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ArchivesReducing Junk Mail: NH wants to HelpBy Mark Bevis on Tuesday, April 22, 2003.Junk Mail. It arrives daily. You are just as likely to toss it without looking at it as you are to open it. NEW HAMPSHIRE’S DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES HAS SUGGESTIONS FOR REDUCING THE AMOUNT OF JUNK MAIL YOU RECEIVE. DES RECYCLING COORDINATOR MARC MORGAN DESCRIBED THE SERVICE TO NHPR’S MARK BEVIS. You can go to the State's new junk mail website by clicking here: www.des.state.nh.us/junkmail Earth DayBy Laura Knoy on Tuesday, April 22, 2003.Earth Day. We check in with what the modern environmental movement has done over the last thirty years and where it?s headed. Laura talks with Nancy Girard, Vice President, Conservation Law Foundation www.clf.org, Denis Hayes, Chair, Earth Day Network, www.earthday.net, James Glassman, fellow, American Enterprise Institute www.aei.org and host of www.techcentralstation.com, Kathy Fallon Lambert, Executive Director of the Hubbard Brook Research Foundation, State Representative Ted Leach, part of the Carbon Coalition, a group trying to raise the profile of air pollution and energy issues and other guests TBA. Counting Animal, Vegetable and FungiBy John Walters on Tuesday, April 22, 2003.Rick Van de Poll makes his living conducting bio-inventories. He takes a piece of land and finds out what lives on it. He works for conservation groups, local governments, land owners and developers. He talks to John about the huge amount of data he has collected about the regional environment and global change. Sexual Harassment in New HampshireBy Rebecca Kaufman on Tuesday, April 22, 2003.The sexual harassment charges recently settled against New Hampshire's former Fish and Game director Wayne Vetter received a lot of attention. They also cost the state thousands of dollars. But most sexual harassment charges don't make the headlines. And many never go to court. But as NHPR's correspondent Rebecca Kaufman reports, sexual harassment and discrimination in the workplace is by far the number one complaint filed with New Hampshire's Human Rights Commission. NH Attorney General Writes to EPABy Mark Bevis on Tuesday, April 22, 2003.New Hampshire Attorney General Peter Heed has joined his New England colleagues in a letter to EPA Administrator Christine Todd Whitman. The seven attorneys general express their concerns over Bush Administration plans to relax pollution controls. Attorney General Heed spoke with NHPR's Mark Bevis. He said he wants to draw attention to recently published new evidence of pollution damage to New Hampshire. |
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