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ArchivesNew Hampshire's Real Estate MarketBy Laura Knoy on Friday, August 29, 2003.Interest rates are up, rents are down, housing prices have cooled but homebuilding is skyrocketing. We examine the changing trends of real estate in the Granite State. Laura's guests are Ross Gittell, Associate Professor of Management and the University of New Hampshire's Whittemore School of Business and Economics. Robert Dunning, a buyer broker, homebuilder and residential land developer for Robert E. Dunning Inc in Concord and Walter Molony, Spokesman for the National Association of Realtors. Fall PreviewBy Rosemary Conroy on Friday, August 29, 2003.You won't believe what nature has in store for you this autumn. Find out with Rosemary Conroy. Moving MusselsBy Mike Arnold on Friday, August 29, 2003.Mike Arnold talks with Ethan Nedeau, owner of BioDrawVersity. Nedeau recently led a team of biologists on a mission to relocate rare Dwarf Wedgemussles found in the Connecticut River. State Lists Schools In Need of ImprovementBy Dan Gorenstein on Friday, August 29, 2003.The New Hampshire Department of Education has released this year’s list of schools that have tentatively been identified as in need of improvement. These schools have failed to meet No Child Left Behind testing standards two years in a row. New Hampshire Public Radio’s Dan Gorenstein reports. NCLB: States See More Impact on the HorizonBy Jon Greenberg on Friday, August 29, 2003.In every state, No Child Left Behind has begun to touch how schools function. New Hampshire Public Radio’s Jon Greenberg has this look at how the new law is playing out elsewhere. A Walking Tour Of CanterburyBy John Walters on Friday, August 29, 2003.John Walters gets a tour of the Canterbury Shaker Village with President, Scott Swank. It's one of the best preserved of all the former Shaker settlements and provides insight into the life, work and faith of the Shakers. Farang BaBy John Walters on Thursday, August 28, 2003.Craig Wilson looks like your average international corporate attorney who happens to live and work abroad in Bangkok, Thailand. He was born in Washington, D.C. and was educated at the finest schools. But Craig is no ordinary balding, pasty, 45 year old, he is an avid amateur boxer who steps into the ring at any opportunity and usually does so against opponents half his age. He has fought all over Thailand: in small villages, on Thai army bases, and in the city of Bangkok. He emerges the winner more often than not. Portsmouth resident John Sullivan has chronicled Craig's life in an award-winning documentary called Farang Ba, which means "crazy white foreigner" in Thai. Ed GillespieBy Laura Knoy on Thursday, August 28, 2003.We speak with Republican National Committee Chair Ed Gillespie about the state of the party, including how this year's Republican races are shaping up. Segway Summits Mt. WashingtonBy Trish Anderton on Thursday, August 28, 2003.Yesterday marked a milestone in the history of the Segway Human Transporter. The brainchild of New Hampshire inventor Dean Kamen made its first official climb up Mt. Washington, the highest mountain in the northeast. Three riders took turns piloting the Segway up the Mount Washington Auto Road. NHPR�S Trish Anderton was there. Second GlanceBy John Walters on Wednesday, August 27, 2003.Jodi Picoult had always wanted to write a ghost story. She has done it with her 10th novel, Second Glance. Strange things start to happen in a small Vermont town when a piece of land is developed against the will of the local Abenaki. Through her book Jodi Picoult explores paranormal activity, the history of the Abenaki and the Vermont eugenics project of the 1930's. |
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