Friday, September 24, 2010

Dover High School Homecoming set for October 2


DOVER —
The schedule of events for the First Annual Dover High School Homecoming to be held on Saturday October 2, 2010 on the DHS campus has been announced. The event is open to the public and in particular anyone that attended either the “old” or “new” Dover High Schools. Day-long activities will begin with an “Alumni Division” in the Dover Apple Harvest road race in downtown Dover and end with the varsity football game on Dunaway Field.
The homecoming committee has been working several months to present a well rounded program with doors at the Alumni Drive Dover High School opening at 9 am and featuring a three ring affair with entertainment in the Frederick C. Walker Auditorium, athletic events starting at 10 am in The Oliver J. Adams Gymnasium and Judson Dunaway Fields and class meetings and school tours originating from the mezzanine, cafeteria and Mary C. Reilly Library.
Historic displays include several videos, including a recently produced interview with three of the honorees of the first homecoming, former high school principals A. Harvey Knepp, Kent Rosberg and Greg Kageleiry along with a slide show presentation from 60 years of DHS yearbooks. Football game ceremonies will include introduction of four outstanding contributors to Dover High School as well as the Dover American Legion Post 8 coordinated salute to veterans and active military at 1:15 pm, prior to kick-off of the Dover-Alvirne varsity football game. Halftime of the football game will feature a special half-time show by the Green Wave marching band and alumni.
Evening events will continue the homecoming theme as independent, post homecoming venues welcome alumni including informal gatherings at favorite Green Wave establishments Kelley’s Row, Roger’s Pizza and a special performance by The Spectras at the Somersworth VFW Hall. For more information and Spectras ticket forms email DHS.Homecoming@gmail.com.
Photo caption: The diploma of Henry Clinton Fall from the class of 1880 suprisingly arrived in the mail at Dover High School this summer. (Courtesy photo)

Comic Genius


By Chip Schrader
Book Review Editor
Author and cartoonist Daniel Clowes made his name in the graphic novel and independent film circles with “Ghost World,” a film that starred the then undiscovered sixteen-year-old actress Scarlett Johansson. Since then, Clowes has authored some of the most edgy, irreverent, hilarious and tragic portraits of everyday life that echoes the works of Al Jaffee and Don Martin of MAD Magazine, R. Crumb (Fritz the Cat) and the late Harvey Pekar (American Splendor).
His latest effort, “Wilson,” is a portrait of a loner who could easily be defined as a lost soul, or even a loser to less sympathetic readers. Wilson is only a logical extension of Clowes’s work as Wilson’s life story is divided up into single page comic strips, form Clowes had worked with in last work “Ice Haven.”
Wilson is a shabbily dressed man whose semi-estranged father is comatose, and his life in Oakland is far from satisfactory. The first portion of the book deals with his distaste for modern culture, and the lack of identity that Oakland seems to exude. Oakland plays as a nice backdrop for a character that seems listless and has a personality that is difficult to categorize, or even nondescript, a complaint Wilson states about Oakland. But, his father’s loneliness seems to spark insight into his own existence.
Soon Wilson searches for his ex-wife and a daughter he never knew. The three of them are starkly awkward within the real world, and no less awkward with each other as a family unit, which somehow makes perfect sense. Wilson swore his wife left him and ended up in prostitution, and there were times one wondered if that wasn’t better than being stuck with Wilson.
The bickering, the one liners, and absolute disdain for the mainstream make this semi-tragic comedy gut busting. All the while, Clowes taps into the universal curmudgeon that waxes and wanes within all of us, and creates a character that is as easy to identify with as he is to nauseate with his irritability. Wilson is every bit lovable as he is off-putting, and he is easy to see in the mirror at many turns of the page. By the end, we hope to see Wilson get a glimmer of insight and enlightenment, but will he? Or was he already enlightened, and is that why hid path is so jagged.
Offbeat is Clowes’s signature, and “Wilson” wears it proudly. The content is for adults and more mature adolescents, and while stories are often hard to follow or are often superficial in graphic novels and comics, Daniel Clowes’s is a master of juggling simplicity and nuance while treading into the depths of human psychology and sociology. Clowes’s other great works: “David Boring” and “Ghost World” should not be missed, either. A must read for any comic strip fans, or those with a taste for social satire.
Photo caption: Cover to Daniel Clowes’ Ghost World, a graphic novel. (Courtesy photo)

