|
|
ArchivesCounting CrowsBy Rosemary Conroy on Friday, January 30, 2004.Crows have been flocking to urban settings more and more. Find out what the city life has to offer. listen: No audio currently available. Order on CD (pdf).
State of the State RecapBy Laura Knoy on Friday, January 30, 2004.Governor Benson addressed New Hampshire Residents last night at an unprecedented new location in Plymouth. We'll review his speech, talk about the issues raised from the economy to infrastructure to education funding and analyze what the state of our state is January, 2004. Laura's guests are State Deputy House Speaker Michael Whalley. State House Democratic Leader Peter Burling and Jeff Feingold, Editor of the New Hampshire Business Review Ultimate Grooving and the PigskinBy John Walters on Friday, January 30, 2004.Bedford native Heather Paul began alpine skiing at age two. By her junior year in college, and at the top of her racing career, she got tired of the scene and quit. She learned a different type a skiing the next year- telemark. It's like alpine, but the binding leaves the heel free and the turns are executed differently. Heather became a world champion in the sport by the mid-nineties. She now lives in Barrington and runs Ultimate Groove- a telemark ski clinic for women that travels to different ski areas. Lou D'Allesandro is best known these days as a state senator form Manchester, but he had a football career before he went in to politics. He even tried out for the Patriots. He talks about his life in semipro ball and the heady expereince of being at the Patriots' tryout camp. NH Assigned to Execute Gary SampsonBy Mark Bevis on Friday, January 30, 2004.On the same day that New Hampshire got the news about a federal prison, state officials also learned the state had been chosen as the place to execute a convicted killer. A U.S. District Court judge ruled that Gary Sampson will be executed in the Granite State for a killing spree that left three men dead. But New Hampshire hasn't put anyone to death in 65 years. New Hampshire Public Radio's Mark Bevis has more. |
Support FromHighlightsNavigationUser login |