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by Tom Tollefson

Four jam-packed days of live


music, entertaining dances, cool
trucks and spooky kids; all of that
made Old Home Days irresistible
to all ages.
Day 1: Thursday
A Spooky Kick-off
The rst day of Old Home
Days, Hudsons annual end-of-
summer event, kicked off with
trick or treating for the children,
and karaoke and live music for the
adults.
On Thursday, children bit into
an early taste of Halloween as they
had a chance to dress up in their
favorite costume and trick or treat
at the 67 vendors. The Halloween
preview was followed by a
childrens costume parade, much to
the excitement of the parents who stood on the
side with cameras in hand. This was the third year
for the early Halloween event at Old Home Days.
Rory Chamberlin, Marketing Associate at
Chamberlin Electric said about the spooktacular
event: Its a different twist and it brings a lot
more people out. You can get to
see a lot more faces.
Parents also enjoyed watching
their youngsters scamper
from vendor to vendor as they
collected their favorite sugary
treats.
I think the Halloween event
is spectacular. It gives kids of all
ages an opportunity to enjoy Old
Home Days, said Kim Buccarelli,
who brought her two children
and nieces and nephews.
Allie Silva, owner of a womens
tness center in Hudson called
Flock Together said the turnout
was fantastic as children
ocked to her table for candy
as well as the stickers she handed
out all weekend. Silva went
through three bowls of candy over
the course of the hour-long trick or treat fest.
Later in the evening, the Dueling Murphys
performed pop and rock cover classics such as
Dont Stop Believing by Journey. The group
performed using vocals and electronic pianos and
also took requests from the audience. This group
consisted of the husband-and-wife duo of Heather
and Larry Maconaghy.
Everybodys having a great time and were so
happy with the weather, said Larry Maconaghy.
The weekend was made possible by the
Old Home Days Committee and the following
sponsors across town: Atlas Fireworks, Fairview
Healthcare, Charles Schwab (Nashua), Columbus
Dental, the Nash Foundation, the Town of
Hudson, Continental Paving Inc., Eastern Propane
and Oil, Collins Dentistry for Children, Bensons
Bakery, TD Bank, Greater Hudson Chamber o
Commerce, the Hudson Mall, Hurd Electric,
Perfect Entertainment, Regan Clothier Ltd., Service
Credit Union, Kohls, Pinard Waste Systems,
Financial Insurance Services, Sousa Realty and
Development, Red Brick Clothing, T-BONES
of Hudson, TJ Malley Electric, The Telegraph,
Sullivan Tire, Digital Federal Credit Union, and
State Farm Insurance, Denise McCarthy.
Day 2: Friday And Music Filled the Air
Friday was another music-lled evening at Old
Home Days. One of the musical highlights was
a live performance from the ve-piece rock band
Figure 8. The band was sponsored by Fairview
Healthcare and performed covers of rock songs
Volume 26 Number 7 August 22, 2014 16 Pages
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Hudson Police Inform Store Owners of the Dangers of Spice
by Marc Ayotte
A State of Emergency was recently declared in the State of New
Hampshire.
The following are excerpts contained in the press release from
New Hampshire Governor Maggie Hassans ofce on August 14:
In order to protect public health and well-being, Governor
Maggie Hassan today declared a State of Emergency in the State of
New Hampshire as a result of recent overdoses in Manchester and
Concord as a result of the use or misuse of the synthetic cannabinoid
identied as Smacked!
Generally referred to as spice, synthetic cannabinoids are
chemically engineered substances similar to tetrahydrocannabinol
(THC), the active ingredient in marijuana. While they are labeled as
not for human consumption, herbal incense products of this type
are known to be ingested by smoking or brewing into a tea because
they contain synthetic cannabinoids.
Other brands of synthetic cannabinoids may also pose dangers
for substance abuse and public health. Stores are encouraged to
voluntarily remove all synthetic cannabinoids from their shelves.
Earlier on the same day that Governor Hassan issued the State
of Emergency, this reporter had a chance to sit down and discuss
the Spice situation in the Town of Hudson with HPD Detective
Sergeant Jason Lucontoni and Detective David Cayot. Also that
same day, the two detectives were visiting stores around town with a
dual purpose: to discover if the substance was being carried or sold
in any location and to inform and educate store owners about
by Marc Ayotte
Every day of the year MooreMart accepts
donations from businesses, individuals and
veterans organizations that they package and
ship, four times per year, to U.S. soldiers stationed
in the Middle East. Their benevolence to U.S.
troops has become a nationwide phenomenon
comprised of a vast network of volunteers
who send more than 65,000 care packages to
destinations half way around the world. And on
Saturday, August 15, in a politically and military,
dignitary-lled National Guard Armory in Nashua,
MooreMart, as an organization, took time to
honor those volunteers that make the whole
process possible.
On display in the Armory were hundreds
of greeting cards that were part of a contest
MooreMart conducted in school districts covering
several local towns. We decided to put them up
and see all the submissions and how much the
kids appreciate the soldiers sacrice, explained
volunteer Sharon Zeigler. The winning card was
drawn by a middle school student from Goffstown
while the runner-up prize went to a Hudson third
grader who attends the Hills Garrison School.
Co-founders of MooreMart, Paul Moore and his
sister, Carole Biggio, were joined by numerous
New Hampshire politicians including U.S.
Senators Kelly Ayotte and Jean Shaheen, along
with NH State Senator Chuck Morse, Nashua
Mayor Donnalee Lozeau, and NH Governor
Maggie Hassan. In addition, several military
representatives were on hand, including Major
General Reddel and Colonel Richard Duncan,
who, like the distinguished politicians on hand
for the ceremony, shared stories and gave thanks
to the efforts of the entire MooreMart family of
volunteers.
Nashua Mayor Lozeau, a longtime volunteer
for MooreMart, was the rst to speak, and
while commending what the local service
organization represents on the whole, specically
acknowledged the importance of the volunteer
structure by paraphrasing what she referred to as
one of her favorite quotes; volunteers dont just
have more time, they have more heart.
In Senator Ayottes address, she referred to
MooreMart as a New Hampshire treasure, and
a national model, for their continued support of
U.S. Troops. It shows the nation a way we can
give back to the soldiers who have defended our
freedom, continued Ayotte. She also mentioned
how, when her husband served in Iraq, it was
so important to him to receive one of the care
packages with which MooreMart has become
symbolic. Ayotte also commended MooreMarts
humanitarian aid contributions, saying that it plays
a prominent role for the children of Iraq, showing
the compassion that the United States has to
offer. Senator Ayotte, along with Senator Shaheen,
each presented Paul Moore with a Congressional
Record Statement, recognizing their support of
U.S. soldiers.
Governor Hassan, in her address, said we
should all be eternally grateful to the service men
and women for what they do, and indicated the
critical role that MooreMart plays in the support of
their mission. It sends a very powerful message
of support, noted Hassan of the organizations
benevolence, via the care packages. When
MooreMart Volunteers Honored at Home for their Far-reaching Efforts MooreMart Volunteers Honored at Home for their Far-reaching Efforts
Paul Moore addresses volunteers gathered in the National Guard Armory in Nashua. Listening are from left: Carole Biggio
(sister), Senator Kelly Ayotte, Senator Jean Shaheen, Governor Maggie Hassan, and Nashua Mayor Donnalee Lozeau.
Volunteer Sharon Zeigler displays the runner-up entry
from a MooreMart-sponsored greeting card contest in
support of the troops; this entry was drawn by a 3rd
grader at the Hills Garrison School in Hudson
MooreMart co-founders Carole Biggio, left,
and Paul Moore received a Congressional Record
Statement from U.S. Senator Kelly Ayotte.
speaking to the impact that receiving a package
has on soldiers morale, Hassan closed by
offering, They know that there are people at
home who havent forgotten them.
A highlight of the ceremony, and also
representative of the daily theme, occurred when
Paul and Carole Moore presented an annual
award to a volunteer, of whom, Paul has referred
to as the backbone of MooreMart. Ted Luszey
was the recipient of the rst award bearing
his name; indicative of the countless hours of
volunteerism he has given to the organization.
Old Home Days Rocks Hudson
Kyleigh Perella
Te bassist from the country band, Walkin Te Line continued to page 7- Old Home Days
continued to page 6- Spice
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Ted Luszey receives the inaugural Ted Luszey Volunteer Award
signifying unparalleled volunteerism in the MooreMart cause.
continued to page 7- Mooremart
MooreMart Volunteers Honored at Home for their Far-reaching Efforts
2 - August 22, 2014 | Hudson - Litchfield News
Accolades Accolades
Andrew Richards of Hudson was named to the Presidents List at
Plymouth State University for the spring semester.
Nicole M. Quadros of Hudson, majoring in Nursing, has been
named to the Deans List at University of Massachusetts-Lowell for
academic excellence for the fall and spring semester.
The University of Rhode Island is pleased to announce that the
following Hudson residents have been named to the University of
Rhode Island Deans List: Kayla A Belanger, Ashley Iannaco, Michael
James Moulton, and Morgan Ratte.
Air Force Airman 1st Class Patrick Sweeney graduated from basic
military training at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, San Antonio, TX.
The airman completed an intensive, eight-week program that
included training in military discipline and studies, Air Force core
values, physical tness, and basic warfare principles and skills.
Airmen who complete basic training earn four credits toward an
associate in applied science degree through the Community College
of the Air Force.
Sweeney earned distinction as an honor graduate.
He is the son of Kevin and Susan Sweeney of Litcheld and a 2008
graduate of Campbell High School. He earned an bachelors degree
in 2011 from Full Sail University, Winter Park, FL.
Send your Accolades to news@areanewsgroup.com with a photo
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submitted by Lori Bowen, Hudson Senior Services Coordinator
We did it! The rst community puzzle is nished.
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Fifth Annual
Zach Attack Race
Keeps Dream Alive
by Tom Tollefson
Zach Tompkins memory was kept alive as 367 runners competed
in the fth annual 5K Zach Attack race. Every year, runners raise
money to fund Zachs dream of building a football stadium in
Hudson. At 10, Zachary Tomkins died from a genetic heart defect.
The race was sponsored by Ayottes Stateline Market, Carbonneau
Insulation, Walgreens, 7-Eleven, JLH Construction, and the Hudson
Fire and Police departments.
Im so blessed and grateful for all this support. It blesses my
heart to know that they still honor him (Zach Tompkins), support
him, and remember him, Necole Tompkins, mother of Zach
Tompkins, said about the race.
Alvirne science teacher Adam Goldstein took rst place overall
with a time of 18:26.
It was surprising. I was expecting to see the soccer and cross
country boys go way ahead of me, said Goldstein, shortly after
crossing the nish line.
Mike Gagnon followed close behind with a time of 18:27.
I got about 10 meters in front of him and then he took off on the
turn around the corner, Gagnon said about his neck-and-neck nish
with the science teacher.
Pro tness competitor Melinda Corssino was the rst woman to
cross the nish line with a time of 23:14. Corssino admitted to not
having done much training for distance running and primarily does
focuses her training on sprints, body building, and weight lifting,
which she still said helped her.
The complete results for the race can be found on www.
coolrunning.com. Anyone interested in donating to the Zachary
Tomkins Memorial Fund can log onto www.zacharytompkins.org.
Chase Clark Plays for Hudson Rec Kids
by Tom Tollefson
Robinson Pond was rocking
with the music of Alvirne alumni
Chase Clark as his vocals and
guitar notes streamed out over
the water. Clark is the lead singer
and guitarist for the Hudson-based
rock band Figure 8. He came
to the pond to put on a show
for the children of the Hudson
Recreation Departments
Summer Program, who spent
every Friday during the
summer at the town pond.
It was fun playing out here
by the water. The kids really
got into it and had a blast,
Clark said.
The children swam and
lounged on the beach as
music played. This was the
third year that Clark came
out to play for the kids at one of
their last days at Robinson Pond
for the summer. He played newer songs such as It Started With a
Whisper and classics such as Sweet Home Alabama by Lynyrd
Skynyrd.
It was great. He was entertaining the kids and it gives the beach
day a little bit more of a beach feel, said Hudson Recreation
Summer Program Director Frank Girginis.
The young audience enjoyed the music at one of their last
summer days at the pond.
It felt soothing and awesome. It was very unique because he
blended the songs going from one song to another, said Kayleigh
DAmico, 12.
Chase Clark poses with Jacob Rhyner, Sophia Fitzpatrick, and John Patrick Burke at Robinson Pond.
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Necole Tomkins stands with frst-place female runner, Melinda Corssino, and
frst overall runner Adam Goldstein.
Hudson Fish and Game
Jr. Rie Team
Looking for New Talent
submitted by Bill Dutton
The Hudson Fish and Game Club, NH Junior Rie Team has a few
openings available for juniors, age 11 and up, for the upcoming year.
This is a competitive paper target shooting program. The new members
become part of a team that holds individual/team state and national
titles.
A two-night rie clinic will be held September 10-11.
The clinic is a great way to learn about the rie program
and meet the coaches and team.
Rie is an Olympic sport. New members will be
trained for smallbore .22 rie and precision air rie
competition in this style. Team members are taught 3
position competitive rie from the beginning using NRA
programs and materials. Coaching staff includes NRA
certied rie coaches and instructors. No previous rie
experience is necessary. All members need is a desire to shoot and compete.
Once basic marksmanship skills are learned, new shooters will
participate in both indoor and outdoor match competition. Travel to
other states is expected but is within New England in most cases.
The Hudson Junior Rie Team will supply the .22 rie and
basic equipment for the beginning marksman. Some parental
involvement may be needed (match transportation, occasional help
during practice, etc.). The only cost for the beginner is a monthly
membership fee of $40.
Practices will be at the Hudson Fish and Game Club on Wednesday
or Thursday nights 6 to 9 p.m. beginning in mid-September.
Contact HFGJRT Director Bill Dutton at bill@williamdutton.com or
(617) 594-2194 for more information.
Coach Steve Hanscom
works with a new junior
team member at the 2013
Junior Rife Clinic.
Courtesy photo
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Hudson - Litchfield News | August 22, 2014 - 3
The Word Around Town...
Letters to our Editor
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Attention Candidates
What you need to know concerning announcements, letters, and advertising in this paper...
Any political candidate running for ofce in 2014 may supply the Area News Group with the following:
Candidacy announcement 400-word limit, accompanied with a photo (optional). Candidates may submit one Letter to the Editor with a 600-word limit expressing their views.
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ESTATE PLANNING- ITS YOUR FUTURE
Closer to Zachs Dream
On behalf of the Zach Tompkins Memorial Fund, we would like to say
thank you to all 386 runners and walkers who attended the ffth Annual
Zach Tompkins Walk/Run 5K. Each step you took brought us one step
closer to realizing Zachs Dream.
Lately the buzz across town has been one of curiousness. Whats going
on over there? Is that thing ever going to be built? Te simple answer to
the frst question is asbestos and bureaucracy, two things with which most of
us are unfamiliar with. An initial grant of $625,000 was slated to remediate
the site, however, it wasnt enough to complete the process. Terefore,
another grant was obtained to fnish the clean-up, which Im proud to say is
100 percent complete.
On Sunday, August 17, professional tree cutters began removing trees.
Land preparation will soon begin followed by feld work in spring of 2015.