Help Your Child Succeed in School

STRAFFORD COUNTY—
Now that another school year is here, children are heading back to the classroom and parents might wonder what they can do to help their children succeed in school.
Most parents would say they want their children to know the alphabet and how to begin to count as their child begins school, but most kindergarten teachers and multiple research studies tell us social, emotional learning paves the way for academic learning.
Helping children develop strong social/emotional skills is one major key to school success. It’s hard to teach children who don’t listen, don’t get along with others, and aren’t interested in learning.
Some key social/emotional skills children should learn include how to follow directions, get along with others, stay focused, solve problems with words rather than aggression, work independently or within a group, and identify and manage their emotions and behaviors.
Children learn important social and emotional skills when they solve problems that arise in play with others. Playing games with your toddler can help prepare him/her for school in a couple of years.
Offer children a balance of “choice time,” such as free play, and time for structured play.
Help them with this balance by providing a regular routine. Help them schedule their time. Make sure they have time for both schoolwork and fun activities.
Parents can establish a routine for meals, bedtime and homework; provide books, supplies and a special place to study. They can encourage their children to “ready” themselves for studying by refocusing their attention and learning to relax. Offer to study with them periodically, such as spelling words or using flash cards.
Part of a daily meal routine includes making sure children eat a good breakfast. As simple as it sounds, according to an expert in Penn State’s College of Agricultural Sciences, “Eating breakfast improves concentration, memory and problem-solving ability. Eating breakfast improves the brain’s ability to function and gives you the energy to get you going and keep you going throughout the day.”
According to Katherine French, registered dietitian and extension educator, this is especially important for school-age children because “those who eat breakfast are more alert, less irritable, participate more fully in learning activities and have better behavior. These kids have longer attention spans, get better test scores and are tardy and absent less often.”
In many ways, parents are the most important teachers children will have and it’s important to support your children’s education both at school and at home. Children continue to learn outside of school. The more positive and constructive learning experiences children have outside of school, the better they do in school. Establish regular communication with your child’s teachers. As a parent, you know your child best. Help your child’s teacher understand his/her strengths and struggles, daily life, and culture making the teacher/student connection stronger and more meaningful. This helps bridge the connection between what children learn in the classroom with their lives outside of school, keeping them engaged and excited about learning.
Talk with your child’s teachers about the kind of behavior you both expect from the child. Children learn better when parents have clear and reasonable expectations. Then, give your children frequent verbal support and praise them often in their schoolwork, progress and efforts. Let kids know you care about them and how they perform in school; this increases their self-confidence and helps them do better in school.
Remember, your children watch you, so be a role model for education and learning. Set a positive example by reading, studying, asking questions, and talking about education. The important thing for parents to remember is they are the most important teachers in their child’s life. Children are born eager to learn, but parents need to help them channel that learning. Talking with children before, during, and after any activity helps them learn the steps involved in learning.
To learn more about parenting and other family topics, contact Ellen Rondina, UNH Cooperative Extension Strafford County Extension Educator, Family and Consumer Resources, at ellen.rondina@unh.edu or by calling 603-749-4445.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Volunteers Sought for Coastal Cleanup


PORTSMOUTH—
Last year, over 1,000 volunteers cleaned beaches along the NH Seacoast in September as part of the NH Coastal Cleanup, held in conjunction with the International Coastal Cleanup. Those volunteers picked up over 7,000 pounds of litter on NH beaches.
The Blue Ocean Society for Marine Conservation is seeking groups, individuals and students and teachers to participate in this year’s cleanup in September.
There are 3 ways to get involved: teachers can sign up their classes to participate in the Student Cleanup Day on Friday, Sept. 24, members of the public can participate in the regular Coastal Cleanup Day on Saturday, Sept. 25, or groups, businesses, clubs and Scout troops can arrange a cleanup anytime in September for a group of 10 or more. The Society’s goal is to involve over 1,500 volunteers in the NH Coastal Cleanup.
During the cleanup, volunteers will spend 1-3 hours cleaning a local beach and recording their findings. The data is used locally and also gets sent to the Ocean Conservancy for use in studying trends in marine pollution and helping in educational programs.
Through their participation in the cleanup, volunteers will have a hands-on experience with scientific data collection. The data generated will contribute to ongoing research concerning the worldwide sources of marine debris. Ultimately, the litter collected collect will help Blue Ocean Society and other organizations to learn how we can prevent more from showing up in its place.
To learn more about the cleanup or to schedule a presentation on marine conservation, call (603) 431-0260 or visit www.blueoceansociety.org.
Photo caption: NH Coastal Cleanup 2009. Volunteers from Coca-Cola at Foss Beach in Rye, NH. (Ralph Morang photo)

