME 1250 AM - Manchester 900 AM - Nashua Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 10 CALL TODAY WHILE THERE IS STILL TIME! SEE IT — WANT IT — FEEL IT — BE IT! 250 Commercial Street Suite 2005 Waumbec Mill Manchester *Check out our testimonials on the website Please mention this Hippo ad 039515 11 PeoplE, places & other stuff Sports Glossary Carpenter building strength, Local golfer meets Tiger Alumni News: Saturday’s 7-1 win over KC is the latest news local hurler Chris Carpenter is building a nice season after a year plus of little activity thanks to an assortment of arm injuries. The Bedford righty got the win after giving up just a run and three hits while striking out six over seven innings. It moved him to 5-1 on the year with a 1.53 earned run average over 58.2 innings when he’s struck out 43 and walked just nine batters. His five 2009 wins give him 105 in his career against 71 loses. Sports 101: Joe Torre moved into fifth place all-time for games won by a manager with a 3-2 win over Nomar and the A’s on Thursday night. Who are the four managers ahead of Torre on the list? Tiger Tale: After his showing at the U.S. Open maybe Tiger Woods should have changed places with local legend Mike Grady a while back when the 14-time winner of golf’s majors stopped by to give him a few tips. The meeting came at a clinic at the Grand Cypress Resort near Tiger’s Orlando, Fla., home as the result of the owner of Elm Street’s Collector Heavens winning a clinic from a sales promotion from a sports collectible retailer. Alumni News II: After a rough 1-5 start, exMemorial Crusader Chris (leg of) Lambert has picked it up for Maxwell Q. Klinger’s favorite baseball club. He’s won two of his last three and over his last four games he’s given up just three earned runs over 26.2 innings when he The Numbers: 1:07:44 – best time by a local in Saturday’s grueling race to the top of Mt. Washington, turned in by Juan Guillermo of Milford, which was good for 12th place overall. 1:29:22 – time it took Amherst’s Cathy Merra to reach the finish line with the top local female time at the 49th annual Mt. Washington Road Race, which made her the 12th-place finisher as well. 16 – Eastern League-leading number of homers by the allowed 17 hits and struck out 20 for his Toledo Mudhens. Walk-off Hit of the Week: While the walkoff part is not accurate since the guy who hit it was running full speed to first, it did have the same impact as if Nick Gorneault’s bottomof-the-ninth-inning single was a homer since it scored Brian Dopirak to make the F-Cats a 2-1 winner over the Akron Aeros on Thursday night. And since it was his third hit in four at bats, he gets offensive player of that game too. Out-of-Town Scores: With nine interceptions between the teams you probably can’t call it a neat and tidy game, but a win is a win is a win for the Manchester Wolves, especially given the recent struggles that have seen them drop to 4-7 on the year. But they got win number five on Friday night with a 59-53 verdict over the Mahoning Valley Thunder behind new QB Mike Pott’s big day, which included five TD passes while he was going 32 for 47 for 274 yards. Sports 101 Answer: The four managers with more wins than Torre are Connie Mack (3,791), John McGraw (2,763), Tony LaRussa (2,469) and Bobby Cox (2,357). And if you are wondering Torre moved past Sparky Anderson to get to number five, and Mack with 3,948 is also waaaay in front for most losses by a manager all-time. Fisher Cats’ Brain Dopirak, which came during a 3-5 day when the F-Cats beat Erie 82. He also leads the EL with 21 doubles. 73 – score carded by Manchester’s Pat Gocklin in earning medalist honors at NH State Amateur qualifier held at Concord Country Club last week. 90 – points lost off the combined batting averages of Dustin Pedroia and Kevin Youkilis since Jacoby Ellsbury and his game-breaking speed were shifted out of the lead-off spot in the Red Sox batting order. Pedroia has gone from .326 to .286 while for Youk it’s .366 down to .316. 134 – winning score posted by Walt Cutshall and Dave Larrivee of Manchester CC at the NHGA Four Ball Championships at Owls Nest. 302,500 – dollars raised over the eight years the Manchester Monarchs have held their own at the Ace Baily Golf Classic after the latest haul of $30,000 raised last week at the tourney held at Manchester CC. 0 S.A.T Preparation Program • Now Registering • Program Begins July 6th Fall Programs Available for Oct. Nov. Tests Call for Study Skills Information Flexible SAT Scheduling Limited Enrollment Call (603)641-7017 for information or Visit www.anselm.edu/administration/arc Page 11 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Espo for Park and Ratelle: Shocking 1974 trade sending wildly popular Bruins all-timer Phil Esposito to New York with hasn’t-been-heard-from-since defenseman Carol Vadnais for hated Ranger Brad Park and smooth enter Jean Ratelle. Sent a guy who’s scored an unheard of 76, 66, 55, 68 and 61 goals the previous six seasons for a guy who’d just written a book ripping everyone in his new locker room. Bruins fans were outraged, but Espo never scored more than 42 again as his game declined from the moment of the trade, while the Bruins stayed in thick of it long after he left Beantown. Ed O’Bannon: All lefty early ’90s California prep star forecast to be headed for an all-world NBA career. Settled at UCLA where knee injuries nearly derailed his career. Recovered in time to lead them to their first NCAA title since John Wooden and the dynasty left the building. Did it with a flourish too, scoring 31 and grabbing 17 rebounds in the final. Lasted just three NBA years where his knee woes and tweener stature left him to small to play the bigs and too slow to play the guards. The D-Word: Refers to the word “dynasty,” which some hand out to successful teams like youth leagues give out trophies. Goes for a long period of sustained success where a team wins it all a number of times and is in the heat of the race when they don’t. In my lifetime that includes the Celtics, Yankees, Canadians, 49ers, the combined Tom Landry AND Jimmy Johnson-Barry Switzer Cowboys, UCLA basketball under Wooden, as well as the 15 titles and 31 trips to the finals Minneapolis-L.A. Lakers and not the four in one decade but none before and two 30 years later Steelers or the admirable three-in-four-years Patriots. Grant Hill: Supposed to be the next Michael Jordan after a celebrated career at Duke. Played in four Final Fours under Coach K, winning twice and carrying the 1994 Dukies to a final-game loss to Arkansas almost by himself. Most famous moment was throwing the in-bounds pass that led to Christian Laettner making THEE basket vs. Kentucky in the greatest college game ever. Perennial NBA AllStar in his early years until felled by foot woes that forced him to miss more than 60 games in four of six seasons with Orlando, though he did play in all 82 this past year. 11 Upcoming events 12 June 27 | Ferret Awareness Day at the 28 | Sand Sculpture viewing ends today. See www. Londonderry Lions Club Hall, 256 Mammoth Road in Londonderry, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Admission costs $3 for adults; children 12 and under get in free. River Jamboree at Waterfront Park at Everett Arena in Concord from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. with a rubber duck race at 1:15 p.m. See onconcord.com/recreation. hamptonbeach.org. Castle Quest medieval experience today from 1 to 4 p.m. at the Castle, 141 Union St. in Manchester. Cost is $15 per person. See www.castlecreate.com. Hollis Strawberry Fest from 2 to 4 p.m. with strawberry shortcakes and sundaes along with music and activities at Monument Square in Hollis. 29 30 A kids’ guide to summer Stuff to do, places to go and things to see for kids and the whole family 12 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Summer vacation takes on a whole different meaning when it’s your kids, not you, singing “school’s out for summer.” Whether it’s a few days between camps, a week of family staycation or a whole summer of free time, you’re going to have days when you need to find something to do to entertain the kids. Luckily, you have plenty of options, from classes and workshops that last only a few hours to events where you can drop in at will. For those looking to get a few more weeks of allday camp, slots are still available at some area camps. Whether it’s a weekend outing or something to add excitement or learning (that’s OK, they don’t have to know) to a weekday, we’ve got your guide to a kid-friendly summer. And who knows — there might even be some fun for the older members of the family as well. Art • Currier Art Center (180 Pearl St., Manchester, 669-6144, ext. 122, www.currier.org) Classes & workshops: The summer art school offers daylong camps as well as half-day classes that run for a week and cost between $175 and $230 for age 5 through adult. Class sessions start Monday, July 6. Registration is required for all classes. • Currier Museum of Art (150 Ash St., Manchester, 669-6144, www.currier.org) Regular events: The museum offers Family Studio every Wednesday, 2:30 to 4:30 p.m.; Family Saturdays the second Saturday of each month from 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., and Storytime in the Gallery the fourth Monday of every month at 11:30 a.m. Big events: “From Barks to Bowls: A Day of Turned Wood” on Saturday, July 11, from 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. will correspond with the new exhibit “Turning Wood Into Art: The Jane and Arthur Mason Collection,” which opens July 3. The Saturday event (which features free admission all day) will include demonstrations and more. Older, literature-inclined kids might also be interested in the New Hampshire Poetry Slam team, which will appear for a night of slam poetry on Thursday, Sept. Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 12 3, from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. • E.W. Poore (532 Front St. in Manchester, 622, 3802, www.ewpoore.com) Classes & workshops: The air-conditioned studio is available for use for $10 per visit. Six-week classes for 7 to 12 year olds in drawing and painting start in early July. The cost is $90. • Kimball-Jenkins School of Art (266 N. Main St. in Concord, 229-0655, kimballjenkins.com) Classes & workshops: Kimball-Jenkins offers summer courses for teens and tweens on topics like manga starting July 6. Teens can also take summer classes or workshops with adults to build skills in photography, pottery, drawing or painting). Fees range from $50 to about $275. Libraries • Amherst Town Library (14 Main St., Amherst, 673-2288, www.amherst.lib.nh.us) Regular events: The library offers regular story times (for which registration is required) including Paws to Read with Anna and Leo every other Monday, 1011:15 a.m. in 15-minute increments, and Craft Storytime for ages 7 and up and ages 3 to 6 alternate every other Wednesday, 2:30-3:30 p.m. starting July 1. Classes & workshops: The library offers a variety of hour- to two-hour-long classes (many of which are in writing) including for kids in middle school and older. Go online to register. Big events: The library will welcome guests such as Fungo or Slider from the Fisher Cats for story time on Friday, July 10, from 10:30 to 11 a.m. and Norman the Amazing Magician on Monday, July 20, at 2 p.m. Bravery Soup will be performed by the Riverbend Youth Company on Wednesday, Aug. 5, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Middle schoolers and older can participate in the Ice Cream Taste Off on Tuesday, Aug. 11, 3:30-4:30 p.m. The End of Summer Reading Cookout will be on the town green on Thursday, Aug. 13. Registration is required for all events. • Bedford Library (3 Meetinghouse Road, Bedford, 472-3023, www.bedford.lib.nh.us) Regular events: The library offers monthly Friday night movies (July 10 and Aug. 8 at 7 Camps p.m.), Scrabble on July 8 at 7 p.m., and Many of the groups in this list offer day-long camps. See updated information for summer camps by clicking on this story at www.hipppopress.com. The list was updated in early June and many camp sessions are still available. 13 July 1 | Dinosaur Day 2 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Children’s Museum of New Hampshire in Dover. See www.childrens-museum.org. Red, White & Blue Parade of decorated bikes, trikes, wagons and more at 2 p.m. at the Nashua Public Library. See www.tinyurl. com/nplkid. 3 | Fireworks in Manchester at Arms Park at dusk (about 9:30 p.m.). Entertainment begins at 7:30 p.m. Admission is free. Summer free for all! • Looking for some last-minute, money-free weekend fun? The Currier Museum of Art offers free admission to all on Saturdays from 10 a.m. to noon. Kids under 18 always get in free, and on Saturday mornings so can their drivers. • Open Doors Manchester’s arts and cultural tours in downtown Manchester means free transportation (a free trolley between events), free snacks (many of the galleries are holding receptions for artists) and stops at kid-friendly places like SEE Science Center and the Millyard Museum. The remaining summer trolley event is Thursday, June 25. See a map at majestictheatre.net. • Grease is on the bill for the Prescott Park Arts Festival in Prescott Park on Marcy Street in Portsmouth, Thursdays and Sundays at 7 p.m. and Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m., June 26 through Aug. 23. The event is free but donations are recommended; see www. at noon at Merrimack High School; fireworks are held at dusk. See www.clubrunner.ca/ Merrimack. Nashua’s Fourth of July includes a field day from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and fireworks at 9 p.m. at Holman Stadium. Contact Parks & Recreation at 589-3370. An old-fashioned Fourth of July will be held at Strawbery Banke, 14 Hancock St. in Portsmouth, from noon to 5 p.m. with a parade, traditional games, historical events and more. Tickets cost $15; children 17 and under get in free. See strawberybanke.org. Fireworks in Concord at Memorial Field at dusk (9:15 p.m.); gate opens at 6 p.m. Admission cost is $2. See onconcord.com/recreation. Steve Blunt at the Lawrence Barn. There also is an ice cream social on Tuesday, Aug. 11, at 2 p.m. at the Lawrence Barn. • Hooksett Public Library (1701 Hooksett Road, Hooksett, 485-6092, www.hooksett.lib. nh.us) Regular events: The library offers story times at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. on Wednesdays starting July 8. Classes & workshops: Upcoming classes include “Build a Book” on Wednesday, July 8, at 12:30 p.m. for grades 6 to 8. Registration required. Big events: The library will kick off its summer reading programs with a party for teens on Tuesday, June 30, at 6:30 p.m. and a party for younger kids on Monday, July 6, at 6 p.m. • Manchester City Library (405 Pine St., 624-6550; 76 N. Main St., 624-6560; www.manchester.lib.nh.us) Regular events: The library has story times on Tuesdays and Friday at 9:30 a.m. and free kids’ movies on Friday at the West Branch Library at 2 p.m. The library also offers crafts classes on Thursdays at 9:30 a.m. and live entertainment in Victory Park (across the street from the main library) on Thursdays at 6 p.m. from July 9 through Aug. 13. Big events: “Digging for Dinosaurs” on Monday, Aug. 17, at 11 a.m. (for kids 1 to 5 years old); for teens, a Dance Dance Revolution tournament on Friday, July 10, and Aug. 14, at 4 p.m., and a Guitar Hero tournament on Thursday, July 23, at 4 p.m. • Nashua Public Library (2 Court St. in Nashua, 589-4631, nashualibrary.org) Regular events: The library hosts Plaza Pics in Greeley Park the last four Fridays in July. Story times are held Monday through Wednesday at 10 a.m. and Thursday at 9 a.m. and 7 p.m. There is a regular teen role-playing meet-up on Mondays at 3:30 p.m., and look for live music on Thursday evenings and at noon on Wednesday. Classes & workshops: Teen workshops include a weeklong Manga workshop the week of July 20 as well as other one-day classes for teens. Go online for a schedule or to register. • Rodgers Memorial Library (194 Derry Road in Hudson, 886-6030, rodgerslibrary.org) Regular events: Lullaby Lapsit for children up to 23 months Mondays at 10:30 a.m.; 2-year-olds Mondays at 9:30 a.m.; 3- to 6-year-olds Tuesdays at 10 a.m., and PJ Story Time for 3- to 6-year-olds prescottpark.org. • The River Jamboree at Everett Arena in Concord on Saturday, June 27, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., offers kids’ music, games, face-painting and canoe and kayak rentals for free. If you want to spend a few bucks, buy a duck ($3 each or two for $5) for the 1:15 p.m. duck race. Call 225-8690 or go to onconcord. com/recreation. • Stark Park in Manchester’s North end will host silent comedy films with live music by Jeff Rapsis on some Thursdays at 8 p.m. in July and August. The schedule is College (1927) on July 2 with Buster Keaton plus comedy shorts; July 16, at 8 p.m., A Sailor-Made Man (1921) with Harold Lloyd plus comedy shorts on July 16, and Tramp, Tramp, Tramp with Harry Langdon plus comedy shorts on Aug. 27. • The theater company S.P.A.T.S. will offer free shows at the end of its the- Tuesdays at 6 p.m. Book Bunch for 7- to 12year-olds on Mondays at 1 p.m. Craft club every Thursday at 10 a.m. for 7- to 12-year-olds. Registration is required for all events. Big events: Summer Reading Program events are all on Wednesdays at 10 a.m. starting July 8, which is Big Truck Day at Alvirne High School. July 15 is Wildlife Encounters with real wild animals, July 22 is a magic performance, July 29 is Baseball Bonanza and Aug. 5 is A Beach Story. • Wadleigh Memorial Library (49 Nashua St. in Milford, 673-2408, www.wadleigh.lib.nh.us) Regular events: The library offers regular book clubs and a writing group for teens and a summer reading program for younger kids. Story times and other events for younger kids are held Monday and Wednesday mornings with some family story events on Monday evenings. Classes & workshops: Kids’ crafts classes are offered regularly throughout July and August. Big events: Upcoming events include a Scholastic Book Fair July 11 through July 18, a Harry Potter party on July 7, and the reading program finale on Thursday, Aug. 27. Museums & historical sites • Canterbury Shaker Village (288 Shaker Road, Canterbury, 783-9511, shakers.org) Regular events: Visitors can tour the village’s trails and buildings, view exhibits and craft demonstrations, shop at the museum store and dine at the Shaker Table restaurant. Guided tours are offered. The Village is open daily during the summer from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Big events: Upcoming events include Let Freedom Ring (a Shaker Spirit Day) on Sunday, July 5; Raspberry-Lavender Day on Saturday, July 11, and an art show on Sunday, Aug. 2. • The Children’s Museum of New Hampshire (6 Washington St. in Dover, 742-2002, childrens-museum.org) Regular events: The nearby Cocheco Arts Festival features children’s musicians in Henry Law Park at 10:30 a.m. on Tuesdays July 7 through Aug. 11. Big events: Dinosaur Day is Wednesday, July 1, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.; Let it Fly Day is Thursday, July 16, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.; a teddy bear clinic and tea party is Wednesday, Aug. 12, from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. ater camp programs. How To Eat Like A Child plays Friday, July 3, at 7 p.m.; A Midsummer Night’s Dream plays Friday, July 17, at 7 p.m., and Pinocchio is Friday, July 31, at 7 p.m. — all at Adams Memorial Opera House, 29 West Broadway in Derry. Call 715-1855 or email [email protected] for more information. • The Andres Institute of Art, 98 Route 13 in Brookline, encourages kids to touch and even climb on some sculptures along its trails. The Institute offers guided sculpture trail hikes at 10 a.m. on third Saturdays (July 18, Aug.15) and at 11 a.m. first Sundays (July 5, Aug. 6), from the lower parking lot. Call 6738441 in the days before your visit to verify that a guide will be present. See www.andresinstitute.org. • Plaza Pics at Greeley Park in Nashua means free Friday night movies in July. A preshow of live entertainment ture the animals of the Caribbean in Victory Park in Manchester at 6 p.m. Hillsborough Balloon Festival and Fair starts today and runs through July 12 at Grimes Field in Hillsborough. Admission is free; some events have a fee and parking costs $5. See www.balloonfestival.org. • Kaleidoscope Children’s Museum (250 Commercial St., Suite 101, Manchester, kaleidoscopechildrensmuseum.net) Regular events: The Museum features ongoing exhibits and play areas including a puppet theater, a reading corner and a climbable pirate ship. Classes & workshops: Art classes, workshops, yoga and more are offered on a rotating basis in the museum’s party room. Crazy Crafts with Carla will run Wednesdays at 9:30 a.m., 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. for $12 per session (includes museum admission) beginning July 16; and Amy Conley’s summer sing & dance class for ages 0 to 8 will be Thursdays from July 15 through Aug. 27 at 1 p.m., $10 per family for drop-in. Big events: A grand opening event to celebrate the Kaleidoscope’s move to Manchester will be held Saturday, July 25, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., with music from Amy Conley and other fun. General admission fees apply. On Sunday, Aug. 16, at 3 p.m. the Flannery Brothers will perform a concert of silly songs and singalongs; tickets cost $8 (free for children younger than one year old). • Mariposa Museum (26 Main St., Peterboro, 924-4555, mariposamuseum.org) Regular events: The museum focuses on folk art, cultural studies and story-telling. It is open from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. in summer. And offers regular Sunday events and more. Part of the museum’s collection includes costumes from different eras and cultures that kids can try on. The museum regularly offers crafts, musical and other events specifically geared toward kids. Big events: On Tuesday, July 28, at 7 p.m. it’s a summer sing-along with Animaterra. • Millyard Museum/Manchester Historic Association (200 Bedford St., 622-7531, manchesterhistoric.org) Regular events: Exhibits on view include “Abraham Lincoln: Manchester Remembers” and “Woven in Time: 11,000 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black summer reading-related events for kids and teens. Big events: Special programs planned include a performance of Prince Caspian by the Hampstead Stage Company on Tuesday, July 14, at 10:30 a.m., at Bedford Town Hall; The Toe Jam Puppet Band on Wednesday, July 22, at 10:30 a.m. at Bedford Town Hall and the Fun Faire and Picnic on Wednesday, Aug. 5, 10:30-11:30 a.m. at the library. Registration is required for all events. • Concord Public Library (45 Green St., Concord, 225-8670, onconcord.com) Regular events: The library offers summer reading programs and story times. Call for times. • Derry Public Library (64 East Broadway in Derry, 432-6140, derry.lib.nh.us) Regular events: The library offers a Lunch Bunch Story Time every Friday at 11:30 a.m. in the park. Bring a lunch and blanket. The library has Movie Mondays every Monday at 1 p.m. Classes & workshops: Classes at the library include arts and crafts classes for elementaryschool-aged children. Registration is required for some programs. Big events: There will be an hour-long drum, movement and singing show at the East Derry Library on Tuesday, July 24, at 1 p.m.; a mime on Thursday, July 16, at 2 p.m.; Norman Ng, a magician, on Tuesday, July 21, at 2 p.m.; Raptor Rapture on Wednesday, July 29, at 6:30 p.m. and a beach party for grades 1-6 on Thursday, July 30, at 1 p.m. Registration is required for some programs. • Hollis Social Library (2 Monument Square in Hollis, 465-7721, hollis.nh.us) Regular events: Storytimes offered by the library include Tiny Tots, 0- to 3-year-olds every Friday at 10:30 a.m.; preschool, 3- to 5-year-olds on Monday afternoons at 1:30 p.m. and Thursday mornings at 11 a.m. and Pajama Story Time the third Wednesday of the month at 7 p.m. Summer reading programs are Mondays at 11 a.m. for twoyear-olds to second graders and Thursdays at 11 a.m. for third through sixth graders. Big events: Special reading program events are on Tuesdays at 11 a.m. July 7 is Julie & Brownie Pirate Show at the Lawrence Barn. July 14 is Mike Bent, magician, at the Lawrence Barn. July 21 is How to Live on a Ranch. July 28 is Jerry Schneider with What’s the Buzz at Your Library. On Aug. 4 at 11:30 a.m. it’s 4 | Merrimack’s Fourth of July celebration starts with a 5K race at 8 a.m. A midway opens 5 6 7 8 9 | A Pirate Journey will fea- More kid fun Have a kid-friendly event to help rev up summer? Let us know at [email protected]. And if you’re looking for stuff to do with the kids this or any weekend, check out Kiddie Pool, a regular spotlight on events for youngsters and their whole families in our Inside/Outside section. starts at 7:30 p.m. and is followed by a movie. The line-up is Journey to the Center of the Earth on July 10, Tale of Despereaux on July 17, Kung Fu Panda on July 24 and Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa on July 31. • The Fairy Tale Festival in Greeley Park in Nashua will feature music, bouncey houses, face-painting, art, a parade and more on Saturday, July 11, from noon to 3 p.m. See www.gonashua.com or call 589-3370. • Downtown Film Fest at Veterans’ Park on Elm Street in Manchester features free outdoor kid-friendly films on Thursdays with pre-show live entertainment starting at 6:30 p.m. See Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa on July 16, Hotel for Dogs July 23, Journey to the Center of the Earth July 30 and Kung Fu Panda Aug. 6. See downtownfilmfest.com. • High School Musical is on the bill for the Theatre in the Park in Veterans Park in Manchester on Fridays and Saturdays, July 17, July 18, July 24 and July 25. Pre-show entertainment begins at 6:30 p.m.; show begins at 8 p.m. Admission is free but bring cash for food. See www.newthealianplayers.org. • The Tempest, Nashua Theatre Guild’s production of William Shakespeare’s play, will help bring the Bard to life for the kids heading into high school Shakespeare studies on Saturdays and Sundays, July 18, July 19, July 25 and July 26, at 2 p.m. on each day. The play will run in Greeley Park in Nashua. • A Kidz End-of-Summer Bash on Tuesday, Aug. 4, at 5 p.m. will celebrate the final week of Derry’s summer concert series in MacGregor Park (the series runs Tuesdays and Thursdays in July and the first week of August; see www.derry. nh.us). The event will feature a free movie. Bring cash for food and moon jump tickets. Page 13 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo 13 13 14 10 11 | Powwow at Mt. Kearsarge Indian 12 13 14 15 16 | Concord’s Mar- 17 | Go on a night 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 | Canterbury Fair will feature canoe 26 Museum, 18 Highlawn Road in Warner, from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. and July 12 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. See indianmuseum.org. Fairy Tale Festival in Greeley Park in Nashua from noon to 3 p.m. with a children’s parade at 2:45 p.m. See www.gonashua.com. ket Days and Summer Music Festival runs today through July 18, 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. in downtown Concord. See www. mainstreetconcord. com. hike of Hackett Hill in Manchester presented by Amoskeag Fishways from 8 to 9 p.m. The cost is $5 per family. See www. amoskeagfishways. org. polo, square dancing, a chicken barbecue and kids’ events. Admission is free (parking costs $3). Visit www.canterburyfair.com. Prescott Park Kids Festival will run Saturdays, July 25 and Aug. 22, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Prescott Park on Marcy Street in Portsmouth, www.Prescottpark.org, 4362848. Suggested donation $5. Years at Amoskeag Falls,” at the Millyard Museum Wednesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Big events: The MHA presents a free concert by the Yankee Brass Band on Saturday, July 25, at 6 p.m. in Stark Park. • Mt. Kearsage Indian Museum (18 Highlawn Road, Warner, indianmuseum.org, 456-2600) Regular events: The museum, which is open in summer 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily (noon to 5 p.m. on Sundays), is dedicated to local Native American culture, from thousands of years ago through the present. The museum features indoor and outdoor “quests” — the “Medicine Woods Quest” along a nature trail and the “Circle Quest” with the artifacts in the galleries. The museum offers a day camp for children age 6 to 13 from late June through early August. Big events: The 10th Anniversary Powwow will be held on Saturday, July 11, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m, and Sunday., July 12, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.. Family-oriented outdoor event will focus on American Indian culture and include drumming, dancing, performances, kid’s crafts, and demonstrations by Native American Indians from New England and beyond. • New Hampshire Aviation Museum (South Perimeter Road in Manchester, 669-4820, nhahs.org) Regular events: The museum is generally open to visitors on Fridays and Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sundays from 1 to 4 p.m. Admission is free but donations are accepted at the door. • Museum of New Hampshire History (6 Eagle 14 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Don’t Miss the NYC Christmas Tree Lighting Dec. 4-6, 2009 Deluxe Motorcoach from Nashua. 2 Nights in Manhattan. Brunch at Tavern of the Green. Orchestra Seats for Rockettes Christmas Spectacular. Great Girls Get Away weekend too! $640 per person, double occupancy. Ask about Montreal Weekend Oct. 2-4, 2009(Few Seats Left) $199 per person. Jersey Boys in Boston Sept. 12, 2009 1st Mezzanine, 1st & 2nd Rows Motorcoach $144 per person. Music • Concord Community Music School (23 Wall St. in Concord, 228-1196, ccmusicschool.org) Classes & workshops: The school offers camps, classes and lessons for singers and musicians on a variety of instruments. Day-long fun Looking to get your kids a full day of sports, rocket-building, theater experience or dance? Luckily, many summer camps still have open one- or two-week sessions, even during the most desirable parts of summer. Go online to this story at www.hippopress.com for a list of science, nature, art, dance, theater and traditional summer camps with updated information as of early June. Uncanoonuc Mt. Perennials Over 900 Varieties of hardy perennials flowering vines ly k e e W s climbing roses ie New Variet choice shrubs antique roses Wed-Sun 9:00-5:00 berry bushes unusual annuals 497-3975 452 Mountain Rd., Goffstown www.uncanoonucmt.com Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 14 Square in Concord, 228-6688, nhhistory.org) Regular events: The museum is open Monday through Saturday, 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday, noon to 5 p.m., in the summer. See exhibits highlighting the natural, political and cultural history of New Hampshire. Big events: On Thursday, July 2, at 7:30 p.m., the Museum presents a free concert by the Seacoast Wind Ensemble performing historical patriotic music from the Revolutionary War through the Civil War. The concert will be held outdoors in Eagle Square, unless it rains, in which case the show moves to the adjacent atrium — bring a chair. 15 3 4 5 Big events: The “Summer Sings” program is open to the public on Tuesdays, June 30 through July 28, at 7 p.m. Different genres of music will be the focus on each night — family sing starts the series on June 30. The cost is $25 for a family of three or more per evening. • Manchester Community Music School (2291 Elm St., Manchester, 644-4548, mcmusicschool.org) Classes & workshops: The school offers camps, classes and lessons for singers and musicians on a variety of instruments. Big events: MCMS presents a summer music series for kids, free and open to the public, performed in the third-floor auditorium of UNHManchester. That series includes The Fisherman and His Wife, a fable presented by UNH’s Little Red Wagon, on Friday, July 17, at 1 p.m.; jazz combo with percussion Go to the movies! 7 8 | Gilford Rock ’N 9 Ribfest at Gunstock Mountain Resort in Gilford. Admission costs $5; kids 5 and under get in free. See www. gilford-rotary.org/ribfest. & Tea Party at the Children’s Museum of New Hampshire in Dover from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. See www.childrens-museum.org. presented by MCMS on Thursday, July 23, at 1 p.m., and Peter and the Wolf on Thursday, Aug. 20, at 1 p.m. • Nashua Community Music School (5 Pine St. Ext., Nashua, 881-7030, nashuacms.org) Classes & workshops: Private lessons as well as a series of one-week classes in the summer for various ages and various instruments; typical cost of a one-week program is $300. Nature • Amoskeag Fishways (6 Fletcher St. in Manchester, 626-FISH, amoskeagfishways.org) Regular events: Family Friday Nights this summer are June 26, July 17 and Aug. 14; registration ($5 per family) is required in advance for these hour-long all-ages events focusing on the Merrimack River and its watershed, one of which is a hike. Fishways Fundays, for ages 4-5 with an few solid, entertaining-the-whole-family movies and one truly excellent one. Want excellent? Go for Pixar and Up, the PG tale of a grumpy old man, an earnest young boy and their adventure to South America. Eddie Murphy’s Imagine That (PG) is a sweet and charming comedy about a father bonding with his young daughter over her possibly magical security blanket. Night at Your Leader in Quality Late Model Recycled Auto Parts 10 11 12 | Teddy Bear Clinic 13 14 15 | Festival of Fireworks in 16 17 | The Children’s Jaffrey. Gates open at 4 p.m.; fireworks begin after dusk. Tickets cost $40 per carload, $8 for walk-ins; children 10 and under get in free. See www. jaffreychamber.com. adult, include Aug. 5 and Aug. 19, from 10 to 11 a.m. or 1 to 2 p.m., studying insects and amphibians in the wild around the Fishways. Registration in advance ($5 per family) is required. Classes & workshops: Summer vacation series in three groups: Explorers (ages 5-6), Adventurers (ages 7-9) and Voyagers (ages 10-13). Meet once a week in July; Explorers and Adventurers meet for two hours each time, cost is $8 per session or $30 for all four, and adults need not attend. Voyagers meet all day to explore the watershed, cost is $28 per session or $105 for all four. • Beaver Brook Association (117 Ridge Road in Hollis, 465-7787, beaverbrook.org) Regular events: The association’s land includes fields, forests and wetlands in Hollis, Brookline and Milford with 35 miles of trails for hiking, biking and horseback riding. See Web site for a map. Classes & workshops: Classes in weeklong the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian (PG), the Ben Stiller sequel to the original museum-exhibits-come-to-life movie, is a little less charming and more predictable but it has those monkeys the kids like so much. Of the big action movies, X-Men Origins: Wolverine, Star Trek and Terminator Salvation are all solidly PG-13 and best to be saved for older movie goers. Other kid-friendly Festival in Hampton Beach runs this week through Friday, Aug. 21. See www.hamptonbeach.org/children-only.cfm. sessions for various age groups from preschool to teen, exploring and studying local wildlife. Big events: Free summer celebration at Maple Hill Farm on Saturday, June 27, starting at 5 p.m., with a dessert buffet and live music from Cahill from 6 to 8 p.m. • Charmingfare Farm (Route 27 in Candia, 483-5623, visitthefarm.com) Regular events: Guided horseback trail rides available by reservation, suitable for all levels of riding ability, even first-time riders, but children must be at least 10 years old and accompanied by one parent; cost is $60. General admission to the farm often includes opportunities for pony rides, horse-drawn rides or tractor train rides in addition to visiting the petting zoo and wildlife exhibits. Classes & workshops: For ages 5-6, choose a three-day week of camp that runs 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., cost is $139 per week. For ages 7 to 16, choose a full movies on the schedule: • Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (PG) Ray Romano and company return for this third movie about a mammoth, a saber-tooth tiger and the wacky sloth Sid. Opens Wednesday, July 1. • Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (PG) Harry Potter and The Second to Last Book. Wednesday, July 15. • G-Force (PG) A squad of elite, gov- ernment-trained guinea pigs protects the country from evildoers in this Disney movie mixing animation and live action. Opens Friday, July 24. • Aliens in the Attic (not yet rated) Live-action kids (including High School Musical’s Ashley Tisdale) discover computer-animated aliens living in their Maine vacation home. On the schedule for Friday, July 31. 