INSIDE: 16 Voices 26,000 Copies Please Deliver Before Friday, November 10, 2006 Vol. 32 | No. 44 | 2 Sections |40 Pages Hats Off Portsmouth Police raise funds for fallen officer By Scott E. Kinney Atlantic News Staff Writer Cyan Magenta Yellow Black PORTSMOUTH | “1034” is the police radio code for officer down. And though that call went out weeks ago in Manchester, police officers here on the Seacoast are still responding to it. On Oct. 27 from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m., 36 off-duty officers from the Portsmouth Police Department, along with officers from Newington and Rochester, gathered together in Market Square to help raise money for the family of Manchester officer Michael Briggs, who was killed in the line of duty during the middle of last month. The fundraiser was spearheaded by classmates of Brigg’s from the 126th New Hampshire Police Academy, HATS Continued on 23A• Slight changes in tax rates By Scott E. Kinney Atlantic News Staff Writer EXETER | Residents will see a slight increase in tax rates this year, as the cost goes up by a nickel. As set by the Department of Revenue Administration, the town’s tax rate for 2006 has increased to $19.26 per $1,000 of valuation, up 5 cents from the previous year. The total rate is made up of four factors, town, local school, state school and county taxes. Each has increased or decreased slightly. The town tax rate has increased to $5.02, up 11 cents from the previous year. Likewise, the local school rate has increased by 12 cents from 2005 to $11.03. Both the state school and county rates have decreased from $2.49 in 2005 to $2.35 and from 90 cents to 86 cents, respectively. What has also increased it the town’s tax base, up by roughly 5 percent. That’s a gross increase of $115 million, $90 million of which is the result of new growth, while the remaining $25 million reflects market appreciation. On average, homes within the Exeter borders have increased in value by 5 percent from 2005. A home valued at $300,000, last year’s average, paid $5,763 in property taxes in 2005. With a 5 percent increase in value, making the average home $315,000, at this year’s rate of $19.26 would be have this year’s property tax increase to $6,066.90, a roughly $304 increase from last year. For 2006, the total tax commitment is $31,744,342. The county’s portion accounts for $1.43 million and the state school portion accounting for $3.89 million. TAX Continued on 5A• WE SPECIALIZE IN SERVICE OF VOLKSWAGENS AUDIS & LAND ROVERS BRING THIS AD 10% YOUR FIRST IN & RECEIVE OFF SERVICE!!! 603.772.8233 *10% good up to $50.00 in service Page A | Atlantic News | November 10, 2006 | Vol 31, No 44 Weather Friday, November 10 Saturday, November 11 the AtlanticNews.Com . Weekend Sunday, November 12 Monday, November 13 Sunny Veteran’s Day Partially Cloudy Sunny High: 57° Low: 35° High: 56° Low: 40° High: 58° Low: 40° High: 50’s° Low: 40’s° High Tide Hampton Harbor’s 10 Day Tides Low Tide High Tide Portsmouth Harbor’s 10 Day Tides Low Tide High Tide Dover Point’s 10 Day Tides Low Tide High Tide Low Tide DateAM PMAM PM DateAM PMAM PM DateAM PMAM PM DateAM PMAM PM 10 Fri Tides provided by www.MaineHarbors.com 11 Sat 9:20 10:06 10 Fri 2:32 2:37 8:41 9:27 10 Fri 2:40 2:45 8:26 9:12 10 Fri 3:51 3:56 3:46 3:53 10:18 11:05 11 Sat 3:29 3:36 9:39 10:26 11 Sat 3:37 3:44 9:2410:11 11 Sat 4:48 4:55 10:34 11:21 12 Sun 4:45 4:54 11:20 - 12 Sun 4:28 4:37 10:41 11:25 12 Sun 4:36 4:45 10:2611:10 12 Sun 5:47 5:56 11:36 13 Mon 5:44 5:56 12:04 12:23 13 Mon 5:27 5:39 11:44 13 Mon 5:35 5:47 11:29 - 13 Mon 6:46 6:58 12:20 12:39 14 Tue 6:40 6:55 1:01 1:25 14 Tue 6:23 6:38 12:22 12:46 14 Tue 6:31 6:46 12:0712:31 14 Tue 7:42 7:57 1:17 1:41 15Wed 7:31 7:50 1:55 2:21 15Wed 7:14 7:33 1:16 1:42 15 Wed 7:22 7:41 1:01 1:27 15Wed 8:33 8:52 2:11 2:37 16 Thu 8:18 8:40 2:43 3:11 16 Thu 8:01 8:23 2:04 2:32 16 Thu 8:09 8:31 1:49 2:17 16 Thu 9:20 9:42 2:59 3:27 17 Fri 8:59 9:25 3:26 3:56 17 Fri 8:42 9:08 2:47 3:17 17 Fri 8:50 9:16 2:32 3:02 17 Fri 10:01 10:27 3:42 4:12 18 Sat 9:37 10:07 4:05 4:37 18 Sat 9:20 9:50 3:26 3:58 18 Sat 9:28 9:58 3:11 3:43 18 Sat 10:39 11:09 4:21 4:53 19 Sun 10:12 10:46 4:41 5:15 19 Sun 9:55 10:29 4:02 4:36 19 Sun 10:0310:37 3:47 4:21 19 Sun 11:14 11:48 4:57 5:31 2:49 2:54 - L ast Q uarter S unday , N ov . 12 N ew M oon S unday , N ov . 20 FOR FIRST TIME BUYERS...ENJOY THE BENEFITS OF WORLD GYM! MEET OUR STAFF, TRY OUR TOP OF THE LINE EQUIPMENT! <H;; -:7OF7II 8EDKI:?I9EKDJ If you decide to join our club during our 7 day free pass period, you will receive a special discount! Ask for details. Twice as Large, More Bikes, Windows! Trainers! 9:36 10:22 - “We’re not just adjusting spines, we’re adjusting peoples lives.” - Dr. Mark Lique. NEW SPINNING ROOM To receive a 7 day free pass you must be a local resident and over 18 years of age. Needs to be used within 7 consecutive days. Must present this ad. Expires December 31, 2006 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Newburyport’s 10 Day Tides WE OFFER GREAT CARE FOR A GREAT FEE. Mention this ad when you make your initial appointment and receive an entire new patient exam for BE HEALTHIER, FEEL ONLY $27 YOUNGER! (A $250 VALUE!) 8;>;7BJ>?;H <;;BOEKD=;H FbWdOekh D[mO[WhÊi H[iebkj_edDem ;nf_h[i'(#)'#(&&, ,&)#*-*#.(&&rHj['"/(&BW\Wo[jj[HZrI[WXheea"D>rmmm$mehbZ]oci[WXheea$Yec Mon-Wed-Thurs 7:30-11:30 & 3-6 Tuesday 3-6 • Friday 7:30-11:30 ,&)#*-*#///&rHj['"-(-BW\Wo[jj[HZrI[WXheea"D>rmmm$d^Y^_hefhWYjehi$Yec AtlanticNews.Com Vol 32, No 44 | November 10, 2006 | Atlantic News | Page A . News Do some ‘Scouting for Food’ this fall By Liz Premo Atlantic News Staff Writer the community. “There is a definite need out there,” he says. “We don’t often see the people who need the food, but they’re out there.” Members of Hampton Boy Scout Troop and Pack 177, Troop 380 and Troop 176 take part in the annual drive. Aykroyd says local Girl Scouts help out too, as does the Hampton Historical Society, with the First Congregational Church on Winnacunnet Road serving as the drop-off and distribution center. Aykroyd honestly reveals that response to the annual Scouting for Food effort in Hampton “has been growing slowly each year” since it began in 1993, but is sometimes not as great as hoped or anticipated. “The kids are often disappointed at the low response,” says Aykroyd, particularly in what could be perceived to be higherincome neighborhoods. On the other hand, there are those residing in more middle class Hampton locales Tbyhanksgiving the Sea Imagine a Thanksgiving feast without all the fuss. Bring the family for turkey and trimmings and enjoy! Thanksgiving Dinner Buffet Enjoy an all you can eat dinner buffet with an extensive selection of holiday favorites, as well as special salads, seafood, and an extravagant dessert table. Served in the Hampton Room from 11:30am-4:00pm Ashworth Dining Room Relax and enjoy the view while sampling our special holiday menu featuring traditional favorites and Ashworth classic entrees. Served in the main dining room from 12:00pm-7:30pm Reservation Required. Please Call 603-926-6762 295 Ocean Blvd., Hampton, NH 03842 603-926-6762 www.ashworthhotel.com who will frequently put out two bags of food for the drive. Aykroyd guesses that this example of generous giving occurs because “people who have been there understand. It’s the reality.” Still, the Scouts are happy with whatever anyone is willing to give as they prepare to go Scouting for Food. “Even if people just put out one can, it will make a difference,” says Aykroyd. “No donation is too small.” Residents are encouraged to keep an eye open for the Scouting for Food bags to be distributed this weekend. Fill them up, then put them out on November 18 before 9 a.m., when Hampton Scouts will begin collecting them. By the way, an additional drop-off point for Hampton will be located at the Hannaford Supermarket on Lafayette Road — ideal for those residents who want to help out but perhaps did not receive a bag or simFOOD Continued on 5A• SCOUTING FOR FOOD — Scouts from throughout Hampton will be conducting the annual Scouting for Food Drive over the next two weekends. On Saturday, November 11, the Scouts will drop off food bags (such as those displayed for a previous drive by members of Hampton Boy Scout Troop 177) to all Hampton residents. On November 18, they will collect the filled bags and distribute the items to local food banks to help families in need. — Atlantic News File Photo LIFE INSURANCE FOR SENIORS Insurance coverage to $25,000. Issue age 0-80 “Yes/No” Application No medical exam Simplified, quick issue No “smoking” questions. Call Ray A. Lefavor, LUTCF (603) 926-8564 • raylefavor@hotmail.com 20% OFF ALL REGULAR PRICED MERCHANDISE Announcing our Grand Opening! Only 2 Days Left! Friday, November 10 • Saturday, November 11 27 Lafayette Rd. (US Route 1) • North Hampton, NH (Just south of The Home Depot on US 1 next to Midas and Jiffy Lube) (603) 964-8855 • www.togetherinHISname.com Hey Kids! Come in to meet Bob & Larry From VeggieTales! • Daily Drawings for Free Prizes • Balloons & Coloring Contests for the Kids • Refreshments • Doors Open at 10:00 a.m. Every Day! Schedule of Events Friday, November 10 Open till 8:00 p.m. Saturday, November 11 Open till 6:00 p.m. 11:00 a.m. Story Time for school-aged kids. 12:00 p.m. Special appearance by Veggie Tales’ Bob & Larry 6:00 p.m. Family Movie Night • Veggie Tales Video • Special appearance by Bob & Larry • Free Popcorn, Refreshments & Balloons 10:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. - 2:00 p.m. Face Painting 11:00 a.m. Contemporary praise and worship concert the Pneumadicts (Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal) 12:00 - 2:00 p.m. Clown and balloon animals 1:00 p.m. Children’s worship concert New Covenant Church of North Hampton Worship Team 1:45 p.m. Special appearance by Veggie Tales’ Bob & Larry 2:00 p.m. Contemporary praise and worship concert New Covenant Church of North Hampton Worship Team. Cyan Magenta Yellow Black HAMPTON | If it’s autumn, it’s time for the Boy Scouts’ November “Scouting for Food” drive, an effort to stock the shelves of local food pantries in anticipation of the holiday season. Seacoast area residents will join their neighbors across the nation to help the Boy Scouts gear up for this annual “Good Turn for America” project. Here in New Hampshire, about 18,000 Scouts and adults associated with the 500 traditional Scouting units will take part in this year’s food drive. Scouts in Hampton will be counted among those helping out. The concept is simple and effective. Residents are asked to keep an eye open for the food collection bags (donated by Stop ‘n Shop) which their local Scouts will distribute to area homes on Saturday, November 11. Once they have received the specially-labeled bags, residents are encouraged to head to their local grocery store to do some shopping, in order to fill their bag with non-perishable food items. Then, the following Saturday, November 18, residents leave the filled bags on their doorsteps first thing. Over the course of the day, thousands of pounds of food will be collected by the participating Scouts to be distributed to food pantries around the state. Local food pantries here in the Seacoast area benefit from this drive as well. In fact, according to Hampton Scoutmaster Doug Aykroyd, “All the food we gather in Hampton stays in Hampton.” Items collected by Hampton Boy Scouts go to fill the food pantries at Hobbs House at Trinity Church on High Street, the St. Vincent DePaul ministry at Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal Church, and the United Methodist Church on Lafayette Road. It’s an important and urgent call to action that the Boy Scouts send out each year to their neighbors in Page A | Atlantic News | November 10, 2006 | Vol 31, No 44 AtlanticNews.Com . Voting ] = / A Mon–Thur Friday Saturday Sunday in Hampton 9–6 9–8 9–7 10–5 Who Says the Big Store Has All the Bargains?? Wes’s Discount is back in the Seacoast area, with great buys and super closeouts! COLOR CLING 69 ¢ It’s the first week in November, so you had better start your Christmas shopping now! Wes has Static Cling Window all you need to get you started, including toy Decorations. Many closeouts, puzzles, candy, candles, 99¢ items, Assorted Designs up to 32 Pcs. each. hand tools & tarps, 1000 PC. My Reg. 99 porcelain dolls, each Puzzle hundreds of gifts, 20 foot display of photo Assortment frames, Thanksgiving and Christmas paper, Made in U.S.A. by White party goods, Patriot shirts and Bruins Mountain Puzzles. Over 50 Different styles. As seen in Sweatshirts, work gloves, winter hats & the Mall for $14.99 each. My Reg. 10.99 gloves, magic scarves, lite-up clocks, dream catchers, Native American gifts, dolphin gift Assorted Current Title items, dog and cat toys, and accessories, Paperback Christmas bags and paper, decorations, each Books boxes of Christmas cards and all sizes of Hundreds of different titles. Prepriced $6.99 and up. Christmas wrapping boxes. Christmas lights My Reg. 2.19 each and ribbon and much, much more. There is just too much to list The Dollar Store Crusher! in my first ad. You’ll just have to come and see 50 sq.ft.Roll of each for yourself. Don’t be fooled by the Big Store Premium price come-ons. Christmas Wrap Mayfair Candy Company Many different designs The best place to choose from. Kids’ My Reg. 99 each to shop is right bag Play Mix here in North Hampton, NH, on Route 1, 1 lb. 12 oz. bag of assorted, individually-wrapped candy. 2 doors down from Seacoast Harley. 12 great brands in each bag, Remember, when you shop locally owned, including Double Bubble, Smarties, Atomic Fireball & more of your dollar goes back into the local More! My Reg. 3 each economy. ¢ Cyan Magenta Yellow Black 7 $ 99 $ 1 $ 39 $ 79¢ 3 $ 19 $ ¢ 99 5 Lafayette Road • North Hampton, NH A/=] 10 $ 00 $3 Off When you spend or More with this Coupon 1 Per Customer • Expires November 12 and Excludes Sale Items COUNTING ON SUPPORT — Voting was steady at the Hampton polls on Tuesday, with sign-waving candidates and supporters lining up outside Marston School. Overall, Democrats did very well locally; tentative results as of press time indicated the top vote-getters included Gov. John Lynch, Carol SheaPorter (US Rep., unseating Jeb Bradley in Dist. 1), incumbent State Sen. Martha Fuller Clark, Beverly Hollingworth (Executive Council, Rockingham, Dist. 3), and Jane Kelley, Ben Moore, Sue Kepner and Tom McGuirk (NH House, Dist. 15). Incumbent GOP candidate Nancy Stiles kept her seat in the NH House. — Atlantic News Photos by Liz Premo AtlanticNews.Com Vol 32, No 44 | November 10, 2006 | Atlantic News | Page A . News -PDBMMZ0XOFE0QFSBUFEGPS0WFS:FBST ATLANTIC NEWS Fight the flu with Seacoast VNA Publisher & Editor • Michael P. Connelly connelly@AtlanticNews.com General Manager • Elizabeth McClean Sales & Marketing • Michelle M. Connelly Sales • Sheri Burgoon Sales • Sean Dionne Inside Sales • Ann Hogan ad@AtlanticNews.com Production Manager • John Hirtle production@AtlanticNews.com Community Editor & Staff Writer • Liz Premo editor@AtlanticNews.com Staff Writer • Scott E. Kinney news@AtlanticNews.com Staff Writer • Aubry Bracco editor@AtlanticNews.com Graphic Artist • Jen Morton adstation1@AtlanticNews.com $POUSJCVUJOH8SJUFST John Holman Jerry McConnell Published By Connelly Communications LLC 893 Lafayette Road, Hampton, NH Mailing Address: PO Box 592, Hampton, NH 03843 (603) 926-4557 | Fax: (603) 926-4531 Office Hours: Mon. - Fri.; 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. To Contact Us Stories: editor@AtlanticNews.com Advertisements: production@AtlanticNews.com www.AtlanticNews.com TO ADVERTISE: Connelly Communications LLC is a family owned, local community newspaper, printed and distributed each Thursday. To advertise or to schedule an advertising presentation, please call, e-mail or fax Publisher Michael P. Connelly at (603) 926-4557/office or (603) 866-0883 cell or e-mail Connelly@AtlanticNews.com, or fax to (603) 926-4531, or call and leave a message during or after business hours at (603) 926-4557. DEADLINES: Letters to the editor, Calendar Notes and Public Notices are due by noon on Fridays. Letters received after noontime on a Friday will be held for the following week. The Atlantic News welcomes ideas for articles, community news and special stories as well as photography submissions and requests. Call us at (603) 926-4557 if you have questions. PHOTOS: Digital or scanned photos may be e-mailed to the Atlantic News in JPEG format to: production@AtlanticNews.com. NOTICE TO OUR READERS: All letters submitted for publication on these pages must contain a name and telephone number of the author for verification prior to publishing. Unnamed letters will not be published. The opinions expressed by our readers are not necessarily those of the publishers of The Atlantic News or Connelly Communications LLC. — Michael P. Connelly STORE RACKS: Business owners who wish to display the Atlantic News, or other Connelly Communications publications, please contact General Manager Betty McClean at (603) 926-4557 Mon.-Fri., 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. The Atlantic News assumes no responsibility for any typographical errors in an advertisement. The Atlantic News reserves the right to reject any advertisement. Are You Getting The ATLANTIC NEWS ? The Atlantic News is now mailed to 22,671 Homes and Businesses in 15 towns in Rockingham County* Are you getting the paper? If not call (603) 926-4557, or e-mail Connelly@atlanticnews.com *The Atlantic News does not mail for free outside of our 15 town territory. THE FIRST AMENDMENT: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievance.” NORTH HAMPTON | Want to enjoy a healthier winter season? Now is the time to visit a flu clinic, roll up a sleeve, and get a vaccine to keep those pesky viruses at bay. To help in the fight, the Seacoast VNA will be holding flu clinics in three Seacoast area towns. The first, taking place on Tuesday, November 21 from 9-11 a.m., will be held at the Seabrook Recreation Center, located on Route 1. The second flu clinic will be held on Wednesday, November 29 from 1-3:30 p.m. at the Hampton town offices at 100 Winnacunnet Road, while the third will be conducted on Thursday, November 30 from 1-3:30 p.m. at the Hampton Falls Safety Complex, located on Drinkwater Road. The flu vaccines cost $30 each. Recipients who are covered under Medicare Part B are asked to bring their cards to the clinic; the Seacoast VNA will bill Medicare directly. Individuals will be screened by the VNA to be sure they fall within the CDC guidelines. Be prepared for flu season by getting a vaccine at a Seacoast VNA flu clinic. More information may be obtained by calling the Seacoast VNA office at (603) 926-2066. Drug arrests made in Hampton By Scott E. Kinney Atlantic News Staff Writer HAMPTON | A routine check of the New Hampshire State Liquor Store in Hampton led to two arrests this past weekend. At approximately 5:39 p.m. on Nov. 4, Trooper Steven Cooper was conducting a check on the northbound side of Interstate 95 when he observed a suspicious vehicle parked at the rear of the vehicle. Following a brief investigation, Gerard Atwood, 28, of 25 Brainerd Street, Read- TAX From 1A The town will be responsible for $8.38 million, while local schools take the largest chunk at $18.42 million. (These numbers are, of course, rough estimates.) A recent vote by the Exeter board of selectmen has the town applying $1.3 million of the unencumbered fund balance to help offset the tax rate. Residents will begin to receive bills in the coming weeks. field, Maine was arrested on charges of possession of a controlled drug with intent to distribute, cocaine and transporting a controlled drug. The passenger of the vehicle, Ryenn Norwood, 18, of 243 Water Street, Gardner, Maine, was also arrested and charged with possession of a narcotic drug, heroin and cocaine. Both were transported to Rockingham County Jail and held on $10,000 cash bail. They were arraigned in court on Monday, Nov. 6. FOOD From 3A ply forgot to put it out for pick-up the following week. Items may also be brought directly to the Congregational Church in Hampton on November 18. For more information about the Scouting for Food collection, ask a Hampton Boy Scout, call Scoutmaster Doug Aykroyd at (603) 9263536; or contact the Daniel Webster Council main office in Manchester at (800) 2210009. Play prepares a child’s mind for life Open 7 Days (603) 772-4923 107 Water Street, Downtown Exeter, NH Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Your Local Source For Community News By Liz Premo Atlantic News Staff Writer Page A | Atlantic News | November 10, 2006 | Vol 31, No 44 AtlanticNews.Com . Local Votes Veteran’s Day Stratham honors Veterans Special to the Atlantic News FROM THE LEFT AND RIGHT — Democrats (above) and Republicans (below) staked out the polling place at Greenland Central School to help root for their candidates of choice as voters came and went. — Atlantic News Photos by John Hirtle Seacoast ceremonies honor Veterans Special to the Atlantic New Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Unforgettable moments HAMPTON | Hamptons American Legion Post #35 has announced that a special Veterans’ Day ceremony will be conducted at the Global War on Terror monument located on the grounds of the Legion Hall at 69 High Street in Hampton. The ceremony will be held on Saturday, November 11 at 11 a.m., in place of the annual ceremony held at the High Street Cemetery. At that time, the Legion will unveil the names of US Army SPC Jesse S. Conger and L/CPL Peter J. Sora, USMC, two NH Veterans who lost their lives in the GWOT. Their names were inadvertently omitted during the dedication of the monument on September 11, 2006. Their families will be in attendance. Other Veterans’ Day ceremonies will be conducted on November 11 as follows: • Hampton Beach at the New Hampshire Marine Memorial (“The Lady”), across from the Ashworth by the Sea Hotel, 8 a.m.; • Hampton Falls at Weare’s Common across from the Baptist Church, 9 a.m.; • North Hampton at the North Hampton library, 10 a.m. This year’s guest speaker is Hampton Fire Chief Hank Lipe, a Veteran who served in both the US Air Force as a sergeant from 1973-77; the Air Force Reserves from 1977-79; and the US Coast Guard Reserves from 19862003, for a total of 23 years in the military. Post #35 members, a rifle squad, bugler Mark Weatherby and the Post Chaplain will be present at all four services, as will the Seacoast’s own WHS USMJROTC Color Guard. The community is invited and encouraged to join in honoring Seacoast area Veterans at any or all of these ceremonies. Refreshments will be served following the final ceremony at the Legion Hall. For more information, call (603) 926-4668. STRATHAM | The Town of Stratham and the Stratham Hill Park 100th Celebration Committee invites the public to attend the annual Stratham Veterans’ Day service on Saturday, November 11. The service will begin at 10:40 a.m. at the Memorial Garden in Stratham Hill Park. The Stratham Volunteer Fire Department Rifle Squad and Honor Guard will joined by the Stratham Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts for this opportunity to honor all those who served in the military. Representing the many veterans in the community will be Stratham residents Walter Smyk, a Korean War Thank troops, Veterans with Legion e-cards Special to the Atlantic News SEACOAST | With thousands of troops deployed overseas, the American Legion is once again offering electronic greeting cards, a free, easy way to thank them for their service on the eve of Veterans Day, November 11. American troops serving overseas often have access to e-mail and they look forward to the cards that do not take up a lot of bandwidth. Anyone who has an e-mail account can receive the special cards. Creating the card is quick and easy at the American Legion’s Web site. The site offers e-mail cards representing each branch of military RTE 111 ATLANTIC AVE NORTH HAMPTON, NH 964-6152 MEAT SHOPPE We Sell Only USDA Choice & Prime Beef Open Mon-Fri: 8-6 • Sat 8-5 • Closed Sun • SPECIALS GOOD THROUGH 11-10-2006 Black Angus Order your All- Natural Antibiotic Free Fresh Plainville Turkeys for Thanksgiving 29 Lafayette Road (Route 1) Seacoast Village North Hampton, NH - 603.964.6541 Mon-Sat 10am-6pm Sun 12-5 - www.quicksilver.com - Personal Checks & Credit Cards Accepted. Solid gold, sterling silver, and precious stones • U.S. Pat. No. 7,007,507 • © • All rights reserved visit www.pandora-jewelry.com 10-35 lb avg. TURKEY BREAST & GRAVY P.E.I. Sirloin Tips $5.99 lb Beef Shanks for Soup POTATOES Short Ribs of Beef $2.99 lb $15.99 50 LB. BAG 5 lb 85% Lean Fresh USDA Choice Ground Beef $12.95 HOT SOUPS Made Fresh Daily! ATM WWW.J OES M EAT S HOPPE . COM Veteran, and Maurice Alexander, a Veteran of World War II. Rev. David Dodge of the Stratham Community Church will offer prayers in recognition of those who served. Immediately following the service there will be a brief ceremony to unveil two plaques installed to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the park. As she did at the first plaque unveiling in 1920, Nan Pearson will join with members of the Celebration Committee and the Park Association to mark this final event in the 100th year celebration. The public is invited and encouraged to join in these Veterans’ Day celebrations. Call Our Lunch Line! (603) 964-9911 God Bless Our Troops service, along with the service song that plays when the card is opened. Each card provides plenty of space to compose a personal message. Cards may be sent directly to active duty service men and women if their military e-mail addresses are known. The electronic greeting cards are also ideal to thank all Veterans, of all generations, who have served in the US Armed Forces. Veterans and those serving in the military service today need to see that there are friends and family members who are proud of their sacrifices for America. The 2.8 million-member American Legion is the nation’s largest wartime Veterans organization. For more information or to send a Veterans Day greeting, visit www.legion.org. Stretch-rite carpet co. Stratham, NH (603) 475-1762 AtlanticNews.Com Vol 32, No 44 | November 10, 2006 | Atlantic News | Page A . Community Apple pie sales a sweet fundraiser By Liz Premo Atlantic News Staff Writer NORTH HAMPTON | Buy a pie or two and enjoy a holiday treat while supporting an important missions trip to Mexico. How, you ask? By placing an apple pie order with the Senior High Youth Group from the United Church of Christ in North Hampton. Youth group members spend a busy weekend prior to Thanksgiving assembling 100 apple pies, which they make available to the community. The pies are then sold for $10 each; proceeds brought in through this sweet fundraiser help with the trip to Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, which the students take in April during their school vacation. According to Brenda Tharp, “They do a variety of physical work there — painting, reshingling a roof, repairing fences, building a church, cementing, etc., as well as a lot of relationshipbuilding work.” Plus, she adds, “a big chunk of the money needed for this trip is raised by the youth” through the apple pie sales. It’s definitely a sweet deal for all involved. These delicious pies can be popped right into the oven, or frozen for later use. They will be assembled by the youth group on Saturday, November 18, and will be available for either delivery or pick up later that same afternoon. Pie orders are currently being accepted over the phone. For more information or to place an order, call Richard and Brenda Tharp at (603) 964-8194. Tree donations needed for festival Special to the Atlantic News TREE Continued on 22A• One-stop holiday shopping with Seabrook PTO By Liz Premo Atlantic News Staff Writer SEABROOK | The holidays are coming! The holidays are coming! To help with all the gift buying that comes with the season, the community is invited to attend the Seabrook PTO’s Second Annual This and That One Stop Holiday Shoppe on Saturday, November 18. Scheduled to take place from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Seabrook Elementary and Middle Schools, the event will feature the work of local crafters, offering a variety of items in one convenient spot — just in time for holiday shopping. “It is a craft fair plus,” according to Sheila Chace, one of Seabrook PTO’s codirectors. The many gift selections available to wow shoppers include fleece blankets, canned goods, hand-painted items, ornaments and other holiday items, jewelry, and needlework items (embroidered, quilted and croche- ted). Handbags, country crafts, PTO Continued on 22A• Holiday Open House Saturday, November 18 The Great American Country Store Seacoast Village Mall, Rt. 1 North Hampton, NH (603) 964-9330 10:00 am to 5:00 pm Discount Storewide ~ Refreshments Food Bank Dropoff $1.00 = 4 Meals visit us on the web at www.greatamericancountrystore.com Guaranteed! No Gimmicks, Gums, Patches or Lasers... Hypnosis Makes It Easy 95% of smokers who use our program quit in just one hour. How do you know it will work for you? We back it up with a Lifetime Guarantee! Individual sessions by appointment at our Portsmouth location. Call today for the exciting details of this program. 118 Maplewood Ave. • Building A Portsmouth, NH Smoke Free Hypnotherapy 1-877-574-6178 FA L L I N TO FA S H I O N . 