What makes a hiking trail great? Though every hiker has different preferences, everyone enjoys gorgeous scenery. When that scenery is paired with well-established paths and interesting landmarks, it helps a hiking trail rocket to the top of people’s favorites list. These factors are what contribute to the popularity of Flume Gorge.
Located within beautiful Franconia Notch State Park, Flume Gorge offers guests hours of adventure. Visitors will find the gorge at the base of Mount Liberty. Nearby, the one-and-only Flume Gorge Trail leads hikers along stunning local water features.
Whether you’re planning a trip to the area or researching destinations for your hiking bucket list, let this photo gallery treat you to a preview of Flume Gorge’s lovely landscapes.
Notre Dame desperately has been searching for size with very little of it returning in 2023-24. [autotag]Braeden Shrewsberry[/autotag], son of coach [autotag]Micah Shrewsberry[/autotag], committed to the Irish, but he merely was the latest entry on a long list of guards they’ve had lately. Finally, the program has a new forward in [autotag]Carey Booth[/autotag], who announced his own commitment to the Irish less than 24 hours after Shrewsberry.
Booth is a four-star recruit and fourth on the list of 2023 recruits in New Hampshire. At 6-foot-10, he fills the height left by [autotag]Nate Laszewski[/autotag] and likely the young forward role left by the transferred Ven-Allen Lubin. Depending on how the rest of the roster shapes up, he could be thrust into the spotlight immediately.
Like Braeden Shrewsberry, Booth appeared headed to Penn State. Instead, he also is taking his talents to South Bend so that he’ll play for Micah Shrewsberry after all. He also previously visited Marquette and California and received offers from 13 other Division I schools.
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Watkins served as a graduate assistant at Rutgers from April 2018 to June 2019. He worked with the wide receivers while with the Big Ten program.
His rise through the coaching ranks is a testament to his work ethic.
After that, he spent time at Concordia College where he was the defensive coordinator for two years. He then moved on to the University of St. Thomas where he spent two years as their assistant football coach before landing at New Hampshire in April.
Watkins’ new role, a big step forward in his young coaching career, was announced on his LinkedIn profile this week.
Last year, New Hampshire went 9-4 (7-1 Colonial Athletic Association). They beat Fordham in the first round of the FCS playoffs before losing to No. 7 Holy Cross in the second round.
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Current UCLA head coach Chip Kelly played at New Hampshire before eventually coaching with the program. He rose to the rank of offensive coordinator before he left for Oregon to become their offensive coordinator and eventually their head coach.
The Ivy League school closed Hanover Country Club in 2020, and has refused the foundation’s request to return the money.
Several years before his death in 2002, at age 88, Robert T. Keeler drew up a will to make his intentions clear. His wife and family were his primary beneficiaries. Also on the list were his secretary and housekeeper, a church, seminary, and medical center, and Dartmouth College, his alma mater.
Keeler didn’t name a dollar amount for Dartmouth, choosing instead to leave a percentage of his estate, but he did specify how he wanted the money used: for the “sole purpose of upgrading and maintaining its golf course.” When Dartmouth asked for the flexibility to use the money for other purposes, the family said no.
Per their 2005 “statement of understanding,” the college was to send any money it didn’t need to maintain the course to the Robert T. Keeler charitable foundation, a nonprofit that supports children in need. That hasn’t happened. The college closed the Hanover Country Club in 2020, citing financial concerns, and has refused the foundation’s request to return the approximately $3.8 million that remains.
Dartmouth has also fought the foundation and estate’s request to be allowed to make their objections to a court. They’ve so far been denied.
The disagreement has triggered a 2½-year legal dispute between Dartmouth, Keeler’s estate and foundation, and the Attorney General’s Charitable Trusts Unit, which is charged with protecting donors’ intentions.
It has also illustrated the limits of donors’ ability to control their charitable intentions, even when they spell out restrictions, as Keeler did.
With the blessing of the Attorney General’s Charitable Trusts Unit, a circuit court judge ruled in February that Dartmouth can keep the $3.8 million and use it for “golf-related” purposes, such as the study and design of golf practice areas or administrative and equipment costs of the school varsity golf teams.