To those in the community who have been a part of this process, now is
the time more than ever, to heighten your eforts to see this project through
to completion. We are calling on volunteers and local businesses to step
forward to join us. We need to hear from any type of tradesman that would
like to donate their time working on the project, and any local businesses
wishing to donate merchandise, please reach out to us.
Its been nearly fve years since Zachs passing and I know some of you
have felt you have been nickel and dimed, but I can assure you every penny
has been and will be put towards realizing Zachs Dream. Remember in
your hearts that one day sooner than later, all the children of Hudson will be
able to play the very game he so loved on his feld.
At the moment of this printing, the ffth annual Zach Tompkins
Memorial Golf Classic may not be held. We desperately need golfers and
sponsors. Tose of you that can help out, please reach out to us. We need
your support more than ever.
Lastly, to all who came to the 5K, I hope you had a great time! I sure did!
We are already planning for next year. Look for an email in the next couple
of weeks detailing some of the fun and exciting things we have planned for
next year. Hope to see you all soon!
Michael Carbonneau ,Te Zach Fund, Hudson
Pancakes and Palettes a Success
Te Hudson Litchfeld Rotary Club wishes to express its appreciation to
the community for its support of Pancakes and Palettes held last week at
Alvirne High School. We served over 225 guests and displayed 239 pieces of
student art and 23 pieces of community art.
Te Peoples Choice Award winners were students Amanda Michaud,
Emily Holten and Olivia Horstkotle. Adult winner of the Peoples Choice
was Cathy Claricucio.
Tis event could not have been successful without the support of more
than 70 sponsors.
Special thanks to the custodial and administrative staf at Alvirne High
School as well as Deb Ballok, Heidi Miller and Denise Freeman, art teachers
in Hudson and Litchfeld.
We would like to acknowledge Aramark, Suzies Diner, Hannafords
Supermarket, Cofee Pause, and CPTE for in-kind donations that greatly
contributed to the event.
We look forward to providing deserving students scholarships to further
their education and supporting other community projects.
Elaine Cutler, Hudson Litchfeld Rotary
A Famous Man Once Said ...
Most readers wont believe that a school chum of mine, from a long time
ago, regularly reads the Hudson~Litchfeld News. He, Mark Twain that is,
enjoys the letters and opinions of Hudson and Litchfeld folks and hes a big
fan of Tumbs, because as most of us know, he enjoyed poking his thumb in
certain peoples eyes whenever the chance was there.
He regrets that from where he is, he cannot contribute to Tumbs or
Opinions, so he calls on me at times to do that for him and such a time
is when he read an opinion in the August 15 edition about keeping our
military the strongest on the planet. Mark T. asked me to remind the HLNs
devoted readers of one of his wisest wisdoms on that topic when he said
I do not want Our Eagles Talons to touch down on any other lands. As
it so happens, my thoughts about that wisdom are identical and further that
the talons or boots or wheels of our eagles have touched down on the lands
of most every country in our world and that is why there is so much anger,
hatred, death and destruction around us.
We are a war-mongering society, going as far back as when the colonists
pushed the Native Americans of their lands and we havent stopped since
then. We insist that other societies be an image of us but we are a poor
image to the other societies as we have the highest rates of endless poverty,
we imprison more citizens than any other country, we keep certain citizens
on reservations like zoo animals to be visited in the summer, and our feral
(all defnitions apply) government is one of the most in-efective, inept, and
corrupt systems.
A lot of the worlds problems would not be as perverse
as they are, if we as a society began to tell our feral
government how we want to be governed, not listen
to how they will govern us; we need to have a mental
revolution. I might imagine then that most Americans
would agree with Mr. Twain about where the talons of
our eagles belong and do not ever forget that we have
had a very recent president who lied to us, about why
our eagles talons must touch down on the lands of
Iraq and in doing so; thousands of innocent Iraqi men,
women, and children we murdered because it was an
unjustifed, immoral, and illegal invasion of another
country.
Jerry Gutekunst, Hudson
Positive EEE Reading
in Londonderry
My name is John Latsha, Chairman of the Litchfeld
Mosquito Control District. I would like to inform the
public that a mosquito pool in Londonderry has tested
positive for EEE. It is the frst fndings in the state
this year. With that said, I would like to encourage all
residents in the surrounding communities to please take
some precautionary steps such as using bug spray, which
contains Deet, during peak mosquito activity dawn/
dusk and read all directions prior to use, and try to
eliminate all standing water on your property that you
can control.
Tank you and please enjoy the remaining weeks of
summer.
John Latsha, Litchfeld
Act of Kindness
will be Paid Forward
Monday morning, August 18, Te Golden Gals held their monthly
breakfast get together at Suzies Diner in Hudson. As the group was
checking out, their waitress informed them that their bill had been taken
care of, including the tip. Te ladies had an opportunity to meet the
gentleman before he left and promised that each would pay it forward in
their own way. Te Golden Gals would like to thank Mr. JP of Hudson for
his kind act.
Geraldine Longenberger,
Nashua
4 - August 22, 2014 | Hudson - Litchfield News
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Join the Hustle and Bustle of the North Barn
by Lori Bowen, Hudson Senior Services Coordinator
Hello Friends!
We are in our twelfth week being open here at the North Barn
and I thought maybe it was time to share our weekly operations with
you, so you have a better idea of what happens here every day.
Tuesdays
Tuesday mornings we are a buzz of activity. The doors open at
8:45, and we have a large group that joins in our coffee club. They
sit and drink coffee or tea, chat about anything that comes up and
enjoy each others company. We also have a large group that plays
Scat on Tuesday mornings. They play for nickels so bring some if
you want to play! We also have a Wii that we play bowling on,
and there is a group of men that get together and play Billiards. The
Whist players also come on Tuesday mornings and play rowdy hands
of whist; and of course the Mah Jonng tables are lling up as we
have multiple games of Mah Jonng going on.
Lunch is served at 11:30 every day and a $2 donation is requested
for every meal. The money goes to support St. Joes Senior Services
out of Merrimack. St. Joes holds the contract with the State of
New Hampshire for Hillsborough County and provides meals for
senior centers and Meals on Wheels. The menu consists of healthy
meals with a meat, vegetable sides and bread as well as a small
dessert offering. Everyone really likes the food and it is served
by our wonderful kitchen coordinator from St. Joes, Diane, and
her volunteer, Mack. On large serving days other volunteers are
recruited and you will nd Claire every Thursday serving the bread
and butter with a smile. These volunteers help Diane and really
make lunch go smoothly.
In the afternoon on Tuesdays we are still busy with lots of activity.
In the Function room the wall gets pulled across by Lori
and the tables and chairs are moved so the
Zumba Gold has a dance space.
Zumba starts at 1:45 and is
$4 to take the class; it is a
drop in class so everyone is
welcome to join in this high
energy dance class. On the
other side of the wall you
will nd space to enjoy coffee or a late lunch, or
just sit and watch the dogs in the dog park. There are also cards and
dice in the afternoon, Sevens is played right after lunch and that is
followed by Pokeeno. Pokeeno is getting so popular we have started
playing on two long tables. Bring your pennies for afternoon games,
but please join us even if you dont know how to play!
On the other side of the building starting at 1 p.m. there is a
cribbage game to join and a bridge game to play. If you prefer a
different game there are still tables available to sit and friends to
make. Of course the billiard table is still there and there is always
someone wanting to play against you. The Center close at 3 p.m.,
but by then everyone has found their way to their next adventure.
On the rst and third Tuesdays of the month the Hudson Community
Television Center opens their doors to the Seniors to tour the facility
and studio, give demonstrations on the equipment and other fun
things. See Lori for more information, but tours start at 1pm and
you can meet them at the doors to the HCTV Access Center down
behind the Barn.
Wednesdays
On Wednesday we are in the mood to exercise! Aerobics with
Sylvie starts at 9 a.m. and she runs a low impact aerobics routine,
then follows it up with chairs exercises and a balance routine. After
that we turn a little bit country for some Line Dancing. Gail is the
instructor and she teaches her class the steps and then they dance to
all kinds of country music. We are hoping to add a beginners Line
Dancing class this fall, so please let Lori know if you are interested
in participating. Both classes, Aerobics and Line Dancing are $3
per class and are drop in classes so you can participate at your
leisure. The card group is back for more fun and games with Scat,
Sevens and Pokeeno. The same rules apply as Tuesday, so bring your
change! Wednesdays lunch is served in the dining room at 11:30.
In the afternoons on Wednesday the Senior Center has The
North Barn Presents which is a presentation of some kind every
Wednesday at 1 p.m. This is mostly a free presentation, excluding
movie day, which serves popcorn and water for a $1 donation. The
schedule is always changing and there are many different types
of presentations planned for upcoming Wednesdays. This week
brought Inspector Steve Dube from the Fire Department in and next
week we have Superintendent Brian Lane coming in to discuss this
upcoming school year. The schedule for Wednesday can be found
in the North News, the newsletter about the
happenings at the Barn, and on the website at
www.hudsonnh.gov you will nd us under the
Recreation Department.
Thursdays
Thursdays are fun here at the Barn! Thursday
morning brings a meeting to attend if you desire.
The rst Thursday of the month there is a Mens
Meeting moderated by Charlie Matthews, the
director of the Rodgers Memorial Library. The
second and fourth Thursdays of the month is the
Senior Meeting, the historical twice monthly
meeting of the Hudson Seniors that anyone is
welcome to attend. If you have something to add
to the agenda please stop by the ofce and add
it. The third Thursday of the month is the day for
the Book Club, sponsored by the Rodgers Library.
Natalie and Amy are your reading group leaders,
and they come and discuss a pre-planned book
and sign out the following months books. The
context is always changing and Lori can sign
out a book to you starting Thursday afternoon
after the Book Club meets. And nally, starting
in October, on the fth Thursday of the month
is going to be Coffee Conversations where the
Senior Coordinator, Lori Bowen, will be available
in the Function Room to sit and chat about happenings at the barn,
hear your suggestions and feedback about the activities and events
and she will be available for group conversation. The rst Thursday
of the month in the morning tours will be given to anyone that wants
to visit the Barn.
Also on Thursdays we have many Scat games and new friends to
meet. The Silver Needles that meets at 9 a.m. in the Craft Room.
You are invited to bring down whatever craft project you are working
on and join them for conversation. Lunch is served at 11:30 a.m.
and in the afternoon you can always nd people milling about the
lounge playing Billiards or working on
the community puzzle.
Mah Jonng is taught on
Thursday mornings at
9:30 a.m., so come learn
to play.
Thursdays is also
Bingo day. Bingo cards
are sold at 12 p.m., they are $1.25 each
card and we play 12 games. Our Bingo System is high tech
with a Bingo machine, light board and three televisions that show
the next ball being called. We are starting to ll our room, so come
on down and join us.
Tuesdays and Thursdays we also are starting a Softball team. If you
are interested in playing please meet Don at Sousa eld on County
Road in Hudson and have fun. Dont forget your glove and it is
coed.
Other Activities and Features
Some of the other features and activities we have here at the
Barn are the community puzzle located in the lounge. Everyone is
welcome to sit down and add pieces to the puzzle. We are up to
the fourth puzzle already. The billiard table is always available for
anyone wanting to play, and dont forget we are going to convert it
to ping pong for Patriots day. The lending library is also located in
the lounge and there you can nd books of all genres ready to go
home with you. No sign out needed, just borrow and bring it back
when you are nished. There is also a puzzle library that works that
same way. The Indoor Yard Sale is located in the hallway, as is the
bulletin boards that hold a ton of information on the Center and the
Community.
We hold an Arts and Crafts event on the last Thursday of the
month and this August we are making Fairy Gardens. Stop by to
sign up and get more information and to see what will be coming in
future months. We also host Foot Clinics and Blood Pressure clinics
on a regular basis. Please see the North News for more information.
The Trip Ofce is open on Wednesday and Thursday mornings
from 9 to 11 a.m. You can always stop by with a check and slip
and leave them with Lori and she will see that Lucille gets them.
But if you would like to discuss a particular trip with Lucille she is
available those mornings. The trips are also located on the website.
Trips are paid per seat and prices range in price from $65 a seat to
$90 for a day trip. Overnight is based on the location and travel
expenses. All trip information is posted on the bulletin board and
can be found on the website. Trips are lling up fast so be sure to
book early!
We have a Suggestion Box located in the hallway for anyone
that would like to offer up a suggestion to the Senior Center. All
comments and suggestions left in the box will be addressed at the
Senior Meetings on the second and fourth Thursdays. This is our
center and this will help to ensure all your needs are being met.
Volunteers make the world go round and we are no exception
here in the Senior Center. I just want to publically recognize all
those that make my world go round Mary, Dot, Lucille, Sandy,
Diane, Janice, Dave, Frank, Shirley, Davin, Mack, Dave, Chrissy,
Leo and Lynne. Not to mention all of you who have graciously
volunteered to take the North News places. This place would not
be as wonderful without you and I greatly appreciate your help.
Happiness is found in all the little things, and I thank you all for your
help to make this place a home.
All the information and our trip information on the Senior Center
can be found by stopping by the Barn, picking up a copy of the
North News or going online to the Town of Hudson website at www.
hudsonnh.gov. Under departments you will nd the Recreation
website and we are located in the left margin under Senior Center.
Lori is also available by e-mail at lbowen@hudsonnh.gov. Stop by
and see us Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday, 8:45 a.m. to 3 p.m.
even if you are not a Senior. We are so proud of this center and
are happy to show it off!
Dont forget this Senior Center is, yes a Senior Center, but the
word Senior is used loosely around here. Being over 55 just allows
you to register here at the Barn and keep in mind we are An active
and independent adult recreation facility that caters activities to its
registrants that are over the age of 55 and their spouses. So your
age is just the right number here at the Barn. And we are not Zip
Code biased, so please come see what all the fun is about!
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End 68 Hours of Hunger
Coming to Hudson Schools
by Len Lathrop
In a moving presentation during Mondays school
board meeting, Erin and Emma Beals, with the support
and assistance of their mom, Regina Beals, outlined and
introduced the End 68 Hours of Hunger.
This private, not-for-prot effort targets the approximately
68 hours of hunger that some school children experience
between the free lunch they receive in school on Friday
afternoon and the free breakfast they receive in school on
Monday morning. The Beals explained that childhood
hunger or food insecurity is a national problem. It
occurs when children receive insufcient food on a regular
basis and in many cases, miss meals entirely. After a while,