20% OFF ALL DRESSES (with this ad) CHRISTINE’S CROSSING 1000 Washington Rd ● Rye, NH Open daily or by appointment (603)964-6063 Off Route 1, 1/4 mile east towards Rye Center at Breakfast Hill Light Cyan Magenta Yellow Black TREE TIME — The 2006 Festival of Trees Committee recently met to discuss this year’s event, which will be held at the Exeter town hall on Thursday, November 30. Pictured here are (back row) Nancy Erdmann, Kathy Ullrich, Ann Winter, Pam Goldsmith, Kathy Mattucci, and Joan Archibald; (center) Helen Joyce, Lisa Lortie, Laurel Blackett, Maddy Tourville, Bonnie Galinski, Catrina Gaynor, and Linda Safford; and (front) Mary Stone, Linda Allen, and Christy Utter. Not present when the photo was taken were committee members Jan Russell, Pam Bourgeois, Sue Drinker, Helen Burnham, and Jeannette Lackey. — Atlantic News Courtesy Photo EXETER | As the Christmas season approaches, there has been an overwhelming response from those in the community willing to decorate trees for the eighth annual Festival of Trees in Exeter. The event will take place during the Annual Open House sponsored by the Exeter Area Chamber of Commerce on Thursday, November 30 at the Exeter Town Hall from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Due to the fabulous turn out of decorators, the committee is in need of more live trees and is still looking for local farms to donate trees for this year’s Festival. Currently, the following businesses have generously Stop Smoking In 1 Hour... Page A | Atlantic News | November 10, 2006 | Vol 31, No 44 AtlanticNews.Com . Another View Passing the politician test By John Hirtle Atlantic News Staff Writer As I understand it, schools across the state have recently inflicted the “New England Common Assessment Program Grade-Level Expectations” or NECAPGLE tests on their charges. For those not familiar with it, this is part of the federal “No Child Left Behind” program, which is designed to encourage teachers to teach to a test, rather than following their own common sense, tried and true methods, and local parental and school board directives. Not to worry about our hard-earned tax dollars leaving the state though — Measured Progress in Dover is in charge of making and correcting these tests, which are given under such strict safeguards that the Department of Homeland Security should sit up and start taking notes. It did get me thinking From the Publisher: The views expressed on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the Atlantic News or its advertisers. We welcome alternative views and will consider guest commentaries for publication. Readers may send their comments and rebuttals to editor@atlanticnews.com. ~ Michael P. Connelly Editor / Publisher Page 36A Puzzle Solutions E I D 27 I A A T B 23 A 21 A P O C 22 W T O A 12 R R T U A A N M O 2 R M L 29 E S N H H 16 R B 10 R O T 3 H 30 A R H A L 11 O 24 L E 4 5 C O 25 N A I C G I D I H S A 26 E L T N 17 R 13 E 9 C R A N U R O U U A T R E O E E T C U Y M E E 19 L T S T H H H A T S O O 28 18 E I S 32 L U 15 N A G R S 1 A E N 20 8 T 6 H U N 14 A O T T E I N 7 T To Advertise, Call 926-4557 R Tell Them You Solved It In The Atlantic News 31 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black though. Why isn’t there a test for politicians? After all, a politician has much more to worry about than a mere third grade to high school student. They have anything from a town to an entire country to run. As I understand it, some politicians even become president. What a concept. Now I ask you — do you really want an untested politician to go running around spending your tax money in foolish ways? They might make a wrong decision, like taking a bribe, starting a war, or flipping the page to some previously unthoughtof scandal. Even worse, you might wake up to find your favorite politician becoming the center of a mindless media circus for weeks on end, all because you happened to vote for that one untested politician. Now I ask you — do you really want that? Of course not. So, it only makes sense to provide a test for aspiring politicians to take before they can consider running for office. Consider it proof that they have what it takes to be a politician, just like you need to take a driver’s test before you can get to drive a car. And just like a driver’s license, they would have to take it before they run for office again. We wouldn’t want any unprepared politicians taking office now, would we? The politician who passes the test — well great, they can run for office, and get to see if anyone votes for them. They fail — well, maybe they ought to admit they have not made adequate yearly progress to be a politician, and need to be kept back until they are ready. There are plenty of other jobs that need to be done in the government you know. No stress to this test you understand. Now the most important part of a politician’s test would be high-end home economics, with emphasis on math. Obviously, politicians don’t have a clue how to balance a checkbook, or how to come up with a balanced budget. Yet millions of ordinary Americans manage to do it every year as they manage to keep a roof over their heads and food on their tables. Second on the test would be an intense section on ethics and proper manners. This would cover the obvious, such as not fooling around with interns or pages, as well as common courtesy, and the art of compromise. To really ace this section, any politician would have to admit that a campaign’s mud-slinging attack ads are not very nice — or polite. Then there’s the writing and public speaking section, where a politician has to draft a speech and a law on their own without the help of aides, assistants, or lawyers. We want to make sure that they don’t say something obviously stupid that will become a sound-bite on one of those comedy shows. The practical portions of the test would include real world problems to solve, like how to fund government employees when the insurance company goes way up on its premiums, or how to deal with an unexpected disaster. The need to compromise and find good middle ground rather than play petty party politics would be the way to pass this section. Self-centered egotists need not apply. Of course, just as there are different grades in school, there would be different levels to the politician test. Anyone seeking a seat in the Senate, Congress, or the President’s office would have to show an understanding of geography, so they know where not to bomb and invade. World history would be important, so they know why people in different parts of the world hate Americans so much. Considering the fact that religion is causing so much discord, a section on the various world belief systems would be a must. Finally, there would have to be a section on the benefits of timely long-term planning, to remove the tendency of petty politicians to consider the goals for their own short terms in office. There is a real need to set a course and to stay on it — whether the plan is brewed up by one party or the other. Now, it is too late to do any testing for the 2006 elections, but there is plenty of time to devise such an obvious test to ensure that we have the best crop of politicians possible running the country in 2008. I think it ought to be at least as easy as fixing the voting machines in Florida. Of course, many would argue that not a single politician would come close to fulfilling even the most basic parts of such a rigorous test. That’s true. We would probably have to outsource their jobs to India or Mexico just to meet the shortfall. But it seems darned silly for the politicians to impose tests on our children to “prepare” them for the real world when the politicians themselves don’t seem to have a clue on how to run it correctly. Letters Point of view To the Editor: Kudos to you and your staff for hosting such lively community dialogue around current national and political issues. Margery Jennings adds a fresh, new voice that was sorely needed as an antidote to Jerry’s McConnell’s regular bashing of the liberal side of issues. Equally interesting are the many voices you publish coming from local citizens — refreshing and differing points of view that reflect the diversity which makes this country great. The election will be over when your next edition comes out, but with your help many voters will have gone to the polls stimulated, enlightened, even angered — and the cause of American Democracy will have made another step forward. Thanks for devoting time, space, resources and effort to this important cause. Malcolm Odell South Hampton Semper Fi To the Editor: The US Marine Corps was born in Tun Tavern in Philadelphia in 1775. The Continental Marines, as a regular branch of our young country’s service, were formed by an act of the Second Continental Congress and passed on November 10, 1775. The ethos of our beloved Corps has always reflected the very best in military virtue and war-fighting excellence. Throughout their history, Marines have distinguished themselves by their bravery, aggressive spirit, sacrifice, love of country and loyalty to one another and to their Corps. Now, on this 231st birthday, Marines the world over will celebrate according to a specific tradition handed down from generation to generation. At every Marine post, station and camp, the Mameluke sword will be used to cut our birthday cake. The first slice will go to the youngest Marine in attendance and the second slice to the oldest Marine, symbolizing the continuity and bonding of one Marine generation to the next. And so on this day, I extend to my fellow Gyrenes, Jarheads, Devil Dogs, Leathernecks, Warriors, Marines, one and all, a very happy birthday. Stand tall, raise a glass of cheer and salute our Corps! Semper Fidelis. Bill Decker USMC 1953-56 North Hampton Count your blessings To the Editor: Gratitude is a virtue we should exercise more often. In comparison to so many others we are blessed. At this time of year, we are reminded to count those blessings. We are a fortunate people, don’t you agree? Well, most of us are fortunate — but not all of us. Some families find themselves in the unhappy position of needing to have their children placed in foster care. Sometimes this separation of parents from their children is short, sometimes longer and sometimes it is permanent. While foster care is usually temporary, it can lead to adoption if the family is unable to provide a safe home for the child. Share your blessings with a child in need. Become a foster parent. Call your local Portsmouth DCYF foster care worker at (800) 821-0326. Jan Feuer NHFAPA Concord Water on the warrant To the Editor: The warrant articles for the special North Hampton town meeting are posted on the town’s Web site. Article 1 concerns the hostile takeover of the water company. Contrary to the clarifying statements by the board of selectmen, it does not ask if voters want to “explore the feasibility of acquiring Aquarion’s assets” in North Hampton but rather “authorizes the board of selectmen to acquire” Aquarion’s assets. Because this is a special town meeting, the board of selectmen have not included a price tag for this warrant article. However, they have stated that next March they are going to propose a money article for $150,000 towards the takeover of a company that is not for sale. It is noteworthy that the board of selectmen have not announced the $15,000 in legal bills that have already been incurred. LETTERS Continued on 26A• AtlanticNews.Com Vol 32, No 44 | November 10, 2006 | Atlantic News | Page A . Tales from the Trail Sinning and grinning By Gerald Hodges Special to the Atlantic News out of a Hollywood movie script. “Man, oh, man,” I thought, “Mark has got it made. Lots of women and a fast race car.” For just a flash, I caught a glimpse of a familiar woman’s face, but suddenly she disappeared in the crowd. Call it luck, fortune, hard work, or a combination of both, Mark and his team had the fastest qualifying time, and would sit on the pole for the 39th Snowball Derby. “How ‘bout them apples,” shouted Mark as his team pushed his car through the pit area for a post-qualifying inspection.” Suddenly, Mark’s big four-wheel drive, Chevrolet dually, the one he pulled his race car and hauler with was headed straight for the race car. “Look out, get outta there, what’re you doing!?!” shouted Mark. The driver of the truck showered down on the gas pedal. People scattered. A closer glimpse showed a woman behind the wheel of the big dually, and it was apparent her target was Mark’s race car. The left side tires hit the middle of the hood of the late model, and crawled right over the top. Not once, not twice, but three times it went over. Pandemonium reigned. People gawked. Others cheered. Several policemen came running. The long-legged blonde in black tights had disappeared. Rose, the mild-mannered school teacher from Opelika, AL accepted help from a sheriff’s deputy as she crawled from the cab of the truck that was parked on top of the crushed race car. Before the sheriff’s depu- ties could begin asking question, Rose calmly said, “Officers, this is my race car and truck. Here’s the title to the truck and other papers to show that the race car is mine.” Rose was grinning as she cast one last look at Mark on her way out of the pits. Mark’s Craftsman Truck Series and other racing dreams ended that night. He never made the Snowball Derby, because his race car was flatter than a Waffle House pancake. As far as I know, he has never gotten back into racing. But the words he continued to repeat in the pits that night, still haunt me. “Did you see how she was smiling, while she was doing that?” he kept repeating over and over. “Did you see that fiendish grin on her face?” This story has two moral lessons: First, consider consulting Rev. Graham on eternal issues, but show a little respect to your girlfriend if she owns the race car you drive. French Cuisine At Its Finest! Now ServiNg SuNday BruNch 10 am - 4 pm Live Entertainment THU-SAT Nights & Sundays! Classical Guitar & Pianist Business or Private Parties For 5 - 50 Guests Open: Wednesday-Sunday Wed-Sat: Lunch 11 am - 2:30 pm Dinner 5 pm - 9 pm Rosewood at Rye 150 Lafayette Rd. Rye, NH 03870 (603) 964-2252 www.leparisian.net Seabrook Greyhound Park 7 Days & 7 Nights of Simulcasting of Thoroughbred, Harness & Greyhound Racing. Charity texas hold ‘em Poker tournaments Every Thursday & Friday from 3:00 p.m. to Midnight. Every Saturday & Sunday from 12:00 Noon to Midnight It’s a Great Escape ... Great Food..... Closed on Thanksgiving Have a Happy & Safe Holiday! And Quiet Conversation. Route 107 off I-95 at Exit 1 Seabrook, NH (603) 474-3065 www.seabrookgreyhoundpark.com Cyan Magenta Yellow Black This is a story about one woman’s revenge. “Be sure, your sins will find you out,” said Billy Graham, the renowned North Carolina evangelist, in one his televised sermons. While I believe the Rev. Graham was referring to the Almighty’s Laws, a recent experience involving a friend of mine, Mark Gaston and his girl friend, Rose Pettway, has really caused me to ponder on Graham’s words. Mark and Rose have known each other for about 12 years. Mark is 32 and Rose is 10 years older. They had a close relationship for many years. Mark was a refrigeration mechanic and Rose an elementary school teacher. She is a quiet, homebody person, while he is a little on the wild side. She likes to sit at home and work in the garden at the rear of her small home; he goes out every evening to the local bar for beers with the neighborhood crowd. They never married, but did have a daughter. Until about two years ago, Mark lived with Rose. Finally, it’s hard to say, who was at fault, but they just seemed to drift apart. Mark moved out and bought a house trailer on a small piece of property at the edge of town. He visited his daughter, or she visited him every weekend, and he paid child support. About once a week, Rose would stop by for a conjugal visit. But she always called in advance. Just before the couple broke up in 2004, Mark came to Concord, NC, with a brand new late model. While he had raced in a few pure stock races, most of his friends were surprised. Where did the money come from? Was he into selling dope? Those who knew him best wondered how he could afford it. His race equipment was the best; a Howe chassis, Jericho transmission, and even a Hamner racing motor. But he did well. The second race night he won a heat race, and two weeks later won his first feature. He did so well that by the end of the season, he was able to go to Nashville and qualify for the All-American 400, finishing fourth. The sun was shining on Mark. Rose could be seen in the evening working outside her house, planting or weeding flowers. Occasionally, her blue ’95 Buick was spotted parked outside Mark’s trailer. Mark started the 2005 season off at Gainesville, GA, and then traveled to Lakeland, FL for a big 200lap event. He was doing well. While he had yet to win a big race, he had several top-five finishes. Along the way, Mark picked up a couple girl friends. Racers call them “pit lizards,” because they scurry all over the pit area trying to latch on to a winning driver. Our paths didn’t cross much in 2005, because Mark was always on the go or headed to an out-of-town race. He didn’t work as much at his regular job as he used to. It wasn’t until the Snowball Derby, the first weekend of December that we were finally able to sit down and chat. “Things are going great,” he said. “We’ve had the fastest time of anyone during practice, and if I do good in the Derby, James Mason has promised to put me in one of his Craftsman Trucks in 2006.” Mark and his team were 24th in line to qualify. I noticed that as his team pushed the car to the qualifying apron, he had a new partner holding on to his arm. She was a young, long-legged blonde, wearing black tights. The kiss he received from her before putting on his driving helmet was straight Fall Cleanups 10 Page 10A | Atlantic News | November 10, 2006 | Vol 31, No 44 AtlanticNews.Com . Community Town Meetings Apply now for Christmas Network By Liz Premo Atlantic News Staff Writer SEACOAST | Seacoast area families with children in need can look forward to a bright and Merry Christmas this year, thanks to the Christmas Network. The Christmas Network is a service offered through Rockingham Community Action’s distribution of Christmas services throughout Seacoast area towns. Operated by the Greater Raymond and Seacoast Out- reach Centers, the Christmas Network matches local organizations providing Christmas services with families as well as individuals in need of help. It also directly serves children from towns in which the need for services exceeds the supply. Applications for the Christmas network are currently being accepted, and may be made through the Thursday, November 30 deadline. Eligibility is based on the family’s gross income and the size of the household. Seacoast Community Action’s Christmas Network serves the towns of Greenland, Hampton, Hampton Falls, Kensington, New Castle, Newington, North Hampton, Portsmouth, Rye, Seabrook, South Hampton, and Stratham. The Seacoast center, located on Route 1 in Seabrook, will accept walk-in applicants; call (603) 474-3507 for more information. The Greater Raymond Community Action Christmas Network serves the towns of Brentwood, Candia, Deerfield, East Kingston, Epping, Exeter, Fremont, Kingston, Newfields, Newmarket, Northwood, Nottingham and Raymond. Applications are available at the center and can be requested over the phone. All applications must be received by mail; call (603) 895-2303 to request an application or for more information. coast Area Firefighters’ Toy Bank annual Chili CookOff. The event is scheduled to take place on Thursday, November 16 beginning at 5:30 p.m. at Lebec Rouge, located at 73 Ocean Boulevard, Hampton Beach. Contestants are encouraged to stir up their best pot of chili and bring it to the event for judging. Trophies for the best chili will be awarded, and raffles (including a 50/50) will also be part of the fun. Local #2664 is also seeking raffle donations, such as gift certificates for goods and services. Donations need to be received by Monday, November 13. The public is invited to come and taste the Seacoast’s best chili dishes at this popular event. A $5 donation will be gratefully accepted; proceeds will support this year’s Toy Bank. To enter the Seacoast Area Firefighters’ Chili Cook-off, or for more information, contact Justin McDaniel at (603) 926-3316 or visit www. hampton firefighters.org. Entries sought for chili cook-off Special to the Atlantic News Cyan Magenta Yellow Black HAMPTON | Wanted: Good cooks who make great chili and would like to make a difference in the lives of Seacoast area children in need. The holiday season is right around the corner, and the Professional Firefighters of Hampton are seeking entries for this year’s Sea- Holiday shopping at Alternative Marketplace Special to the Atlantic News NORTH HAMPTON | The Missions Committee at the North Hampton United Church of Christ will host the Fifth Annual Alternative Marketplace on Saturday, November 25. The event will take place from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the church, which is located on Atlantic Avenue in North Hampton. The Alternative Marketplace provides a contrast to the commercially-driven holiday season. This unique experience not only provides shoppers something more substantive but also makes the season one that is more meaningful and brings more joy to the world. Proceeds raised through sales at the Alternative Marketplace benefit local agencies and programs such as Greater Seacoast Habitat for Humanity, Seacoast Interfaith Hospitality Network and SERRV. With the overwhelming success that the event has had over first four years, the committee expects more agencies, programs and faith community mission opportunities to present themselves this year. Local vendors are invited to participate by signing up for a table, with a voluntary $10 donation, where their mission items might be offered for sale on that day. All items for sale must carry positive or helpful messages MARKET Continued on 23A• Brentwood (603) 642-6400 Olive Tash ................................. Town Administrator Board of Selectmen ..... Tuesday, Nov. 14, at 7 p.m. Planning Board ........... Thursday, Nov. 16, at 7 p.m. School Board .......... Monday, Nov. 13, at 6:30 p.m. East Kingston (603) 642-8406 Deborah Gallant.......................... Town Administrator Board of Selectmen... Monday, Nov. 20, at 6:30 p.m. Planning Board.............. Thursday, Nov. 16, at 7 p.m. School Board.................... Tuesday, Dec. 5, at 7 p.m. Exeter (603) 778-0591 Russell Dean....................................... Town Manager Board of Selectmen........ Monday, Nov. 13, at 7 p.m. Planning Board.............. Thursday, Nov. 16, at 7 p.m. School Board ................... Tuesday, Dec. 5, at 7 p.m. Exeter Co-op Board.......Thursday, Dec. 14, at 7 p.m. Greenland (603) 431-7111 Karen Anderson.......................... Town Administrator Board of Selectmen......... Monday, Nov. 13, at 7p.m. Planning Board.............. Thursday, Nov. 16, at 7 p.m. School Board............ Monday, Nov. 20, at 6:30 p.m. Hampton (603) 926-6766 Mark Gearreald........................Acting Town Manager Board of Selectmen........ Monday, Nov. 13, at 7 p.m. Planning Board.......... Wednesday, Nov. 15, at 7 p.m. School Board..................Tuesday, Nov. 14, at 7 p.m. Winnacunnet Co-op Board..Wed., Nov. 22, at 6 p.m. Hampton Falls (603) 926 -4618 Eric Small ................................... Town Administrator Board of Selectmen.........Wed, Nov. 15, at 6:30 p.m. Planning Board................Tuesday, Nov. 28, at 7 p.m. School Board...................Thursday, Dec. 7, at 7 p.m. Kensington (603) 772-5423 Denise Gregson................... Administrative Assistant Board of Selectmen... Monday, Nov. 20, at 7:30 p.m. Planning Board......... Thursday, Nov. 16, at 7:30 p.m. School Board.................Thursday, Dec. 14, at 7 p.m. Newfields 772-5070 Board of Selectmen....Tuesday, Nov. 14, at 6:30 p.m. Planning Board.............. Thursday, Nov. 16, at 7 p.m. School Board............ Monday, Nov. 13, at 5:30 p.m. North Hampton (603) 964-8087 Michael Pardue ......................... Town Administrator Board of Selectmen........ Monday, Nov. 13, at 7 p.m. Planning Board.............Monday, Dec. 4, at 6:30 p.m. School Board................ Thursday, Nov. 16, at 7 p.m. Rye (603) 964-6777 Alan Gould...................... Acting Town Administrator Board of Selectmen... Monday, Nov. 13, at 6:30 p.m. Planning Board.................Tuesday, Nov. 14, at 7p.m. School Board............ Wednesday, Nov. 15, at 6 p.m. Seabrook (603) 474-3311 Computer Problems? REMOTE SERVICE FOR $50! Convenient, Quick, Affordable, Secure. A REMOTE ClickN Fix tech is a phone-call away. 766.7999 Call Today! CLICK’N FIX SMART BUYS ● 512MB RAM $59 19” Flat Panel Monitor $199 ● Spyware & Virus Removal System Tune-ups & Upgrades ● Wireless & Networking ● Data Backup, and more! ● ● No Geeks. No Nerds. No Gimmicks. www.clicknfix.net ● 30 Mirona Rd, Portsmouth Fred Welch.......................................... Town Manager Board of Selectmen..... Wednesday, Nov. 1, at 7 p.m. Planning Board..................Tuesday, Nov. 7, at 7 p.m. School Board................. Monday, Nov. 20, at 6 p.m. South Hampton (603) 394-7696 Larry Baker.................................. Town Administrator Board of Selectmen... Monday, Nov. 13, at 7:30 p.m. Planning Board.......... Monday, Nov. 20, at 7:30 p.m. School Board.................... Tuesday, Dec. 5, at 7 p.m. Stratham (603) 772-4741 Paul R. Deschaine........................ Town Administrator Board of Selectmen... Monday, Nov. 13, at 7:30 p.m. Planning Board..... Wednesday, Nov. 15, at 7:30 p.m. School Board....... Wednesday, Dec. 13, at 6:30 p.m. 11 AtlanticNews.Com Vol 32, No 44 | November 10, 2006 | Atlantic News | Page 11A . Business Harvest the Savings Thanksgiving Wreaths & Table Arrangements 30% OFF Making a permanent impression y lit a u Service for 30 y ea r S Q 446 Lafayette Road (Rte 1) Hampton, NH 603-926-5150 Wayne, Founder of Wayne’s Auto Body, is proud to introduce his son Jay as new manager. Just-right shopping at Present Perfect By Scott E. Kinney Atlantic News Staff Writer HAMPTON | Everchanging. That is one way to describe Present Perfect, a store of items infrequently found elsewhere. “I always said it would evolve,” explains Edie Argo, proprietor of the small shop. “I’m always looking at new distributors and new product.” She is also always visiting other gift shops to ensure that the products she sells are unique to her store. “I’m not the wholesale distributor’s dream,” she says with a laugh. But, what may be bad for the wholesale distributor is good for the customer, especially the one that is looking for just the right gift. Eclectic might be another way to describe the business. Present Perfect stocks furniture, but it’s not a furniture store. It also sells clothing, but it isn’t a clothing store. There’s a variety of items through out the store, from wall hangings, to piggy banks, to jewelry and candles. There is also a mix of imported items along with products created by local artisans. Perhaps it’s best to allow Argo to describe the store in her own words. “It’s an eclectic group of old and new,” she explains. “I like it when people say this reminds me of… We all need our senses appealed to and I’ve stimulated someone’s senses if I can get them to come in and spend more than 10 minutes looking around.” The shop is a far cry from her previous employment — strategic planning for the managed care division of Travelers Insurance Co., now Travelers City Group, and prior to that in the corporate internal audit department, specializing in auditing of computer systems. “It’s something that I’ve always wanted,” she says. “This is sort of a vision I’ve had since the fourth grade.” Argo recently moved her three-year-old business from Rye to downtown Hampton, where there is more room to grow as well as a more prominent location. “It’s a bigger space,” says Argo. “I was really tucked away. I’m glad I’m here.” Argo pays little heed to the idea that, historically, retail businesses have a difficult time in the area. “If you give people a reason to go some place they will,” says Argo. “But, there has to be a reason to come. We just need to make a concerted effort to let people know that the obstacles that are there, aren’t really there.” Present Perfect is now conveniently located downtown at 457 Lafayette Road, Hampton. To reach the store call (603) 926-3340. Looking Forward to another 30 Years of Quality Service! 22 lafayette rd, North hamptoN, Nh (603) 964-6261 Thank You! Isaiah & Midge wish to thank the three men & a woman who recently helped him off of Hampton’s North Beach. 603-926-5150 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black WELCOME — Edie Argo (pictured) can help you choose the perfect present at her shop, Present Perfect. The store recently moved to downtown Hampton. — Atlantic News Photo by Scott E. Kinney 12 Page 12A | Atlantic News | November 10, 2006 | Vol 31, No 44 AtlanticNews.Com . Community Friends hold holiday fair at Lane Memorial Library Special to the Atlantic News Cyan Magenta Yellow Black HAMPTON | Be an early bird shopper when the Friends of the Lane Memorial Library hold their annual Holiday Craft and Bake Sale, taking place at the library on Friday, November 17 from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and Saturday, November 18 from 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Holiday Fair items will include a repeat of last year’s wildly popular hand-made doll clothes to fit American Girl and Bitty Baby dolls, holiday ornaments, fresh balsam wreaths, custom made-to-order bows, and many additional gift items that are sure to appeal to all ages. For a small fee, there will be a children’s craft table to entertain children from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. both days. There will also be a delicious assortment of holiday goodies and desserts baked of the fair will be the drawing of some very special raffle items. The first is a Holiday Décor Raffle with three beautiful silk flower arrangements and a $50 gift certificate to Seacoast Florist. The silk arrangements were donated by Naturally Silk, Barrymore Designs, and Fleurs de Magrit. The children’s raffle items are a Thomas and Friends electric train set and a collectible limited edition American Girl Doll named Jess. Tickets can purchased at the circulation desk now through November 18 at $1 each or six for $5. The winners will be selected after the Friends’ Holiday Fair. The public is invited to stop by, enter the raffles and get a little (or a lot) of Christmas shopping done. The Lane Memorial Library is located on Academy Avenue in Hampton. For more information about this event, call the library at (603) 926-3368. p.m. at the First Congregational Church, located at 157 Winnacunnet Road. During the meeting, Rev. Deborah Knowlton will give a talk on her trip to Japan to visit her son, who was in that country as part of a foreign study program planned by the college he attends. Japan is an interesting country and Monday Club members are looking forward to the talk. The meeting will take place upstairs in the chapel. Norma St. Germain will read the devotions. Monday Club members and their guests are invited to attend. For more information, call Kathi Traut at (603) 926-0262. by Friends members. The culmination Japan program with Monday Club By Isabel Grasso Special to the Atlantic News HAMPTON | The Hampton Monday Club will take a trip to Japan — vicariously — when the club meets on Monday, November 13 at 1 A FAIR TIME FOR ALL Local Notes holiday centerpiece workshop PORTSMOUTH | The Portsmouth Garden Club will hold their next meeting on Wednesday, November 15 at 12 p.m. at the Urban Forestry Center on Elwyn Drive in Portsmouth. Members will gather at noontime for refreshments and the club meeting. At 1 p.m. Elizabeth McCoomb will provide instruction for making a holiday centerpiece. The table arrangement will be made with fall decorations for Thanksgiving, and is designed to be easily transformed for the winter holidays. Items to bring include scissors and/ or pruning sheers, and suitable greens such as balsam, hemlock, holly euonymus, arborvitae. A container, oasis, candle holder, a fall colored candle and a red candle, boxwood, fall flowers and a glass globe will be provided to participants. To find out more about this activity or the Portsmouth Garden Club, call Elizabeth McCoomb at (603) 431-8368. Landscape design topic at garden club EXETER | The Exeter Area Garden Club will be meeting on Thursday, November 16 at 10 a.m. at the Stratham Community Church. Coffee and refreshments will precede the meeting at 9:30 a.m. The program for the morning is entitled “Landscape Design: Beginning with the End in Mind” and will be presented by Mark Olson, a landscape architect from Hampton. Hostesses for the meeting are Norma Roberts (chairman), Darlene Alonzo, Abbie-Jane Anderson, and Jean Wark. The club welcomes new members. For more information call Abbie-Jane Anderson at (603) 775-0434. News from R ye Driftwood Garden Club RYE | The regular monthly meeting of the Rye Driftwood Garden Club will be held on Tuesday, November 21 at 9:30 a.m. in the fellowship hall of the Congregational Church at Rye Center. Bill Holt, owner of Willow Mist Grasses in Stratham, will present a program entitled “Ornamental Grasses.” Joan Sweeney is in charge of the hostess committee for this meeting. On Thursday, November 30, members will devote a workshop to the creation of items for the Christmas Fair at Webster at Rye. Participants are requested to bring greens and containers if possible. The Rye Driftwood Garden Club is in its 37th year, meeting the third Tuesday of each month from September to June. The club’s objectives are to encourage all phases of flower arranging, home gardening and better horticultural practices, to promote civic beautification and to foster the conservation of natural resources. Membership requirements include payment of annual dues ($10); support of ways and means activities and town projects; and willingness to serve on committees and as a host or hostess. Nancy Neville and Claire Russon currently serve as copresidents, while Kathleen Coker and Kathy Fitzgerald share the responsibilities of first vice president (membership and luncheons). Kathryn Job and Manon Venden share the duties of second vice president in charge of programs and trips, and Marjorie Smith is responsible for the planning and coordination of workshops for the current club year. More information regarding the Rye Driftwood Garden Club, club membership and activities is available by calling Priscilla Jenness at (603) 964-8728. OLLI presents panel discussion The Rye Congregational Church, located on Washington Road across from the Rye Library, will hold its Fall Harvest Fair on Saturday November 18 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Festivities will include coffee and donuts from 9-1 a.m., a luncheon from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.; a silent auction, and a cookie walk. There will also be crafts, baked goods, Christmas items, a children’s room, a White Elephant Table, and a Pie Table. The community is invited to join in the fun and festivities. — Atlantic News Courtesy Photo EXETER | What will become of books? “The Library of the Future” will be the topic discussed by a panel of professional librarians at a session taking place in the meeting room of the Exeter Public Library on Wednesday, November 15 at 2 p.m. Sponsored by the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, this informative session will feature panelists Mary Ann List, director of the Portsmouth Public Library; and Michael York, the New Hampshire State Librarian. David Corbett, a trustee of the Exeter Public Library, will moderate the discussion. The program is free and open to the public. For additional information, contact the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, “OLLI at Exeter” at RiverWoods by calling (603) 772-4700. 