15 DIRECTED BY FRANCO DRAGONE Thursday, Friday & Saturday July 16, 17 & 18 PRESENTED BY 9am - 10pm each day proudly presented by Main Street Concord www.mainstreetconcord.com • 603.226.2150 1-800-258-3215 54 Basin Street, Concord, NH 03301 www.centralautorecyclers.com WE PAY FOR YOUR JUNK CARS Join in the fun! • Live Music • Free Family Fun • Downtown Trivia • Concord Arts Market • Great Shopping Both Indoors & Out • Fabulous Food of all Kinds • Lunch Time Performances by Aerialists from the ceil rouge moving co. • Recipe Bake-Off Coordinated by the Concord Co-op • Live Farm Animals • Baby Pit Stop • Games & Rides • Pet Pit Stop • Yoga Demonstrations, Street Performers, Clowns & More! “… a consistent TRIUMPH… EXTRAORDINARY” – The New York Times Sponsored by: JULY 8—12 GET YOUR TICKETS TODAY! VERIZON WIRELESS ARENA CIRQUEDUSOLEIL.COM VENUE 039885 OFFICIAL SPONSORS Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Kids’ movies aren’t always the most fun part of a grown-up’s summer, but they do offer a still-not-terribly expensive outing and two hours of air conditioning where the kids are being entertained by someone else. And, thanks to stadium seating, most movie theater chairs are now comfortable enough to nap in if watching the movie is too painful. So far, the summer has yielded a 6 Photo: Al Seib Costume: Dominique Lemieux © 2001 Cirque du Soleil 2 1 August 27 28 29 30 31 Page 15 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo 16 (catch & release) weekends from noon to 4 p.m. Call ahead to arrange fishing instruction. GPS rentals are also regularly available. Classes & workshops: Monthly Creature Feature for all ages Saturday, Aug. 1, from 2 to 3 p.m., free to Amherst residents, $1 for others. A large variety of summer camps available for all ages all summer, for which pre-registration is required. Build-a-Boat class, in which each student builds his or her own canoe for personal use, will be held Aug. 17-21, with a limit of 10 participants. Science 16 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black week of camp that runs from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., cost is $279 per week. • Educational Farm at Joppa Hill (174 Joppa Hill Road in Bedford, 472-4724, theeducationalfarm.org) Regular events: The farm offers riding lessons and farm tours, which are geared toward kids. Classes & workshops: Farm camp for ages 4-5 has half-day (choose morning or afternoon) sessions. Agricultural camp for ages 6-13 includes nature walks, garden work and a weekly theme, for a full day. Choose your week; themes vary. • Massabesic Audubon Center (26 Audubon Way in Auburn, 668-2045, nhaudubon.org) Regular events: The Center offers regular nature presentations for families, often on Friday evenings and Saturdays and Sundays (this weekend it’s “Bats Above” on Friday, June 26, at 7 p.m. and “Dragonfly Workshop” on Saturday, June 27, at 2 p.m.). Registration is usually required. On Sundays, the center teaches Fun for the whole family The search for kid fun doesn’t have to end with parental suffering. There are plenty of summer events that offer something for everyone. Here are a few to keep in mind: • Farmers’ markets: In addition to the foods (from strawberries to apples but also baked goods like the doughnuts and cupcakes at the Concord Farmers’ Market), many area markets offer a bit of fun for kids. Some farmers bring the chicken whose eggs they’re selling with them (a regular visitor in past years at the Manchester Farmers’ Market; www.manchesterfarmersmarket.com). In Bedford (which holds its markets on Tuesdays, 3 to 6 p.m.), musicians and other entertainment can be found on many market days (see www.bedfordfarmersmarket.org). Check out your local market; see www. nhfma.org for list of area markets. • Summer Solstice celebration: Beaver Brook Association will hold a Summer Solstice Celebration on Saturday, June 27, from 5 p.m. to dusk at Maple Hill Gardens, 117 Ridge Road in Hollis. The event is free. You can enjoy an evening of music with the band Cahill (www.cahillmusic.com/music.html) on the basics of backyard birding (the cost is $5). Classes & workshops: Half-day camps for ages 4 and 5, full-day camp for older campers. Mostly nine-day sessions. Ages 12 to 14 may sign up for a Wilderness Week either July 13-17 (backpacking in the White Mountains) or July 27-31 (canoeing in the Lakes Region). • McLane Audubon Center (3 Silk Farm Road, Concord, 224-9909, nhaudubon.org) Regular events: McLane offers trails for hiking and searching out wildlife. Classes & workshops: Half-day camps for ages 4 and 5, full-day camp for older campers. Mostly nine-day sessions. Ages 12 to 14 may sign up for a Wilderness Week either July 13-17 (backpacking in the White Mountains) or July 27-31 (canoeing in the Lakes Region). • Peabody Mill Environmental Center (66 Brook Road in Amherst, 673-6248, pmec.org) Regular events: Fishing rentals (rod, reel, tackle and bait) available for $5; fish in PMEC pond the lawn (bring a blanket) and kids and adults alike can partake of the dessert buffet. See www.beaverbrook.org. • Hollis Strawberry Fest: The annual Hollis Strawberry Festival and Band Concert will unify young and old on Sunday, June 28, 2 to 4 p.m., with strawberry shortcakes and sundaes. Grown-ups will also enjoy the arts, crafts and music from the Hollis Town Band while kids check out some of the activities designed specifically for them. The event will be held at Monument Square in Hollis (or the Hollis Brookline High School in case of rain). • The Cirque: Cirque du Soleil: Alegria will perform Wednesday, July 8, through Sunday, July 12, at the Verizon Wireless Arena, 555 Elm St., Manchester, verizonwirelessarena.com, 644-5000. Tickets cost $33 to $96. • Hillsborough Balloon Festival and Fair: This event will run from Thursday, July 9, through Sunday, July 12, at Grimes Field in Hillsborough and offer a variety of kids’ events including a carnival, a parade and more. Fair-goers of all ages can enjoy the live music, four-wheeler mud bogs, fireworks, minitractor pulls and hot air balloon rides. Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 16 • McAuliffe-Shepard Discovery Center (2 Institute Drive in Concord, 271-STAR, starhop. com) Regular events: Super Stellar Fridays every Friday at 7 p.m., different topic each week, recommended for ages 8 and up (under 13 must be with an adult); $9 adult, $6 child, members free. Teen Nights on the second Friday of each month, with pizza and soda. Free SkyWatch on the first Friday of each month with the NH Astronomical Society. Regular planetarium shows include “Black Holes” (for ages 8 and up), “Dawn of the Space Age,” (8 and up) “Digital Universe” (8 and up), “Family of the Sun” (6 and up), “Our Place in Space” (4 to 8), “Tonight’s Sky” (6 and up) and others. Classes & workshops: Little Explorers meets the third Wednesday of each month, 10 to 10:45 a.m., for ages 3-4 with adult; $5 per person. Rocketeers workshop for ages 8 and up costs $25 per person (includes materials), available Saturday, June 27, at 9 a.m. and again Saturday, Aug. 29, at 9 a.m. Scout badge workshops are also offered. Half-day and full-day weeklong summer camps are available for various ages with various themes in July and August; costs range from $150 to $250. • Seacoast Science Center (570 Ocean Blvd. in Rye, 436-8043, seacoastsciencecenter.org) Regular events: The Music-by-the-Sea concert series Thursday evenings in July, under a tent on the north lawn—bring beach blankets and chairs, rain or shine; all concerts begin at 6 p.m., gates open at 5 p.m., no dogs, no alcohol; tickets are required, prices range from $1 to $8. Classes & workshops: Family Science Camp offers hands-on exploration for ages 6 and up, cost is $50 per family (members $40); Saturday, July 11, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. is “The Salt Marsh”— bring a picnic. Big events: Art in Nature, a weeklong exploration of art and science, July 6-12, includes activities for all ages and chances to watch artists at work and Admission is free but parking costs $5 and other items have related fees. See www.balloonfestival.org. • 10th Anniversary Powwow: Learn about the Native American culture of the area at Mt. Kearsarge Indian Museum, 18 Highland Road in Warner, indianmuseum.org, 456-2600, on Saturday, July 11, from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Sunday, July 12, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. as part of the anniversary powwow. There will be crafts for the kids as well as drumming, dancing, performances, demonstrations, a nature walk and food and craft vendors. • Concord’s Market Days and Summer Music Festival: Concord will celebrate summer with this annual event Thursday, July 16, through Saturday, July 18, from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. each day. Kids’ activities and family performers are a big part of the events (with free family fun activities on the Statehouse lawn from 10 a.m. to noon). For the grown-ups, the event will feature shopping, food and more. See www. mainstreetconcord.com. • Lowell Folk Festival: Just for the kids, this downtown Lowell, Mass., event features games and other activities to purchase paintings. Marine Teens will go whale watching in the Gulf of Maine on Monday, July 13, 9 a.m. to noon, for ages 12-15, cost is $10. • SEE Science Center (200 Bedford St. in Manchester, 669-0400, see-sciencecenter.org) Regular events: SEE houses many hands-on science exhibits and demonstrations related to light, electricity, sound, motion, bubbles, balls, gravity, etc. It is also home to the largest permanent LEGO installation at minifigure scale in the world. Classes & workshops: SEE offers its fourthemed one-week Summer Science Camp twice, first July 20-24 and again July 27-31, meeting from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., for kids entering grades 3 to 6 in the fall, at a cost of $200 per camper. Sports & recreation • Concord Recreation Dept. (onconcord. com/recreation) Classes & workshops: Summer programs include swim and tennis lessons, soccer leagues and various sports camps for different age groups in grades 1 through 9. Camps are held in city parks. Guard Start, a junior lifeguarding program from the Red Cross for ages 11-14, is offered Fridays, July 10-31. See complete schedule and full descriptions online. Big events: The Splash Bashes for grades 4-8 are set for four Mondays: July 6 at Rolfe Pool; July 13 at Merrill Pool; July 20 at Heights Pool and Aug. 3 at Kimball Pool. No registration needed. Popcorn and soda will be sold. Events are supervised by lifeguards from City pools, and pool staff will host water games and contests. Music is provided by a professional DJ. Events are from 7 to 8:30 p.m. and cost $3; limit of 100 children per event. • Conway Ice Arena (8 Riverside St., Nashua, 595-2400, conwayarena.com) Regular events: Open skating occasionally available; call or see current schedule online. Classes & workshops: Recreational skating camp for ages 6 and up and Basic Level 3 and up, one week in July; team hockey camp last week in July; various summer hockey camps and clinics focusing on particular skills. • SummerFun in Nashua (www.gonashua. com; many events are in Greeley Park) Regular events: Downtown street entertainment Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays in July, to include play performances, all-ages concerts, family films, and a youth fishing derby. Concerts on Library Plaza most Thursdays in August at 7 p.m. Bach’s Lunch Concerts at noon most Wednesdays at Shattuck Street on Saturday and Sunday from noon to 6 p.m. For adults, it’s a cornucopia of folk, roots, Americana, jazz and other musical genres on six stages from Friday, July 24, through Sunday, July 26 — all for free. Do bring money, though, for the crafts in Lucy Larom Park and for the diverse offering of ethnic eats. See www.lowellfolkfestival.org. • Blueberry festival: Bring them together with blueberries. The Seventh Annual Blueberry Fiddle Festival, organized by the Immaculate Heart of Mary School in Richmond, will be held at the Cheshire Fairgrounds (Route 12 in Swanzey) on Friday, Aug. 7, from 2 to 9 p.m. and Saturday, Aug. 8, from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Admission is free; parking is $5. Blueberry pie and ice cream will be available. Music lovers can enjoy the fiddle competitions and jams and even delight/ embarrass your kids by joining in. See www.blueberryfiddlefestival.com. • Latino Festival: Kids love a parade, and a parade down Elm Street in downtown Manchester kicks off the festival on Saturday, Aug. 15, from 11 a.m. to noon. The festival itself will be held in Veterans Park from noon to 8 p.m. and Continued on page 18 feature foods from all over Latin America (as well as standard festival eats for the kids who might not be lining up with their parents for empanadas). Nosh while watching the dancers and musicians who will perform throughout the day. Admission is free but bring money for the eats. See www.latinosunidosnh.org. • Southeast Asian Water Festival: Or head down to Lowell, Mass., that same day (Aug. 15) to give the kids a taste of Southeast Asian culture. Kids can enjoy the parades, boat tours and more; meanwhile, adults longing for Vietnamese and Cambodian eats will have plenty of snacking opportunities. See www.lowellwaterfestival.org. • Living History: Sneak in a little learning with the Living History event in Hillsborough Friday, Aug. 21, through Sunday, Aug. 23. Kids will like the reenactments from the Revolutionary and Civil Wars. Older history buffs can see a schoolhouse from the 1800s and tour cemeteries, churches and historic homes. Admission costs $10 for adults, $8 for seniors over 65, $5 for children 617; children 5 and under get in free. See livinghistoryeventnh.com. 17 Quick. Convenient. Affordable. Cyan Magenta Yellow Black When sore throats strike... When a knee gets wrenched at soccer... When a toddler wakes up on the weekend with an earache... When an out-of-town visitor comes down with the flu... For life’s minor medical ailments and injuries... Immediate Care of Southern New Hampshire is here. 17 No appointment necessary | No long waits Office co-pay | Lab and X-Ray on site Open 7 days a week and holidays Monday – Friday: 11:00 am – 8:00 pm Saturday, Sunday and Holidays: 9:30 am – 5:00 pm Located at 29 Northwest Blvd, Nashua (off 101-A) 8 Prospect Street, Nashua, NH 03060 Affiliated with Southern New Hampshire Medical Center For more information, call 603-577-CARE or visit www.immediatecareofsnh.org. Page 17 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo 18 in August at the library. Big events: Fairy Tale Festival on Saturday, July 11, from noon to 3 p.m. at the Greeley Park bandshell, with on-stage actsandmusical treats plus food, games and a bounce house. Children’s Day on Saturday, Aug. 8, from noon to 3 p.m., with entertainers, activities and a bike parade (bring your own bike); also youth and adult bike races starting at 9 a.m. behind Holman Stadium the same day. On Monday, June 29, at 6 p.m. Marcus Gale performs children’s music at the Greeley Park bandshell; on Monday, Aug. 24, at 6 p.m., it’s Judy Pancoast. • Tri-Town Ice Arena (311 West River Road in Hooksett, 485-1100, tri-townicearena.com) Regular events: Public skating available at $6 per skater (skate rentals $3, skate sharpening $6), or get a 10-admission punch card for $50. Typically open Saturdays and Sundays 2:30-4:30 p.m. but see schedule online for exceptions and other times. Family skate time available on certain Friday evenings 6-8 p.m. Occasional Teen Nights with DJ on Fridays for ages 11-15; call for details. Classes & workshops: Learn-to-Skate sessions start Monday, June 29. Learn to Play Hockey is Wednesdays, July 1 through Aug. 5, 9:30-10:20 a.m., $120. Power Skating summer camp for Mites and Squirts is July 6-10, 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Other camps include Figure Skating, middle school hockey, high school hockey, and Drills and Skills. Sports (spectator) 18 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 18 • American Defenders of NH (at Holman Stadium, Amherst Street in Nashua, 8832255, americandefenders.us) Regular games: The next home games for this Can-Am League baseball team are June 29 & 30 and July 1 vs. Quebec; July 3-5 vs. Sussex; July 15-22 vs. Brockton and then New Jersey. The regular season continues through Sept. 7. Big events: Saturday, June 27, features an exhibition game with the Doug Flutie All-Stars vs. the U.S. Military All-Stars at 5:05 p.m., followed by the U.S. Air Force Band Afterburner at 7:30 p.m. on the party-deck porch, and then a classic rock concert with Ernie and the Automatics and the Flutie Brothers Band on the big stage. • Lowell Spinners (450 Aiken St. in Lowell, Mass., 978-934-9348, lowell.spinners. milb.com) Regular events: Some amount of tickets will always be available to a game on the day of the game, according to the Web site. Tickets start at $4. The next run of home games is Wednesday, July 1, through Friday, July 3. Big events: Upcoming promotions include “Mystery Bobblehead Giveaway” on July 3, Star Wars night on July 18 and “Celebrate 1 Year Anniversary of the Manny Ramirez Trade” on July 30. • Manchester Wolves Football (Verizon Wireless Arena, 555 Elm St. in Manchester, manchesterwolves.com) Regular games: The Wolves have two home games left in the season — Friday, July 17, vs. the Mahoning Valley Thunder and Friday, July 24, vs. the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Pioneers, both at 7:30 p.m. Tickets start at $9.75 for kids; $15 for adults. • NH Fisher Cats Baseball (1 Line Drive in Manchester, 641-2005, nhfishercats.com) Regular games: The next set of home games is Friday, June 26, through Monday, June 29, vs. the Portland Sea Dogs (games start at 7:05 p.m. except on Sunday, when start time is 6:35 p.m.). The Cats return with games on Saturday, July 4, through Monday, July 6, also versus the Sea Dogs. Look for at least one home game a week (usually between three and five) through the end of August. Tickets start at $6. Big events: Upcoming extras for gameattendees include fireworks after the games on Saturday, June 27, and Sunday, June 28. On Monday, June 29, it’s a Johnny Pesky bobblehead giveaway (game starts at 7:05 p.m.). Theater & movie theaters • The Acting Loft (516 Pine St. in Manchester, 666-5999, actingloft.org) Classes & workshops: The Acting Loft offers full-day summer camps. Big events: High school performers will present Storytime Theatre matinees on Fridays at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. Tickets cost $3 and are available at the door. The schedule includes Hey Diddle Diddle — The Rhymes and Riddles of Mother Goose (July 10), The Butterfly (July 17), Ama and the White Crane (July 24), Arkansaw Bear (July 31), Tarheel Tales (Aug. 7) and Ghost of the River House (Aug. 14). • Actorsingers (320-1870, .actorsingers.org) Classes & workshops: Actorsingers offers full-day summer camps. Big events: The Teen Actorsingers will present Swing Friday, July 31, at 7:30 p.m.; Saturday, Aug. 1, at 2 and 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, Aug. 2, at 2 p.m. at the 14 Court St. Theater. • The Bedford Youth Performing Company (155 Route 101 in Bedford, 472-3894, bypc.org) Classes & workshops: The BYPC offers halfday camps in music and dance (as well as full day theater camps). • Chunky’s cinema and pub (151 Coliseum Ave. in Nashua; 150 Bridge St. in Pelham, 6357499, chunkys.com) Regular events: Chunky’s shows first run movies but with the twist of sit-down menu of foods like salads, burgers, desserts and more. See Web site for deals and promotions. • Majestic Academy of Dramatic Arts (281 Cartier St. in Manchester, 669-7469, majestictheatre.net) Classes & workshops: The Majestic offers half-day camps for 4- to 7-year-olds as well as full-day camps for older students. • Palace Theatre (80 Hanover St. in Manchester, 668-5588, palacetheatre.org) Big events: The Palace Professional Theatre for Children Summer Series will offer shows Tuesdays (at 10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.) and Wednesdays (at 10 a.m.) in July and August. Tickets cost $6. The schedule includes Cinderella (July 7-8), Willy Wonka (July 14-15), Little Mermaid (July 21-22), Charlotte’s Web (July 28-29), Snow White (Aug. 4-5), Seussical (Aug. 11-12) and Sleeping Beauty (Aug. 18-19). • Peacock Players (14 Court St., Nashua, 889-2330, peacockplayers.org) Classes & workshops: Peacock Players offers full-day camp. Big events: The players will present Grease from Friday, Aug. 7, through Sunday, Aug. 9, at the 14 Court St. Theater in Nashua. • Red River Theatres (11 S. Main St. in Concord, 224-4600, www.redrivertheatres.org) • Regular events: The theater will offer familyfriendly movies such as The Great Muppet Caper (June 26 through July 2), Raiders of the Lost Ark (July 3, through July 9), The Goonies (July 31 through Aug. 6) and more through the end of August. • Regal Hooksett (100 Technology Dr. in Hooksett, 641-3456) Regular events: A second-run theater, Regal Hooksett offers $3.50 movie tickets for all shows. • Seacoast Repertory (125 Bow St. in Portsmouth, www.seacoastrep.org, 433-4472) Regular events: Seacoast Repertory will offer matinees of kid-friendly productions on Saturdays and Sundays. Tickets cost $8 to $10. Schedule includes Doctor Doolittle (July 11 at 11 a.m. and July 12, at 1 p.m.), Alice Through the Looking Glass (July 25 at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., July 26 at 1 p.m.) and The Adventures of Beatrix Potter & Her Friends (Aug. 8 at 11 a.m. and Aug. 9 at 1 p.m.). • Wilton Town Hall Theatre (Main Street in Wilton, 654-FILM, wiltontownhalltheatre.com) • Regular events: Wilton offers two free films regularly — a weekly classic movie on Saturdays at 4:30 p.m. and on one Sunday a month, a free silent film (with live music). Upcoming films in that series are College (June 28), A Sailor-Made Man (July 19) and Tramp, Tramp, Tramp (Aug. 30). THIS WEEK EVEnTS TO CHECK OuT JunE 25 - JuLY 1, 2009, And BEYOnd Hot List What’s hot now in... Sunday, June 28 Mike Spaziani, Tyler Christie, Trevor Buteau, Josh Dennis and Zach Bencal play members of a fictional Christian boy band (think ’N Sync) who are trying to save souls while playing their last gig. StageCoach Productions closes their run of Altar Boyz today at 2 p.m. at the 14 Court St. Theater in Nashua. Call 320-3780 or visit www.stagecoachproductions.org. Ticket costs range from $15 to $18. Jagfotoz Photography photo. For more about theater, see page 22. Manchester Open Doors cultural trolley tour is 5 to 8 p.m. today. One of the gallery openings on the list is an exhibit of work by folk artist Robin Kent (her “First Cup” is seen here) at the Framers Market, 1301 Elm St. in Manchester (6686989). Find an Open Doors map at majestictheatre.net. More information is in Hippo art gallery listings on page 20. Friday, June 26 New Hampshire author Jodi Picoult’s novels have a pretty sizable following. My Sister’s Keeper involves a young girl who was conceived to help keep her sister, a cancer patient, alive. Cameron Diaz stars as their mother in a film adaptation of the story. For more about movies, see page 42. Saturday, June 27 Watch a Professional Bull Riders (pbrnow.com) competition at the Verizon Wireless Arena (555 Elm St. in Manchester, 644-5000, verizonwirelessarean.com) today at 7:30 p.m. The tour showcases rising stars, fan favorites and veterans. Ticket costs range from $12.50 to $35.50. For more about local happenings, see page 25. Sunday, June 28 Stop by the Hollis Strawberry Festival today between 2 and 4 p.m. Find strawberry shortcakes and sundaes, arts and crafts and kids’ activities, plus the Hollis Town Band performs. It’s at Monument Square (or the Hollis-Brookline High School in case of rain). Call 465-2392 or 465-2723. For more about food, see page 32. Need a frame? We’ve got a bunch! BOOKS According to Amazon’s best sellers (each book is listed only once) 1. Glenn Beck’s Common Sense: The Case Against an Outof-Control Government, Inspired by Thomas Paine, by Glenn Beck (Threshold Editions, 2009) 2. Liberty and Tyranny: A Conservative Manifesto, by Mark R. Levin (Threshold Editions, 2009) 3. Finger Lickin’ Fifteen (Stephanie Plum), by Janet Evanovich (St. Martin’s Press, (June 23, 2009) 4. The Shack, by William P. Young (Windblown Media, 2007) 5. The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society (Random House Reader’s Circle), by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows (Dial dVd According to Hollywood Video 1. Gran Torino (R, 2008) 2. The International (R, 2009) 3. Defiance (R, 2008) 4. Paul Blart: Mall Cop (PG, 2009) 5. He’s Just Not That Into You (PG-13, 2008) 6. Taken (PG-13, 2008) 7. Fired Up (PG-13, 2008) 8. New in Town (PG, 2009) 9. Revolutionary Road (R, 2008) 10. Valkyrie (PG-13, 2008) FILM Top movies at the box office June 19-21 (weekend/cumulative) 1. The Proposal, Walt Disney ($34 million/$34 million) 2. The Hangover, Warner Bros. ($26.8 million/$152 million) 3. Up, Buena Vista ($21 million/$224 million) 4. Year One, Sony ($20 million/$20 million) 5. The Taking of Pelham Learn to Dance Dance Party Every Friday Night! Private & Group Lessons for Social & Competitive Dancing 531 FRONT STREET, MANCHESTER (603) 622-3802 / WWW.EWPOORE.BLOGSPOT.COM 00 WWW.EWPOORE.COM 167 Elm St. Manchester 9am-9pm Mon. - Fri. (Sat. by appointment) royalpalacedance.com 621-9119 Page 19 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Thursday, June 25 Press, 2009) 6. Sookie Stackhouse, Books 1-7, by Charlaine Harris (Ace, 2008) 7. Breaking Dawn (The Twilight Saga, Book 4), by Stephenie Meyer (Little, Brown, 2008) 8. Eclipse (The Twilight Saga, Book 3), by Stephenie Meyer (Little, Brown, 2007) 9. New Moon (The Twilight Saga, Book 2), by Stephenie Meyer (Little, Brown, 2008) 10. The Twilight Saga Collection, by Stephenie Meyer (Little, Brown Young Readers, 2008) CdS According to Bull Moose Music’s top sellers 1. Dave Matthews Band, Big Whiskey And The Groogrux King 2. Incubus, Monuments & Melodies 3. Eminem, Relapse 4. Mos Def, Ecstatic 5. George Harrison, Let it Roll: The Songs of George Harrison 6. Kings Of Leon, Only By The Night 7. Chickenfoot, Chickenfoot 8. Black Eyed Peas, E.N.D. (Energy Never Dies) 9. Dirty Projectors, Bitte Orca 10. Green Day, 21st Century Breakdown 20 ARTS The SOPHA community Amateur and professional photographers join Manchester studio By Heidi Masek [email protected] 20 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black The storefront of Croteau Photography in a distinctive downtown Manchester building has quietly taken on a new role in the same industry. The way the Studio of Photographic Arts (SOPHA) functions, it sounds like a nonprofit. It’s not, but owner Bud Thorpe frequently uses the word “community” when he talks about the place. SOPHA now has 39 member photographers, up from about six when they moved into 941 Elm St. near the end of 2008. SOPHA offers studio rental, including use of lighting, props and a make-up room. They run classes geared to help people figure out what they can actually do with their fancy new digital cameras. Professional members use SOPHA’s reception area/gallery for client meetings, and the $100 per month pro membership fee allows unlimited studio usage (depending on availability). There’s also a large format printing service. The studio was busy with a setup for a fashion advertisement shoot Thursday, June 18. On a recent weekend, 30 ballerinas were at SOPHA and around downtown for a member dance photographer’s shoot. Thorpe calls himself “studio manager,” and everyone who helps out seems to be called “staff.” Interns come from local art and photography schools, including Boston University’s Center for Digital Arts in Waltham. The first SOPHA members’ gallery show opening on April 30 collect- ed 185 pounds of tuna for the New Hampshire Food Bank (it was their canned tuna month). Gallery shows run for four or five weeks in their storefront space and are meant to show and sell member work, but are always tied to a charity, Thorpe said. Since SOPHA is about a photographic community, the shows should be tied to the larger community, he said. It’s “a very simple business practice ... don’t be greedy,” he said. Their second show, “America,” opens Thursday, July 2, with a reception from 7 to 10 p.m., and is up through Aug. 1. Members were challenged to represent the theme without using an American flag. Thorpe stressed that it’s not meant to be unpatriotic — the purpose of the rule is to avoid cliché and force the photographers to think beyond the obvious. Those showing work are making donations to the New Hampshire World War II Veteran’s Memorial Fund; visitors can also donate at the reception. Thorpe expects about 20 members to show about 100 photos; prints will probably start at $30. SOPHA originally opened two years ago at 62 Elm St. in Manchester and included a lot of car photography. The partnership split, and Thorpe wanted to focus on SOPHA as a community in a more visible location. He saw an “opportunity that couldn’t be missed” when his friend Dan Croteau planned to close his studio. Croteau now works mainly in real estate, but is a SOPHA member and still meets clients there. “The digital world presented some challenges” to portrait and wed- 22 Art ding photographers because more and more people have access, Thorpe said. Thorpe’s idea for dealing with that is to bring in the new photographers. SOPHA’s not a school — “It’s more like a community art center in the way we run our classes,” Thorpe said. SOPHA runs four-night “KickStart Digital SLR,” “Intermediate Digital SLR” and “KickStart Photoshop” classes regularly ($199 for nonmembers, $159 for members). Many enroll because they bought a digital SLR (single lens reflex) and want to know what all the buttons do. Thorpe said the class is a lot of fun to teach and he enjoys students’ “eureka moments.” “We have a tremendous retention rate,” Thorpe said. Ninety-five percent take a second class. Eric Arnold, of Hunt’s Photo in Manchester, has a BFA from Massachusetts College of Art. Finding “qualified instructors” with the “right personality” is a challenge, Thorpe said. Arnold teaches “Urban Landscapes” for SOPHA; the one-day workshop is rescheduled to June 28 because of rain. Dave Dawson, also of MassArt, teaches one-day workshop “Dastardly Dames, Alternative Glamour” (July 26, $199 or $179 for members). “The Artistic Nude” is scheduled for July 12 ($249, or $199 for members). While sunshine may work outside, indoor shots on digital cameras can be tricky (that’s an understatement in this reporter’s case). Thorpe said the first way to address lighting issues is to learn to use the flash properly. SOPHA spends one Inside a SOPHA studio. SOPHA photo. evening of a four-night digital SLR class on this. “There’s a lot people can do to improve the quality of their pictures,” Thorpe said. SOPHA teaches studio lighting to those who want to take that a step farther. Studio lighting has “never been so approachable,” Thorpe said. That’s because with a digital camera the photographer can immediately see the result. SOPHA has 6,000 square feet of first-floor and basement space — the upstairs was bricked off in 1945, Thorpe said. They use the bricked back alley and basement for shoots. The basement also stores props and is the home of T-shirt business, 603 Clothing. It also houses a darkroom. “We’ve got a range of members with a range of photographic interests,” Thorpe said. If you go Some have always shot in film, some are discovering for the first time because great film camera equipment can currently be had for very little money, he said. Thorpe is a self-taught photographer, with undergraduate work in infectious disease. After 25 years in paramedics, he still works as a paramedic one day per week in Townsend, Mass. — “People call during the worst moments of their life,” Thorpe said of that job. Thorpe mainly shoots portraits, families, frequently corporate or executive portraits and some weddings. There’s a number of wedding photographers at SOPHA in all price ranges, Thorpe said. Others use the studio for product photography, advertising and portraits. Members come from Manchester and father afield, including Keene and Portsmouth. What: “America” members’ gallery show reception Where: Studio of Photographic Arts (SOPHA), 941 Elm St., Manchester When: Thursday, July 2, from 7 to 10 p.m. Charity: Donate to the NH World War II Veterans Memorial Fund at the reception. Contact: 584-1492, www.thesopha.com 23 Theater 24 Classical Includes listings for gallery events, ongoing exhibits, classes and workshops. Includes listings, shows, auditions, workshops and more. For information Includes listings for symphony and orchestral performances and choral For more information on exhibits, see past stories on hippopress.com. Send on shows plus features and reviews of performances, see past stories on events. To get your event some press, write [email protected]. To get information to [email protected]. hippopress.com. To get listed, send information to [email protected]. your event listed, send information to [email protected]. Art Listings Gallery Events • ANDRES INSTITUTE OF ART, 98 Route 13 in Brookline, guided sculpture trail hikes at 10 a.m. on the third Saturdays (July 18, Aug.15) and at 11 a.m. first Sundays (July 5, Aug. 6), from the lower parking lot. Call 673-8441 in the days before your visit to verify that a guide will be present. See www.andresinstitute.org. • ART CONCORD gallery walk June 25, Aug. 20 and Dec. 3, 5-8 p.m., and Oct. 10, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. See concordnhchamber.com or call 2242508. Participating venues include Cole Gardens, 430 Loudon Road; Franklin Pierce Law Center Gallery, 2 White St.; Kimball Jenkins School of Art, 266 North Main St.; League of NH Craftsmen, 205 North Main St.; Mill Brook Gallery and Sculpture Garden, 236 Hopkinton Rd.; NHTIConcord’s Community College, 31 Institute Dr.; Red River Theatres, 11 South Main St.; and Sulloway Gallery, 19 School St. • CONCORD ARTS MARKET Saturdays, 9 a.m.