these children also experience fear of hunger that affects
their behavior as much as physical hunger affects their
bodies.
According to the End 68 Hours of Hunger website,
the program is growing nationally but has some amazing
numbers. For example, 19 children in New Hampshire
were being helped back in October 2011. As the effort
closed out 2013, more than 700 children were being
served weekly in New Hampshire (Alton, Barrington,
Conway, Dover, Exeter, Hampton, Milton, Nashua,
New Durham, Northwood/Nottingham,
Oyster River (Durham, Lee, Madbury),
Somersworth, Portsmouth, Rollinsford) and
Maine (Eliot, Kittery, York). Recently, the End Hunger
effort has crossed the great divide as Vacaville, Calif., has
been added to the town roster. Currently there are over
350-plus volunteers who have helped raise $160,000 in
addition to tons of food.
The Hudson effort will be handled a little differently as
the Beals have teamed up with the Food Pantry at Saint
John the XXII Church, who will manage the distribution to
the schools. Regina Beals noted that there is no cost to the
those receiving the food and the program is run without tax
dollars solely based on donations and sponsorship support.
Pauline Boisvert from the food pantry accompanied the
Beals with the presentation and explained how the food
pantry has been providing extra supplies to the families
they serve to balance the loss of the school lunch program.
Bags will delivered to each school on Fridays for the
students to take home for the weekend; Boisvert explained
that they are ready to do 150 weekend kits as school starts
and can adjust to the need. The distribution system will
be different for each school based on the schools age
grouping. The organizers have met with the Hudson Food
Service director and each schools administrators to get
their input.
The school board supported the program, thanking both
the family and the food pantry for making this happen in
Hudson.
Hudson - Litchfield News | August 22, 2014 - 5
Pub: Sal em Pat r i ot
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Our doctors at The Center for Bone and Joint Health are
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22 Kehoe Avenue, Nashua Fax 595-2898
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Jordan Ulery has announced that he is a
candidate for one of the 11 seats representing
Pelham and Hudson in the 2014 Republican
Primary. Ulery has served on the Ways and
Means Committee in the House and on
the Joint Legislative Ethics Committee most
recently. Previously he served on the Criminal
Justice Committee. In Ways and Means Ulery
consistently voted to prevent unnecessary and un-
need increases in fees, nes and taxes proposed
by the Democratic majority. He voted not to
increase the cost each taxpayer paid for goods and
services each of the past two years. Previously
he sponsored and stewarded the request for
a Balanced Budget Amendment through the
General Court which was forwarded to Congress.
Currently Ulery is active with the Article V
Caucus to re-establish the power of the states in
a revitalization of the federalism that help make
America great.
Jordan Ulery is a long-time resident of Hudson,
his two boys attended grade school in town and
attended St. John the Evangelist Church. Those
children are now grown and have families of their
own. The eldest recently retired from the Marine
Corps. The youngest works for United Health
Care. Mr. and Mrs. Ulery have been married
for 43 years and have lived on Webster Street in
Hudson for 42 years. Jordan is also active in the
Knights of Columbus and serves as an alternate
on the Hudson Planning Board. His wife is a
former OB/GYN nurse and assisted many mothers
in Hudson and Pelham with their deliveries at
local hospitals. Many Sunday mornings he can be
found at Suzies restaurant when he is available to
answer your questions of comments.
Said Representative Ulery, I look forward to
again being able to serve the people of Hudson
and Pelham in Concord as their representative.
Service has been the hallmark of the work Ulery
has done in the region and in Concord. I
have worked with hard working, dependable
men and women on the Republican ticket who
have tried to keep New Hampshire government
within its means. It will be an honor to return
to Concord to continue the work to prevent
expansive government from interfering with each
of us, said Ulery. I hope the Republican voters
of Pelham and Hudson will support me at the
September 9 Republican Primary, was expressed
by Representative Jordan Ulery.
Follow Representative Jordan Ulery on
Facebook or on Twitter @repulery. E-mail:
repulery@myfairpoint.net.
Jordan Ulery to Vie for Seat
in House of Representatives
by Tom Tollefson
McKenzie Lowe found out she had even more
friends last Sunday at Old Home Days.
Jason Denehy, a member of the board of
directors for Team Micky Ward Charities,
presented McKenzie Lowe with a donation from
his board. Denehy said this is only the start and
that he will continue to work to help support
Lowes cause both through donations and through
word of mouth.
The Friends of McKenzie Lowe is a dedicated
group of supporters that raises money to cover
the medical expenses for McKenzie, who was
diagnosed with Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma,
an inoperable brain tumor, in 2012. The group set
up a vendor to sell wrist bands, offer a rafe, and
collect donations at Old Home Days.
Ill look at this every day as a reminder,
Denehy said as he looked down at his pink
bracelet with the words Be McKenzies Hero.
Well get the word out to as many people as
possible to help get this young lady better.
Denehy rst heard about the McKenzies cause
when he saw a donation jar at Ayottes Stateline
Market store in Hudson.
That rang a lot of bells with me. It stands close
to home because of other work Ive done with the
Joe Andruzzi Foundation as a volunteer, Denehy
said about his motivation for bringing up the
donation opportunity with the rest of the Micky
Ward board of directors.
Anyone interested in helping can donate to
Friends of McKenzie Lowe at DCU Credit Union
on 257 Lowell Road in Hudson.
The Mickey Ward Charities is a non-prot
organization that raises money to help charitable
causes. Micky Ward was a world champion boxer
from Lowell, Mass., who was played by the actor
Mark Wahlberg in the movie, The Fighter. For
more information you can go to their website at
www.teammickycharities.com.
McKenzie Lowe Receives Donation
from Micky Ward Charities
Jason Denehy hands a check to McKenzie Lowe
and her grandfather, Frank LaFountain,
at Old Home Days.
Staff photos by Tom Tollefson
Courtesy photo
We are all ears!
Send us your
comments and let
us know how we
are doing!
Write or Email us at:
news@areanewsgroup.com
We are all ears!
Send us your
comments and let
us know how we
are doing!
Write or Email us at:
news@areanewsgroup.com
17 Executive Drive, Suite 1 | Hudson, NH 03051 | 603.880.1516 17 Executive Drive, Suite 1 | Hudson, NH 03051 | 603.880.1516
Remember Hudson when ...
submitted by Ruth Parker
Baker Brothers Store and Block was
photographed in 1933 from the corner of Central
and Ferry streets at the bridge. The building is
decorated for the 1933 bicentennial celebration
of the founding of Nottingham, Mass., in 1733.
The old watering trough is in the lower left. The
38-star American ag is displayed on the right.
This became the countrys ofcial ag after the
admission of Colorado as a state in 1876. The
photo and ag are part of the Historical Society
collection.
1
st
2
nd
5
th
6
th
9
th
2
7
th
N
ow
Errors: Te liability of the publisher on account of
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incorrect insertion. Advertisers should notify
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occurs.
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6- August 22, 2014 | Hudson - Litchfield News
Good for the Community
Your Hometown Community Calendar
A
ugust 2014
Old H
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D
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D
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Gatherings
Generated by http://www.opensky.ca/~jdhildeb/software/sudokugen/
Puzzle 7 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.36)
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Are you looking for a church home?
Visit us and feel the warm welcome.
"Best kept secret
that is right
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FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF HUDSON
236 Central St., Hudson, NH 882-6116
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See us on Comcast Cable ch. 20 Sundays at 9AM and 6PM
On the First Sunday of each month we serve communion and
have a time of fellowship and refreshments after the Worship Service.
Sunday Worship Services-
10:00 am to 11:00 am
No Sunday School during the Summer.
Founded in 1976
ASSE International Student Exchange Program is a Public Benet, Non-Prot Organization.
For privacy reasons, photos above are not photos of actual students
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ASSE 4x4 color space 0613.indd 4 6/26/13 10:39 AM
Susan Woodbury Misek
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Ongoing
Rodgers Memorial Library Summer
Hours: The Rodgers Memorial Library in
Hudson will be open 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on
Saturdays through Labor Day weekend.
Fridays thru August 22
The Rodgers Memorial Library in Hudson will
be hosting a Free Friday Film Festival every Friday
night at 6:30 p.m. Come enjoy lms on our
big screen in air conditioned comfort. Call the
library Film Line at 816-4535 for lm titles and
information on future showings. Call 886-6030 if
you have additional questions.
Monday, September 1
Labor Day - Federal Holiday
Tuesday, September 2
First Day of School for Hudson and
Litcheld School Districts
Hudson Checklist Supervisors will hold
a voter registration session from 7 to 7:30 p.m. in
the lower level of the Town Hall across from the
Selectmens meeting room. No party changes
will be taken at this time. This session is for new
registrations only.
Supervisors of the Checklist will be in session
from 7 to 7:30 p.m. at the Town Hall, Two Liberty
Way, Suite 3, Litcheld, for the purposes of voter
registration and additions and corrections to the
checklist. This is in preparation for the State
Primary Election on September 9.
Friday, September 5
Hudson Police Relief Association
Comedy Night: The Hudson Police Relief
Association wants to remind everyone
that received tickets during our fundraising
campaign. Our comedy night, featuring Paul
DAngelo and the Boston Comedy All Stars
is coming up soon. The event will be on at the
Crowne Plaza Nashua, doors open at 7:30 p.m.
This will be a great night of entertainment for all
the residents in the Hudson area!
Admission is $15 and tickets will be available
at the door the night of the show. Tickets were
given away complimentary with a donation to
the Hudson Police Relief Association fundraising
campaign.
We would also like to take this time to thank the
members of our community who have generously
supported the Hudson Police Relief Association,
year in and year out. Without your support, we
could not support the many community projects we
participate in every year.
Saturday, September 6
Hudson Family Fun Day at
Benson Park, 1 to 4 p.m. Bring the
entire family for a fun day of games.
There will be a treasure & scavenger
hunt, shing lessons, and lots of games for
kids! Sponsored by the Hudson Scouts.
(Rain date: Sept. 7)
Tuesday, September 9
State Primary Election:
Hudson - Community Center, 7 a.m.
to 8 p.m.
Litcheld - Campbell High School, 7
a.m. to 7 p.m.
Saturday, September 27
Second Annual Hudson Historical
Society Lumberjack Show is coming on
the grounds of the historic Alvirne Hills
House, 211 Derry Rd., 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
rain or shine! Free parking and admittance. No
pets, please.
Get ready to cheer on both collegiate and
professional lumberjacks and lumberjills as they
chop their way to glory and compete in old-time
lumberjack events! Events include cross-cutting,
underhand chopping, single buck, springboard, and
everybodys favorite ... hot saw!
Food, beverages, and t-shirts will be on sale all
day, starting at 8 a.m. Dont forget to bring your
chairs, blankets, and whatever else will make for a
spectacular day of lumberjacking, as this event is
rain or shine!
For questions, or if youd like to be a sponsor,
e-mail hudsonlumberjackshow@yahoo.com.
the legal ramications associated with possessing the
product as well as the health issues involved with
the use of the substance.
In conrming what came out in the governors
press release, Sergeant Lucontoni described the
product in question as a leafy substance that was
sprayed with a synthetic chemical. Lucontoni
went on to say that there has been an increase in
the product being sold in southern New Hampshire.
He noted that the product has been around since
around 2010-2011 and that, at about the same time,
the Drug Enforcement Administration had outlawed
the sale of the substance, based on its chemical
composition at the time.
However, as Detective Cayot indicated, the
manufacturers keep changing the chemicals as a
means of circumventing the DEA restrictions; in
effect staying one step ahead of the law. Its come
back to the forefront in the news again, observed
Cayot, adding; its hard to say what the exact cause
of that is. The detectives indicated that since 2013,
there have been 56 overdoses, with 30-40 percent
attributed to heroin, but did not conrm that any
were a result of the product Smacked. Both Cayot
and Lucontoni shared an informational ier from
the DEA that was being used by the HPD in their
attempt to educate the store owners. Included in the
ier were various street names of the product, how it
is abused, what it looks like (similar to potpourri) as
well as the effects of using Spice or K2.
In reiterating the departments objective of
informing and educating store owners as to the
various perils of being involved with the illegal
substance, Cayot addressed the moral issue.
Regarding any potential continued sale of the
product by store owners, after being informed of
the adverse and mind-altering affects resultant
from its use, Cayot intimated that it would be
unconscionable for the seller to continue
selling the product, knowing the potentially grave
ramications to the user.
Such was not the case in nearby Pelham, where
the PPD made a recent arrest of a store owner,
Christopher Matte, 43, of Hudson. Matte, the owner
and employee of Ace Discount Cigarettes on Bridge
Street, Pelham, was charged with two counts of
felony Sale of Drugs. These charges stem from the
distribution of synthetic marijuana, also commonly
known as Spice.
After personally searching out Smacked in
several store locations in Hudson, this reporter
was unable to procure any; with some store clerks/
owners more convincing than others in their
assurance that they did not carry the product.
However, at Ayottes Stateline Market - Smokin
Joes, a convenience store located on the Hudson/
Tyngsboro, Mass. state line, manager Mike Roberts
was adamant regarding the sale of the product:
Weve never carried it. Ive been against it from the
very beginning. Hopefully, his feelings are shared
by all retail store owners as well as other potential
sellers.
And at the risk of getting too editorial on the
subject, maybe the DEA should become signicantly
more restrictive with the ingredients for this product;
expand the scope of illegal chemicals and stop
leaving the door open for potential manufactures
to circumvent the law by making subtle changes in
formulas that allow them to continue distributing the
product to prospective sellers.
A fier distributed
by the DEA and used
by the HPD in their efort to inform store owners
about the product Spice
Spice- continued from front page
Susan Woodbury Misek was born in Milton
Mills, NH, and passed away in hospice on
August 3, 2014, as a result of failed cancer
treatment.
Born on September 25, 1931, the daughter
of Doris Horne Woodbury and William E.
Woodbury of Milton Mills. She is survived
by three siblings, Ann Davis, Jane Seeling and
Stephen Woodbury.
Sue graduated from the Rhode Island School
of Design in 1953 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in
Textiles. In 1954 she was employed by Sanders
Associates, Inc. in Nashua as a patent draftsman.
Soon Vic Misek appeared with a patent
application which required drawings. After
a whirlwind courtship, she married Victor A.
Misek in 1955. Sue and Vic celebrated their
59th anniversary together in June, 2014. She
is survived by husband Victor and children
Martha Frick, William Misek and Carl Misek, but
predeceased by the eldest son, Stevan.
Sue and Vic have been residents of Hudson
since 1957. Their home was designed by Sue.
After the kids grew up, Sue worked for Sanders
Associates and New England Microwave as
a draftsman. She taught jewelry making and
design at the Manchester Institute of Arts and
Sciences. She was active for many years in