13 AtlanticNews.Com Vol 32, No 44 | November 10, 2006 | Atlantic News | Page 13A . AtlanticNews.Com Vol 32, No 44 | November 10, 2006 | Atlantic News | Page 13A . Field hockey defeated after astounding journey By Ben Allen Talon Reporter Special to 16 Voices Cyan Magenta Yellow Black EXETER | For the members of the girl’s field hockey team it was a season they will never forget. They came in with one goal, a goal no other field hockey team has ever accomplished, to win it all. Some girls will remember the amazing journey it was, while others will always lament over the outcome of the championship game. While most of the team grieved over the 3-2 loss to Salem in the Class “L” Championship, everyone knew they had nothing to be ashamed of. This was a team of destiny that showed over the past two months they truly were a team. Although Salem came out on top in the end, Exeter showed that through the playoffs they knew how to win. In the quarterfinals they defeated Timberlane in double overtime, and continued the momentum to defeat Winnacunnet in the semifinals, one of the two teams they lost to in the regular season, by a score of 3-1. They were one of two Exeter field hockey teams in history to make it to the Class L Championship. They finished the season at 14-3, losing to a team who had won the championship the last four out of five years. It became quite apparent that as the final game went on the best two teams were competing in the championship. Unfortunately for Exeter they came up one goal short. “All we did was outscore them today,” said Salem Coach Carol Merchant. “I knew they were a great team and I knew they would be ready.” For Exeter it was the team aspect that helped them to accomplish so much. “It was an incredible season,” said Coach Grott, Exeter’s coach for the past five years. “This group of girls played extremely well together and no matter on the field or on the bench they all supported one another. I truly believe it’s a team effect that got them here.” Captains Sydney Hagen and Sam Corti both helped to contribute to the team aspect. “No matter what kind of game those two girls are having they are always trying to be positive,” said Coach Grott. “They are always there to support the team.” Despite the loss Syd- ney believed this was the best experience of her life. “I will always cherish the friendships and lessons I have learned from this team,” said Sydney, who had one of Exeter’s two goals in the finals. “It has helped me to build character and gave me something to believe in. No matter who is on the field, I know I can trust them.” Regardless of not winning the championship this group of girls displayed what it means to win. They have helped to write Exeter field hockey history and hopefully set a new standard for field hockey teams of the future. 14 Page 14A | Atlantic News | November 10, 2006 | Vol 31, No 44 AtlanticNews.Com . School News SUNSHINE STABLES Education is the key to freedom 88 Powwow River Rd • Rte 107A • East Kingston, NH (603) 580-5863 • (603) 793-2281 Fall Special: Buy 2 Lessons Get 1 Free Join us now for Winter Boarding… Receive $50 OFF first month’s board & Enjoy our Indoor Riding Track Riding Lessons for all Ages & Levels Boarding: $425 Per Month Board & Training: $550/Month Package Rates & Gift Certificates Available Relaxed Family Atmosphere Quality Horses for sale at all times Specializing in Morgan Show Horses Donna Buckles Trainer/Manager BOARDING • TRAINING • CAMPS • SHOWINGS • SALES Dr. Zodwa Dlamini speaks with students at Exeter By Kelly Whittier Talon School News Editor Special to 16 Voices EXETER | In America, the notion that a student would walk ten miles to go to school each day is unimaginable. In South Africa this is a stark reality for students. For Dr. Zodwa Dlamini, this is a reality that she is fighting against. “If you deprive people of education, you deprive them of their existence,” she said. Dr. Dlamini is a representa- teachers. Updated books, however, are what are most needed by students. “What students can do is send books. Our shelves are empty and outdated,” she said. Dr. Dlamini realizes that it was her education that helped her in her success. “Without education I don’t think I would be where I am. I was only able to get the position with Nelson Mandela because of my education,” she said. Working with Mandela was a gratifying experience for Dr. Dlamini. “Nelson Mandela is a beautiful human being who exudes love. When you meet him, you have to love this very good man,” she said. Now that she is working towards improving education in her homeland, Dr. Dlamini has hopes for the impact that donated books will have on students in South Africa. “Education is the key to freedom,” she said. hockey captains’ speech. Senior captain Sam Corti provides answers for all the EHS students who, when she mentioned “Namaste,” were wondering “What the heck is she talking about?” “Namaste” which means literally “I bow to you” is used as an idea and as a gesture when practicing yoga. As an idea Namaste is the recognition that everyone has a divine spark in their hearts. The gesture from one person to another is performed by bringing the hands together at the heart, closing the eyes and bowing. It is commonly done at the beginning and end of a yoga session. For the field hockey team though, Namaste has a slightly different meaning. “Namaste really means that the inner light in you respects the inner light in another, but for us, it’s more of connecting with each other as a team,” Sam explained. The team began practicing yoga together in mid September when Coach Grott, the varsity field hockey coach, suggested and organized it. “[Coach Grott] feels that it is a good alternative for strength building, but more importantly she feels that yoga is influential in our team unity. She calls it team building,” said Sam “We do a lot of poses where we lean on each other for balance. One partner supports while the other focuses on strengthening,” Sam said. These poses also help with team building. The girls, along with Coach Grott, feel so strongly about its influence on the team that they will often devote an entire practice to yoga and will also have practiced yoga with an instructor three times by the end of the season. “We usually end games and practices with a Namaste cheer,” said Sam. “We have also started doing dynamic stretching this year at the beginning of each practice, which has helped minimize the number of injuries we have had this season.” As for the homecoming game, Sam believes that Namaste had an influence on their performance. “Namaste helped us rally before homecoming because it was truly our thing,” she said. “No one else really knew what we were talking about, which was kind of funny. But the saying really just helped us connect as a team.” Field hockey recognizes their inner light By Lauren Chaisson Talon Sports Reporter Special to 16 Voices Cyan Magenta Yellow Black tive for South Africa and is asking the EHS community to stand with her in her battle for education. “You have proved your hospitality by helping those in need during the accident in New Orleans. I’m asking you to extend that hand to the children of South Africa who also want an education,” said Dr. Dlamini. Students in Africa aren’t receiving an adequate education because of lack of recourses, books, and skilled EXETER | Those who attended the annual homecoming pep rally can remember the call back cheer, the high energy, the school spirit, and of course the always entertaining captains’ speeches. This year though, many students were left in the dark when it came to the field WE CAN HELP YOU WITH YOUR HOMEWORK THINKING OF BUYING OR SELLING A HOME? Free home market analysis Search the MLS at www.KathyWalsh.com Serving the SAU16 area for over twenty years (603) 772-6212 Improve Your Child’s Grades With 1 FREE WEEK* OF TUTORING! *Call For Details! With One-On-One Tutoring In Your Home! • All Subjects • Pre-K To Adult • SAT/ACT Prep • LD/ADD • Foreign Languages • Study Skills • Reading Comprehension • Speech Therapy • Computer Training • Math • Science • Affordable Rates • Qualified Teachers R 603-758-1330 www.clubz.com 15 AtlanticNews.Com Vol 32, No 44 | November 10, 2006 | Atlantic News | Page 15A . School Notes Sign up for ceramics EXETER | Exeter Rec is currently offering fall ceramics classes with Barbara Young, a multi-talented volunteer and instructor who has been with the department for more than 25 years. All ceramics classes are available to the novice as well as to the experienced. Whether a participant is a beginner or a pro, they are invited to display their creativity. All tools and materials are available at the studio; all that is needed is to bring enthusiasm, curiosity and imagination. Open classes are held weekly on an on-going and regular basis Barbara was certified with the National Ceramic Association in 1974 and has instructed children and adults for years. In addition to her work as a ceramics instructor, Barbara has also taught grades 2 and 4, and was the children’s librarian at the Exeter Public Library. For the past 18 years she has been the school librarian for Epping Elementary School. Open ceramics classes are held on Mondays and Thursdays from 7-9 p.m. .for adults; Wednesdays from 3:45-4:45 for children; and Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. for both adults and children. Participants should note that the schedule may change during vacations and holidays. There is a one-time registration fee of $10 per person to be paid up front. In addition, there is a fee of $2 per class per child (starting age 5) and $2.50 per class per adult. Greenware is purchased separately. Exeter Rec is located at 32 Court Street in Exeter. For more information or to sign up, stop by the office or call (603) 773-6151. EXETER | Exeter Parks and Recreation will host a family trip to see the Boston Celtics on Friday, February 2, 2007. The bus will leave the Parks and Recreation parking lot (located at 32 Court Street in Exeter) at 5:15 p.m. for the 7:30 p.m. game. The bus will return to Exeter at about 11-11:30 p.m. The seats, which are behind the Celtics’ bench, are excellent (Section 329, Rows 1,2, and 3). The cost is $75 for Exeter residents and $80 for nonresidents. This includes coach transportation and a ticket to the game. All children under 14 must be accompanied by an adult. Although the deadline to register isn’t until Friday, January 5, this trip is expected to sell out quickly, so Celtics fans are encouraged to sign up now. Register in person or visit www.town. exeter.nh.us. For more information, call the Exeter Parks and Recreation Department at (603) 7736151. Vendors sought for school craft fair NEWFIELDS | The Second Annual Newfields Elementary School Holiday Craft Fair is scheduled for Saturday, November 18, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The event will offer a wide array of vendors and merchandise for sale. Admission is free. All proceeds from the day’s activities go directly to the school’s fifth grade class to fund their week-long environmental camp experience in April held at Boston University’s Sargent Center (formerly known as Sargent Camp) in Hancock, NH. Event holders are still looking for some craftsmen and women to participate in the fair. The table fee for crafters is $25. There is talk of other fun fundraising events planned as part of the Craft Fair as well. The school is hopeful that the community will take part in this important fundraiser for its fabulous fifth grade class. For more information, contact the school office at (603) 772-5555. Craft fair entries needed EXETER | Crafters are wanted for the annual Turkey Tournament and Craft Fair taking place November 24-26 at the Rinks at Exeter. Participating crafters can anticipate a huge traffic flow of more than 5000 spectators during this event. For reservations and more information, call Kirsty at (603) 775-7423, ext.14. Called due to snow? The Difficulties of School Closing Decisions By Arthur Hanson SAU16 Superintendent Special to Atlantic News Below is an explanation from SAU16 Superintendent Arthur Hanson on how decisions are made for schools in inclement weather. We understand that decisions to have delayed opening, early releases or school cancellations due to inclement weather have a large effect on families. We also understand that our students are best served both academically and socially, by being in school. However, my top priority is always the safety of our students and staff. How decisions are made Numerous factors are considered in school cancellations, delayed openings and early releases. We must give careful considerations to the most dangerous roads in our districts, which comprises six different towns spread over a diverse geo- graphic area with many secondary roads. On school cancellations, information starts to be collected around 4 a.m. on the day of the potential inclement weather. My first conversation is always with the SAU Director of Operations, Dick Wendell. We share the knowledge that we have at this point in time, i.e., looking at the amount of snow and/ or ice that has accumulated or will be accumulating according to the weather forecast; if the school parking lots and walkways can be sufficiently cleared prior to school opening; and the severity of the forecasted wind and temperature chill factors that morning. From 4 a.m. on, Dick and I am in constant contact with SAU17 (Sanborn Regional), SAU21 (Hampton area), SAU50 (Rye/ Greenland) and SAU52 (Portsmouth). All of these SAU’s including SAU16, are having discus- sions with our highway departments and police departments to try to get the best information possible for the decision that has to be made. We also have the services of meteorologists who are in contact with us at various times during the night to give us the most up to date weather conditions and forecast. At around 5:30 a.m. a decision has to be made in order to notify our bus drivers. SAU16 personnel always urges parents during inclement weather, if, at any time, they feel it is not safe for their child to attend school, to use their best judgment whether he/ she should attend. If a child does not attend due to safety factors, his/ her absence will be excused. Also, we urge parents to discourage their teenager from driving in inclement conditions. The bus is always an alternative for them. If a delayed opening is called, it is because we believe that by the time school opens with the delay, the road conditions, parking lots and walks will not be a safety concern. With early releases, it is our belief that weather conditions will be worsened by the time school would normally release. If at the release of school, there are unsafe driving conditions, we encourage high school students to leave their cars in the school parking lot and take the bus home. Although we use this assessment process to try and make the best possible decision regarding inclement weather, we know that often no perfect decision exists. I hope this explanation helps everyone understand the process that we use to make the safest decisions for all the children and staff in SAU16. Should you have any comments or questions, please do not hesitate to contact me at 775-8653 or ahanson@sau16.org. the same name. It will be presented as a one-act musical version of the novel, which has become a favorite of both children and adults. The ArtsPower National Touring Theatre is producing this play to commemorate the 37th anniversary of the publication of this Newbery Award-winning novel. In the play, Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler, a collector of art and miscellaneous facts and figures, narrates the story in the form of a letter she is writing to her lawyer. As the tale unfolds, Claudia Kincaid and her brother, Jamie, run away to (and hide out in) the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. While at the museum, the two begin investigating whether a statue there named Angel was actually made by Michelangelo. In preparation for this theatre trip the fifth graders will have read (or have read to them) “From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler.” They will also discuss various aspects of the book and their expectations regarding the performance. The production Company ArtsPower has also provided the school with a study guide that includes information about E.L. Konigsburg, Michelangelo, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and theater company productions. Kensington students get ‘Mixed Up’ Special to 16 Voices KENSINGTON | On Monday, November 25, the three fifth grade classes at Kensington Elementary School will be traveling to the Capitol Center for the Arts in Concord to view the play, “From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler.” This production, part of the school series which is sponsored by the Capitol Center, is adapted from E.L. Konigsburg’s story of Giving Circle announces new grant cycle Special to 16 Voices EXETER | The Giving Circle has announced that it is accepting applications for its 2007 grant cycle. Based in Exeter and established in October 2002 by a group of local women united by their concern for disadvantaged children and teens in the SAU16 community, the Giving Circle is currently in its fourth year of grant making. In the past three years the Giving Circle has awarded almost $27,000 in grants, ranging from $250-$5000, to local nonprofits providing important services and opportunities to children, youth and families. Agencies receiving Giving Circle support have included the New Outlook Teen Center, Richie McFarland Children’s Center, the Women’s Infants and Children’s (WIC) program of Rockingham Community Action, Arts in Reach, the Friends Project, Compass Youth Program, and the Healthy Families Program of Child & Family Services. In addition, the Giving Circle provided scholarships for local youth to attend summer programs at YMCA/ Camp Lincoln. Priority is given to projects that can have a permanent impact on the individuals participating. First time projects needing “seed” money are welcomed, and inexperienced grant writers will find it a user friendly application. All applications must be received by Friday, November 17, 2006; grants will be awarded by Monday, January 15, 2007. To receive a grant application, contact the Giving Circle, c/o The Women’s Fund of New Hampshire, 46 S. Main Street, Concord, NH 03301 or e-mail info@wfnh. org. Have you received the Atlantic News, delivered in the past, but you just missed one of our issues? Please get in touch with your Letter Carrier or Post Office and ask them to make sure they deliver it to your home or business. Cyan Magenta Yellow Black See the Celts School News 16 Page 16A | Atlantic News | November 10, 2006 | Vol 31, No 44 AtlanticNews.Com . School News AdditionAl $25 RebAte FRom PAge Aluminum With this Ad! Cyan Magenta Yellow Black “We don’t just install them, we helped design them.” Nathan G. Page * See specific warranty for more details. Single family, owner occupied residence only. Rebate must be submitted by December 30, 2006. Not to be combined with any other offer. Howard Page Aluminum & Vinyl Products Co. Inc 200 Drakeside Rd, Hampton NH 1-603-926-2429 1/2 MILE SOUTH OF HAMPTON BRIDGE FOOD FOR THOUGHT — Seacoast School of Technology Animal and Plant Science students (from left) Andrea Cole, Lester Barthelemy, Kiah Wiggin and Diane Holt meet with a representative from Kent Feed Inc. during the 2006 Future Farmers of America Convention. — Atlantic News Photo by Scott E. Kinney SST takes horse course on the road By Scott E. Kinney Editor, 16 Voices EXETER | At the end of last month, while many were thinking about costumes and candy, one group of Seacoast School of Technology (SST) students were thinking of something entirely different: Horses. Four students from SST’s Animal and Plant Science program traveled to the Indiana State Fairgrounds in late October to participate in the 2006 National Future Farmers of America Convention held in Indianapolis. SST’s Andrea Cole, Kiah Wiggin, Diane Holt and Lester Barthelemy earned a bronze plaque in the horse judging event. The group was among 49 teams representing all but one state. “Everyone wins to an extent,” said Animal and Plant Science Teacher Anne DeMarco, who made the trip with the group. “It’s to see how you rank.” The first day of the event had the group analyzing horses for 10 hours and then giving oral reasons, from memory for their analysis. “They’re not only looking for knowledge, but for TRY SOME SEAFOOD FAVORITES The beauty secret that never goes out of style. Visit us regularly and let us take care of your most important accessories. 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While the team was judging horses, five other students from the Animal and Plant Science program were attending workshops as well as working the New Hampshire booth, educating other FFA member on the state as well as sampling some good ole’ native New Hampshire maple syrup. “Our job was to convince people that real maple syrup is a good thing,” DeMarco said. The journey began last spring for the horse judging team, when the small group won the state’s horse judging event. That win earned them the chance to go and judge at the regional event held at the Big E, the well known, largest fair in the northeast hosted in West Springfield, Mass. There the winning continued, earning the four SST students the opportunity to move on to the national event. DeMarco said she was pleased with how her team competed. “I was very, very happy,” she said. “It’s a lot of hard work, with practice through August and September.” DeMarco went on to say the group was thankful for the several local residents that gave hours of their time so they could practice. The event was a great experience for the students, according to DeMarco, and they’re already looking forward to the next. “They learned a lot, they saw a lot and they’re all ready to go back again.” 17 AtlanticNews.Com Vol 32, No 44 | November 10, 2006 | Atlantic News | Page 17A . School News By the book By Scott E. Kinney Editor, 16 Voices • • • • • Hourly & Monthly Programs Onsite or Offsite Database Repairs and Upgrades Intuit Authorized Training Center Discount Software Vendor Learn More at Emmith.com New 2nd Location 680 Lafayette Road, Hampton, NH • 603-926-3273 DODGE’S AGWAY N S OVEMBER PECIALS Stock Up Now! Rakes & Shovels .................. 20% OFF! Stock Up Now! 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Cyan Magenta Yellow Black NEWFIELDS | Much to the delight of students and parents alike, Newfields Elementary School held its annual book fair this week. Students had the opportunity last week to peruse of bevy of books including well-known titles such as “Harry Potter” and “Olivia” along with some old favorites such as “How to Eat Fried Worms.” There were also a variety of how-to-draw books, some cookbooks, offerings from the popular “Chicken Soup” series and joke books, to tantalize the reading taste buds of any child. But buying their own books is just part of the fun of the fair. Teachers also had the opportunity to pick out books for their classrooms. As part of the program teachers are invited to make out a wish list for families who wish to purchase books to donate to their child’s class. A new addition this year was the introduction of gift certificates, which teachers could combine to make purchases from their respective lists. Parents had the opportunity to participate on Monday night, when they could look over their child’s selections as well as get a chance to meet with Brother Bear. School Librarian K.J. Meline added that the money earned from book sales went on to the continued benefit of the school. “All of the profit we make goes directly to the library,” she said. Scholastic matches whatever earnings the book fair brings in, which can yield several new books for the school’s library. Meline said the wish list portion of the program is a great way for parents to help support their child’s classroom. “The kids get to present it (the book) to their teacher,” she said. “It’s fun.” Bookkeeping Professionals and Business Consultants 18 Page 18A | Atlantic News | November 10, 2006 | Vol 31, No 44 AtlanticNews.Com . School News Local Notes Local jeweler starts young By Phoebe Waldron Talon A&E Reporter Special to 16 Voices Cyan Magenta Yellow Black EXETER | Entrepreneurship starts young. In the summertime, kids flock to the roadsides with cardboard lemonade stands. In the wintertime they whip out the snow shovels. Kids start up yard sales and sell their lunches at school. But as they age, they become the workers, not the bosses. It takes many people a lifetime to reach the point of running their own successful business, but junior Jen Larsen is already there. Jen started her business, Jennifer’s Jewels, about six months ago. She uses a variety of beads to create custom-made jewelry that she sells to customers and shop owners. “I used to go on jewelry shopping sprees, but then I realized that I could do this,” said Jen. “So instead of having to buy it I make it myself.” This isn’t Jen selling pony-beaded arts and crafts out of her basement. This is a legitimate, registered business. “I went online to figure out what I needed to do to make [my business] official,” she said. “I had to get a tax I.D. and register a trade Learning styles at Brainwaves name with the state. Then I opened a big bank account.” There are many steps involved in running a jewelry business. Jen receives orders from customers for her creations. She makes necklaces, earrings, bracelets, bookmarks, and keychains. “Anything that can be beaded,” she said. In order to make the jewelry, she needs supplies. Jen has to search for bead suppliers to find the best for each specific type of bead. Then she purchases a set amount. “Everything depends on the quality of the bead,” she said. “Sterling silver is ridiculously expensive right now.” Certain bead suppliers are good for specific beads. “I order pearls from one place that’s best for that and silver from another place,” said Jen. “Wherever I can get the best deals.” So how does Jen market herself? “Mostly through word of mouth,” she said. “First I would wear my stuff and people would comment on it and ask me where I got it.” Jen has also hosted a number of bead parties where people can come and buy jewelry that is already made or design their own which she will then make for them. Her jewelry is sold at Luna Chics, in downtown Exeter, and at Pink Shutters, a store in Hampton that is open during the summer. Many of Jen’s customers are teachers or friends. “Most of the people I sell to I know personally,” she said. “That’s actually one of my biggest downfalls as a business owner. I hate taking advantage of people, so sometimes I undercharge.” Jen hates overcharging. “When you buy jewelry at stores you’re paying at least three times what it costs to make it,” she said. “That’s why it’s cheaper to buy it straight from the creator.” Jen charges only twice the cost per bead of what she pays for it. Running a business takes time, and time is something most high school kids are short on. Jen juggles running a business with school, homework, and extra-curricular activities. “Right now it’s volleyball season, but my biggest commitment is basketball,” she said. “Sometimes it’s hard to balance everything, but I have a lot of people helping me.” So why put in all the effort? Why does she push herself to do all this and still be a good student? “I really want to go to business school, so I think this will help me with admissions. But that wasn’t why I started. I like making jewelry.” Jen hopes to one day have her own store and thinks that having this business will prepare her for that. She would like to sell her own work along with clothes and accessories. “My dad is a retired banker, so he’s guiding me,” she said. “I will have to pay taxes. It’s a bummer, but it’s kind of validating. It makes it official.” Jennifer’s Jewels is much more than a lemonade stand. It’s a lot of work and pressure, but she enjoys it. Starting something big took help, but soon enough she was able to stand on her own feet. “To start [the business] I had to take a loan from my parents, but I’m paying that back. Business is good so even though I’m in debt, it doesn’t feel like it,” said Jen. She smiled. “Business is good.” To place an order with Jen, email jennifers jewels24@ yahoo.com. the chance. “It’s a spiritual thing,” said Wiccan senior Sammi Delisle. “You believe more in earth and elements, and you believe in many gods and goddesses,” she said. “You put out good energy, and good energy will come to you.” “It’s all about trying to help others,” said Amy. “It’s just about good energy.” While the religion is complicated, students like Sammi who are seriously dedicated, understand Wicca fully and have few to no regrets about choosing this path in life. However, to some, the whole idea of becoming a witch might be a little difficult to wrap their mind around. “My parents aren’t too happy about it,” Sammi said. In terms of age, Wicca is in the running with plenty of other old and well known religions, but due to its rela- tive obscurity, few people recognize it as a true religion. “It’s a nature-based religion, probably one of the oldest,” said Wiccan junior Emily Braile in regards to the roots of Wicca. “It’s kind of neo-paganism and new-age based on old traditions. It’s kind of a loose religion.” No matter what the general populace tends to think about Wicca, its followers are learned and devout. “I feel it’s right,” said Sammi. “I’ve always believed that there are multiple deities. I can’t believe that just one person snapped his fingers and everything was there.” The misconceptions of Wicca are numerous and lengthy. Typically it is considered witchcraft, in which spells are cast, spell books are read, and gatherings take place. “Many people feel that people who are Wiccan or Pagan are Satanic, but that’s not it at all,” said Sammi. “It’s not evil. We’re regular people. We’re not cultish. It’s not; ‘I’m going to send a curse after you.’ It’s fun,” she said. “You can’t levitate stuff, or fly around on brooms,” said Emily. “You can’t blow stuff up.” “There’s no slaughtering animals, not in Wicca,” said Amy. Despite what most people think about witchcraft, Wicca is a passive, nature respecting religion. “It’s a really peaceful religion, not closed or prejudiced,” said Emily. “It fits me. I like nature and I’m intrigued by magic.” And despite many skeptic critics, there are Wiccans who practice and believe in magic. “I concentrate energy on Wicca: Casting a spell on students By Devon Magoon Talon In-Depth Reporter Special to 16 Voices EXETER | Double, double, toil and trouble. Of course, the average person automatically thinks, “Witch! Warlock! Harry Potter!” To some this is fairytale, to others, a blemish upon the face of religion, and to others, a way of life. Witchcraft, although often over exaggerated and relatively unknown, is a reality to some. Not in the form of the Wicked Witch of the West, the creepy old lady next door with 10 cats, or Harry, Ron and Hermione, but in the form of Wicca, a widely unknown and misunderstood religion. “It’s not all to do with spells. It’s discovering who you are,” said junior Amy Brown, who currently attends classes in Salem and events like Wiccan group book-reading when she gets SPELL Continued on 26A• NORTH HAMPTON | Brainwaves, located on Route 1 in North Hampton, will be hosting a workshop for parents entitled “Learning Styles & Your Child” on Saturday, November 18 from 10 a.m. to 12 noon. In this workshop — which will introduce learning style theory — participants will learn how to identify learning style traits in their children and match their child’s strengths with specific study skills and strategies to better enhance their overall academic experience. Led by Stacy Swain, M.Ed., the workshop will also focus on tips to develop self-awareness of each child’s own personal learning style. The cost of the workshop is $25; to reserve a space call (603) 964-3040. For more information call or visit www. brainwaveslearning.com. NHAPA hosts celebration event SEABROOK | The New Hampshire Academy of Performing Arts (NHAPA) will host their 50th Anniversary Celebration Silent Auction and Alumni Art Exhibit on Friday, November 17 at NHAPA’s studios, located at 875 Lafayette Road in Seabrook. Silent Auction bidding and the Art Gallery will be open from 7-9:30 p.m. A performance by the Seacoast Civic Dance Company and Performance Groups will begin at 8 p.m. Light refreshments will be served. For more information or to RSVP, call Ann Marie Tinkham at (603) 474-2444 extension 224 or e-mail kmsaj tinkham@ yahoo.com. Financial planning for higher education HAMPTON | Funding a college education is all about advance preparation and good cash flow management. To that end, Winnacunnet Community Education will be offering an educational financial course entitled, “How to Pay for College” on Wednesday, November 15 at 6:30 p.m. at Winnacunnet High School, located on Alumni Drive in Hampton. The course will be presented by Ned Loughlin, CCPS, RealWorld Strategies on Maplewood Avenue in Portsmouth, a certified member of the National Institute of Certified College Planners. Appropriate for both parents and grandparents, this discussion is designed to help participants to determine their best strategy for funding a college education for a child or grandchild while maximizing retirement savings. The discussion will include the following topics: Education Savings 529 Plans; Coverdell Education Savings Accounts; Short Term Strategies for students attending college in the next year or two; Student Assessment and College Selection; Tax Incentives; Grandparents’ Contributions; The Financial Aid Process; and Educational Loans. The discussion will also cover appropriate strategies that can help reduce the cost of education for those who do not qualify for need-based financial aid; as well as, strategies for reducing the cost of K–12 private education. Participants will also learn how to identify and make the “right” college more affordable. This is an educational opportunity that is not to be missed. All attendees will receive a free workbook and a “Preparing for College” calendar. Space is limited; interested participants are asked to register in advance by calling (603) 758-9231. China topic of library speaker series RYE | The Friends of the Rye Public Library welcome the public to its November Speaker Series program entitled “China: An Emerging Power,” taking place on Thursday, November 16 at 7 p.m. The program will be presented by Professor Gary H. Jefferson of Brandeis University. Dr. Jefferson is a graduate of Dartmouth College, the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy of Tufts University, the London School of Economics, and Yale University. He currently holds joint appointments at Brandeis in the Department of Economics and International Business and the Graduate School of International Business and Finance. He has lived and taught at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and at Wuhan University in China. The public is invited to come hear Dr. Jefferson’s presentation. Admission is free, and refreshments will be served. The Rye Public Library is located at 581 Washington Road. For more information call (603) 964-8401 or visit www.rye. lib.nh.us. 19 AtlanticNews.Com Vol 32, No 44 | November 10, 2006 | Atlantic News | Page 19A . School news from LCA Special to the Atlantic News cally challenging, while at the same time it incorporates more hands-on activities and self-directed time. Moving at a moderate pace, the program provides an interesting and fun learning environment where kids are encouraged to excel and develop a life-long excitement about learning. Another new program marking its debut at LCA is My Gym Mobile, a program “dedicated to improving the lives of children and families throughout the world.” With a very low student-teacher ratio, My Gym provides a pioneering approach to health and fitness in children. In a nurturing, non-competitive atmosphere, kids are not only instructed in fun, exciting and challenging physical activities, they are also encouraged to develop their social skills, understanding of team work and goal development, as well as their sense of self-esteem and personal confidence. In addition to these exciting programs, the board has announced the appointment of Linda Brown as interim administrator of the school. Mrs. Brown, who resides in Kingston, earned her BS in Elementary Education from Gordon College in Wenham, MA. She brings more than 23 years of teaching experience to her position, including a previous stint as head teacher at the Lighthouse. Lighthouse Christian Academy is located at 263 Route 125 in Brentwood. For more information, call the school at (603) 642-3756. LOST CAT Devastated Family trying to locate our indoor cat named Kirby. Last seen on Monday Oct 16th on Gale Rd off of Exeter Rd (Rte 27) Disappeared with collar/ I.D on. Very friendly, short haired, light gray with dark gray stripes with white patch under neck and white tips on paws. May be hiding in or under shed, garage, plants etc. May run if approached. If seen, please call immediately - cell #’s are on 24/7. Ed - (603) 918-6487 or Rhonda (617) 645-5333. Any sightings greatly appreciated. Large Reward. FRIENDS FOREVER AT WHS Friends Forever, a national program sponsored by the Rotary Clubs of America, paid a visit to Winnacunnet High School for the eighth consecutive year in a row. The program, developed more than 20 years ago, was designed to promote peaceful relationships among students of Northern Ireland, Catholic and Protestant descent. Ten students from Northern Ireland were welcomed by the Interact Club, a junior branch of Rotary International dedicated to supporting the community through volunteer work and donations. Participating students are encouraged to establish and maintain friendships with the Irish students through art projects, group discussions, games, and contests. They were treated to a pizza party, a dance performance and a cooking class. The visit was organized by Hampton Rotary Club member, Dr. Craig Kelleher. — Atlantic News Photo by Andrea Cabral Good reading at Academy book fair By Liz Premo Atlantic News Staff Writer HAMPTON | Winter’s coming, and with the outdoor chill comes warm times spent indoors with a good book. To help local reading enthusiasts keep their home bookshelves well-stocked, Hampton Academy is hosting a Scholastic Book Fair, running now through November 21 from 7:45 a.m. to 3 p.m. on regular school days. The fair will be set up in the library media center at the school, which is located at 29 Academy Avenue in Hampton. According to HA Librarian/ Media Specialist, Steff Metalious, the book fair will feature “a wide range of books for young teens and adults, including mystery and adventure novels, fantasy trilogies, sports guides, anime, cookbooks, and the latest best sellers from more than 150 publishers.” This wide variety of ageappropriate books was specifically selected to appeal to those attending the book fair. Students, teachers and the community are all invited to stop by and buy something good to read this winter. Scholastic Book Sales helps to build classroom libraries through book pur- chases for teachers as well as the Classroom Wish List program. All proceeds raised will benefit Hampton Academy. For more information about the sale, call (603) 9262000. Get Your LocaL HDtV cHanneLs FREE! Need High Definition TV Help? We Sell & Install AudioVox TV LCD/Plasma Wall Mount TVs 37” LCD . . . . . . . . . $1,895 .95 42” Plasma . . . . . . $2,199 .95 50” Plasma . . . . . . $2,799 .95 All with HD Tuners / 1080i Mounting / HD Local Antenna Satellite antenna available With tvS East Coast satEllitE tV Seabrook, NH • 603.770.7858 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black BRENTWOOD | The school board of the Lighthouse Christian Academy (LCA) has announced the implementation of an exciting new program for upper school students. Utilizing 10 new desktop computers, and working in collaboration with Seven Star Academy, LCA is now able to offer on-line Spanish classes. While the class will be led by LCA teacher, Lisa Johnson, this innovative program uses technological advances to bring high-level, inter-active instruction into the class room via the internet. As the pilot school for this program on the east coast, LCA is able to offer this, and potentially 60 other courses, to not only its students but to those at other schools in the area. Currently, Mt. Zion Christian School in Bedford has two of their students enrolled in the LCA online Spanish class. This year also marks the inauguration of an interimyear Readiness Program at LCA. Instead of being integrated into a Kindergarten or first grade curriculum, this program offers a full year of preparation, after kindergarten and before first grade. Readiness Director Peg Stoodley explains that this program is designed to give bright, active children “the gift of time,” and a real opportunity to feel as though they are progressing forward, without the stress and demands of first grade. The curriculum is academi- Education 20 Page 20A | Atlantic News | November 10, 2006 | Vol 31, No 44 AtlanticNews.Com . Thanksgiving Notes Dinner at the ‘Castle’ By Liz Premo Atlantic News Staff Writer Y The secret to a moist holiday turkey Cyan Magenta Yellow Black The secret to moist turkey is simple: brining. Brining is a process of soaking meat in a salt water solution prior to cooking it to effectively lock in the natural juices. A secret of restaurant chefs for more than a century, it’s now being handed to a new generation of cooks. Turkey benefits from brining because it’s generally cooked at a higher heat, which saps the moisture and flavor of the meat quickly. The brining binds and locks in natural juices without leaving a salty flavor. For the easiest and most effective brining, consider Morton Kosher Salt. It dissolves quickly and has a clean, crisp taste. Whether you’re making a basic saltwater brine or adding herbs and spices for more flavorful side dishes, this salt can make a noticeable difference in the juiciness of your holiday turkey. Soak the turkey in this recipe for a succulent bird. For more brining recipes go to www.mortonsalt.com. Brined Roasted Whole Turkey 2 cups Morton® Kosher Salt 2 cups sugar 2 to 3 gallons of cool water One 12- to 15-pound fresh, whole, bone-in skin-on turkey, rinsed and patted dry 8 tablespoons unsalted butter, divided (5 Tbsp. softened; 3 Tbsp. melted) 1/2 teaspoon ground black pep- per 1 cup white wine, chicken broth or water To Brine: Combine Morton Kosher Salt and sugar in cool water in a large, clean stockpot until completely dissolved. Place whole turkey in the brine until completely submerged. Cover and refrigerate 4 to 5 hours minimum, or up to 24 hours for best results. Remove turkey from the brine, rinse inside and out under cool running water for several minutes to remove all traces of salt; pat dry with paper towel. To Roast: Mix the softened butter with the pepper. Place turkey on rack in roasting pan. Rub the seasoned butter under the skin. Brush the skin with the melted butter. Pour the 1 cup liquid (wine, broth or water) over the pan bottom to prevent drippings from burning. Roast turkey at 450° F for 25 minutes, baste and then rotate the roasting pan. Continue roasting until the skin turns golden brown, an additional 25 minutes; baste again. Reduce oven temperature to 325° F; continue to roast, basting and rotating the pan once about halfway through cooking, until the internal temperature reaches 170° F. for turkey breast meat and 180° F for turkey thigh meat. Remove the turkey from the oven. Let stand 20 minutes before carving. ears ago, when I was just about to enter my teens, our family enjoyed Thanksgiving dinner in a very unique locale — a place affectionately known as “The Castle.” Not only did this special holiday excursion free Mom up from slaving in the kitchen all day long, it also provided my younger sister and me with a very different kind of childhood experience that not everyone can claim as their own. Situated on the picturesque banks of a wide, swift-moving river, the Castle was a huge fortress, with a number of levels and landings. Approaching it, one could easily be amazed by the massiveness of its high-windowed, cornice-trimmed, creamy white facade and flat-peaked green roof. Though it had only a handful turrets at its corners, and no drawbridge at its entrance, it was still easy to see why it held the moniker it had earned. It was a royally magnificent sight to behold. My parents, my sister and I were greeted by a stationary guard at the front portal, and after we were cleared for entry, we made our way inside. A heavy, metal-barred door — installed for security, no doubt — clanged behind us. Our footsteps echoed as we walked down the wide corridors. We were almost compelled to speak in hushed voices, so grandiose our surroundings appeared. Because Dad (a 20-year career Navy man) had worked at the Castle, he knew exactly where the dining hall was, and he escorted us there. We walked in to a well-lit room devoid of much Thanksgiving ornamentation. Additional autumnal embellishment wasn’t needed, however, because the hall’s centerpiece — an impressive and overflowing bounty of a colorful assortment of fruit, nuts and other tempting edibles — more than sufficiently conveyed the flavor of the holiday. A deliciously traditional Thanksgiving feast awaited us — moist, tender turkey, smoky ham, whipped and sweet potatoes, delectable stuffing, savory-seasoned vegetables, a rich gravy and a choice of wheat or white dinner rolls with butter. This grand spread was presented in a type of buffet-style setup, but instead of helping ourselves, a staff of servers stood at the ready behind the warming trays, waiting to heap our desired portions of the mouthwatering meal upon our plates. The odd thing was, our servers did not speak to us — no warm holiday greet- ings, no service with a smile. Nor did they look directly at us — there was absolutely no eye contact at all. They just performed their appointed duty, quietly and politely dishing onto our plates whatever we desired. If we wanted more of one thing or another, we’d have to request it, and they’d silently oblige. This obvious lack of communication puzzled me, and I asked Dad about it. They aren’t allowed to speak to or look at the guests, he explained as we crossed the dining hall to our table. They were just there to perform their duties as servers. That seemed very strange, but it didn’t deter any of us from enjoying our Thanksgiving repast, which was followed by our choice from a selection of sumptuous if not traditional desserts. Other families did the same as ours did that Thanksgiving day, but not everyone there had come with relatives. Some of those who indulged beside us were in uniform; others were in very casual wear, still others came in wearing what looked to be their work clothes. But whether they were there as a family, or a group, or as a single diner, everyone enjoyed a wonderful Thanksgiving dinner at the Castle. So what exactly was this Castle, where we not only feasted on that particular Thanksgiving holiday but on Christmas Day the following month? Believe it or not, it was the U.S. Naval prison on Seavey Island, an eye-catching structure which still can be seen at its location overlooking the banks of the Piscataqua River in Portsmouth. The people who served us our dinner — our hosts — were “residents” at the Castle — military prisoners who for one reason or another had been sent there to serve their time. No wonder they weren’t allowed to interact with their guests! So how did we end up at the Castle for Thanksgiving dinner? The Castle was where Dad was stationed in the late 60s, in the years just before his retirement from the Navy. No, he never served time there as a prisoner; rather, he helped supervise the overall operation of the prison galley until his tour of duty there was complete. Possessing the privilege of being “employed” at the Naval prison, Dad acted as our “connection” to gain us entry to the Castle. Thus it was there the family ventured for a wonderful — and very memorable — holiday meal, complete with all the trimmings and thoroughly enjoyed in a setting far different from any found at Grandmother’s house. Give thanks to George W. for Thanksgiving Special to the Atlantic News SEACOAST | Americans don’t know it and children aren’t taught it, but George Washington is responsible for the nation’s Thanksgiving holiday. It was America’s first president who led the charge to make this day of thanks a truly national event — not the Pilgrims and not Abraham Lincoln. On October 3, 1789, George Washington issued his Thanksgiving Proclama- tion, designating for “the People of the United States a day of public thanks-giving” to be held on “Thursday the 26th day of November,” 1789, marking the first national celebration of a holiday that has become commonplace in today’s households. While subsequent presidents failed to maintain this tradition, it was Washington’s original Proclamation that guided Abraham Lincoln’s 1863 Thanksgiving Proclamation. In fact, Lincoln issued his proclamation on the same day (October 3) and marked the same Thanksgiving Day (Thursday, November 26) as Washington had, setting Thanksgiving as the last Thursday of November after the first president’s example. The proclamation was printed in newspapers, including the October 9, 1789 issue of the Pennsylvania Packet and Daily Advertiser. George Washington first mentioned the possibility of a national Thanksgiving Day in a confidential letter to James Madison in August 1789 (just months after taking office), asking for his advice on approaching the Senate for their opinion on “a day of thanksgiving.” By the end of September 1789, a resolution had been introduced to the House of Representatives requesting that “a joint committee of both Houses be directed to wait upon the President of the United States, to request that he would recommend to the people of the United States a day of public thanksgiving.” The committee put the resolution before the president and George Washington issued the first national Thanksgiving Proclamation within days. Washington knew the value of a thanksgiving day long before becoming the first president of the United States. During the Revolutionary War, he would order special thanksgiving services for his troops after successful battles, as well as publicly endorse efforts by the Continental Congress to proclaim days of thanks, usually in recognition of military THANKS Continued on 21A• 21 AtlanticNews.Com Photo Gallery Vol 32, No 44 | November 10, 2006 | Atlantic News | Page 21A . Local Notes Feel good at Rzepa NORTH HAMPTON | Chiropractic services and massage are now available in one-stop shopping at Rzepa Family Chiropractic in North Hampton. Jen Hall, a licensed massage therapist has joined the practice of Drs. Pam and Bart Rzepa at Rzepa Family Chiropractic. Their office is located at 216 Lafayette Road in Crotty’s Professional Park, across from Abercrombie and Finch. For more information, call (603) 964-1103 or visit www. chironh.com. Seabrook Women’s Club plans holiday party tion. Thanksgiving was not made a legal holiday until 1941 when Congress named the fourth Thursday in November as a national day of thanks in answer to public outcry over President Roosevelt’s attempt to prolong the Christmas shopping season by moving Thanksgiving from the traditional last Thursday to the third Thursday of November. Take 25% OFF On All Thanksgiving & Fall Items Chamber to hold holiday auction HAMPTON | The Hampton Area Chamber of Commerce has announced that the 2006 Holiday Auction will take place on Thursday, November 16 at the Ashworth by the Sea, located at 295 Ocean Boulevard on Hampton Beach. The doors will open at 6 p.m. According to Ginni McNamara, the Chamber’s director of special events, it will be “a chocolate covered Christmas!” with a decadent chocolate buffet featuring a lavish chocolate fountain. Enjoy complimentary hot and cold hors d’oeuvres while angelic melodies by harpist Melinda McMahon fill the air, and come ready to bid on fabulous merchandise, services and bargains galore. Proceeds raised at the auction will benefit the annual Children’s Christmas Parade and community events. For more information about this event, call the Hampton Area Chamber of Commerce at (603) 926-9977. Fine Home & Garden Accents! /,BW\Wo[jj[HeWZ">Wcfjed<Wbbi"D> mmm$\b[khZ[cWh]h_j$Yecr,&)/(/#*/+/ Read. Call. Do Nothing More. Scouting for great recipes HANDS-ON LEARNING — Sacred Heart School’s fifth grade class recently took a hands-on approach to learning after reading “Walk Two Moons” by Sharon Creech. The book, which won the Newbery Medal in 1995, tells the story of a 13year-old girl from Kentucky who is traveling across the country to Idaho with her grandparents to find her missing mother. Sacred Heart students brought parts of the main character’s travel to life by building geysers found in Yellowstone National Park and the Badland rock formations of South Dakota. Led by their teacher, Ms. Gillman, the students enjoyed working together to research and create these natural wonders. — Atlantic News Courtesy Photo HAMPTON | The Boy Scouts of Troop 177 have cooked up a tasty fundraiser, and the local community is invited to savor the flavor of a very worthy project. “Boy Scout Bounty: Recipes from Troop 177” is now on sale. Chock full of local Boy Scout lore as well as historic sketches by Scouting founder Lord Robert Baden-Powell, the cookbook features favorite recipes from Troop 177 Scouts and their families, community members, and town officials. Copies of this original spiral-bound cookbook are currently available for $10 each at Hampton Computer, located on Lafayette Road. Checks or money orders should be made out to Troop 177. For more information, call Larry Marsolais at (603) 926-5570. Internet access at Lane Library HAMPTON | Visiting Hampton and looking for a place to catch up on e-mail? Want to log on to a local newspaper to keep up with the news from home? Need a computer to offload digital photos to CD? The Lane Memorial Library, located at 2 Academy Avenue in Hampton offers free access to computers with Internet access to everyone. Times may be limited to 20 minutes per day during busy periods. Those who have their own computer with either a wireless card or Ethernet port can connect from the library and stay all day. Library hours are from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. from Monday through Thursday; and from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday and Saturday. For more information, call the Lane Memorial Library at (603) 926-3368. $30 Off Your First Cleaning ● Uniformed, Bonded & Insured ● Equipment & Supplies Provided ● Every Cleaning Is Inspected & Guaranteed Call today for a no obligation estimate. 603-430-2038 All major credit cards accepted. http://portsmouth.maidbrigade.com Locally owned and operated. Cleaning homes like yours since 1979. Cyan Magenta Yellow Black GOING THE DISTANCE — North Hampton athlete Jon Gould (pictured) and his teammates from Berwick Academy’s Boys Varsity Cross Country Team, will compete in the New England Championships at the Marianapolis School in Thompson, CT, on Saturday, November 11. Jon’s team, the Eastern Independent League’s regular season champions, completed their season undefeated by taking the league’s championship race at Franklin Park in Boston, MA, on November 3. Jon, who is a senior at Berwick Academy, crossed the finish line only six seconds behind the winner. — Atlantic News Courtesy Photo SEABROOK | The Seabrook Women’s Club scheduled their November meeting for Thursday, November 9 at 7 p.m. at the Warren Precinct Building on Route 1A, Seabrook Beach. The planned program for the evening featured the Chamber Singers from Winnacunnet High School. Hostesses included Mona Francis, Mary Dunlap, Joanne Payson, and Janet Labrecque. Reservations are being accepted at $20 each for the club’s upcoming holiday party at the Old Salt Restaurant in Hampton on Thursday, December 14. This will be the final meeting until April 12, 2007. The deadline to make a reservation for the party is Friday, December 1; to RSVP call (603) 474-9866. All are welcome to join in for the party as well as the monthly meetings. The Seabrook Women’s Club has been in existence since 1976. The membership is proud of the annual scholarship the club awards to Seabrook resident students at WHS, as well as the donations to Seabrook Elementary School, the Firefighters Toy Bank and the town’s resident soldiers serving overseas. THANKS From 20A victories and alliances. The concept of thanksgiving was not new to the citizens of the new United States. Colonists even before the Pilgrims often established Thank Days to mark certain occasions. These one-time events could occur at any time of the year and were usually more solemn than the Thanksgiving Americans observe today, emphasizing prayer and spiritual reflec- 22 Page 22A | Atlantic News | November 10, 2006 | Vol 31, No 44 Local Notes Come to the Holly Fair STRATHAM | Stratham Community Church will host a Holly Fair on Saturday, December 2 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. The public is invited to come and enjoy the day while meeting Joane Snow Duncanson, the author of “Breakfast in the Bathtub.” A few of the many events of the day include face painting, quilt squares, “Fresh Greens” homemade food and candy, costume jewelry, children’s loved toys, a children’s wrapping room, and a silent auction. The café will be open for everyone’s dining pleasure. Stratham Community Church is located at 6 Emery Lane in Stratham. For more information, call (603) 772-3389. Crafts, pie at annual festival GREENLAND | The Greenland Women’s Club will be holding the 16th Annual Craft Fair and Pie Festival on Sunday, November 19 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Greenland Central School, located at 70 Post Road in Greenland. The fair will feature many quality crafters, homemade pies, a raffle, a café featuring delicious homemade soups and more. Parking and admission are both free. The Greenland Women’s Club is associated with the General Federation of Women’s Clubs/ New Hampshire. The Craft Fair and Pie Festival is the club’s primary fundraiser, enabling them to contribute funds to benefit many community service projects and non-profit organizations like the Crossroads House, the American Cancer Society, the SASS Interfaith Hospitality Network and the Community Diversion Program. For more information about the club or the event, contact Marie Hussey at (603) 431-0056. AtlanticNews.Com . TREE From 7A donated and continue to support the Festival of Trees year after year: Arjay’s Ace Hardware of Exeter, Tonry Tree Farm, Churchill’s Garden and Gifts of Exeter, Mr. & Mrs. John Archambault, Lang’s Landscaping of Greenland, Mr. Jim Walsh of Exeter, Indian Hill Farm, Windcrest Tree Farm, Granite Creek Nursery, the Hall Family of Stratham, and Stratham Circle Nursery. As a result of the large response to decorate trees, the Festival has reached its capacity of 50 trees. “Next year, we will look into ways in which we can expand the number of trees that will fit into the town hall — perhaps moving upstairs or outside of the building,” said Festival Co-Chairman, Bonnie Galinski. The decorated trees will be auctioned off the night of the Festival with proceeds going to the Exeter Chamber Children’s Fund, which provides warm clothing vouchers to children of needy families in the local areas of Brentwood, East Kingston, Epping, Exeter, Kensington, Kingston, Newfields, Newmarket, Raymond and Stratham. The Festival of Trees is free and open to the public. Stop by and see how fifty lit and decorated trees turn Exeter’s town hall into a glistening forest. It is a great beginning to the holiday season. To donate a live tree, or for more information, call the Exeter Area Chamber of Commerce at (603) 772-2411. DUTY, HONOR AND COUNTRY Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Consignments taken at Clothes Attic STRATHAM | The Clothes Attic at the Stratham Community Church on Emery Lane is currently accepting consignments of fall and winter clothing. Business hours for sales and consignment are Wednesdays from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.; sales-only hours are Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 12 noon. The Clothes Attic is easily accessible from the lower parking lot behind the church. For more information call (603) 775-0171. Scouting for great recipes HAMPTON | The Boy Scouts of Troop 177 have cooked up a tasty fundraiser, and the local community is invited to savor the flavor of a very worthy project. “Boy Scout Bounty: Recipes from Troop 177” is now on sale. Chock full of local Boy Scout lore as well as historic sketches by Scouting founder Lord Robert Baden-Powell, the cookbook features favorite recipes from Troop 177 Scouts and their families, community members, and town officials. Copies of this original spiral-bound cookbook are currently available for $10 each at Hampton Computer, located on Lafayette Road. Checks or money orders should be made out to Troop 177. For more information, please call Larry Marsolais at (603) 926-5570. Community dinner celebrates Thanksgiving EXETER | A community Thanksgiving dinner will be held on Thursday, November 23 in the vestry at First Baptist Church, located on the corner of Front and Spring Streets in Exeter. The vestry is handicapped-accessible. There is no fee for this meal, but a free-will offering will be accepted. Meals can be delivered to home addresses upon request. Volunteers are needed to help with the preparation, serving, delivering and clean-up. For details, call Kathy at (603) 7723098 Monday through Wednesday from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. To make dinner reservations, request a meal delivery or to volunteer, call the number above by Wednesday, November 15. Services at Christ Episcopal Church EXETER | Christ Episcopal Church, located at 43 Pine Street in Exeter, holds worship services at 8 a.m. and 10:30 a.m., with Adult Formation and Sunday School beginning at 9:15 a.m. Nursery care for infants up to age 4 will be provided during the 9:15 a.m. education hour as well as the 10:30 a.m. service. The church also offers Morning Prayer at 8 a.m. on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, as well as, a Holy Eucharist and Healing service on Wednesdays beginning at 10 a.m. The church has resumed their evening Eucharist service, held the third Sunday of each month at 5 p.m. The service is informal, and features the church’s Praise Band led by Duncan Holcomb. An AA meeting is held on Monday evenings at 8 p.m., and an Al-Anon meeting is held on Wednesday afternoons at 12 noon. They are open to all. For more information, contact Linda Carey at (603) 772-3332 or visit www.christchurchexeter.org. Take a harbor cruise with Club Finz Potluck, speakers at 76ers meeting STRATHAM | The next meeting of the Stratham Seniors76ers will take place on Tuesday, November 14. The meeting is being held the second week of the month due to the Thanksgiving holiday. Members will meet at the Stratham Municipal Center for a potluck lunch and program from 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Those who are planning to attend are asked to bring a potluck dish and their own dishes (this helps the host/ hostesses with cleanup). Dessert will be provided. During the meeting, a second discussion will continue on the by-laws revision. Also, Carol Gulla will introduce members to the new transportation initiative (TASC) for Seacoast citizens. Gloria Auger will speak about SPCA and offer an update of activities. A tour of the SPCA facility will be available for those who are interested. For more information about these events or the Stratham Seniors-76ers, call Diana at (603) 772-6065 or Irma at (603) 436-7978. Local Notes Cadet Ryan Cote Pope (pictured), son of Kerry and Kimberly Pope of Rye, recently completed Cadet Basic Training at the US Military Academy. Pope was among approximately 1300 Cadet candidates who concluded their training with a 12-mile road march from Camp Bucker to West Point, and were accepted into the Corps of Cadets during a recent Acceptance Parade. Pope graduated from Portsmouth Christian Academy in 2005. He plans to graduate from West Point in 2010 and will be commissioned a second lieutenant in the US Army. — Atlantic News Courtesy Photo PTO From 7A baby blankets, centerpieces, greeting cards, decorative pens, and much more will also be offered, along with an assortment of home baked goods, raffles, door prizes and give-aways. But that’s not all. “Along with crafts we have several vendors who will be showing their goods and services,” says Chace. Taking part in this shopping extravaganza will be reps from Silpada Jewelry, Avon, Pampered Chef, Tupperware, Tastefully Simple, PartyLite, Stamp’n Up, Noah’s Ark Workshop, Arbonne, Premier Designs, lia sophia and more. Need to take a break from all that shopping? The SMS Music Department will operate a concession stand, offering coffee, doughnuts, soda, water, snacks, sandwiches, soups, stews and desserts. Be sure to put the Second Annual This and That One Stop Holiday Shoppe on the household or workplace calendar. Both schools are located on Walton Road in Seabrook. For more information about this event, call (603) 474-3822 or (603) 4749221. PORTSMOUTH | Members of Club Finz are currently organizing their eighth annual Sock, Hat and Mitten Drive, taking place on Tuesday, November 14 from 5:30-8 p.m. onboard the Isles of Shoals Steamship Company’s MV “Thomas Laighton.” New socks, hats, or mittens are the admission to come on board for this fun-filled Portsmouth Harbor cruise. The donations will benefit Families First Health and Support Center, Lids for Kids, Family Service Association of Portsmouth, the Hampton Community Coalition, HUB Families and Seacoast Consumer Alliance. Club Finz is a local group of Jimmy Buffet enthusiasts (also known as “Parrot Heads”) who are fans of the singer–songwriter’s tropically influenced beach/ rock/ folk music. Members meet in various locations the second Tuesday of the month, and are involved in numerous community service projects year-round. For more information, visit www.clubfinz.com or contact didany2001@ wmconnect.com. Happy Seniors plan trip SEABROOK | The Seabrook Happy Seniors are planning a trip to Foxwoods on Thursday, November 16. The bus will leave the Seabrook Community Center on Lafayette Road at 7 a.m. and returning about 6:30 p.m. The cost of the trip is $27. For more information or to sign-up, call Helen at (603) 474-8932. Stimson notecards still available HAMPTON | The Friends of the Lane Memorial Library would like to remind the public of the continuing sale of two sets of Ruth Stimson “Art” notecards. Ruth Stimson is fondly remembered by many in Hampton as a true “Renaissance Woman.” She was a talented artist, passionate environmentalist, educator, community leader, library supporter, and expert gardener. After her death, her artwork was given to the Lane Memorial Library and sold at a silent auction. Several pieces have been selected and reproduced as note cards. It is very fitting that these fine reproductions of her artwork will serve as a fundraiser for the Friends of the Lane Memorial Library. The notecards can be purchased at the circulation desk at the library and at the Tuck Museum on Park Avenue in Hampton for $10 per set of five. For more information, call the library at (603) 926-3368. 