This Week 25/05/15

Thursday, May 15

The BNH Stage (16 S. Main St., Concord, 225-1111, ccanh.com) hosts a performance of “This Is My Brave – The Show” tonight at 7 p.m. benefiting NAMI New Hampshire. Performers will share personal stories of overcoming mental illness and substance use disorder. Tickets are $31.

Saturday, May 17

NH Muscle Cars will hold its Granite State Season Opener Car Show today from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Deerfield Fairgrounds featuring live music, vendors, fair food and of course fields of cars competing for 35 trophies in a variety of categories. Spectator admission costs $5; see nhmusclecars.com.

Saturday, May 17

Canterbury Shaker Village (288 Shaker Road in Canterbury; shakers.org) opens today for the season and will be open daily through October from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Today, the Canterbury Shaker Village Cross Country 5K begins at 10 a.m.

Saturday, May 17

Saint Peter’s Episcopal Church (3 Peabody Row, Londonderry, 437-8333, stpeterslondonderry.org) will hold its 38th Annual Spring Artisan Craft Fair today from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Saturday, May 17

The Manchester City Library (405 Pine St., Manchester, 624-6550, manchesterlibrary.org) holds its spring book sale today from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Library’s Winchell Room.

Saturday, May 17

The NH Philharmonic will present “Swashbucklers and Superheroes, a celebration of “the iconic music behind some of the greatest adventure films in cinematic history,” tonight at 7:30 p.m. and tomorrow, Sunday, May 18, at 2 p.m. at Seifert Performing Arts Center in Salem. Tickets cost $35 for adults, $30 for seniors, $10 for students. See nhphil.org.

Saturday, May 17

It’s the final weekend of the New Hampshire Renaissance Faire. Tickets, which can be purchased at nhrenfaire.com, cost $20 for adults and $15 for ages 6 to 12 and for military and veterans, the website said. Kids ages 5 and under get in for free.

Sunday, May 18

The Nashua Choral Society presents Vive La France, “a choral journey celebrating French composers,” at 3 p.m. at Immaculate Conception Church (216 E. Dunstable Road, Nashua). See nashuachoralsociety.org.

Sunday, May 18

Chunky’s Cinema Pub (707 Huse Road, Manchester, 206-3888, chunkys.com) hosts the 2025 New Hampshire High School Short Film Festival at 12:30 p.m. Presented by the New Hampshire Film Bureau, this festival screens a two-hour program of selected films. This event is free to attend. Visit nhmediateachers.org.

Tuesday, May 20

Beyond the Lawn: No Mow May’s Role in Sustainable Communities” will be the topic at tonight’s Science Cafe NH, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at SOEL Sistas Cafe, 30 Temple St. in Nashua.

Wednesday, May 21

Beaver Brook (117 Ridge Road in Hollis; beaverbrook.org) will host a Lilac Walk today from 1 to 3 p.m. Registration costs $22.

Saturday, May 17

It’s plant sale Saturday! The Goffstown Community Garden Club sale starts at 8 a.m. and runs until noon (or when they sell out, whatever is first) at the Goffstown Town Commons. Find the Milford Garden Club from 8:30 a.m. to noon at the Community House Lawn, at the corner of Union and Elm streets. The Nashua Garden Club will hold its annual plant sale from 9 a.m. to noon at the Nashua Historical Society, 5 Abbot St. The Bedford Garden Club will hold its sale at Joppa Hill Farm (174 Joppa Hill Road in Bedford) from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Featured photo: Courtesy photo.

Quality of Life 25/05/22

Competitive Ford fixing

As reported by Nashua InkLink on May 8, teams of high school students in auto tech programs took part in a statewide competition to determine which team could most efficiently diagnose a troubled vehicle. The 2025 NH ACE Competition was a hands-on, timed event. “Ten New Hampshire Automotive Programs from across the state compete in teams of two to diagnose and repair a Ford Bronco within 90 minutes,” InkLink reported. The event, organized by the New Hampshire Automobile Dealers Association and Ford Dealerships, brought student tech teams together from 10 area high schools, the story said.

QOL score: +1 for investing in our vocational students

Comment: As reported by Nashua InkLink, “the winning school receives a 2024 Ford F-150 to enhance their training.”

A diploma and an ear-scritch

As reported in a May 14 online article by WMUR, Bear, the Derry Police Department’s first comfort dog, officially graduated from his training program in a ceremony attended by Gov. Kelly Ayotte. “During a ceremony, Ayotte congratulated Bear and his handler, Master Patrol Officer Erin Sullivan, for their hard work and dedication throughout training,” the WMUR story read. “More than 10 fellow service dogs from law enforcement departments across New Hampshire were also in attendance.”