The Great New Hampshire Pie Festival Coming Soon


MILTON —
Plans for the Second Annual New Hampshire Pie Festival at the New Hampshire Farm Museum on October 3rd from noon to 4pm are well underway and it is looking like a great event! Below is an outline:
The Amateur Piemaking Contest is open to nonprofessional piemakers. Prizes include a custom pie plate from Salmon Falls Stoneware and baking items from King Arthur Flour. The judges this year are NH humorist Rebecca Rule, author of Live Free and Eat Pie; portsmouthnh.com blogger Eryn EpiCurious, food critic and restaurant judge for NH Magazine; and self-proclaimed dessert connoisseur Gary Reynolds, producer at WMUR who admits he is always hungry.
The Professional Piemakers Contest is open to professional bakers. Enter your signature pie and win the People’s Choice Award! Attendees to the festival will taste-test your creation and vote for their favorite pie in two categories: fruit and nonfruit.
For guidelines to either contest, email the museum at info@farmmuseum.org and state in the subject line which contest guidelines you are requesting. Or call 652-7840.
Festivities for the day include the ever-popular kids’ pie eating contest, a silent auction of cooking-related items, tractor hay rides to visit the museum farm animals, guided tours of the historic Jones Farm and tavern, and much more.
The tents will be up so the Great New Hampshire Pie Festival happens rain or shine. Admission is $10 for adults; $5 for children. Sponsors include Salmon Falls Stoneware, Dover; Independent Color Press, Ossipee; and King Arthur Flour, Norwich, Vermont.
All the pie you can eat—how can you go wrong?
The New Hampshire Farm Museum is a nonprofit organization whose mission is to promote the preservation of New Hampshire’s agricultural heritage. The Museum is located at 1305 White Mountain Highway, Milton, NH 03852.
Photo caption: Judging of the Amateur Piemaking Contest, 2009 Great New Hampshire Pie Festival. (NH Farm Museum photo)

Prevention Coalition Up and Running

SOMERSWORTH—
The Somersworth-Rollinsford Prevention Coalition is inviting all interested community members to attend a coalition planning retreat on Friday, Sept. 24th from 9 a.m.-noon at the Sumner Country Restaurant (formerly known as the Gateway) on route 108 in Somersworth. The mission of the newly formed coalition is to create and support projects and initiatives that promote positive, healthy, safe and drug-free lifestyles for youth and families. At this meeting, attendees will discuss the coalition’s goals and plans for preventing drug and alcohol abuse among youth in the Somersworth and Rollinsford communities.
The coalition works with parents, business leaders, professionals in healthcare and law enforcement, city and state government, and faith based organizations in the Somersworth-Rollinsford communities. The coalition will explore ways to achieve a cooperative approach to form consistent strategies and messaging about alcohol, tobacco and other drugs.
The coalition’s coordinator, Lisa Paone encourages citizens of Somersworth and Rollinsford to attend this open retreat so the community at-large can be more informed and engaged in the responsibilities of keeping our kids safe.
“Our two communities have all the necessary elements for a strong and united partnership to keep our youth safe. When we work together we can prevent substance abuse and teach our kids and parents how to be safe by giving them strategies to be healthy and avoid the pressures of using drugs and alcohol.”
Paone added that the coalition is expanding its base and is asking interested community members to attend the retreat to explore ways they can become more involved in supporting the coalition’s mission.
The Somersworth-Rollinsford Prevention Coalition is funded through ONE Voice for Southeastern New Hampshire, which envisions an alliance of communities that are well equipped to overcome and diminish substance abuse. ONE Voice supports youths, families, educators, and communities that are committed to the prevention of alcohol and drug abuse.
For more information about the Somersworth-Rollinsford Prevention Coalition please contact Lisa Paone at 749-9755 X 10. For information about ONE Voice for Southeastern New Hampshire, go to www.onevoicenh.org.