23 AtlanticNews.Com Fairs Jingle Bell Fair rings in the holidays HAMPTON | The First Congregational Church UCC of Hampton, located at 127 Winnacunnet Road, will be holding its annual Jingle Bell Fair on Saturday, November 11 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sponsored by the Women’s Guild, this fair features two floors of holiday delights. Highlights include a vast array of seasonal crafts, American Girl doll clothing, customdesigned gift baskets, home-baked goods featuring a Cookie Walk, attic treasures (antiques and collectibles), and a silent auction of unique and one-of-a-kind items and gift certificates from local merchants (bids close at 1 p.m.). There will be two benefit drawings this year; one for a 6x9 handmade wool and silk area rug from Portrie’s Floor Coverings, as well as a weekend at a North Conway ski condominium. And, once again, Santa will be present to have his photo taken with the young and the young-at heart, while stories for the very young will be read by one of Santa’s helpers. There will be some great food and refreshments, too. In the morning, the Jingle Bell Café will serve coffee and breakfast treats and, later on, the luncheon will feature Cliff Pratt’s famous clam chowder, sandwiches and homemade desserts. Each floor of the church is handicapped-accessible. For more information about this event, call the church office at (603) 926-2837. Luncheon is ‘a fair to remember’ Holly Day Fair at OLMM HAMPTON | The Catholic Women’s Club of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal Church in Hampton will present their annual pre-Christmas Holly Day Fair and Spaghetti Dinner on Saturday, November 18. The fair, taking place from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., will feature 40 vendors offering arts and crafts, homemade baked goods, and the Country Kitchen, serving breakfast and lunch items including their well-known clam chowder. The Gift-o-Rama raffle table is a popular feature at this event, which will be held in the Sacred Heart School gymnasium. Following the fair, the Holy Name Society will serve up their famous spaghetti dinner from 4-6 p.m., during which time the Gift-o-Rama raffle will be drawn. Tickets for the dinner are $7 for adults and $3 for children (Kindergartners and younger eat free). Tickets are available at the door or by calling Ben Caci at (603) 926-8609. Church holds holiday fair NEWFIELDS | It’s time to get some Christmas shopping done. To help make all those wishes on the gift list come true, the Newfields Community Church will hold a Holiday Fair on Saturday, November 18, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The fair will include crafts, baked goods, plants, world mission/ fair-trade gifts, and white elephants. A soup lunch will be served. The church is located at 71 Main Street on Route 85 in Newfields. For more information, call (603) 778-8626. in a diverse community. Vendors will determine what they wish to offer, price the items and then, perhaps offer a certificate or card that the person buying the item may give in joy to another for Christmas. In the past, some very creative ideas were part of Alternative Marketplace. For example, Rockingham Community Action’s Literacy Project sold bookmarks with famous sayings. Sea- HATS From 1A Vol 32, No 44 | November 10, 2006 | Atlantic News | Page 23A . coast Interfaith Hospitality Network sold pins from artwork done by homeless children served in other local networks. The public is invited to stop by the Alternative Marketplace and see everything that is available. For more information, or to reserve a vendor’s table, call Missions Committee members Nancy Bergeron at (603) 964-8487 or Susan White at (603) 6170714. Officers Laura Purslow and while on duty on Monday, Scott Pearl. Oct. 16, when he was shot “We felt compelled to do in the head while respondwhatever would could to ing to a domestic violence help,” said Purslow. call. Briggs died the followAnd what they could do ing day. is hold a hat drive, asking Although, Purslow lost passers-by for whatever they contact with Briggs followcould spare. ing her academy graduation, Portsmouth Detective his memory sticks with her. Stephen Arnold was among “He was a really nice the officers who participated guy,” she recalled. “Just a in the first half of the day’s soft-spoken, nice guy.” drive. The shooting death of “I found that the people a New Hampshire police were phenomenal,” he said. officer does not happen “They expressed often. The last their condowas nine Officer lences and years ago, Michael Briggs were very according to eager to help Arnold. He Fundraiser out in any said when To donate, stop by way.” an officer is the Portsmouth Police And help out on the Department or contact they did. street they them at (603) 427-1500. Community must caremembers fully balance emptied their their emotions. pockets to help the family “Unfortunately, in this of the fallen officer. Pockets line of work it’s bound to were emptied and automohappen,” said Arnold. “You bile ashtrays were relieved can’t let the fear take over, of change. Arnold said offibut you don’t ever forget cers received over $600 in that the possibility exists.” donations in coins alone. The tragedy has made Arnold related how one Purslow, who works a simiwomen, with her last five lar, overnight shift in Portsdollars, asked him if he could mouth, mindful of the things give her back two dollars for that she has. bus fare as she wanted to “It makes you realize give something. it can happen to anyone,” In total, eight hours on said Purslow. “It makes you the square raised just shy of appreciate the time that you $15,000 for the Briggs famhave with friends, family ily. Purslow said the numand your brother officers.” ber may now be larger as Arnold said Officer donations continue to flow Purslow was instrumental into the Portsmouth Police in pulling the department Department. together for a good cause. Officer Michael Briggs, “She put the call out,” he of the Manchester Police said. “She deserves all the Department, was killed credit.” Fairs Holiday Craft Fair at St. Mark’s KITTERY | St. Mark’s United Methodist Church, located at 60 Government Street in Kittery, Maine, will be holding a Holiday Craft Fair on Saturday, November 11 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. There will be a huge variety of items at the fair, including crafts (sewing, knitting, painting), gifts of all kinds, jewelry, handmade holiday decorations for Thanksgiving and Christmas, baked goods (cakes, cookies, sweet breads), the Trinkets & Treasure Café (serving donuts, muffins, sandwiches, chowder, desserts, and beverages), candy (fudge, chocolates), preserves and jellies, a silent auction, and a children’s room where youngsters can purchase items for their parents, grandparents, siblings and friends. The public is invited to attend this annual event. For more information, call St. Mark’s at (207) 439-9686. Trinity Church to hold annual Holly Berry Fair HAMPTON — Trinity Episcopal Church’s annual Holly Berry Fair will be held on Saturday, November 18 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Hobbs House, located at 200 High Street in Hampton. This year, the fair will take on an exciting new idea with the first-ever “New With Tags” table. This table will feature previously-received “gifts” that have sat unused in household closets. In addition, there will be face painting and crafts in the Children’s Corner, a cookie walk, baked goods and a great selection of gift baskets. A luncheon of soups, chowder, assorted sandwiches, desserts and beverages will be served from 11:30 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. in the Christmas Café. Proceeds from the sale help Trinity Episcopal Church continue outreach programs of providing for local soup kitchens, space for the Firefighters’ Toy Bank, Senior programs, Out of School programs, Families First, Boy and Girl Scouts, and other community initiatives. The community is invited to come and join Trinity Church for this warm, fun-filled event as the holiday season returns to the Seacoast. For more information, call Patrice H. Wood at (603) 926-8305 or Gretchen Gobar at (603) 926-2768. Church Holiday Fair in Newington NEWINGTON | The Newington Town Church Holiday Fair will take place on Saturday, November 18 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Newington town hall, located on Nimble Hill Road in Newington. Featured at the fair will be a quilt raffle, holiday greens and decorations, baked goods and candies, handcrafts, attic treasures, a knitting table, gifts for teachers and parents, and dolls. There will also be a silent auction table, and a luncheon of fish chowder, sandwiches and desserts will be served. For more information about this event, call the Newington Town Church at (603) 431-8663. Holiday Fair at Webster at R ye RYE | Webster at Rye, a nursing care and retirement community located at 795 Washington Road, will host its annual Holiday Fair on Saturday, December 2 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The fair is open to the public, and will feature a raffle, baked goods, handcrafted items, and more. For more information, call Activities Coordinator Kerry Robertson at (603) 964-8144. Sale time at Eventide Home EXETER | Eventide Home, located at 81 High Street in Exeter, will host a Bake, Craft and Raffle Sale on Saturday, December 2 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. A brand new “Tickle Me Elmo X” will be raffled off the same day as the event. Raffle tickets are on sale at Eventide Home for $2 each or six for $10. The proceeds from this event will be distributed to the Eventide Home Residents’ activity program, and the Maria Miller Scholarship Fund. Those in the community who wish contribute to the sale may call (603) 772-5743 for more information. Cyan Magenta Yellow Black KINGSTON | Seacoast area women are invited to the upcoming “A Fair to Remember” luncheon, co-sponsored by Seacoast Christian Women and taking place on Monday, November 13 at the Pond View Restaurant, located on Route 125 in Kingston. Everyone is invited to bring a friend, come early, and do some holiday shopping at this month’s luncheon. Crafts, jewelry, food tables and a silent auction will be part of the fun. The program will feature guest speaker Marilynn Moores from Rhode Island, whose topic will be “Learning about Life in the Most Unexpected Places.” The luncheon will be held from 12-2 p.m.; doors open at 11 a.m. Cost is $12 (inclusive); complimentary nursery will be provided for those in attendance. This luncheon event is co-sponsored by Stonecroft Ministries, also a non-profit organization. Reservations may be made in advance by calling Marie at (603) 642-6021, Barbara at (603) 474-2388, or Sandra at (978) 388-3341. Those who need to cancel their reservation on the day of the luncheon are asked to call the restaurant at (603) 642-5556. MARKET From 10A 24 Page 24A | Atlantic News | November 10, 2006 | Vol 31, No 44 AtlanticNews.Com . Community Entries sought for holiday art show Special to the Atlantic News EXETER | The Exeter Arts Committee, a town-sponsored committee comprised of volunteers, has put out a call for artists who would like to take part in this year’s Holiday Art Show. Area artists are invited to display and sell their work. Paintings, pottery, fiber, sculpture, and multimedia pieces are all welcome. Art- ist’s personal self-standing portfolios for public viewing and purchasing are also welcome. There is no fee for being a part of the exhibit. The show will be held in the town gallery on the second floor of the historic Exeter Town Hall. The public is invited to come and join the committee for all the festivities. Many works of art from the region’s artists will be on display and for sale. In addition, four artfully decorated wreaths by the committee will be for sale and the proceeds will go to the Chamber’s Children’s Fund. The first night of the Holiday Art Show — Thursday, November 30 from 4-8 p.m. — coincides with the Chamber of Commerce’s Festival of Trees gala fund- raiser for the Chamber Children’s Fund. Later that week on Saturday, Dec 2 is the Holiday Art Show Opening Reception from 2-4 p.m. The show will run on Saturdays and Sundays, from 1-4 p.m., between December 2-17. For more information, contact Rose Bryant at rosebryant@ earthlink.net or visit the town’s Web site and click on “Arts Committee.” This comedy, written and performed by Poulin in collaboration with Gordon Carlisle, has received overwhelming critical acclaim and has been performed from Maine to Minneapolis. The audience will meet Ida LeClair, a self-professed home shopping networkaholic. Ida lives in the small town of Mahoosuc Mills, Maine with her husband, Charlie, and she’s got a double-wide mobile home full of stories she’s dying to share. “I’ll tell you about the amazing adventures I’ve had with the Women Who Run With the Moose: Celeste, Rita, Betty, Dot, and Shirley,” says Ida. “Like the time we caught the boys at the topless donut shop when they were supposed to be hunting. Or when Charlie and I went on that Cabbage Soup Diet. If you’re lucky, I may even give you my recipe for Baked Spam. It’s wicked Susan Poulin as ‘Ida: Woman Who good!” Runs With The Moose’ Speaking of Festival. her character, Poulin says, Showtime for “Ida: “Ida pays homage to the Woman Who Runs With women I grew up with in The Moose” at the Rochwestern Maine. “She’s funny, ester Opera House is at 8 wise and is filled with joie de p.m.; doors open at 7:30 p.m. vivre.” Tickets are $21 and may be In the nine years since purchased online at www. it’s premiere, Poulin has Rochester OperaHouse.com; performed “Ida: Woman by phone at (603) 335-1992 Who Runs With the Moose” or at the box office window throughout New England, located in the Rochester city in New York State and the hall building at 31 Wakefield Minneapolis Fringe Theater Street in Rochester. Up and running with Ida at ROH Special to the Atlantic News ROCHESTER | The Rochester Opera House offers up a hysterical evening of downeast humor on Saturday, November 18 when Poolyle Productions presents Susan Poulin in “Ida: Woman Who Runs With the Moose.” Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Excellent Chinese Cuisine Prompt Take Out Available (603) 926-6633 7 Ocean Blvd, Hampton Beach Located at Seabrook/Hampton Bridge on Rte 1A www.oceanwok.com Dinner Specials 1. Lettuce Wrap Minced chicken wrapped in fresh lettuce $8.95 Elliot 2. Steamed Haddock With shredded scallions and pork $13.95 3. Chinese Eggplant Sautéed with your choice of pork or shrimp in a spicy garlic sauce Pork: $9.95 Shrimp $10.95 4. Twin Lobster Stir Fry With shredded ginger and scallions in a soy flavored brown sauce $24.95 Try Our 3-Course Lunch! Green Tea & Brown Rice are available Alexander Wood & Metal A craftsman from the Seacoast of New Hampshire with a passion for combining wood and metal into functional works for your home or business. www.elliotalexander.com (603) 778-2135 Healthy Notes Lamprey to hold flu clinics NEWMARKET | Lamprey Health Care will hold flu clinics which are open to members of the general public at their Newmarket and Raymond Centers. Flu clinics for both adults and children are scheduled at the Newmarket Center for Thursday, November 16 from 4-6:30 p.m. and Saturday, November 18 from 9:30-11:30 a.m. A pediatric-only flu clinic for children will be held at the Raymond Center on Tuesday, November 21 from 2-6 p.m. At the Newmarket flu clinics, all adults will be charged $15 unless participants have Medicare and present their card. Flu shots for children age 6 months to 18 years of age are $5. For additional information, call the Newmarket Center at (603) 659-3106 or the Raymond Center at (603) 895-3351. Lamprey Health Care is a nonprofit agency with medical centers in Newmarket, Raymond and Nashua. The agency provides primary care and preventive health services to individuals of all ages and incomes, regardless of their ability to pay. Board-certified physicians and highly qualified clinical staff provide pediatric, adolescent, adult and geriatric care. Additional information is available at www.lampreyhealth.org Free medical clinic open in Hampton HAMPTON | A free medical clinic, located at 37 Ashworth Avenue in Hampton across from the Mainsail Motel, is open from 6-8 p.m. on the first and third Tuesday of each month. Staffed by a doctor, nurse and social worker, the nonprofit clinic offers free medical exams, pap smears, mammograms, HIV screenings, pregnancy testing and more. No appointments are necessary. This medical clinic is made possible thanks to the generosity of Preston Real Estate and the assistance of other local individuals and organizations. Donations are gratefully accepted; to make a donation, please make checks payable to “Hampton Beach Free Medical Clinic” and mail to Hampton Beach Free Medical Clinic, PO Box 625, Hampton, NH 03843. For more information, call (603) 770-4383. Free blood pressure screenings STRATHAM | Free blood pressure screenings will be offered every Saturday morning from 8 a.m. to 12 noon by Dr. Jill Burns at the offices of Dr. Ken George and Associates. The office is located at 89 Portsmouth Avenue in Stratham. For more information, call Belinda or Kelly at (603) 7726400. Get talk’n about diabetes EXETER | “Talk’n Diabetes,” an informative and energetic discussion forum about diabetes self-care, is currently being offered at the Exeter Senior Center, located at 32 Court Street in Exeter. Meetings are held the second Wednesday of each month at 2:30 p.m. Monthly topics focus on helping people who live with diabetes gain control over their disease, one step at a time. These programs are free to the public and offered by Neighborhood Diabetes, a local pharmacy and diabetes resource organization in conjunction with HealthReach Diabetes, a department of Exeter Hospital. To register or for more information, call (800) 4-EXETER or sign up online at www.foreveryday.com. Take a harbor cruise with Club Finz PORTSMOUTH | Members of Club Finz are currently organizing their eighth annual Sock, Hat and Mitten Drive, taking place on Tuesday, November 14 from 5:30-8 p.m. onboard the Isles of Shoals Steamship Company’s MV “Thomas Laighton.” New socks, hats, or mittens are the admission to come on board for this fun-filled Portsmouth Harbor cruise. The donations will benefit Families First Health and Support Center, Lids for Kids, Family Service Association of Portsmouth, the Hampton Community Coalition, HUB Families and Seacoast Consumer Alliance. Club Finz is a local group of Jimmy Buffet enthusiasts (also known as “Parrot Heads”) who are fans of the singer– songwriter’s tropically influenced beach/ rock/ folk music. Members meet in various locations the second Tuesday of the month, and are involved in numerous community service projects year-round. For more information, visit www.clubfinz.com or contact didany2001@ wmconnect. com. 25 AtlanticNews.Com Vol 32, No 44 | November 10, 2006 | Atlantic News | Page 25A . Health Mason Views Caregivers take a break with Compass Care Special to the Atlantic News PORTSMOUTH | November is National Family Caregivers Month, a nationally recognized month celebrated to draw attention to the many challenges facing family caregivers and to raise awareness about services and options for families with aging loved ones. National Family Caregivers Month is a time to thank, support and celebrate more than 50 million family caregivers across the country. Compass Care, located at 127 Parrott Avenue in Ports- mouth, wishes to honor and assist the many Seacoast area families who provide care to aging loved ones so that they may remain at home and independent for as long as possible. On Saturday, November 18, Compass Care’s Adult Day Health Program will offer a free “Day of Respite” from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Caregivers can take a few hours to themselves, prepare for the holiday season or catch up with old friends, while their loved one spends time having fun with peers in a caring environment that can monitor their individual health needs. Compass Care’s Adult Day Health Program can help make it possible for caregivers to continue or return to working, or take care of personal needs, such as raising young children and running errands, while knowing that their loved one is in a safe and engaging environment. Having a break from the demands of caregiving can help improve family relationships and personal health. Clients who participate in the program often thrive from the social interaction, exercise, healthy meal and personal attention. Those who are interested in participating in the “Day of Respite” are invited to contact Compass Care at (603) 430-0070 and learn how to obtain forms for a doctor referral. Pre-registration is required. To learn more about the Adult Day Health Program, community wellness groups, caregivers support groups and other services, visit www.compass care.org or call (603) 430-0070. Volunteers needed for ACS Relay for Life Special to the Atlantic News that time the committee will begin planning the event designed to raise funds and awareness of the fight against cancer in Portsmouth. Relay For Life is a unique fundraising event that allows participants from all walks of life — including patients, medical support staff, corporations, civic organizations, churches and community volunteers — to join together in the fight against cancer. Relay For Life is a team event where participants walk around a track relaystyle overnight. Teams of cancer-fighting enthusiasts will gather at Portsmouth High School to show their support and dedication. Volunteers from the Portsmouth community are needed to begin planning now for this event. “Relay For Life is as much an awareness raiser about the progress against cancer, as it is a fundraiser,” Red Cross offers LNA training Special to the Atlantic News NEWINGTON | The Great Bay Chapter of the American Red Cross has announced that the next session of their Nurse Assistant Training (LNA) day and evening classes is scheduled to begin on Monday, November 27. The Chapter is currently enrolling students for these classes, which are available on a first-come, first-served basis. Limited to 16 students with a 12 student minimum, classes are held Monday through Thursday at the Chapter Headquarters, located at the Pease International Tradeport. Candidates are asked to attend a scheduled informational session, which is set aside to register and interview candidates as well as to provide them with a thorough explanation of what a career as an LNA is all about. The Red Cross LNA course is recognized in New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Maine. Tuition reimbursement and tuition payment plans are available. Those who are looking for a change of careers should not let this opportunity pass them by. For additional information, or to find out when the next informational session will be held, call the Great Bay Chapter at (603) 766-5440, ext. 1004. HELP WANTED Great Benefits! 401K, Fun Place to Work, Dental, Medical, Summer & Winter Bonuses says Elise Ring, volunteer event chairman. “Individuals who are willing to give their time and energy to this exciting event as volunteers or participants have made a commitment to fight back against this disease and let the community know that you can beat cancer.” Volunteers are needed to organize and recruit teams, seek community and corporate support, coordinate logistics, solicit in-kind refreshments and prizes, plan entertainment, and lend their support in any other way possible. Anyone who would like to join the Relay For Life in Portsmouth as a volunteer or team participant is encouraged to call the American Cancer Society at (800) ACS-2345 or visit www.cancer.org for more information. Fragrance Of The Month... Christmas Wreath While Supplies Last! FIFTY YEARS — Saint James Lodge F&AM of Hampton recently had the honor of hosting a 50-year Mason. Brother Glendon Simmons of Hampton was presented with a 50-year medal and pin in recognition of his honorable half-century in the Masonic fraternity. Pictured here at the presentation are (from left) the Most Worshipful Master of the Grand Lodge of Free & Accepted Masons of the state of NH, Brother David Lamprey, Sr. of North Hampton; Brother Glendon Simmons; and PGM Brother Jeremy Sawyer of Hampton Falls. — Atlantic News Courtesy Photo 25% OFF Now Available: Jewelry for Autumn & Everyday! Assorted Gifts for every occasion Seacoast Shopping Center Seabrook, NH • Open at 9am (603) 474-3082 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black PORTSMOUTH | Walkers, cancer survivors (anyone who has ever been diagnosed with cancer), community leaders, team captains, and dedicated workers are all needed to make the American Cancer Society Relay For Life a reality in Portsmouth. The first volunteer committee meeting for Relay For Life will be held on Wednesday, November 15 at 6 p.m. at Portsmouth Hospital. At MASONIC SCOUTER AWARD — Saint James Lodge F&AM of Hampton had the recent pleasure of hosting the presentation of the Daniel Carter Beard Masonic Scouter Award, a national recognition approved by the Boy Scouts of America and promoted by the Grand Lodges of Masons in the US. It may be presented to any Master Mason who has made significant contributions to youth through Scouting. This is a selective award, the purpose of which is to recognize the recipient’s outstanding service to youth through the Boy Scouts of America. Pictured here is Senior Grand Warden of the Grand Lodge of Free & Accepted Masons of the State of NH, Brother C. Wayne Libby preparing to present the award to recipient Brother Paul A. Perregaux. — Atlantic News Courtesy Photo 26 Page 26A | Atlantic News | November 10, 2006 | Vol 31, No 44 AtlanticNews.Com . LETTERS From 8A Cyan Magenta Yellow Black As noted in the article, Aquarion’s operations are not three systems cobbled together but rather it is an integrated water system designed to serve all three towns. To meet the maximum and average daily water demands and storage requirements, the town of North Hampton would have to acquire Aquarion’s entire New Hampshire system, which includes Hampton and a portion of Rye. North Hampton would either have to enter into an agreement with Hampton and Rye on the acquisition of the water system, thereby creating a new bureaucratic water district, or it would have to overcome likely opposition from those towns in any proceeding before the New Hampshire Public Utilities Commission (NHPUC). It is hard to imagine that the residents of Hampton or Rye would be willing to agree to have the town of North Hampton run the water company that serves them. For example, in March 2005, Hampton town residents voted by a four-to-one margin against a Warrant Article that would have authorized the formation of committee to study the feasibility of taking over Aquarion’s New Hampshire operations. In recent news articles and at a NHPUC hearing on Aquarion’s change in ownership, the acting Hampton town manager reiterated the town’s lack of interest in participating in a forced takeover of the water company. If North Hampton were to pursue a hostile take over of Aquarion, whether all or part of the system, the litigation costs alone would likely be several million dollars, as in the case of the City of Nashua in its efforts to forcibly takeover Pennichuck Water Company. In the August 19, 2006, edition of the Nashua “Telegraph” the mayor says the city had budgeted $850,000 in takeover costs for next fiscal year, spending that will push the city’s total bill to nearly $4 million in the battle to forcibly takeover Pennichuck Water Company. The litigation costs do not include the many tens of millions of dollars the town would have to borrow to buy the company’s assets in the unlikely event that such a takeover attempt ever succeeded. And the NHPUC would have to rule that the takeover is in the public interest. If the town were to takeover the water system, in addition to paying the debt, it would have to continue to invest large sums in the infrastructure. For example, in the last four years Aquarion has invested more than $5.0 million to increase water supplies, lift a building moratorium, and improve water quality and service to the three Seacoast towns it serves. As part of our commitment to provide quality water to its customers, Aquarion is investing $1.3 million in 2006 and will invest an additional $6.9 million over the next four years thereafter to further improve the water system. Is this a road the taxpayers of North Hampton really want to go down now? Martin Cohn Spokesperson Aquarion Water Co. (Editor’s Note: The Article reads: “Shall the Town of North Hampton authorize the Board of Selectmen pursuant to RSA Chapter 38 to acquire that portion of Aquarion Water Company’s (or its successors or assigns) plant and property, both within the municipal boundaries of North Hampton and outside of its boundaries, which the selectmen (as advised by the North Hampton Water Commissioners) judge to be expedient and suitable for establishing a municipal water utility, with the further understanding that any agreement or proposal to acquire or determination of acquisition price shall be presented to the voters at a future North Hampton Town Meeting for approval and ratification prior to final acquisition of such water company property?”) Bushels of thanks To the Editor: I would like to thank this year’s crop of volunteers for helping to make Applefest 2006 a bountiful success. So many individuals volunteered their time, talent and prizes just so our town’s Senior Citizens could have a good time. And here’s the most amazing part: They aren’t all from Hampton! They just like to help. The Seniors had a wonderful time and enjoyed themselves immensely because of each and every volunteer. You are the wonderful ingredients that blend together for a sweet time. Our harvest of this year’s volunteers was so fantastic, that I cannot thank each of you by name. I must thank a few who’s help I could not have done without: Patty McKenzie, Donna Marie Reed, Rusty Bridle, Rebecca Domoracki, Jan, Julia, Lauren and Tom Merrow and their friends, Marrisa and Sarah, Dannielle Miller, Hampton First Congrega- tional Church, and Hampton Hannaford. On behalf of Trinity Church, the Hampton Recreation Department, the Hampton Community Coalition and especially, Hampton’s Senior Citizens, Thank you!! Nita Niemczyk Volunteer Hampton Community Coalition Hampton SPELL From 18A one thing and can warm it up,” Amy said, using a hand as an example. A night with a few friends and a Ouija board further explains Amy’s belief in the supernatural. “One time we used the Ouija board and asked the lights to go out,” she said. “A wind came from the heater, and the lights sparked and flickered down. I looked back and [my friends] were out of there, chairs were tipped over, and the room was empty,” said Amy. Emily had a similarly supernatural encounter involving spell-casting. Often when spells are cast, a “wand” or other casting item is used, and candles are lit. “Whenever I went over a candle my hand would shake,” said Emily. “I wasn’t even doing anything.” Despite the shock supposed magic can have on the nerves, Wiccans use spells only with good intent, and especially not for self indulgence. Lately, witchcraft has been known to be more of a trend when associated with teenagers. Shows and movies like “Charmed” and “The Blair Witch Project,” books like “Harry Potter,” and a good number of kids who are simply going through a “stage” in their lives, lead to fallacies about true witchcraft. “It gets me angry,” said Amy. “A lot of people don’t even try to understand.” “It has become a trend and you can tell who’s into it and who’s not,” said Sammi. “If you come to my house you’ll see my altar and my Book of Shadows. It’s like entertainment now.” However, it is difficult to say that the exposure has been all bad to Wicca and its followers. “It’s kind of good, kind of bad,” said Emily, referring to the attention, even if it is negative, that Wicca gets. However, one thing is certain. “It’s always interesting,” said Sammi. Many, if not most, people do not fully understand Wicca and end up connecting it to what is seen most commonly in the media. Wicca is not a bad religion, it is not Satanic, and Wiccans do not typically turn people into toads and will not give you warts on your nose. “It’s a religion, plain and simple,” said Amy. Church News Indulge at Greek pastry sale Hungry for a bite of Baklava or a taste of Tiropeta? Want to sample these and other flavors that are the pride of Greek delicacies? Then come join the Daughters of Penelope-Itona, Chapter 177 for their popular annual pastry sale. The event will be held on Saturday, November 18 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Greek Church of the Annunciation’s church hall, located on Locust Street in Dover. Not only sugar and spice but other things nice (such as honey, nuts, cinnamon, filo, feta cheese, and butter) will be used to create delights such as famous Baklava and equally-known Kourimbedas, Koulourakia, Ravina and Tiropeta. These treats will all be found among the array of scrumptious baked goods freshly prepared by the members of this longtime charitable organization. The community is invited to come and indulge. For more information, call the church at (603) 742-7667. First Baptist Church of Hampton Falls HAMPTON FALLS | The First Baptist Church, located at the junction of Routes 1-88 in Hampton Falls, holds Sunday services at 9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Sunday school is held during the 9:30 a.m. hour for all ages, and several adult classes are offered during the 11 a.m. hour. A nursery for children from birth to two years of age is held during both services. A coffee hour is held between services. Wednesday evenings offer a children’s choir at 6 p.m. and Avodah (the Hebrew word for “work, worship, service”) for children in grades 1-5) at 6:45 p.m.; youth groups for junior and senior high school students at 7 p.m.; women’s bible study (1 Samuel); men’s mid-week; and a combined study of the Pentateuch. A service of communion is held the first Sunday of each month. In addition, a number of groups meet at the church. Local Boy Scouts meet on Thursdays and an AA group meets at 10 a.m. on Saturdays. Celebrate Recovery - an 8-step program that focuses on people who are struggling with past hurts, habits, and hang-ups - is held on Friday evenings (a gathering time, with snacks, begins at 6:30 p.m.; meetings follow at 7 p.m.). The Senior Pastor at the First Baptist Church of Hampton Falls is Rev. Dr. Kenneth Lawrence; Rev. Dean Glover serves as Pastor of Discipleship and Evangelism. The Youth Coordinator is Dan Odom. For more information, contact the church office at (603) 926-3724, ext. 201. ACR worship services PORTSMOUTH | The Anglican Church of the Resurrection is a parish of the Anglican Communion Network. It is affiliated with the American Anglican Council, adhering to the orthodox faith and practices of the worldwide Anglican Communion. Sunday worship is held at 9:30 a.m. on the third floor of 1 New Hampshire Avenue at Pease in Portsmouth. Evening Bible study is held twice weekly in parishioner homes. Transportation is available. ACR welcomes all. Call (603) 828-4055 for information or for any pastoral needs. RSVP now for free wild game dinner NORTH HAMPTON | New Covenant Sporting Club will host its fifth annual free wild game dinner on Wednesday, December 6 at 6 p.m. at the North Hampton Elementary School on Atlantic Avenue. Reservations are required, and RSVPs are currently being accepted. This event fills quickly; the club suggests that reservations be made as soon as possible. For the past five years, this popular dinner has become known for great wild game dishes and fun family atmosphere. This year local hunters expect to harvest a wide variety of large and small game. The anticipated menu includes venison, moose, elk, pheasant, grouse, squirrel and duck. In addition a variety of side dishes and tame game selections will be offered. Along with great food there will be down-home live music and entertainment throughout the evening. To RSVP, call New Covenant Church at (603) 964-2700; leave a message with name, phone number and the desired number of reservations. 