QOL score: +1

Comment: Lt. Shawn O’Donaghue from the Derry Police Department said in a telephone interview that Bear, a 1-year-old black Lab, is ready to go to work full-time for the Department. His duties will “involve the well-being and mental health of officers,” O’Donaghue said, “as well as outreach to the community and helping ease emotional trauma for emergency victims.”

Not enough lifeguards

The City of Concord doesn’t have enough lifeguards. According to a May 13 online article by WMUR, Concord’s Parks and Rec Department is still trying to fill openings before the City’s pools open for the summer in mid-June. WMUR quoted City Councilor Stacey Brown: ““We desperately need more lifeguards. This is something that is incredibly important. We don’t want people swimming in the river; we want people learning how to safely swim. [Our pools are] clean, there is no cyanobacteria, and this is something that sets us apart from other communities,” In a telephone interview with the Hippo, Assistant Parks and Recreation Director Laura Bryant said there is no clear cause for this year’s lifeguard shortage. “It ebbs and flows year to year, so I think maybe people just aren’t thinking about it as much. We’re probably still looking for another 10 to 12 [more lifeguards] at this point.”

QOL score: -1

Comment: Bryant said her department has several interviews scheduled for prospective lifeguards over the next week. She said that there are still a few weeks until Pool Time. “Our Public Properties Division is just getting out and opening all the pools up and seeing where we’re at with everything. So we don’t have an official date, but typically it’s around Father’s Day weekend.”

QOL score last week: 61

Net change: +1

QOL this week: 62

What’s affecting your Quality of Life here in New Hampshire?

Let us know at [email protected].

Knicks end C’s season

The Big Story – Celtics Season Ends Early: That’s all she wrote for the 2024-2025 Celtics. And maybe for 2025-2026 as well with Jayson Tatum likely out for much or all of next season after tearing his Achilles tendon in the closing minutes of Game 4. The loss of Tatum had nothing to do with why they were eliminated by New York in six games. It’s because of their horrid fourth-quarter play in Games 1, 2 and 4 as they were blowing 20-point leads in those games. Helped along by the truly awful coaching by Joe Mazzulla in the first two losses.

Sports 101: Who was the lowest-seeded team to win an NBA title?

News Item – Tanner Houck: After giving up nine runs and 12 hits in 2.1 innings vs. Detroit last week Tanner Houck inthismonth alone has had the two worst starts in the Red Sox’ 135-year history.

New Items – 3 Things To Like About The Knicks: (1) The resilience and mental toughness showed in the series. (2) The Villanova threesome of Jalen Brunson, Josh Hart and Mikal Bridges and yes foul shooting challenged, but offensive rebounding machine Marcus Robinson, who I’ll take all on my team any day. (3) That Brunson has clearly demonstrated how much better he is than Kyrie Irving after Dallas let him walk to sign the more expensive Irving.

The Numbers:

.122 –batting average of Red Sox shortstop Trevor Story while in a protracted 22-game slump dating back to April 22 in which he’s 11 for 90 with one home run and five RBI.

5 – margin of victory at the PGA Tournament on Sunday as Scottie Scheffler won his third major championship.

265 – million-dollar contract given 49er QB Brock Purdy, quite a pay increase for a guy who not long ago was the last person picked in his draft class.

Of the Week Awards

Alumni News – Chris Sale: It probably didn’t look familiar because it was Fenway Park and he was healthy. But that was the Sox one-time ace lefty who bested their current ace lefty Garrett Crochet 4-2 Friday when Sale held the Sox to five hits and a run while striking out eight over seven innings.

Four Leaf Clover Award – Dallas Mavericks: For getting the NBA’s top pick after entering the lottery with a 1.4 percent chance to get it. Not to mention getting Cooper Flagg should quiet those still ticked over the Luka Doncic trade.

Coward of the Century – Rob Manfred: The Baseball Commissioner gets it for his capitulation on admitted baseball gambler Pete Rose’s eligibility for the Hall of Fame so Donald Trump won’t be mean to baseball. Of particular offense was the excuse that MLB’s objection should end after a guy dies. Earth to Rob, Shoeless Joe Jackson, who was better than Rose, died in 1951, so why the sudden rush now? And as a matter of point, when Whitey Bulger got offed in prison, did they vacate his murder convictions? No, because crimes don’t go away after someone dies. Rose broke baseball’s cardinal rule. Which, after lying about it for 15 years, he finally admitted, to juice book sales.

Random Thoughts:

With the Red Sox wearing green uniforms with yellow trim at Fenway against Atlanta last weekend, am I the only one who thought the Oakland A’s were in town? I know the answer is merchandise sales, but what is the point of the city edition uniforms?

Another reason to like the Knicks: they refused to talk to Steven A. Blowhard on ESPN after their Game 6 win.

Prediction – NBA Conference Finals: Indy over New York in six. Oak City takes out T-Wolves, setting up a Pacer-Thunder Finals.