The case is now before the state Supreme Court. Keeler’s estate and foundation have asked the court to essentially reopen the modification request and give them the right to show why Dartmouth should be forced to return the money.
They believe they can show that Dartmouth didn’t close the golf course for financial reasons, which would meet the legal threshold for repurposing the money, but closed it because it wants to extract more value from the course by erecting housing and academic buildings on the course. The school’s strategic plan identifies the redevelopment of the course as a possibility.
The foundation and estate also argue the Charitable Trusts Unit failed in its obligation to sufficiently investigate Dartmouth’s financial argument.
“If this stands, the idea that when a donor makes a gift with conditions, that those conditions are supposed to be honored, that rule does not exist anymore in New Hampshire,” said attorney John Laboe, who is representing the estate and foundation. Asked how he’d advise clients seeking to protect their intentions, Laboe said, “I would say don’t give them the money.”
Dissecting an agreement
The law allows institutions like Dartmouth to modify how they use gifts in limited circumstances: if the donor agrees or when the gift’s original purpose or restriction becomes unlawful, impracticable, impossible to achieve, or wasteful. However, the institution must still use the gift in a way that honors the donor’s wishes as much as possible, and a court must agree.
In February, Circuit Court Judge Thomas Rappa upheld the Charitable Trusts Unit’s determination that the school had met that legal burden and ruled that Dartmouth could redirect the money to other golf-related expenses. He found too that the unit had been extensively involved in reviewing Dartmouth’s request.
In oral arguments before the state Supreme Court in late March, Dartmouth’s attorney, Ralph Holmes, defended the school’s position that it is not required to return the money. He focused on a phrase in the statement of understanding that states the gift was intended to benefit future generations of Dartmouth students and members of the Dartmouth community. According to the statement of understanding Dartmouth included in a court filing, Keeler wished to support the golf course “so that future generations of Dartmouth students and members of the Dartmouth community may continue to enjoy the great game of golf at the course which he so loved.”
Holmes also told the court that the document does not identify the foundation as a beneficiary, and therefore does not require the money be returned. Holmes said that if Keeler wanted the right to have the money returned to his estate or foundation, that wish should have been included in the agreement.
“If that had been an agreement, it would be in this document, and it’s not there,” Holmes told the justices.
The agreement states that “… any amounts in excess of the amounts the executor determines to be necessary to sufficiently upgrade and adequately maintain the golf course shall be distributed to the Robert T. Keeler Foundation …”
Dartmouth’s legal team referred the Bulletin to Diana Lawrence, Dartmouth’s associate vice president for communications. Lawrence declined to comment while the case is pending.
As close as possible
Diane Quinlan, director of the Charitable Trusts Unit, also declined to comment on the case while it is pending. Assistant Director Michael Haley defended the unit’s handling of Dartmouth’s modification request during oral arguments, saying it has been extensively involved in the case. He also reiterated Holmes’ agreement that nothing in the statement of understanding requires the money be given to Keeler’s foundation.
“Now we have $3.8 million in charitable revenue or charitable assets that cannot be used,” Haley told the justices. “If we go back to the beginning … and they have a whole new hearing, and throw out everything we’ve done so far, that’s going to tie these resources up even further. And that’s certainly not what the intent of the donor was. He wanted these funds to be used for his intended charitable purposes.”
English common law first required attorney general oversight of charitable gifts in 1601, Quinlan said. New Hampshire was the first state to codify that responsibility in law. The Legislature created the Charitable Trusts Unit in 1943.
She said it’s not uncommon for institutions to seek permission to modify restrictions on a gift. She pointed to one involving two scholarship trusts established by Keene residents, one in 1929, the other in 1970.
The first required scholarships be given to male students. The second limited scholarships to male Protestant students. In 1987, the school board sought court permission to broaden the scholarships to all students, citing a fear that its administration of scholarships limited by gender and religion violated the constitutional right to equal protection. A superior court judge agreed.
The Attorney General’s Charitable Trusts Unit appealed the decision to the Supreme Court, arguing that the school board could resolve its concerns by appointing private persons to administer the scholarships. In a 1990 decision, a majority of the justices rejected the state’s argument. Then-Chief Justice David Brock disagreed, writing in his dissent, “for centuries, Americans have rightly believed that they enjoy a legally protected right to choose the objects of their bounty and to bequeath their property by will, as they see fit. Neither our state nor our federal constitution requires this court to write a ‘better’ will for a decedent in terms which reflect the breadth of concern and conception characteristic of a public welfare program.”
