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What Stories Should NHPR News Cover Next Year?

By Mark Bevis on Monday, December 31, 2001.

On this last day of the year, a popular feature on news programs is the look back….usually a collection of sounds…and for TV, pictures….of the events we’ve all just lived through. Well, this year New Hampshire today is trying something different. We’ve asked people across the state to tell us what stories we should cover next year.

Here are a few of their answers. If you'd like to add your own ideas just click on this link.
http://www.nhpr.org/static/programs/nhtoday/visuals/2002ideas.php

listen: No audio currently available. Order on CD (pdf).

The Olympic Torch Comes Through NH

By Roger Wood on Friday, December 28, 2001.

The Olympic torch began its trip through New Hampshire this morning in the seacoast city of Portsmouth.

Correspondent Roger Wood was on hand to see the flame carried through the downtown streets and files this report on the celebration.

listen: No audio currently available. Order on CD (pdf).

A News Update with the Nashua Telegraph

By Lisa Peakes on Friday, December 28, 2001.

This week?s holidays didn?t slow down the Board of Aldermen in Nashua.
They voted 8 to 6 not to set a tougher standard for smoking in restaurants?and they also banned by an overwhelming 12-2 all night public dancing.
Nick Pappas, the Managing Editor at the Nashua Telegraph updated NHPR?s Lisa Peakes on those stories and more news from the region.

listen: No audio currently available. Order on CD (pdf).

Could DCYF Have Done More?

By Dan Gorenstein on Thursday, December 27, 2001.

Jurors have found Chad Evans, the man charged with killing 21-month old Kassidy Bortner guilty. A little more than one year ago, the baby died in a Maine hospital, about 10 days after state officials received a suspected abuse report. The Division for Children Youth and Families is the state office responsible for child abuse and neglect cases. As NHPR?s Dan Gorenstein reports, child advocacy groups wonder if DCYF could have done more to prevent the death.

listen: No audio currently available. Order on CD (pdf).

District Four Race Is On

By Josh Rogers on Thursday, December 27, 2001.

The race to fill the vacancy on the executive council has taken on more urgency. Manchester Democratic state rep. John Kacavas will vie with Republican and former Queen City Mayor Ray Wieczorek to succeed district 4's Tom Colantuono, who recently resigned to become US Attorney.

NHPR's Josh Rogers has more.

listen: No audio currently available. Order on CD (pdf).

Snow Country

By Kevin Gardner on Wednesday, December 26, 2001.

The NH Humanities Council concludes its year of exploration of Asian culture and literature with the Japanese novel Snow Country, by Yasunari Kawabata.

Winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1968, Kawabata's fiction challenges and rewards western readers with a literary sensibility that is deeply Japanese.

Humanities reporter Kevin Gardner files this report.

listen: No audio currently available. Order on CD (pdf).

Merchants' Take On The Holiday Take

By Josh Rogers on Wednesday, December 26, 2001.

While the numbers are still being tallied, state shopping malls report holiday retail spending has been better than anticipated and at least as strong as last season. But as NHPR's Josh Rogers learned, the perspective of merchants on Concord's main street was but more varied.

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The Willing Workers of Sugar Hill

By Rebecca Brown on Monday, December 24, 2001.

Just before Christmas in the North Country town of Sugar Hill, Santa Claus makes a stop at the Meeting House.
Every child in town gets a present, courtesy of Santa, but with a little assistance from a group called the Willing Workers.
In Sugar Hill, it?s a Holiday tradition.
But Sociologists like to label it a form of Social Capital?..or community connectedness.
Small town New Hampshire tends to rich in Social Capital, but as Rebecca Brown reports, it can?t be taken from granted.

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Sanctions Stripped From Education Bill

By Stateline News on Thursday, December 20, 2001.

A provision to punish states financially for failing to improve student performance has been eliminated from the federal school aid bill which won final congressional approval Tuesday (12/18). As the bill now stands, states will be required to expand student testing, but regardless of the test results, they will not be threatened with loss of federal aid. Democrats pushed for a bill with "teeth" but conservatives objected on the grounds sanctions would undermine states' rights.

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School Tests: How States Tackle the Challenge

By Stateline News on Thursday, December 20, 2001.

In total, states spend over $400 million a year to test students. The new federal education bill mandates annual testing of every student in grades 3 through 8. States are concerned about the costs of compliance and how testing should be used to improve schools.
See a complete list of how much each state spent on testing in 2001 www.nhpr.org/static/programs/nhtoday/focus_point/schools/testing_spendin...

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