This Week 25/11/13

Thursday, Nov. 13

The Aviation Museum of New Hampshire (27 Navigator Road, Londonderry, 669-4820, aviationmuseumofnh.org) will host a presentation and book-signing at 7 p.m. tonight with Shirley Phillips (pictured), pilot and author of the new memoir How Not to Fly an Airplane. Admission is $10 per person.

Thursday, Nov. 13

The Nashua Center for the Arts (201 Main St., Nashua, 800-657-8774, nashuacenterforthearts.com) will host 360 Allstars tonight at 7:30 p.m. Featuring BMX, basketball, breakdancing, acrobatics, drumming and more, this is a physical performance exploring all forms of rotation, according to the website, where tickets start at $20.

Friday, Nov. 14

Ovation Theatre Company will present Freaky Friday: A New Musical, the tale of a mom and her teenage daughter who magically swap bodies, tonight at 7 p.m. and tomorrow, Nov. 15, at 1 and 7 p.m.at the Derry Opera House, 29 W. Broadway in Derry, according to ovationtc.com, where you can purchase tickets.

Friday, Nov. 14

S**t-Faced Shakespeare: Hamletwill be performed tonight at 8 p.m. at the BNH Stage (16 S. Main St., Concord, 225-1111, ccanh.com). Tickets cost $40 in advance, $45 at the door, the website said.

Saturday, Nov. 15

The 2025 Craft Fair at Manchester Community College will take place today from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the college’s all-purpose room, 1066 Front St. in Manchester, according to a Facebook page for the event. The event will feature more than 50 vendors, the post said. Find more craft fairs this weekend and beyond in last week’s (Nov. 6) issue of the Hippo, available in our digital library at hippopress.com. Know of a craft fair not listed? Let us know at adiaz@hippopress.com.

Saturday, Nov. 15

Speaking of last week’s issue, in the Nite section you’ll find a profile of Ian Galipeau, who is currently touring in support of the release of his album Something About a Horse. Read the story and then catch him tonight at 7 p.m. at The Listening Room at Prayers of Nature in Wilton. See prayersofnature.com for ticket information.

Sunday, Nov. 16

New Hampshire arts organization Creative Guts will hold its Third Annual Art Around the Room event at the Derryfield School (2108 River Road, Manchester) today from 1 to 4:30 p.m. Adults will have the opportunity to explore a variety of art media at timed stations with guidance from professional artists. Tickets are available for $40 atcreativeguts.org/events.

Sunday, Nov. 16

The iconic Glenn Miller Orchestra will perform two shows at the Tupelo Music Hall (10 A St., Derry, 437-5100, tupelomusichall.com) today, at noon and 4:30 p.m. Tickets are $47.

Save the Date! Friday, Nov. 28
A modern tradition, the Trans-Siberian Orchestra will perform its musical celebration and light show on Friday, Nov. 28, at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m.at the SNHU Arena (555 Elm St., Manchester, 644-5000, snhuarena.com) as part of its Ghosts of Christmas Eve tour. Tickets start at $55.

Featured Photo: Pilot and author, Shirley Phillips. Courtesy photo.

Quality of Life 25/11/13

Cuuubes … innn … spaaaace

According to a Nov. 6 press release from the University of New Hampshire, as you read this, a mini satellite known as a CubeSat designed and built by a team of UNH undergraduates has launched into space. Probably. “The small-but-mighty satellite is set to launch on a SpaceX rocket from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California no earlier than Nov. 10, 2025 at 10:19 a.m. PST,” the announcement read. “It will head to the outer reaches of the atmosphere to study the solar wind, which will help scientists in their quest to improve space weather forecasting and better protect technology in space and on Earth — such as communication networks, power grids and GPS — from potentially damaging large solar flare events.”

QOL score: +1

Comment: “CubeSats are a specific subset of satellites that are small and standardized,” the announcement said, “and provide a cost-effective way to study space science. It is about the size of a loaf of bread and offers a simpler way to start building and operating than larger satellites, making it an ideal piece of equipment for students to hone their skills outside of the classroom.” Visit eos.unh.edu/3ucubed.