-3 p.m., through July 25 (closed July 4), at 33 Capitol St., Concord. Also runs during Concord’s Market Days, July 16-July 18. Visit concordartsmarket.com or call 229-2157. • ELEMENTS group show through June 27 at the MAA Gallery, 1528 Elm St., Manchester, 785-6437. • FIRST THURSDAYS The Currier Museum is open late from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. first Thursdays each month with special programs including live music, lectures and film. No First Thursday in July. • FIRST PEOPLE OF THE NORTHEAST contemporary paintings and traditional crafts through Sept. 20 at Mill Brook Gallery & Sculpture Garden, 236 Hopkinton Road in Concord, 2262046. Reception Sun., July 12, 1-4 p.m. Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 20 Art Concord reception, Thurs., June 25, 5-8 p.m. • THE GLORY OF WATERCOLOR, work by Diane Statkum and Pat Hurd in June at Canal Art and Framing, 1 Water St., Nashua, 886-1459. • GRAND OPENING RECEPTION of White Birch Fine Art, LLC, gallery and instruction, Fri., June 26, 4–8 p.m., and Sat., June 27, 10 a.m.–2 p.m., at 8 Mohawk Dr., Londonderry, www. WhiteBirchFineArt.com, 434-0399. Managed by artist Elaine Farmer. • “GREEN: More Than a Color” collaborative event among art galleries and eco-friendly organizations in Market Mills Courtyard, Lowell, Sat., June 27, noon-4 p.m. (rain date is June 28). Sponsored by Brush Art Gallery at 256 Market St., and includes ALL Arts Gallery, 246 Market St., X/O Studio and Studio II at 256 Market St., Revolving Museum, Lowell Farmers’ Market and others. See www.thebrush.org or call 978-459-7819. • GROUP SHOW of work by Richard Lee Clark, Beth Ordway, Sitaji Devi and Harriet Blackie in June at the NHTI library, 31 College Dr., Concord, 2717186, www.nhti.edu/library. • INVITATIONAL OUTDOOR SCULPTURE exhibit through Oct. 18 at Mill Brook Gallery & Sculpture Garden, 236 Hopkinton Road in Concord, 226-2046. Art Concord Thursday, June 25, 5-8 p.m. Champagne reception with music from Sylvia Miskoe Sat., June 27, 2-4 p.m. • KATHY TANGNEY watercolors, “Birds of a Feather” in June at the Wine Studio, 53 Hooksett Rd., Manchester, 622-9463, www.thewinestudionh.com. • JANET DUCHESNEAU pottery and Jeff Newcomer photography featured in June at Sharon Arts Downtown Galleries in Depot Square, Peterborough, 924-2787, sharonarts.org. • JOSH HUTCHINS “Creative Pho- tography” through August at UNH Center for Graduate & Professional Studies at Manchester, 286 Commercial St., 4th floor, 641-4313, www. unhmgrad.unh.edu. Meet the artist Thurs., June 25, 4:30-6 p.m. • KIMBALL-JENKINS School of Art presents Michael Garlington photography “Portraits from the Belly of the Whale,” and abstract paintings by Roger Goldenberg in June and July at the galleries at 266 N. Main St. in Concord, 255-3932. Reception Thurs., June 25, 5:30 -7:30 p.m., during Art Concord. • LAWRENCE DONOVAN exhibit, “Simplicity,” through June 27 at East Colony Fine Art, 55 South Commercial St., Manchester, 624-8833, www. eastcolony.com. • LENKA FLAHRETY photography exhibit “Sled Dogs on the Trail,” through June 30 at The Darkroom Gallery at Hunt’s Photo and Video, 4A Vinton St., Manchester, 606-3322. • LINDA MACARTHUR stained glass featured in June Hatfield Gallery, 55 South Commercial St.,Manchester, 627-7560. • LOVE LETTERS TO KAFKA, work by Nicole Maloof through June 29 at Three Graces, 105 Market St., Portsmouth, 436-1988, www.threegracesgallery.com. • MICHELA VERANI metal clay jewelry July-September at Maison de L’Art, 57 East Pearl St. Nashua, 8799888, www.moniquesakellarios.com. • MONTY WHITFIELD watercolors and acrylics through June at the Nashua Library, 2 Court St., 589-4610. • NEW MEMBERS EXHIBIT of the New Hampshire Art Association through June 26 at Robert Lincoln Levy Gallery, 136 State St., Portsmouth, 4314230, www.nhartassociation.org. • “OCEANIA—Peoples of the Pacific Islands” exhibit opens during 21 Ending, beginning, return “The Ordeal,” photo from Germany by Art Ferrier. Peterborough’s First Friday, July 3, with a “KidCraft,”at 5 p.m., reception at 6 p.m., and performance from Allison Aldrich and Hunt Smith at 7 p.m., at Mariposa Museum, at 26 Main St., Peterborough, 924-4555, www.mariposamuseum.org. Auburn St. in Manchester. There’s an “Intro to Beads” class Saturday, June 27, at 2 p.m. for $75, materials included. “Intro to Lampworking” in two sessions starts Sunday, June 28, at 10 a.m. Slater has a class schedule up at www. aaronslaterglass.com/classes.htm. Open studio time is available. If you want to teach or rent bench space, contact Slater at 380-3004 or [email protected]. (Read about Slater and glass lampworking in Hippo’s March 1, 2007, “Secretive art, Mixing imagination and science to create glass art,” at www.hippopress. com/070301/cover.html.) • Bad news: I always look forward to reading about what ellO gallery&shop in Portsmouth is up to. ellO held a “Bend it! Break it!” workshop to “Break some toys & make some art” in May, followed by an “ellO Wood Derby” (pinewood derby). Last year ellO challenged artists to use messenger bags from a Portsmouth-based manufacturer in “The BaileyWorks Art Project.” They frequently hosted live music and sound art. Unfortunately, ellO shuts their doors for good after two years June 28. “Postcards from the Edge,” a juried show in which artists were asked to explore the “‘Greetings From...’ tourist-type postcard” idea, runs until then, with a closing reception Friday, June 26, from 5 to 9 p.m. “Revival,” new works by Katrine Hildebrandt, Jenny McGee Dougherty, Peter Jackson Hussey and Joseph Conway, the Pine Haven Collective, is on view, too. Co-owner Byrdy DiLando said they had a “rough winter,” sales-wise. “We just can’t really afford to keep it going much longer,” DiLando said. John Fanning, another co-owner, plans to create “ellO Project” informal events around the area, DiLando said. Check www.ellogallery.com for news until August. In the meantime, stop at 110 State St. in Portsmouth while you can (433-9110). • Home-like art space: Elaine Farmer, who has been active in regional and Londonderry art scenes, is managing a new gallery exhibiting her work and that of other artists. White Birch Fine Art, LLC, also has space for instruction, “ART Birthday Parties” and gallery space rentals for other social gatherings. Check the place out at grand opening receptions Friday, June 26, from 4 to 8 p.m., and Saturday, June 27, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., at 8 Mohawk Drive in Londonderry (www.WhiteBirchFineArt.com, 434-0399). Farmer wants White Birch to “create a warm, homey atmosphere,” according to a release. Coffee and pastries will be available for purchase, and it has places to sit and relax. • One more: If you didn’t get enough galleryhopping at either Manchester Open Doors (www. majestictheatre.net/opendoors.php) or Art Concord June 25, several galleries around the Market Mills Courtyard in Lowell, Mass., are involved in “Green: More Than a Color.” They collaborate with eco-friendly organizations like the Lowell Farmers’ Market Saturday, June 27, from noon to 4 p.m. (The rain date is June 28.) Brush Art Gallery & Studios at 256 Market St. sponsors. See www.thebrush.org/GreenMoreThanAColor.htm or call 978-459-7819. • OPEN DOORS MANCHESTER Thursdays, 5-8 p.m.: June 25, Sept. 17 and Nov. 12. Tour of arts and cultural venues with free trolley between venues, 669-7469, [email protected]. Map at majestictheatre.net. Venues include Manchester City Hall Art on the Wall at City Hall Gallery; MAA Gallery; Millyard Museum, SEE Science Center and FIRST Place at 200 Bedford St.; Art 3 Gallery; Langer Place studios and galleries at 55 S. Commercial St.; East Colony Fine Arts Tickets/Info: (603) 436-2400 Sizzling Summer Salsa Dance Party! Friday, June 26 „ 8pm “righteous pleasure...… - NEW YORK TIMES SPONSORS: Agave Mexican Bistro; The Portsmouth Brewery SERIES SPONSORS: For full performance schedule visit us online at www.themusichall.org Cyan Magenta Yellow Black • Chimera’s back: Nashua’s Chimera Gallery, which was a lively place to visit during various Nashua Art Walks, went dormant over the past months. Everyone involved has other full-time gigs, and projects and studies kept them occupied while Nashua Theater Guild used the Picker Building space to rehearse in, according to Art and Nancy Ferrier. But Chimera is back this summer with a reception Saturday, June 27, from 3 to 6 p.m., for what look to be three unique exhibits running through Aug. 27. One of the things that kept regular exhibitor Art Ferrier busy was a show at Marziat Gallery in Hamburg, Germany. He shows urban photographs mostly from Hamburg, plus some from Montreal, New York and Boston, in “Signs of Man” at Chimera this summer. Ferrier participates in the Florence (Firenze) Biennale in Italy (www.artferrierphotography.com). Abstract painter Dominique Boutaud’s installation “L’echapper Belle – A Narrow Escape” is also at Chimera. Gallery director Nancy Ferrier has been advising her on other shows. In “The Unseen,” Francisco De la Barra uses organic materials including spices in painted portraits he created after interviewing guests of a Somerville, Mass., homeless shelter. Chimera Gallery is part of a working photography studio owned by photographer Kym Scott and her husband Marcus Scott, and other than receptions it’s usually only open Saturdays and by appointment, according to the Ferriers. The Picker Building is at 99 Factory St. Extension in Nashua. Call 888-2661 or visit www. chimeragallery.net. • Queen City rollover: Glass artist Aaron Slater of Manchester is taking over the Queen City Lampworks space, a studio previously run by Kevin Engelman and Jason Herring, to run as a glass school on a trial basis inside 21 W. Local Color 28 Chestnut St. „ Portsmouth, NH 21 08 Page 21 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo 22 Arts 2 for 1 Full Sets Cut, Color, and Basic manicure & pedicure $99 673-2270 [email protected] www.edenrestaurantandlounge.com 672-5355 546-0194 or 595-7531 www.antiquesatmayfair.com 672-1344 (1EGG) 22 249-3336 673-3111 [email protected] 673-0404 www.affinitysalonnh.com (603) 673-5223 New Englands largest selection of window lace. 672-8780 www.galleryportraitstudios.com 672-6900 www.justnaturalproducts.com 249-3310 249-3310 www.smallsolesboutique.com Cyan Magenta Yellow Black 292 Route 101 • Amherst, NH A ICAN YAN KE R E M E Fabrication & Design WROUGHT IRON FENCING • RAILINGS • HOME DECOR 622 - 4004 • www.nhwrought-iron.com • 1-866-713-4004 041590 Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 22 Musicial fundraiser in Concord THE VILLAGE SHOPPES AT Zoom in Hot hits The chorus rehearses for “Hot Hits.” Courtesy photo. A geographic cornucopia of songs are pulled together for the revue “Hot Hits, Cool Harmonies: The Great American Songbook.” From “New York, New York” to “California Here I Come,” with country-western in between, plus Nat King Cole, Elvis, barbershop and Broadway, the show with area performers is a tribute to bygone musical eras, according to a release. It’s conceived by Irene Deschesnes and Gallery; and Framer’s Market. • OPEN STUDIO NIGHTS third Thursdays, 6-9 p.m. at Verdigris Artisans, 88 N. Main St., Suite 205, Concord, www.verdigrisartisans.com. • OUT OF AFRICA exhibit through early June at Mariposa Museum, at 26 Main St., Peterborough, 924-4555, www.mariposamuseum.org, $3-$5. • PHOTOGRAPHY by Beth Ordway and Richard Lee Clark in the NHTI Library Lobby, 31 College Dr. in Concord, 271-7186. • REVIVAL installations from Pine Haven Collective through June 30 at ellO gallery & shop, 110 State St., Portsmouth, 433-9110, www.ellogallery.com. • ROBERT CHILDRESS, illustrator of the Dick and Jane books from 1958 to 1968, print sales of his college series partially benefit the New Hampshire Food Bank. Email [email protected]. • ROBIN KENT folk artist June 25-Aug. 16 at the Framers Market, 1301 Elm St., Manchester, 668-6989. Reception Thurs., June 25, 5-8 p.m., during Manchester Open Doors. • THREE JEWELERS, THREE FRIENDS Lauren Pollaro, Karen Orsillo, and Blair LaBella in June at Exeter Fine Crafts, 61 Water St., Exeter, 778-8282. THEATER Listings • The Acting Loft 516 Pine St., Manchester 666-5999, actingloft.org • Actorsingers 219 Lake St., Nashua, 889-9691, actorsingers.org • Adams Memorial Opera House 29 W. Broadway, Derry, 437-0505, derryarts.org • Amato Family Center for the Performing Arts at Souhegan Valley Boys & Girls Club 56 Mont Vernon St., Milford, 672-1002 ext. 2, svbgc.com • Andy’s Summer Playhouse Martha Kuepper and directed by Betty Thomson. Deschanes has put together more than 14 stage extravaganzas to raise money for local causes. She started a tradition in 1993 of creating shows around music and a theme as a fundraiser for Concord City Auditorium’s renovation effort. The Rotary Club of Concord presents “Hot Hits” to benefit local agencies that serve the hungry and the homeless, and the cast and crew are Rotarians, Rotarian family members and a few extras, according to Julienne Turner. See “Hot Hits, Cool Harmonies: The Great American Songbook,” Thursday, June 25, at 7:30 p.m., Friday, June 26, at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday, June 26, at 7:30 p.m., at the Concord City Auditorium, 2 Prince St. in Concord. Tickets cost $20, or $15 for students and seniors. Children under 7 are admitted free. Buy tickets at the door, at Ballard’s or Merrimack County Savings Bank in Concord, or at www. concordnhrotary.org. — Heidi Masek Wood visions The Currier Museum of Art displays “Turning Wood Into Art: The Jane and Arthur Mason Collection” from July 3 through Sept. 27. See 65 objects “from one of the world’s foremost collections of contemporary lathe-turned wood.” Everyone is admitted free Saturday, July 11, for wood-themed activities at the Currier including an exhibit reception from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. with woodturning demonstrations. Ron Fleming’s 1997 lathe-turned and carved pink ivory wood, “Firebird,” from the collection of the Mint Museum of Craft + Design, Charlotte, North Carolina, a gift of Jane and Arthur Mason, is seen here. (Image courtesy of the Currier). The Currier is at 150 Ash St. in Manchester (www.currier.org, 669-6144). P.S. The Currier is not holding its regular monthly “First Thursday” evening event in July. Wilton, 654-2613, andyssummerplayhouse.org • Anselmian Abbey Players Dana Center, 641-7700 • Bedford Off Broadway Meetinghouse Road, Bedford, 557-1805, bedfordoffbroadway.com • Bedford Town Hall 70 Bedford Center Rd., Bedford • Belle Voci bellevoci.org, 848-7986 • Capitol Center for the Arts 44 Main St., Concord, 225-1111, ccanh.com • Concord Chorale 224-0770, concordchorale.org • Concord City Auditorium 2 Prince St., Concord, 228-2793, concordcityauditorium.org • Concord Community Players 224-4905, communityplayersof concord.org • The Dana Center 100 Saint Anselm Drive, Manchester, 641-7700, anselm.edu • The Majestic Theatre 281 Cartier St., Manchester, 669-7469, majestictheatre.net • Manchester Community Music School 2291 Elm St., 644-4548, mcmusicschool.org • Manchester Community Theatre and Second Stage Professional Co. 698 Beech St., Manchester, 627-8787 • Milford Area Players 673-2258, milfordareaplayers.org • Music and Drama Company (MADCo.) Londonderry, madco.org • My Act myact.org, 429-3950 • Nashua Theatre Guild PO Box 137, Nashua, 03061, 320-2530 nashuatheatreguild.org • New Thalian Players newthalianplayers.org, 666-6466 • Nashua Community College Performing sek Gail Angellis and Melissa Sine in FIGHT, at the 2008 New England Fringe Festival. Courtesy photo. Arts Club (PAC) 505 Amherst St., Nashua, 428-3544 • The Palace Theatre 80 Hanover St., Manchester, 668-5588, palacetheatre.org • Peacock Players 14 Court St., Nashua, 886-7000, peacockplayers.org • Profile Chorus profilechorus.org • School of Theater Arts at The Amato Center for Performing Arts 56 Mont Vernon St., Milford, 672-1002 ext. 20 • Seacoast Repertory Theatre 125 Bow St., Portsmouth, 433-4472 • SNHU Drama Club 2500 North River Rd., Hooksett • Yellow Taxi Productions yellowtaxiproductions.org • GIRLS NIGHT: THE MUSICAL Thurs., June 25, and Fri., June 26, at 8 p.m.; and Sat., June 27, at 3 p.m., at the Capitol Center for the Arts, $29.50-$49.50. • “HOT HITS, COOL HARMONIES: The Great American Songbook” conceived by Irene Deschesnes and Martha Kuepper, directed by Betty Thomson, Thurs., June 25, at 7:30 p.m., Fri., June 26, at 7:30 p.m. and Sat., June 26 at 7:30 p.m., at the Concord City Auditorium, $15-$20, free for children under 7, www.concordnhrotary.org. Presented by the Rotary Club of Concord to benefit local agencies serving the hungry and the homeless. • PHEDRE starring Helen Mirren, National Theatre of London HD Broadcast Series Thurs., June 25, at 7 p.m., at The Music Hall, 28 Chestnut St., Portsmouth, 4333100, www.themusichall.org, $15$27.50. • ALTAR BOYZ presented by StageCoach Productions Fri., June 26, at 8 p.m.; Sat., June 27, at 2 & 8 p.m.; and Sun., June 28, at 2 p.m., at 14 Court St. Theater, Nashua, 3203780, www.stagecoachproductions. org, $15-$18. • THE WORLD OF SARAH ORNE JEWETT, an original production performed by Seacoast community members under Pon- tine Theatre direction, Fri., June 26, at 7:30 p.m., at West End Studio Theatre, 959 Islington St., Portsmouth, and Sat., June 27, at 1 p.m., at Historic New England’s Sarah Orne Jewett House Museum, South Berwick, Maine, 436-6660. • ROOM 16, staged reading of an in-development musical about Watergate Friday, June 26, at 7:30 p.m., at the Palace Theatre, $10. • TAPPED features tap dance soloist Aaron Tolson Sat., June 27, at 7:30 p.m., at the Palace Theatre, $27. • HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS WITHOUT REALLY TRYING through Aug. 9, in repertory with GYPSY June 26–Aug. 23 at the professional Seacoast Repertory, 125 Bow St. in Portsmouth, www.seacoastrep.org, 433-4472, $24-$28. • ANDY’S SUMMER PLAYHOUSE youth educational company features actors ages 8-18 in new work, at 582 Isaac Frye Hwy., Wilton, 654-2613, andyssummerplayhouse.org, $7-$14: Donkey Xote, by Kerry Ryan Thurs., June 25 – August 15, 2009 You are cordially invited to the artist reception Thursday June 25 from 5:00 to 8:00 In conjunction with Open Doors Manchester, an art & cultural Trolley ride tour. 603-624-8668 1301 Elm Street, Manchester 668-6989 Tues-Fri 9:30-6:00 Sat 9:30-4:00 or by appointment DR. NATALIE ACCOMANDO, DMD Now Accepting New Patients Life has enough anxieties... going to the dentist shouldn’t be one of them! To provide the best dental care for you and your family. Our experienced, caring staff will help put even the most nervous patient at ease, making your visit to the dentist a pain-free, pleasant experience. CALL TODAY! 603-645-8510 1361 Elm Street • Suite 300 Manchester, NH www.accomandofamilydentistry.com We accept most insurance including Delta Dental, Met Life, Guardian & Healthy Kids 0 FREE Checking Cyan Magenta Yellow Black • Bring your own venue? New England Fringe Festival included 14 Court St. in Nashua as a venue for its first two years. Heading into its third, the main stage will be Atlantis Playmakers’ theater in Burlington, Mass. (Atlantis is the company behind this Fringe.) However, they are offering a “Bring Your Own Venue” option anywhere in the six New England states, during the festival run of Sept. 21 through Oct. 4. Registration is firstcome, first-served starting July 1 and isn’t just open to theater. Music, stand-up, dance, improv and performance art are some of the other options. Productions this year can use up to 120 minutes (you can certainly use a shorter piece) but are disqualified for running over their time slot. New this year, productions get a percentage of ticket sales plus an opportunity to win a cash “Audience Award” or “Producers Award.” For more details, visit www.NEFringeFestival.com, call 978-667-0550, or e-mail [email protected]. • At the Majestic: In other festival news, applications to put a production in the New Hampshire Community Theatre Association Festival are due June 30. That festival runs 088 idi Ma By He Sept. 12 and Sept. 13 at the Majestic Theatre in Manchester. Visit www.nhcommunitytheatre.com for the entry form, or e-mail Rob Dionne at [email protected] for details. • Congrats: Void, by New Hampshire playwright Don Tongue, was the Audience Choice runner up in the 37th Boston Playwrights’ Platform Festival of New Plays in Series B — nine shorts performed nightly from June 18 through June 20 in Boston. New Hampshire’s John Sefel directed, and also tied for the runner up of best director, Playwright’s Choice (www.playwrightsplatform.org). • (Targeted) jobs: Stimulus funding has made its way to the Henniker Youth Theatre at John Stark Regional High School via The New Hampshire Department of Education (www.NHworks.org). It’s allowing for 12 full-time positions for 18- to 24-year-olds interested in the arts who can work up to 40 hours a week from July 1 to Sept. 30. Some work will be at the Hillcat Summer Theatre in Hillsboro and other performing arts programs. Find out if you are eligible at www. alchemistsworkshop.org, where job descriptions are also posted, or call 428-8202. • This weekend: The Palace Theatre (80 Hanover St., Manchester, 668-5588, www. palacetheatre.org) features a reading of Room 16, an in-development musical about Watergate, Friday June 26, at 7:30 p.m. Tickets cost $10. On Saturday, June 27, at 7:30 p.m., Aaron Tolson returns to the Palace with dance showcase “Tapped,” including performances from New England Tap Ensemble (www. newenglandtap.com). Tickets cost $27. Musical revue Girls Night: The Musical visits the Capitol Center for the Arts (44 S. Main St., Concord, 225-1111, ccanh.com), Thursday, June 25, and Friday, June 26, at 8 p.m.; and Saturday, June 27, at 3 p.m. Ticket costs range from $29.50 to $49.50. The National Theatre of London HD Broadcast Series can be seen in New Hampshire on Thursday, June 25, at 7 p.m., when Phedre, by Jean Racine in a version by Ted Hughes, is broadcast at The Music Hall (28 Chestnut St., Portsmouth, 433-3100, www. themusichall.org). Helen Mirren stars. Ticket costs range from $15 to $27.50. Note–No Asterisk!! NO FINE PRINT › › › › › No minimum balance required No monthly maintenance fee No-annual-fee Visa Debit Card Free CyberTel online banking Free CyberPay online bill payment That’s free checking at NECU! Open a Northeast Checking account today. Visit a local branch, call 1.888.436.1847 or go online at www.necu.org. NCUA Federally insured by NCUA PORTSMOUTH DOVER ROCHESTER LEE N O RT H W O O D EXETER 1.888.436.1847 MANCHESTER www.necu.org CONCORD P O RT S M O U T H N AVA L S H I P YA R D (not open to public) GM3420.5.09 Page 23 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo 24 7:30 p.m., at the Capitol Center for the Art’s Spotlight Cafe, $20. FRENCH & JOHN ST, DOWNTOWN RAIN LOCATION: LHS AUDITORIUM SHOWTIME: 7:30PM Check out our 62 academic programs in 6/27 LOS LOBOS 7/10 LOS LONELY BOYS 7/11 ANI DIFRANCO 7/17 MICHAEL FRANTI & THE WALLFLOWERS 8/15 ENTRAIN 8/21 EILEEN IVERS Z34060409 & SPEARHEAD 7/18 AIMEE MANN 7/24-7/26 LOWELL FOLK FESTIVAL 7/30 JOAN BAEZ 7/31 BLUES TRAVELER 8/1 MELISSA FERRICK & CATIE CURTIS 8/7 DAR WILLIAMS 8/8 DEREK TRUCKS BAND 8/14 JAKOB DYLAN • Business • Computers • Engineering Technologies • Health Programs • Human Service • Justice/Legal Studies • Liberal Arts • Visual Arts Visit www.nhti.edu or call (603) 271-6484 00 & IMMIGRANT SOUL 8/22 LIVINGSTON TAYLOR 8/28 TERRANCE SIMIEN & THE ZYDECO EXPERIENCE 8/29 RONNIE EARL & THE BROADCASTERS 9/4 HOT TUNA ELECTRIC 9/5 TOM RUSH 9/12 30th BANJO & FIDDLE 9/18 GAELIC STORM 716 106) FREE FUN FOR KIDS! WED & THUR AT 11AM Wed - 7/8 Curious Creatures Thurs - 7/9 Ben Rudnick & Friends 4 Miles from Concord, see website for directions 603-856-0110 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Tues-Sat 10-5:30pm Sun 11-4pm www.hilltopconsignments.com 24 Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 24 Auditions/workshops • AUDITIONS for the children’s choir for ages 8-12 in Joseph & The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, Sat., June 27, at 10 a.m., at the Palace Theatre. Call 668-5588 for appointment. • IMPROV COMEDY eight-week class starts Sun., June 28, from improv troupe Stranger Than Fiction. See www.strangerthanfiction. us. • NHCTA FESTIVAL deadline to perform at the Sept. 12-13 New Hampshire Community Theatre Association Festival (www.nhcommunitytheatre.com) is Tues., June 30. E-mail Rob Dionne at rob@ nhcommunitytheatre.com. • YOUTH STIMULUS JOBS, 12 full-time positions for 18-24 year olds awarded to Henniker Youth Theatre by the New Hampshire Department of Education (see www. NHworks.org). Those with an interest in the arts who are available to work up to 40 hours per week July 1-Sept. 30 should visit www.alchemistsworkshop.org. • ARTS MINISTRY of All Saints Anglican Church open auditions Wed., July 1, at 6:15 p.m., for singers, dancers, instrumentalists and actors of all ages, at,at the Concordia Lutheran Church, 211 Main St., Concord, 875-1917, www.allsaintsnh.com. • NEW ENGLAND FRINGE FESTIVAL 2009 registration opens July 1. In its third year, the main venue will be Atlantis Playmakers theater, 380 Cambridge St., in Burlington, Mass. There’s a “Bring Your Own Venue” option. E-mail info@ nefringefestival.com, visit www. NEFringeFestival.com or call 978667-0550. • VOLUNTEERS needed for New Thalian Players in mid-July for Theatre in the Park performances in Manchester, including backstage assistants, costume assistants, booth attendants and ushers. E-mail [email protected]. Outside and in Wendy Klemperer’s “Running Black” is part of the Mill Brook Gallery & Sculpture Garden’s annual invitational outdoor sculpture exhibit at 236 Hopkinton Road in Concord. See the rest of this year’s work at Mill Brook’s garden during the Art Concord gallery open houses and receptions Thursday, June 25, from 5 to 8 p.m. Indoors, Mill Brook features contemporary paintings and traditional crafts in “First People of the Northeast” (226-2046, themillbrookgallery.com). If you miss Art Concord, there’s a champagne reception at Mill Brook with music by Sylvia Miskoe and Bruce Cobb, Saturday, June 27, from 2 to 4 p.m. For more about Art Concord, see concordnhchamber. com or call 224-2508. Peterborough, 924-7585, www. peterboroughplayers.org: The Just So Stories by Rudyard Kipling mainly Fridays and Saturdays at 10:30 a.m., June 26-July 25, plus July 22. Proceeds from Just So Stories on June 27 go to Recreation Allies Network (www.recreationallies.org). Anne of Green Gables runs Sat., Aug. 22, Wed., Aug. 26, Fri., Aug. 28, and Sat., Aug. 29, at 2 p.m.; and Mon., Aug. 24, at 7 p.m. • CAPITOL CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS Concord Pediatric Dentistry’s “Little Smiles” Children’s Summer Series Tuesdays at 11 a.m. & 2:30 p.m. in Governor’s Hall at the Capitol Center geared for age 3 and older, $6: Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs June 30; Hansel and Gretel July 7; The Little Mermaid July 14; The Jungle Book July 21; Rapunzel July 28; The Nightingale Aug. 4; Aladdin Aug. 11. Free outdoor shows • GREASE presented by the Prescott Park Arts Festival Thursdays and Sundays at 7 p.m., and Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. June 26-Aug. 23 Children’s performances in Prescott Park on Marcy Street in • LITTLE RED WAGON profesPortsmouth, www.Prescottpark.org, sional theater troupe of UNH per436-2848. Donation recommended. forms A Midsummer Night’s Dream Mon., June 29, at 2 p.m., for young Summer stock audiences, at the Senior Center, 76 • NEW LONDON BARN PLAYN. Main St., Manchester, as part of HOUSE, 84 Main St., New London, the West Manchester Community 526-6710, www.nlbarn.org. PerforLibrary Summer Reading Program. mances Tuesday-Saturday at 8 p.m.; Call 624-6560. Sundays at 5 p.m.; Wednesdays at 2 • PETERBOROUGH PLAYERS p.m.; selected Mondays and Saturdays Second Company shows for chilat 2 p.m., $20-$35.50: She Loves Me, dren and families at 55 Hadley Road, by Joe Masteroff, Sheldon Harnick and Jerry Bock through July 5. • PETERBOROUGH PLAYERS professional performances are mostly Tuesday or Wednesday through Saturday at 8 p.m., and Sundays at 4 p.m., at 55 Hadley Road, Peterborough, 924-7585, www.peterboroughplayers.org, $38-$45. Student rush $15. “Rush for all” $15 on the first Thursday of each show: Bad Dates, comedy by Theresa Rebeck through June 28; The Breath of Life, drama by David Hare July 1-12;. • WINNIPESAUKEE PLAYHOUSE professional summer season at Alpenrose Plaza, routes 3 and 11B in Weirs Beach, Laconia, $19-$21, 366-7377, www.winniplayhouse.com. Performances Monday-Saturday at 8 p.m., and Mondays at 2 p.m.: Play it Again, Sam, romantic comedy by Woody Allen through July 4. Classical Listings • AMHERST TOWN BAND performs at Greeley Park in Nashua Thurs., June 25, at 7 p.m., www. amhersttownband.org. • CONCORD COMMUNITY MUSIC SCHOOL piano recital Sun., June 28, at 2 p.m., at 23 Wall St., Concord, 228-1196, www.ccmusicschool.org, free. • GRANITE STATE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA performs Beethoven’s Symphony No. 3 and the Brahms violin concerto Sat., June 27, at 7:30 p.m., for the Summer Music Associates, at the Sawyer Center at Colby-Sawyer College, 541 Main St., New London, 526-8234. 25 inside/outside In this section: Activities for children and families, workshops, volunteer opportunities, events to keep you healthy and more Gardening Growing Bearded Irises Guy Sun-loving flowers in a rainbow of colors Marita Johnson in her iris garden. Henry Homeyer photo. By Henry Homeyer [email protected] Clubs Car • EAST COAST CAMARO CLUB meets the third Sunday of every month at MacMulkin Chevrolet in Nashua. Visit mjwrabbit.tripod.com. • GATE CITY CORVETTE CLUB meets on the second Friday of the month at 7 p.m. at MacMulkin Chevrolet in Nashua. See www.gatecitycorvetteclub.com. • LONE WOLFE CRUISERS CRUISE NIGHT at Arnie’s Place (164 Loudon Road, Concord) on Tuesdays at 5 p.m. Cruise Night features the Cruiser’s Choice Trophy, which honors the drivers’ favorite car of the night, and the Arnie’s Choice Trophy, which honors the staff’s favorite car. The evening also includes raffles for various prizes and a 50-50 drawing, from which half the proceeds are donated to local charities. adds potassium and micronutrients. One year she added bone meal for phosphorus, but the skunks came and dug them up to get the bone meal. Marita divides her irises every three to five years in the fall. She inspects each rhizome for borers or rot and then replants — keeping out some rhizomes to share with friends and visiting gardeners. In general she plants four rhizomes in a rough circle, allowing about a foot of space in the middle of the planting. In years with an early mud season and long, wet springs she loses some rhizomes to rot. Undaunted, she uses that as an opportunity to buy more! Three companies in Oregon supply Marita with most of her rhizomes, which cost about $7.50 for the ordinary ones. Fancy new varieties can cost up to $50, but she is patient and waits for the price to come down. The companies are MidAmerica Garden (www.mid-americagarden.com, 503-390-6072), Schreiner’s Iris Gardens (www. schreinersgardens.com, 800-525-2367) and Cooley’s Gardens (www.cooleysgardens.com, 503-873-5463). Of course, you can buy some in bloom right now by going to your local plant nursery. That way you will know the color and size of the blooms. Marita keeps on cutting off the spent blossoms to keep that outdoor “bouquet” looking good: sometimes she goes through her iris patch three times a day to remove blossoms that have passed their peak. Deadheading also saves energy, she explained. After a plant is done blooming, she cuts off the foliage about six inches above the ground. So take advantage of the season. Go to your local nursery, see what is in bloom, and bring home some irises. Henry Homeyer is a gardening coach and garden designer and the author of three gardening books. Contact him at henry.homeyer@comcast. net or P.O. Box 364, Cornish Flat, NH 03746. • NEW HAMPSHIRE MUSTANG CLUB holds cruise nights every Saturday at Home Depot in Londonderry (41 Nashua Road). Call 533-0884 or email secretary@ nhmustangclub.com or visit nhmustangclub.com. • NEW ENGLAND VINTAGE THUNDERBIRD CLUB meets throughout the year and sponsors events such as Thurderama. Call 859-7818 or 859-3491, or email [email protected] or visit their Web site clubs.hemmings.com/clubsites/nevt. • SPORTS CAR CLUB OF NEW HAMPSHIRE holds Autocross events throughout the summer. The events happen at the New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon. Cost is $50 for nonmembers. Go to sccnh.org or Samples offered on Sat & Sun reat & Good For You! Tastes G TACOS • ENCHILADAS • QUESADILLAS • NACHOS & MORE! BEST OF NH 2009 www.healthybuffalo.com 603-369-3611 Professional development, degrees... 30 Yoga Classes for all levels.... Features 25 The Garden Guy Advice on your outdoors. 26 Kiddie pool Family activities this weekend. 27 Car Talk Click and Clack give you car advice. 28 Treasure Hunt Hit paydirt in your old stuff. Food 32 Kitchens past An exhibit of kitchens through th ages PLUS Bella Vino’s wine school; Rich TangoLowy helps you shop for ingredients; Weekly Dish; the experts help you pick Wine with Dinner. Get Listed! [email protected] 25 From yoga to pilates, cooking to languages to activites for the kids, Hippo’s weekly listing offers a rundown of all area events and classes. Get your program listed by sending information to [email protected] at least three weeks before the event. VEGGIE QUESADILLAS 2008 36 AMHERST ST., MANCHESTER WWW.CONSUELOSTAQUERIA.COM WWW.MANCHESTERMEXICANFOOD.COM 622-1134 The Open Daily 10 -5 Mon-Wed 11-8 Thu-Fri 11-9 Sat 9-9 Jewelry, Geodes, es, Fossils, Spheres, ds, Minerals, Beads, and more! S Quartz Source Rock & Mineral Shop 503 Nashua St., Rt. 101A Milford 603-673-0481 SANGRIA BEST OF NH 1 mile East of the Weathervane Restaurant. 