Friday, September 10, 2010

USS Virginia Arrives at Shipyard for Maintenance, Upgrades


By Larry Favinger
Staff Columnist
KITTERY—
She came up the river slowly, accompanied by security and tug boats, much to the delight of a small yet enthusiastic crowd of municipal officials, shipyard workers, members of the media, and, clearly not the least of these, family members of her crew.
While some saw the arrival of the attack submarine USS Virginia signifying a long future for the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, there were those with a much more personal reason for welcoming her.
“Hi Daddy,” one of the small youngsters cried out several times as the boat made it way to its dock.
According to a shipyard spokeswoman, Virginia is the first of her class to arrive at the shipyard for work, and is scheduled for “a major availability consisting of various maintenance work and several systems upgrades.”
The bread and butter for the shipyard has been and remains work on the 688 Class (Los Angeles) submarines, Capt. L. Bryant Fuller, the shipyard commander, said. “One of these days it will be nothing but the Virginia Class,” he said, adding the Virginia class will eventually replace the 688’s.
Work on the Virginia class “is our future,” said Paul O’Connor, president of the yard’s Metal Trades Council, the largest union on the shipyard. He said the arrival of the new class of submarine is “another step in our history” at the shipyard that has been operating for more than 200 years.
Workers have received a lot of special training to prepare for work on the submarine.
Tom Ferrini, the Mayor of Portsmouth, also noted the historic event.
“It continues a long and storied tradition that we enjoy in Portsmouth and the seacoast of Maine and New Hampshire,” he said. “The city of the open door welcoming the submarine, its crew and their families. It means a lot to us economically, and we’re proud of our Naval shipyard to be able to maintain and improve its standing” in the military community as a fine facility.
Portsmouth is the host community for the Virginia and its crew. Chairman of the Host Committee is City Councilor Bob Lister and the former superintendent of Portsmouth schools. In the near future Lister will become the interim superintendent of Somersworth schools.
The USS Virginia, under the command of CMDR. Tim Salter of Buffalo, N.Y., has a crew of 13 officers and 121 enlisted personnel. The boat was built under a team agreement between General Dynamics Electric Boat in Groton, Conn., and Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding of Newport News, Va.
Commissioned in October 2004, Virginia is the sixth United States Navy vessel to be named for the 10th American state.
According to NAVSEA, Virginia is the fist of the newest class of nuclear powered attack submarines, built to excel in anti-submarine, anti-ship and strike warfare, special operations, intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance, irregular warfare and mine warfare missions.
Cmdr. Salter is a 1992 graduate of MIT with a Bachelor of Science in mechanical engineering and was commissioned through the Reserve Officer Training Corps.
He had served aboard the USS Salt Lake City, USS Greeneville, and USS Philadelphia. He has completed three deployments with USS Kitty Hawk Carrier Battle Group and one deployment with USS Kearsarge Expeditionary Strike Group.
He has also served on the staff of Commander in Chief, U.S. Naval Forces Europe. Most recently he attended the Naval War College where he earned a Masters of Arts degree in National Security and Strategic Studies.
Photo caption: The USS Virginia arrived at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard last week. (Courtesy photo)