In other cases, the Charitable Trusts Unit has opposed a modification request or asked an organization to modify it. About two years ago, Catholic Charities told the unit it wanted to change restrictions on eligibility for the Liberty House, its transitional housing for veterans in Manchester.
The donor who had gifted the property many years ago required that it be available to only Vietnam veterans. As that population dwindled, Catholic Charities wanted court permission to lift the restriction and allow it to welcome all veterans.
Quinlan said her office told the court it would agree, but only if Vietnam veterans were given first preference. The court agreed with the unit’s recommendation, she said.
“The problem, of course, is that when someone gives the gift, and when the charity accepts the gift, they can’t always predict what might happen in the future that might frustrate the purpose of that gift,” she said
In 1928, a woman left $1,000 to provide poor residents in Manchester ice, which was then needed to refrigerate food. The trustees asked a court in 1984 to use the money instead to help needy residents with electric bills. The court agreed.
“It seemed like a good idea at the time,” Quinlan said, “but by 1984 (when the city requested to repurpose the gift), the purpose really became impractical because who, ‘Who had an icebox? Nobody.’”
‘Honorably return the money’
After Keeler graduated from Dartmouth in 1936, he earned a law degree from Yale and joined an Ohio law firm founded by the oldest son of former President William Howard Taft. He partnered with a cousin to develop 7,000 acres into a pulp and paper company that became the main supplier for Time Inc., according to his obituary.
He also continued golfing, up to two years before he died at his home in Vermont.
While an institution must notify the Charitable Trusts Unit that it is requesting court permission to modify a gift, it does not have to tell the donor. In the Dartmouth case, Peter Mithoefer, executor of Keeler’s estate and president and trustee of the foundation, learned the school was closing the golf course from a friend, who’d read about it in a golf magazine.
Mithoefer contacted Dartmouth and asked that the remainder of Keeler’s gift be given to the foundation, as Keeler requested. He said the school’s lawyer declined. In October, Mithoefer put his request to the school in writing.
He called Dartmouth’s decision to modify the terms of Keeler’s gift a betrayal and violation of the agreement. He said he had no doubt Keeler would have opposed any other use of his gift, including “golf-related” expenses. Mithoefer shared that he’d encouraged Keeler to instead leave the school money for scholarships and academics.
“His response was very clear,” Mithoefer wrote. “He was leaving money to maintain the golf course because he felt it would be a great asset for the alumni.” It would keep alumni connected to the school, often a first step in soliciting alumni gifts.
Mithoefer characterized the school’s financial argument for closing the course as misleading. He cited the school’s interest in using the land for student housing. He accused the Charitable Trusts Unit of failing to investigate the school’s real reasons for closing the school.
“I do not begrudge Dartmouth doing what it believes to be in the best interest of the college – expand its physical plant,” Mithoefer wrote, “but it should accept the ramifications of such a decision and honorably return the money given specifically to maintain the 18-hole golf course to the only other beneficiary named in (Keeler’s) will, his foundation.”
Annmarie Timmins is a Senior Reporter for the New Hampshire Bulletin, an independent, nonprofit news organization. This story first appeared in the New Hampshire Bulletin.
Donald Ross’s list of top-ranked courses extends into New Hampshire.
The influence of famed golf architect Donald Ross stretches across the Golfweek’s Best course rankings, including into New Hampshire.
Omni Mount Washington’s Ross design was completed in 1915 and was restored in 2008 by Brian Silva. It ranks as the No. 1 public-access layout in New Hampshire on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list in 2022, a distinction it has held for more than a decade.
Golfweek’s Best offers many lists of course rankings, with that oftop public-access courses in each stateamong the most popular. All the courses on this list allow public access in some fashion, be it standard daily green fees, through a resort or by staying at an affiliated hotel. If there’s a will, there’s a tee time.