28 Continuing Education F i n des, U s Healthy Meals Start with Healthy Meats! 258 Dover Rd ( Rt.4 ) Chichester, New Hampshire Hobbies, nature, Toastmasters... Continued on page 28 THE HEALTHY BUFFALO Bison, Venison, Elk, Ostrich Quail, Duck, Wild Boar, Alligator Thurs & Fri 12pm-6pm, & Sat & Sun 10am-4:30pm. 25 Clubs Cyan Magenta Yellow Black June is one of the best months for ogling flowers. There are the peonies, of course, and bachelor buttons. Lupines send up their bright spires. Meadow rue, both blue and yellow, abound in the garden and outside it. Ragged Robin (Lychnis flos-cuculi), a fantastic pink wildflower that grows along roadsides — and even at the edge of my parking area — does its yearly display this month. But as good as any of those are the irises: slim, delicate Siberian iris and hefty bearded iris in a surprising array of colors. They are easy to grow, beautiful, and some of the bearded irises are surprisingly fragrant. Marita Johnson of Springfield, Vt., grows 225 different varieties of bearded iris in her yard in a couple of beds that can be viewed with Mt. Ascutney as a backdrop. I visited her in the second week of June and on that day she had 100 different kinds of iris in bloom. Not 99 or 103. She counts them daily and keeps impeccable records about every type she grows. From white to nearly black, Marita’s irises cover the full spectrum of colors. Bearded irises do best in full sun. Marita and her husband have been in their house for 35 years and during that time the iris garden has had to move as trees grew up and began shading the garden. Like any sun-loving flower, bearded irises will grow in areas with just a little sun, but the number of blossoms and the plant vigor is reduced. In general, six hours a day of sun is fine. Planting irises for the first time? Be sure you plant them with their rhizomes on the soil surface, not buried. A rhizome is a horizontal plant stem that is modified to store energy. Roots come off the rhizome and go down; leaves begin at the rhizome and grow up. The rhizomes are brown and most people just call them roots. They prefer well-drained soil and do not require highly fertile soil, though they do best if started in good soil. Each year Marita uses fertilizers that have little or no nitrogen (the first number of the 3 numbers on the bag). She top dresses with a 510-10 chemical fertilizer in the spring, and adds only phosphorus in the fall with a 0-20-0 chemical fertilizer. The soil should be near neutral, so you may need to add some limestone from time to time to neutralize the acid rain we get. Organic gardeners could fertilize in the spring with an organic fertilizer like Pro-Gro (5-3-4) and supplement it with a little rock phosphorus and green sand in the spring. Because rock phosphate is very slow to be taken up, I would think no fall application would be needed. Green sand Listings 10% OFF with this ad. Not to be combined. 0 Page 25 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo Now Welcoming New Patients 26 in our new location Events for the family this weekend Dr. Jo-Anne Johnson and Dr. Melissa Dennison have merged their practices at their new location. 25 South Maple Street, Manchester www.wellnessdental.net 00 Call for appointment: 622-6288 Want save to Earn Money & the environment? 26 New and Recycled for Baby to Teen and Mothers-To-Be Cyan Magenta Yellow Black www.mothersays.com T-Shirts from Zehn Naturals Available 603-886-6727 Greystone Plaza, Rte 101-A • Race a rubber duck (buy one for $3 or two for $5), ride a pontoon boat, play games and enjoy music at the River Jamboree in Concord at the waterfront park at Everett Arena on Saturday, June 27, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Admission is free, as are canoe and kayak rentals. The rubber duck race starts at 1:15 p.m. For details call 225-8690 or visit www. onconcord.com/recreation. • Celebrate the summer solstice in Hollis (belatedly) on Saturday, June 27, at Maple Hill Gardens, 117 Ridge Road, from 5:30 p.m. until dusk. Free to the public, this party includes live music and a dessert buffet. If it rains, it’ll be indoors. • Or if you’re really feeling summery, head over to Hampton Beach to enjoy a nighttime viewing of the lighted sand sculptures on the Seacoast, any night through Sunday, June 28. For more info, con- 088 tact Hampton Beach Village District at [email protected]. • If it’s Friday, there’s a Friday Frolic at Beaver Brook in Hollis from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Bring rain gear, insect repellent and walking footwear. $5 per person. Call 465-7787 to register. • If it’s Friday, June 26, you can meet some Animals of Summer at the McAuliffeShepard Discovery Center (2 Institute Drive in Concord, starhop.com) from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Discover how these animals have learned to adapt to the change of seasons. This is recommended for children 5 years old and up. Children under 13 must be accompanied by an adult. Cost is $9 for adults, $6 for children 3-12, $8 for students/seniors — and free for members. • Also on Friday, June 26, you can hunt for Bats Above at Massabesic Audubon Center in Auburn from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Learn about bats and search for them, hear bat stories and toast marshmallows. Pre-registration is required; call 668-2045 or see www.nhaudubon.org. Cost is $9 per person (members $6) or $15 per family (members $10). • Or you could study Forest Frogs & Salamanders at Amoskeag Fishways, 6 Fletcher St. in Manchester, 626-FISH, www.amoskeagfishways.org, on Friday, June 26, from 7 to 8 p.m. Cost is $5 per family; advance registration and payment required. Charmingfare Farm Guided Horseback Trail Rides Whether a first-timer or an expert, it’s sure to be a safe and enjoyable experience! Call or visit the website for more information! www.VisitTheFarm.com 603-483-5623 080 Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 26 27 Reader wants advice on safely pulling a prank Walk-Ins Welcome • Gift Certificates Available We need Gold Jewelry For Our Repair Work Highest Prices Paid!! 17 Freetown Rd #1, Raymond, NH 03077 (Located at Raymond Shopping Center) • Acrylics Nails • Gel Liquid • Solar Nails • Pink & White • Spa Pedicure • Hands Design We Make House Calls! • Pearls Gel • Manicure • Air Brush Mon-Fri: 9am-7pm Sat: 10am-6pm Sun: 10am-4pm dville Pinar NOW Accepting Jewelry for Consignment Always Buying Gold & Jewelry Mon 10-5 Tues 10-5 Wed 10-5 Thur 10-7 Fri 10-5 Sat 10-3 679 Mast Rd. Manchester, NH 603-626-0900 BEST OF 2009 THANK YOU FOR VOTING US THE FRIENDLIEST DENTIST! n’t ! Do This iss M ony m r a Coo l H Rota s t i H t Ho A CELEBR HE TING T f Con r y Club o AN AMERIC G R E AT cord Pre SONGB sents Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Dear Tom and Ray: My son, who transports cars for a living, says that we should not put a car battery on the garage floor for more than a few moments while we’re moving it from one place to another. In other words, we should never store it on the garage floor. Why? He claims that it will discharge. He says it happens to them all the time. Now, I’m an electrical engineer. Nothing in my knowledge, training or experience tells me anything about cement garage floors being in any way, shape or form conductive, or in any way a cause of battery discharge. Which one of us is nuts? — Tom RAY: Your son is. We’ve always been told not to leave car batteries on garage floors, too. But that’s so other mechanics won’t trip over them and crack their heads. TOM: Cement is not conductive. You’re right about that. But any rechargeable battery — that’s left anywhere — eventually will lose its charge. Rechargeable batteries are particularly quick to discharge. Just like your cell phone’s battery runs down when it’s sitting on the kitchen counter overnight. RAY: There are some people who have told us that this old myth comes from the days when battery casings were made out of wood. If the battery acid spilled out, it could make the wood wet, and create a conductive path to a moist cement floor. I wasn’t around when batteries were made out of wood, so I don’t know. My brother was around, but nowadays, he can’t remember anything before the Teapot Dome Scandal. TOM: Another theory is that garage floors are simply colder than, say, workbenches. And, as every electrical engineer knows, chemical reactions slow down in lower temperatures. So, while the battery might not be discharging on the cement floor, it might be cooling off, and be less able to pump out its power temporarily. RAY: That’s why we store all of our unsold batteries on our living-room sofas, Tom. Tell your son that’s what he needs to do, too. *** Used cars can be a great bargain, and reliable, too! Find out why by ordering Tom and Ray’s pamphlet “How to Buy a Great Used Car: Secrets Only Your Mechanic Knows.” Send $4.75 (check or money order) to Used Car, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475. Get more Click and Clack in their new book, “Ask Click and Clack: Answers from Car Talk.” Got a question about cars? Write to Click and Clack in care of this newspaper, or e-mail them by visiting the Car Talk Web site at www.cartalk.com. Consignments just in: ROLEX, TIFFANY DAVID YURMAN d of Dear Tom and Ray: My name is Victor, and as an upcoming college freshman, in a fit of my newfound freedom, I want to add a comical touch to my car (when and if I ever get one). I was thinking about gluing a coffee mug onto the roof of my car right above the driver’s seat, as if I forgot my morning coffee. I think it would be funny to see me driving down the highway, 70 mph, with my forgotten drink clinging to the roof of my car for dear life. I have two questions: (1) What glue do you guys suggest so as not to have the paint eaten off the roof of my car? Or some other form of attachment to keep the mug on the car? (2) Do you guys think this is funny? Because I want my most honorable Car Talk Guys’ stamp of approval of humor before I go ahead with my prank on the world. Thank you very much. Victor TOM: I think it’s very clever, Victor. I know there are serious people all over the place who will disagree with me, but I think we all need a few more laughs these days. So I’m for all for it. RAY: I think the only concerns you need to consider relate to safety. First of all, you don’t want the cup to fly off when you’re going 70 mph and hit some other car in the windshield. Or even just scare another driver if it comes flying at him. TOM: So, forget about glue. I wouldn’t trust a commercial glue in that situation, at those speeds. What you need are sheet-metal screws! RAY: Right. We know, since you’re an entering college student, that any car you buy will be old, ugly and crying out to have a few holes drilled in its roof. TOM: I’d suggest that you use a plastic mug. In fact, we have a nice Car Talk travel mug at the Shameless Commerce division of our Web site, www.cartalk.com. Unfortunately, at $14.95, it might be worth more than your car. RAY: In any case, take the plastic mug, place it where you want it on the roof, and then drill four screws right through the bottom of the mug. Be careful that the screws aren’t too long, or they’ll stick down into the passenger compartment. TOM: Right. Then when you go over speed bumps, you’ll bounce up and get four holes in your head. And it’s clear you don’t need any MORE holes in your head, Victor. RAY: Then, to prevent leaks into the car, cover the tops of the screws with a clear, silicone caulk. And draw a bead around the outside of the cup, too, to prevent water from coming in underneath it. TOM: I have a few concerns about the IMMEDIATE CASH PAYMENT BROKEN, USED OR NEW n Isla distraction it may provide to other drivers. I wouldn’t want anybody getting obsessed about your coffee mug and causing an accident while frantically trying to signal you to pull over. But I think the vast majority of people will just smile and shake their heads. RAY Right. It’s not like you’re attaching a baby bassinet to the roof with a blanket billowing out of it. Uh-oh. I hope we didn’t just give Victor another idea. Full Set & Spa Pedicure $48 Spa Pedicure & Fill $40 08 CAR TALK By tom and Ray Magliozzi Come in for Summer Specials OOK JGL9JQ;DM:G>;GF;GJ< akhmllaf_gfYKGF? 9F< <9F;=K@GO Tunes from across America, comedy, dance, and a few surprises will all be performed LIVE by your friends in the Rotary along with some special guests. JUNE 25, 26, or 27 ~ 7:30 PM ~ Concord City Auditorium Tickets: $20 Adults, $15 Seniors and Students Kids under 6 are FREE Available from any Rotarian, Ballards Novelty Shop, Merrimack County Savings Bank, or at www.concordnhrotary.org. All proceeds will be donated to programs that provide support to the homeless and hungry in the Concord area. Thanks to our major sponsors 0 Page 27 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo 27 8 An antiques expert helps you search for buried treasure Bead It! 146 N Main Street, Concord Tel: 603-223-0146 Hello, Donna, I have what I think is a weird item to ask you about. This has been floating around in my family since, well as long as I can remember and I am 62 years old. At one point it was hanging on the back of the cellar door and had sewing pins in it at my parents’. Before that I remember seeing it in their home in the spare room on a table. Now it’s been in my home for over five years in our cellar just waiting for where it will go next. I don’t have the heart to just throw it away. Can you tell me anything you might know about it? It’s 23 inches long and is mostly constructed of wood. The face looks to be hand carved. The clothes look old and it had some kind of hair at one time but it is almost all gone now. If this has any value to someone, maybe you could help me sell it or just find it a new home. Claire in Hudson Dear Claire, Your doll is so sweet. It’s hard to give you a determination on a price because it looks handmade. This category of item is considered to be folk art. There is modern-day folk art as well, but some of the older items have such craftsmanship in them that they can bring some really substantial money in today’s market. Handmade items can be one of a kind. The value would lie in the quality of the item, sometimes the maker (it it’s a famous creator of folk art), the rarity and the subject of the item. A lot of the stuff that would bring a higher value would be the earlier items, but I have seen plenty from the 21st century that has been of interest to collectors. Even stuff from the last 10 years is now sought after as well. Your doll looks to be from the 1930s or 1940s judging by the clothes — though the clothing could have been made to look that way from older garments. His head is very sweet and the 8 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Order today, watch tomorrow. contact Bill Bennert at [email protected] for more information. To join the club visit sccnh.org or contact Dan Francis at 235-9521. MLB EXTRA INNINGS ® DIRECTV knocks it out of the park with FREE next-day installation and a low, locked-in price for one year! DIRECTV packages starting as low as 29 $ 99 MONTH The FamilyTM Package Local channels included†† No equipment to buy No start-up costs DIRECTV is ranked #1 in customer satisfaction† call for more info FREE Professional Next-Day Installation. Ask how! Ray Doyon YOUR LOCAL DIRECTV AUTHORIZED DEALER ACE COMPUTER & ELECTRONICS 1271 ELM ST 866-245-1440 603-703-5959 Authorized DIRECTV Dealer Offer ends 7/07/09, on approved credit, credit card required. New customers only (lease required, must maintain programming, DVR and HD Access). Hardware available separately. $19.95 Handling & Delivery fee may apply. ^Trademarks of Dolby Laboratories. †Among the largest national cable & satellite TV providers. ††Eligibility based on service address. Programming, pricing, terms and conditions subject to change at any time. Pricing residential. Taxes not included. ©2009 DIRECTV, Inc. DIRECTV and the Cyclone Design logo, and FAMILY are trademarks of DIRECTV, Inc. All other trademarks and service marks are the property of their respective owners. Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 28 COnTInuInG EduCATIOn Professional development • CONSITUTION FOR TEACHERS at the Loeb School (749 East Industrial Park Dr., Manchester) on Wed., Aug. 12. The workshop will be led by Attorney Gregory V. Sullivan, who has argued before the New Hampshire Supreme Court in several landmark First Amendment and public access cases. Attorney Sullivan will explore how the three branches of the Federal Government interact with each other, with the 50 states and with the rights of American citizens, all as prescribed by the Constitution. The Constitutional Amendments will be discussed, with an emphasis on the Bill of Rights and the five freedoms of the First Amendment. Register at loebschool. org. • MEDICAL OFFICE COURSES weekly at the Office Technology Training Program in Nashua. Nashua Adult Learning Center, 882-9080 ext. 218. • PRE-NURSING ASSISTANT fact that the hair is missing gives it more character. That’s a difference between manufactured pieces and handmade ones. If this were a Barbie and the hair were missing the value would be almost none. But because this might be the only wood figure like this it’s OK. I would say its value is in the $200+ range to the right collector. It could be even higher, but I would have to see it for real. My word of advice for anyone who has old handmade items from their family: don’t be so sure it’s trash. Some of the common stuff that was made from kits doesn’t have value, but I mean items like this wood figure. If you have questions, have it looked at first before you discard it. Donna Welch has spent more than 20 years in the antiques and collectibles field and owns From Out Of The Woods Antique Center in Goffstown (www.fromoutofthewoodsantiques.com). She is an antiques appraiser, an instructor, a licensed auctioneer and a member of the N.H. Antiques Dealers Association. To find out about your antique or collectible, send a clear photo of the object and information about it to Donna Welch, From Out Of The Woods Antique Center, 465 Mast Road, Goffstown, N.H., 03045. Or e-mail her at [email protected]. Or drop by the shop (call first, 624-8668). Cut-a-thon Signature Style at 670 North Commercial St. in Manchester (in the Jefferson Mill building) will hold a Cut-a-thon on Sunday, June 28, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Men, women and children pay $15 per haircut, whether it’s a half-inch off or a “Locks of Love” haircut of 10 inches or more (no styling, though), and all proceeds will be donated to the New Hampshire Food Bank. Walk-ins are welcome but if you’d like an appointment or have questions, call 606-7089 or e-mail [email protected]. PROGRAM from the American Red Cross, Granite Chapter Office (2 Maitland St., Concord, 225s-6697 or 1-800-464-6692) teaches students how to care for residents in longterm facilities/home/hospitals in a licensed nursing assistant 9-week, 162-hour program. Registration fee is $40; state test is $100. Must be 16 years old; high school diploma or GED not required. • SCIENCE WORKSHOP for kindergarten to 8th-grade teachers at Amoskeag Fishways (6 Fletcher St. in Manchester, 626-FISH, www. amoskeagfishways.org) July 6 to 17 with the Museum Institute for Teach- ing Science. The two-week session will focus on “Science Inquiry: Water and Energy.” See www.mits. org. Graduate credit or continuing education units available. • TEACHING STEM THROUGH AEROSPACE at the McAuliffeShepard Discovery Center on Tues., June 30, at 9 a.m. Learn how to educate middle and high school student about STEM (Science, Technology Engineering, and Mathematics) in this fun-filled teacher workshop featuring aerospace-based activities. Cost is $75, includes $8 credit Continued on page 30 29 Al’s Roofing LOCALLY OWNED & FAMILY OPERATED Cyan Magenta Yellow Black www.als-painting.com Painting, Siding &Windows 29 Page 29 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo 30 Loan Modification, Refinancing RATES CONTINUE TO DROP! & Mitigation Assistance 100% Financing Still Available For Purchases! We provide valuable services to Homeowners to prevent Foreclosure. • LOWEST RATES IN 40 YEARS We fullfill Mortgage formalities in restructuring, contracting or • FHA & VA Low Fixed Rates refinancing existing mortgages. We also assist with Divorce • Purchases RefiBankruptcy nances Bail Outs and Short Sales. Settlements, Tax&Liens, • ResidentialThere’s & Commercial No One We Can’tLoan Help! Programs 595-7699 Esther C. Booras Broker Apply online: Residential & Commercial Financing www.alphamortgages.com 08 Licensed by the New Hampshire Banking Department • MA Broker #MB2267 ME Broker #CS07003 • We arrange but do not make mortgage loans. 2 Bucks a Shuck...Every Tuesday 30 BEST OF Cyan Magenta Yellow Black 2009 $3 Beers, Raw Oysters only $2 from 5:00 - 8:00 pm Call for details and reservations. Ninety Six Pleasant Street, Concord 603.225.7102 www.graniterestaurant.com 0 Unsurpassed Views MONTH FREE RENT* FREEONE RENT FOR THE SUMMER!* Garage Brand NParking ew Construction Garage Parking arking Garage PCourtyard Private Private Courtyard Private Courtyard Concierge Concierge ConciergeServices ervices SServices Monthly Business PARKING SPACES available – Inquire within! INSPIRED CITY LIVING INSPIRED CITY LIVING The Residences At Manchester Place is downtown Manchester’s most desirable new address, designed At forManchester those who Place demand uncompromising sophistication in their The Residences is downtown Manchester’s most desirable new home and lifestyle. from everything the sophistication city has to offer, Manchester address, designed Situated for those just whosteps demand uncompromising in their Place provides a levelSituated of convenience maintenance-free anywhere home and lifestyle. just stepsand from everything the cityliving has tounrivaled offer, Manchester provides elsePlace in the region.a level of convenience and maintenance-free living unrivaled anywhere else in the region. w/ private decks •••Townhouses Kitchens and baths w/ granite Townhouses &and Penthouses 1,and 2, and 3 w/granite bedrooms Spacious 1, &2,Penthouses 3 bedroomsw/private decks • Spacious • • Kitchens baths • Spacious 1, 2, included and 3 bedrooms • •Kitchens and baths w/granite •• Heat &&hot water Trend-setting fitness center Heat hot water included • Kitchens and baths w/granite • Townhouses & penthouses w/private decks • Over-size closets, plus additional storage • Townhouses & penthouses w/private decks • •Over-size plus additional storage •• Furnished corporate suites Roof topclosets, terrace Furnished corporate suites • Trend-setting fitness center • Furnished corporate suites Trend-settingfitness fitness center • Furnished corporate suites •• •Trend-setting • 9” ceilings, 7” windows w/ blinds Community room center •• 9’9’•ceilings, windows w/blinds • Roof and community room ceilings, 7’7’windows Rooftop topterrace terraceand andcommunity community room 9’ ceilings, windowsw/blinds w/blinds •• Roof top terrace • Full-size W/D in7’each residence • Steps from fine restaurants &room cultural attractions •• Full-size W/D residence • Steps fine restaurants cultural attractions Full-size W/D inineach residence Stepsfrom fromfine finerestaurants restaurants &&cultural attractions • Full-size W/D ineach each residence •• Steps from & cultural attractions • Over-size closets, plus additional storage • Rents starting at $1,040* Over-size closets, plus additional storag • Rents starting at $1,040* Heat & hot water included •• Spacious 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms H t&h t t i l d d Leasing Fast – Limited Selections Available See for yourself why The Residences At Manchester Place is the premier place to live d t F i iinformation, f ti i it our office ffi att 1200 El t entrance t tto downtown. For lleasing visit Elm St Street, leasing office on Kidder street, or call 603-668-2880. Move in for asResidences little At asManchester $87.50 —is the Ask usplace How? See for yourself why The Place premier to live leasing office on Kidder street, or call 603-668-2880. downtown. For leasing information, visit our office at 1200 Street, entrance to See for yourself why The Residences At Manchester Place is Elm the premier place to live leasing officeFor onleasing Kidderinformation, street, or callvisit 603-668-2880. downtown. our office at 1200 Elm Street, entrance to leasing office on Kidder street, or call 603-668-2880. 866-838-8122. Professionally managed by DOLBEN in by Julyrestrictions 30, 2009 for 2 months free rent. Certain restrictions apply. **Move Certain apply 054962 www.manchester-place.com Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 30 Equal Housing Opportunity towards lunch in the Countdown Café. 10% discount for members. Call 271-7831 or 271-STAR to register. • TECHONOLOGY FOR TEACHERS The Institute on Disability, 56 Old Suncook Road in Concord, via the University of New Hampshire, will host the third annual Assistive Technology Summer Institute July 22-24, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., with three interactive workshops. The cost is $75 for each workshop, all taught by Dan Herlihy. See www.iod.unh.edu/events. html#atsi or call 228-2084. Yoga • Academy of Marital Arts Manchester Commons, 403 S. Willow St. in Manchester, 626-5272; Lorden Plaza, 614 Nashua St. in Milford, 672-1333; academy-martialarts.com • All Elements Healing Therapies 228 Loudon Road, Concord, 225-5554, allelementshealing.com • Amherst Yoga 17 Old Nashua Road in Amherst, 673-7661, amherstyoga.com • Aquarian Yoga Studio 102 Elm St., Milford, 672-1744. • Bikram Yoga Concord 8 McGuire St., Concord, 4159642, bikramyogaconcord.com • Bikram Yoga Nashua 5 Pine St. Extension, #6 Mill South, Nashua, 880-YOGA, bikramyoganashua.com • Bikram Yoga Manchester 195 McGregor St., Mill West Annex, Manchester, 669-7711, manchesterbikramyoga.com • Body-Oasis 89 Route 101A Suite 9 in Amherst, 882-3832, body-oasis.com • Full Spectrum Wellness Langer Place, 55 S. Commercial St.,Manchester, 296-0830, fullspectrumwellness.com • Greater Manchester Family YMCA 30 Mechanic St. in Manchester, gmfymca.org, 623-3558 • Healing Hands Chiropractic 25 Nashua Road, Suite F2, Lon donderry, 434-3456, healinghand snh.com. • Hollis Yoga 3 Market Place, Hollis, 465-2343, hollisyoga.com. • Living Yoga Studio 120A N. Main St. in Concord, 226-YOGA, livingyoganh.com • Manchester Yoga Center 679 Mast Rd., 668-YOGA, nhyoga.com • Moving Spirit Yoga Studio 32 DW Hwy, Merrimack, 886-7308, movingspirityogadance.com • NH Power Yoga 704 Rte. 101 A, Merrimack, nhpoweryoga.com, 594-2494. • Riverflow 198 Londonderry Pike in Hooksett, 935-9822, riverflowyoga.com • Sharing Yoga 3 Pleasant St., Concord, 630-5576, sharingyoga.com. • Southern New Hampshire Medical Center 8 Prospect St. in Nashua, 883-5124, snhmc.org • Londonderry Yoga 298 Rockingham Road, Route 28, Londonderry, 669-9642, chiro-yoga-massage.com • YogaBalance 145 S. Main St., Manchester, 625-4000, yogabalance.info • YogaCaps yogacaps.org, 670-0302, [email protected] • Yoga Center Concord, 226-0680, nhyogacenter.com. Remember the ferrets A ferret festival, part of the 14th annual Ferret Awareness Day, will take place Saturday, June 27, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Londonderry Lions Club Hall (256 Mammoth Road, Londonderry). There will also be a yard sale from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Admission to the festival costs $3 per person; children 12 and under get in free. Proceeds will benefit local ferret shelters. Call 669-5062 or e-mail nhfoc@ comcast.net. Garden tour The Colonial Garden Club of Hollis will present “Come Into Our Gardens,” a selfguided tour of seven Hollis-area gardens on Sat., June 27, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Tickets cost $20 in advance and can be purchased at www.thecolonialgardenclubofhollis. com, by phone at 466-7148 or by mailing Beaver Brook Association, 117 Ridge Road in Hollis. Tickets will sell for $25 on the day of the tour at the Hollis Common. Pre-order a box lunch, which will be served at Beaver Brook, for $12. • Yoga Circles for Life 43 Lowell Road, Belltowne Plaza, Hudson, 880-8122 • Yoga for Today Waumbec Mills, Manchester, • Yoga Sanctuary 25 Indian Rock Road, Windham, 537-0588, yogasanctuary.com • BUDDHA BELLY YOGA as well as Flow yoga, Gentle Flow yoga, Anusara-Inspired Yoga, Ashtanga sampler and more at the Living Yoga Studio. • CORE YOGA at YogaBalance. Work on abdominal and back strengthening and flexibility postures. Every Tuesday, 9:30-10:30 a.m. Cost is $15 for drop-ins. • FAMILY YOGA a program from Concord Hospital at the Center for Health Promotion (279 Pleasant St., Concord). The class runs Mondays from 5 to 5:45 p.m. starting July 13 and ending Aug. 17. Cost is $69. Register at the Concord Hospital Web site. • FREE YOGA for the unemployed at Sharing Yoga. The offer is for an eight-week yoga and meditation series. Call 230-7300 or go to www.sharingyoga.com. • GENTLE/BEGINNER YOGA a program from Concord Hospital at the Center for Health Promotion (279 Pleasant St., Concord) on Mondays from 5:15 to 6:30 p.m. Classes start July 13 and end Aug. 31. Cost is $95. Register at www. concordhospital.org. • GENTLE FLOW YOGA at Living Yoga, Monday, 5-6 p.m., and Tuesday, 6:15-7:15 p.m. Drop-in rate is $15. • GENTLE YOGA at the Allard Center YMCA of Manchester, Tuesdays, 6:45-8 p.m. Cost is $85 ($60 for members). • GENTLE YOGA at Londonderry Yoga on Tuesdays, 6-7:15 p.m. Drop-ins cost $15. • GENTLE YOGA at Riverflow, Wednesdays at noon, Fridays at 5 p.m. and Sundays at 9 a.m. All classes are 75 minutes, walk-ins cost $12 and seniors and students cost $10. • GENTLE YOGA at Yoga Center on Thursdays, 5:30-6:45 p.m. Cost is $15 for drop-ins. • INTERMEDIATE YOGA is an eight-week program offered by Southern New Hampshire Medical Center, 8 Prospect St. in Nashua, www.snhmc.org. Classes are on Wednesdays, 5:30-6:45 p.m., from Wed., July 8, until Wed., Aug. 26. • IN-DEPTH YOGA every Tuesday from 6 to 8 p.m., with 45 minutes of discussion, presentation and demonstration followed by 75 minutes of yoga, at Sharing Yoga. • LUNCHTIME YOGA as well as Vinyasa yoga, mediation, restorative yoga and Tai Chi/Qi Gong at Full Spectrum Wellness. • NH POWER YOGA has classes Mondays at 9:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.; Tuesdays at 9 a.m., 4 and 7 p.m.; Wednesdays at 9:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.; Thursdays at 9 a.m. and 7 p.m.; Fridays at 9:30 a.m. and 5 p.m.; Saturdays at 9:30 a.m., and Sundays at 9:30 a.m. and 4 p.m. • POWER YOGA a program from Concord Hospital at the Center for Health Promotion (279 Pleasant St., Concord) on Tuesdays from 9 to 10 a.m. Classes start July 14 and end on Aug. 25. Cost is $79. Register at www.concordhospital.org. • POWER YOGA at Riverflow, Wednesdays at 6 p.m. and Saturdays at 8:45 a.m. Wednesday’s class is 75 minutes, Saturday’s class is 90 minutes. Walk-ins cost $12, seniors and students $10. • POWER YOGA: CHALLENGING at YogaBalance on Thursdays, 6:30-7:45 p.m., and Sundays, 4-5:15 p.m. Cost is $15 for drop-ins. • STRESS MANAGEMENT THROUGH YOGA a program from Concord Hospital at the Center for Health Promotion (279 Pleasant St., Concord) on Fridays from 5 to 6:15 p.m. Classes start Jun 19 and run until July 31. Cost is $75. Register at www.concordhospital.org. • SUN SALUTE YOGA at Londonderry Yoga on Thursdays, 910 a.m. Drop-ins cost $15. • SUNRISE YOGA at YogaBalance. A one-hour moderate hatha yoga class every Thursday, 6:15-7:15 a.m. Cost is $15 for drop-ins. • THAI YOGA BODYWORK plus Vinyasa yoga, gentle yoga, beginner yoga and all-levels yoga as well as occasional retreat events are available at Yoga Sanctuary. 31 MORE CONVENIENT SHOPPING Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Starting at $164,900 ENERGY SMART HOMES 31 • 2 bedrooms • 1 ½ baths • central air conditioning • high efficiency furnace • private rear deck • garage SequelDevelopmentNH.com Developed by Conway Mulberry, LLC Built by Sequel Development Visit our Model Anytime by Appointment Call Julie Warhola at 603.321.5540 RE/MAX Properties 603.589.2380 Ext 2241 From Rte South Take Exit to Rte A. Merge onto nd St. Turn left at W. Hancock St. Continue to follow A. Turn left onto Varney St. Turn right onto Larch Street. 