27 AtlanticNews.Com Vol 32, No 44 | November 10, 2006 | Atlantic News | Page 27A . FREE 7 Day de GuiSEA TV 3SE A-9 TV Vol 32, No 44 | November 10, 2006 | Atlantic News | Page 1SEA Pages Sports Listings Page 2SEA Judy Underwood ~ Focus on photography By Liz Premo Atlantic News Staff Writer summer of 1996, Judy lived in Israel while volunteering at a Tel Dor dig on the coast of the Mediterranean Sea. A 2002 trek to China had her teaching English to children as well as taking every opportunity to travel around the Asian country. Throughout her travels Judy has employed her knack and love for photography, capturing (via both digital and traditional film) many scenic views and other interesting sights that caught her eye. Well-rounded as a both photographer and a traveler, Judy has also earned a living in the computer technology field, wearing many hats including that of a database programmer, When you, a family member, or friend need home health care services what questions do you ask? It’s your choice... Is the agency a community-based, non-profit home care agency? Does the agency have 100% patient satisfaction? Does the agency have nationally certified nursing specialists? Does the agency have over 35 years of providing home care services? Does the agency provide the clinical services you need with the latest technology available? Does the agency provide a “peace of mind”? Ask for us by name... 29 Lafayette Road, North Hampton, NH 03862 • 603.926.2066 • 603.430.7656 network manager, project manager, consultant and instructor. Currently, Judy teaches computer-related classes at the Rye Public Library and has been known to build Web sites in her spare time. Her talent behind the camera lens is evident in her work, a lot of which can be found on her aptly-named Web site, www. wandering jude.com. Paying a visit there, one can find stills of lighthouses and sailboats, a bird in flight and flowers in bloom, and much, much more in the six stunning galleries she has posted there. The New Hampshire Seacoast, nature and travel, flowers and more are there for the browsing. Check it out. Judy is a member of the Friends of the Rye Public Library, and as such has created a number of posters which have been used to promote Friendssponsored events. Not surprisingly, Judy has also taken part in the Art in Bloom show at Webster’s for the past two years as a member of the Rye Driftwood Garden Club. Her artistry goes beyond photography, reaching into the garden as well. In celebration of her latest works, Webster at Rye will host an artist’s reception on Wednesday, November 15 at 4 p.m. in the South Solarium, where selections of Judy Underwood’s photography will be on display. The public is invited to attend and reception and view Judy Underwood’s photography exhibit. Webster at Rye is located on Washington Road in Rye. For more information, call Kerry Robertson at Webster at Rye, (603) 964-8144 or e-mail krobertson@ websteratrye.com. Cyan Magenta Yellow Black RYE | The South Solarium at Webster at Rye lends itself well to art exhibits featuring various media — oil pastels and watercolors are a few which have been on display for all to see. The comfortable surroundings and spacious walls of the elegant retirem e n t h o m e invite the enhancem e n t of those w o r k s w h i c h have been on display at various times over the years. The Solarium has also become home to the annual Rye in Bloom exhibit, a celebration of art and floral arrangements accomplished by talented folks with an eye as well as a heart for beauty and blossoms. Regional blooming and foliage seasons have pretty much passed, but there’s still plenty of color to be seen during the months of November and December, when the focus is on the photography of Rye resident Judy Underwood. Originally hailing from New Jersey, Judy has lived in the Seacoast area for two years, having moved to Rye (and the beach) in 2004. As a child she lived in Center Conway and Chocorua before moving to Connecticut with her family. There she attended high school as well as the University of Connecticut, receiving her Master’s degree in Mathematics. What followed were moves to Franklin, Vermont and Boulder, Colorado, the latter proving to be a semi-permanent home in the Rocky Mountain foothills for the next 20 years. She came back to New Hampshire in 1999. In between and beyond these stops Judy has traveled extensively, covering 49 of the 50 United States and embarking on overseas excursions. During the 28 PPage || Atlantic ews ovember age 28A 2 SEA AtlanticNN ews||NN ovember10, 10,2006 2006 || VVol ol 31, 32, No o 44 44 Atlantic Seacoast Entertainment & Arts | A tlanticN News ews.C .Com om . SPORTS ON TV AUTO RACING Saturday 3:30 p.m. WCSH-6 WHDH-7 NASCAR Racing Busch Series — Arizona.Travel 200. From Phoenix International Raceway in Avondale, Ariz. (Live) 10:00 p.m. ESPN2 NHRA Drag Racing Automobile Club of Southern California Finals — Qualifying. From Pomona, Calif. (Same-day Tape) Sunday 2:30 p.m. WCSH-6 WHDH-7 Countdown to Green (Live) 3:30 p.m. WCSH-6 WHDH-7 NASCAR Racing Nextel Cup — Checker Auto Parts 500. From Phoenix International Raceway in Avondale, Ariz. (Live) 7:00 p.m. ESPN2 NHRA Drag Racing Automobile Club of Southern California Finals — Final Eliminations. From Pomona, Calif. (Same-day Tape) BASKETBALL Friday Cyan Magenta Yellow Black 7:00 p.m. FOXSN Celtics Tonight (Live) NESN New Hampshire at Boston College. (Live) 7:30 p.m. ESPN NBA Shootaround (Live) FOXSN Utah Jazz at Boston Celtics. From TD Banknorth Garden in Boston. (Live) 8:00 p.m. ESPN Miami Heat at New Jersey Nets. From Continental Airlines Arena in East Rutherford, N.J. (Live) 10:00 p.m. FOXSN Celtics Postgame (Live) 10:30 p.m. ESPN Detroit Pistons at Los Angeles Lakers. From Staples Center in Los Angeles. (Live) 3:00 a.m. ESPN2 Miami Heat at New Jersey Nets. From Continental Airlines Arena in East Rutherford, N.J. (Same-day Tape) — DePaul at Oklahoma. From Norman, Okla. (Live) 7:00 p.m. NESN Arizona at Virginia. (Live) 8:00 p.m. ESPN Houston Rockets at Miami Heat. From the AmericanAirlines Arena in Miami. (Live) Monday 7:00 p.m. ESPN2 CBE Classic Regional Final — Teams TBA. From Durham, N.C. (Live) FOXSN Celtics Tonight (Live) NESN Vermont at Boston College. (Live) 7:30 p.m. FOXSN Orlando Magic at Boston Celtics. From TD Banknorth Garden in Boston. (Live) 9:00 p.m. ESPN2 NIT Season Tip-Off — Indiana vs. Lafayette. From Indianapolis. (Live) 10:00 p.m. FOXSN Celtics Postgame (Live) Tuesday 8:00 p.m. ESPN College GameDay Season preview. (Live) 9:00 p.m. ESPN NIT Season Tip-Off Regional Final — Teams TBA. (Live) 10:00 p.m. ESPN2 CBE Classic Regional Final — Teams TBA. From Lubbock, Texas. (Live) 12:00 a.m. ESPN2 NIT Season Tip-Off — Gonzaga vs. Rice. From Spokane, Wash. (Live) 12:30 a.m. ESPN NBA Fastbreak NBA highlights, analysis, lookins. (Live) Wednesday 7:30 p.m. FOXSN Boston Celtics at Cleveland Cavaliers. From Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland. (Live) 10:00 p.m. FOXSN Celtics Postgame (Live) 12:00 a.m. ESPN2 NBA Fastbreak NBA highlights, analysis, look-ins. (Live) 7:00 p.m. ESPN NIT Season Tip-Off Regional Final — Teams TBA. (Live) FOXSN Celtics Tonight (Live) 7:30 p.m. FOXSN Indiana Pacers at Boston Celtics. From TD Banknorth Garden in Boston. (Live) 9:00 p.m. ESPN Memphis Grizzlies at Sacramento Kings. From ARCO Arena in Sacramento, Calif. (Live) 10:00 p.m. FOXSN Celtics Postgame (Live) 10:30 p.m. ESPN2 NIT Season Tip-Off Regional Final — Teams TBA. From Spokane, Wash. (Live) 1:30 a.m. ESPN NBA Fastbreak NBA highlights, analysis, lookins. (Live) 1:00 p.m. ESPN2 Women’s College State Farm Tip-Off Classic — Georgia vs. Rutgers. From Norman, Okla. (Live) 3:00 p.m. ESPN2 Women’s College State Farm Tip-Off Classic 7:00 p.m. ESPN2 Coaches vs. Cancer Semifinal — Teams TBA. From New York. (Live) 8:00 p.m. TNT Chicago Bulls at Houston Rockets. From Toyota Center in Houston. (Live) Saturday Sunday Thursday 9:00 p.m. ESPN2 Coaches vs. Cancer Semifinal — Teams TBA. From New York. (Live) 10:30 p.m. TNT Sacramento Kings at Golden State Warriors. From the Arena in Oakland, Calif. (Live) 1:00 a.m. TNT Inside the NBA (Live) BILLIARDS Friday 5:00 p.m. ESPN2 Enjoypool.com Women’s 9-Ball Championship, Semifinals. From Las Vegas. (Taped) Tuesday 5:00 p.m. ESPN2 2006 WPBA U.S. Open 9-Ball Championship — Quarterfinal. From Albuquerque, N.M. (Taped) 6:00 p.m. ESPN2 2006 WPBA U.S. Open 9-Ball Championship — Quarterfinal. From Albuquerque, N.M. (Taped) Wednesday 5:00 p.m. ESPN2 2006 WPBA U.S. Open 9-Ball Championship — Quarterfinal. From Albuquerque, N.M. (Taped) 6:00 p.m. ESPN2 2006 WPBA U.S. Open 9-Ball Championship — Quarterfinal. From Albuquerque, N.M. (Taped) BOWLING Sunday 12:00 p.m. ESPNC Discover Card Windy City Classic. From Taylor, Mich. (Taped) 1:00 p.m. ESPN Etonic Championship. From Cheektowaga, N.Y. (Live) Monday 5:00 p.m. ESPN2 Etonic Championship. From Cheektowaga, N.Y. (Taped) BOXING Saturday 10:00 p.m. HBO Calvin Brock vs. Wladimir Klitschko. Calvin Brock takes on Wladimir Klitschko in a heavyweight bout. From New York. (Live) FOOTBALL Friday 4:00 p.m. ESPN NFL Live (Live) 8:00 p.m. ESPN2 Texas-El Paso at Alabama-Birmingham. (Live) Saturday 10:00 a.m. ESPN College Gameday (Live) 12:00 p.m. WCVB-5 WMUR-9 Syracuse at South Florida. (Live) WSBK-38 ACC — Teams TBA. (Live) ESPN Wisconsin at Iowa. (Live) ESPN2 Teams to Be Announced. (Live) NESN Williams at Amherst. (Live) 12:30 p.m. FOXSN Baylor at Oklahoma State. (Live) 3:00 p.m. ESPN ESPN2 College Football Scoreboard (Live) 3:30 p.m. WBZ-4 Teams to Be Announced. (Live) WCVB-5 WMUR-9 California at Arizona, Ohio State at Northwestern or ACC or Big 12 Game TBA. (Live) ESPN Michigan at Indiana. (Live) 4:00 p.m. ESPN2 College Football Overdrive (Live) 6:30 p.m. WCVB-5 WMUR-9 Post Game Report (Live) ESPN College Football Scoreboard (Live) 7:00 p.m. ESPN College Football Scoreboard (Live) ESPN2 Teams to Be Announced. (Live) 7:45 p.m. ESPN Teams to Be Announced. (Live) 8:00 p.m. WCVB-5 WMUR-9 Teams to Be Announced. (Live) 10:15 p.m. FOXSN Oregon at USC. (Live) 11:15 p.m. WCVB-5 WMUR-9 Post Game Report (Live) 12:00 a.m. ESPN College Football Final (Live) Sunday 11:00 a.m. ESPN Sunday NFL Countdown (Live) 12:00 p.m. WBZ-4 NFL Today Host James Brown; with Boomer Esiason, Dan Marino and Shannon Sharpe. (Live) WFXT-25 Fox NFL Sunday (Live) 1:00 p.m. WBZ-4 New York Jets at New England Patriots. From Gillette Stadium in Foxboro, Mass. (Live) NESN Scotiabank East Championship — Toronto Argonauts or Winnipeg Blue Bombers at Montreal Alouettes. From Montreal. (Live) 4:00 p.m. WFXT-25 New Orleans Saints at Pittsburgh Steelers. From Heinz Field in Pittsburgh. (Live) 7:00 p.m. WCSH-6 WHDH-7 Football Night in America Bob Costas, Cris Collinsworth, Jerome Bettis and Sterling Sharpe recap the day’s NFL highlights. (Live) 7:30 p.m. WFXT-25 The OT (Live) 8:15 p.m. WCSH-6 WHDH-7 Chicago Bears at New York Giants. From Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J. (Live) 9:30 p.m. FOXSN The Official BCS Ratings Show The weekly BCS standings are announced. (Live) Monday 3:00 p.m. ESPN SportsCenter Special Edition: Monday Night Kickoff (Live) 6:00 p.m. ESPN NFL Primetime (Live) 7:00 p.m. ESPN Monday Night Countdown (Live) 8:30 p.m. ESPN Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Carolina Panthers. From Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, N.C. (Live) Tuesday 4:00 p.m. ESPN NFL Live (Live) 7:00 p.m. ESPN2 Ball State at Toledo. (Live) 7:30 p.m. ESPN NFL Live (Live) Wednesday 4:00 p.m. ESPN NFL Live (Live) 7:30 p.m. ESPN2 Miami-Ohio at Bowling Green. (Live) Thursday 4:00 p.m. ESPN NFL Live (Live) 7:30 p.m. ESPN West Virginia at Pittsburgh. (Live) GOLF Friday 4:00 p.m. USA Merrill Lynch Shootout. From Naples, Fla. (Same-day Tape) TD Banknorth Garden in Boston. (Live) 9:30 p.m. NESN Bruins Overtime (Live) MARTIAL ARTS Sunday 7:00 p.m. FOXSN International Fight League (Taped) SKATING Sunday 4:00 p.m. ESPN Figure Skating HomeSense Skate Canada International. From Victoria, B.C. (Taped) SOCCER Sunday 1:00 p.m. WUNI-27 Fútbol de la Liga Mexicana Torneo de Apertura: UNAM vs. UNL Tigres. (En Vivo) 3:30 p.m. WCVB-5 WMUR-9 MLS Soccer MLS Cup ’06 — Teams TBA. From Pizza Hut Park in Frisco, Texas. (Live) TENNIS Sunday Saturday 11:00 p.m. ESPN2 ATP Tennis Masters Cup — Round-Robin. From Shanghai, China. (Sameday Tape) Sunday 6:00 a.m. ESPN2 ATP Tennis Masters Cup — Round-Robin. From Shanghai, China. (Live) 3:00 p.m. ESPN2 ATP Tennis Masters Cup — Round-Robin. From Shanghai, China. (Sameday Tape) 1:00 p.m. WBZ-4 Merrill Lynch Shootout — Front Nine. From Tiburon Golf Club in Naples, Fla. (Live) 11:00 a.m. USA PGA Tour Sunday (Live) 5:00 p.m. WBZ-4 Merrill Lynch Shootout — Back Nine. From Tiburon Golf Club in Naples, Fla. (Same-day Tape) HOCKEY Friday 7:00 p.m. WENH-11 Boston University at New Hampshire. (Live) Saturday 6:30 p.m. NESN Bruins FaceOff (Live) 7:00 p.m. NESN Ottawa Senators at Boston Bruins. From TD Banknorth Garden in Boston. (Live) 9:30 p.m. NESN Bruins Overtime (Live) Wednesday 6:30 p.m. NESN Bruins FaceOff (Live) 7:00 p.m. NESN Boston Bruins at Washington Capitals. From Verizon Center in Washington, D.C. (Live) 9:30 p.m. NESN Bruins Overtime (Live) Thursday 6:30 p.m. NESN Bruins FaceOff (Live) 7:00 p.m. NESN Toronto Maple Leafs at Boston Bruins. From Monday Tuesday 6:00 a.m. ESPN2 ATP Tennis Masters Cup — Round-Robin. From Shanghai, China. (Live) 3:00 p.m. ESPN2 ATP Tennis Masters Cup. From Shanghai, China. (Same-day Tape) Wednesday 6:00 a.m. ESPN2 ATP Tennis Masters Cup. From Shanghai, China. (Live) 3:00 p.m. ESPN2 ATP Tennis Masters Cup. From Shanghai, China. (Same-day Tape) Thursday 6:00 a.m. ESPN2 ATP Tennis Masters Cup. From Shanghai, China. (Live) 3:00 p.m. ESPN2 ATP Tennis Masters Cup. From Shanghai, China. (Same-day Tape) WRESTLING Monday 9:00 p.m. USA WWE Monday Night Raw (Live) 29 AAtlantic om tlanticN News ews.Com Vol tlantic N News ews||PPage age329A Vol32, 32,NNoo44 44||NNovember ovember 10, 10, 2006 2006 | Atlantic SEA. 26,000 Copies Weekly | 22,671 Mailed to 15 Towns | To Advertise, Call (603) 926-4557 Today! Atlantic Classifieds 30 DAYS WORDS BUCKS Snapshots SPORTS NEWS MOVIES HOBBY LEARNING VARIETY WBZ-4 (CBS) WCVB-5 (ABC) WCSH-6 (NBC) WHDH-7 (NBC) WUNI-27 (UNI) WMUR-9 (ABC) WGBH-2 (PBS) WENH-11 (PBS) WLVI-56 (CW) WSBK-38 (IND) WNRU-21 (PAX) WFXT-25 (FOX) MyTV-50 DISN FAM NICK TOON TVLAND ESPN ESPN2 ESPNC FOXSN NESN CNN CNBC FOXNWS MSNBC NECN HBO MAX SHOW FOOD HGTV TRAVEL A&E DISC HIST TLC AMC MTV TBS TNT E! 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Rose Rose Foster Partner Class Lazlo The Naked Gun 2 1/2: The Smell of Fear Paid Montana Kim Videos Videos Design Fresh Pr. Squirrel Dragon-Z Naked Gun 2 ‘ODYSSEY’ AT WEST — New Hampshire Theatre Project’s 2006-07 mainstage season kicks off with the US premiere of “The Odyssey,” presented in a new re-telling by David Farr. Playing from November 10-26, this production will be presented on Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. at West End Studio Theatre (WEST), located at 959 Islington Street in Portsmouth. Tickets are $20 for general admission, and 2-for-1 for Seniors, students and starving artists. For more information or to reserve tickets, call (603) 431-6644 ext. 5, or email tickets@ nhtheatre project.org. — Atlantic News Courtesy Photo Horn Interrupt SportsCenter (Live) (HD) NBA NBA Basketball Miami Heat at New Jersey Nets. NBA Basketball: Pistons at Lakers Billiards: Semi. Billiards: Finals Honor Roll (N) (CC) College Football Texas-El Paso at Alabama-Birmingham. (CC) Quite Frankly NFL Live Interrupt College Football 2002 USC at Oregon. Schwab Streetball Boxing 2005 U.S. Poker 60 Min. 60 Min. Arliss Seats Boxing Green The Ride BCS Sports Celtics NBA Basketball Utah Jazz at Boston Celtics. Sports Tailgate Downs Football Prev. Sports Be a Bruin Sports Hot College Basketball: UNH at BC ACC Hoops SportsD Raceline SportsD Sports Paid Paid The Situation Room Kudlow & Company The Big Story Hardball (CC) Live at Five Lou Dobbs Tonight Mad Money Special Report (CC) Tucker Right Business The Situation Room On the Money Fox Report Hardball (CC) Globe Right Paula Zahn Now Fast Money The O’Reilly Factor Countdown Curtis Business Larry King Live Mad Money Hannity & Colmes Documentary News Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) The Big Idea Fast Money On the Record The O’Reilly Factor Documentary Documentary News LateNight LateNight Larry King Live Mad Money Special Report Countdown News (4:30) Million Dollar Baby (CC) Fur Inside the NFL (CC) (4:30) First Daughter (:15) ›› Aces: Iron Eagle III (1992) (CC) (4:45) ›› Without a Paddle › The Cookout (2004) Ja Rule. ›› Fantastic Four (2005) Ioan Gruffudd. The Wire ’ Real Time ’ (Live) ››› Twister (1996) Helen Hunt. (CC) ›› Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005) Brad Pitt. ››› Dave Chappelle’s Block Party (2005) Masters of Horror Dexter (iTV) ’ Contessa Lee Design Design Taste Taste Minute Minute If Walls Offbeat Creepiest Dest. Good Unwrap What Get House Haunted Plantation Emeril-Troops Designed Design Mutter Museum Thanksgiving 1 Roof House World’s Strangest Paula’s Party (N) House House Most Haunted (CC) Good 40-a-Day Thanksgiving Tech Want Designed Design Mutter Museum World’s Strangest Cold Case Files Cash Cash Warrior-Fiske Chef Chef Crossing Jordan ’ It Takes a Thief Mega Disasters Jamie’s Kitchen CSI: Miami (CC) Dirty Jobs (CC) Generatn Mail Call Chef Chef CSI: Miami (CC) Dirty Jobs (CC) Shootout! (N) (CC) Cover Cover CSI: Miami (CC) Man vs. Wild (N) The Lost Evidence What Not to Wear CSI: Miami (CC) I Shouldn’t Be Alive Dogfights (N) (CC) What Not to Wear CSI: Miami (CC) Stunt Stunt Secret Aircraft What Not to Wear Comedy Sports Star Wars-Phantom Un White CSI: Miami (CC) Dirty Jobs (CC) Shootout! (CC) What Not to Wear ››› The Green Berets (1968) John Wayne, David Janssen. ›››› Patton (1970, Biography) George C. Scott, Karl Malden. (CC) ››› The Green Berets (1968) Momma Momma Momma Movie Denver Laguna Laguna Laguna MTV Awards Chal Chal Rob & Rob & Channel Parental King King Seinfeld Seinfeld Raymond Raymond ›››› The Wizard of Oz (1939, Fantasy) (:15) ››› Father of the Bride (1991) (CC) Family Futurama Charmed (CC) Law & Order “Stiff” Without a Trace › Gone in Sixty Seconds (2000) Nicolas Cage. › Exit Wounds (2001) Steven Seagal. Execu Hilary Swank: Story Carters Carters E! News Daily 10 Dr. 90210 Sports Stars The Soup Child E! News Daily 10 The Soup Child PGA Golf: Shootout Law Order: CI Law Order: CI ››› The Mummy (1999) Brendan Fraser. Premiere. (CC) House ’ (CC) ›› The Hulk (2003) Still Still Reba ’ Reba ›› Chasing Secrets (1999) Della Reese. ›› Lucky 7 (2003), Patrick Dempsey (CC) Will Off Frasier Frasier travel Breakfast Custom Travel Business & service to advertise call 603-926-4557 GOT CARROTS? — Leddy Center for the Performing Arts, located on Main Street in Epping, presents “Anne of Green Gables” now through November 12. Based on the classic novel by L.M. Montgomery, “Anne of Green Gables” plays Fridays at 7:30 p.m., Saturdays at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. Tickets are $14-$16 depending on seating; group rates are available for any group of 20 or more and advance-sale discounts are available for Friday nights. For more information or to make ticket reservations, call (603) 679-2781 or visit www.leddycenter.org. — Atlantic News Courtesy Photo Arts BOOKKEEPING Jewelry OF HAMPTON Passport Photos $12 per Passport or FREE with a Vacation Package or Cruise! 448 Lafayette Road, Downtown Hampton, NH 03842 (603) 929-1114 •(800) 772-9782 www.customtravelhampton.com Breakfast Buffet All You Can Eat! $7.95 Th-Fr 7am - 10am • Sa 7am - 11am 471 Lafayette Rd. Hampton, nH (603) 929-7873 Bookkeeping Professionals 680 Lafayette Rd. Hampton, NH (603) 926-EBS3 www.emmith.com Cyan Magenta Yellow Black KIDS BROADCAST 11/10/06 5 PM 30 PPage |A News ovember age30A 4 SEA | tlantic Atlantic News| |NN ovember10, 10,2006 2006||VVol ol 31, 32, N Noo 44 44 Notes Brentwood | East Kingston | Exeter | Greenland | Hampton | Hampton Beach | Hampton Falls | Kensington | Newfields | North Hampton | Rye | Rye Beach | Seabrook | South Hampton | Stratham DOVER | Garrison Players will present “The Fantastics” for two weekends from now through November 19 at the Garrison Players Arts Center, located on Route 4 in Rollinsford. The opening night weekend run was unfortunately postponed due to the illness of one of the lead actors; opening night will now be on Friday, November 10. Any tickets already purchased for the original opening weekend will be honored for the upcoming two weekends of the show’s run. The world’s longest running musical, written by Harvey Schmidt with book and lyrics by Tom Jones, “The Fantastics” is the classic story of two young lovers who learn about life as their meddling fathers plot their relationship. This show is a favorite to be enjoyed by the whole family. Friday and Saturday evening shows are at 8 p.m. and Sunday matinees are at 3 p.m. Tickets at $15 for adults and $10 for students are available by calling 750-4ART or in person at the Dover train station. The arts center is air-conditioned and handicapped-accessible. Garrison Players is a nonprofit, volunteerbased community theatre group dedicated to enriching the cultural life of the area by presenting high-quality theatrical performances geared for family audiences. For more information call (603) 516-4919 or visit www.garrisonplayers. org. Health & Wellness 11/11/06 5 PM BROADCAST New opening night for ‘Fantastics’ Lawn Moe Professional Property Services Now Scheduling Fall Cleanups & Snow Plowing KIDS SPORTS NEWS MOVIES HOBBY LEARNING VARIETY Cyan Magenta Yellow Black ‘Sewing Lessons’ KITTERY | Generic Theater will present a reading of Susan Chamberlin’s new play, “Sewing Lessons” on Tuesday, November 14 in the Rice Public Library’s main building. The reading, which begins at 7 p.m., is free and open to the public. When middle-aged June Hartwood is diagnosed with colon cancer, her loved ones and caregivers gather around her. As a spectrum of responses to both June’s illness and her relationship with her “life partner” Vikki gradually clarifies, lessons about suffering and survival, and the nature and limits of friendship and intimacy, are taught — and, in some cases, learned. “Sewing Lessons” will be read by a cast of Generic Theater regulars and friends, including Peggi McCarthy, Jessica Michaud, Susan Turner, and Bruce Allen. The Rice Public Library’s main building is located on Wentworth Street just past Kittery’s downtown Wallingford Square and the entrance to the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard. After passing the (only) traffic light there, take an immediate right into the parking lot adjacent to the library’s basement (watch for the G. Theater Playreading sign). Additional parking is available in the lot just beyond the library, approximately across from the Town Pizza Restaurant. Property Maintenance AAtlantic tlanticN News ews.C .Com om .. WBZ-4 (CBS) WCVB-5 (ABC) WCSH-6 (NBC) WHDH-7 (NBC) WUNI-27 (UNI) WMUR-9 (ABC) WGBH-2 (PBS) WENH-11 (PBS) WLVI-56 (CW) WSBK-38 (IND) WNRU-21 (PAX) WFXT-25 (FOX) MyTV-50 DISN FAM NICK TOON TVLAND ESPN ESPN2 ESPNC FOXSN NESN CNN CNBC FOXNWS MSNBC NECN HBO MAX SHOW FOOD HGTV TRAVEL A&E DISC HIST TLC AMC MTV TBS TNT E! USA LIFE Gas 5:30 6 PM 6:30 (3:30) College Football Teams to Be Announced. (Live) (CC) College Football NASCAR Racing: Busch Series NASCAR Racing: Busch Series News ’ (CC) News ’ (CC) Primer Impacto: Fin Que de Semana Locura College Football Post Game NBC News NBC News Take part in the Atlantic News’ latest special section, featuring local information on optimizing wellness, from cutting edge technology to old world remedies & alternative medicine. To Advertise Call Michelle or Sheri at (603) 926-4557 7 PM 7:30 8:30 9 PM Proudly Serving the Seacoast Area www.lawnmoe.com 48 Hours Mystery ’ News (CC) (CC) Green’s Maine Dateline NBC ’ (CC) Law & Order: Law & Order: Special News ’ (CC) Criminal Intent (CC) Victims Unit Patriots All-Access Green’s Maine Access Hollywood (CC) News College Football Teams to Be Announced. ’ (Live) (HD) (CC) (:35) The (12:05) Stone Insider Undercover (N) (CC) Post Game Dateline NBC ’ (CC) Law & Order: Law & Order: Special News ’ (CC) Criminal Intent (CC) Victims Unit Sábado Gigante Olga Tañon; Roxana Martinez; Aitor Iturrioz; Jackie Guerrido; Los Tigres del Norte. Chronicle College Football Teams to Be Announced. ’ (Live) (HD) (CC) The This Old House Ask This Masterpiece Theatre (N) ’ (Part Keeping Hour (N) ’ (CC) Old 3 of 3) (CC) (DVS) Up Being Served New Tricks ’ (CC) Post Game The Office Coupling Monty Python Noticiero Otro Rollo Univisión News (CC) Basic Black ’ Wheel of Jeopardy! › Big Daddy (1999, Comedy) Adam Frasier ’ Frasier ’ Without a Trace ’ (CC) (CC) Fortune Sandler, Joey Lauren Adams, Jon Stewart. (CC) King of Queens King of Queens Paid Paid Morris Cerullo Program ’ Program ’ Helpline ’ Friends (CC) Gaither Gospel Hour Healthy ’ Body Stargate SG-1 Mastermi Mastermi Seinfeld ’ (CC) Mitchell disappears. nds nds The Shield (CC) Feud EveryAmerican Idol Paid Raymond Rewind “Audition 5” Program Outdoors 70s 70s Paid Program Good Black Neighbrs Adder Sex and the City (12:05) Entertainment Tonight (N) ’ (12:01) Keeping Score (CC) Monty Python Monty Python GirlsBadly GirlsBadly Scrubs ’ The Shield “Cupid (CC) and Psycho” (CC) ››› Bronco Billy (1980) Clint Eastwood. Shoe sales- Time Life Paid Paid Paid man does Wild West show with heiress and losers. Music ’ Program ’ Program ’ Program ’ Simpsons Cops (N) Cops ’ ’ (CC) Proud Proud Emperor Suite Life Montana So Raven Love Don’t › Two Can Play That Game (2001) (CC) Nicktoon Nicktoon Nicktoon Nicktoon OddPar Sponge Pokémon: Jirachi Wish Maker ’ (CC) Pokemon Yu Gi Oh Bonanza (CC) Bonanza (CC) Bonanza (CC) EveryNews Raymond (CC) Being Served Saturday Night Live Alec Baldwin; Christina Aguilera. (N) Phantom Gourmet American Idol Rewind ’ (CC) Keeping Up Chris Inside Matthews Edition Saturday Night Live Alec Baldwin; Christina Aguilera. (N) All Creatures Great and Small (CC) Bowling Candlepin. (CC) Antiques Roadshow Jackie Onassis: An “Cleveland, Ohio” Intimate Portrait ’ Primer Impacto News (CC) World War II Memorial: The Lawrence Welk A Testament Show Desire (N) (CC) America’s Most News (CC) Wanted-Fights Back Fashion House (N) CSI: Miami ’ (CC) Mad TV (N) ’ (CC) Cheaters (N) ’ Replace Emperor ›› Cadet Kelly (2002) Hilary Duff. (CC) Suite Life So Raven ›› Deliver Us From Eva (2003) LL Cool J. ›› Deliver Us From Eva (2003) LL Cool J. Drake School Mr. Romeo! Full Hse. Fresh Pr. Rose Rose Batman Naruto Naruto Dragonball Z: Fusion Reborn Chicken Trinity Little House Griffith Jeffer Good Cosby Pity Fool 3’s Co. Spike M*A*S*H Feresten (CC) Paid Paid Montana Emperor Two Can Play Design Fresh Pr. Bleach Eureka 7 Murphy Murphy College Football Score (4:00) College Football Overdrive (Live) Strong Strong Strong Strong Dest Wild Pro Foot. Tailgate Downs Camo Putt The Buzz Bruins Score (:45) College Football Teams to Be Announced. (Live) (HD) (:45) SportsCenter (CC) Football Final College Football Teams to Be Announced. (Live) (HD) (CC) NHRA Drag Racing Fast Streetball Strongest Man Boxing Boxing Boxing Boxing Boxing 2003 Poker 2003 Poker Green NBA Basketball: Celtics at Cavaliers (:15) College Football Oregon at USC. (Live) (HD) NHL Hockey Ottawa Senators at Boston Bruins. Bruins SportsD The Buzz SportsD Outdoors NHL Hockey CNN Live Saturday Paid Paid Big Story Weekend Inv: Driver Beware New Engl New Engl This Week at War Tim Russert Fox Report Getting-Murder TV Diner Lou Dobbs Paid Paid Beltway Watch MSNBC Special Evening Evening CNN Presents Deal or No Deal ’ John Kasich Pamela Smart Journey Evening Larry King Live Suze Orman The Line-Up (Live) Investigates News News CNN Saturday Night Tim Russert Big Story Primetime Investigates News News CNN Presents Deal or No Deal ’ Journal Beltway Pamela Smart Sports Sports Larry King Live Suze Orman The Line-Up Investigates News Paid Just (:45) ››› The Hunt for Red October (1990) (CC) ›› The Dukes of Hazzard (2005) (CC) Boxing Calvin Brock vs. Wladimir Klitschko. (CC) Pacquiao Star Wars: Episode II (:35) Star Wars: Episode III -- Revenge of the Sith ›››› Star Wars (1977) Mark Hamill. (CC) (:10) ›››› The Empire Strikes Back (CC) Eagle-Landed Battleground: 21 Days ››› Home Front (2006) (CC) (:15) › BloodRayne (2006, Horror) Dexter (CC) Sleeper Cell (CC) Titans of Taste Designer House Alaska: Walk Sugar Showdown Iron Chef America Dbl Take Designer Mak House Alaskan Wild (CC) Alaskas Arctic Emeril Live Sandra Lee Domino Design Design Design World Poker Tour (CC) Mediums: Dead Mega Builders (CC) Batt. Missouri Property Ladder City Confidential Mega Builders (CC) Unsung Heroes Flip Flip Cold Case Files Space Shuttle Trapped Tower Little Little Drugs at the Border MythBusters (CC) Snipers: Stalk Little People Pie Champion Design Design 5 Takes: USA (N) Cold Case Files The First 48 (CC) Engineering Engineering Civil War Terror (N) (CC) Flip Flip Trading Spaces (N) Iron Chef America Sandra Lee Travis’ Facelift Domino Design World Poker Tour (CC) Amer. Justice Engineering Sex in the Civil War Little Little Cold Case Files Space Shuttle Trapped Tower Flip Flip (4:15) ››› A Bridge Too Far (1977, Drama) Dirk Bogarde. ››› Tora! Tora! Tora! (1970) Martin Balsam, Soh Yamamura. ››› The Enemy Below (1957) (CC) Laguna Laguna Denver Chal Chal Rob & Rob & Channel Parental Parental Momma Momma Momma Momma Denver Chal Hook ›› Snow Day (2000) Chris Elliott. (CC) Grinch ›››› The Wizard of Oz (1939, Fantasy) (:15) ››› Home Alone (1990) (12:15) ››› Hook Gone in Sixty › Exit Wounds (2001) Steven Seagal. ›› Walking Tall (2004) (CC) ›› Walking Tall (2004) (HD) ›› Walking Tall (2004) (HD) 3000 Mls Girls Girls Diddy: True Story E! News Weekend ››› Election (1999) Matthew Broderick. Saturday Night Live Dr. 90210 Dr. 90210 ››› Face/Off (1997, Action) John Travolta, Nicolas Cage. (CC) ›› The Mummy Returns (2001) Brendan Fraser. (CC) Law Order: CI ›› Fear (1996) (CC) A Lover’s Revenge (2005, Suspense) (CC) ›› Indiscreet (1998) Luke Perry. (CC) Monarch Cove (N) Monarch Cove (N) Housewives ›› Serial Mom (CC) Business & service to advertise call 603-926-4557 Construction Full Service Landscaping Company (603) 512-3694 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 12 AM 12:30 CSI: NY “City of the CSI: Crime Scene Dolls” ’ (HD) Investigation Noticiero Casos de Familia: Univisión Edición Especial Post Game 8 PM Entertainment Tonight (N) ’ (CC) WalkWays • Patios • Retaining Walls • gRanite stePs & landings (603) 944-0924 Plumbing ELECTRIC Brown’s Electrical & Home Maintenance