the Boy Scouts of America rising to the rank of
commissioner and receiving the Silver Beaver
award, one of the highest in scouting, for her
many years of service.
Sue was actively interested in local history
and genealogy, having membership in the
Hudson Historical Society, Nashua Historical
Society, New Hampshire Historical Society and
New Hampshire Society of Genealogists. She
spent many days at Hills House with colleagues
gathering and cataloging historical treasures.
She also devoted considerable effort to
interviewing and tape recording family members
to preserve their life experiences for posterity.
The loves of her life were family, the First
Baptist Church of Hudson, cats, gardening, bird
feeders, cooking, sewing, knitting, quilting,
birthday dinners at Pickety Place, lobster feasts
in the yard, summers at Horn Pond and family
reunions.
Oh Susan how we miss you!
At 11:30 a.m., Saturday, August 30, a
Celebration of Life memorial service for Susan
will be held at the First Baptist Church of
Hudson, 236 Central Street, Hudson.
At 1 p.m., after the service, a Celebration of
Life Luncheon will be served at the White Birch,
222 Central Street, Hudson.
Hudson - Litchfield News | August 22, 2014 - 7
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from the last few decades such as Sweet Home
Alabama by Lynyrd Skynyrd and the more recent
It Started with a Whisper by the Neon Trees.
The crowd enjoyed the good mix of familiar songs
from the 70s, 80s, 90s and today.
They seem to be quite diversied with the
amount of instruments they have there, said
audience member Dave Gravelle.
This was the third straight year the hometown
band, made up of recent Alvirne Alumni, played
at the end-of-summer festival. The band is made
up of the following members as listed on their
Facebook page:
Chase Clark - lead guitar/lead vocals; Vincent
(Vinny) Dupont - bass/back vocals; Eric Dupont
- drums/back vocals; Steve Caporale sax; Cody
Knapp - trumpet/guitar/vocals; and Tim Duffy -
keyboard.
Its always great to play in front of the home
crowd, which responds well and it was a great
turnout, said trumpeter, guitarist, and vocalist
Cody Knapp.
The festival even drew an international crowd.
Hudson born and bred Sari Cavanna (Grossman
was her maiden name) was in town visiting from
Zurich, Switzerland and brought her husband
Laurent Cavanna and sons Lois and Jacques.
It was great to see family and friends that I
grew up with at Old Home Days, the Hudson
native said as she admitted to feeling the nostalgia
of the weekend since much of the festival was still
the same as she remembered growing up with
rides and fried dough.
After the balloon rides and music, many of the
residents went over to the Stonyeld booth for free
yogurt.
We were giving out our yogurt and we thought
the Zach Attack Race demographic would be
perfect to market our product. As a Hudson
resident, I love being able to show our product
to our town, said Stonyeld Event Marketing
Representative Brianna Knap.
Day 3: Saturday Busy, Busy, Busy
Saturday is always the busiest day of the
weekend for Old Home Days. As usual, it was
the most eventful day of the festival packed with
live music, kids games, a chili cook-off, touch a
truck event, and of course everyones favorite Old
Home Day tradition ... reworks at 9 p.m.
Dozens of parents and children ocked to the
Touch a Truck event sponsored by Continental
Paving Inc. Several trucks were on display
including a police crime scene truck, grader,
school bus, National Guard resupply vehicle, up
armor humvee, tractor, the towns rst mail truck,
and a 1950 Dodge with a at bed owned by the
Hudson Historical Society.
Children enjoyed sitting on their parents laps
as they honked the horns in the various trucks
and the sirens in the Hudson Police crime scene
vehicle.
He loves it every year and looks forward to it,
Mark Gouveia said about his son Kyles love for
the hands on truck show.
Another favorite for the pint-sized residents
were the childrens games sponsored by Collins
Dentistry for Children and Digital Federal Credit
Union. The games included bean bag toss, hula
hoop contest, parachute games, and small pin
bowling. Prizes included toys such as bouncy
balls and fake money much to the delight of the
competitors.
I like how the volunteers are interacting and
adjusting the games for the different ages, father
Jeff Cote said as he watched his daughter bowl.
While the children enjoyed the games, the
adults were excited about the music. The country
band called Walkin the Line, the cover band
Rock Daddys, and the middle school band Silent
Fist performed throughout the day. Residents
relaxed under the tent as they ate and socialized
with their friends around town. Many stated that
they enjoyed the rhythm, beat, and diversity
of the music by Rock Daddys.
I like that theyre not too loud so you can still
talk and socialize, Hudson resident Brandon
Locke said as he ate with friends.
Another major music act of the day was an
up-and-coming band Silent Fist. The members
may have not been old enough to drive cars, but
they drove the crowds wild with their own brand
of rock cover songs such as Imagine Dragons
Demons, Daft Punks Get Lucky, and Stevie
Wonders classic hit Superstition. This weekend,
the band was sponsored by Red Brick Clothing
and Columbia Dental Care.
It was exciting and a lot of my friends were
here. I never thought wed play at Old Home
Days, said Silent Fist lead singer Murray
Reynolds.
As they started playing, the socializing in the
tent slowed down and all eyes and ears were on
the middle schoolers. The crowd was engaged,
and the group even had people jumping in their
seats every time they said jump in their cover of
Jump by Van Halen.
Theyre great. Theyre very spirited and so
happy go lucky. They look like theyre having
a great time, said audience member Donna
Hughes.
Silent Fist has been around for about a year and
a half and took second place for junior band in
the New England Music Festival in Newton, Mass.
The country music cover band Walkin the Line,
sponsored by Fairview Health Care, also put on a
live show.
The place is busy, the weather is great, people
are friendly, and people here are drawn to country
music, said Walkin the Line lead singer Kevin
White.
Another vendor with a worthy cause was
Shanes Anti-Bullying Program, which is a non-
prot program started by a 16-year-old student
named Shane Graham-Bevis from Lowell, Mass.,
who was violently bullied in middle school.
Shane now travels to colleges and schools to raise
awareness about the damaging affects of bullying.
Over the weekend, Shane and his mother,
Summer Graham, sold T-shirts, bracelets, posters,
and jewelry that had anti-bullying messages and
gave out free informational packets about bullying
and its effects.
Day 4: Sunday Showcasing Talented Singers
and Dancers
The four-day end-of-summer extravaganza
nished with a bevy of activities on Sunday.
The nalists for the Voice of Hudson singing
competition emerged after two previous nights
of karaoke. The judges admitted it was tough
competition, but three winners emerged after the
nal round on Sunday. There were three winners,
one from each age group. Michaela Short won
for the 13 and under group, McKenzie Catanzaro
for the 14-17, and Maria McManus for the adults.
This was the rst year the competition was open
to adults.
It was really fun. I could barely sleep last night
because I couldnt wait for this day to come,
said Michaela Short after winning rst place and
stating she wasnt nervous.
Also among the top nishers in the competition
was adult second-place nisher Alan St. Louis,
who holds the world record for most times singing
the national anthem over the course of a year at
217.
I sing a cappella so its stepping outside of my
box, but it was fun, St Louis said.
The singing competition was judged by
Chairman of the Hudson Board of Selectmen
Roger Coutu; Hudson Memorial Principal Keith
Bowen; and Renee Gregoire, one of the staff at
Old Home Days. The winners of each age group
were awarded cash prizes: $200 for rst place,
$50 for second, and $25 for
third.
While Hudsons best
vocalists sang their hearts out,
residents were amazed by the
dancing skills in the other tent
across the eld. Here local
dance groups came out to
showcase their best moves.
WPI Ballroom, and Paper
Moon Dance Center students
demonstrated various dances
such as the cha cha, rumba,
bolero, fox trot, tango, waltz,
and salsa just to name a few.
I think it was well received.
It was a fun showcase of
dance. A lot of people see
Dancing with the Stars, so its
fun to let them know about
local opportunities to get
involved with dance, said Scott
Bergendahl, a student at Paper
Moon Dance Center.
Local political candidates also
joined the weekend festivities
to mix and mingle among the
townspeople and share their
views and values. Hudsons
own Jim Lawrence was in the mix of political
candidates at Old Home Days. Jim Lawrence is
currently running for Congress.
Ive come to Old Home Days every year and
its great like every other year. There was a lot of
great family fun and it was good to see a lot of
neighbors and friends, Lawrence said about his
weekend at Old Home Days.
Luszey, in a heartfelt acceptance address, thanked his
daughter, Ashley, for her dedication to MooreMart. He
then thanked Deborah, his wife, with an emotional tribute:
Behind every successful man there is a great woman.
In closing out the ceremony, Paul Moore addressed the
volunteers and special guests, thanking them for their effort
through the years. Youve been able to help change an
individuals life, half a world away, Moore told his valued
core of volunteers. Specically, Moore addressed the role
of local and state politicians in MooreMarts efforts: In
New Hampshire we have elected ofcials who, as they say,
walk the walk. Theyre not afraid to roll up the sleeves and
work with you.
Looking forward, Moore believes that the need to
continue shipping care packages to the Middle East has
never been greater with troops asking for essentials
(and) the necessities. As such, Moore indicated that he
is committed to serve the troops as long as they are in
harms way.
Mooremart- continued from front page
Old Home Days- continued from front page
Daniel Remmy
Te middle school musicians of Silent Fist get smiles from attendees at Old Home Days.
Christian Canfeld
Voice of Hudson singing competition winners McKenzie
Catanzaro (of the 14-17 age group) poses with her sister
Maria McManus (of the 18 and up age group).
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Hudson - Litchfield News | August 22, 2014 - 9
All Bridal Gowns / Dresses
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Sale runs 8/18/14 to 9/30/14.
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Golf Tournament
Sign up to play or
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www.zacharytompkins.org/events
Proceeds to benefit the building of Zachs Stadium
Y
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A fantastic day out on
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and some great eats!
Lets do this!
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You can See the Trees from the Field; Zach Field is on its Way
by Len Lathrop
Zachary has been gone for a while now, but he
and his dream are not forgotten. The only thing
that is gone on the 9 Industrial Avenue site is the
asbestos.
Well, it is truly not gone, but buried in the
ground where it is not a danger to anyone playing
on, visiting or even in the next several months,
working to make the Zachary Tompkins Field
the home of the Bears. The New Hampshire
Department of Environment Services has declared
that the memorial foundation can begin work.
While there are several things that will be need
to be done before the site is certied for games,
the approved cleanup plan must be completed.
Those tasks include paving the parking lot, lling
the pre-game practice eld area to be level,
and then to loam and seed it. These tasks will
be completed using the remainder of the state
and federal funds that the Town of Hudson has
received to abate the asbestos.
For rst-time readers, Zachary Tompkins was
an 11 year old who just didnt wake up on March
8, 2010. Prior to his death, he had made a
platter with his grandmother and told his mom
that someday he wanted to own a stadium. The
community came together to build Zachs dream.
Stacey Iwanicki wrote: I think its most tting to
keep Zachs memory alive because as anyone who
knew him would agree, in only 11 years, he left
an angelic mark on Hudson that would take most
a lifetime to leave. Our town was blessed to have
him with us. To know more about Zach, read the
Mark 19, 2010, edition of the Hudson~Litcheld
News front page which can be found in the
achieves at www.areanewsgroup.com.
This complex is no longer just a dream.
Through the support of the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, the NH Department of
Environmental Services, and other community
funding of roughly $1.2 million will be spent to
make this site safe to be a multi-discipline game
eld. While the greater Hudson community
continues to support
this endeavor in many
ways, the mitigation
of the asbestos has
consumed over four
years of grant writing,
Memorandum of
Understanding,
designing for the eld
and site studies about
the contamination.
Volunteers started
removing trees in
sections of the complex
that were not reachable
prior to the asbestos
being buried.
Getting confused? Yes, four years have elapsed.
Quite simply, there was more asbestos than any of
the professional engineers had calculated, more
than double the volume expected. In fact, roughly
65,000 cubic yards became 150,000 cubic yards
and then throw in a whole area of ledge at the
front edge of the hot zone and many things began
to change. Ledge outside of the hot zone was
blasted and moved. This allowed for the parking
lot size to be expanded for the containment cell
under the parking lot, which now is sealed with a
material barrier and a lot of compressed crushed
stone. It will then be paved with 6 inches of black
top. Ledge in the hot zone could not be blasted
or hammered due to the cost factor of it being in
the hot zone. The construction team, the Hudson
engineer and the Zach Foundation went back
to the design phase and found that an elevated
practice eld was the more practical engineering
and nancial way to build the complex. This
meant that the game eld had to be turned,
resulting in the game eld being perpendicular
with Industrial Drive and not parallel as originally
planned. Imagine needing 400 feet for the game
eld from one end to the other, not just the 300
feet of the actual game eld.
As the community stepped up four years
ago, now it is time to reestablish the drive and
excitement that we had then. All that is left is to
build the game eld, which will be a showcase
complex for the Bears and also other very needed
sport elds for the youth of Hudson. The loose
group of Family Friends of Zach, community
members and the Bears leadership now informally
known as the Foundation have committed that
the game eld will be articial turf and will be
striped for not only football but also soccer and
lacrosse. Field house and concession stands may
be portable for the rst few years, but the game
eld will be a place where Hudson youth can
play. Many parts of the complex that needed to
be done, such as parking lot drainage and non-hot
zone blasting, were paid for by the Foundation
as this project has developed with the current
foundation investment being $100,000. The
Bears president Kelly Champagne has been in
conversation with Andre Tippit, the contact person
for the Kraft family, and the Patriots; grant work is
being completed to apply for some funding for the
game eld surface.
The Bears have been practicing since the
beginning of August and have their season opener
this Sunday as the teams are on the road. The
Annual Golf Tounament is September 15 and it
is never too late to sign up to play. While tree
cutting began this past week, this is the rst day of
cleaning in which volunteers will be needed.
It is time to remember four years ago, it was
important then and is now even more important
send an email to the Zach foundation to ask how
you can help: zacharytompkins@gmail.com
Joe Conrad drags the chain to winch the logs.
Len Lathrop loads logs cut at the feld on Sunday.
continued to page 15- Zach Field
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10 - August 22, 2014 | Hudson - Litchfield News
2
SCHOOL
2014
Ad Proof
Please contact us with any changes, alterations or questions.
tel: 603-537-2760 email: production@nutpub.net
Deadline for changes is 5 p.m. on the Thursday prior to Thursdays publication.
Ad will run as seen if no response has been received.
SIZE: 4X3.25 RUN DATE: 7/17/14
Register for Fall Online Now
Celebrating our 25th Season!
All preschool
classes available
Days, Nights and
Saturdays
www.mhdancecenter.com
Parent/Tot (20+ mo)
Preschool I & II (3-4 y/o)
Tumbling sprouts (3-5)
Hippety Hop (4-5)
Kindercombo (5-6 y/o)
Expanded Preschool Class Schedule
603-886-7909
210 Robinson Rd.
Hudson, NH 03051
OPEN HOUSE
Tuesday August 26

