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Canada Drugs

By Laura Knoy on Friday, February 6, 2004.

New England is at the center of a national trend to look to Canada for cheaper prescription drugs. And the Granite State is right in the middle of it. Governor Benson says going over the border for medication will save the state money, but others aren't so sure the savings will add up. And they argue, it might not be safe. Laura's guests are Keith Herman, Policy Advisor for Governor Benson, and Charlie Arlinghaus, Director of the Josiah Bartlett Center For Public Policy.

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Commission Recommends Closing State Nursery

By Doug MacPherson on Friday, February 6, 2004.

Since 1910, the New Hampshire State Nursery has been quietly churning out low-cost tree seedlings for New Hampshire residents to plant.

Now, the Governor's Efficiency Commission recommends closing the nursery in order to save money.

Meanwhile, most New Hampshire residents may be unaware the nursery exists.

NHPR's Doug MacPherson reports.

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Letters from the Civil War

By John Walters on Friday, February 6, 2004.

Being a soldier in wartime is never easy, but the Civil War was especially tough. It was a long, bloody war, at a time when weapons had become much more deadly and medical care was as likely to kill as to cure you. The men also had to survive bad food, poor sanitary conditions, hot summers and cold winters. One of those soldiers was Benjamin ?Webb? Baker. He served in the Union Army for three full years. He was repeatedly wounded, patched up, and sent back into duty. Benjamin's story is told by his great-grandson through a collection of letters that Benjamin wrote during the war. The great-grandson is Benson Bobrick. He's is a writer from Brattleboro, Vermont, and author of Testament: A Soldier?s Story of the Civil War.

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