0 Directions to The Village of Crosswinds 2 Larch Street, Goffstown NH Page 31 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo 32 Weekly Dish Kitchens then and now Notes from the local food scene By Linda A. Thompson-Odum [email protected] 32 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black • Presidential burgers: One of President Obama’s favorite burger joints is coming to Nashua. Five Guys Burgers and Fries is scheduled to open in the Greenfall Marketplace (341 Amherst St.) sometime in the near future, according to the company’s Web site (www. fiveguys.com). • New eats: The new Ichiban Japanese Steakhouse, Sushi Bar and Lounge opened recently in the old Cat and Fiddle location in Concord (118 Manchester St.). The menu features an extensive selection of sushi, sashimi and rolls, plus a selection of hibachi items. Lunch is served daily from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.; dinner is served Sunday through Thursday, 4 to 10 p.m., and Friday and Saturday, 4 to 11 p.m. • Recession eats: 900 Degrees, 50 Dow St. in Manchester, now offers the Recession Buster — one Margherita pizza and a Caesar Salad for $10. This deal is available from 4 to 7 p.m., Monday through Friday. • Raw: Z Food and Drink, 860 Elm St. in Manchester, will hold another Amateur Chef Night on Tuesday, July 14, and this time with raw food practitioner and aspiring chef Cara Theos. With the support of Z’s staff, Theos will prepare a four-course raw-foods dinner so guests can give this eating style a test run. Part of the proceeds will once again go to the NH Food Bank. Tickets cost $50 and the fun starts at 6:30 p.m. Call 629-9383 for reservations. • Food, the movie: Food, Inc., a documentary about the nation’s food industry, will premiere at Red River Theatres in Concord on Friday, July 24, with a special post-film Q & A with Stonyfield Farm founder Gary Hirshberg. The film is a study of what we eat, how it’s produced, what it’s doing to our country and what the future holds. Regular screenings will run until Aug. 6. Go to www.redrivertheatres.org for film times and to purchase tickets. • Wine tasting: LaBelle Winery, 100 Chestnut Hill Road in Amherst, will hold a free Open House Wine and Cheese event Saturday, June 27, from noon to 3 p.m. The tasting will feature the winery’s award-winning wines paired with local cheeses, plus samples from the Meat House and chair massages. Register through the winery’s Web site, www.labellewinerynh. com, with the number of people in your party, or call 828-2923. • Wine dinner: Flag Hill Winery, 297 North River Road in Lee, 659-2949, will hold its June dinner on Friday, June 26. The three-course dinner features a choice of starters (beer-battered squash blossoms or strawberry and spinach salad) and entrée (bison sirloin steak, paella, or black bean enchilada), with strawberry cream puffs for dessert. Coffee or tea is included, and wine, beer and soda may be purchased by the glass with dinner. The cost is $36 per person; reservations are required. • Hospital food, part 1: Concord Hospital’s Center for Health Promotion, 279 Pleasant St. in Concord, will offer two sessions of its “Kids Top Chef” program — one on Monday, July 13, and the other on Monday, Aug. 3, from 11 Continued on page 34 Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 32 FOOD Museum display tracks progress from mud hut to microwave By Linda A. Thompson-Odum [email protected] Visitors to the new “America’s Kitchens” exhibit at the Museum of New Hampshire History in Concord are greeted by the E. B. White quote, “On days when warmth is the most important need of the human heart, the kitchen is the place you can find it; it dries the wet socks, it cools the hot little brain.” The exhibit’s mission is to outline the centrality of the kitchen as it relates to American life, which includes the regional and historical differences and the technological changes through time. “It’s logical that the kitchen is the center of the home. It’s all about food, which is basic to human existence. And anytime you have food, it’s related to social contact,” said director of collections and exhibitions Wesley Balla. Visitors will see kitchen vignettes that range from Colonial times to the modern day. Some displays also highlight regional kitchen variations between New England kitchens and ones found in the South, Midwest and Southwest. Others show advances in kitchen technology. For example, a food preservation display moves from a wooden barrel (an Old Sturbridge Village reproduction) and 1890s icebox to a 1930s and a 1960s refrigerator. There are a number of interactive displays, such as the one near the exhibit of historic cookbooks, where visitors can page through some books and copy recipes onto provided cards. Another area allows visitors to write down their favorite kitchen story, including disasters, to be archived. A different display lets them explore kitchen design. Visitors may get the feel of churning butter or try their hand at grinding corn on a heavy stone with a stone roller the way it was done by women in New Mexico. Balla pointed out the exhibit shows the ways social, cultural and economic forces change the kitchen over time. He noted how the kitchen started as the centerpiece of the home but then lost some of that status when the movement to fast food shifted the food focus out of the home and family rooms took The progressions of food preservation displayed in the “America’s Kitchens” exhibit at the Museum of New Hampshire History. Linda A. Thompson-Odum photo. the kitchen’s place. It returned with the trend toward big designer kitchens, and remains as the current economy forces people to prepare more meals at home to save money. “Aside from the core point of the exhibit, visitors get to see those changes that occurred and how people and cultures created their own interpretations of the kitchen,” Balla said. The display that seems to elicit the most comments so far is the Koravos Kitchen, a remake of a post-World War II kitchen from Andover, Mass. The turquoise metal cabinets and the stainless steel appliances remind many people of their parents’ or grandparents’ kitchens. “America’s Kitchens” was organized by Historic New England in Boston, the oldest and largest regional preservation organization in the United States. New Hampshire is the first to get the exhibit, where it will remain until January 17, 2010. Then it will move on to the Long Island Museum of American Art, History and Carriages in New York, and the Heritage Museum & Gardens in Massachusetts. To go along with the exhibit is the new book America’s Kitchens by Nancy Carlisle and Melinda Nasardinov with Jennifer Pustz. Much like the display, the book discusses what it was like to live and work in kitchens that were very different from the ones of today. The book costs $34.95 and is available at the museum and at www.nhhistory.org. “Even though a lot of people still cook from raw ingredients, we don’t have the skill sets that people once needed in the kitchen, such as how to handle a fire and where to place the pot,” Balla said. “Go even farther back and they were killing their own meat and growing their own food. The exhibit helps people see the roots of their food, cooking and kitchens.” Bella Vino owner Paula Doucette said. Each class will feature information about a specific wine variety with five different wines to taste and compare. Doucette will teach the classes along with representatives from various wine distributors. “I chose these classes because they seem to be the major grape varietals and they’re our top sellers,” Doucette said. The classes will also include food pairings put together by Sheila Sheehan, the shop’s resident food and wine expert. She has compiled a notebook full of suggestions and recipes for customers. The classes: • Sauvignon Blanc (Tuesday, July 7) — Sauvignon blanc is a white wine best known for its grassy, herbal flavors. It’s a good match with shellfish or as an alternative to chardonnay. This class will explore differences between new world and old world sauvignon blancs. “Most people who love red wines like sauvignon blanc,” Doucette said. • Riesling (Tuesday, July 21) — The classic German white wine grape known for its floral perfume aromas. Regional differences can change this wine’s characteristics from crisp and bone-dry to full-bodied and spicy or luscious and sweet. “America’s Kitchens” exhibit Where: Museum of New Hampshire History, 6 Eagle Square, Concord, 228-6688, www.nhhistory.org When: Exhibit runs through Jan. 17, 2010. Hours: Tuesday through Saturday 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sunday noon to 5 p.m. Also open Monday, 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., July 1 through Oct. 15. Same grape, different wine Find out why with Bella Vino By Linda A. Thompson-Odum [email protected] Anyone who has a favorite wine type — merlot, pinot noir, sauvignon blanc — knows that the flavor can differ from one label type to another. This summer, Bella Vino in Londonderry will host a series of classes that explain what makes wines different even though they come from the same grape type. “Everyone has a favorite type of wine, but it’s amazing how different each varietal can be. Plus a lot of people have also told me they want to know about wine in general,” 33 FOOD • Pinot Noir (Tuesday, Aug. 4) — Pinot Noir originated in Burgundy, France, but today’s popular varieties also come from Oregon and California. It’s a light to medium-body wine that has a reputation of being difficult to grow and make. • Merlot (Tuesday, Aug. 18) — Merlot has herbal and fruity flavors similar to Cabernet Sauvignon, but also a smooth and supple character without the bite of tannins. Top producers hail from Bordeaux, California, Washington state, Chile and Argentina. • Cabernet Sauvignon (Tuesday, Sept. 8) — Doucette noted that this wine is the most successful and popular of the top-quality red-wine grapes. Cabernet sauvignon grapes produce full-bodied, fruity wines that are rich, complex and intensely flavorful. The classes run from 6 to 7:30 p.m. The cost of each is $25, and class size is limit- Continued on page 35 Breaking News! 17 West Main St. Hillsborough, NH 603.464.6766 255 Newport Road New London, NH 603.526.2265 2 Young Road, Londonderry (just below Tupelo Music Hall), 426-5212, www.bellavinonh.com Store hours: Tuesday and Wednesday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Thursday and Friday, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.; and Saturday, 11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Regular wine tastings take place on Thursday from 4:30 to 7 p.m. and Saturdays from 1 to 4 p.m. from local artisans. To get in touch with McChesney for more information on the market or to learn how to become a vendor, call 731-6253 or [email protected]. • LACONIA FARMERS’ MARKET on Beacon Street East, Saturdays through October, 8 a.m. to noon. Call 267-6522 or e-mail [email protected]. • LEE FARMERS’ MARKET at Old Fire Station on Route 115 on Thursdays through October, 3-6 p.m. Call 659-9329 or e-mail [email protected]. • MANCHESTER’S DOWNTOWN FARMERS’ MARKET Manchester’s Downtown Farmer’s Market returns on Thurs., June 18 and will continue every Thursday until Oct. 22. The Market runs from 3 to 6:30 p.m. (until 6 p.m. in October) and parking in the Harnett Parking Lot next door to the market is free during market hours. Look for local produce, meat, cut flowers, baked goods, specialty foods, certified organic products and more. Weekly family activities will include cooking demonstrations, music, farm animals and other entertainment. The market is located on Concord Street next to Victory Park. Visit www.manchesterfarmersmarket.com for a list of vendors and activities. • MILFORD FARMERS’ MARKET at Granite Town Plaza on Elm Street on Saturdays, 9 a.m. to noon, Classic Italian-American Cuisine with Brick Oven Pizza Bella Vino • BROOKLINE (OUTDOOR) FARMERS’ MARKET at Brookline ballpark on Route 130, on Tuesdays through October, 3-6 p.m. Call 672-4229 or e-mail www. brooklinefarmersmarket.org. • CANTERBURY FARMERS’ MAKRET at Canterbury Center in Elkins Library parking lot on Wednesdays through October, 4-7 p.m. Call 783-9649, e-mail farmer@ ccfma.net or go to www.ccfma.net. • CONCORD FARMERS’ MARKET runs Saturdays, 8:30 a.m. to noon on Capitol Street next to the state house. Look for live music, plants, flowers, meat, maple syrup and baked goods along with the traditional seasonal fruits and vegetables. • FRANKLIN FARMERS’ MARKET, 206 Central St. on Tuesdays, July through September, 3-6 p.m. Call 648-6586 or e-mail [email protected]. • HILLSBOROUGH FARMERS’ MARKET at Butler Park on the corner of Central and Main streets, on Saturdays, July through September, 9 a.m. to noon. Call 464-4640. • KEARSARGE MARKET 51 E. Main St. in Warner in the Brookside complex. This year-round market is open every Saturday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Owner Mike McChesney says the market features locally grown or made fruits, vegetables, cheese, ice cream, pies, cakes, breads, freeranged meats, eggs, herbs, spices, herbal products, tomato sauces, maple products, candy and more as well as art, jewelry and other items 172 North Main St. (in the Holiday Inn) Concord, NH 603.224.0400 www.nonnisitalianeatery.com Quality is affordable! 5 ~ 10 ~ 15 $5 Lunches $10 Sunday Brunch $15 Dinners Weekdays 11:30AM -4PM 33 Check out our Luncheon Fare, Rancher Burgers, or Wraps, Rollups, & Sandwiches sections online where you’ll find 19 items priced between 5.99 and 7.99 at our special lunchtime price! Sun. & Mon. 4PM-8PM Grill your own skewers on our deck! The Boston Globe has honored The BVI’s Chocolate Bag as one of the Top Ten Desserts in New England! February 2009 OpenTable.com has named The BVI as one of the Top Ten Most Romantic Restaurants in New England! March 2009 Choice of beef or chicken served with whole grain summer pasta salad and fresh sweet NH corn on the cob... 9.99 LuxuryLinks.com has selected The BVI to join its collection of luxury destinations throughout the world. Log on to LuxuryLinks.com and check it out! That and a lot more at The BVI! Go2CJs.com 782 South Willow St., Manchester NH · 627-8600 Two Olde Bedford Way, Bedford, NH 603.472.2001 www.bedfordvillageinn.com 800.852.1166 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Food Listings Farmers’ markets • AMHERST INDOOR FARMERS’ MARKET at Salzburg Square, Route 101 in Amherst. Monday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Tuesday and Wednesday, 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.; Thursday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. (wine tasting from 4 to 7 p.m.); Friday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sunday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. • AMHERST (OUTDOOR) FARMERS’ MARKET at the Amherst Village Green, on Thursdays through October, 2:306:30pm. Call 249-9809 or e-mail [email protected]. • BEDFORD FARMERS’ MARKET, at Wallace Road in Benedictine Park, on Tuesdays, through October, 3-6 p.m. Events include usicians, July 4 celebration, pumpkin decorating and trick or treat at the market. Call 435-6410, e-mail [email protected] or go to www.bedfordfarmersmarket.org. • BROOKLINE INDOOR FARMERS’ MARKET offers breads from Stormy Moon Farm bakery, a freezer of meats from Kelly Corner Farm in Chichester, locally raised chickens, free-range turkeys that can be preordered, DJ’s Pure Natural Honey, Yankee Farmers pepperoni, garlic from Country Dreams Farm, Nashua. The market is on Route 13, next to TD Banknorth, the Brookline Florist and Farwell Realty. Hours are Mondays, 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., and Tuesdays through Fridays, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Call 554-6002 ed, so registration is required. Each student will receive a 10-percent discount if they sign up for three or more classes. Students will also receive a 10-percent discount on the purchase of any wine sampled that evening and a free Bella Vino Wine glass. Doucette may add a class on zinfandels in the fall. She plans to hold another wine aroma class, which teaches how to distinguish the different scents found in wine. To find out the latest, visit her Tastings and Notes blog on the shop’s Web site, www. bellavinonh.com. Page 33 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo 34 STEAKS SEAFOOD CHICKEN SUSHI Japanese Steak House 669-8122 Dinner for Two choose from only TERIYAKI CHICKEN or SUKIYAKI STEAK $ 20. 95 Exit 9 South 1 Mile off 93 Maple Tree Mall 545 D.W. Highway North Manchester from $6.50 Includes Jumbo Shrimp Appetizer, Soup, Crispy Salad, 4 Vegetables, Steamed Rice & Tea Limit one coupon per party, Good Sun-Fri. Not to be combined with any other offers. One coupon per visit. Not valid holidays. Coupon expires 7-1-09 Air Conditioned ~ Full Bar ~ Gift Certificates available ~ Expertly prepared at your table 0 34 Be Hi st o pp f t o he 20 B 09 es ! t Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Serving the complete Piccola Menu late into the night Friday, June 26th Siroteau Saturday, June 27th Double Shot Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 34 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on both days. The cost is $15. See www.concordhospital.org. • Hospital food, part 2: St. Joseph Hospital, 172 Kinsley St. in Nashua, 882-3000, www.stjosephhospital.com, will hold its “New England Clambake Class” on Thursday, July 9, from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Learn how to cook for a clambake and take apart a lobster. The cost is $25. Register online. • Two great tastes… The Canterbury Shaker Village, 228 Shaker Road in Canterbury, will hold its Raspberry-Lavender Day on Saturday, July 11, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Learn culinary, medicinal and household uses for lavender, take a tour of a certified organic gardens, which will include tips on growing and sustaining lavender, and attend a relaxation clinic and try Shaker-style lavender cookies and tea for sampling. Cooking demonstrations, lavender wand-making, sachet-making, massages and yoga also will be part of this event. Admission costs $17 for adults, $8 for children ages 6 to 17, and children under 5 may attend free. Call 7839511 ext. 200 or see www.shakers.org. • Eat local: Gibson’s Bookstore, 27 S. Main St. in Concord, 224-0562, www.gibsonsbookstore.com, will hold an event to celebrate Eat Local Foods month in New Hampshire (August) on Thursday, July 30, at 7 p.m. A panel will discuss the ben- efits (health, economic, environmental) of eating local and offer suggestions of books to encourage local eating. The panel will include Ruth Smith from the Concord Cooperative Market, Larry Pletcher of the Vegetable Ranch and president of Local Harvest CSA, Elizabeth Obelenus of Northeast Organic Farming Association and Ruth Owen of Hopkinton. • Helping more people eat local: The state Department of Health and Human Services’ Women, Infants and Children (WIC) Nutrition Program will offer WIC families coupons to use at state farmers’ markets. See www.nhfma.org for a list of markets. See www.dhhs.nh.gov/DHHS/WIC/default.htm for information on WIC. • New menu, new deals: Nutfield Ale and Steakhouse, located inside the Four Points by Sheraton on John E. Devine Drive in Manchester, plans to introduce a new menu at the end of June, according to a press release. Look for Main Jonah crab cakes with fresh jalapeño preserves, a crisp summer fruit gazpacho, miso and sake glazed baby back ribs, and beer and bourbon marinated filet tips as well as a new wine list. Also, the steakhouse will have a hospitality hour Monday through Friday, 4 to 6 p.m., with different specials each night. BEST OF 2009 Weekly Dish Continued from page 32 Daily Lunch Specials Southern NH’s Most Unique Dining Experience FOOD Firefly American Bistro & Bar 22 Concord Street Downtown - Manchester, NH (603) 935-9740 Open 7 days Lunch 11:30am - 4pm Dinner 5pm - 10pm Sun-Thu 5pm - 11pm Fri & Sat Reservations Accepted 35 FOOD Ingredients Foodie Rich Tango-Lowy helps you search the aisles 603.622.5488 08 Pickles with Sanbaizu (Three Flavor Vinegar) I often make these pickles with cucumbers, but you can easily substitute carrots, daikon (Japanese radish), eggplant, cauliflower, Chinese cabbage or any similar vegetable. In a medium bowl, whisk 1/3 cup of rice vinegar, 3/4 teaspoon of soy sauce, 1 1/2 tablespoons of sugar, and 1/4 teaspoon of salt until completely blended. Peel two cucumbers, slice each in half lengthwise, and scoop out the seeds with a teaspoon. Slice the cucumbers very thinly to make many, many half-moon shaped slices. Toss the slices into the bowl with the vinegar mixture making sure to coat them thoroughly, cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate several hours or until dinnertime. Serve with short-grain rice and Asian fare. from 3 to 6 p.m. in the parking lot between the Old Navy and the Banana Republic. The market will run from June 23 through Sept. 23. • WEARE FARMERS’ MARKET in Weare Center around the gazebo on Fridays through September, 3-6 p.m. Call 413-6213 or e-mail [email protected]. Festivals/cook-offs/expos/ parties/book events • STRAWBERRY FESTIVAL The annual Hollis Strawberry Festival and Band Concert will be held Sun., June 28, from 2 to 4 p.m. featuring strawberry shortcakes and sundaes along with arts and crafts, activities for the kids and music. The Hollis Town Band will perform marches, Broadway show tunes and symphonies. The event will be held at Monument Square (or in the Hollis Brookline High School in case of rain). Contact Diana Kroeger at 465-2392 or Lynne Dougherty at 465-2723. • SUMMER SOLSTICE WITH DESSERT BUFFET Beaver Brook Association will hold a Summer Solstice Celebration on Sat., June 27, from 5 p.m. to dusk at Maple Hill Gardens, 117 Ridge Road in Hollis. The event is free and open to the public and will feature a dessert buffet, live music with the band Cahill (www.cahillmusic. com/music.html), a walk through the gardens and more. Bring a picnic dinner and blankets and chairs. See www.beaverbrook.org. Chef events/special meals • CIGAR DINNER Bedford Village Inn, 2 Olde Bedford Way in Bedford, 472-2001, www.bedfordvillageinn.com, will hold its third annual cigar dinner, featuring Tatuaje Cigar owner and founder Pete Johnson, on Thurs., July 23. The evening will begin at 6 p.m. under the tent with a cigar, a taste of scotch and hors d’oeuvres and a raw bar. Dinner will begin at 6:30 p.m. Most courses of the multi-course meal will be paired with a cigar wine or other beverage. The cost is $105 per person and “the dress is Tommy Bahama Casual,” according to the BVI Web site. Call 800-852-1166 or e-mail www.bedfordvillageinn. com for reservations. See the Web site for a complete menu. • MEDITERRANEAN MEAL Before the performance of Girls Night: The Musical at the Capitol Center for the Arts in Concord on Thurs., June 25, and Fri., June 26, enjoy a pre-show dinner in the historic Kimball House Mansion Dining Room (attached to the Chubb Theatre) catered by Nonni’s Italian Eatery. The menu includes fresh mozzarella and tomato brochette, vegetable roll-ups with chive cream cheese, Mediterranean chicken skewers with olive and basil, mini eggplant parmesan with ricotta cheese, prosciutto and fresh melon with cracked pepper, and Caesar salad with Nonni’s homemade dressing. Tickets for the dinner cost $16.50 (performance tickets are sold separately) and must be purchased in advance. Go to ccanh. com for tickets to both events. (The dinner will not be served before the Sat., June 27, performance.) 13 Warren St., Concord, NH 03301 www.nhchocolates.com 225-2591 BEST OF 2009 Hours: Sun. 12-5, Mon.-Wed. 10-6, Thur. & Fri. 10-8, Sat. 10-6 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black June 20 through early October. Call 673-5792, e-mail mosseyapples@ aol.com or go to www.Milfordnhfarmersmarket.com. • NASHUA — MAIN STREET BRIDGE MARKET is held on the side of Main Street, on the bridge near Peddler’s Daughter in downtown Nashua, on Sundays, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., through Oct. 25. See www. greatamericandowntown.org or call 883-5700. • NASHUA — SCHOOL STREET MARKET will run Fridays from 2 to 6 p.m. until Oct. 30. See www.greatamericandowntown. org or call 883-5700. • NEW BOSTON FARMERS’ MARKET at the gazebo in the Town Common on Route 13 on Saturdays, July through October, 9 a.m. to noon. Call 487-2480, e-mail [email protected] or go to www. newbostonfarmersmarket.org. • PELHAM FARMERS’ MARKET has started for the season and will run Mondays through Sept. 28 from 4 to 7 p.m. at St. Patrick Parish, 12 Main St. in Pelham. Look for New Hampshire wines, fruits and vegetables, homemade breads and baked goods, plants, flowers and entertainment for the kids. E-mail [email protected]. • PETERBOROUGH FARMERS’ MARKET in Depot Square on Wednesdays through October, 36 p.m. Call 878-6124, e-mail Mich. [email protected] or go to www.peterboroughfarmersmarket.webs.com. • TILTON TANGER OUTLET The Tanger Outlet Center in Tilton, Exit 20 off Interstate 93, will host a farmers’ market on Wednesdays Cotton has the cure Voted best Martinis in New Hamphire year after year after year after year after year www.cottonfood.com 35 Distilled white vinegar, champagne vinegar, balsamic vinegar, 12-years-old black fig vinegar, apple cider vinegar, chardonnay vinegar, pear vinegar and rice wine vinegar. I keep many vinegars; vinegar provides acid, vinegar adds tang,vinegar balances the rich fat. Rice vinegar with sesame oil for basting, rice vinegar with soy sauce for dipping, rice vinegar with sugar and a pinch of salt for sushi rice. White rice vinegar fermented from short-grain rice with water and sugar, smoky black rice vinegar made with sweet rice and sorghum, sweet-tart red rice vinegar fermented from yeasty red rice. Mild Japanese rice vinegar, potent Chinese rice vinegar, rice vinegar from the supermarket, rice vinegar from the Asian market. I pickle cucumbers and carrots and daikon in rice vinegar and soy sauce and sugar and salt; it’s called Sanbaizu. Rice Vinegar Martini Envy? Page 35 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo 36 BEST OF 2009 Hippo Press Readers Poll Best Ribs KC’s Rib Shack Best Menu Item Pulled Pork BBQ KC’s Rib Shack Best Sandwich The Cardiac Sam Hottest Bartender BEST OF 2009 KC’s Rib Shack KC’s Rib Shack Cyan Magenta Yellow Black IS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Best Vegetarian Menu Café Momo •Hanover St. Oops... Oh Well, Ya Can’t win ‘em all 36 KC’s BBQ • 837 2nd. St. Manch. 627-7427 • ribshack.net 625 Mammoth Road, Manchester NH 03104 (603) 623-2880 www.thederryfield.com WiFi Plenty of FREE Parking ENTERTAINMENT THIS WEEK Thursday: Nate Comp Friday: Endangered Species Saturday: Resonant Soul Sunday: Chad LaMarsh Solo Acoustic Monday: Lisa Guyer Solo Tuesday: Gardner Berryu Wednesday: Ben Kilcollins Thursday: John Ridlon Wednesday Nights are Prime Rib Night Prices start at $9.99 4pm til it’s gone! Vote d “ B e st D e ck ” i n N H ! LIVE ENTERTAINMENT EVERY NIGHT! IN THE LOUNGE ... Friday: Mama Kicks Saturday: Chad LaMarsh Band NEW HEATED SKY DECK! (OPEN EVEN WHEN IT RAINS!) ALWAYS A GOOD TIME! NEW DRINK MENU! COME CHECK US OUT! 200 seat Banquet Facility... Off Site Catering Specializing in weddings, corporate meetings, holiday parties... (603) 623-2880 Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 36 0 37 drink Wine with dinner What to drink when you’re eating Strawberry Shortcake By Linda A. Thompson-Odum [email protected] Drink Listings Brewerys/Distillerys/Cider • ANHEUSER-BUSCH 221 DW Hwy in Merrimack. Complimentary tours include a visit to the Clydesdale Hamlet, home to the world-famous Budweiser Clydesdales. Open daily 10 to 5 p.m. Call 595-1202. • FARNUM HILL CIDERS 98 Poverty Lane, Lebanon, 448-1511, www.farnumhillciders.com • ELM CITY BREWING COMPANY Colony Mill Marketplace, 222 West St., Keene, 355-3335, www.elmcitybrewing.com. Restaurant, brewery and pub, open Mon.-Thurs., 11:30 a.m. to 11 p.m., Friday and Saturday, 11:30 a.m. to midnight, Sunday 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. • REDHOOK BREWERY 35 Corporate Drive, Pease Tradeport, Portsmouth, www.redhook.com, produces Redhook ales and features the Cataqua Public House offering brews and a pub menu. Tours offered Monday and Tuesday at 2 p.m.; Wednesday and Thursday at noon, 1, 3 and 4 p.m.; Friday and Saturday every hour on the hour from noon to 4 p.m.; Sunday every hour on the hour from 1 to 4 p.m. For private tours, call 4308600 ext. 327. • TUCKERMAN BREWING COMPANY 64 Hobbs St. in Conway, 447-5400, www.tuckermanbrewing.com, offers tours every Saturday at 3 p.m. Classes/workshops on wine/ beer making • BEER/WINE-MAKING classes and demonstrations on making beer, wine and soda at IncrediBREW, 112 DW Hwy., Nashua, 891-2477, incredibrew.com. Shop features fest-nights that focus on making a particular kind of beer. • VINTNER’S CELLAR CUSTOM WINERY — BEDFORD Vintner’s Cellar at Sebbins Brook Marketplace, 410 South River Road Route 3 in Bedford, offers a chance to taste and create custom wines. Call 627-9463 or go to www.vintnerscellarnh.com. • VINTNER’S CELLAR WINERY — CONCORD 133 Loudon Road, allows customers to make custom wines. • VINTNER’S CELLAR WINERY — PORTSMOUTH Design and create your own high-quality wine. At 801 Islington St. in Portsmouth. Open Mondays through Wednesdays, and Saturdays, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Thursdays and Fridays 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., Sundays and evenings by appointment only. Call Gail at 431-5984. Classes/workshops on beer/ wine tasting • INTRODUCTION TO WINE Chuck Saunders of The Wine Society (18 Pondview Place in Tyngsboro, Mass., 978-649-8993; 650 Amherst St. #9 in Nashua, 883-4114; www.winesociety.us) will hold a one-night introduction to wine on Thurs., June 25, 6:308 p.m. at the Tyngsboro store. The cost is $40 ($35 for Society members); RSVP at 883-4114. • WINE CLASSES Bella Vino, 2 Young Road in Londonderry, will hold six summer classes that focus on different grape varietals on various Tuesdays from July until September. Each class will include wine education specific to that grape, food pairing and five wines to taste and compare. Cost is $25 per class. Enrollment is limited, so sign up early. Email paula@ bellavinonh.com, or call 426-5212. The complete list of classes can be found at www.bellavinonh.com. • WINE SOCIETY (18 Pondview Place in Tyngsboro, Mass., 978649-8993; 650 Amherst St. #9 in Nashua, 883-4114; www.winesociety.us) offers classes for wine-lovers of all levels. New sessions start every few months. Call for upcoming schedule. Special tastings • BBQ WINES The Wine Society (18 Pondview Place in Tyngsboro, Mass., 978-649-8993; 650 Amherst St. #9 in Nashua, 883-4114; www. winesociety.us) will have a tasting of wines to go with July Fourthstyle barbecue on Sat., June 27, at the Tyngsboro store from 1 to 4 p.m. The cost is $10; RSVP to 8834114. • WHITES & ROSÉS WINE TASTING The Concord Cooperative market, 24 S. Main St. in Concord, 410-6200, www.concordfoodcoop.coop, will hold a summer wine tasting of whites, pinks and rosés on Thurs., June 25, from 6 to 8 p.m. This event is free and open to the public. Sample 50 different wines (available for sale for less than $15 per bottle) while snacking on treats and listening to live music. • WINE & CHEESE TASTING LaBelle Winery in Amherst is holding a free open house wine and cheese tasting event on Sat., June 27, from noon to 3 p.m. Go to labellewinerynh. com to register for the event. • WINE SOCIETY BOOK CLUB The Wine Society will restart its Wine Society Book Club in the fall at the Tyngsborough store at 18 Pondview Plaza on scheduled Thursdays from 6:30 to 8 p.m. The cost of each book event will be $25 per participant and the number and type of wines to go with each book discussion will depend on the number of attendees. Registration for each month’s discussion will be closed one week in advance. Introducing The Recession Buster! Contemporary Asian- American Fusion with Japanese Hot Pots and Full Sushi Bar 1 Margherita Pizza & a Caesar Salad $10.00 4-7pm, Mon-Thurs Also, stop by for acoustic Tuesdays Casual Fine Dining San Francisco Kitchen 133 Main St., Nashua 50 Dow Street, Manchester 886-8833 www.900degrees.com Sun. 4-10 Mon.