4-7pm
Ad Proof
Please contact us with any changes, alterations or questions.
tel: 603-537-2760 email: production@nutpub.net
Deadline for changes is 5 p.m. on the Thursday prior to Thursdays publication.
Ad will run as seen if no response has been received.
SIZE: 4X3.25 RUN DATE: 7/17/14
Register for Fall Online Now
Celebrating our 25th Season!
All preschool
classes available
Days, Nights and
Saturdays
www.mhdancecenter.com
Parent/Tot (20+ mo)
Preschool I & II (3-4 y/o)
Tumbling sprouts (3-5)
Hippety Hop (4-5)
Kindercombo (5-6 y/o)
Expanded Preschool Class Schedule
603-886-7909
210 Robinson Rd.
Hudson, NH 03051
AND CHILDREN OPENING DOORS FOR ADULTS
School Age
Right in Your Neighborhood School
Before and After School Care
In your public school.
Programs are filling up! Don't miss out!
Morningprogramsstartat6:30.Afternoonprogramsendat6:00.
Print the application from our website: www.adultlearningcenter.org
Click on School Age Adventures then look at how to enroll.
OR Call 882-9080 ext. 212
Returning children need to re-enroll for the 2014 - 2015 school year.
Nashua School of
Now Accepting Fall Registrations!!
Gymnastics
880-4927
30 Pond St., Nashua, NH 03060
http://www.nsgonline.info/
Session 1 Begins Sept. 2, 2014
Preschool Classes Girls & Boys
(18 months+)
Recreational Classes Girls (6 yrs.+)
Tumbling Classes (7 yrs.+)
USA and Prep-Optional Competitive Teams
Nationally Certied Instructors
Birthday Parties
Robyn,
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Colors Perms Extensions Keratin Treatments
With ad! Not to be combined with
any other ofer. Expires 9/30/2014
$5 OFF
All Student Haircuts
142 Lowell Rd, Hudson 603-521-8471
With ad! Not to be combined with
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Paul Mitchell Retail