Western Michigan vs New Hampshire game preview, prediction, and breakdown for the Week 5 game on Saturday, October 1
Western Michigan vs New Hampshire prediction, game preview, how to watch. Week 5, Saturday, October 1
Western Michigan vs New Hampshire How To Watch
Date: Saturday, October 1
Game Time: 6:00 ET
Venue: Waldo Stadium, Kalamazoo, MI
How To Watch: ESPN3
Record: Western Michigan (1-3), New Hampshire (3-1)
– Sign up and live stream college football on ESPN+
The pass rush is a killer, the run defense can hold up, and the running game is fine, but it’s QB Max Brosmer who can make this interesting.
Western Michigan is having a hard time on third downs, the offense has gone bye-bye over the last few weeks, and the secondary isn’t coming up with any big plays – no picks over the last three games.
Enough, Broncos. It’s time to start playing better.
The talent is there, the experience is in place, and the team is playing like a big bag of yuck with a dead offensive performance in a 34-6 loss to San Jose State and with just 180 yards of total offense in the loss to Pitt.
It stars with the lines – they’ve been lousy. However, the New Hampshire defense is awful on third downs, the run D hasn’t faced anyone who’s all that great and …
The passing attack that’s been stagnant will be crisper, but it’ll be the play of the running game that takes this over early on. New Hampshire is a dangerous team with enough good parts to pull this off, but the Broncos will come through.
It’s not going to be pretty, but the team will take it.
Western Michigan vs New Hampshire Prediction, Line
Western Michigan 35, New Hampshire 20
Line: Western Michigan -14.5, o/u: 51
ATS Confidence out of 5: 1
Western Michigan vs New Hampshire Must See Rating (out of 5): 2
There are still nine states that are still hoping their day in the sun is still to come.
This week the PGA Tour visits the First State for the time.
Wilmington Country Club will play host, marking the PGA Tour’s first-ever event in the state of Delaware and the 10th different venue to host the BMW Championship since the inception of the FedEx Cup in 2007.
“You’ve got to hit it as far as you can and hit a lot of fairways,” advised BMW defending champion and reigning FedEx Cup champion Patrick Cantlay.
Delaware becomes the 41st state in the union to host a Tour event, but that means there are still nine states that are still hoping their day in the sun is still to come.
Maine is one of the nine remaining states that have never hosted a Tour event. Professional golf has been absent from northeast New England, five states within the Mountain Time Zone and Alaska. Some states barely avoided making the list. Nebraska was spared solely by the 1933 Nebraska Open, Idaho’s Coeur d’Alene hosted the 1992 Merrill Lynch Shootout and Arkansas made headlines with the Arlington Hotel Open from 1955-63.
Some of these states have hosted Nationwide, Champions and LPGA events, but the locals are waiting patiently for Rory, Tiger and Jordan to grace them with their presence.
Here’s a list of some of the golf courses that could potentially host the stars of the PGA Tour someday. (Special thanks to longtime Golfweek reader and journalist Peter Kollmann, who helped with the research.)
Lately, we’ve been talking a lot about Notre Dame benefiting from the transfer portal. They recently added two defensemen for the 2022-23 season in Drew Bavaro and Ben Brinkman. Now, the Irish have a new outlet for scoring to look forward to thanks to the addition of forward Jackson Pierson from New Hampshire.
In four seasons with the Wildcats, Pierson scored 88 points, including 31 goals, in 115 games over four years. As a senior, he served as an alternate captain. His 24 points from the past season would have tied him for seventh on the Irish. Hockey East also honored him with the Len Ceglarski Individual Sportsmanship Award.
Pierson also is returning to his home state as he hails from Zionsville, a suburb of Indianapolis. His family also has a history of college sports in Indiana as Todd, his father, was a baseball player at Purdue. Let’s hope for the Irish’s sake, those athletic genes will pay off for them.
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PORTSMOUTH, NH — As temperatures start to drop into the 30s and colder, many golfers may be resigned to putting their clubs away for the winter as they wait longingly for spring.
But the owner of the new Tour restaurant and indoor golf simulator facility says “this is our peak season.”
Ryan Lent said Tour will offer Seacoast residents five oversized indoor golf simulators, featuring more than 80 different courses from around the world, along with a full-size restaurant and bar serving “upscale country club food.”
“We’re trying to marry high-end food with a state-of-the-art virtual golf experience,” Lent said about the new business, which opened Wednesday.