Complete Electrical Services • Carpentry • Home Improvements Plumbing • Mobile Homes Remodeling • Fencing • Heating “Specializing in All Homeowner’s Needs” 603-997-1374 31 A ews.C .Com om | S eacoast Entertainment & Arts Atlantic tlanticN News VVol 2006 || A Atlantic tlanticN News ews||PP age531A ol32, 32,NNoo44 44 || NNovember ovember 10, 10, 2006 age SEA . Open Year Round On Route 107 off I-95 at Exit 1 in Seabrook, NH (Schedule subject to change) 603-474-3065 www.seabrookgreyhoundpark.com SPORTS NEWS MOVIES HOBBY LEARNING VARIETY WBZ-4 (CBS) WCVB-5 (ABC) WCSH-6 (NBC) WHDH-7 (NBC) WUNI-27 (UNI) WMUR-9 (ABC) WGBH-2 (PBS) WENH-11 (PBS) WLVI-56 (CW) WSBK-38 (IND) WNRU-21 (PAX) WFXT-25 (FOX) MyTV-50 DISN FAM NICK TOON TVLAND ESPN ESPN2 ESPNC FOXSN NESN CNN CNBC FOXNWS MSNBC NECN HBO MAX SHOW FOOD HGTV TRAVEL A&E DISC HIST TLC AMC MTV TBS TNT E! USA LIFE 5:30 PGA Golf: Merrill Lynch Shootout MLS Soccer: MLS Cup ‘06 6 PM CBS News News (CC) 6:30 News (CC) ABC News 7 PM 7:30 60 Minutes ’ (CC) America’s Funniest Home Videos (N) ’ (3:30) NASCAR Racing Nextel Cup -Checker Auto Parts 500. ’ (Live) (HD) Football Night in America (CC) (3:30) NASCAR Racing Nextel Cup -Checker Auto Parts 500. ’ (Live) (HD) Football Night in America (CC) 8 PM 8:30 The Amazing Race 10 (N) ’ (CC) 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 12 AM 12:30 Cold Case “Fireflies” Without a Trace “Win News (N) ’ (HD) Today” (N) (CC) Extreme Makeover: Desperate (:01) Brothers & News Home Edition (N) ’ Housewives (N) (CC) Sisters “Glass Jumps” (CC) Sports Final Ebert & Roeper (:15) NFL Football Chicago Bears at New York Giants. From Giants Stadium News ’ (CC) in East Rutherford, N.J. ’ (Live) (HD) (CC) (:15) NFL Football Chicago Bears at New York Giants. From Giants Stadium News ’ (CC) in East Rutherford, N.J. ’ (Live) (HD) (CC) Red Sox- Sports Week Machine (12:05) Da Vinci’s Inquest (CC) Sports Action Sports Machine Extra ’ (CC) Sports Extra Primer Impacto Mundial Que Locura Noticiero La Hora Pico Beto el Reyes de la Canción Ganadores de “Cantando Por un Sueño” Univisión Boticario. compiten por un contrato de grabación. Primer Impacto (4:00) Warplane ’ (Part 1 of 2) (CC) Steves Europe Gourmet Globe Trekker “Beirut Nature “Penguins of Masterpiece Theatre “Prime Suspect VII” City Guide” ’ the Antarctic” (N) ’ (N) ’ (Part 1 of 2) (CC) (DVS) Masterpiece Theatre Antiques Roadshow ’ (CC) MLS Soccer: MLS Cup ‘06 Windsor Castle: A Royal Year (CC) News (CC) ABC News Windsor Castle: A Royal Year (CC) All of Us (CC) Girlfriend The Game Hates s Chris Paid Program Paid Program (4:00) Movie America’s Funniest Home Videos (N) ’ Extreme Makeover: Desperate (:01) Brothers & News Home Edition (N) ’ Housewives (N) (CC) Sisters “Glass Jumps” (CC) Antiques Roadshow Nova “Wings of (N) ’ (CC) Madness” (N) ’ Smallville “Rage” ’ 7th Heaven (N) ’ (HD) (CC) (CC) That ’70s That ’70s CSI: Miami “Simple Show ’ Show ’ Man” ’ (CC) ››› A Fistful of Dollars (1964, Western) Clint Eastwood, Gian Maria Volonte. ’ CSI: Miami “Dispo Day” ’ (CC) Disaster Detectives (CC) (DVS) Independent Lens (N) ’ (CC) (DVS) Stone Undercover “Dead Dog Rain” Red Sox- Red Sox Week Stories America’s Next Top Model ’ (CC) ››› The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1967) Clint Eastwood, Eli Wallach. ’ (4:00) NFL Football New Orleans Saints at Pittsburgh The OT ’ Simpsons American Family (Live) Steelers. From Heinz Field in Pittsburgh. (CC) Dad (N) Guy (N) Smallville ’ (CC) Simp Sister Life De (4:00) › Au Pair II Nicktoon Nicktoon Pokemon Pokemon Gunsmoke (CC) Emperor Suite Life Montana So Raven Rodgers & Hammerstein’s Cinderella Amanda School Drake School Coden Partner Foster Lazlo Gunsmoke (CC) Gunsmoke (CC) Simp Cheers Cheers Without a Trace ’ The War at Home The Shield (CC) Lilo & Stitch 2: Glitch Lilo Dr. Dolittle 3 (2006) John Amos. Premiere. Zoey 101 Unfab Fresh Pr. Fresh Pr. Class Ed, Edd Grim Squirrel Little House Griffith Jeffer News (CC) Kung Fu ’ News (CC) CSI: Miami ’ (CC) SportsCenter (CC) NBA Basketball Houston Rockets at Miami Heat. NHRA Drag Racing: Auto Club of Southern Calif. Finals NASCAR Boxing ›››› Raging Bull (1980) Robert De Niro. (CC) Fight League Poker Superstars Blowups BCS In Focus College Basketball Arizona at Virginia. Be a The Buzz SportsD CNN Live Sunday Paid Paid Big Story Weekend Investigates New Engl New Engl CNN Live Sunday Diabetes Wall St Fox Report The Vanishing Drm Evening CNN Presents Net Matthews War Stories-North Held Hostage Evening Evening Ebert & Roeper (12:05) Da Vinci’s Inquest (CC) Hispanic Hispanic Austin City Limits Achv Achv (CC) Sex and the City Smallville “Delete” ’ (CC) Carleton Sheets Without a Trace “Clare de Lune” ’ Tim American McCarver Athlete Seinfeld ’ (CC) Farscape “Thanks for Sharing” ’ Live From Liberty ’ Feed the Paid Children Program ’ King of the Hill My Voice Paid Phil Sadie Suite Life So Raven Dr. Dolittle 3 (2006) John Amos. (CC) Fresh Pr. Fresh Pr. Fresh Pr. Fresh Pr. Futurama Aqua Family Chicken Pity Fool Cosby 3’s Co. 3’s Co. Figure Skating: Skate Canada Basket World World ISKA Boxing Boxing Beach Volley. Beyond the Glory Putt Outdoors Outdoors Outdoors Lou Dobbs Paid Paid Fox News Sunday Meet the Press Evening Evening Noticiero Tras la Verdad Univisión Tiziano Ferro. Paid Autumn Montana J. Osteen Fresh Pr. Squidbill Griffith Emperor Feed Fresh Pr. Dingo Griffith SportsCenter (Live) (HD) SportsCenter (CC) ATP Tennis Masters Cup -- Round-Robin. Boxing Boxing Boxing Track Poker Dome Challenge Red Sox SportsD Red Sox Paid Paid Larry King Live CNN Sunday Night Inside American Airlines: A Week, Life The Line-Up (Live) Big Story Primetime Investigates Meet the Press News News News Journey CNN Presents Net Matthews War Stories-North Held Hostage Sports Sports Larry King Live Am. Airlines The Line-Up Investigates News Paid (4:30) ››› Rudy (1993) (CC) Miss Congeniality 2 ›› The Transporter 2 (2005) The Wire (N) (CC) Comedy ›› Prime (2005) Meryl Streep. Return (:40) Star Wars: Episode I -- The Phantom Menace ›› Star Wars: Episode II -- Attack of the Clones ››› Star Wars: Episode III -- Revenge of the Sith Mind (:25) ››› Hotel Rwanda (2004) (CC) › Godzilla (1998) (HD) Matthew Broderick. iTV. ’ Dexter (iTV) (N) ’ Dexter (iTV) ’ Sleeper Cell (CC) Rachael Ray Kitchens, Baths Grand Castles Titans of Taste Offbeat I Did Super Yachts (CC) Diner, Drive-In Rezoned House Lake Homes Emeril Live (N) Iron Chef America (N) Good Haulin Potential Keys to the Castle Dream Whats Houseboats Million Yachts Log Homes Flay Road Iron Chef America If Walls What Get Haulin Potential Houseboats Million Yachts Sell Spender Assault on Waco Murders Murders Flip Flip Sell Sell Murders Flip Murders Flip Flip This House MythBusters (CC) Death Road (CC) Flip Flip Flip This House The Battle for Rome Engineering Flip Flip Crank-America MythBusters (CC) Dogfights (CC) Flip Flip The First 48 (HD) The Battle for Rome Engineering Flip Flip Intervention (CC) The Battle for Rome Engineering The Monastery (N) Flip This House The Battle for Rome Engineering Flip Flip ManSnow ››› The Undefeated (1969, Western) John Wayne. ››› Cool Hand Luke (1967, Drama) Paul Newman. ››› Man Without a Star (1955, Western) CoolLuke Momma Momma Momma Momma Momma Channel Chal Chal Rob & Rob & Laguna Laguna Denver Parental Parental Parental Snow ››› Home Alone (1990) Macaulay Culkin. Grinch ›››› The Wizard of Oz (1939, Fantasy) (:15) ›››› The Wizard of Oz (1939) Judy Garland. It Takes (4:00) › Blue Streak ››› Rush Hour (1998) Jackie Chan. (CC) ›› Rush Hour 2 (2001) Jackie Chan. (CC) ›› Rush Hour 2 (2001) Jackie Chan. (CC) › Blue Streak Pink: Story Sports Stars E! News Weekend Diddy: True Story Hip Hop Wives Girls Girls Carters The Soup Girls Girls (3:30) The Mummy (:10) ›› The Mummy Returns (2001) Brendan Fraser. (CC) (:02) ›› The Scorpion King (2002) (CC) Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU ›› Murder in the Hamptons (2005) The House Next Door (2006) (CC) Lost Behind Bars (2006) Paget Brewster. Lisa Williams Strong Medicine Funky Divas host fall concert Special to the Atlantic News PORTSMOUTH | The Funky Divas of Gospel will host their annual Fall Concert on Sunday, November 17 from 8-10 p.m. at South Church, located at 292 State Street in Portsmouth. This year is also the Divas’ 15th anniversary, so who better to guest that night than Truffle’s own Dave Gerard who is celebrating his (and Truffle’s) 20th anniversary. For the past 15 years the Funky Divas of Gospel have been performing throughout New England and upstate New York. The group is made up of two dozen talented choir members — soloists Jim White, Jeannie Daniels, Buzz Davenport and Chubby Boothe and The Funky Band including Barbara Whitney on keyboards; Barbara London on flute, Pat Herlehy on guitar and sax; Charlie Daniels on drums and Trish English on bass. Besides their signature Southern Gospel style the Divas have added Zydeco Gospel to their set list and gospel accordion. According to White and Daniels, “Audiences love it. We heard this great zydeco song by the Gospel Hummingbirds called “God’s Radar” and knew it was perfect for us. “To our surprise Barbara Whitney brought in her accordion (who would have thought). Audiences have loved it so much we added another accordion-based song: Bruce Springsteen’s arrangement of Pete Seeger’s ‘Oh Mary Don’t You Weep.’ Of course it doesn’t hurt to have Pat Herlehy on guitar and sax, Barbara London on flute and the rest of this great band.” DIVAS Continued on Following Page• Wondering What your house is Worth? Call me for a complimentary pricing opinion! 432B New Zealand Seabrook, NH $359,000 432B New Zealand Road, Seabrook, NH: 3BR, 2.5Ba, New Home built in 2005, hardwoods, tile, center island kitchen, maple cabinets, stainless, BONUS: 36x36 heated, insulated garage with RV doors for easy access. All on 1.46 of land. Secluded, Rd,acres yet close to commuter routes. $359,000 Easy to show, quick close possible. PAM BAILEY, SRES® REALTOR® (603) 334-1916 Business (603) 770-0369 Cellular Pam.Bailey@NEMoves.com 25 Maplewood Ave, Portsmouth, NH 03801 www.NewEnglandMoves.com/Pam.Bailey.home Owned and operated by NRT Incorporated. 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Phonebet Wager by phone on races at Seabrook and other top Greyhound, Thoroughbred and Harness tracks (Call for details) 32 PPage || Atlantic ews ovember age 32A 6 SEA AtlanticNN ews||NN ovember10, 10,2006 2006 || VVol ol 31, 32, No o 44 44 CNN CNBC FOXNWS MSNBC NECN HBO MAX SHOW FOOD HGTV TRAVEL A&E DISC HIST TLC AMC MTV TBS TNT E! 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Tools •TVs • Appliances • Electronics Locally Owned and Operated 1 Batchelder Rd, Seabrook, NH (next to Sam’s Club) M-F 9-6 Sat 9-6 Sun 10-4 | 603-474-1110 Seabrook Greyhound 95 107 Master McGraths 107 Rd KIDS SPORTS MOVIES HOBBY ESPN ESPN2 ESPNC FOXSN NESN 5:30 er to advertise call 603-926-4557 DISN FAM NICK TOON TVLAND News (CC) To Advertise Call Michelle or Sheri at (603) 926-4557 held Business & service LEARNING Dave Gerard’s musical style has been called electrified rootsy funk, influenced by his love of New Orleans R&B, pop, blues, world music and country-grass. He and Truffle play more than 275 shows a year throughout the US and the US Virgin Islands. He has shared stages with international acts such as Richie Havens, Arlo Guthrie, Phish and the Dave Matthews Band, to name a few. “Funky Divas” performances are suitable for all ages. Tickets for the fall concert are $12 each and are available at Bullmoose Music; by writing jeannie@ funkydivas ofgospel. com; or by calling (603) 828-6317. For more information, visit www.funkydivasofgospel. com. WBZ-4 (CBS) WCVB-5 (ABC) WCSH-6 (NBC) WHDH-7 (NBC) WUNI-27 (UNI) WMUR-9 (ABC) WGBH-2 (PBS) WENH-11 (PBS) WLVI-56 (CW) WSBK-38 (IND) WNRU-21 (PAX) WFXT-25 (FOX) MyTV-50 Take part in the Atlantic News’ latest special section, featuring local information on optimizing wellness, from cutting edge technology to old world remedies & alternative medicine. atc DIVAS From PREVIOUS PAGE 11/13/06 5 PM VARIETY Cyan Magenta Yellow Black EXETER | The Seacoast Artists Association (SAA) will have artist Monique Sakellarios as its featured demonstrator at their meeting taking place at 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday, November 15 at the SAA G a l l e r y, located at 121 Water Street in Exeter. The public is invited to this meeting. Sakellarios, who will present an oil demonstration, creates original oil paintings of landscapes, gardens, and market scenes in the impressionist style. She studied at the Leonardo Da Vinci School of Art and the American University, both in Cairo, Egypt. Sakellarios exhibits in national competitions and has won numerous awards for her oil paintings. She is a juried member of the New Hampshire Art Association, a Signature member of the National Oil and Acrylic Painters Society in which she earned “Best in Show” in their 2006 exhibit. In addition, she is a signature member of Oil Painters of America. Her demo will be a landscape of her choice, and she will bring prints for raffle. For more information on other Seacoast Artists Association events or the upcoming meeting and demonstration, call (603) 7788856 or visit www.seacoastartist.org. BROADCAST Health & Wellness NEWS Special to the Atlantic News Brentwood | East Kingston | Exeter | Greenland | Hampton | Hampton Beach | Hampton Falls | Kensington | Newfields | North Hampton | Rye | Rye Beach | Seabrook | South Hampton | Stratham 1B SAA artist gives oil painting demo AAtlantic tlanticN News ews.C .Com om . 95 33 AAtlantic om | S eacoast Entertainment & Arts tlanticN News ews.C .Com Vol Atlantic tlantic N News ews||PPage age733A Vol32, 32,NNoo44 44||NNovember ovember 10, 10, 2006 2006 | |A SEA. Brentwood | East Kingston | Exeter | Greenland | Hampton | Hampton Beach | Hampton Falls | Kensington | Newfields | North Hampton | Rye | Rye Beach | Seabrook | South Hampton | Stratham Atlantic News SPORTS NEWS MOVIES HOBBY LEARNING VARIETY WBZ-4 (CBS) WCVB-5 (ABC) WCSH-6 (NBC) WHDH-7 (NBC) WUNI-27 (UNI) WMUR-9 (ABC) WGBH-2 (PBS) WENH-11 (PBS) WLVI-56 (CW) WSBK-38 (IND) WNRU-21 (PAX) WFXT-25 (FOX) MyTV-50 DISN FAM NICK TOON TVLAND ESPN ESPN2 ESPNC FOXSN NESN CNN CNBC FOXNWS MSNBC NECN HBO MAX SHOW FOOD HGTV TRAVEL A&E DISC HIST TLC AMC MTV TBS TNT E! USA LIFE News (CC) 5:30 News (CC) News (CC) News ’ (CC) News ’ (CC) News ’ (CC) 6 PM News (CC) News (CC) Curious George Curious George 7:30 8 PM 8:30 News ’ (CC) Nightly News 207 Magazine News (CC) Extra (N) Friday Night Lights ’ (CC) “Homecoming” (N) Access H’wood La Plaza- Nova “Family That Frontline “A Hidden Frontline “The Last Ilan Walks on All Fours” Life” (N) ’ Abortion Clinic” ’ Keeping Up Paid Program Amen ’ Wheel of Jeopardy! 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(CC) While You Were Out CSI: Miami (CC) Dirty Jobs (CC) Modern Marvels Rides “Thump” CSI: Miami (CC) Dirty Jobs: Bite Rogue Waves (CC) Overhaulin’ Dog Dog Dirty Jobs: Bite Mega Disasters Overhaulin’ Dog Dog Everest: Limit Man-Machine Miami Ink (CC) CSI: Miami (CC) Man vs. Wild Modern Marvels Miami Ink (CC) (:15) ›››› Jaws (1975) Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw. (CC) Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid ››› Bend of the River (1952) (CC) Made ’ Parental Momma Denver Sucker Free ’ Games Momma Momma Momma Rob & Rob & Chal Chal King King Seinfeld Seinfeld Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Sex & Sex & Friends Friends Seinfeld Seinfeld Charmed (CC) Law & Order Without a Trace › Twisted (2004) Ashley Judd. (CC) › Twisted (2004) (HD) Ashley Judd. Crimes-Fashion Hilary Swank: Story E! News Daily 10 Diddy: True Story Hip Hop Wives Girls Girls E! News Daily 10 1 Night McCl Law & Order: SVU Monk (CC) Law & Order: SVU › Friday After Next (2002) Ice Cube. (CC) Law Order: CI Still Still Reba Reba Price of a Broken Heart (1999) (CC) (DVS) ››› Dinner With Friends (2001) Premiere. Will Will Gifts Pride, sorrow & chess at Players’ Ring CSI: Miami (CC) Dirty Jobs: Bite Rogue Waves (CC) Overhaulin’ Walk-Proud Laguna Laguna Eight Leg Frks NYPD Blue (CC) Girls Girls Law & Order: SVU Frasier Frasier PORTSMOUTH | “Paul Morphy,” the latest work by talented Portsmouth playwright Noah Sheola, will take the stage from November 16-26 at the Players’ Ring, located on Marcy Street in Portsmouth. S h o w times are T h u r s d a y, Friday and Saturday nights at 8 p.m. and Sunday nights at 7 p.m. There will be no performance on Thanksgiving Day. Sheola’s prose, both touching and humorous, tells the tale of one of America’s first and now forgotten international superstars. Born to a distinguished New Orleans family, Paul Morphy is considered by many to be the greatest chess player who ever lived. His meteoric rise to fame in 1858 and sudden departure from the game just a few years later prompted one contemporary to dub him “The Pride and Sorrow of Chess.” Morphy was a child prodigy, and a Creole aristocrat, a charismatic gentleman fluent in four languages and, in his final years, a paranoid recluse dependent upon his mother’s care. The play depicts Morphy’s futile struggle to escape from the prison of his own phenomenal talent. “Paul Morphy,” featuring Eliot Johnston in the title role, is the fourth play of Noah’s to be produced at the Ring. Noah is a graduate of Bard College. His first play, “Lose Some, Win Some” was the 2002 winner of the Gary Newton Playwriting Competition sponsored by the Players’ Ring in Portsmouth. “The Grotesque History of Marie Antoinette” and “Sent & Sentimentality” received rave reviews and performed to sold-out houses. Tickets for general admission are $10 for members, 12 for non-members. Student and senior tickets are $8 for members, $10 for nonmembers. Reservations are suggested and can be made by calling the Players’ Ring at (603) 436-8123. For more information about “Paul Morphy” and the 2006 season for the Players’ Ring, visit www.playersring.org or call the number above. Business & service to advertise call 603-926-4557 Services Radio GUTTER CLEANING Cornerstone Hardscapes (603) 944-0924 Bicycles Cyan Magenta Yellow Black KIDS BROADCAST 11/14/06 5 PM Mailed weekly to nearly 23,000 Homes!! Positive community and school news from 15 towns Locally owned with an independent voice 5 times the reach at less than half the competitors’ rate! 34 PPage |A News || November age34A 8 SEA |tlantic Atlantic News November10, 10,2006 2006||VVol ol31, 32,NNoo44 44 BROADCAST 11/15/06 5 PM NEWS MOVIES HOBBY LEARNING WHAT A DOLL! — Reservations are now being accepted for Ballet New England’s eighth annual “Nutcracker” Tea. This popular holiday tradition will be held at the Wentworth by the Sea in New Castle on Sunday, November 26 from 10 a.m. to 12 noon and again from 3-5 p.m.; and at the Three Chimneys Inn in Durham on Sunday, December 17 from 3-5 p.m. Guests will have the opportunity to meet costumed “Nutcracker” characters (pictured here is Emily Avery) and be treated to a special 15minute mini-performance featuring excerpts from the “Nutcracker.” Menu selections will vary, as will the cost for the various sittings. Reservations can be made by calling BNE at (603) 430-9309. Seating is limited; RSVP now to avoid disappointment. For more information, visit www.balletnewengland. org. — Atlantic News Courtesy Photo by Budd Perry VARIETY Cyan Magenta Yellow Black NEWINGTON | Jukwaa Mazoa presents the Pulitzer Prize-winning play, “Driving Miss Daisy,” written by Alfred Uhry and playing now through November 19 at the Old Newington Town Hall, located at 336 Nimble Hill Road in Newington. Set in mid-century Atlanta, “Driving Miss Daisy” tells the story of an elderly Jewish matron Daisy Werthan (played by Donna M Goldfarb), her chauffeur, Hoke Coleman (Michael Henderson) and Daisy’s son Boolie (Leslie Alan Coates). At first Daisy is none too happy with being forced out of the driver’s seat. Hoke gradually wins her over, and during the 25-year span of the play the two develop a deep-rooted affection for one another. This incredible production of “Driving Miss Daisy,” performed by an outstanding cast under the direction of Chuck Galle, will run Thursday night at 7 p.m., Friday and Saturday nights at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 3 p.m. Regular ticket prices are $14; Seniors age 60+ and students, $12; and groups of 10 or more, $10 each. For more information, directions or to make a reservation, call (603) 436-2242. To purchase tickets by mail send a check to Jukwaa Mazoa, 93 Beane Lane, Newington, NH 03801; online ticket purchases may be made atwww.Virtuous.com or via e-mail at JukwaaMazoa @aol. com. Take part in the Atlantic News’ latest special section, featuring local information on optimizing wellness, from cutting edge technology to old world remedies & alternative medicine. Health & Wellness KIDS Special to the Atlantic News Brentwood | East Kingston | Exeter | Greenland | Hampton | Hampton Beach | Hampton Falls | Kensington | Newfields | North Hampton | Rye | Rye Beach | Seabrook | South Hampton | Stratham SPORTS Take a ride with ‘Driving Miss Daisy’ AA tlantic NNews tlantic ews.C .Com om .. 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Journal Late Night South Park Entertain The ment Insider (N) Simpsons Malcolm- King of Mid. the Hill Cheaters Paid Montana Suite Life Everwood ’ (CC) School Avatar Partner Xiaolin Good Good Phil So Raven Gilmore Girls ’ OddPar Neutron Foster Foster Jeffer Jeffer Horn Interrupt Billiards NBA Basketball Poker Basket Hoops SportsCenter (CC) Billiards College Basketball NBA Basketball: Grizzlies at Kings SportsCenter (Live) (HD) Interrupt College Football Miami-Ohio at Bowling Green. (Live) (HD) College Basketball Frankly Schwab Strongest Boxing Series of Poker Who’s Number 1? Arliss Seats Boxing Celtics NBA Basketball Indiana Pacers at Boston Celtics. Sports Sports Best-Sports Final Sports NHL Hockey Boston Bruins at Washington Capitals. Bruins SportsD The Buzz SportsD Sports NHL Hockey The Situation Room Kudlow & Company The Big Story Hardball (CC) Live at Five Lou Dobbs Tonight Mad Money Special Report (CC) Tucker Right Business Football Sports Sports Bruins The Situation Room On the Money Fox Report Hardball (CC) Globe Journey Paula Zahn Now Deal or No Deal ’ The O’Reilly Factor Countdown Curtis Business Suite Life So Raven The 700 Club (CC) Rose Rose Futurama Family 3’s Co. 3’s Co. Larry King Live Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) Game On: History of Video Games Deal or No Deal ’ Hannity & Colmes On the Record The O’Reilly Factor Scarborough Investigates Under Suspicion News News LateNight LateNight (4:00) The Age of Innocence › Taxi (2004) Queen Latifah. Meet the Fockers ›› Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005) Brad Pitt. › Shadow of Fear (:05) ›› Sahara (2005), Steve Zahn (CC) Nativity ›› The Transporter 2 (2005) ›› Two for the Money (2005) Al Pacino. (:15) ›› Art Heist (2004) Ellen Pompeo. Contessa Lee Design Design Europe Europe Minute If Walls Europe Emeril-Troops Thanksgiving Romancing the Bird Good Designed Potential Design Design House My Junk Escape Escape Professional Poker Tour (N) Escape Cold Case Files Cash Cash UFO Files (CC) Chef Chef Crossing Jordan It Takes a Thief Days-Shook While You Were Out Minute Good Unwrap Rezoned What Get House Europe Escape Escape CSI: Miami (CC) MythBusters (CC) Modern Marvels Smartest Boy CSI: Miami “Bunk” Engineering Modern Marvels One Too Many Dog Dog MythBusters (CC) Modern Marvels Untold Stories Phil Videos Design Aqua Sanford Paid Phil Phil 7th Heaven ’ (CC) Sponge Drake Pokémon Pokemon Pity Fool Griffith Kim Videos Fresh Pr. Inuyasha Sanford Larry King Live Video Games Special Report Countdown News Inside the NFL (N) Real Time ’ (CC) The Wire ’ ››› The Witches of Eastwick (1987) (CC) Witches-Breast Dexter (iTV) ’ ›› Where the Truth Lies (2005) (CC) Angel Angel Megabuilders (CC) Modern Marvels (N) Building Face Tasty Hammer Escape Angel Angel MythBusters (CC) Modern Marvels One Too Many Thanksgiving Designed Potential Poker Tour CSI: Miami “Bunk” Engineering Modern Marvels Untold Stories (3:30) ››› Hoosiers ››› Romancing the Stone (1984) ›› Three Men and a Little Lady (1990) (:15) ››› 9 to 5 (1980) Jane Fonda, Lily Tomlin. (CC) 3MenLdy Parental Parental Momma Games Sucker Free ’ G Hole Laguna Laguna Laguna Laguna Beach Rob & Rob & Chal Chal King King Seinfeld Seinfeld Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Sex & Sex & (:15) Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star Charmed (CC) Law & Order Without a Trace Without a Trace Without a Trace Without a Trace Las Vegas (CC) Alias “Echoes” 20 Most Horrifying Hollywood Murders E! News Daily 10 Dr. 90210 ››› Election (1999) Matthew Broderick. E! News Daily 10 Carters Carters › Friday After Next Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law Order: CI Law & Order: SVU Still Still Reba Reba Living in Fear (2001) William R. Moses. Stranger in My Bed (2005) Jamie Luner. Will Will Frasier Frasier Going Caroling? Then you need our FREE Christmas Carol Songbook Distributed FREE to Carolers across the region To Reserve Your Books, Please Call (603) 926-4557 35 AA om tlantic N ews Atlantic tlanticN News ews.C .Com om SPORTS NEWS MOVIES HOBBY LEARNING VARIETY WBZ-4 (CBS) WCVB-5 (ABC) WCSH-6 (NBC) WHDH-7 (NBC) WUNI-27 (UNI) WMUR-9 (ABC) WGBH-2 (PBS) WENH-11 (PBS) WLVI-56 (CW) WSBK-38 (IND) WNRU-21 (PAX) WFXT-25 (FOX) MyTV-50 DISN FAM NICK TOON TVLAND ESPN ESPN2 ESPNC FOXSN NESN CNN CNBC FOXNWS MSNBC NECN HBO MAX SHOW FOOD HGTV TRAVEL A&E DISC HIST TLC AMC MTV TBS TNT E! 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(Live) (HD) (CC) SportsCenter (Live) (HD) NFL Live Interrupt Billiards Billiards Fantasy College Basketball: Coaches vs. Cancer College Basketball: Coaches vs. Cancer Quite Frankly Fantasy College Football: 1982 Ala. at Auburn Schwab Kickbox Boxing Series of Poker Blame Blame Arliss Seats Boxing Beyond the Glory Football Sports Tailgate Downs Poker Superstars Best-Sports Sports Sports Best-Sports Final Sports Divers Sports Be a Bruins NHL Hockey Toronto Maple Leafs at Boston Bruins. Bruins SportsD Be a SportsD Sports NHL Hockey The Situation Room Kudlow & Company The Big Story Hardball (CC) Live at Five Lou Dobbs Tonight Mad Money Special Report (CC) Tucker Right Business The Situation Room On the Money Fox Report Hardball (CC) Globe Right Paula Zahn Now 1 vs. 100 (N) (CC) The O’Reilly Factor Countdown Curtis Business Larry King Live Mad Money Hannity & Colmes Scarborough News Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) The Big Idea 1 vs. 100 (iTV) ’ On the Record The O’Reilly Factor Vegas Eyes Blood Brothers News LateNight LateNight Larry King Live Mad Money Special Report Countdown News Miss Congeniality 2 Real Sports Inside the NFL (CC) ›› The Ice Harvest (2005) Pacquiao Cathouse ’ Inside the NFL (CC) (:15) Star Wars: Episode I -- The Phantom Menace ›› Star Wars: Episode II -- Attack of the Clones ››› Star Wars: Episode III -- Revenge of the Sith History (:15) Sunday Driver (:15) ›› Without a Paddle (2004) (CC) ›› Diary of a Mad Black Woman (2005) Un Un White Dexter (iTV) ’ Horror Contessa Lee Design Design Best Bathrooms Minute Minute If Walls Small Ultimate Vacations Good Unwrap What Get House Super Yachts (CC) Emeril Boy Grill Thanksgiving Designed Mak Design Design Europe Passport Joan Cusack Sandra Lee House House Trip of a Lifetime Good Design Europe Cold Case Files Cash Cash Decoding the Past Chef Chef Crossing Jordan ’ It Takes a Thief Conspiracy? (CC) While You Were Out CSI: Miami (CC) 48 Hours Modern Marvels Killer Ants (CC) CSI: Miami (CC) RFK Assassination Engineering Area 51: Fact Kansas City SWAT Last Seen Alive (N) Modern Marvels Crop Circles Cold Case Files Most Evil (CC) Modern Marvels Area 51: Fact The First 48 (N) A Haunting (N) Decoding the Past UFO Stories 40-a-Day Thanksgiving 1 Roof Designed Mak Passport Joan Cusack CSI: Miami (CC) RFK Assassination Engineering UFO Stories WhiteHtr (:45) ››› The Man From Snowy River (1982) ››› Pale Rider (1985, Western) Clint Eastwood. (CC) ››› For a Few Dollars More (1965) Clint Eastwood. Laguna Parental Momma Momma Sucker Free ’ Blasta Rob & Chal Chal Chal Rob & Momma Blasta Games G Hole King King Seinfeld Seinfeld Raymond Raymond Friends Friends Friends Friends ›› Austin Powers in Goldmember (2002) › Lucky Numbers Charmed (CC) Law & Order Without a Trace NBA Basketball Chicago Bulls at Houston Rockets. NBA Basketball: Kings at Warriors Carters Carters Dr. 90210 E! News Daily 10 50 Cutest Child Stars All Grown Up Saturday Night Live E! News Daily 10 Traci Lords: THS (3:30) The Gauntlet Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law & Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law & Order: SVU Still Still Reba Reba The Secret of Hidden Lake (2006) (CC) Break-In (2006) Kelly Carlson. (CC) Will Will Frasier Frasier Danielle Caton’s ‘Mouthwatering’ SAA features photo exhibit Special to the Atlantic News EXETER | The Seacoast Artist Association (SAA) has announced that photographer Danielle Caton has been selected as the featured Artist of the Month for November. The public is invited to join Caton for a reception on Saturday, November 18 from 2-4 p.m. at the SAA Gallery, located at 121 Water Street in Exeter. Caton has been freelancing for about six years and has studied with Jan Macomber, a well-known photographer in her area. “Macomber entertains all of my questions,: she says, “and critiques all of my work which helps me to become better and better at the craft.” In addition to being a member of SAA, Caton has been a member of the Moosehead Arts & Theatre Society in Greenville, ME. She has been selected as the Artist of the Month in downtown New Bedford, and has also shown her work in Fall River, MA and Salmon Falls Mills, NH. One of Caton’s photos on display, entitled “Mouthwatering” and featuring a moose standing in water up to his belly, won a prize at the 2006 Moosemania, Moosehead Lake Region, Chamber of Commerce, Greenville, ME. The image will be published in the 2007 Visitor Guide. For more information on this and other SAA events, call (603) 778-8856 or visit www.seacoastartist.org. Cyan Magenta Yellow Black KIDS BROADCAST 11/16/06 5 PM VVol NNovember 2006 Atlantic tlantic News ews||N age9|35A V ol||32, No 9 | 10, March 10,|| 2006 | ANtlantic ews Page. ol32, 32,NNoo44 44 ovember 10, 2006 A PPage SEA 36 Page 36A | Atlantic News | November 10, 2006 | Vol 31, No 44 Historic Happenings Terms Of The Armistice Terms Provided by John M. Holman, American Legion Post #35 Explanations Provided by John Hirtle, Production Manager, Atlantic News Cyan Magenta Yellow Black With the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir apparent of the AustrianHungarian Empire by Bosnian terrorists in 1914, Europe, and the world was plunged into the horrors of the First World War. By its end, eight million men lay dead. Three empires — the Austrian-Hungarian Empire, the Ottoman Empire (Turkey) and Tsarist Russia were destroyed from within and without. Germany, once the rising power of Europe was brought to its knees, and held largely accountable for a war that had spun horribly out of control from the assassination of one man by a terrorist. Fresh manpower from the United States and another man, President Wilson, helped to force Germany and its allies to the Peace Table. The Germans, tired of war, and facing mutinies in their own armed forces, forced the Kaiser to flee the country for neutral Holland on November 9, 1918. Two days later, the Armistice took effect on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month of 1918. In memory of that historic date, Armistice Day — now known as Veteran’s Day — is observed. Listing the somewhat arcane terms of the Armistice in 2003 is much like trying to explain the finer points of today’s War on Terrorism to a young soldier of 1918. As a result we are listing the Terms of the Armistice followed with a brief explanation in italics. The following terms were set by the Allied powers for the Armistice. 1. Effective six hours after signing. - Owing to the communications of the day it would have taken this long to relay cease fire orders to the front. 2. Immediate clearing of Belgium, France, AlsaceLorraine, to be concluded within 14 days. Any troops remaining in these areas to be interned or taken as prisoners of war. - During World War I, only Belgium was completely overrun, and Holland remained free and neutral for the conflict. Alsace-Lorraine were two provinces of France taken by Germany during the Franco-Prussian War of 18701871. Following World War One, this territory would be returned to France. 3. Surrender 5000 cannon (chiefly heavy), 30,000 machine guns, 3000 trench mortars, 2000 planes. - Cannon (artillery pieces) mortars and machine guns had been used by both sides with deadly effect, as both high explosive and gas-filled shells created the no man’s land of trench warfare. By the end of the war, the Germans had better planes than the Allies, of note the Forker VII fighter. 4. Evacuation of the left bank of the Rhine, Mayence, Coblence, Cologne, occupied by the enemy to a radius of 30 kilometers deep. - The Rhine, a major river in Germany provided a natural boundary to help pen up the Germans. Eventually, the region between France and the Rhine was seized by France for Germany’s non-payment of war reparations, and became the Rhineland — and the first stop for Hitler’s expanding ambitions in 1936. 