- Wed. 11-10 Thurs. - Sat. 11-11 603.641.0900 Open 7 Days aWeek. (Located behind the former Dunn Furniture store on Canal St.) 0 37 An Affordable Taste of Italy in downtown Nashua…since 1997 Discover budget-friendly Italian cuisine: Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Strawberry shortcake is the quintessential summer dessert. The most logical wine match would be champagne since it is common to pair its fine bubbles with strawberries, and one of the wine experts made that selection. However, the other two made different, though bubbly, suggestions to expand this dish’s wine possibilities. • Scagliola Dolcesvago Moscato — $15.99 (Recommended by Marissa Bontatibus from The Wine Studio, 53 Hooksett Road in Manchester, 622WINE (9463), and 27 Buttrick Road #3 in Londonderry, 432-WINE (9463) This moscato has a hint of lemon and is light and effervescent, which Bontatibus said will make the shortcake light and airy. • Champalou Brut Vouvray — $22.99 (Recommended by Paula Doucette of Bella Vino, 2 Young Road in Londonderry, 426-5212, www.bellavinonh.com) This sparkling Chenin Blanc is floral on the nose, dry and clean on the palate, and less effervescent than champagne. But it’s every bit as fun to drink and versatile with food. • Charles LaFitte Brut Champagne — $33.99 (Recommended by Marilyn McGuire from the Cracker Barrel, 377 Main St. in Hopkinton, 746-7777) Brut means dry, and the dryness offsets the sweet strawberries and the rich cream. And the bubbles make it fun. • 2007 Scagliola Brachetto Petali di Rose — $16.99 at state stores (Recommended by Alexandra Graf from The Inn at Danbury’s Alphorn Bistro, 67 Route 104 in Danbury, 768-3318, www.innatdanbury.com)This Italian selection is sweet and slightly sparkling, though not as much as champagne. It has a little acid to balance the sweetness of a dessert. Everybody Mangia! Page 37 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo 8 POP CuLTurE Index Cds pg39 dork vs. dork: Transformers 2 Revenge of the CGI explosions • Rhett Miller, Rhett Miller, B+ BOOKS MuSIC, BOOKS, GAMES, COMICS, MOVIES, dVdS, TV And MOrE pg40 • What We Eat When We Eat Alone, Stories and 100 Recipes, B Includes listings for lectures, author events, book clubs, writers’ workshops and other literary events. To let us know about your book or event, e-mail Lisa Parsons at lparsons@ hippopress.com. To get your author events, library events and more listed, send information to [email protected]. FILM pg42 • Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, B 8 • Year One, B- • Away We Go, B • Food, Inc., C+ dAn rESPOndS You’re right, there’s no place to go. Like some dork Capt. Picard, you’ve become assimilated by the Bay-org and I have no Riker to shoot you out. But maybe it’s better this way. Maybe, just maybe, you’ll come out the other side of this a better person. After all the robot dust has settled and you pick yourself up off your sticky basement floor, and as the gummy bears slowly begin to fall away, your eyes will clear and you’ll walk out into the piercing daylight a better, stronger human being. Then again, maybe resistance really is futile. What is there to debate here, really? The size of the explosions? Megan Fox’s acting ability? Whether there will be a third movie in the franchise? Answers: Big, terrible, yes. So Michael Bay is back with the summer’s most highly anticipated sequel: Transformers: Revenge of the blah, blah blah. Who cares? This movie might as well be called Megan Fox Pretty, Robots Go Boom for all the difference any nod to story, acting, development or subtext this movie will have. There are three writers attached to this project. Why? What could they possibly have contributed? Here, let me save Bay some money next time, and write the script for him right here: Kablam! There, done, you’re welcome. Look, Bay took a real step toward being a real person by appearing in those credit card commercials where he makes fun of himself. Good for him. So, now, why maintain the facade of being a real film-maker? Why not just film a two-hour robot fight? John Turturro? Why bother? Put that money toward more special effects. Add ninjas and maybe a giant shark that can walk on land. Make it robot zombies. Bring in some pirates. The sooner Bay strips off the greasy veneer of filmmaker and just focuses his energy on blowing things up, the better off we’ll all be. Until then, it’s not worth sitting through Shia LaBeouf’s attempts at human emotion. The robots have more feeling. GLEnn rESPOndS It should be noted that one of the three writers here comes from your precious Star Trek reboot, Mr. Pissoneverything. Just because Michel Gondry didn’t bring your proposed My Little Pony Helen Mirren, Ralph Fiennes Darfur genocide indie flick to the silver screen shouldn’t sour your puss to a fun romp in robo exlpodey town. Also, Megan Fox Pretty, Robots Go Boom? I and most film-goers would lap that sweet cream up. • T-SHIRTS AVAILABLE IN ASSORTED COLORS • AND DON’T FORGET THE FRIED DOUGH Spring Hours 11a.m. - 10p.m. 7 days a week - Take out orders 250 Valley St., Manchester Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 38 6 6 9 - 4 4 3 0 Delivery & Catering Available Cyan Magenta Yellow Black • Whatever Works, B+ I’m sorry, what did you say? I couldn’t hear you over the sound of everything being exploded by ninja robots who turn into sports cars. I didn’t hear your pointless plea for subtext and plot amidst the Robo-kung-fu; the chest-swelling bass of Peter Cullen’s Optimus Prime has deafened my ears to the mewling of lesser men. Gloomy Gus and Nitpick Ned are sure to pooh- pooh the Bayformers franchise from their respective crum bum perches. “Oh, phooey, they didn’t make Soundwave a 20-foot-tall tape deck.” “Well tarnation! A M1 Abrams-sized robot cannot possibly shrink down to a Vespa scooter.” SHUT UP, NERD. Go watch a PBS documentary about giant crossbows instead of ruining a perfect summer treat. Objections are irrelevant to a film like Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen. I mean, if you’re going to argue negatively about a movie that uses a subtitle with “Revenge” in it you’ve already lost. Bay’s “adaptation” is causing a nerd war among Trans-fetishists but the only Switzerland profiteering to have is to shut the medulla off and unselfconsciously enjoy it. Yes! Shia LaBeouf looks like a Camaro-driving early ’80s pimp minus the John Waters moles-tache. Hell yes! Megan Fox has legs that go all the way to the ground and is the proverbial “Brick House” that funk music warned us of. Michael Bay WILL sweep a tracking shot across an aircraft carrier and then explode them all to heck with robot meteors. GIVE IN TO THE BAYHEM. Introducing at 116 West Pearl St. Nashua 603-579-0888 Come in today and discover our award winning menu and unbeatable Hospitality. Now 2 Locations for Southern NH’s Best Asian Food! 1000 Elm St. Manchester ph:634-0000 116 West Pearl St. Nashua ph:579-0888 POP CuLTurE: On store shelves Tuesday, June 30 • Wilco, by Wilco (Nonesuch) • Cradlesong, by Rob Thomas (Atlantic) • American Saturday Night, by Brad Paisley (Rca) • Electric Dirt, by Levon Helm (Vanguard Records) CdS • Wait For Me, by Moby (Mute) • Road Show, by Stephen Sondheim (Nonesuch) • Now, Vol. 31, by Various Artists (Sony Legacy) • Johnny Winter: The Woodstock Experience, by Johnny Winter (Sony Legacy) • Jefferson Airplane: The Wood- Rhett Miller, Rhett Miller Shout Factory Records, June 9 stock Experience, by Jefferson Airplane (Sony Legacy) • The Woodstock Experience, by Various Artists (Sony Legacy) • Killswitch Engage, by Killswitch Engage (Roadrunner Records) We Deliver — The Cat’s MEOW!!!! It’s Not Love” owes its soul to Elvis Costello. B+ — Eric W. Saeger NEW YORK STYLE PIZZA!! Playlist Discover the pizza that wins “Best Pizza” awards in both Manchester and across the entire state. We use only the highest quality cheeses and freshly prepared toppings on dough made fresh right here in the store. All of our pizzas are handtossed and cooked right on the stones in our ovens, ensuring our goal, to give you the finest in New York Style Pizza! Pizza • Calzones • Subs Salads • Appetizers Home of the 20” Pizza 669-4533 486 Chestnut St., Manchester BEST OF 2008 CALL US FOR DINE IN OR TAKE OUT P &C T love food? love exploring the world of food? then you’ll love d Foo for Though t with 50 South Main St. Manchester, NH 296-0115 MEET THE STAFF (from 12 o’clock) 0 Debby, Katie, Terry, Kristi, Avalanche, Jenn, Kosmos, Rosie GLENDI MENU Thursday - Sunday Baked Lamb $10.75 Pastichio $9.95 Stuffed Green Peppers $9.95 Dolmadakia $3.75 The Taste “Buds” every Sunday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on WTPL 107.7 Granite Square Salon & Spa 712 Valley St. Dine In or Take Out Call 622-1021 www.tastebudsradio.com LUIGI’S STIMULUS PACKAGE 2 Large 1 Topping Pizzas 20 Chicken Wings Large French Fries $30.00 plus tax Take out only. Must mention ad when ordering. Page 39 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo Cyan Magenta Yellow Black You (sort of) know what to expect from A seriously abridged Rhett compendium of recent Miller as leader of alt-country bigand future CD releases shots Old 97’s, the band • Wilco releases Wilco (The Album) next week, still made up of the same spearheaded by breakout single “You Never Know,” a four dudes who gave us 1993’s Hitchhike to Rhome straightforward radio-rock honky-tonker that channels (a record soaked in the Tom Petty and Dylan. As usual, it will get Grammys and same cowpoke slide-gui- wide critical acclaim while normal people buy the Black tars to which they returned Eyed Peas album instead and then drag it back to their in last year’s Blame It On dingy digs while complaining about how everybody’s Gravity). As a solo artist, stupid, and then skip paying the electric bill, again. • Former Matchbox Twenty singer Rob Thomas is a Miller is most rebellious toward his fans, getting all huge and famous solo artist now, mainly because you city-fied and whatnot, and weren’t interested in the job. Looking like a one-eyed the tradition continues in albino ghoul from some Tom Hanks Hades on the covthis fourth solo record, er of his new pop album, Cradlesong, he beckons you blasphemously bereft of to listen to his tedious advance single, “Her Diamonds,” slide guitar for the first which sounds like your basic American Idol finalist trythree songs. But forget Tex- ing to sound like Collective Soul wearing plastic Paul as and stuff; this album is Simon masks. Brings up the question: what the hell are proof that he’s a strong we all doing? • Part of the Jonas Brothers’ deal with Lucifer Q. songwriter, not a one-trick Pal-o-mine-o, channeling Devil was agreeing to have their greasy hair immortalTommy-era Pete Townsh- ized in 3-D, thus next week you can pay FYE $40 to end in the melodically get Jonas Brothers: The Concert Experience, or instead robust grower “Nobody wait two weeks to get it from Amazon for $6.66 from Says I Love You Anymore” some goth kid whose parents bought it for him, knowing (lyrically he does tend to he would be saved. Backstage footage featuring lungbe a little fatalists-R-us, busting bong hits, panda furries and naked bald ladies yes, but be prepared to tune painted gold not included if you purchase the edited verinto a Ray Davies — or sion from the Disney Store, at your mall. • Now That’s What I Call Music #31 approacheth, spaceshot stoner, take your pick — headset, not Mopey due in stores Tuesday. Includes Lady Gaga’s slick and the Mopeingtons). but loathsome “Poker Face,” Black Eyed Peas’ horriPunkish speedster “Happy ble-stinky retro-techy “Boom Boom Pow,” and Ting Birthday Don’t Die” strad- Tings’ worm-eaten cheerleader-alt-rocker “That’s Not dles the line between My Name.” Meanwhile, nuclear-armed North Korea is Replacements and “19th having a fit of hissy-insane and your sister’s family is Nervous Breakdown”; Jack considering moving into a Dumpster until the full-pay Johnson gets a wink in jobs come back from quarter-pay India. — Eric W. Saeger “Another Girlfriend”; “If 0 Sunday-Monday 11:00am-7:00pm Tuesday-Saturday 10:00am-9:00pm WWW . MYGARDENIAS . COM 11 Birch Street, Derry 432-3977 0 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black POP CuLTurE: In stores this week Fiction • Return to Sullivans Island, by Dorothea Benton Frank (HarperCollins) • The Sound of Water: A Novel, by Sanjay Bahadur (Atria) • The Apostle: A Thriller, by Brad Thor (Atria) • Seen the Glory: A Novel of the Battle of Gettysburg, by John • Art in the Age of TechnosciHough Jr. (Simon & Schuster) ence: Genetic Engineering, Robotics, and Artificial Life in Nonfiction Contemporary Art, by Ingeborg • Duchess of Death: The Biogra- Reichle (Springer) phy of Agatha Christie, by Rich- • Wilderness Warrior: Theodore ard Hack (Phoenix Books) Roosevelt and the Crusade for • Encyclopedia of Human Rights, America, 1858-1919, by Douglas by David P. Forsythe (ed.) Brinkley (HarperCollins) (Oxford University Press) What We Eat When We Eat Alone, Stories and 100 Recipes, by Deborah Madison and Patrick McFarlin (2009, Gibbs Smith, 272 pages) What do I eat when I eat alone? Whatever creates the fewest dirty dishes. One pot only is good, one paper plate only is better. A knife or a fork slipped easily into the dishwasher works well. After a long day, crackers straight from the box works the very best. Of course, sometimes one wants more than that. What We Eat When We Eat Alone is all about not just eating crackers or turning to takeout but also not quite doing the kind of cooking that we tend to do for others. It’s about cooking solely for your own pleasure — the kind of cooking that can make a meal of a side dish (like fried potatoes with yogurt sauce or Dan’s Spicy Tapenade) or can make use of convenience items, like canned fish or leftovers, to nonetheless create something that makes the solitary meal truly a meal instead of an in-front-of-theTV snack. The book features stories of the special ritual of eating and cooking alone. Some of the food is odd (jelly on fried Spam) and some is more elaborate (a grilled marinated tri tip). Childhood connections and comfort BOOK & LECTurE LISTInGS Author events • LOCAL AUTHOR EVENING Gary Crooker, author of New Hampshire’s Old Home Days, Robert DePaulo, author of Resurrection, and Equanimiti Joy will read from their works on Thurs., June 25, from 7 to 9 p.m. at Wilton Public Library (7 Forest Road, Wilton, 654-2581, wiltonlibrarynh.org). • WRITERS ON A NEW ENGLAND STAGE series at The Music 08 BOOKS food play an even bigger role when you’re cooking for yourself. The people described here don’t go to extra effort to make their rice with eggs, carbonara-style, or the aforementioned Spam creation appetizing to others. You know what you like and when you cook for yourself you can make it exactly as you like. The book offers its stories and then follows with these idiosyncratic recipes, many of which, not for nothing, would make good for-two recipes or (doubled or tripled) good recipes for more people. Many recipes are meant to be made and eaten over a week — leftovers being a particular favorite of those dining solo. Most of your work is already done but you are still able to hack your meal a bit — more cheese here, fried with an egg there. This conversational book makes for a light, fun read. There’s a chummy quality to the discussions here. Talking about people’s comfort foods is like talking about your guilty-pleasure TV shows or the songs you sing in the shower. The result is a book full of intimate stories and quirky recipes. It feels somehow like the opposite of your standard cookbook, where you’re learning about a food tradition (whether it’s a culture’s traditions or a family’s traditions) and then cooking for an audience. Here, it’s all focused internally, giving you a peek at what feels like people’s personal culinary thoughts. B — Amy Diaz Hall begins its 2009-2010 season with a visit from E.L. Doctorow on Wed., Sept. 30, at 7:30 p.m. ($13). Subsequent shows are Tracy Kidder on Mon., Oct. 19, at 7:30 p.m. ($13), Barbara Kingsolver on Tues., Nov. 3, at 7:30 p.m. ($13), and Jodi Picoult on Wed., March 31, 2010, at 7:30 p.m. ($13). Tickets on sale to general public at noon June 27 at The Music Hall, 28 Chestnut St., Portsmouth, at 436-2400, or online at www.themusichall.org. • DAILY KOS founder Markos Moulitsas Zuniga will be at Gib- son’s Bookstore in Concord on Mon., Aug. 24, at 7 p.m., coinciding with the paperback release of his book Taking on the System. • HOUSE OF CARDS: A TALE OF HUBRIS AND WRETCHED EXCESS ON WALL STREET author William D. Cohan will be at Gibson’s Bookstore on Mon., Aug. 31, at 7 p.m. • HOWARD DEAN former Vermont governor, 2004 candidate for Democratic presidential nomination, author of Howard Dean’s Prescription for Real Healthcare Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 40 41 POP CULTURE: Poetry • NEW ENGLAND COLLEGE POETRY READINGS are free and open to the public; call 219-9172 to confirm reading. Wed., June 24, Ilya Kaminsky and Carol Frost. Thurs., June 25, Pat Fargnoli and Maura MacNeil. Fri., June 26, Kazim Ali. Sat., June 27, performance with Regie O’Hare Gibson. Sun., June 28, NEC alums Chris Goodrich and Paula McLain. Tues., June 30, NEC student reading. Wed., July 1, Brian Henry and Eleni Sikelianos. See http://tygerburning.blogspot.com. What are you reading? Jim Readey Owner of The Yoga Center in Concord, www.nhyogacenter.com I am just finishing Eat, Pray, Love by Elizabeth Gilbert. It’s an autobiographical work about the 30-something author’s decision to celebrate her bitter divorce by traveling for a year in order to find herself. First up is Italy (where her aim is to explore pleasure), then India (to study yoga in an ashram), and finally Indonesia/Bali (to, well, perhaps, fall in love, again). Gilbert is a clever and hilarious writer, and had me entertained throughout her journeys. She also shares lots of powerful insights, of both a spiritual and practical nature, along the way — which is the book’s real value. I resisted reading this, at first (having been told it was a “chick book”), but now I am wishing she would write a sequel! Other • BOOK SALE at Manchester City Library (main branch) on Thurs., June 25, from 2:30 to 6:30 p.m. For $5 you receive a paper grocery bag at the entrance of the Winchell Room, which you can fill Shalom, 87 Richardson Road in June 28, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. with as many items as you can fit. North Chelmsford, Mass. (www. Hundreds of gently read books for • BOOK SALE at Congregation congregationshalom.org) on Sun., all ages at rock-bottom prices. The Book Report 626-1207 1000 Elm Street Hampshire Plaza Manchester’s Only Alternative A pub that captures the mythical and Old World feel that takes hold and slowly pulls you toward another time SUN: Sing Session w/Spain Brothers 2pm-5pm, followed by Traditional Music MON: Scalawag Spend your summer nights at Billy’s watching your favorite team. With Billy’s MLB network and 50 TV’s you’ll never miss a game! We will be closed for 4th of July Holiday. Closed Sat. 4th Closed Sun. 5th Reopen Mon. 6th TUES: MANCHUKA Funk & Soul WED: Open Mic Comedy Night The Dirtnaps SAT: 6/27 FRI: 6/26 Rock & Bluegrass The Stink Classic Rock & Folk Brunch Sat & Sun 11:30 AM Back Room FREE for Parties 909 Elm Street • 625-0246 Page 41 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo Cyan Magenta Yellow Black • The all-nature Book Report, item 1: Mountains: There’s now a third edition of The White Mountains Map Book, written by Steve Bushey and Angela Faeth, published by Map Adventures of Portland, Maine, and distributed in New Hampshire by Bondcliff Books of Littleton. The 64page guide comes with a waterproof trail map showing “almost the entire White Mountain National Forest,” according to a press release. The book describes hikes, lists campgrounds and offers trip planning advice. See www.mapadventures.com. • The all-nature Book Report, item 2: Lakes: Also check out Beyond Walden: The Hidden History of America’s Kettle Lakes and Ponds, by UConn geologist Robert M. Thorson, published by Walker & Co. in May; its entry for New Hampshire mentions Chocorua Lake near Conway, cites Mirror Lake as “one of the best studied kettles in the world” and mentions Eagle Pond in connection with poet Donald Hall. Kettle lakes are “self-contained natural wells, with no inlet or outlet streams” formed by glacial ice melting. • The all-nature Book Report, item 3: River: There are amazing photographs — close-ups of river otter, lynx tracks on a snow-covered log — and some very interesting maps in the new Where the Great River Rises: An Atlas of the Connecticut River Watershed in Vermont and New Hampshire, edited by Rebecca A. Brown and published by Dartmouth College Press. The maps simplify could-be-dull material, showing things like where New England’s birds fly when they migrate (there are three “flyways” over the region). It’s an oversized, glossy-paged atlas filled with essays by different authors on the wild and the civilized aspects of the region. • The all-nature Book Report, item 4: University: The University of New Hampshire Press has released The Sustainable Learning Community: One University’s Journey to the Future, edited by John Aber, Tom Kelly and Bruce Mallory, and it’s all about, you guessed it, UNH. It includes essays like “Sustainable Science and Engineering” and it chronicles the university’s efforts to be green itself — it ints landscaping, transportation, composting, fuel use and such — and its environmental academics, e.g. its Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space, its dual major in EcoGastronomy and its Sustainable Living minor. —Lisa Parsons 0 Reform, visits Gibson’s Bookstore in Concord Sept. 20, at 2 p.m. BOOKS 41 FILM In theaters Friday, June 26 • My Sister’s Keeper (PG-13, wide release) • Cheri (R, limited release) • The Hurt Locker (R, limited release) • Life Is Hot in Cracktown (R, limited 42 REVIEWS BY AMY DIAZ release) • Quiet Chaos (limited release) • The Stoning of Soraya M. (R, limited release) • Surveillance (R, limited release) In theaters Wednesday, July 1 • Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (wide release) • Public Enemies (R, wide release) 42 Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (PG-13) Shia LaBeouf teams up with his hot girlfriend, Optimus Prime and the other Autobots (again) to fight Megatron and the Decepticons (again) in Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, a sequel that just as easily could have been called Transformers: Again But Louder. Sam Witwicky (LaBeouf) is headed off to college, leaving his girlfriend Mikeala (Megan Fox) and his car Bumblebee — and his parents (Kevin Dunn and Julie White, and I give already, they’re fun). He’s eager to be a regular kid, not at all the guy helping the Autobots fight the Decepticons, both invading alien factions who can turn into cars, jet planes or other vehicles of awesomeness. But fate (Michael Bay) has other plans for him. The Decepticons are busy searching the Earth for something connected to, as Optimus Prime intones in a voiceover (which has the same timbre and rah-rah quality you’d expect in the narration for an ad for some kind of massive, ass-kicking pick-up truck), the long history the Decepticons have had on our planet. Naturally, just as our best and brightest young Army officer (Josh Duhamel) fighting the Decepticons with the Autobots is starting to sense trouble, some civilian wienerhead (John Benjamin Hickey) shows up to wave around a presidential order, disrespect the Autobots and generally muck things up. Meanwhile — because coherent storytelling is for girls — Sam is having strange visions of Transformer symbols, he can’t seem to say to his girlfriend “I love you,” a piece of the life-giving All-Spark turns some of the Witwicky household appliances into dog-sized Decepticons, his college roommate is a conspiracy nut, Decepticons are planning to destroy the world and Sam’s parents are vacationing in Paris. Transformer: Revenge of the Fallen doesn’t so much have subplots as it has the paper sketch of a subplot with some dialogue thrown at it and maybe a scene or two before it moves on to something else. It’s the suggestion of character development, the rough draft of plot threads. The movie might have nearly two and a half hours but it clearly doesn’t want to waste time on incidental things like character arcs or story-telling or scenes that make sense when viewed back to back. It’s as though someone gave Michael Bay a complete, multidimensional 15-hour movie and he cut it down, leaving in only the parts that reached a certain threshold of awesome. Thus we have some parental comedy, some explosions, a few shots of the perpetually lip-glossed Megan Fox, some more explosions, some stuff happening in a military control center, some funny college stuff, some shiny cars driving fast, other shiny cars and trucks turning into Transformers and smashing into opposing side Transformers. In fact, “shiny” is a big part of this Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 42 movie — shiny cars, shiny trucks, shiny yellow Camaro, shiny Megan Fox’s hair, shiny explosions, shiny Josh Duhamel. Shia LaBeouf is not so much shiny, he’s in motion — that being the other major theme of Transformers, stuff moving fast. The cars speed, the fighter jets swoop down, Shia LaBeof runs, other people run, the unicycle-ish Transformers roller skate after their untransformed vehicle brethren. Shiny stuff moving fast — there’s your plot summary. Transformational shweesh shweesh, vaguely gun-cocking-sound, ka-boom — there, I’ve just described most of the scenes. For all that big chunks of this movie flat out makes no sense — for example: many of the scenes in Egypt, particularly the ones that appear to feature wild camels; the scene where the doors at a Washington, D.C., museum seem to open onto a California desert complete with mountains in the background, everything to do with the reappearance of John Turturro — I didn’t entirely mind. I don’t even mind the anachronistic jingoism and the score that, at one point, seemed like Wagner with more drums and less subtlety. If anything, this movie’s biggest problem is that despite the “oh, to hell with it” approach to story continuity, it’s still really long. Perhaps a few of those somber speeches about destiny or revenge could have been cut. Also, while some of the robot-on-robot violence is quite cheer-able, much of it is just a crazy hairball of metal and CGI and you don’t know what’s happening until something blows up and the smoke clears (and re: stuff blowing up — this is the kind of movie where you’ll find yourself thinking “what’s on fire here, the sand?” because explosions and fire don’t always seem to have a direct connection to some actual gas or solid igniting). Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen is loud, un-self-consciously campy, occasionally absurd and full of things clearly designed with the idea “make it more badass” in mind. In short, it’s a Michael Bay movie. And it’s a silly, overly long one. But, as it turns out, still plenty of fun. B Rated PG-13 for intense sequences of sci-fi action violence, language, some crude and sexual material, and brief drug material. Directed by Michael Bay and written by Ehren Kruger, Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman, Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen is two hours and 24 minutes long and is distributed in wide release by Paramount Pictures. Whatever Works (PG-13) Larry David delights at channeling a most misanthropic version of Woody Allen in Whatever Works, a hokily charming comedy set back in Allen’s beloved New York City. Boris Yellnikoff (David) is, basically, a miserable bastard. A self-proclaimed genius (he claims to have been up for a Nobel Prize), he believes himself to be surrounded by “microbes” and “inchworms” — his pet names for the rest of humanity. People make life so much worse than it needs to be, he kvetches to his friends, and then to us, speaking directly into the camera. He tells us the story of his life, which, by the time he was living in a dive apartment and earning money teaching kids to play chess, was pretty indulgently lousy. But then he all but trips over Melodie (Evan Rachel Wood), a possibly 20-something/probably teenage runaway from some caricature of a Mississippi small town who asks Boris for some food. He ends up inviting her into his apartment and letting her stay there — for the company, because she’s pretty, whatever. Though he insults her intelligence at every turn and she is far too chipper for him, they become friends — perhaps because she tolerates his quirks or perhaps because, not threatened by her like he was by his age-appropriate, professionally successful wife, he feels comfortable being some version of himself around her. Then, more wackiness ensues. Her mother Marietta (Patricia Clarkson) shows up and is both repelled by Boris and enchanted by life in New York. Her father John (Ed Begley Jr.) shows up, having just dumped his mistress. There is some talk about Melodie’s family’s religion and then there are some changes in the relationship between Melodie and Boris, some cute and tidy little plot twists and finally the monologue you see in the trailers, about doing whatever you can do to find some happiness in this world, about accepting whatever works in your life. These lines are the most earnestly delivered part of Larry David’s many speeches, asides, monologues and bits of dialogue which all seem to have the comforting quality of knock-knock jokes. For most of the movie, David seems to be barely keeping in a merry laugh at just how wonderfully miserable his Boris is. As the character Larry David on Curb Your Enthusiasm, he is an awkward, grumpy guy trying to fit in to society. In Whatever Works, Boris doesn’t care and can delight, as Larry David the character only occasionally can, in singing out to whoever will listen about how little he thinks of life and people. David is, well, the phrase “pig in,” uhm, let’s say, “it” comes to mind when I think of how wide and twinkly his smile is throughout Whatever Works. The miracle of the movie, though, isn’t that David is having fun but that we get to have fun. There is a “take my wife, please” quality to the jokes here and yet the cornball humor is surprisingly successful. In one scene, Boris wakes in the middle of the night after having nightmares about his own mortality. A genuinely concerned Melodie suggests watching some TV to calm down. I’ve been looking into the abyss, Boris moans. That’s OK, we can watch something else, Melodie says. That’s about the level of the humor, but it works, as does the stageyness of some of the scenes and even the oft-recycled quality of some of these quintessentially Woody Allen characters. I read the New York magazine story about David, Allen and the changing tone of American comedy before I saw this movie, so perhaps that put me in the mood to think about this movie in terms of comedy as an art form. But Whatever Works feels like old comedy in the way Broadway revivals can recall golden ages of theater. It could have felt like moldy nostalgia but it feels more like a well-played jazz standard. Whatever Works is being called 43 Middle-aged. Divorced. Broke. Gigolo. A New Comedy Series SM JUNE 28 SUN,10PM IT’S HARD TO MAKE AN INDECENT LIVING SPECIAL! Master Blaster 2 for $99 Reg. $89 each With this ad while supplies last. 658 Rte 3-A, Bow, NH • 603.225.7353 Check out our Website for Special Offers! ©2009 Home Box Office, Inc. All rights reserved. HBO® and related channels and service marks are the property of Home Box Office, Inc. 08 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black www.champnysfireworks.com 43 Page 43 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo 44 POP CULTURE: FILM Continued boy’s out-of-nowhere response to his mother’s prodding that he “tell the nice people what you know about babies.” It’s a kind of delightful weirdness that you’ll either be able to buy or not — if you can’t, I could see how it would tip the movie over into “insufferably cute” territory. But I bought and, for its fun characters and solid performances, liked it. B Rated R for language and some sexual content. Directed by Sam Mendes and written by Dave Eggers and Vendela Vida, Away We Go is an hour and 37 minutes long and distributed in limited release by Focus Features. It is scheduled to open Friday, June 26, at Red River Theatres. Food, Inc. (PG) Whatever Works 44 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black a return to form for Allen but its tone is something different — it’s a cheerier kind of movie, even, dare I say it, an optimistic one. It’s as though, after years of wrestling with miseries big and small in his movies, Allen has found in this tale some kind of contentment, even happiness. You leave feeling lighter. Who knew — the cure for the existential blues might just be a good corny joke. B+ Rated PG-13 for sexual situations including dialogue, brief nude images and thematic material. Written and directed by Woody Allen, Whatever Works is an hour and 32 minutes long and is distributed in limited release by Sony Pictures Classics. It opens in the Boston area on Friday, June 26. Year One (PG-13) And lo, God reached out His hand and from the dust He did createth the poop joke and He looked on it and saw that it was good in Year One, a hopelessly, winningly silly comedy about early man. Zed (Jack Black) and Oh (Michael Cera) are buddies, a hunter and gatherer (respectively) in their village of stick huts and grunting men. Zed’s a braggart, Oh’s a shrinking violet — neither is exactly eating first from the kill, social-status-wise. So Zed decides to snack on some fruit from the tree of knowledge and is banished from the tribe. Oh goes with him because it’s a buddy comedy and they meet Cain (David Cross) and, very briefly, Abel (Paul Rudd); a just-discovering-circumcision Abraham (Hank Azaria) and his notso-thrilled son Isaac (Christopher Mintz-Plasse nee McLovin’), and, once in Sodom (of “and Gomorrah” fame), a sketchy high priest (Oliver Platt) and a scheming princess (Olivia Wilde — Thirteen for all you House fans). They also regularly bump in to their respective crushes from the village — Eema (Juno Temple) for Oh and Maya (June Diane Raphael) for Zed. So, poop, sight gags involving how Sodom got its name, Blackian bluster, Ceraesque mumbling, circumcision jokes, general sex humor, sight gags involving the amount of hair on Oliver Platt’s chest — ask a class of third-graders for their best potty humor jokes and I’ll bet you’d get at least one that was somehow in this movie. This isn’t subtle, dry, observational humor. This is “wacka wacka,” “ba-dum-DUM” humor with plenty of moments of “bwahHA” and “ewww” and whatever noise I made during one of the poop scenes (sort of a laugh-gag thing, I’m guessing). I don’t remember a rubber chicken but there will probably be one in the DVD outtakes. Add this all together and, yes, you get 100 minutes of stupid. But it’s good stupid. It might have you rolling your eyes but more often it will have you laughing. BRated PG-13 for crude and sexual content throughout, brief strong language and comic violence. Directed by Harold Ramis and written by Ramis, Gene Stupnitsky and Lee Eisenberg, Year One is an hour and 40 minutes long and is distributed in wide release by Sony Pictures. Away We Go (R) A cute but nervous couple contemplates finding a new home as they await the birth of their child in Away We Go, a somewhat precious but sweet, likeable film. Burt (John Krasinski) and Verona (Maya Rudolph), unmarried but committed, are expecting. They live what seems to be a pleasant life — Verona is a medical illustrator and Burt works in insurance — but Verona suspects they might also be screw-ups, a sense that is heightened as she considers the approaching birth of her baby. When Burt’s parents (Catherine O’Hara, Jeff Dan- Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 44 iels) unexpectedly announce that they plan to move abroad for a few years (missing the birth and the first few years of the baby’s life — the years Burt and Verona had hoped to lean on them), Burt and Verona consider leaving the area. They want to be near family and friends, to find a home that says Home to them. Thus, they travel. In Phoenix, they hang with Verona’s inappropriate, unhappily married friend Lily (Allison Janney). In Tuscon, they spend time with Verona’s sister Grace (Carmen Ejogo). In Madison, it’s Burt’s flakey, hippy cousin LN (Maggie Gyllenhaal) — she doesn’t want a stroller because why would she want to push her babies away from her. In Montreal, it’s the warm and happy (seemingly) family of college buddies Tom (Chris Messina) and Munch (Melanie Lynskey). In Miami, it’s Burt’s brother (Paul Schneider), recently left by his wife and worrying about his now motherless daughter. This discussion of where to live isn’t just about location — it’s about how to live, what kind of family Burt and Verona want. It’s one thing to be sort of romantically adrift in those years after college, it’s another thing to be Burt and Verona — people in their 30s and unclear exactly what kind of life they want to be living. Away We Go isn’t, therefore, about one of the dramatic life stages — coming of age, post-college, mid-life crisis. It’s about the part where you say “huh, so, this is my life,” unsure how you feel about what you see. I think it’s the mushiness of this subject matter that can make the film seem a little mushy itself, a bit half-baked and overly concerned with its own little moments. But I find that kind of fitting — the tone matches the subject, just as the hipster-in-middle-age humor matches the story itself. And the movie is funny if you buy in to its point of view — much of it of the quiet chuckle kind of humor except for a few big laughs, including one little Add high calories, environmental concerns, questions about labor practices and genetically modified farming to the toppings on your national chain fast food sandwichproduct with Food, Inc., a documentary about modern food production in America. Uhm, or don’t add those things — do what you want, eat as many McWhopperFilets as you’d like. One of the things Food, Inc. scares the bejesus out of you about is the veggie libel laws in some states that make it difficult (or at least expensive) to speak ill of the dominant agricultural industry. So, to be clear, no actionable ill-speaking here. You probably already know which of your food choices are not the right ones — you eat in the car instead of at the table, you eat too much meat and fat and not enough vegetables, you think enough snack cakes can equal a dinner. (And, yes, by “you” I mean me.) Food, Inc. gives you some science to add deeper perspective (though, sadly for me, not any excuses) to your questionable nutritional choices. It explains some of the government policy and economic reasons behind why soda is cheaper than broccoli and what some of the effects of that kind of food pricing are, particularly for people at the lower end of the economic scale. It tours the chicken coops of farmers for the big chicken producers, it looks at the negative side of modern slaughter houses (both for animal and for worker), it considers the effects that genetically modified seed (and its patenting) have had on farmers. In the movie’s most heart-rending scenes, we also meet a woman whose toddler son died after eating an E.Coli-tainted burger. She has now become a food safety advocate and we meet her tirelessly pushing Congress to pass stricter enforcement laws. Well, not tirelessly, really, because as passionate as she clearly is about her cause you can see the weariness (from her grief, maybe, and having to constantly relive it to make her case) on her face and in her posture. Balancing out the in-the-fieldstyle reporting are interviews with Eric Schlosser, author of Fast Food Nation, and Michael Pollan, author of The Omnivore’s Dilemma. New Hampshire’s own Gary Hirshberg of Stonyfield Farm also makes an appearance. His part in the film is during one of the movie’s more forward-looking segments, which considers Walmart’s entry to the organic business. I would have liked more from him (and not just because he’s a local) and more about this idea of big box stores answering consumer demand for green and organic products. You can’t let perfect be the enemy of good, he says, and I am interested in just how “good” the Walmart impact is and what “perfect” might look like. (And I’m not saying this snidely — consumers voting with their dollars is one of the things the film advocates. Shoppers voted for organic foods and Walmart responded — there is much that the movie could have discussed in that one corporate decision.) My biggest qualm with Food, Inc. as a new entry in the “eat local” media canon is that it doesn’t have quite enough of that forward-looking-ness, not quite enough of the “new.” Food, Inc. feels in many places like a Cliffs Notes version of other things — the Schlosser and Pollan books; Mark Bittman’s latest book on eating green and healthy, Food Matters; the documentary King Corn, which looks more deeply at the public policy behind the explosion of the corn crop and at were all that corn goes. Food, Inc. feels like a survey, touching briefly on so many subjects (food safety, labor practices, immigration, nutrition, environmental concerns) that we can’t get too deep on any one, nor do we get the kind of sketched out images of the future (positive, negative, whatever) that can spur action or at least more interest in a subject. If you’ve read the books of the men featured in this movie, started shopping at your farmers’ market, been paying more attention to your labels, you’re likely the choir to which parts of this documentary are needlessly preaching. But for those who are new to the “eat local” movement, Food, Inc. does offer a way to get an idea how the whole locavore discussion came about. C+ Rated PG for some thematic material and disturbing images. Directed by Robert Kenner, Food, Inc. is an hour and 34 minutes long and is distributed in limited release by Magnolia. The film is scheduled to open at Red River Theatre in late July as well as Wilton Town Hall Theatre in coming weeks. 