“This concept just hasn’t been done before. That’s taken a lot of work, but I think we have a really good product at this point,” he said.
Lent, who is president of NNE Hospitality, also owns The Puddle Dock in Portsmouth.
“This has been a true labor of love, and we couldn’t be more excited to offer this experience to the Seacoast and beyond,” Lent said. “Our mission moving forward will be to help our guests create memories while welcoming, serving, and engaging them through the union of golf and hospitality.”
Tour is located at 581 Lafayette Road — formerly home of Tuscan Kitchen. Visitors will be struck by just how big it is as they walk into the restaurant or golf simulator areas.
Jerry Lewis cinemas site
Some longtime residents might remember Tour’s location was also once home to the former Jerry Lewis cinemas.
Lent, a Rye resident who grew up in Portsmouth and graduated from Portsmouth High School, said workers had to dig into the foundation under the slab when they were creating Tour’s space.
“And we found the old walls to the movie theater,” he said.
People sitting in one of the many booths throughout the restaurant space can enjoy television for its party.
“It’s just like the old jukeboxes at Papa Gino’s,” he said.
In addition to the five golf simulators, there are more than 200 restaurant seats, about 30 televisions, as well as restaurant and bar areas where you can see your food being prepared in Tour’s open concept kitchen.
The simulators, as Lent explained, are really “massive multi-media screens” that golfers hit into after picking the course they want to play from famous courses located around the world.
“We use special balls with markings on them that will track spin rates and ball speed and flight patterns and that sort of thing that determines how you’re playing a hole,” Lent said.
Plenty of room
Lent said he designed Tour’s golf simulator areas to be larger than he has seen at other locations, noting they sometimes left him feeling “like you had to lean back so you didn’t get hit by a club.”
“When we designed these, we took that into account and we made them bigger, there’s also bar seating behind a wall at each simulator,” he said.
Tour has four simulators where four golfers can comfortably play, plus there’s a fifth “executive simulator suite” in a “conference-size” individual room that features a multi-media screen that’s about 23 feet wide.
“This room can hold 50 people as event space if they’re not playing golf, but if you are playing golf, you can fit 10 to 14 people very comfortably in here and still play,” Lent said as he demonstrated the executive simulator at Tour.
Each golf simulator will be serviced by wait staff and golfers will have places to store their golf bags before and after they play, he said.
Lent, an amateur golfer who loves the sport but acknowledges, “I’m not very good,” hopes to offer lessons at Tour beginning as soon as this spring after hiring a golf pro.
“Hopefully I’ll get better playing here,” he said.
What’s on Tour’s county club menu
Lent stressed he wanted to craft “an upscale casual country club type menu,” around the golf simulators so guests can have a complete experience.
“We have a fantastic pasta selection, we have filet, we have New York strip, there’s seafood options, it’s really just upscale country club fare,” he said as he stood in the middle of Tour’s 11,000-square-foot kitchen space. “We have a top-quality chef making all the ingredients from scratch. It’s not going to be your typical restaurant.”
Chef Doug D’Avico describes Tour’s menu offerings as “fresh American cuisine, with influences of Italian and a little bit of Asian.”
“We’re trying to be great county club cuisine, so we can take care of the golfers, but we also want to be able to be a great 160-seat restaurant where people can come in for a great dinner,” he said. He spoke Tuesday with his massive lighted kitchen in the background. “We’re trying to do a little bit really, really well so that we can get people to come in on a consistent basis.”
A different approach
Tour is not seeking to compete with other restaurants that specialize in say chowder or fried fish, but instead will offer visitors “something a little bit different that they can’t get anywhere else.”
As an example, he points to their Bacon Bomb appetizers, which he described as “Asian-style pork meatballs … wrapped in bacon.”
Tour also offers a Baked Local Cod in Paper entry, which D’Avico says is locally caught cod that’s baked in a bag with all the other ingredients.
“Everything’s created in the bag and then brought to the table,” he said. “When you open it up, you have that wonderful aroma from the dish and then your fish is moist and it’s hot and it’s something different.”
Tour also offers monthly memberships that golfers can buy that give them additional benefits, or discounted simulator rates, or both, Lent said.
Hours are noon to 8 p.m. ET Wednesdays through Sundays.