Festive painted windows

Mosaic Art Collective (66 Hanover St., Manchester, 512-6209, mosaicartcollective.com) has launched a new community initiative, The Painted Holiday Windows, in downtown Manchester. Working with downtown businesses and corporate sponsors Stonyfield Farm and Members First Credit Union, Mosaic has commissioned artists to paint festive holiday-themed images on street-facing windows. “[By] bringing color and joy to downtown this November and December, we’re reminded once again how powerful it is when our community comes together to celebrate art and imagination,” Mosaic announced in a Nov. 7 statement.

QOL score: +1

Comment: The depictions on business windows range from traditional images of reindeer and candy canes to pop culture icons, like the Rankin Bass characters Snow Miser and Heat Miser, who are painted on the windows of the Thirsty Moose Taphouse.

Still a drought, but at least it’s a damp drought

“The latest U.S. Drought Monitor report shows that parts of Grafton, Carroll and Coos counties remain in severe or extreme drought,” WMUR reported in a Nov. 6 online article, “while Hillsborough and Cheshire counties continue to experience moderate drought. Even with more frequent rain showers, overall rainfall totals have stayed low.” A Boston Globe story on Nov. 10 described reports of wells going dry around the state, particularly in the north, and noted that “Nearly half of the state’s residents get their water from a private well, according to the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services.”

QOL score: -1

Comment: “While New Hampshire state officials said recent rain has decreased wildfire risk, it didn’t replenish surface water or aquifers,” the Globe reported, and the WMUR story said, “While the drought hasn’t worsened, New Hampshire will need much more rain to make a significant impact.”

QOL score last week: 67

Net change: +1

QOL this week: 68

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

Let us know at news@hippopress.com.

Pats have NFL’s best record

The Big Story – Football Takes Center Stage: With baseball finally over, football now has the attention of sports fans through mid-February. And with the Pats, Colts and Broncos sitting atop their divisions while sharing the league’s best record at 8-2, it has been a most surprising first half of the year.

Next comes the very definition of a trap game for New England on Nov. 13, when they face the (2-7) Jets, whose second win came a few days after giving up on 2025 by trading their two best players.

Sports 101: Who holds the rookie records for most rushing yards in a season by a Patriot runner and for the NFL overall as well?

News Item – Patriots Down Tampa Bay 28-23: Another close win, which needed a Stefon Diggs on-side kick recovery to put it away. But they didn’t let it slip away either as they moved to 8-2. And who would have thunk that?

Key Stat – Rushing Yards: 147 yards on 14 carries and two loud TD’s for rookie TreVeyon Henderson.

Improvement – Kyle Williams: The rookie wideout got the radio yackers and boo-birds off his back for at least one week after his 72-yard catch-and-run score to tie the game at 7-7.

Back slide – Drake Maye Decision Making: He made the usual number of big plays, but again put it up for grabs in the end zone for a fourth-quarter pick when a FG would have iced the game.

Game Ball – Henderson: His 69-yard TD run in the final minutes was the longest by a rookie in Patriots team history since his 55-yarder made it 21-10 in the third quarter.

News Item – Gambling Story Grows: This week it’s MLB, as suspended Cleveland hurlers Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz were charged with allegedly rigging pitch counts for payoffs from gamblers.Yes, by all means, Rob Manfred, perfect time to make Pete Rose eligible for the Hall of Fame.

News Item – The Player of the Week – Jonathan Taylor: The Colts back went for 244 rushing yards and three TD’s in their 31-26 OT win over Atlanta. The TD’s included an 83-yard run and the walkoff game winner to give him 15 on the season, while another made him the Colts’ all-time rushing TD leader with 65.

The Numbers:

34 – second most in the NFL sacks surrendered by the Patriots o-line in 10 games.

546 – total yards by the Detroit offense (226 rushing, 320 passing) in a 44-22 thumping of the Commanders.

900 – career goals scored by Alex Ovechkin to become the first in the NHL’s 900 goals club.

Of the Week Awards

Thumbs Down – Patriots Brass: For doing nothing at the trade deadline to address their biggest needs — edge rusher and running back depth.

Stat – NY Jets Being The Jets: According to Dan Graziano of ESPN.com, after trading DB Sauce Gardner to Indy, their cap hit for him in 2026 will be $11 million while for the team he’ll play for it’ll be just $9 million.

Good News – Trevor Story: After arguably being the team’s MVP (.263, 28 homers, 96 RBI) Story has opted in on his contract option to play for the Sox in 2026.