45 POP CULTURE: (603) 654-FILM (3456) MILFORD DRIVE-IN 101A in Milford, 673-4090, www. milforddrivein.com. Check Web site for changes related to weather or screenings. Open daily; drive-in opens at 6:15 p.m.; movies begin at dusk. Admission is $20 per car (up to 6 occupants). This movies are for Friday, June 26., through Tues., June 30. • Screen 1: Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (PG-13, 2009); Star Trek (PG-13, 2009) • Screen 2: Up (PG, 2009); The Showtimes for June 26 - June 30 PRESENTED IN DIGITAL 3D UP IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D B 11:00, 11:30, 1:35, 2:05, 4:05, 4:35, 6:30, 6:55, 9:00, 9:30 $2.50 surcharge for admission to all 3D films MY SISTER’S KEEPER C 10:45, 1:45, 4:20, 7:15, 9:35 TRANSFORMERS: REVENGE OF THE FALLEN C 10:00, 10:30, 12:00, 1:00, 1:30, 3:15, 4:00, 4:30, 6:30, 7:00, 7:30, 9:40, 10:00, 10:30 THE PROPOSAL C YEAR ONE C 11:15, 2:00, 4:45, 7:20, 9:45 11:10, 1:50, 4:15, 7:05, 9:50 THE TAKING OF PELHAM 1 2 3 E 11:05, 1:40, 4:25, 7:10, 9:25 THE HANGOVER E 11:20, 1:55, 4:40, 7:25, 9:55 NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: BATTLE OF THE SMITHSONIAN B 10:10, 12:45, 3:15 www.oneilcinemas.com Starts Fri — the story of “A Chorus Line” “ ” Every Evening 7:30 Sun mats 2:00-4:30 Continuing... “ ” Every Evening 7:30 Sun mats 2:00 SUNDAY... a silent comedy treasure Buster Keaton “” (1927) With live music by Jeff Rapsis Sun late matinee 4:30pm — free admission Saturday Afternoon Library Classic Film Gregory Peck — Ava Gardner — Fred Astaire In the doomsday thriller masterpiece “ ” (1959) Sat 4:30pm — free admission — donations to charity Admission Prices: All Shows Adults $6.00 Children (under 12) and Seniors (65 and over) $4.00 Londonderry, NH - 603-434-8633 Transformers Up Star Trek The Proposal Ice Age plus companion feature Check website for details NEWBURYPORT SCREENING ROOM 82 State St.., Newburyport, Mass., 978-462-3456, www.newburyportmovies.com • Limits of Control (R, 2009) Thurs., June 25, at 7:30 p.m. • Summer Hours (NR, 2009, French with subtitles) Fri., June 26, at 6:30 & THE MUSIC HALL 8:45 p.m.; Sat., June 27, at 4:15, 6:30 28 Chestnut St., Portsmouth, 436- & 8:45 p.m.; Sun., June 28, at 5:15 2400, www.themusichall.org & 7:30 p.m.; Mon., June 29, through • Monsters vs. Aliens (PG, 2009) Thurs., July 2, at 7:30 p.m. Sat., June 27, at 2 p.m. • State of Play (PG-13, 2009) Sat., OTHER June 27, at 7:30 p.m. • CINEMA AT STUDIO A, a • Examined Life (NR, 2008) Sun., summer independent film series June 28, at 4 & 7:30 p.m.; Mon., with the Lowell Film Collaborative. June 29, and Tues., June 30, at 7:30 Films screened at LTC offices, 246 p.m. Market St. in Lowell, Mass. Events • Gone With the Wind (1939) Wed., are open to the public; donations July 1, at 6:30 p.m. encouraged. Under 18 not admitted • Anvil (NR, 2009) Thurs., July 2, to R movies. See www.lowellfilmthrough Sat., July 4, at 7:30 p.m. Dis- collaborative.org. Movies schedcussion to follow Thursday show. uled: Thurs., June 25, at 7 p.m., • MIFF The Maine International Nerdcore Rising (NR, 2008, docuFilm Festival will be held Fri., July mentary about nerd rap). 17, through Sun., July 19, and will • TWILIGHT on the front lawn at feature eight films, seminars and Franklin High School in Franklin more. Weekend passes went on sale on Sat., June 27, at 8:30 p.m. Popto the public May 9; individual tick- corn, hot dogs and soda available ets will go on sale June 27. A festival for purchase. Cost is $2 per person; pass (which includes priority seating $5 per family. Bring a lawn chair. for films and special events) costs • SILENT FILMS — SUMMER $120; weekend pass costs $28; indi- COMEDY SERIES Free screenvidual film tickets will cost $11. See ings of silent comedy films in Stark www.miff.org. Park in Manchester with live music by Jeff Rapsis. On Thurs., July PETERBOROUGH 2, at 8 p.m., College (1927) with COMMUNITY THEATRE Buster Keaton plus comedy shorts. 6 School St., Peterborough, 924- On Thurs., July 16, at 8 p.m., A 2255, www.thepct.com. Schedule Sailor-Made Man (1921) with Harsubject to change, call ahead. old Lloyd plus comedy shorts. On • Up (PG, 2009) Thurs., June 25, Thurs., Aug. 27, at 8 p.m., Tramp, 7:30 p.m. Tramp, Tramp with Harry Langdon • The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 (PG- plus comedy shorts. 13, 2009) Fri., June 26, through • DOWNTOWN FILM FESTISun., June 28, and Tues., June 30, VAL in Veterans Park in Manchester. through Thurs., July 2, at 7:30 p.m.; Evenings begin at 6:30 p.m. with live plus Sat., June 27 and Sun., June entertainment; movies begin at dusk. 28, and Wed., July 1, at 3 p.m. Food vendors on site. Scheduled movies: Thurs., July 16, MadagasTHE COLONIAL THEATRE car: Escape 2 Africa; Thurs., July 23, 95 Main St., Keene, 352-2033, Hotel for Dogs; Thurs., July 30, Jourwww.thecolonial.org ney to the Center of the Earth; Thurs., • The Planet of the Apes (1968) Aug. 6, Kung Fu Panda. For info, call Thurs., June 25, at 7 p.m. Intown Manchester 645-6285. • Anvil! (NR, 2009) Fri., June 26, • NH FILM FESTIVAL opens the through Thurs., July 2, at 7 p.m. call for entries for the ninth annual Plus Sat., June 27, and Sun., June Film Fest, Oct. 15 to 18, in downtown 28, at 2 p.m. Portsmouth. Go to www.nhfilmfesti• Every Little Step (PG-13, 2009) val.com to find out how to enter the Fri., July 3, and Sun., July 5, festival (with www.withoutabox. through Thurs., July 9, at 7 p.m. com). Early entries close July 5; late entries close Aug. 5; Without a Box entries close Aug. 15. 45 Stadium Seating • Dolby Surround • Beer, Wine & Sandwiches AWAY WE GO (R) 98 min. Fri. 2:00, 5:45, 8:00, Sat. 2:00, 5:45, 8:00, Sun. 2:00, 5:45, 8:00, Mon. 2:00, 5:45, 8:00, Tue. 2:00, 5:45, 8:00, Wed. 2:00, 5:45, 8:00, Thu. 2:00, 5:45, 8:00 THE BROTHERS BLOOM (PG-13) 113 min. Fri. 3:00, 5:30, 7:50, Sat. 3:00, 5:30, 7:50, Sun. 3:00, 5:30, 7:50, Mon. 3:00, 5:30, 7:50, Tue. 3:00, 5:30, 7:50 THE GREAT MUPPET CAPER (G) 95 min. Fri. 1:00, Sat. 1:00, Sun. 1:00, Mon. 1:00, Tue. 1:00, Wed. 1:00, Thu. 1:00 DESTRY RIDES AGAIN (NR) 94 min. In Our Screening Room Fri. 2:00, 7:00, Sat. 2:00, 7:00, Sun. 2:00, 7:00 RULES OF THE GAME (NR) 106 min. French/English Subtitles - In Our Screening Room Mon. 2:00, 7:00, Tue. 2:00, 7:00 THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME (NR) 115 min. In Our Screening Room Wed. 2:00, 7:00, Thu. 2:00, 7:00 CHERI (R) 92 min. Wed. 3:00, 5:30, 7:45, Thu. 3:00, 5:30, 7:45 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black WILTON TOWN HALL Main Street in Wilton. Tickets cost $6 ($4 for seniors and children) unless otherwise stated. wiltontownhalltheatre.com or call 654-FILM. • Lemon Tree (NR, 2009) Thurs., June 25, at 7:30 p.m. • Angels & Demons (PG-13, 2009) Thurs., June 25, through Thurs., July 2, at 7:30 p.m. Plus, Sun., June 28, at 2 and 4:30 p.m. • Every Little Step (PG-13, 2009) Fri., June 26, thru Thurs., July 2, at 7:30 p.m ; also Sun., June 28, at 2 p.m. • On the Beach (1959) Sat., June 27, at 4:30 p.m. Free; donations to charity accepted. • College (1927) and comedy shorts, Sun., June 28, at 4:30 p.m. Live music by Jeff Rapsis. Free. Proposal (PG-13, 2009) MANCHESTER CITY LIBRARY 405 Pine St., Manchester, 624-6550, www.manchester.lib.nh.us • Sweet Liberty (PG, 1986) Wed., July 1, at 1 p.m. Movies outside the cineplex RED RIVER THEATRES 11 S. Main St., Concord, 224-4600, www.redrivertheatres.org • Easy Virtue (PG-13, 2009) Thurs., June 25, at 6 & 8 p.m. • Holes (PG, 2003) Thurs., June 25, at 2:15 p.m. • Only Angels Have Wings (1939) Thurs., June 25, at 7 p.m. • The Brothers Bloom (PG-13, 2009) Thurs., June 25, at 2, 5:30 & 7:50 p.m.; Fri., June 26, through Tues., June 30, at 3, 5:30 & 7:50 p.m. • Away We Go (R, 2009) Fri., June 26, through Thurs., July 2, at 2, 5:45 & 8 p.m. • Destry Rides Again (1939) Fri., June 26, through Sun., June 28, at 2 & 7 p.m. • The Great Muppet Caper (G, 1981) Fri., June 26, through Thurs., July 2, at 1 p.m. • Rules of the Game (La Regle Du Jeu) (NR, 1939) Mon., June 29, and Tues., June 30, at 2 & 7 p.m. • Cheri (R, 2009) Wed., July 1, and Thurs., July 2, at 2, 5:30 & 7:45 p.m. • The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939) Wed., July 1, and Thurs., July 2, at 2 & 7 p.m. TOWN HALL THEATRE FILM Continued Page 45 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo 46 Nite Roundup Local music & nightlife news By Katie Beth Ryan [email protected] 46 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black • Homegrown: Friday, July 3, will bring The Geyer/Feld Duo to Nashua’s Studio 99 at 8 p.m. Mathew Bryan Feld and Nashua native Ben Guyer will perform their blend of original music with jazz and pop standards. Tickets cost $10, or $7 for students. Studio 99 is located at 99 Pine St., the former Picker Building in Nashua’s millyard. For more information, visit www.studio99nashua.com or call 5625179. Get an idea of the Geyer/Feld sound at www.benguyer.com and www.myspace. com/matthewbryanfeld. • Transforming: A series of Saturday night concerts with singer-songwriters will help christen the new Derry Meadows Music Café, 35 Manchester Road in Derry. The first concert will take place on Saturday, June 27, at 7 p.m. with Second Union and Greg Descoteaux. Admission is free but donations will be welcomed to support the Greater Derry Arts Council. To learn more about the series, contact Caitlin O’Neil at [email protected] or 781-418-6293. • Harmonic: Vermont-based teen world music ensemble Village Harmony will perform on Saturday, July 4, at 7 p.m. at the Community Church of Francestown, 18 Main St. in Francestown. Their repertoire includes traditional Appalachian folk music, gospel, South African and Georgian music, as well as Bosnian songs influenced by two Bosnian performers currently performing in Village Harmony. Adult leaders of Village Harmony include Luke Hoffman, Carl Linich and Suzannah Park. Tickets cost $10, or $5 for students and seniors. For information, call 899-3249 or visit www.villageharmony.org. • Touring: Two ’90s-era chart-toppers will play back-to-back dates at the Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom in mid-August. Collective Soul will appear on Friday, Aug. 14, and the Mighty Mighty Bosstones will follow up on Saturday, Aug. 15. Tickets cost $26 for Collective Soul, $29 for the Bosstones, and both shows are 18 and up. Tickets can be purchased by visiting the Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom box office, 169 Ocean Boulevard in Hampton, by phone at 929-4100, or online at www.ticketmaster.com. • Jazz in Portsmouth: The 14th annual Tommy Gallant Jazz Festival will take place on Sunday, July 5, from noon to 6 p.m. as part of the Prescott Park Arts Festival. This year’s slate of performers includes Billy Novick’s Blue Syncopators, saxophonist Fred Haas, the Press Room Trio and the Seacoast Big Band. Donations of $5 to $8 will be collected at the door. Prescott Park is located at 105 Marcy St. in Portsmouth. The event is sponsored by the New Hampshire Library of Traditional Jazz and Prescott Park Arts Festival. Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 46 HIPPO NITE Bars, clubs, bands and other after-dark amusements Screaming like a… Banshee has old-school ambition By Katie Beth Ryan [email protected] It’s fair to say that most bands on the local circuit share a similar life cycle. Their members meet in their youth, jam in their basements and at friends’ pool parties for those formative years after high school, and then attract a larger audience during regular sets at clubs and bars. They might record a few songs or even a full-length CD, before marriage, kids and work loom on the horizon and their expensive equipment collects dust in the basements where they once broke the sound barrier. At least that was the case for the members of Banshee, whose members each played in now-defunct area bands in the ’70s and ’80s. But musical restlessness eventually took over, says guitarist Dave B, who was once a staple in several Lynn, Mass.,-based bands. “I quit the whole music scene for about 10 years, and one day just put out an ad, saying I wanted someone to jam with,” he said. “I was kind of tired of just having all this gear and not doing anything. Billy answered the ad and the next thing you know, Sweede piled on, and we went and saw Joey, and we liked him so much that we invited him down to a practice, and he ended up being the final nugget in the group. It was just a magic thing.” Hearing Dave B — he won’t give out his last name — talk about his involvement in Banshee is like hearing an aspiring musician rave about the opportunity to play alongside his rock idols. And Banshee has an impressive pedigree. There’s lead singer Joey P, who does double duty, performing with Banshee and local favorites The Rusty Cadillacs. Bassist Sweede used to play in bands like Mantis and Hex, opening for groups like Kiss and Ronnie Montrose, and drummer and vocalist Bell Wenzel made a name for himself in Oliver Sudden. Balancing a band with many varied backgrounds can be tough. Wenzel says that Banshee manages to make it work. “We all have a good portion. Everybody has their own part,” he said. “We blend very well together…. We all get along well, too. We hang around together other than in the band, which is a good thing. It’s like a little family.” In particular, said Dave B, bassist Sweede acts as the musical backbone of Banshee, filling the void left by the band’s lack of a rhythm guitarist. To boot, he’s also not a bad vocalist. “A lot of people look over bass players usually, but he’s not a typical bass player,” he says. “He’s just a mechanic when it comes to his instrument.” With Manchester boasting a fair number of cover bands, Banshee manages to stand out by lugging what they claim is the largest PA system of any area group. During the band’s two-year lifespan, its members have started to incorporate more live material into their live set, while also infusing the term “cover band” with new life. “We really wanted to bring back more of the old concert experience, instead of just going out there [and] playing covers,” Dave B said. “Everyone in the band comes from more of an original band before this. We came together and wanted to do some more old-school stuff.” Now that they’re all at the age when fam- Courtesy photo. ilies and work have settled into the picture, the boys of Banshee aren’t looking to conquer American Idol anytime soon. But Dave B says that doesn’t mean that the band isn’t ambitious. “With Banshee, we just want to destroy New Hampshire. I want to tear down the walls of every club there is. I want that name to get out there,” he says. “We’re having a great time with it. And whatever happens happens.” Banshee’s upcoming shows include a Friday, June 26, show at American Legion Post 23 in Milford (15 Cottage St. in Milford); a Saturday, July 18, show at Murphy’s Taproom, 494 Elm St. in Manchester; and a show on Friday, July 24, at Mad Bob’s Saloon, 342 Lincoln St. in Manchester. Banshee’s MySpace page — 20,000 hits and counting — is www.myspace.com/rockbanshee. Reborn Mortuus Ortus makes metal harmony By Katie Beth Ryan [email protected] The past year and a half has been a period of constant change for local heavy metal band Mortuus Ortus. For one thing, its lineup has changed, now containing two new core members in addition to longtime member Andrae Dumont, a.k.a. Drae Graveyard. And for another, the band has traded in its longtime moniker, “Graveyard Shift,” for its current name. “It didn’t serve us any good purpose,” says bassist Jason Freitas, known by his stage name of Jason Skulls. “If you go on MySpace, for instance, you’ll find 10 other bands with that name.” Mortuus Ortus (pronounced mor-TWO-us OR-tus) is frequently mispronounced, and its Latin meaning may elude longtime fans of Graveyard Shift. Freitas says that the name is symbolic, as it roughly translates as “to die and arise.” “The old band kind of died and this one rose in its place,” he says. “So it’s kind of metaphorical in that sense, and it sounds kind of cool and creepy. It works.” And after seeing musicians come and go, Mortuus Ortus’ current lineup is working out well, too. Dumont, 35, is joined not only by Freitas but also by younger brother Shawn Dumont (“Shawn the Dead.”) Freitas came on board after crossing paths with Drae, who also performs in the local groups Human Wine and Vintage Flesh. Meanwhile, Shawn, a decade younger than Drae and Jason, says he grew up watching his brother’s involvement in other bands. All the while, he was studying the trumpet and piano and knew that he wanted to one day learn the guitar and play with his brother. “When it comes to playing guitar, it was something I taught myself,” he says. “I picked it up, I really wanted to play it, and I wanted to try a different genre of music.” The songwriting process in Mortuus Ortus, says older brother Drae, has felt more organic than in his past musical ventures. In the past, “I wasn’t the songwriter, I wasn’t the guy composing and putting the stuff together,” he says. “When it came down to Graveyard Shift, my own personal evo- Courtesy photo. lution in music just became, ‘Why are you going and trying to put together someone else’s thoughts and their work, when you have so many of your own?’” For a band that grew up on Ozzy Osbourne, Judas Priest and Iron Maiden, there’s a great degree of formal musical training in Mortuus Ortus’ past. Shawn’s training was in classical and sacred music, but that hasn’t hindered him as the guitarist for a heavy metal band. Meanwhile, Freitas studied jazz composition at Five Towns College on Long Island. Nowadays, he’s put aside his jazz training to perform before audiences with his body completely wrapped in chains (and, occasionally, dangling from the ceiling). Freitas says that while heavy metal bands dominate the north- 47 NITE “The greatest appeal of it is that it’s homegrown,” Shawn said. “A lot of the music I appreciate now, I have to say that he introduced it to me years back. This is as much my baby as it is his. It’s something we’ve developed and that we’re creating and fostering.” Look out for Mortuus Ortus’ appearance in Lucretia’s Daggers’ video “The Horrors of Retail. They’ll play at The First Players Club in Derry on Saturday, July 18; at Milly’s on Wednesday, Sept. 9; and at Rocko’s on Wednesday, Sept. 19. Samples from the band’s self-titled demo can be found at www.myspace.com/graveyardshiftmusic. J.W. Hill’s Sports Bar & Grille 795 Elm Street • Manchester • 603-645-7422 • www.jwhills.com Want to know what’s happening at J.W.Hill’s? BEST OF Join our email list by logging into jwhills.com 2009 MARCEL’S WAY CHARITY GOLF TOURNAMENT MON. JUNE 29. 436-2400 The Old Meeting House, 1 New Boston Rd., Francestown Palace Theatre 80 Hanover St., Manchester, 668-5588 Tsongas Arena 300 M.L.K Jr. Way, Lowell, Mass., (978) 848-6900 Tupelo Music Hall 2 Young Road, Londonderry, 603-437-5100 Verizon Wireless Arena 555 Elm St., Manchester, 644-5000 Help us raise money & awareness for Marcel’s Way & Mitochondrial Disorder with a fun day of golf. Stone Bridge Country Club 161 Gorham Pond Road, Goffstown Village Harmony Concert The teen world music ensemble Village Harmony will perform Saturday, July 4, at 7 p.m. at the Community Church, Main Street in Francestown. The group features 23 teenager singers and instrumentalists from eight states and Bosnia. The concert will include American shape-note, gospel and Appalachian harmonies, traditional music from Caucasus Georgia and Bosnia, and South African songs and dances, according to a press release. Admission costs $10. See www.villageharmony.org for more on the band. Call 889-3229 for more on the event. • Reel Big Fish and The English Beat, Wed., July 8, at 7 p.m., Casino Ballroom • Aimee Mann, Thurs., July 9, at 8 p.m., Tupelo (sold out) • State Radio, Thurs., July 9, at 8 p.m., Casino Ballroom • Buddy Guy, Fri., July 10, at 8 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black • Susan Tedeschi & Shemekia Copeland, Thurs., June 25, at 8 p.m., Casino Ballroom • Spanish Harlem Orchestra, Fri., June 26, at 8 p.m., Music Hall • Taking Back Sunday, Fri., June 26, at 8 p.m., Casino Ballroom • Truffle, Fri., June 26, at 8 p.m., Tupelo • Los Lobos, Sat., June 27, at 7:30 p.m., Lowell Summer • Styx, REO Speedwagon and .38 Special, Sat., June 27, at 7 p.m., Meadowbrook • Savoy Brown, Sat., June 27, at 8 p.m., Tupelo • Boz Scaggs, Sat., June 27 at 8 p.m., Casino Ballroom • Recycled Percussion, Sun., June 28, at 7 p.m., Palace Theatre • Badfish: A Tribute to Sublime, Fri., July 3, at 8 p.m., Casino Ballroom • The Church, Fri., July 3, at 8 p.m., Tupelo • Diana Krall, Fri., July 3, at 8 p.m., Meadowbrook • Joe Cocker, Tues., July 7, at 8 p.m., Casino Ballroom Registration @9:30am Shotgun tee time @10:30am. $125 Player fee includes the scramble, cart, dinner, music & prizes. Register online: marcelsway.org Live this week p.m., Casino Ballroom • John Eddie, Fri., July 10, at 8 p.m., Tupelo • Los Lonely Boys, Fri., July 10, at 7:30 p.m., Lowell Summer • Staind with Chevelle and Shinedown, Fri., July 10, at 7 p.m., Meadowbrook wednesday - Mama Kicks Thursday - John Ridlon Friday - Never in Vegas Saturday - Tigerlily NO COVER BEFORE 9 NO COVER NO COVER NO COVER BEFORE 9 WEEKLY TUESDAYS: DJ IGNITE’S DANCE TO THE HITS OF THE 80’S, 90’S & TODAY EVERY FRIDAY & SATURDAY: LIVE MUSIC FEATURING THE TOP SONGS OF THE 90’S AND TODAY! 669-5523 www.blackbrimmer.com Come see why we are voted Best Bar for Live Music 9 years straight by Hippo readers! 08 Venues Capitol Center for the Performing Arts 44 S. Main St., Concord, 225-1111 The Colonial Theatre 95 Main St., Keene, 352-2033 Dana Humanities Center at Saint Anselm College 100 Saint Anselm Dr., Manchester, 641-7700 Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom 169 Ocean Blvd., Hampton Beach, 929-4100 Leddy Center WHO SAYS THERE’S NO SUCH THING AS A FREE LUNCH?! CONCERTS 38c Ladd’s Lane, Epping, 6792781,leddycenter.org Lowell Auditorium East Merrimack Street, Lowell, Mass., 978-454-2299 Lowell Summer Music Series Boarding House Park, 40 French St., Lowell, Mass., www.lowellsummermusic.org Meadowbrook Musical Arts Center 72 Meadowbrook Lane, Gilford, 293-4700 The Music Hall 28 Chestnut St., Portsmouth, Located in downtown Manchester: 1087 Elm St. (Parking on Lowell St.) 0 ern New England music scene, Mortuus Ortus stands out because its members’ backgrounds are varied and their music is fun, though the lyrical content may be dark. “We hope that sets us apart from so many other groups, where everyone has the same influences and they go straight up for that,” he says. “The market for that is a little bit smaller. We hope to branch out to more people.” Adding to Mortuus Ortus’ heavy metal harmony are the brothers Dumont. After years of learning under his brother’s tutelage, Shawn says it’s nice to finally call him a bandmate as well. Page 47 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo 47 48 NITE “Shafted” — RockandRollCrosswords.com by Todd Santos Across 1. Metronome marking 4. Isaac Hayes favorite 9. Former Laker girl ’80s chick 14. Swing or Classical 15. Like ladies backstage 16. Ian Anderson’s “axe” 17. High maintenance groupie? 18. Musical component (2 wds) 1 2 3 4 14 15 17 18 20 5 31 6 7 25 26 32 34 38 39 35 40 43 44 45 48 46 52 53 56 60 SHAFTED 21 24 61 62 47 54 57 63 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black 67 68 70 71 19. Polyphonic Spree attire 33. Spinal __ 69. Jimmy Buffett drink 20. What a smitten groupie lets out 34. Floyd “Have A ___” 70. Beats per minute (!) 22. “D. ___” Uncle Tupelo 36. Hornsby’s band 71. Indigo Girls “___ Tree” 24. “Only Time Will Tell” band 38. Randy Rhoads-era Ozzy hit 72. Rock star’s hotel room 25. Cali school Jack Black went to 43. 80s nobodys ___ Holliday 27. Unsigned band’s recording 44. New Riverside Ramblers “___ Down 31. Ogle the female fans la Barriere” 1. Country Bangla music comes 32. Anesthetic Who song “In The 45. Journey album, for short from rockandrollcrosswords.com ___” 46. Type of seat at show 2. Kill-worthy Fatboy Slim song 48. Takes an unexpected Grammy “___ You” 8 9 10 11 12 13 52. Grateful ___ 3. Rod Stewart “___ May” 54. Moody Blues “__ Of Futures 16 4. Heidi Klum’s husband Past” 5. Love/___ 19 55. Two singers 6. “Long, long time __” 56. Dressing __ 7. Black metal band from UK 22 23 58. Musically slow 8. Bass’ sidekick on stereo 27 28 29 30 60. American Idol hard ass 9. Disco hairdo 63. Whole point of spandex 10. Platinum hair color 33 66. Play a wrong note 11. Over__ 67. Country dance move 12. Roger Waters’ singer __ 36 37 68. Release album MY PUZZLES YOU an MAKE COME TRUE Lemper rockandrollcrosswords.com 41 42 13. Claypool of Primus 6/18 L A M P A M O S W A S H 21. Grateful Dead guitar slinger A W O L P A R T S I N T O 23. “That was a crazy game of S A R A T R E A T S N A P poker” 48 49 50 51 T Y I N G S O M E W H E R E 25. Where Donny and Marie hail S E E K S P E A K 55 E A S T E R N S P R A N G from D R E S S I N G S H E E T 26. Pretenders leader Hynde 58 59 G E T S E E D S E N O 28. Siddharta song E N T E R L E T I T D I E 65 66 29. Peter, Paul, and Mary song A E N E M A L O R R I E S D E A L S P I E S 30. Madonna “__ Your Heart” 69 F A M I L Y M A N S A L E S 32. “I am the __man, I am the A L A N B O N E S T O R I walrus” L O N G E S T E E E V I L 72 L E N S T I D E D E C K 35. Tori Amos “Jamaican __” 64 36. Queen “Great King __” 37. Tour schedule 38. Drop Dead __ 39. Left behind 311 hit? 40. Village People favorite 41. They balance testosterone at shows 42. Cover art color 46. Patrick Doyle’s soundtrack “Much __ About Nothing” 47. Musical pentameter 49. What plumbers use while listening to classic rock 50. Santa Fe folk rockers 51. “___ Monday” T-Bone Walker 53. What aging rockers bodies do 57. “Everyone needs a hand to hold __” 58. Santana’s water 59. Ted Nugents target 60. Sound barrier breaker 61. Vanilla __ 62. Earth, Wind, and Fire hit 64. GnR “__ Your Illusion” 65. John Lennon’s dropped ©2009 TODD SANTOS rockandrollcrosswords.com 080 Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 48 49 NITE Offering Lessons, & Band & String Instruments for Rent or Purchase - the Lowest Prices Around! 377 Elm Street Manchester, NH 603-623-8022 Just two blocks south of the Verizon Wireless Arena The Hampstead Meetinghouse Park summer music series kicks off this week with a performance by Groove Alliance, a ninepiece show band, on Tuesday, June 30, at 6:30 p.m.See www. groove-alliance.com for more on the band. The series continues on Tuesdays and Saturdays in July and August with bands like the Freese Brothers Big Band (July 7, 6:30 p.m.); Third Annual Meetinghouse Park Fiddle Championships and Pickin’ Party (July 18 at noon); John Penny Band (Aug. 4, 6:30 p.m.); Doo-Wop night (Aug. 15, 6 p.m.) and High Range, a bluegrass group (Aug. 25, 6:30 p.m.). See www.meetinghousepark.org for more information on the series. Admission to each show is free. Bring blankets or lawn chairs. We’ve Moved! Groove Alliance Plenty of parking available. 08 WWW.MANCHESTERMUSICMILL.COM # Hot Hits, Cool Harmonies $ $ # Bonus 250 Smoking and Non-Smoking Areas • Snack Bar EARLY BIRD starts at 6:30 pm • Doors Open 4:30 pm 88 Market St. Manchester / 666-0293 The most comfortable hair removal system available. Buy One Area — Get 2nd Area Half Price* $200, $300, $499 Games and Free Shot Gun FREE GIVEAWAYS EACH WEEK $ THE PALOMER STARLUX™ PULSED LIGHT SYSTEM + + Entertainment • THE 3 MEDIUMS: LISA WILLIAMS, JOHN HOLLAND, & COLETTE BARONREID Thurs., June 25, at 7:30 p.m., Lowell Auditorium, 50 East Merrimack St., Lowell, Mass. $45.50 to $75.40. • PSYCHIC MEDIUM RAVEN DUCLOS on Sat., Aug. 8, from 5 to 7 p.m. at the NH Institute of Art’s French Building, 149 Concord St. in Manchester, to benefit ALS research and patient services. Tickets cost $30. See www.acarrollconsulting or call 458-1519. $ 50 - 5,000 Over 51 - 2,500 Coverall 52 or more - 1,000 + “Hot Hits, Cool Harmonies: The Great American Songbook” will present a variety of musical styles — show tunes, a tribute to Nat King Cole, an Elvis tribute, rock and roll, country western, a capella and barbershop quartet — Thursday, June 25, through Saturday, June 27, at 7:30 p.m. on each night, at the Concord City Auditorium. Tickets cost $20, $15 for students and seniors and free for children 6 and under. Purchse them at www.concordnhrotary.org. The show is presented by the Rotary Club of Concord to raise money for groups serving the hungry and the homeless. The Concord City Auditorium (www.concordcityauditorium.org) is at 39 Green St. in Concord, 228-2793. CERT SERIES in Prescott Park in Portsmouth at 7 p.m. Concerts start on July 1 with Tom Rush. The schedule includes David Francey on July 8, Pine Leaf Boys on July 15, Genticorum on July 22, Richie Havens on July 29, The Waybacks on Aug. 5, Jonathan Edwards in August, the Lost Bayou Ramblers on Thurs., Aug. 27, and The Nouveaux Honkies on Sat., Aug. 29. See www.prescottpark.org. • THE GEYER/FELD DUO, jazz pianist and vocalist, respectively, on Thurs., July 2, at 8 p.m. at Studio 99, Pickering Building, 99 Pine St. in Nashua, 562-5179, www.studio99nashua.com. Tickets cost $10. FOR MORE INFORMATION: 49 or less - $59,000 52,000 Carry LIVE MUSIC 6 DAYS A WEEK www.strangebrewtavern.net Page 49 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo Cyan Magenta Yellow Black NIGHTLIFE • NH BASS FEST Wed., June 24, through Sat., June 27, at Southern New Hampshire University in Manchester. The event features classes and workshops all day long with evening concerts featuring Michael Manring, Celso Pixinga, Todd Johnson, Dave Buda, Danny Morris, Marshal Wood and Rob Gourlay. Go to www.nhbassfest.com for information on registration for the workshops. The Saturday, June 27, will feature an open house for the public from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. • SIT DOWN BABY, southern style blues, on Fri., June 26, at 8 p.m. at Studio 99, Pickering Building, 99 Pine St. in Nashua, 5625179, www.studio99nashua.com. Tickets cost $7 at the door. See www.sitdownbaby.com for more about the band. • NORBERT DAMS, innovative classical guitarist, on Sat., June 27, at 8 p.m., at Studio 99, Pickering Building, 99 Pine St. in Nashua, 562-5179, www.studio99nashua. com. Tickets cost $12 at the door. • ED GERHARD, guitarist, at The Bow Lake Grange Hall in Strafford on Sat., June 27, at 8 p.m. Show benefits Grange. Tickets costs $18 and can be purchased at 664-7200 or www.edgerhard.com. • STRAWBERRY FESTIVAL & BAND CONCERT on Sun., June 28, from 2 to 4 p.m. featuring music by the Hollis Town Band, performing music in many styles from marches to Broadway show tunes and symphonic works. The festival will also feature strawberry shortcakes and sundaes. The festival will be held at Monument Square (Hollis Brookline High School in case of rain). • GROOVE ALLIANCE, 9-piece show band, will kick off the Hampstead Meetinghouse Park summer series on Tues., June 30, at 6 p.m. Admission is free; attendees are advised to bring blankets or lawn chairs. The Meetinghouse Park is at the corners of Main Street and Emerson Avenue in Hampstead behind the town hall. See www. meetinghousepark.org. • LIZ LONGLEY, folk with acoustic, on July 1, part of the Londonderry Arts Council’s 2009 Concerts on the Commons series at the bandstand on the town common, the corner of Mammoth and Pillsbury roads, Wednesdays at 7 p.m. The high school math club will have concessions. Free. See www.lizlongley.com. • WEDNESDAY NIGHT CON- 49 MUSIC THIS WEEK 50 50 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Allenstown Candia Ground Zero Henderson’s Pickin’ Parlor 48 Allenstown Rd. 179 Raymond Rd, 483-5001 Pasquales Ristorante Amherst 145 Raymond Rd, 483-5005 Club Comedy at Amherst Concord Country Club Annicchiarico Theatre 72 Ponemah 1 Thompson St. Road,673-9908 The Barley House 132 N. Main St., 228-6363 Auburn Borders Auburn Pitts 76 Fort Eddy Rd, 224-1255 167 Rockingham Concord Grille Rd, 622-6564 1 Eagle Square Green Martini Barnstead 6 Pleasant St., 223-6672 Barnstead Hermanos Music Hall 11 Hills Ave., 224-5669 96 Maple St, Loudon Road Restaurant 269-2000 and Pit Road Lounge 388 Loudon Rd, 226-0533 Bedford Makris C.R. Sparks 354 Sheep Davis Road, 18 Kilton Rd, 225-7665 647-7275 Penuche’s Ale House Mark’s Show- 6 Pleasant St., 228-9833 place Route 3, The Red Blazer 668-7444 72 Manchester St., 224-4101 Slammers 547 Donald St., Deerfield 668-2120 Lazy Lion Café Quackers Lounge 121 S. 4 North Road, 463-7374 River Road; 622-3766 Derry Belmont Adams Opera House The Lodge at Belmont 29 W. Broadway/ Rte 102 Route 106, 877-872-2501 Brookstone Grille 14 Route 11 E., 328-9250 