In Thin Ice


By Chip Schrader
Book Review Editor
“The Frozen Rabbi” is New York novelist and National Jewish Book Award winner Steve Stern’s novel that spans three centuries and two continents. Rabbi Eleizer ben Zephyr’s travels also span this time and space, but he spent most of it inside an ice cube discovered by Salo Karp in 1890, a shrewd businessman who bargained with a peddler for his own wife.
Karp became devoted to the preservation of this artifact, and it would eventually be discovered by a fifteen-year-old descendant, Bernie, in his Memphis basement one hundred and ten years later. Upon his parents learning of their son’s discovery, and eventual thawing of the holy man, young Bernie Karp loses weight and interest in school. In place of this, Bernie learns the mystical scriptures through the Rabbi and develops the skill of traveling out of his body, a talent that captures the affections of Lou, a gentile girl who has a passion for anything forbidden.
The subsequent chapters document a woman with a tragic past crossing the ocean posing as a man with the frozen man in tow, echoing the Barbara Streisand film Yentl, and an industrious inventor’s chance encounter with him/her to start a business around something he invented that didn’t end up a disaster. This and the Rabbi himself, awakening to modern day Memphis hooked on trashy television, and a business idea to transform the spirituality of humanity make for a comic blaze. As the old Rabbi finds a way to raise mischief with his new practice, the novel indicates that it may be harder than ever to be a moral person in this day and age, or possibly, that moral flexibility was the whole reason the Rabbi vanished in the first place.
The first forty pages of this novel are hard work. Getting a grasp of the far flung subject matter, and the generous use of Yiddish and Final Jeopardy worthy vocabulary take time. But there is a rhythm that eventually catches the readers and their imaginations. The only thing to beware, a half an hour can pass and only fifteen pages might get read. With that said, it is a fantastic journey, and a half an hour well spent.
Such a bizarre premise for a book needs much further explanation, but it takes nearly four hundred pages to narrow it down to any plausibility. The earthy and bodily humor of Bernie’s adolescence adds only a little more spice to an already zesty dish as Stern references Freud and Philip Roth’s “Portnoy’s Complaint,” tying this novel deeply into its Jewish literary roots. Not unlike the works of Roth, this novel rings with tremendous satire about modern life, lost innocence, and the loss of culture. A must read for Jewish fiction enthusiasts, and those who enjoy wit and carefully written fiction.
Photo caption: Cover image of “The Frozen Rabbi.” (Courtesy amazon.com)

Registrations Filling Fast for Dover Citizens Leadership Academy

DOVER—
The Greater Dover Chamber of Commerce and the City of Dover have partnered to proudly sponsor the Second Annual Dover Citizens’ Leadership Academy. This program will increase citizens’ knowledge of the Dover community and introduce them to opportunities to become more involved as active leaders in the community. The Citizens’ Leadership Academy will feature discussions about local government and municipal operations and will introduce Dover citizens to opportunities to engage in shaping the future of our city by volunteering to join with others and participate as a member of one of many city boards, commissions and civic organizations. Only 10 slots remain for this limited participation event.
Building on last year’s successful one-night event, this year’s Citizens’ Leadership Academy will be expanded to four consecutive Thursdays in the month of October, 2010, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. In addition to the Thursday evening sessions, there will be a Saturday session on Oct. 16 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Participation in the Citizens’ Leadership Academy is free and open to all interested Dover residents, especially targeted to those residents new to or otherwise not normally involved in local government. Registration can be completed by visiting the Greater Dover Chamber of Commerce web site and completing the online registration form. Pre-registration is required. The first session will be held on Oct. 7, 2010 from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the Greater Dover Chamber of Commerce Visitor Center located at 550 Central Avenue. Light refreshments will be served.
The Dover Citizen’s Leadership Academy is held at least once each year and is intended to bring together, from diverse segments of the community, residents of Dover who are interested in meeting and working with others to address key issues critical to maintaining and improving upon our city’s quality of life. Citizens participating in the Leadership Academy will be encouraged to open a dialogue with other residents, business and government leaders and contribute their knowledge, imagination and energy towards efforts for the betterment of the entire community. Those in need of further information regarding this exciting and informative program can contact Kirt Schuman, Executive Director of the Greater Dover Chamber of Commerce at 603/742-2218 or kirt@dovernh.org.