Sports 101 Answer: The six-seed 1995 Houston Rockets were the lowest seed to become NBA champions. After going 47-35 to finish third in their division, they swept Orlando four straight in the Finals.

Final Word – Patriots Hall of Fame: Congrats to Julian Edelman for his election to the Patriots Hall of Fame. But with all due respect, he was erroneously selected because it was done thanks to recent popularity over the chronology of worthy contributions. First, Adam V should have won — and wouldn’t it have been a nice touch to see him go in with Bill Parcells, who first signed him in 1996? But second, how could Edelman go in before Wes Welker? Edelman has an incredible postseason resume for sure with arguably the greatest Super Bowl catch ever. But Welker came first and his per year averages of 112 catches, 1,243 receiving yards and 6 TDs are off the charts compared to Edelman’s 59, 620 and 3.5.

Overall it’s Welker 672, 7,549, 37 TDs, five 100-plus catch and 1,000 receiving yard seasons in six Patriot seasons to Edelman’s 642, 6,822 yards, 36 TDs and just one 100 catch and three 1,000 receiving yard seasons in 11 years. No complaint about Edelman’s worthiness. But how dominant Welker was in the slot as Tom Brady’s first big target is being lost to time. Email Dave Long at [email protected].

Email Dave Long at [email protected].

News & Notes 25/05/22

Volunteer Fair

The United Way of Greater Nashua will hold a Greater Nashua Volunteer Fair on Thursday, May 22, from 5 to 7 p.m. in the Chandler Wing of the Nashua Public Library (2 Court St. in Nashua; nashualibrary.org), according to a press release. The event will feature more than 30 local nonprofits representing a variety of volunteer opportunities including “youth development, food security, environmental sustainability, or supporting older adults,” the release said. See unitedwaynashua.org.

New at MSD

Last week, the Manchester School District Board of School Committee approved the hiring of an assistant superintendent and principals at Highland-Goffe’s Falls Elementary School and Manchester School of Technology High School, according to a district release. Ryan Roth, currently working in a California school district, will serve as the assistant superintendent of middle schools and student services, the release said. “Longtime District administrator and current Assistant Principal Keith Puglisi was selected as the next Principal at Manchester School of Technology,” succeeding the retiring Principal Tim Otis, the release said. And Tim Larney, an administrator at the Nashua School District, will be Highland-Goffe’s Falls principal, the release said, succeeding the retiring Principal Sue Matthews. All the new positions are effective July 1, the release said.

New executive director

Liberty House, a Manchester-based program from Catholic Charities NH that provides “transitional housing and a community pantry for New Hampshire veterans,” has announced that Ashley Kitchell is the organization’s new executive director, according to a press release. Kitchell has worked at Liberty House for nearly a decade and was most recently the assistant director, the release said. See libertyhousenh.org.

Memorial Day commemorations

The Manchester VA Medical Center (718 Smyth Road in Manchester) will host a Memorial Day ceremony on Monday, May 26, from 10:30 a.m. to noon outside the Eagle entrance of the center, according to a press release.

Bedford holds its annual Bedford Memorial Day Hometown Parade on Sunday, May 25, at 1 p.m. The parade will run up Meetinghouse Road from Bedford Center Road to the Town Hall, followed by a celebration at Bedford Village Common Park, according to a post on the Bedford Parks & Recreation Facebook page.

The Concord Memorial Day Parade will take place Monday, May 26, at 9 a.m. and run from the Christ the King Church parking lot on Thorndike Street and wind toward the City Plaza, according to concordnh.gov.

Indie Lens Pop-up, a series featuring screenings of films from PBS’s Independent Lens, will present Free For All: The Public Library followed by a discussion with Susan Drisko Zago, Law Library Director and Professor of Law at UNH Franklin Pierce School of Law, on Saturday, May 31, at 11 a.m. at Red River Theatres in Concord, according to a Red River Theatres Facebook post, where you can find a link to reserve a seat for this free event.

Tickets are on sale now for the Palace Theatre’s Kitchen Tour on Sunday, June 1. The tour will run from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. and feature a self-guided tour at kitchens in Amherst, Bedford Hollis and Manchester, with a lunch offered at Baron’s Major Brands in Manchester. Tickets cost $55 in advance, $65 on the day. See palacetheatre.org.

The Peterborough Town Library (2 Concord St. in Peterborough; peterboroughtownlibrary.org) will hold a two-day craft supplies swap Friday, May 23, from 2 to 6 p.m. and Saturday, May 24, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Bring in new or gently used art supplies to exchange.

Shirley Phillips will discuss her book How Not To Fly An Airplane: A Female Pilot’s Journey on Saturday, May 24, at 2 p.m. at Balin Books (Somerset Plaza, 375 Amherst St. in Nashua; balinbooks.com).

Stay in the loop!

Get FREE weekly briefs on local food, music,

arts, and more across southern New Hampshire!