Boscawen Burgundy’s Billiards Alan’s 35 Manchester St., 437-6600 133 N. Main St., 753-6631 Steve-N-James Tavern 187 Rockingham Road Brookline 434-0600 Big Bear Lodge 106 Route 13, 672-7675 Dover Village Gate Folk Stage Barley Pub 12 Main St., 315-9423 328 Central Ave.,742-4226 Dover Elks Lodge Bow 282 Durham Road Chen Yang Li Biddy Mulligan’s 520 South St., 228-8508 1 Washington St., 749-1100 Mama Clara’s Dover Brick House 728 Route 3A, 227-0221 2 Orchard St., 749-3838 Dover Soul Band Milly’s: False Autopsy, Frankenvan, Pentecoastal Flying Machine, Man Down, The Zambia Strange Brew: Paramounts Concord Green Martini: open mike WB’s: DJ Bob Hermanos: Mike Morris Wild Rover: Marty Quirk Thursday, June 25 Bedford C.R. Sparks: Rico Barr Slammers: open mike Dover Barley Pub: bluegrass jam Brick House: Courtney Brocks Jimmy’s: DJ J Jigga Kelley’s Row: DJ Coach Epping Holy Grail: T.J. Wheeler Hampstead Pasta Loft: Lisa & Lisa Village Square: Ponder Laconia Cactus Jack’s: Eric Grant Fratello’s: Duke Snyder Londonderry Whippersnappers: Rod Welles Blues Band Manchester Black Brimmer: John Ridlon Breezeway: DJ McKay Club 313: DJ Biggie Club Liquid: DJ Danjah and special guests Derryfield: Ron Adams Fratello’s: Michael Grady Johnny Bad’s: open mike with The Wan-Tu Blues 364 Central Ave., 834-6965 Kelley’s Row 421 Central Ave., 750-7081 RJ’s 83 Washington St. Top of the Chop One Orchard St., 740-0006 64 Dow Road Hudson Johnny’s Pizzeria Lowell Road, 880-7087 Linda’s Sport Bar 2B Burnham Rd, 886-0792 East Hampstead The Pasta Loft 220 E. Main St., 378-0092 Laconia Black Cat Café 17 Veterans Sq., 238-3233 Cactus Jacks Epsom 1182 Union Ave., 528-7800 Circle 9 Ranch Fratello’s Windymere Dr., 736-9656 799 Union Ave., 528-2022 Weirs Beach Lobster Epping Pound American Legion 72 Endicott Street, 366232 Calef Hwy. (Rt. 125) 2255 Holy Grail Food & Spirits Weirs Beach Smokehouse 64 Main St., 679-9559 Rt 3 Laconia, 366-2400 Margate Resort Exeter 76 Lake St., 524-5210 Shooter’s Pub Naswa Resort 10 Columbus Ave., 772-3856 1086 Weirs Blvd., 366-4341 Paradise Beach Club Gilford 322 Lakeside Ave., 366-2665 Patrick’s Weirs Beach Smoke House 18 Weirs Rd., 293-0841 Route 3, 366-2400 Goffstown Village Trestle 25 Main St., 497-8230 Hampstead Route 111 Village Square 472 State St., 329-6879 Henniker Pat’s Peak Sled Pub 24 Flander’s Road, 888-728-7732 The Henniker Junction 24 Weare Rd., 428-8511 Londonderry The Homestead Restaurant Rte 102 and Mammoth Road, 437-2022 Mayflower Grange 535 Mammoth Rd, 867-3077 Whippersnappers Route 102, 434-2660 Manchester Alpine Club 175 Putnam St., 623-8202 American Legion Wm H Jutras & Post No 43 56 Boutwell St., 623-9467 Hillsborough American Legion Boomerang’s Post #79 37 Henniker St., 464-3912 35 W. Brook St. Nonni’s Italian Eatery American Legion W. Main St. 464-6766 Sweeney Post 251 Maple St., 623-9145 Hollis Begy’s Lounge Alpine Grove 333 Valley St., 669-0062 19 S. Depot Road, 882-9051 Black Brimmer The Dream Farm 1087 Elm St., 669-5523 Jimmy’s Down Concord Barley House: October Sons Green Martini: Generations Manchester Pit Road Lounge: Code 3 Black Brimmer: Never in Vegas Breezeway: DJ McKay Dover Brick House: Moe Pope City Sports Grille: Morse Code presents Life After God, Club 313: DJ Susan Esthera The Day Laborers Milford Club Liquid: Renegade Jimmy’s: DJ Bounce Shenanigans: karaoke Soundstation Kelley’s Row: Rough Derryfield: Mama Kicks, Nashua Endangered Species Epping Fody’s: Josh Logan Holy Grail: Family Affair Element: DJ Daddy Dave Peddler’s Daughter: Fratello’s: Paul Luff Mindseye Jillians: Jammed Gilford Mad Bob’s: Mad Lincoln Patrick’s: Those Guys Portsmouth Milly’s: Acrida, Caldera, Blue Mermaid: Laurie Permanent Holiday, Goffstown Jones Band Spaulding Village Trestle: The Dolphin Striker: Audrey Jonathan Webster Band Murphy’s: QRawk Ryan Penuche’s: Allie Beaudry Gas Light: T.M.F.I Rocko’s: Psykoma, Devils Hampstead Press Room: Morgan Davis Pasta Loft: Doug Champion, Pirates, The Red Door: Nkosi Day That Drops, Avenge Mitchell the Dead, Demons in the Village Square: Razan Friday, June 26 Attic, Through Fear, Jive Kayne Allenstown Shaskeen: The Dirtnaps Ground Zero: Welcome the Hudson Strange Brew: Love Dogs Tide, We Are The New Year, Johnny’s: Horizon WB’s: DJ Bobby G, DJ Bob A Lifelike Story, The Ghost Linda’s: Out On Bail The Yard: Elijah Clark Sonata, Run Forest Run Merrimack Laconia Bedford Slapshots: Coopers Escape Cactus Jack’s: Aaron Slammers: Eric Preston Seibert Milford Naswa Resort: Bob Boscawen Pasta Loft: Rampage Trio Pratte, Robert Charles Alan’s: Sole City (Aaron Paradise Beach Club: Seibert Duo) Nashua The Bars Amber Room: DJ Jonny C Brookline Black Orchid Grille: Londonderry Country Corral: Pop Wendy Glick Duo Whippersnappers: Farmers Club Social: DJ Big Daddy Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 50 Bo’s Riverside 500 Commercial St., 625-4444 Breezeway Pub 14 Pearl St., 621-9111 City Sports Grille 216 Maple St., 625-9656 Chateau Restaurant 201 Hanover St., 627-2677 Club 313 93 S. Maple St., 628-6813 Club Liquid Amherst St., 645-7600 Commercial St. Fishery 33 S. Commercial St. 296-0706 Derryfield Country Club 625 Mammoth Road, 623-2880 Don Quijote 333 Valley St., 792-1110 East Side Club 786 Massebesic St., 669-1802 Element Lounge 1055 Elm St., 627-2922 Eleven Eleven Nightclub 1111 Elm St., 222-2304 Gaucho’s Churrascaria Brazilian Steak House 62 Lowell St., 669-9460 Grandstands 216 Maple St., 625-9656 The Hilton Garden Inn 101 S. Commercial St., 669-2222 Jewell & The Beanstalk 793 Somerville St., 624-3709 Jillian’s Billiard Club 50 Philippe Cote Dr., 626-7636 Johnny Bad’s 542 Elm St., 222-9191 J.W. Hill’s 795 Elm St., 645-7422 Mad Bob’s Saloon 342 Lincoln St., 669-3049 McGarvey’s 1097 Elm St., 627-2721 Milly’s Tavern 500 Commercial St., 625-4444 Murphy’s Taproom 494 Elm St., 644-3535 New England Revival Fody’s: Brick Yard Blues Peddler’s Daughter: Thirdstone Sky Lounge: DJ Studio 99: Sit Down Baby Plaistow Sad Café: Jessica Prouty, Marissa Winings, Lot 403, Proof of Purchase Portsmouth Blue Mermaid: Scalawag Brewery Lane: DJ SKD Dolphin Striker: Miss Tess Gas Light: Jim Devlin Band, The Hot Club of Portland, DJ Biggie & the Bon Ton Parade Hilton Garden Inn: Curt Bessette and Kathleen Soldati Muddy River: Rockspring with Taylor River Band Press Room: Dreadnaught, The Great Bay Company Red Door: Press Project MCs Face of Fate & BCap with Ryan Obermiller Coffee House (NERCH) 60 Bailey Ave., 625-9550 Olympic Lounge 506 Valley St., 644-5559 Piccola’s Upstairs Lounge 815 Elm St. Penuche's Grill 96 Hanover St., 626-9830 Rocko’s Bar & Grill 253 Wilson St., 626-5866 The Shaskeen 909 Elm St., 625-0246 Strange Brew Tavern 88 Market St., 666-4292 Unwine’d 865 Second St., 625-9463 Wally and Bernie’s 20 Old Granite St., 641-2583 The Wild Rover 21 Kosciuszko St., 669-7722 Workmen’s Club 183 Douglas St. The Yard 1211 S. Mammoth Road, 623-3545 Merrimack Buckley’s Great Steaks 438 DW Hwy, 424-0995 Slapshot’s 515 DW Hwy, 262-9335 Silo’s Steakhouse 641 DW Hwy, 429-2210 Milford The Pasta Loft 241 Union Sq., 672-2270 Santos-Dumont 770 Elm St., 672-5464 Shenanigans 586 Nashua St., 672-2060 Nashua The Amber Room 53 High St., 881-9060 Black Orchid Grille 8 Temple St., 577-8910 Borders 281 DW Hwy, 888-9300 Boston Billiard Club 55 Northeastern Blvd. 595-2121 Cattleman’s Sports Bar 14 Railroad Square, 880-6001 Club Social 45 Pine St., 889-9838 Country Tavern 452 Amherst St., 889-5871 Fody’s Tavern 9 Clinton St., 577-9015 Gate City Pub 56 Canal St., 598-8256 Haluwa Lounge Nashua Mall, Exit 6 883-6662 Killarney’s Irish Pub Holiday Inn, Exit 4 888-1551 Laureano Nightclub 245 Main St. Manhattan on Pearl 70 E. Pearl St., 578-5557 Martha’s Exchange 185 Main St., 883-8781 Michael Timothy’s 212 Main St., 595-9334 Nashua Garden 121 Main St., 886-7363 The Peddler’s Daughter 48 Main St., 880-8686 Penuche’s Ale House 16 Bicentennial Sq., 595-9831 Pine Street Eatery 136 Pine St., 886-3501 Shorty’s Nashua Mall, 882-4070 Simple Gifts Coffee House 58 Lowell St. The Sky Lounge 522 Amherst St., 882-6026 Slade’s Food & Spirits 4 W. Hollis St., 886-1334 Villa Banca 194 Main St., 598-0500 New Boston Mad Matty’s 35 Mont Vernon Road, 487-3008 Peterborough Harlow’s Pub 3 School St., 924-6365 Salem Blackwater Grill 43 Pelham Road, 328-9013 The Varsity Club 67 Main St., 898-4344 Sandown The Crossing 328 Main St. Tilton Plaistow Old Friends Tavern The Sad Café & Restaurant 148 Plaistow Rd,382-8893 927 Laconia Rd, 524-1777 Hot tunes, cool shows Have upcoming shows you want listed in the music this week? Send information about the coming week — Thursday through Wednesday — [email protected] or by fax at 625-2422 no later than noon on Monday. (E-mailed links to regularly updated Web sites would also be appreciated.) Boscawen Gilford Alan’s: Scott McRae Duo Patrick’s: Justin James and Bryan Conway Brookline Country Corral: Stones Hampstead River Pasta Loft: Acoustic Underground Concord Village Square: The Green Martini: Dusty Tweed Brothers Gray and The Know Hermanos: The Machine Hudson Stops Johnny’s: Project Mess Penuches: Grafton Linda’s: Preciphist County Killers Pit Road Lounge: Code 3 Laconia Naswa Resort: Ricky and Salem Dover The Giants Black Water Grille: Rob Barley Pub: Superfrog Paradise Beach Club: Breton Brick House: Johnny The Bars Doogan, Tim Cahill and Saturday, June 27 the Baby Makers Londonderry Allenstown Jimmy’s: DJ J Jigga Whippersnappers: Last Ground Zero: The Kelley’s Row: DJ Coach Kid Picked Regular Cannons, Lauren Hurley, Fentanyle, So Epping Manchester Many Numbers and guests Holy Grail: Elijah Clark Black Brimmer: Tigerlily Bedford Slammers: Tripwire Portsmouth AK’s Bar and Bistro 111 State St. Blue Mermaid Island Grill The hill at Hanover and High streets, 427-2583 Brewery Lane Tavern 96 Brewery Lane, 433-7007 Chestnuts at the Nest 3548 Lafayette Road, 373-6515 Daniel Street Tavern 111 Daniel St. Dolphin Striker 15 Bow St., 431-5222 Gas Light Co. 64 Market St., 431-9122 The Hilton Garden Inn 100 High St., 431-1499 Muddy River Smokehouse 21 Congress St., 430-9582 Paddy’s American Grill 27 International Dr., 430-9450 Player’s Ring Theater 105 Marcy St., 436-8123 Portsmouth Pearl 45 Pearl St., 431-0148, portsmouthpearl.com Press Room 77 Daniel St.,431-5186 The Red Door 107 State St., 373-6827 Red Hook Brewery 35 Corporate Dr., 430-8600 The Wet Bar 172 Hanover St. Breezeway: DJ McKay City Sports Grille: Not Dead Yet Club 313: DJ Bob, Karaoke with CJ Club Liquid: DJ Danjah and special guests Derryfield: Resonant Soul, Chad Lamarsh Element: DJ Took Fratello’s: Sev Jillians: The Skinny Ties Mad Bob’s: The Auburn Jam Milly’s: Mistaken For The Gifted, The Jinxx’d, Meatsaw, Red Right Hand Murphy’s: One Down Penuche’s: Manchuka Rocko’s: Battle of the Bands Shaskeen: The Stink Strange Brew: Racky Thomas WB’s: DJ Bobby G and guest DJs Wild Rover: October Sons The Yard: Without Paris Merrimack Slapshots: B’Acre Boys 51 LIVE ENTERTAINMENT NITE Milford Pasta Loft: Beale Street Band, Rich Kumpu and Bob Allwarden Nashua Amber Room: DJ Rick Naples Black Orchid Grille: Steve Tolley Club Social: Rampage Trio Fody’s: Mad Express Peddler’s Daughter: Best Not Broken Sky Lounge: Bounce Studio 99: Norbert Dams Night of slam Carlos Williams, named the 2009 Best Male Poet at the College Unions Poetry Slam Invitational, will perform at the Friday, June 26, Slam Free or Die open-mike night at Bridge Café, 1117 Elm St. in downtown Manchester. Sign-up for the 15 spots begins between 6 and 6:30 p.m.; the open mike begins after 7 p.m. See myspace.com/bridgepoetryopenmic or myspace.com/russianrouletteprod for more. Peterborough Harlow’s Pub: Mamadou Plaistow Sad Café: Summer kickoff weekend with Keep Me Conscious, Acrida, Obruo, Caldera, Matt Lindstrom Qfwfq Duo (world-reknowned for their light-controlled noise collages), birdorgan and other musicians will perform at 21 West Auburn St., 3rd floor, in Manchester on Saturday, June 27, at 8 p.m. See more about the bands at www.qfwfqduo.com and www.myspace.com/birdorgan. For directions, call 377-9300. Hudson Johnny’s: Project Mess Laconia The Naswa Resort: Pulse Dover Jimmy’s: DJ Koko-P Kelley’s Row: traditional Irish sessions Londonderry Whippersnappers: Jam night with Gardner Berry Manchester Derryfield: Lisa Guyer Shaskeen: Scalawag Portsmouth Dolphin Striker: Matt Shipman Gas Light: Pat Foley Muddy River: Regina Rochefort Press Room: Larry Garland Jazz Jam, Hoot with Jerry Tillett Red Door: Scissor Test Wednesday, July 1 Concord Portsmouth Green Martini: open Londonderry Brewery Lane: open mike mike Whippersnappers: Dolphin Striker: Rick Hermanos: Ben Salem Four Sticks (Led Watson Consortium Levergood Black Water Grille: Zeppelin tribute band) Gas Light: Aaron Seibert Rob Breton Press Room: Gilford Manchester Effenpeifferberger Patrick’s: Eric Grant Sunday, June 28 Derryfield: Chad LaMarsh Red Door: BJ Snowden, Allenstown Foyes , The Drug Rat Band Laconia Ground Zero: Jonathan Penuche’s: Rasta Love Shaskeen: The Spain Fratello’s: Neil Martin Mitchell, Twipe, The Brothers & Friends sing-aTuesday, June 30 Margate Resort: Jeff Novel Ideas, Lauren long, traditional Irish music Concord Lines Hurley and guests Strange Brew: Howard Barley House: Irish Randall Blues Jam acoustic sessions Manchester Concord Hermanos: Ben Black Brimmer: DJ Hermanos: John Franzosa Nashua Levergood Shaskeen: Manchuka Fody’s: Adam Reczek Wild Rover: Marty Quirk Derry Dover Burgundy’s: open mike Nashua Portsmouth Brick House: Open Dolphin Striker: Don mike with Anthony Peddler’s Daughter: Dover Michael Fiandaca DJ St. Julian Barley Pub: Jim Rudolf Severance Gas Light: Rog & Ray Studio 99: First Group Press Room: Bruce Gertz Laconia Wednesday Jazz Jam Brick House: At Half featuring Jerry Bergonzi, Fratello’s: Duke Snyder Mast, Black Bear, Say Tim Ray & Joe Hunt Portsmouth Your Last Words, Scare Gas Light: Elijah Clark Don’t Fear, The Brethren, Red Door: Sunday Night Manchester Groove Session with Black Brimmer: DJ Ignite Muddy River: Nate The Holocene Elegy Pharos and members of Derryfield: Gardner Berry Wilson Group Press Project Penuche’s: open mike Goffstown Strange Brew: Strange Village Trestle: open Monday, June 29 Brew All Stars mike blues jam with The Concord WB’s: DJ Wan-tu Blues Band Hermanos: John Franzosa Comedy Fri. June 26th - MORSE CODE Sat. June 27th - NOT DEAD YET 110” HD Projection TV - Over 35 TV’s • FREE Peanuts • Pub Style Menu Located at Stadium Ten Pin • 216 Maple Street, Manchester • 625-9656 Noise collages Hampstead One Eleven Village Square: Blues jam with Mr. Nick and the Dirty Tricks Pasta Loft: Anthony of Two by Two This Week Featuring: 00 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Portsmouth Blue Mermaid: Todd Cushing & Fred Shepard Brewery Lane: DJ SKD Dolphin Striker: The Erinn Brown Band Gas Light: Root 3, DJ B Money Hilton Garden Inn: Todd Royce Morton Muddy River: One Hand Free, Kings of Crisis, Fire in the Field Press Room: Jazz lunch with Larry Garland & Friends, Charlie Strater Band, The Great Bay Company Red Door: Mike Swells EVERY FRI-SAT NIGHT 9PM TO 12:30AM 51 THIS WEEK and beyond Saturday, June 27 Tuesday, July 7 Manchester Portsmouth Headliner’s: Tom Hayes Player’s Ring Theater: Stranger Than Fiction Tuesday, June 30 improv night, 8 p.m. Portsmouth Player’s Ring Theater: Saturday, July 11 Stranger Than Fiction Hampton Beach improv night, 8 p.m. Casino Ballroom: Joel McHale Manchester Saturday, July 18 Headliners: Kelly Mac- Hampton Beach Farland Casino Ballroom: Lisa Lampanelli Tuesday, July 14 Portsmouth Manchester Player’s Ring Theater: Headliner’s: Dave RatStranger Than Fiction tigan improv night, 8 p.m. Page 51 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo 52 Velma Hippo Crossword “They Were in That?” — you gotta start somewhere. By Matt Jones 1 ___ nova 6 “What’s Happening!!” character 9 Mister Rogers 13 Reversed 14 Space opener 15 Reside 16 “How to ___ Book” (1940 book of literary guidelines) 17 His film debut was a bit part in “Donnie Darko” (2001) 19 His film debut was as Billy Crystal’s son in “City Slickers” (1991) 21 “___ Yuppie Scum” (T-shirt slogan) 22 “The ___-Weed Factor” (John Barth novel) 23 California State Route 1 along the shore, for short 26 Ready to serve 30 Knuckleheaded 34 Fire in the blood 35 His film debut was in “Curly Sue” (1991) as a sort of villain out to get the title girl 37 Half-moon tide 39 Acid in proteins 40 “M*A*S*H” actress 41 His film debut was as a subway thief in “Heartburn” (1986), with Meryl Streep and Jack Nicholson 44 Prefix before friendly 45 “La Boheme,” e.g. 46 Start of el calendario 47 Toon dog of the 1990s 48 Racecar driver Foyt and CNN host Hammer 50 Prompt 52 His film debut was as the 52 Dog-Faced Boy in “Big Top Pee-wee” (1988) 60 His film debut was as Woody Allen’s college-aged son in “Manhattan Murder Mystery” (1993) 61 “What am I gonna do this time?” 62 Early Peruvian 63 45-across selection 64 Composer Camille Saint-___ 65 New Mexico art colony 66 Bumped into 67 Spaghetti western composer Morricone Cyan Magenta Yellow Black stunts 12 Rec room 14 Where J is represented with a moving pinkie: abbr. 18 “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” spinoff 20 Gossipy sorts 23 Liberal, epithetically 24 Radiohead hit of 1992 25 Lose it? 27 Home of ASU’s main campus 28 Bird-related 29 British coins 31 Less shopworn 32 7UP competitor 33 He sang about Bennie 36 Force through intimidation Down 1 ___ Dubai (world’s tallest sky- 38 Amazonian chompers 42 Malaysia’s current prime scraper, as of 2009) minister ___ Tun Razak 2 ___ Day vitamins 43 Part of a jokey coin flip 3 Mt. Rushmore’s loc. 4 Agreed (with) proposition 5 Slow compo- 49 “Get outta here!” 51 Actor Hawke sitions 52 Eric of 2009’s “Star Trek” 6 Film geek’s 53 ___ Domani spool 54 “The Way ___” (Timbaland 7 Johnson of song) “Laugh-In” 55 “Think nothing ___” 8 Prostitute’s 56 Deg. for a grad student in clients film studies 9 Squiggles in 57 Spooky sign one’s vision 58 Rajah’s wife 10 Capital on 59 “This touches me ___ many the Baltic levels” 11 First name 60 Bump on the forehead, perin motorcycle haps? 6/18 By Dave Green 3 4 9 3 1 8 2 2 3 9 9 1 6 5 8 6 5 7 8 4 9 3 Difficulty Level Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 52 5 6/25 2009 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc. 5 ©2009 Jonesin’ Crosswords ([email protected]) For answers to this puzzle, call: 1-900-226-2800, 99 cents per minute. Must be 18+. Or to bill to your credit card, call: 1-800-655-6548. Reference puzzle #0419. SU DO KU Fill in the grid so that every row, every column, and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 through 9. Last week's puzzle answers are below 6/18 5 2 8 7 3 9 6 4 1 9 1 5 3 8 2 4 6 7 8 5 3 2 7 6 1 9 4 Difficulty Level 6 5 2 4 9 1 7 8 3 7 4 9 8 5 3 6 1 2 1 8 3 7 6 2 4 9 5 3 6 7 2 1 5 9 4 8 4 2 8 3 7 9 1 5 6 9 1 5 6 4 8 2 3 7 6/18 2009 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Across SIGNS OF LIFE All quotes are from George Orwell, born June 25, 1903. Cancer (June 21 – July 22) “There are books that one reads over and over again, books that become part of the furniture of one’s mind and alter one’s whole attitude to life, books that one dips into but never reads through, books that one reads at a single sitting and forgets a week later: and the cost, in terms of money, may be the same in each case.” — “Books vs. Cigarettes” Read more. Leo (July 23 – Aug. 22) “First of all, one should use Indian or Ceylonese tea. China tea has virtues which are not to be despised nowadays — it is economical, and one can drink it without milk — but there is not much stimulation in it. One does not feel wiser, braver or more optimistic after drinking it.” —“A Nice Cup of Tea” Seek to develop true sources of wisdom, bravery and optimism within yourself. Virgo (Aug. 23 – Sept. 22) “The existence of good bad literature — the fact that one can be amused or excited or even moved by a book that one’s intellect simply refuses to take seriously — is a reminder that art is not the same thing as cerebration.” —“Good Bad Books” Take in some art. Also spend some time thinking. Libra (Sept. 23 – Oct. 22) “A bookseller has to tell lies about books, and that gives him a distaste for them; still worse is the fact that he is constantly dusting them and hauling them to and fro.” —“Bookshop Memories” Be careful not to spend so much time with a thing you like that you become sick of it. Scorpio (Oct. 23 – Nov. 21) “Much of what goes by the name of pleasure is simply an effort to destroy consciousness. If one started by asking, what is man? what are his needs? how can he best express himself? one would discover that merely having the power to avoid work and live one’s life from birth to death in electric light and to the tune of tinned music is not a reason for doing so.” —“Pleasure Spots” Seek meaningful pursuits. Sagittarius (Nov. 22 – Dec. 21) “Lastly, tea … should be drunk WITHOUT SUGAR. I know very well that I am in a minority here. But still, how can you call yourself a true tea-lover if you destroy the flavour of your tea by putting sugar in it? It would be equally reasonable to put in pepper or salt.” —“A Nice Cup of Tea” Stick to the essentials. Capricorn (Dec. 22 – Jan. 19) “Dickens is one of those authors whom people are ‘always meaning to’ read, and, like the Bible, he is widely known at second hand. People know by hearsay that Bill Sikes was a burglar and that Mr Micawber had a bald head, just as they know by hearsay that Moses was found in a basket of bulrushes and saw the ‘back parts’ of the Lord.” —“Bookshop Memories” Go back and work on something you always meant to get to. Aquarius (Jan. 20 – Feb. 18) “Until one has some kind of professional relationship with books one does not discover how bad the majority of them are.” —“Confessions of a Book Reviewer” Find something really good to read. Pisces (Feb. 19 – March 20) “In general, one’s memories of any period must necessarily weaken as one moves away from it. … But it can also happen that one’s memories grow sharper after a long lapse of time, because one is looking at the past with fresh eyes and can isolate and, as it were, notice facts which previously existed undifferentiated among a mass of others.” —“Such, Such Were the Joys” Share a favorite memory with a loved one. Aries (March 21 – April 19) “Roughly speaking, what one might call the AVERAGE novel … seems to exist only for women. Men read either the novels it is possible to respect, or detective stories. But their consumption of detective stories is terrific.” —“Bookshop Memories” Read something outside your usual comfort zone. Taurus (April 20 – May 20) “Man needs warmth, society, leisure, comfort and security: he also needs solitude, creative work and the sense of wonder. If he recognised this he … would then learn that the highest happiness does not lie in relaxing, resting, playing poker, drinking and making love simultaneously. And the instinctive horror which all sensitive people feel at the progressive mechanisation of life would be seen not to be a mere sentimental archaism, but to be fully justified.” —“Pleasure Spots” Go natural. Gemini (May 21 – June 20) “This idea that the buying, or even the reading, of books is an expensive hobby and beyond the reach of the average person is so widespread that it deserves some detailed examination.” —“Books vs. Cigarettes” Share a favorite book. HIPPO 53 $8 PER 15 WORDS Hippo Classified Form Call FINE PRINT 603.778.6300 CityNews&Entertainment Hippo the Is it Thursday yet? A common passion for caring Live-in Companion Easter Seals NH is seeking a supportive LIVE-IN Companion for a woman with a developmental disability in the Nashua area. Provide assistance with activities of daily living and community activities. Behavioral experience preferred. Free rent and generous daily reimbursement provided. For more information contact: Bette Ouellette at (800) 607-1565 x226. EOE www.eastersealsnh.org HELP WANTED YOUR AD HERE! Call 625-1855 x25 FOR SALE WANTED WANTED SERVICES APARTMENTS Page 53 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo Cyan Magenta Yellow Black 53 54 BUSINESS DIRECTORY 625-1855 x25 or [email protected] Apparel Alterations Including: PLUMBING/HEATING %* 10 FF O 603.626.1062 • 1442 Candia Road, Manchester NH, 03109 603.626.1062 • 1442 Candia Road, Manchester NH, 03109 Call HEATHER BRADFORD 625-1855 x 25 Call 603-219-4752 We specialize in: Paving • Sealcoating • Patching • Hot Crack Filing Parking Lots • Cleaning Striping and More! & Harry Lamphier 321-0983 All Home Maintenance Problems Solved! 603-321-5157 or 603-895-1334 www.daveandlouanns.com ANDSCAPING HENAULTS L622-7400/494-0320 Carpet & Upholstry Cleaning Carpet Repairs & Custom Area Rugs • Bridal & Formal Wear • Ballet Costumes • Prom & Pageant Dress • Costume Design FREE ESTIMATES Home Improvements Apparel Alterations Including: • 5 Step Fertilization Program • Lawnmowing • Bark Mulch • Edging • Landscape Beds Dave & Louann’s Expert Alterations & More Experienced Quality Work & Specialty Design SPRING CLEAN-UP BUSINESS DIRECTORY PAGE Cyan Magenta Yellow Black 81 Londonderry Turnpike Hooksett, NH 03106 www.maineoxy.com (800)698-5490 or (603)627-7904 • Bridal & Formal Wear • Ballet Costumes • Prom & Pageant Dress • Costume Design 54 Expert Alterations & More Experienced Quality Work & Specialty Design Now Booking 2009 Weddings ALL HOME REPAIRS 624-9396 OR 807-7832 “The Finest In Leather Products” DEERFIELD LEATHERS 94 South Rd., Deerfield NH 03037 (603) 463-5591 www.deerfieldleathers.com email: info@deerfieldleathers.com Specializing in Motorcycle Chaps, Jackets & Gear 24 Want to reach over 200,000 customers each day and every week? Try the Hippo’s Business Directory! Call 625-1855 x25. Hippo | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Page 54 55 News of The Weird By Chuck Shepherd Competitive Facial Hair At the biennial World Beard and Moustache Championships in May in Anchorage, Alaska, four local heroes “defeated” the usually dominant German contingent in the 18-category pageant, including overall champ David Traver of Girdwood, Alaska, whose woven chin hair suggests a long potholder. Said Traver, of the Germans, “They were humble, and you have to respect that.” One defending champ, Jack Passion of Los Angeles, fell short with his navel-length red hair, despite having authored “The Facial Hair Handbook” after his 2007 victory. Traver acknowledged that no money was at stake (only trophies and “bragging rights”), but added that there are “a lot of ladies” who fawn over men’s facial hair. “Seriously, they exist.” Yikes! They Actually Pay People to Do This Research (1) Two scientists from Britain’s University of Oxford, on a three-year study costing the equivalent of nearly $500,000, found that ducks may be even more comfortable standing under a sprinkler than paddling around in a pond. Lead researcher Marian Stamp Dawkins concluded that ducks basically just like water. (2) According to research announced in May by pediatrics professor Jennie Noll of the University of Cincinnati, the more often that teenage girls tart themselves up in online presentations, the greater the sexual interest they provoke. The Continuing Crisis • Not What They Were Looking For: (1) Rescuers searching for a missing tourist on People Different From Us When Christina Vanderclip dropped by the house of her former boyfriend, Travis Schneller, in Greeley, Colo., in June, they soon began to argue. According to police, Travis hit her and pulled her hair, then Travis’ mother jumped on Christina’s back and pulled her hair, then Travis’ younger brother Michael and father, Robert, jumped on Christina, too, hitting and choking her. Christina managed to escape, and police, after a 10-hour standoff, entered the home and arrested the entire Schneller family. Least Competent Criminals Jose Villarreal, charged in Georgetown, Texas, with assaulting his girlfriend, decided to take his chances at trial and rejected the prosecutor’s offer of five years in prison. In May, the jury deliberated one minute before finding him guilty, and he got 16 years. Recurring Themes Drivers Who Were Run Over by Their Own Cars: (1) A 21-year-old man in Santa Fe, N.M., inebriated, shifted into reverse, thinking it was “park,” and fell out the driver’s door (November). (2) A 52-year-old man in Tobyhanna, Pa., ran over himself after falling out of his truck trying to reach the controls of the access fence at his gated community (May). (3) A 56-year-old woman in Santa Monica, Calif., was killed when she left her stalled car in “drive” while she crawled underneath to determine why it wouldn’t start. She accidentally triggered the starter with a screwdriver, and the car drove over her (May). It’s Good to Be a British Prisoner (continued) (1) According to a recent report in Britain’s Police Review Journal, the government’s “Intensive Alternatives to Custody” pilot program has recently assigned young offenders, in lieu of incarceration, to attend skill-building classes in gardening, fishing and learning how to apply for government benefits. (2) The U.S. Department of Justice, with British government cooperation, has been trying for 10 years now to extradite three al-Qaida operatives in British custody to stand trial in the 1998 U.S. embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania, but Britain’s legal system has permitted the suspects to stall with nearly endless bureaucratic tactics. Since the jihadists claim indigent status, all of the challenges are paid for by British taxpayers, with the current tab (according to a May Washington Post report) amounting to the equivalent of nearly $900,000. Read News of the Weird daily at www.weirduniverse.net. Send items to weirdnews@ earthlink.net. The Hippo Press releases Letters to the Editor General submissions Display advertisements Deadline for display ads Line classified ads Page 55 | June 25 - July 1, 2009 | Hippo Cyan Magenta Yellow Black • Men Who Get Around: (1) Thomas Frazier, 42, was jailed in Flint, Mich., in April after his unpaid child-support tab reached $530,000 (14 children with 13 women). He told the judge that he was only trying “to find someone who would love me for me.” (2) The total tab of Desmond Hatchell, 29, of Knoxville, Tenn., was not reported at his May court appearance, but the judge questioned him sharply about payments from his minimum-wage job. Hatchell has 21 kids by 11 women, but told WLVT-TV, “I didn’t intend to have this many.” • Bad Sci-Fi Movies Come to Life: (1) A portion of downtown Rotterdam, Netherlands, was blanketed in gluey white “silk” in May, from a six-week-long invasion of caterpillars that strip trees and cover them with gooey larvae. (2) Nicola Bruce and her two toddlers, who live in government-assisted housing in Stoke-on-Trent, England, have awakened nearly every morning for two years to a fresh invasion of about 50 slugs, despite 30 attempts by contractors to find their source (in addition to the remodeling of the kitchen and bath and the bleaching of floors). • The head of Florida’s Department of Corrections admitted in May that at least 43 children (including a 5-year-old), who observed their parents’ prison jobs as part of “Take Your Sons and Daughters to Work Day” in April, were playfully zapped by 50,000volt stun guns. DOC Secretary Walt McNeil said the demonstrations (in three of the state’s 55 prisons) even included one warden’s kid, but that only 14 children were individually shot (with the rest part of hand-holding circles feeling a passing current). Twenty-one employees were disciplined. China’s Taishan Mountain in April failed to find him but inadvertently discovered the corpses of seven other people. (2) Los Angeles Police detectives, frustrated that a 1980s-era South Los Angeles serial rapist-killer is still at large, set out recently to painstakingly trawl for DNA from all unregistered sex offenders who have come through the system since then. They came up with nothing on him, but in late March, they inadvertently matched DNA to a different cold-case serial killer, the “Westside Rapist” from the 1970s and arrested John Floyd Thomas Jr., now 72. • Leading Economic Indicators: (1) Bloomberg News reported in April that among the assets for sell-off by Lehman Brothers Holdings (liquidating following its September 2008 collapse) is a “matured commodities contract” for enough uranium cake to make a nuclear bomb. Administrators are awaiting a rebound in its market price. (2) Among the assets for sell-off listed in the May bankruptcy filing of Innovative Spinal Technologies of Mansfield, Mass., were nine human cadavers (eight of which had already been used for research). • More Fallout From the Recession: (1) In May, Mitsubishi Motors of New Zealand, to spark sales of its Triton compact pickup trucks as “hardy, versatile units,” began offering farmers a companion “hardy, versatile” premium with each truck: a goat. (2) In May, Ichiro Saito, a professor of dentistry at Tsurumi University, publicly warned that as many as 30 million Japanese workers overstressed by the economy are suffering from such severe dry mouth that the country might be experiencing epic halitosis. 55 56 vs. free freer Other wireless carriers may let you make free calls to people on their network, but U.S. Cellular® goes a lot further. We give you Free Incoming Calls—plus Free Incoming Texts and Pix— from any phone on any network at any time, including landlines. 56 Switch to U.S. Cellular, and you won’t ever have to worry about answering since everything headed your way is free. Cyan Magenta Yellow Black So why settle for free when you can get freer—from U.S. Cellular? Get a National Plan for you and your family— • Use your minutes anywhere in the country • No roaming or long-distance charges LG UX300 GET Up to five free After $50 mail-in rebates that come as Visa® Debit Cards. Requires new 2-yr. agmts. and 3-mo. Unlimited Data Plans. $30 act. fees may apply. Available in Blue and Silver Let us help you find a location: visit uscellular.com or call 1-888-BUY-USCC Things we want you to know: New two-year agreement (subject to early termination fee) and credit approval required. A $30 activation fee may apply. Regulatory Cost Recovery Fee applies; this is not a tax or government-required charge. Additional fees, taxes, terms, conditions and coverage areas apply and vary by plan, service and phone. Use of service constitutes acceptance of the terms of our Customer Service Agreement. See store for details or visit uscellular.com. Promotional Phone subject to change. U.S. Cellular Visa Debit Card issued by MetaBank pursuant to a license from Visa U.S.A. Inc. Allow 10–12 weeks for processing. Card does not have cash access and can be used at any merchant location that accepts Visa Debit Cards. Card valid for 120 days after issued. Unlimited Data Plans start at $9.95 per month. Premium Mobile Internet Plan is $19.95 per month. Application and data network usage charges may apply when accessing applications. Limited-time offer. Trademarks and trade names are the property of their respective owners. ©2009 U.S. Cellular.