Friday, September 3, 2010

Garrison Players Presents The Odd Couple


DOVER—
Garrison Players, the Dover area’s community theatre group, will stage Neil Simon’s The Odd Couple, sponsored by D.F. Richard Energy, on Sept. 17-19, 24-26, and Oct. 1-3 at the Garrison Players Arts Center, Route 4 in Rollinsford, with evening shows at 8 p.m. and Sunday matinees at 3 p.m.
Director Jim Mastro says, “The Odd Couple is perhaps the most iconic and well-known of all comedic plays, and it established Neil Simon as the premier comedic playwright of his generation. Who doesn’t know about Felix the clean freak and Oscar the slob? Their names are synonymous with those traits, cemented forever into the American psyche.” Audiences will know Mastro, who started with the Garrison Players three years ago directing Academia Nuts, a hilarious comedy/farce by Gregg Kreutz. The next season, he directed Kreutz’s Bottoms Up! Jim Mastro has been involved in the performing arts since 1974, starting with a part in a community theater production of The Front Page. He went on to do stand-up comedy and improvisational comedy (with Whoopi Goldberg, before she was discovered) at the Comedy Store in San Diego. A writer by trade, Mastro has recently published The Talisman of Elam, the first book of his epic science fiction trilogy The Children of Hathor. The book is available online at www.TalismanOfElam.com and at the Amazon.com Kindle store.
The Odd Couple features Richard Harris in the role of Oscar Madison, the messy sportswriter, who takes in his hapless neat-freak friend, Felix Unger, played by Phil Hesketh, after Felix is tossed out of his home by his wife. Richard Harris has appeared in twenty-seven productions at the Players’ Ring in Portsmouth since 2001. Most recent of these are Labor Day, Glengarry Glen Ross and Love. Last fall’s History of the Roses was his first show with Garrison Players. Hesketh has been involved in community theatre for 14 years, appearing at the Garrison Players Arts Center in the comedies How the Other Half Loves, Love, Sex, & the IRS (as Leslie), and in last fall’s production of The Foreigner (as Charlie).
The show also features Scott Degan as Speed; Matt Smith as Murray; Chris Gempp as Vinnie; Jeff Melton as Roy; and Erin Misek and Rebecca Hios as the Pigeon sisters, Cecily and Gwendolyn. Tickets, at $15 for adults and $10 for students, are available online at www.garrisonplayers.org or by calling 1-800-838-3006.
Photo caption: Left to right — Richard Harris as the neatnik, Felix Unger, Rebecca Hios as Gwendolyn and Erin Misek as Cecily, the Pigeon sisters, critique a cake baked by slovenly Oscar Madison, played by Phil Hesketh in the upcoming Garrison Players production of “The Odd Couple.” (Courtesy photo)

House Passes Legislation to Fund Teachers, Medicaid

WASHINGTON, D.C.—
Congresswoman Carol Shea-Porter on Aug. 10 voted for critical legislation that will prevent hundreds of New Hampshire teachers from losing their jobs and will provide $54 million in additional Federal Medicaid assistance for six months. The Education Jobs and Medicaid Assistance Act (H.R. 1586) passed the House 247 to 161. This bill is fully paid for and will cut the deficit by $1.4 billion over ten years.
“New Hampshire needs teachers in the classroom and funds to help pay for medical care for the poor,” said Congresswoman Shea-Porter. “This bill will prevent thousands of New Hampshire kids from losing their teachers and will provide $54 million in additional payments for medical care.”

Rochester Chamber Hosts Nonprofits at Rochester Fair

ROCHESTER—
The Greater Rochester Chamber of Commerce is pleased to announce they will be showcasing several non-profit organizations in the Chamber’s booth during the Rochester Fair.
The Rochester Fair will be held from Sept. 17 through Sept. 26, 2010. This traditional fair attracts thousands, including area residents and tourists to enjoy the event.
Each year, the Rochester Fair Association generously donates a booth to the Chamber that is located in the Exhibition Building at the fairgrounds. The Chamber offers the use of this booth to its member, non-profit organizations. These non-profit organizations host a day in the booth and benefit by displaying their products and services to the thousands of fairgoers.
The organizations that will showcase their products and services during the fair in the Chamber booth are: Knights of Columbus on Sept. 17th, Cocheco Valley Humane Society on Sept. 18th, The Children’s Museum of New Hampshire on Sept. 19th, Community Partners on September 20th, The Salvation Army on September 21st, Daniel Webster Counsel: Boy Scouts of America on Sept. 22nd, Strafford County Board of Realtors on Sept. 23rd, HONOR Flight New England on Sept. 24th, Happy Time Squares on Sept. 25th and Strafford County Board of Realtors on Sept. 26th.
The Chamber’s mission is to advance and promote the general welfare and prosperity of the business, professional and public communities of our area.