Sports 101 Answer: With 1,808 yards Eric Dickerson is the all-time NFL rookie rushing yards leader, and the Patriot rookie leader is Curtis Martin with 1,487 in 1995.

Final Thought – Hot Stove League Opens: All the important roster building and free agency calendar dates are in play now. So the Sox are on the clock to put the 2026 team together. The four biggest stories:

John Henry: He got a little fan respect back in 2025 by spending $500 million on new players after being public enemy No. 1 for five years of indifference. Will it continue?

Rafael Devers Trade: I’ve been saying since his trade in June that it is not concluded until we see if the owner will re-invest the money ($255 million) saved by the trade. If not, feel free to boo at every turn.

Power: They need a major power hitter to hit fourth. Mets FA Pete Alonso would be perfect for Fenway.

No. 2 Starter: They need a Pedro-Schilling-like one-two punch. The price tag for young players and a new contract make getting available Tigers ace Tarik Skubal highly unlikely, but he’d be perfect.

Third or Second Baseman: With the not worth $40 million Alex Bregman gone and Story staying, Marcelo Mayer will play one spot, so they need the other filled with someone new or maybe Kristian Campbell if he’s ready. Get to work.

Email Dave Long at dlong@hippopress.com.

News & Notes 25/11/13

Theater open

O’Neil Cinemas, 16 Orchard View Lane in Londonderry, opened to the movie-going public on Nov. 11, according to a press release. The new theater is in the location previously operated by O’Neil Cinemas and includes the Backstage Bistro & Lounge as well as 12 D-Box motion seats in one screening room and two Grand DLX Auditorium screening rooms, according to londonderry.oneilcinemas.com, where you can purchase tickets to movies.

New tradition

Nashua’s Great American Downtown will hold a Main Street Unwrapped event on Saturday, Nov. 15, from 10 a.m. to noon, according to a press release. “Our downtown businesses will be working all week to decorate their windows — and on Saturday morning, we reveal the magic together. Join Santa, Olaf from Frozen and Great American Downtown as we stroll Main Street, remove the wrapping, and celebrate the start of the season. Many retailers will be offering seasonal specials and holiday treats,” according to the release, which described the event as a “brand new downtown tradition.” See downtownnashua.org.

NH Navigator

The Foundation for Healthy Communities sent a press release to remind residents during the Affordable Care Act open enrollment period, which runs through Jan. 15, that NH Navigator, “an initiative of the Foundation for Healthy Communities,” can offer free health insurance navigation services for state residents seeking a health care plan via the Federal Marketplace, Medicaid or the Children’s Health Insurance Program. For assistance call 1-877-211-NAVI or visit newhampshirenavigator.com. “Navigators can help consumers identify the plan that best aligns with their health needs and the price point that best fits their budget,” the release said.

Deer season

Firearms deer hunting season opened Nov. 12, and runs through Sunday, Dec. 7, in New Hampshire, according to nhfishgame.com, where you can find information on licenses, hunting rules and registering a harvest. “In Wildlife Management Unit (WMU) A, the northernmost in New Hampshire, the season closes on November 30,” the website said.

Correction

An item about the Queen City Improv comedy show on page 24 of the Oct. 30 issue of the Hippo incorrectly stated the admission price for the group’s Nov. 3 event at Stark Brewing Co. in Manchester. Admission costs $10 at the door (it is not free, as was incorrectly reported). Queen City Improv will return to Stark Brewing Co., 500 Commercial St. in Manchester, on Monday, Dec. 1, at 7 p.m., when admission costs $10 at the door. See queencityimprov.com.

A New England contra dance with caller Tod Whittemore and music by Quindaro Plus will take place at the City-Wide Community Center, 17 Canterbury Road in Concord, on Saturday, Nov. 15, from 7 to 10 p.m. with beginners, singles and families welcome; see concordnhcontra.wordpress.com.

The Humane Society for Greater Nashua held a groundbreaking ceremony on Nov. 5 for a 10,000-square-foot addition to its facility at 24 Ferry Road in Nashua. “The expansion will include a state-of-the-art Humane Care Center, new and improved dog kennels, and additional training and multi-purpose rooms,” according to a Nov. 4 press release. See hsfn.org.

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