Open Year Round
Mon - Fri
6:30am - 6:00pm
Computer Classes
Offered
Degreed & Certified
Teachers
CPR & First Aid
Certified Staff

Snacks & Lunch
Provided
Field Trips
Large Wooded,
fenced in
Playground

Kindergarten
Preschool
Before & After School
(w/Transportation)
Full Day - Daycare
Nursery School
Infant / Toddler


598-6310
A Place W
here Learning is Fun!
Now Accepting Registrations!!
Bus Ride Opportunity
for Hudson Kindergarteners
submitted by the Hudson School District
The Hudson School District and First Student (our transportation provider) would
like to invite all kindergarten students and their parents to take a bus ride before the
start of school. We understand that your child may be excited about boarding the
school bus and may not yet understand general bus safety. This opportunity will
allow children and parents to get on the school bus and take a short ride. The bus
driver will explain the rules of the bus and answer any questions you may have.
When: Wednesday, August 27
Where: Early Learning Center at Library Street School
Time: 1 to 3 p.m.
If you have any questions or concerns regarding this opportunity for your incoming
student(s), feel free to contact either Deb Gilbertson, First Student, 883-0251, or
Kathy Vaillancourt, Hudson School District, 886-1258.
Wholesome Snacks for Back to School
(BPT) - The school year is here and with it, all of those
hectic schedules. You may think the chaos of another school
year means youre too busy to provide your children with
nourishing after-school snacks, but that doesnt have to hap-
pen. There are many easy recipes available that will allow
you to provide wholesome and delicious snacks to your
kids, and there are easy ways to be sure they enjoy them.
Here are a few ideas.
Ask them to help
Your children will be more excited about eating a healthy
after-school snack if they have a hand in its creation. Creat-
ing a garden vegetable tray is an easy way to let kids cus-
tomize their snack to their own taste preferences. Smaller
kids can organize the grape tomatoes while you cut the
peppers, and when youre nished, you can all enjoy the
snack together. This large recipe is perfect if your kids are
bringing friends over. You
could also create the tray
on a Monday and then
enjoy it all week long.
Garden vegetable tray
Ingredients
1 package Simply Organic
Southwest Ranch Greek Yogurt
Dip Mix
1 16-ounce package Stony-
eld Plain Organic Nonfat Greek
Yogurt
1 small zucchini, sliced
1 small yellow squash, sliced
1 pint grape tomatoes
1 medium jicama, peeled and
sliced into sticks
1 orange bell pepper, seeded
and sliced
1 green bell pepper, seeded
and sliced
1 bunch of radishes
1 bunch green onions - about
10 - trimmed
1 head romaine lettuce, large
leaves only for the base of the
vegetable platter
1 red bell pepper
Instructions
Mix Simply Organic Southwest
Ranch Greek Dip Mix with the
16-ounce package of Stonyeld
Plain Organic Nonfat Greek
Yogurt. Chill for 30 minutes.
Line a large tray or shallow
dish with a decorative napkin and
Romaine lettuce leaves.
Seed the red bell pepper by
slicing off the top of the pep-
per, then pull out the membrane
and seeds. Discard membrane
and seeds, but keep the top for
decoration.
Fill the hollow bell pepper with
chilled Simply Organic Southwest
Ranch Greek Dip and place in
the center of the tray or dish.
Arrange corn, zucchini, yellow
squash, grape tomatoes, jicama
sticks, orange and green bell pep-
per, radishes and green onions
around the red bell pepper dip cup.
Place toothpicks or skewers on nearby serving platter.
Hide healthy foods in delicious avors
Sometimes the right presentation is all you need for your children
to enjoy healthy snacks. This recipe for a banana, pineapple and
orange smoothie hides nutritious fruit in a savory offering that feels
more like a dessert. Just make sure your kids dont drink it too fast
to ward off brain freeze.
Banana, pineapple and orange smoothie
Ingredients
1 medium sized frozen banana (peel removed before frozen)
1 cup frozen pineapple
6 ounces Greek Yogurt
1/2 cup coconut milk
1/2 teaspoon Simply Organic Orange Flavor
1/2 teaspoon Simply Organic Vanilla Flavoring
Fresh orange slices and shredded coconut, for garnish
Directions
In a blender, blend all ingredients until smooth, about 3 to 4 min-
utes. Use a spatula to scrape the sides down as needed throughout
blending.
Serve immediately.
Snack on the run
After a long day of sitting at their desks at school, your kids may
not be interested in sitting at the table for snack time. If youre kids
are on the go, this quick, savory recipe will give them a nutritious
snack they can enjoy anywhere so you dont have to turn to chips
or candy.
Roasted chickpeas
Ingredients
2 cans (16 oz. each) chickpeas, drained, rinsed and dried
2 Tbsp. olive oil
1 packet Simply Organics Crazy Awesome Veggies seasoning
blends
Instructions
Preheat oven to 400 F.
Place chickpeas in bowl.
Toss with olive oil and seasoning blend until evenly coated.
Spread in a layer on rimmed baking sheet.
Bake 30-40 minutes or until crisp.
Creating delicious, wholesome snacks for your kids is easier than
you think. All you need is the right recipe. For more easy recipe
ideas to make back to school as healthy and nutritious as possible,
visit www.simplyorganic.com.
Hudson - Litchfield News | August 22, 2014 - 11
2
SCHOOL
2014
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Seven Tips for a Greener Back-to-school Season
(BPT) - With back-to-school shopping, changing
schedules and preparing kids for the upcoming
school year, your familys environmental impact
may be the last thing on your mind
It is possible to have a greener back-to-school
season. Here are seven simple things parents and
children can do to care for the environment - and
themselves - as they return to school.
1. Reuse and recycle notebooks. While high
schoolers may go through multiple notebooks per
subject every year, its rare for elementary school-
aged kids to use up their notebooks. Tear out used
pages (and recycle them, of course) from last
years notebooks so that kids can use the remain-
ing blank pages. Use contact paper to freshen and
reinforce covers that are worn or written on.
2. Give broken and worn down crayons new
life. Gather all the bits and separate by color.
Remove all papers. Using a mini-mufn pan (or
mini ramekins in fun shapes), ll each cup with
crayon pieces in one color. Melt in an oven set
at 350 degrees just until crayons are completely
melted. Cool at room temperature, then freeze for
30 minutes to make it easier to remove the newly
formed crayons.
3. Refresh smelly shoes naturally. Stinky gym
bags and tennis shoes dont have to be a reality for
your athletic child, and you dont have to resort to
chemicals to kill odor. You can create a natural de-
odorizing spray with essential oils. Simply mix 12
to 16 drops of lemon oil, six drops of red thyme
oil and 2 drops of patchouli oil and 4 ounces of
water in a misting bottle. Shake vigorously and
mist inside gym bags and shoes. The formula not
only kills odors, it adds an energizing, refreshing
aroma.
4. Look for ways to green your commute
to school. If you live close to school, consider
walking or biking.
Families with lon-
ger commutes may
consider carpool-
ing or using the
school bus.
5. Green lunch-
es by packing them
in reusable lunch
bags (no brown
bags or plastic
baggies, please).
Pack sandwiches in
reusable sandwich
containers, and
use bento-style boxes with multiple compartments
to hold snacks, veggies and other sides. Replace
plastic water bottles with reusable bottles - plenty
of fun, colorful options are available.
6. Energize naturally. Do your kids grab a sug-
ary soft drink or sweet snack to boost their aware-
ness while doing homework? Instead of relying
on unhealthy treats for an energy boost that will
come with a crash afterward, energize homework
time with an essential oil diffusion. Aura Cacia
offers this mood-boosting blend:
Ingredients:
10 drops peppermint essential oil
3 drops eucalyptus essential oil
2 drops ginger essential oil
3 drops sweet orange essential oil
Directions:
Combine all oils in a mister bottle and spritz
in the air around your childs work space. To give
kids a boost during the school day, soak a cotton
ball in the essential oils blend, slip it into a reus-
able plastic container and place in your childs
book bag. Whenever he needs a burst of energy
during the day, he can open it and take a quick
whiff.
7. Lighten up your electricity use and carbon
footprint. Get kids involved in a fun weekend
project by replacing incandescent bulbs through-
out the house with energy-efcient CFLs or LEDs.
These bulbs give off the same amount of light for
back-to-school tasks like homework or picking
out a rst-day outt, but use about 80 percent less
electricity and can last for eight or more years
before needing replacement.
How to Help Kids Transition Back to the Classroom
The dawn of a new school year is an exciting time. Kids may not
want to say goodbye to days spent lounging by the pool, but such
disappointment is often tempered by the prospect of returning to
school with friends.
For parents, getting kids ready for a new school year is about more
than updating their wardrobe or organizing carpools with fellow
parents. Reacclimating kids to the routine of school after a relaxing
summer is a signicant undertaking, and the following are a handful
of ways for parents to get a head start as the school year draws closer.
* Establish a routine over the last few weeks of summer. Summer
vacations typically lack the structure of the school year, and that lack
of structure can help kids unwind and make the most of the freedom
that summer vacation provides. But as summer starts to wind down,
parents can begin to reintroduce some structure into their kids lives
to make the transition back to school go more
smoothly. Plan morning activities so kids can read-
just to waking up early each day. In addition, serve
breakfast, lunch and dinner at the same time you
typically serve it during the school year so kids
bodies can begin to readjust as well.
* Take kids along when shopping for school
supplies. If you plan to buy your child a new com-
puter or other supplies for the upcoming school
year, take him or her along on your shopping trips.
Kids who get to choose their supplies might be
more excited about returning to school than those
youngsters who are given what they need without
offering their input.
* Monitor or assign summer reading. Many
students are given summer reading lists to keep
their minds sharp over the summer and prepare
them for upcoming coursework. Parents should
monitor kids progress on such reading lists and
even discuss the books with their kids when pos-
sible. Read the books along with them if you think
it will help engage them. If kids were not assigned
summer reading lists at the end of the school year,
assign your own books, rewarding kids when they
nish a new book. Kids who read throughout the
summer may be more likely to start the school year
off on the right foot than those who dont crack a
book all summer.
* Encourage kids to sign up for extracurricular activities. Many
school-aged athletes get a head start on the new school year by try-
ing out for sports teams. Such tryouts often commence a week or two
before a school year is scheduled to begin, and this can help kids
ease their way back into the school year. But even nonathletes can
begin pursuing extracurricular activities before the rst school bell of
the year rings. Theater programs may begin auditions or encourage
interested youngsters to attend orientation meetings before the dawn
of the school year, and such sessions can be a great and pressure-free
way for kids to ready themselves for a new school year.
The arrival of a new school year can be both exciting and daunt-
ing. But parents can help their youngsters readjust to school in vari-
ous ways after a relaxing summer.
Thumbs Up? Thumbs Down? Thumbs Up? Thumbs Down?
Thumbs up to Lowell Road eatery where our experiences are
consistently good, The 4% discount was an amazing surprise.
Thanks for being like family to employees and diners.
Thumbs up to the town and school district of Hudson! Even
though we voted on multiple raises and budgets to be Approved this
year and they were. Our teachers and town personal are still leaving
we were told if we voted for the raises and budgets this wouldnt
happen. They gave us their word they would
stay in Hudson but unfortunately there was
nothing in writing. Now our properties will be
reassessed next year and taxes increased with
passing budgets and pay raises. A educated
voter is a informed voter. See it in writing
before knowing whats right to vote for.
Thumbs down to the intersection of
Musquash and Wason Roads. It is very
dangerous trying to pull out after the stop
sign, there is not enough site distance with the
overgrown trees and brush at the house on the
corner. The Road Agent and the BOS need to
take a look at this problem before someone
gets seriously hurt or killed.
Thumbs up to all of the parents and alumni
that donate their time to make Alvirne High
Schools Marching Band and Color Guards
Band Camp such a big success!
Thumbs up to the families where both
parents work full time! Not only do families
with at least one stay-at-home parents hurt their children but they
hurt their spouse as well by not contributing to retirement.
Thumbs up/thumbs down? To the USMC who gave the Market
Basket protesters the nger. I understand not everyone agrees with
this but I just wanted to thank you for your seless and valiant
service to this country that has allowed me and my coworkers to
exercise our right to express our opinions and ght for our rights.
Again, thank you for your service. I Believe.
Thumbs up to the 2nd Amendment of the Bill of Rights; the
right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
Good Luck to all you game hunters this Fall.
Thumbs down to our current president! There is one debacle
after another and he remains disconnected from the American
people? For that matter the entire world! This country is in shambles
and this guy has taken more vacations than any other president
in U.S. history, costing hard working tax payers millions! Two
vacations to Africa alone cost us 44-plus million
each which I nd staggering! This is money
that could have been put too much better
use securing our borders! Granted everyone
deserves a vacation after working hard all year
but the key word here would be working.
Thumbs up. A huge thumbs up to Kelly
ONeil and ONeil Apple Tree Cinemas in
Londonderry for their extremely generous
donations of popcorn to the town of Litcheld.
The ONeil Cinemas have always donated
popcorn for Grifn Memorial Schools Bingo
night, GMS Mother/Son Movie night and
Litchelds WinterFest Movie night. Thank you
so much for always supporting the community!
Thumbs up. A big thanks to the guys who
returned our fence on Adelaide Street. Its nice
to see that there are still honest people in this
world. Greatly Appreciated!
Thumbs up/Thumbs down. Republicans
know they can win races but not the race to
the White House. Republicans block minority
progress.
Thumbs down to the State Rep candidate
who uses the Benson Park sign with the Town
of Hudson on it on his political yer.
Thumbs up to everyone who has done the
Ice Bucket Challenge. It has raised awareness
for ALS and has totaled millions of dollars for
research. Approximately 5,600 people in the
U.S. are diagnosed with ALS each year. Visit
www.ALS.net to read about this disease and
to understand where the Ice Bucket challenge
originated. Good Work!
Thumbs down to all the political signs up
and down the main roads. Not only do you ll our mail boxes with
your pamphlets and all the junk mail, why not take all that money
used and energy and solve the
problems all over the state.
Thumbs up to Hudson Old
Home Days. Congratulations
to Tim and Brenda for another
successful year. Your hard
work and dedication is much
appreciated by the town people
who look forward to this event
every year. Applause, applause
and thank you.
Thumbs down to the poor
broadcast quality of the Hudson
School Board meeting. It seems
that they just dont want to be
on TV. What are they trying to
hide?
Thumbs up to the wonderful
job Hudson did on Executive
Drive. The town is very lucky
that this crew can do all the
prep and nish work relative to
the paving.
Thumbs up to the Alvirne
Farm for being open during Old
Home Days. A great addition.
Thumbs up to all the kids heading back to school. Good Luck! Get
involved with extra activities, make new friends, help someone in
need and enjoy these years, they will go by so fast.
Tank you for your submissions. All comments, thumbs up or down, are
anonymous and not written by the Hudson~Litchfeld News staf. Tumbs
comments can be sent via telephone, 880-1516 or emailed to us at thumbs@
areanewsgroup.com. When submitting a Tumbs comment, please specify that
you would like it printed in the Hudson~Litchfeld News. During the election
campaign, no comments will be allowed that are direct endorsements or censure
of candidates on the thumbs page. No names are necessary. Please keep negative
comments to the issue. Comments should be kept
to 100 words or less.
12- August 22, 2014 | Hudson - Litchfield News
Comments expressed in this column are the sole views of those callers and do not reect the views of the Hudson~Litcheld News or its advertisers. Town and school ofcials encourage
readers to seek out assistance directly to resolve any problems or issues. The Hudson~Litcheld News editorial staff holds the right to refuse any comment deemed inappropriate.
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2 Winnhaven Dr, Hudson, NH
Call For A Free Foreclosure List Today!!!
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Animal Rescue Network of N.E.

