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ArchivesThe UFC W vs. The MT WashingtonBy Rebecca Brown on Tuesday, December 4, 2001.Union organizers have taken on the Mount Washington Hotel and Resort in Bretton Woods. listen: No audio currently available. Order on CD (pdf).
New Hampshire's School PrincipalsBy Laura Knoy on Tuesday, December 4, 2001.Balancing the needs of students, teachers, parents and the community isn't easy. That may be why there's a principal shortage here in New Hampshire and nationwide. We'll look at the changing role of principals and what's being done to recruit more people to the job. Laura's guests are Peggy McAllister, executive director of the New Hampshire Association of School Principals www.NHASP.org and George Edwards, principal of Bow High school www.bow.k12.nh.us/bhs listen: No audio currently available. Order on CD (pdf).
A Seacoast Artist RediscoveredBy John Walters on Tuesday, December 4, 2001.In the early 20th century, Edmund Tarbell was known around the world as an American master of impressionism. But as the world of art was going through rapid change, he stayed with his style and approach. His place in art history grew smaller and today he's little known outside New England. Now, for the first time in more than 60 years, his art is the subject of a major exhibition at the Currier Gallery of Art in Manchester. Joining us to talk about the exhibit is its curator and gallery director, Susan Strickler and Tarbell's grandson, Edmund Tarbell II. Find out more at www.currier.org listen: No audio currently available. Order on CD (pdf).
Ex-Im Bank takes Grandmaison out of NH PoliticsBy John Milne on Tuesday, December 4, 2001.New Hampshire's Democrats will very likely have to conduct their 2004 presidential primary without the political skills of Nashua's Joseph Grandmaison. NHPR political observer John Milne, says things just won't be the same at election time without him. listen: No audio currently available. Order on CD (pdf).
Anthrax Threat ExpertsBy Dan Gorenstein on Tuesday, December 4, 2001.These days it seems we can't open the paper without news of another anthrax scare. The crisis is new to most of us. But for women and men who work in family planning and women's health clinics, anthrax threats are a regular occurance. Just last week the U.S. Justice Department announced it has identified Clayton Lee Waagner as responsible for hundreds of anthrax scares at women's clinics, including three in New Hampshire. But as NHPR's Dan Gorenstein reports, state and federal officials have ignorned people who have been targets longer than anyone else in the nation. listen: No audio currently available. Order on CD (pdf).
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