5. On the right bank of the Rhine a neutral zone from 30 to 40 kilometers deep, evacuation within 11 days. - An added layer of protection for France where most of the fighting had taken place. 6. Nothing to be removed from the territory on the left bank of the Rhine, all factories, railroads, etc. to be left intact. - The Rhine Valley was the industrial heartland of Germany, a very valuable region, with large coal deposits and the heart of the German military-industrial complex during both World Wars. 7. Surrender of 5000 locomotives, 150,000 railway coaches, 10,000 trucks. - Railroads were the chief method of transporting men and materials at the time. Some special railway cars were also fitted with large artillery pieces to move them from one part of the front to another. 8. Maintenance of enemy occupation troops through Germany. - The Allies in Europe, while victorious, were virtually bankrupt and owed enormous sums of money to the United States. For their “occu- ARMISTICE Continued on 39A• AtlanticNews.Com . Games Church News thewordquizard Worship weekly at FCC HAMPTON | Faith Community Church (FCC), located at 112 High Street in Hampton, is a loving, Christ-centered, Biblebased community committed to loving God and one another, and reaching out to the world with the love of Christ. FCC is a “come as you are” church that really means come as you are. We offer contemporary worship and a place where you can be known and loved, and where you can love and know others to the glory of God. We rejoice in being a true family in Christ and want to invite you to visit with us and see if God might call you to become part of our family. Sunday morning worship service begins at 10 a.m. Bible study and prayer are held on Tuesday nights at 7 p.m., and Thursday mornings a 7:30 a.m. (childcare available if needed). For more information, please call (603) 926-7034; e-mail bvabasciano @gmail.com; or visit www.faithcommunity church.info. Weekly worship at R ye Congregational Plug It In, Plug It In ALARM AMPLIFIER ANSWER BATTERY BLENDER BOOM BOX CLOCK COFFEE MAKER CONVERTER COPY MACHINE CRIMPER DRILL FAX MACHINE HAIR DRYER IRON KEYBOARD LAMP MICROPHONE MICROWAVE RADIO RECORDER REFRIGERATOR TELEVISION TOASTER TRANSFORMER Atlantic News Crossword Puzzle By John Hirtle 1 2 3 4 5 6 8 9 10 11 12 13 15 16 18 20 7 14 17 19 22 23 24 28 25 26 29 30 31 32 Across Experience Bethany Church GREENLAND | The Seacoast area community is invited to find an authentic, relevant, and energetic church experience at Bethany Congregational Church, located on Breakfast Hill Road in Greenland. Bethany Church is filled with people from many backgrounds, all dedicated to God in their daily life, and committed to living and worshiping in ways that will change your opinion about church. Bethany’s growing congregation of nearly 2,000 returns to the 25-acre campus not just for the dynamic worship on Sundays, but throughout the week for fun, meaningful fellowship in a number of mediums customized for life in the 21st century. There are almost 50 ministries, all of which emphasize relationships over programs and are designed to fulfill the needs of the congregation and community. For more information and worship service schedules, call Bethany Church at (603) 431-3644. New Covenant Church services 21 27 RYE | Rye Congregational Church, located at 580 Washington Road in Rye Center, holds weekly Sunday worship at 10 a.m. Sunday school is provided for all children and youth. The Lord’s Supper is celebrated on the first Sunday of each month. On Sunday evenings, the Jr. High Youth meet at 6 p.m., and the Sr. High Youth meet at 7 p.m. for special activities. Community Fellowship Night is held on Wednesdays at 5:30 p.m. Adult choir rehearsals are also held on Wednesdays at 7 p.m. Weekly small group and Bible studies are available. The church is handicapped accessible. For more information, call (603) 9644061 or visit www.ryecongregational.com. 24 A Hawaiian greeting. 27 Burrow. 28 A device than casts an intense beam of light. 30 An engine. 31 Hold onto. 32 A useful bean. 11 Dressed animal skin. 1 1/12th of a year. 14 Free from 4 Something that restraint. happens by 15 A married man. chance. 17 An underground 8 A reptile that passage. carries its own 18 A store. home. 21 A goal to be 9 Not cold. achieved. 10 Do a favor. Down 24 A land-based 12 A love affair. 1 A calculating military force. 13 Dash. topic. 25 Not in. 15 Strike. 2 Tell a story. 26 Something you 16 A map. 3 Not solid. breathe. 19 Improve. 5 A step between a 28 A type of 20 A quantity sidewalk and the computer produced at one road. network (initials). time. 29 A distress 22 A mammal that 6 An anesthetic. signal. swims in rivers. 7 A giant. 10 A large group of 23 Knock. musicians. Answers can be found on Page 8A NORTH HAMPTON | New Covenant Church meets weekly at 6 Hobbs Road in North Hampton for Sunday morning services, which begin at 10 a.m. The church also hosts Family Night, a weekly event that happens on Wednesday evening from 5:30-7:30 p.m. Following a pot-luck style dinner there is an opportunity to join a small group study. Childcare is provided. Other programs and activities include the Women’s Prayer Group, Men’s Life group, Coffee Break and Mom to Mom groups, and the Sporting Club. For more information visit www.newcovenantcrc.org or call the church at (603)964-2700. sudokupuzzle Fill in the puzzle grid so that every row, every column, and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 through 9. Answers on 8A 37 Atlantic Classifieds AtlanticNews.Com Novenas PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN (Never known to fail) — O most beautiful flower of Mount Carmel, fruitful vine, splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son of God, Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my necessity. O Star of the Sea, help me and show me where you are my mother. O Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and and Earth, I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in my necessity (make request) There are none that can withstand your power. O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to three (3 times). Holy Mary, I place this cause in your hands (3 times). Say this prayer for three consecutive days and then you must publish and it will be granted to you. P.M. St. Jude’s Novena — May the sacred heart of Jesus be adored, glorified, loved and preserved throughout the world now and forever. Sacred heart of Jesus, pray for us. St. Jude, worker of miracles, pray for us. St. Jude, help the hopeless, pray for us. Say this prayer nine times a day, your prayer will be answered. It has never been known to fail. Publication must be promised. My prayers have been answered. Thank you St. Jude. M.B. THANK YOU GOD. Say nine Hail Marys for nine days and ask for three wishes. First, business, second and third is for the impossible. Have this published on the ninth day and your wishes will come true even though you may not believe in it. Thank you God. S.K. Automotive MINUTE MOUNT PLOW FOR SALE — Plow only for hydraulic set up. Good condition. Minimum Use. $500. Call Bill (603) 498-5998 or (603) 394-7489. 1988 Buick LeSabre — Clean, no body rot. 69K Original Miles. Best offer. (603) 929-7202. 1985 Ford LTL 9000 10 wheeler. — Approx 255,000 miles, one owner Cat 350 diesel 10 spd Fuller Roadranger transmission RT11610 23’ steel flat bed w/ remote control truck mounted unloader. Air brakes w/ Zeks air dryer & Jake Brake 12,000 lb front / 38,000 rear suspension 54,000 GVW 11R x 22.5 tires. Make an offer. Call (603) 926-8733 Still Offering Low Rates for Novenas. Call… (603) 926-4557 Child Care CHILD CARE — TLC in my Hampton home. Dead end street, fenced in play area, small group, meals provided, fun and games, reasonable rates. (603) 926-2235. DAY CARE — East Kingston Day Care has opening before, during and after School Programs available. Kindergarten pick up and drop off, lunches and snacks provided, Great references. Brenda (603) 642-6823. NORTH HAMPTON CHILDCARE — Excellent references, ECE Certified teacher/nurse. 20 years experience. Full nursery, clean, safe, healthy, pleasant environment. Conveniently located to Highway 95 and all surrounding towns. Call (603) 964-4085. INFANT CARE — Looking for caring person to watch my 10 month old son 7:30 am - 1 pm, Mon-Fri. (603) 601-0803. NANNY NEEDED — Child care for 2 boys in our Hampton Home, Tuesday through Friday 7:30 - 4:30. Previous child care experience, excellent references, reliable vehicle required. Kristen, (603) 770-9859. Help Wanted PART-TIME Merchandiser wanted for major greeting card company in the Epping area. Must be able to work days & some weekends and have relaible transportation. Must live withing 15 miles of Epping and have access to a land phone line. Please visit www.hiringedge.com and use job code 110037. EEOC. Join HELP WANTED — my Avon Team. Earn 50%, flexible hours. Start your holiday shopping. $10.00 sign up fee. Receive a free gift. Interested: Call Sue (603) 642-5354. HELP WANTED — The Seacoast Charter School is seeking part time teaching assistants for 1st and 2nd grade and 5th and 6th grade multi-age classrooms. Employment applications available at www.seacoastcharterschool. org, PO Box 892, Exeter, NH 03833. Are you looking for work with: No nights / weekends? Full time hours starting at $10.00? A benefit package? A great place to work? The Maids is looking for more good people to help us keep growing. Stop by at 62 Lafayette Road in North Hampton, NH or Call (603) 964-1633 for details. HELP WANTED — If you are currently at home or you would like to be, we have the opportunity for you. Work PT/FT around your schedule and enjoy unlimited income potential. Call Lisa (603) 9447093. HELP US GROW — Looking for a night manager and counter help. Great working environment, flexible hours. Please call Jay or James at Honeydew Donuts (603) 474-5332. 741 Lafayette Rd, Seabrook. WOULD you like to earn some extra income for the holiday season? Call today to start your Avon Opportunity. Only $10 to start. Call (603) 203-0081. DELI HELP WANTED — O’Brien’s General Store, Rte 107, Seabrook, NH. Stop by or call (603) 474-2722. For Sale COMPLETE HOME ENTERTAINMENT SYSTEM $650. JVC 35” Stereo TV JVC Audio/Video Receiver, Toshiba 5 Disc DVD/CD, 6 Infinity Speakers, Oak/ Glass Entertainment Center. Will sell individually. Alpine Car FM/CD Player $85, Air Hockey Table $85, 30 Gallon Aquarium Complete with Stand $150. Steve (603) 5561810. COINS: 1890-CC A/U bluetone P/L $215; Marine Dollar Proof $90; Vietnam Dollar Proof $99; 1892 Columbian Simi-Proof $190; 1913 Type 11 Buffallo PCGS64 $145; 2001-S “Limited Edition Signature Series” ICG Proof 69 State Quarters $150; 1933 Cuban Republic B/U Silver Dollar $99; Also, perform reasonable appraisals of all US Coins. Hampton (603) 929-4915. John Deere Tractor 22HP 4x4 Hydromatic Diesel 62” Mowing Deck, 6’ Frontier Rack, Quick Attach Set Up, Weight Box, Tire Chains, Rear Tires Filled, Only 1 Year Old, Hardly Used, Still Looks and Works Like Brand New. Have It All For $12,500 Call (603) 505-7445 Take Out An Atlantic News Classified 30 Days | 30 Words | $30 ! 25¢ for each additional word FOR SALE — New golf clubs and bag set — Ladies Mega Force titanium reinforced matrix oversize big TI Blast Cleveland Putter VASI Red/Black Bag, Firebird (Men/Ladies), Tees, Balls, Glove all for $200.00 (603) 926-3979. FOR SALE — 84” Colonial Sofa, Navy Waverly Plaid, $100. Blye leather lounger, $100. Mahogany antique electric player piano, $3,000 - Best offer. (603) 9646338. LAUNDRY PURE — New way to do laundry. No soap, bleach or hot water wash, all colors at once. No detergent goes down the drain. Environmentally friendly silvernano technologywave of the future. Tony Romano, North Hampton, (603) 964-6650. JEWELRY FOR SALE — One of a kind designs just for your. http:// stores.ebay.co/ craftacular-designs. A NH/CT Based business. Call in NH (603) 601-2346. HOT TUB / SPA — 2006 model, loaded. All options, hydrotherapy package w/ cover. Cover lifter & stairs Cost $6,500, Sacrifice $3,200. Can deliver. (603) 234-2483. Name: Address: Town State|Zip: Phone: Period to Run Ad: Please Return with Payment to: Atlantic News PO Box 592 • Hampton, NH 03843 OR: Phone: (603) 926-4557 • Fax: (603) 926-4531 AFTER SCHOOL PROGRAM COUNSELOR The Town of Rye Recreation Department After School Program is a quality program that offers controlled and free play activities for school-age children. Currently applications are being accepted for the position of part-time counselor. M-F, 2:00 - 6:00 p.m. Applicants must be 18 or older with experience/education in Early Childhood Education or related field and must pass criminal records check. Forward cover letter and resume to: Jonathan Carleton, Program Director TOWN OF RYE RECREATION DEPT. 10 Central Road, Rye, NH, 03870 Tel. (603) 964-6281, Fax (603) 964-1516 Cyan Magenta Yellow Black St. Jude’s Novena — May the sacred heart of Jesus be adored, glorified, loved and preserved throughout the world now and forever. Sacred heart of Jesus, pray for us. St. Jude, worker of miracles, pray for us. St. Jude, help the hopeless, pray for us. Say this prayer nine times a day, your prayer will be answered. It has never been known to fail. Publication must be promised. My prayers have been answered. Thank you St. Jude. A.J.H. Vol 32, No 43 |November 3, 2006 | Atlantic News | Page 37A . 38 Page 38A | Atlantic News | November 10, 2006 | Vol 31, No 44 Atlantic Classifieds For Sale BED — Queen, luxury firm pillowtop mattress. New in plastic. Cost $995, Sell $295. King $475. Twins & Fulls (603) 433-6026. BEDROOM SET — 8 pc. Cherrywood sleigh. Dresser/ mirror chest and 2 nice stands. New in boxes. Cost $3,995, Sell $1,475/ (603) 431-5289. Year Round/ Winter Rentals Cyan Magenta Yellow Black -North Beach -Efficiencies $650/Up -1 Bedrooms $800/Up -Easy access to Route 101 and I-95 -Cable, phone, and utilities included -No pets Bailey’s beach resort 603-926-3306 1-888-343-4934 933 Ocean Blvd, Hampton baileysbeachresort.com Winter Rental WINTER RENTALS — Two units, furnished, one at $700/mo., one at $775/mo. Utilities not included. No pets. Security? Call (603) 926-4601 or (508) 797-2691. Rentals Rentals SEABROOK Two bedroom condo good and convenient location. Private yard with deck and laundry hook ups. $1,200.00/month, plus $1,200 deposit. Utilities not included. No smokers, will consider small pets. (603) 926-3434 or cell (603) 9570001. Stratham 2 Bedroom Condo at Salt River — Available immediately. Includes laundry, furnishings, and updated kitchen. Private, oil heat. $1,300/mo + utils Call Dane at EXIT RE 5665460. www.exit11re.com SEABROOK NH — Beautiful Duplex w/ large eat-in kitchen. 2 or 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Quiet neighborhood. Close to beach and highway. No pets/ smoking. Security deposit and lease required. $1,525 p/month plus utilities. (603) 929-6459. Classifieds - (603) 926-4557 APARTMENT FOR RENT — Hampton Falls. Large 2 bedroom, first floor. All utilities included. Private yard, small pet okay. Nonsmoking. Great locations, $1,600/Month. (603) 9261662. F O R R E N T — H a m p t o n Beach: Year round studios $600 to $700. One bedroom, $750. Two bedrooms, $800. Lease required. (603) 4986896. Services SALISBURY BEACH, MA — Year round nice 2 bedroom starting at $895 monthly. Also large studio, $795 monthly. Both include heat and electricity. No pets. Call (978) 499-0556. CHRIS’ PAINT & POWERWASH SERVICE — Interior painting and power washing. “No job too small.” Call for free estimate. (603) 997-1279 (Cell) (603) 9260161 (Office). Need One Classified for One Week? 30 Words - $10 Call (603) 926-4557 TUTOR — Certified special needs teacher looking for students that need reading, writing or study skills help. (603) 601-0803. Services We dig it landscaping fall clean ups — Complete landscape service. Let us decorate your home for the holidays. We hang Christmas Lights. Book services for next year. Free estimates. (603) 6860106. RELIABLE REMODELING — General contractors, all types of carpentry. Window replacements - Harvey windows. All types of decks, bathrooms. Ceramic tile work, painting and drywall. Any small jobs and handyman work. Call for free estimate. Fully insured with Mass. Builders license. 1-800-8316701 or (603) 512-5363. CHAIR & FURNITURE GLUING and REPAIR — Have your furniture reglued, repaired, cleaned and polished if needed before your holiday company arrives. Chairs are our specialty! Please Call (603)964-5109 KULKA & COSTANZO PAINTING- Interior / Exterior Painting and Restorative light carpentry. Exeter area. Precision prep. Quality paints meticulously applied. Seven years experience. Call Gabriel at (631) 764-2924 or email us at kulkacostanzopainting@ gmail.com Classifieds (603) 926-4557 HANDCRAFTED GRANITE COUNTERTOPS — Fireplace Surrounds, Vanities & More. We are a small shop located in Exeter doing high end work at reasonable rates. Don’t go to Home Depot! We do one job at a time. Get the real handcrafted and personalized service only Big Island Granite can offer. Call Ralph at (603) 369-2756 or email us at bigislandgranite@ gmail.com Services HOUSE CLEANING — Dependable Thorough and Affordable. Bonded & Insured. Clearwater Cleaning Services at (603) 760-2282. FALL LANDSCAPING SERVICES — It’s never too late to spruce up your yard! Beds, mulching, weeding, pruning, woods clearing, wildflower & fall plantings and cleanup. We do the hard work!! Family owned & operated. Call Yard Care at (603) 770-6931 or e-mail yardcare06@yahoo.com. PLUMBING & HEATING — Repairs, remodeling, new homes, mobile homes, gas piping, oil tanks, gas fireplaces, space heaters, appliances, hotwater heaters, pool heaters, pumps. Seacoast Plumbing & Heating. Call (603) (603) 944-0400. Electric and home maintenAnce — Fans, outlets, generators, lightening protection, electrical services, phone, cable, internet, plumbing, heating, flooring, all home improvements, remodeling & dog fencing. All repairs, reasonable rates. (603) 997-1374. NOW is the time — window cleaning. Star Spangled Window Cleaning. Inside and out. Screens and window sills. Wash window wells. Unlimited gutter cleaning. Call Chris. Don't Wait! Affordable, free estimates. Call (603) 9290433. NOW IS THE TIME — Yard sprucing. Trim the brush at the head of the driveway for greater visibility, pull weeds and pick up butts. In the end, fill a 5x8 trailer and make a dump run. Free estimates. Call (603) 929-0433. SIMPLY CLEAN AND MORE — House cleaning, laundry, shopping, or other chores. Moving in or out, we will also help you pack or unpack. Call Kate (603) 929-4268. FALL CLEAN UP — Spend time with your family, not your lawn. Fall clean up leaf removal. You rake ‘em, we take ‘em. Free estimates. Call Apex Property Maintenance at (603) 926-APEX (2739) Wood floor re-finishing. Competitve pricing. Expertly done Call Eric @ Eno Building Supplies Rte1 Hampton 603 926 8733. BOOKKEEPING — Accurate and dependable bookkeeping service, your office or ours. QuickBooks-trained to get the job done quickly and accurately. Call Lisa at C&L Business consultants today (603) 944-7093. Services C & D R E M O D E L I N G — Contractor for all your needs. All types of roofing, siding and painting. Harvey distributor of windows and doors. Structural jacking. Free estimates. Fully insured. Great references. call (603) 918-7165. REASONABLE RATES — Handyman, carpentry, masonry, plumbing, heating & faucet repair. Additions, decks, bathrooms. Aqua blasting. Fully insured. Call Jim @ (603) 772-5177 or (603) 706-8468. ClassifiedsThat Work! (603) 926-4557 LIFE INSURANCE FOR SENIORS — Insurance coverage to $25,000. Issue age 0-80 • “Yes/ No” Application • No medical exam • Simplified, quick issue • No “smoking” questions. Call Ray A. Lefavor, LUTCF @ (603) 926-8564. FALL CLEAN UP SPECIAL! — Complete Lawn Care Services: Leaf clean up, raking, mowing, spruce up, mulch areas, weeding, pruning, walkways. Also now offering PRESSURE WASHING: Clean siding, decks, driveways, windows, etc. We do it all. Professional and detail oriented! Call for your FREE ESTIMATE. We will beat any other quote by 10%. *Snow plowing available for winter*. Coastal Lawn Care. (603) 944-6110. AtlanticNews.Com . Business HOME BUSINESS — Earn income from home with gourmet candles. All natural vegetable wax, double cotton wicks, no black soot, over 90 scents available. Be in business in 10 minutes for less than $50. Earn cash for Christmas, earn cash for life. Call Sharon at (603) 7788689/ www.mybellalite.com. HEALTH & WELLNESS BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY — Turn friends/ resourceful people into networking cash cows. Get involved with this new anti-aging supplement, skin care company. A new scanner measuring skin antioxidant levels just arrived; this is HUGE! Call for a free scanning/ skin nutrient evaluation, (603) 661-1597. Function Hall American Legion Function Hall, Hampton, NH for rent. Holds up to 85 people. Completely Renovated. Call Joe (603) 964-6152 or (603) 9264668. Lost LOST INDOOR CAT — 3 years old, short haired, grey with white paws, answers to the name of Kirby. Vicinity of west Hampton, Gale Road, off Exeter Rd. Reward. (603) 918-6487. Wanted I BUY FIXER-UPPERS HOMES & MULTI-FAMILIES (603) 498-8377 39 AtlanticNews.Com Vol 32, No 44 | November 10, 2006 | Atlantic News | Page 39A . The Racing Corner Stewart wins at Texas By Gerald Hodges The Racing Reporter Special to the Atlantic News went on to his fifth win of the season. With his second-place finish, Johnson has now gone from eighth to first in points in the last four races. “The 20 car was fast all night long,” said Johnson. “I just didn’t have anything for him. I had some problems like the window net popping out under green flag, and I had to get it back up on my own.” He added, “It was a wild night, but it was a good night, and I’m proud of the team.” Dale Earnhardt Jr. was suffering from the effects of flu, but still managed a sixth-place finish. “The first part of the race it wasn’t any good at all,” he said. “But the guys got to working on the car and I got to feeling better, and that last half of the race I was fine. It was a good finish, because we just couldn’t get a hold of pation” it made sense for the Germans to pay the wages of their soldiers. Unfortunately, the Germans were just as deep in debt as the Allies, and the huge financial reparations demanded by the Allies were never completely paid. 9. In the East all troops to withdraw behind the boundaries of August 1, 1914, fixed time not given. -Germany’s conflict with Russia during World War One is often overlooked as it spawned a civil war that destroyed Tsarist Russia and led to the creation of the Soviet Union. The German Army had penetrated deep into Russia during World War I due to a lack of leadership amongst the Russian military, and had also gained even more territory following the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, a peace treaty made independently between Germany and the new Soviet government they had helped establish in Russia. 10. Renunciation of the Treaties of Brest-Litovsk and Bucharest. - The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk was a particularly harsh peace treaty dictated by Germany to the fledgling Soviet Russia in 1918. Among the terms was the loss of Russian territory from Finland to the eastern portion of the Black Sea, and monetary demands. Lenin (who had been sent back to Russia by the Germans) agreed to this mainly because the Soviets were fighting a civil war against the opposing White Russians who were backed by the Allied powers. Ironically, the success of the Communists in Russia led to a number of revolts in Germany following the war, which would be crushed- not to mention the occupation of East Germany by the Soviets after World War II. The Treaty of Bucharest was an equally punishing peace imposed by Germany, the Austrian-Hungarian Empire and Turkey on Romania which had entered the war as an ally of Russia. 11. Unconditional surrender of East Africa. - East Africa was one of the few German colonies that was able to resist the Allies for the duration of the war. Of course, it was in a rather unimportant region of the conflict. After the war, the colony was taken over by the British until 1961. The region is now known as the country of Tanzania. 12. Return of the property of the Belgian Bank, Russian and Rumanian gold. - Belgian Bank property had been seized by the Germans after they had invaded that country; the Russian and Rumanian gold were taken as part of the peace treaties with those countries. 13. Return of prisoners of war without reciprocity. - As in any war, prisoners were taken - although never on the same scale as those taken in World War II. Allied prisoners were to be returned without harm. Captured German personnel would continue to be held by the Allies. 14. Surrender of 160 U- boats, 8 light cruisers, 6 Dreadnoughts; the rest of the fleet to be disarmed and controlled by the Allies in neutral or Allied harbors. - Most of the German High Seas Fleet, already in a state of semi-mutiny was sent to Scapa Flow, the British Navy’s chief base of operations. In a final act of defiance, the remaining crews scuttled the fleet at anchor as final peace talks dragged on. A few were saved or salvaged, but most remain at the bottom of Scapa Flow. Of the six U-Boats given to the United States, the U-111 was sent to the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard where it was studied, tested and dismantled. Lessons learned from it improved American submarine technology, and led to the design of the “Portsmouth Compressor” a ballast-blowing pump that was the standard on US submarines until World War II. The stripped hull of the U-111 was sunk off the Seacoast as a target. 15. Assurance of free trade through the Cattegat Sound; clearance of mine fields and occupation of all forts and batteries, through which transit could be hindered. - Cattegat Sound is the body of water laying between Denmark and Sweden. During both World Wars, German command of this vital waterway cut off easy access to Russia, as well as Finland and Sweden. To the Allies, desperate to stop the Soviets, the opening of this strait allowed them to send troops and ARMISTICE From 36A the car.” Tony Stewart, Jimmie Johnson, Kevin Harvick, Kyle Busch, Clint Bowyer, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Casey Mears, Kurt Busch, Jeff Gordon, and Denny Hamlin were the top10 finishers. The ten Chase contenders with two races remaining: 1. Johnson-6157, 2. Kenseth6140, 3. Earnhardt-6079, 4. Hamlin-6077, 5. Harvick-6052, 6. J. Gordon-6000, 7. J. Burton5973, 8. Kyle Busch-5924, 9. Martin-5904, 10. Kahne-5867. With only the Phoenix and Homestead races left on the schedule, it appears the 2006 Nextel Cup Championship will be decided between Johnson, Kenseth, and Earnhardt. Chase chances gone for Jeff Burton A right front tire blew out on Jeff Burton’s No. 31, during Sunday’s race at Texas, and ships to Russian ports in what would be a failed attempt to stop the Communists from staying in power. 16. The blockade remains in effect. All German ships to be captured. - This may have been the cruelest condition of all — cut off from imports of food, coupled with poor harvests resulted in food shortages and unrest in Germany. By this point, any German ship not in a German port probably had been sunk, captured, or pressed into service by the Allies. 17. All limitations by Germany on neutral shipping to be removed. - Germany had declared unrestricted submarine warfare on Britain, which had nearly lead to England to surrender first before the use of convoys lessened the impact of U-Boat warfare. This unrestricted submarine warfare was also one of the key reasons that the United States entered the war. 18. Armistice lasts 30 days. - It took considerably longer than this to create the Treaty of Versailles, a 200page treaty that Germany was forced to sign on June 28, 1919. While President Wilson had managed to soften the harsh terms dictated on Germany by the victorious European Allies, the groundwork of resentment was laid which would lead to the rise of the Nazi Party and Hitler and the Second World War. doomed his chances of making this year’s Chase. But despite the bad luck he has endured for the past three races, Burton continues to embrace a mature attitude. “I have done my best to prepare myself emotionally for whatever this sport or whatever life brings me,” said Burton. “Not to say that I’ve prepared myself as well as I could have, but I’ve tried. Coming into this chase, I understood, believed that there would be moments of excitement, hoped there would be moments of excitement, and understood there would certainly be moments of disappointment.” For two brief weeks, Burton was the leader, but after three races, he fell to seventh, 184 points out of first. “I haven’t gotten caught up when we were leading,” he continued. “I haven’t gotten caught up in that, because I’ve said to you guys to begin with I thought with two to three races to go, you start to get into it a little bit, now we’re the pursuer. “How that affects us, I don’t know. We’re still going to go out and do our best job, but I don’t feel like I’ve been on a roller coaster. “I’ve been in this sport a long time. And Jimmie Johnson and I were talking about this before the race on Sunday, look at any 10-race period throughout the year and how many teams go through that 10-race period without struggle, without problems. It’s very few. “So certainly the microscope is on this 10-race program. There’s no question about it. But we, as competitors, understand that just because it’s the chase doesn’t mean that it’s any different than any other time of the year, it just has more importance to it.” NASCAR Chairman Brian France promised slight changes to the sport’s championship format, hoping to add more drama to the 10-race title hunt in 2007. This past week on “NASCAR Live,” Bob Dillner reported that NASCAR is considering increasing the number of drivers making the Chase next year from 10 to 12. He said NASCAR is also looking at a new points system for chase participants. One aspect that is being talked about is to widen the Chase field and award more points to race winners. Another, though considerably more controversial option, would be to score the drivers in the Chase separately than the other 33 cars in each race. Thus, the highest-finishing Chase driver would get 10 points, while the driver who finishes last would receive just 1 point Harvick, Bodine in lead Kevin Harvick put together another dominant performance, leading 145 of 200 laps en route to winning the O’Reilly Challenge 300 at Texas Motor Speedway on Saturday. Harvick has won both races since clinching the 2006 Busch Series Championship at Lowe’s Motor Speedway. And, with only two races left in the 2006 Craftsman Truck Series schedule, Todd Bodine has a 137 point lead over Johnny Benson. Top-10 Busch Series leaders with 2 remaining races: 1. Harvick-5323, 2. Edwards-4489, 3. Bowyer-4388, 4. Hamlin-4342, 5. Yeley-4177, 6. Menard-3853, 7. Kyle Busch-3747, 8. Biffle3613, 9. Sauter-3530, 10. Sorenson-3487 Top-10 Craftsman Truck leaders: 1. Bodine-3406, 2. Benson-3269, 3. Reutimann- 3241, 4. Musgrave-3144, 5. Crawford-3070, 6. Hornaday-3068, 7. Starr-3059, 8. Sprague-3027, 9. Cook-3005, 10. Skinner-2986 Weekend Racing All three of NASCAR major series’ will be at the 1mile Phoenix Raceway. Fri., Nov. 10, Craftsman Truck Series Phoenix 150, race 24 of 25; Starting time: 8 p.m. (EST); TV: Speed Channel; Distance: 150 laps; Defending champion: Todd Bodine, Toyota. Sat., Nov. 11, Busch Series Arizona.Travel 200, race 34 of 35; Starting time: 3 p.m. (EST); TV: TNT; Distance: 200 laps; Defending champion: Carl Edwards, Ford. Sun., Nov. 12, Checker Auto Parts 500, race 35 of 36; Starting time: 4 p.m. (EST); TV: NBC; Distance: 312 laps; Defending champion: Kyle Busch. Atlantic News readers can email their NASCAR questions to hodgesnews@earthlink.net. Cyan Magenta Yellow Black FT. WORTH, TX | Tony Stewart won Sunday’s Nextel Cup Dickies 500 at Texas Motor Speedway in what he called, “the perfect race car,” and at the end, Stewart’s two fresh tires were better than runner-up Jimmie Johnson’s four. “I thought we had the perfect car all day, we really did,” said Stewart. “Kasey (Kahne) was the closest guy to run with us, but even he fell off there at the end.” Stewart led 273 of the 334lap race, and except for the last eight laps, it was a long and boring event. Greg Biffle hit the wall on lap 326, bringing out the second-to-last caution. During the caution period, Kasey Kahne, who was running sec- ond lost the engine in his No. 9 Dodge. When green flag racing resumed, the leaders were Stewart, Scott Riggs, Kevin Harvick, and Jimmie Johnson. Johnson was able to immediately get by Harvick for third. Within a lap, Johnson had pulled up on the rear of Riggs, who moved down to the bottom of the track. By this time Harvick came up with a full head of steam, and touched the rear bumper of Riggs’ No. 10, sending him into the outside wall. As Riggs car slid down the track, several other cars slammed and banged into each other. This set up a green/ white/ checkered finish with Johnson, Harvick, Kyle Busch, Clint Bowyer, and Dale Earnhardt Jr., lined up behind Stewart. Johnson was not able to close on Stewart, as Stewart 40 Page 40A | Atlantic News | November 10, 2006 | Vol 31, No 44 AtlanticNews.Com . Cyan Magenta Yellow Black