3 Main St., Pelham, 11am 2pm
Pet Adoption Day
Daisy
Pet Adoption Day

Visit
www.arnne.org
for opportunities
A
R
N
N
E
needs
Volunteers
Sat., Aug. 23
rd
First Congregational Church
www.arnne.org 603-233-4801
Save the Date for the Next Adoption Day
Saturday, September 27th
Photos courtesy of Sea Jay Photography Special Thanks to Beaver Valley Farm for their support
JoJo
Dopey
Cher
Linda
Petey
Sunday, August 10: 5:47 a.m. Stroke, Central Street. 11:46 a.m.
Motor vehicle accident, Lowell Road. 4:32 p.m. Box alarm,
Hudson Park Drive. 5:11 p.m. Dizziness, Sunrise Drive. 7:26 p.m.
Chest pain, Old Derry Road. 7:37 p.m. Stroke, Linden Street.
Monday, August 11: 1:34 a.m. Lift assist, School Street. 6:01 a.m.
Difculty breathing, Madison Drive. 11:36 a.m. Allergic reaction,
Derry Road. 11:55 a.m. Blasting, Brody Lane. 2:19 p.m. Fall
related injury, Morgan Road (L).
Tuesday, August 12: 6:40 a.m. Abdominal pain, Derry Lane. 6:43
a.m. Seizure, Bear Path Lane. 8:15 a.m. General illness, Williams
Drive. 9:35 a.m. Blasting, Belknap Road. 11:52 a.m. Unknown
medical, Burns Hill Road. 1:45 p.m. Alarm box testing, Overlook
Circle. 2:29 p.m. Wires down, Webster Street. 4:05 p.m. General
illness, Lowell Road. 5:42 p.m. Box alarm, Burns Hill Road.
Wednesday, August 13: 7:38 a.m. Wires down, Winnhaven Drive.
8:31 a.m. Assist citizen, Library Street. 8:52 a.m. Motor vehicle
accident, St. Laurent Drive.
10:19 a.m. Head injury, Lowell
Road. 11:01 a.m. Motor vehicle
accident, Lowell Road. 12:59
p.m. Fainting, Muldoon Drive.
3:58 p.m. Service call, Willow
Creek Drive. 4:14 p.m. General
illness, Molsom Circle (L). 7:05
p.m. Box alarm, Derry Road. .
Thursday, August 14: 7:01 a.m.
Abrasion, Paula Circle. 11:05
a.m. Back pain, Hopkins Drive.
1:33 p.m. Chest pain, Webster
Street. 1:37 p.m. Chest pain,
Melba Drive. 6:24 p.m. Allergic
reaction, Derry Road. 6:44 p.m.
Abrasion, Derry Road. 8:18 p.m.
Brush re, Wende Drive.
Friday, August 15: 5:42 a.m.
Mutual aid Ambulance, Pelham.
9:01 p.m. Assist citizen, Library
Street. 10:09 a.m. Motor
vehicle accident, Derry Street.
10:33 a.m. Alarm box testing,
Lowell Road. 2:39 p.m. Box
alarm, Derry Road. 3:48 p.m.
Fall related injury, Westchester
Court.
Hudson Fire Log
Classieds!
Classied Ad Rates: 1 week: $10.00 for 20 words or less. 4 weeks: $37.00 for 20 words or less. Additional words: .10 per word per week. (Maximum of 60 words). Lost and Found and
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All other ads can be mailed or delivered to: Hudson~Litcheld News, 17 Executive Drive, Suite One, Hudson, NH 03051. Call 603-880-1516 for more information.
Buyer Be Aware: Te Area News Group supplies advertising space in good faith for our customers. However, occasionally an advertiser will require up front investment from the consumer.
We do not endorse or guarantee these or any advertisers claim. We encourage you to be a good consumer and do your homework before you invest/purchase any products or goods.
Scoops got your Scoops got your
Hudson - Litchfield News | August 22, 2014 - 13
AUTO/
MOTORCYCLE
WE BUY junk cars and
trucks. Call Pat at Jean-Guys
in Pelham, a N.H. Certifed
Green Yard, at 603-635-7171
8/15/14
CLEANING
A GREAT CLEANING
BY LUCI. Afordable,
experienced, free estimates.
Reliable, with excellent
references. Organizing
services available upon
request. Call Luci at 603-
521-4636. 7/25-8/22/14
A QUALITY HOUSE
KEEPING: Dependable &
high quality work. Home
and commercial. Free
estimates. References
available. Call Leia, 603-
557-2330. 7/18-8/22/14
C.P. CLEANING
SERVICE. Where the
owner is on the job. Carpet
cleaning, sanitizing, and
deodorizing and carpet spot
cleaning. Of ce/janitorial.
Floor cleaning/recoating
Experienced and insured.
Free estimates/no obligation.
Small jobs welcome. 800-
221-4065, 603-893-8212.
8/15-8/29/14
METICULOUS
CLEANING by Deborah:
Home and of ce cleaning.
Weekly, bi-weekly, monthly.
Honest, reliable, excellent
references, 18 years
experience. Call 603-440-
9665 8/22/14
TWISTER CARPET
CLEANING Truck mounted
units. We ofer residential
and commercial cleaning
and foor maintenance. Fully
insured. Call 603-759-5220
06/27-8/22/14
CHILD CARE
CHILD CARE OPENING
for one family. $150-200/
week. Clean, pet-free, smoke-
free home. Flexible hours.
Great references. Contact
Allison, 603-493-9792.
7/18-8/22/14
CONSIGNMENT
CONSIGNERS WANTED
for large childrens
consignment sale. Sept. 12-14.
Newborn/teen clothing, toys,
furniture and more. Clean
out-Cash In! Consigners earn
a minimum of 65%. www.
roundaroundwegrow.com
7/18-8/15/14
FOR RENT
2 GARAGES FOR RENT 10
x 20 for $100/mo. 12 x 24
for $125/mo. Hudson. Call
886-8157. 8/22/14
RENTALS
Canopy Tent Rentals
RCM RENTALS
978-771-2744
rcmtentrentals.com
Great for outdoor parties!
Tables Chairs
Free local delivery &set up
Well beat any competitors pricing.
8/22/14
FOR SALE
THIS END UP CHAIR,
SOFA & OTTOMAN, good
condition, $150 or best ofer.
3 Piece wood and woven
rattan entertainment center
$200 or best ofer, good
condition. Call for more info
-883-7199. 8/22/14
FREE BEES
2 AKC registered (male and
female) English bulldogs
puppies free for to any good
home if interested. Contact
w87309@gmail.com 8/22/14
HEALTH

WOMENS FITNESS
BOOTCAMP at Darrah Pond
Litchfeld Mon 9:15 am;
Tues/Turs 5:45 pm. Call/text
603-682-1920 to enroll. www.
bootcampatdarrahpond.com
8/8-8/29/14
HELP WANTED
BEFORE & AFTER
SCHOOL PROGRAM IN
PELHAM, NH is looking
for experienced Child Care
Workers. Candidate must be
available for shifts Monday-
Friday, 6:45am-8:45am &
2:45pm-5:45pm. Salary is
$9.00 an hour for qualifed
individuals. Please send
resume to info@psacc-nh.org
or call 603-635-9733. 8/22/14
DRIVERS: Local-Home
Nightly! Boston Dryvan!
$18.00/hr & Great Benefts!
CDL-A, 1yr. Exp. Req. 855-
971-6893 8/22/14
DRIVERS: Money &
Miles New Excellent Pay
Package. 100% Hands OFF
Freight + E-Logs. Great Home
time/Monthly Bonus. 1 yr.
OTR exp./No Hazmat 877-
704-3773 8/22/14
DRIVERS: CDLA. Average
$52,000 per yr. plus. Excellent
Home Time + Weekends.
Monthly Bonuses up to $650.
5,000w APUs for YOUR
Comfort + E-Logs. Excellent
Benefts. 100% no touch.
877-704-3773 8/22/14
DRIVER/UTLITY PERSON
$12/hr., about 20 hours/
week, Salem wastewater
treatment frm. Proft sharing.
Separation Technologists. Call
603-898-0020 x 106. Don
Belanger. 8/22/14
EXPERIENCED
LANDSCAPER WANTED
Experience in mowing. Full
time, valid drivers license
required. 603-883-1028 8/22/14
PART TIME Responsible
individual to maintain
laundromat and dry cleaners.
Experience preferred.
References required. Call for
appointment. 603-820-2759.
8/22/14
LOOKING FOR AFTER
SCHOOL SITTER from
2:30 PM to 3:30 PM, M - F,
my home for four weeks
minimum. Position may
become permanent with more
hours (2:30 to 5:00 PM).
Call 603-204-7156 after 6pm.
Ask for Kathy. 8/22/14
INSTRUCTION
PHLEBOTOMY COURSE:
5 Weeks, $800.00. Register
now for August classes.
Wed and Fri, 6p.m.-8p.m.
Phlebotomy and Safety
Training Center, Litchfeld,
NH. 603-883-0306 8/1-8/22/14
WORKREADYNH is a free
business program that ofers
soft skills and computer
training to career builders at
Nashua Community College.
Two nationally recognized
certifcates are earned in
this class. Contact Donna
Marceau at 882-6923 x1560
for the fall schedule of classes.
Or email: dmarceau@ccsnh.
edu. 8/22/14
HOME
IMPROVEMENT
1 A11 IN ONE PAINTING.
25+ years experience, inte-
rior/exterior painting, power
washing, all work guaran-
teed, free estimates. Fully
insured. www.allinonepaint-
ing.net, 603-305-4974.8/8-8/29/14
1 COLLINS BROS.
PAINTING: Interior &
Exterior; Top quality work;
Afordable; Fully insured;
Free estimates; Excellent refs.
603-886-0668. 8/22/14
A TO Z DANIELS
Hand-d-Man: Specializing in
jobs too small for remodelers
or contractors. Husband to-
do list. Big + small, inside
and outside. Yardwork spring
clean-ups. Replacement door
+ windows. Painting inside +
outside. Fully insured. Dan,
603-365-6470. 8/22/14
BOUCHER Handyman and
Remodeling LLC. Home
repair and maintenance.
Interior and exterior painting.
Power Washing. Finished
basement & bath, etc. No job
too small! Let us take care of
your Honey Do list. BNI
member. 603-882-7162.
8/22/14
DAVES HANDYMAN
SERVICES. Interior painting,
windows, doors, decks,
basements, and general home
repairs. Licensed and insured.
Free estimates. References
available. 603-486-1310.
8/22/14
FULL SERVICE
REMODELING: Licensed,
insured, registered. Repairs/
additions. Roofng/Siding.
30 years experience. Formerly
with Tis Old House.
Competitive pricing. Walter,
603-661-652768/15-9/5/14
*JACOBS
CONSTRUCTION*
Additions, decks, screened
porches, basements, interior
trim work, etc. Licensed
and insured. Over 25 years
experience. We accept
MC, Visa, Discover. Call
Joe 603-635-9953.www.
jacobsconstructionllc.com.
8/15-9/5/14
KITCHEN CABINET
INSTALLER, Modifcations,
Repairs, Custom Built-ins,
Finish Carpentry, Additions
and more. Rocco, 603-231
5225 8/22/14
KME PAINTING LLC.
Why remodel? Painting is
quicker, cleaner and better
bang for the buck. Interior,
exterior, home improvement.
Quality work at a fair price.
Fully insured, call for a free
estimate. 603-759-5680.
8/15-9/5/14
SULLIVAN & SONS
FENCE: Installation of all
styles of fence. Also retainer
walls and stone walls. Free
estimates, reasonable rates.
Call Art. 603-557-4682.
8/15-9/5/14
POWERWASHING - call
Patrick Lacasse. 603-883-
6731. 8/22/14
JUNK REMOVAL
AS UNWANTED scrap
metal, cars and trucks, lawn
tractors, washers and dryers,
hot-water tanks, etc. Free pick
up. Call Steve at 261-5452.
6/27-8/15/14
ALL ABOUT JUNK
REMOVAL. Call Us For All
Your Junk Removal Needs.
We Take It All. 10% Of for
Seniors and Veterans.
Call John, 603-889-7173,
978-758-8371.
www.junkoutnh.com.
7/18-8/15/14
LANDSCAPING
8/22/14
AAA LANDSCAPING:
Lawn Mowing Most Lawns
$30 - $45, Spring Cleanups
Starting at $175, Mulch
Installation, Patios, Walkways,
Walls, Fences, Fully Insured,
Reasonable Rates, Free
Estimates, Call 603-759-4591
or Schedule An Estimate
On Our Website at www.
JasonsAAALandscaping.com.
8/22/14
NEED YARD WORK
DONE? Small tree cutting/
trimming, bush trimming,
brush clearing, leaf blowing.
Call Steve 603-235-4014.
8/22/14

LAWN AERATION
SERVICE 35 - 45% of retail
prices. Joseph Melo. Call:
603-401-3679. Fully Insured.
8/22/14
SERVICES
IN-TUNE PIANO
SERVICES. Certifed Piano
Technician. Tuning, Repair,
Regulation, Appraisals,
Rebuilding. 603-429-6368.
randy@in-tunepiano.com,
www.in-tunepiano.com.
7/25-9/12/14
REPAIR, DESIGN &
BUILD SEPTIC SYSTEMS
Call Fisette Excavating at
603-508-0947
8/22/14
TREE SERVICES
BOUTIN TREE REMOVAL.
Specializing in hazardous tree
removal. Fully insured.
Free estimates and frewood
for sale. Call Daryl at
603-321-8768.
www.boutintreeremoval.com
8/22/14
HIGH VIEW TREE
SERVICE: Fully insured, free
estimates, 24-hour service.
Specializing in all aspects of
tree service. Call Brownie,
603-546-3079 8/1-8/29/14
WANTED
AS UNWANTED scrap
metal, cars and trucks, lawn
tractors, washers and dryers,
hot-water tanks, etc. Free
pick up. Call Steve at 261-
5452.8/22/14
YARD SALES
YARD SALE Sat. Aug 30.
50 Musquash Road, Hudson
NH. Mans bicycle, helmet
& shoes. Mens shirts-short
and long sleeve, including
western style. Mens ostrich
cowboy boots. Womens
clothes, shoes and handbags.
Christmas tree. Concord
House Pewter, dorm fridge.
Wide selection of country
line dance and couples
instructional videos, incuding
music. Entertainment center
for 60 TV, bistro set, bakers
rack. Lots of older country
music CDs. Stacking storage
bins and more. 8 a.m. to 2
p.m. 8/22/14
YARD SALE Saturday
8/23 from 9am-3pm. First
Congregational Church,
Pelham. Educational toys,
games, puzzles and more from
Steepletop School. 8/22/14
DOWNSIZING YARD
SALE: 42 Stark Lane,
Litchfeld, NH. Saturday
August 23, 8AM to 3PM &
Sunday August 24, 9AM to
3PM. Arts & craft supplies,
fabric, camping equipment, a
few antiques, some furniture,
household items, collectables,
ABS river canoe, utility trailer
& more. 8/22/14
Join Our Sales Team!
Flexible Hours
Straight Sales Commission
Open Territories
Immediate Start
Call Len
603-880-1516
or email
len@areanewsgroup.com

IRRIGATION INSTALLATION
Lawn Maintenance New Lawns,
Landscape Construction
Hardscaping
Bobcat & Excavation Services
Free Estimates Insured
603-305-6845

-Town of Hudson-
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Proposed Modication to Chapter 317-30
of the Town Code of the Town of Hudson
Chapter 317-30 is entitled Vehicles and Trafc, Schedule III,
Stop Intersections
Please take notice that in accordance with NH RSA 41:11-b the Town of
Hudson Board of Selectmen shall hold a public hearing on August 26,
2014, at 7:00 PM in the Selectmens Meeting Room at Town Hall, 12
School Street, Hudson, New Hampshire to consider an amendment to
Chapter 317-30 of the Code of the Town of Hudson. The amendment
would add a stop sign on Friars Drive, westbound, at the intersection of
Executive Drive.
Residents wishing to speak on the matter are invited to attend.
Stephen A. Malizia - Town Administrator
School Food Service Openings:

Cafeteria Staff
Three and four hour part-time cafeteria employees perform all tasks to
meet the goals of our Food Service program. You must be capable of
lifting and previous restaurant or hospitality experience a plus.

Substitute Cafeteria Staff
Substitute employees perform the essential tasks of our school cafeterias
to meet the goals of the Food Service program on an on-call basis and
earn $8.75 an hour.

For consideration candidates need to apply online at www.sau81.org
-Hudson School District-
PUBLIC NOTICES
HELP WANTED
$345.80 at this size
7 tall by 7.7 inches wide- 4 columns
Hudson Litchfeld News
Friday, August 22
STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES
AIR RESOURCES DIVISION
CONCORD, NEW HAMPSHIRE
NOTICE OF PERMIT REVIEW PUBLIC HEARING AND COMMENT PERIOD
Pursuant to the New Hampshire Code of Administrative Rules, Env-A 621.02, notice is hereby given that
the Director of the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services, Air Resources Division
(Director), has received an application for a state permit to operate from, and based on the information
received to date, intends to issue such permit to:
Continental Paving, Inc.
16 Morgan Road
Litchfeld, New Hampshire
For the Following Devices:
Hot Mix Asphalt Drum Plant #909
The application and draft permit are on fle with the Director, New Hampshire Department of
Environmental Services, Air Resources Division, 29 Hazen Drive, P.O. Box 95, Concord, NH 03302-0095,
(603) 271-1370. Information may be reviewed at the ofce during working hours from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
Monday through Friday. Additional information may also be obtained by contacting Sheila Rydel at the
above address and phone number. Requests for a public hearing and/or written comments fled with the
Director in accordance with Env-A 621.06, and received no later than Monday, September 22, 2014, shall
be considered by the Director in making a fnal decision.
Craig A. Wright
Director
Air Resources Division
14 - August 22, 2014 | Hudson - Litchfield News
Dumont - Sullivan
Funeral Homes &
Cremation Services
50FERRYST.
HUDSON,NH
370MAINST.
NASHUA,NH
882-9431
www.dumontsullivan.com
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Weather Weather and Climate Wise W
h
ys
Weather Weather W
hys
and Climate Wise
by Joseph DAleo, CCM
I had planned another topic
for this issue but felt obliged
to correct the misinformation
in two recent letters by Bruce
Atwood. He obviously spends
a lot of time mining the web
for information and knows
more than the average person,
but as you know, you can nd
on the web information that
can support your ideas. He
frequently mentions Wikipedia,
which he says he trusts
because it is moderated.
Wikipedia is a useful
resource but should come with a disclaimer user beware!
Many of us use Wikipedia to recall the name of an actor, a
favorite movie, the name or year of a song, nd out how old an
actor or singer we like is. You need to be careful, though, about
biographies, history, politics and science, because the material is
open source and often not true or at least slanted.
In a story this April Wikipedia: where truth dies online, http://
www.spiked-online.com/newsite/article/wikipedia-where-truth-
dies-online/#.U-l3GoBdVgn ,Spiked on-line warned that not all
Wikipedia publishes can be trusted. There are over 21 million
editors with varying degrees of competence and honesty Many
teachers warn their students to exercise extreme caution when
using it. (Note: some teachers forbid citing Wikipedia in a paper).
Lawrence Solomon for CBS News http://www.cbsnews.com/
news/wikipropaganda-on-global-warming/ wrote how some
issues like climate have the information controlled by editors or
administrators who have a clear bias.
Kim Dabelstein Petersen is a Wikipedia editor who seems
to devote a large part of his life to editing reams and reams of
Wikipedia pages to pump the assertions of global-warming
alarmists and deprecate or make disappear the arguments of
skeptics.
Holding the far more prestigious and powerful position of
administrator is William Connolley a software engineer
and sometime climatologist (he used to hold a job in the British
Antarctic Survey), as well as a serial (but so far unsuccessful) ofce
seeker for Englands Green party.
And yet by virtue of his power at Wikipedia, Connolley, a
ruthless enforcer of the doomsday consensus, may be the worlds
most inuential person in the global warming debate ... William
Connolley rode shotgun on just about any climate-related article on
that website.
As of a year ago, Mr. Connolley had edited 5,428 Wikipedia
articles, almost all on climate and complaints about his zealotry
ultimately earned him a suspension.
There are other sites like Skeptical Science that Mr. Atwood
references, but they have the same bias http://tinyurl.com/3aytkus
and http://tinyurl.com/k9s38vl.
Now to address Mr. Atwoods other claims with facts.
The grand maximum did not occur 50 years ago but over the
period from 1950 to 1990 with multiple peaks around 1958, 1980,
1990. Ilya G. Usoskin of the Sodankyla Geophysical Observatory at
the University of Oulu, Finland published in Living Reviews of Solar
Physics a paper examining records from two isotope proxies (Be10
and C14) and found that solar activity at the end of the 20th century
was at the highest levels of the past 1,200 years.
The IPCC and warmists like to use the solar brightness (the visible
part of the solar spectrum) which changes only 0.1 to 0.2 percent
during the 11-year solar cycle to try and discount the solar climate
connection, but they ignore other solar variables which greatly
amplify the small change in the visible light like ultraviolet (which
changes 6-8%), geomagnetic and the effect of the solar wind on
cloud enhancing cosmic rays. You have to consider the total solar
effect. http://icecap.us/images/uploads/Solar_Changes_and_the_
Climate.pdf.
UK Professor Lockwood in 2013 found the measurement of
the solar wind and record low
magnetic elds during the long
and record low minimum 2007
to 2009 provided some important
clues for understanding the solar
dynamo and explaining both the
Dalton minimum near 1800 and the deeper Maunder Minimum
(1640-1700). Lockwood, the Russian Pulkovo Observatory, NASAs
Hathaway and many, many other solar scientists predict a turn to
much colder as we dive deeper into the upcoming next Grand Solar
Minimum. The cooling winters after 1995 (2.26 F. for the last 20
years for the US) reect the initial decline that began after the nal
1990 peak (there is a lag of 5-8 years).
A 2014 paper by Chinese scientists (Zhao et al) reported the
impact of carbon dioxide on climate change may have been
overstated with the total solar activity giving a better explanation of
changes in the Earths temperature. Indeed, the greenhouse models
are all failing miserably. The IPCC admitted to low understanding of
water vapor, clouds, solar and ocean cycles, all far more important
than CO2, so that is no surprise.
The greenhouse theory is falsied by the facts warming is
not global, that the so-called atmospheric tropical hot spot, the
signature feature of the heat trapping theory, was absent and that the
greenhouse models have failed. http://tinyurl.com/mwmk5qj.
Yes, at the surface, there was model-predicted warming in
higher latitudes, but that has been observed only in the Northern
Hemisphere (and ended 17 years ago see last link) and the arctic
(which is also cyclical http://icecap.us/images/uploads/ARCTIC.pdf).
Satellites, weather balloons and ocean buoys have all shown
there has been no warming in the tropics from the high atmosphere
all the way down 300 meters into the tropical oceans.
Finally, the health study Mr. Atwood mentioned was one the EPA
found impossible to defend in Congress. Health claims do not
relate to CO2 but to soot, which is why they no longer talk CO2
but carbon pollution. With every breath, we exhale 100 times the
CO2 that the air contains so it obviously doesnt cause premature
deaths or childrens asthma.
Soot is a problem in China but no longer in the U.S. Small
particulates have declined 50 percent the last 15 years here and are
below the EPA standard.
Real data suggests they are not a health hazard. See this story
http://tinyurl.com/oh68sym debunking the role particulates had
even when they were more prevalent. The famous pollution
episodes in Donora, PA, in 1948 occurred due to trapping of other
chemical pollutants and in London in 1952 from sulfuric acid mist
from burning of high sulfur coal in a pea-soup inversion fog.
I had lunch with Dr. John Dale Dunn, an emergency physician
with experience in epidemiology at Fort Hood and saw his
presentation at a recent conference. https://www.youtube.com/
watch?v=TV_kp_Gkw.
We agreed the EPA health risk claims are totally bogus and what
is ignored is the far more serious threat due from the cold where
countries (like the UK) abandoned coal and fossil fuel to chase the
environmental dream of unreliable wind and solar and where prices
rose so much as to make energy unaffordable for those on xed
incomes and the poor. See the deadly results of cold homes http://
tinyurl.com/nj3pl4b. That is where we will be going, if we buy
insurance and allow the EPA to run amuck just in case.
Joe DAleo, a Hudson resident for the last 25 years,
co-founded The Weather Channel and served as its rst director of
meteorology back in 1982. With more than 40 years of experience
in professional meteorology, he has served as chief meteorologist
for Weatherbell Analytics since 2011. As a fellow of the American
Meteorologist Society, he has testied about weather and climate
before federal and state legislatures and taken the science lead on
legal briefs to the D.C. circuit and U.S. Supreme courts. Let Joe
know what you think at joe@areanewsgroup.com.
The Real
Story
Chart embedded in text doc. saved in the week as Weather Whys
Hudson - Litchfield News | August 22, 2014 - 15
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Many thanks
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Tompkins
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To see a fy over video of the feld, go to
https://vimeo.com/98864658
Zach Field- continued from page 9
Talk to


news@areanewsgroup.com


news@areanewsgroup.com


news@areanewsgroup.com
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Bears Face Tyngsborough in Scrimmage
by AJ Dickinson
Since the start of the
American Youth Football
season for the Hudson-
Litcheld Bears on August
2, the young athletes of
the 8U Division have their
sights set on their rst game
this Sunday. As a way to
prepare for the season,
Bears Coach Chuck Rubino,
along with Tyngsborough,
Mass., Coach Dave Robson,
organized a scrimmage
Tuesday, August 19, on the
lower eld of the Memorial
School. The full-contact
scrimmage provided both
teams with a glance at
their teams strengths and
weaknesses in this years
roster while giving the kids
a chance to play a team
they normally wouldnt face
during the regular season.
staff photos by AJ Dickinson
Hudson Cable
Television
Sat. Aug. 23
7:00 a.m. Jazz Cardio
7:30 a.m. Sculpt by Stephanie
8:30 a.m. Learning with Shelby - Reptiles
9:30 a.m. Home Fire Sprinklers
11:30 a.m. Empower Your Parent Voice
12:00 p.m. 2014 International Conference on
Climate Change featuring Joe DAleo
1:00 p.m. Town Hall Meeting with Marilinda
Garcia
2:00 p.m. ACT International 300 at Airborne
Speedway
4:00 p.m. Al Limas School of Self Defense
5:00 p.m. Firearms, Fishing and More - 2014
SASS Competition
6:00 p.m. Body Sculpt - Paper Plates
6:30 p.m. Jazz Cardio Strength Stretch (Ep09)
7:00 p.m. Community Corner With Big Jim -
Hudson Speedway
Sun. Aug. 24 and Wed. Aug. 27
7:00 a.m. Jazz Cardio
7:30 a.m. Body Sculpt
8:00 a.m. Hudson First Baptist Church
9:30 a.m. Trinity Assembly of God
10:30 a.m. Jesus and The Jewish Roots of the
Eucharist
12:00 p.m. Hand Tools Make Simple Work at
Inspiration Farm
12:30 p.m. Paddling the Northern Forest Canoe
Trail
1:30 p.m. Makeover Magic
2:00 p.m. Extreme Beginner Cooking
3:00 p.m. Autism Today
4:00 p.m. Hudson First Baptist Church
5:30 p.m. Trinity Assembly of God
6:30 p.m. Jazz Cardio
7:00 p.m. Community Corner With Big Jim -
Hudson Speedway
Mon. Aug. 25 and Thurs. Aug. 28
7:00 a.m. Jazz Cardio
7:30 a.m. Body Sculpt
8:00 a.m. 2014 International Conference on
Climate Change
9:00 a.m. Todays Air Force
9:30 a.m. What Does Certied Organic Mean?
10:00 a.m. Paddling the Northern Forest Canoe
Trail
11:00 a.m. Mt. Cardigan
11:30 a.m. Hike Safe
12:00 p.m. Expedition New England - No
Escaping New England
12:30 p.m. Sidewalks Entertainment - Candace
Cameron Bure
1:00 p.m. The Humble Farmer
2:00 p.m. Lakes Region Invasive Aquatic Species
- Milfoil
3:00 p.m. Firearms, Fishing and More - 2014
SASS Competition
4:00 p.m. Intuitive Conversations With Pat
5:00 p.m. Go Fishing With Dan Kenney - Central
Massachusetts
5:30 p.m. Autism Today
6:30 p.m. Jazz Cardio
7:00 p.m. Backstage Pass - Analog Heart
Tues. Aug. 26
and Fri. Aug.
29
7:00 a.m. Jazz
Cardio
7:30 a.m. Yoga
With Amy
8:00 a.m. 2014
International
Conference
on Climate
Change
9:00 a.m.
NASA 360 -
NASA and Pro
Sports Athletes
9:30 a.m.
Books of Our
Time - Tom
Brady vs. the
NFL
Chris Rabias of Tyngsborough
Owen Bedi of Hudson carries the ball for a 6-yard gain.
Nate Robinson of Hudson makes fve yards of progress.
Owen Bedi of Hudson
Christian Beck of Tyngsborough is taken down by Owen Bedi.
Christian Hall of Tyngsborough gets tackled by
a swarm of Bears defenders.

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