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ArchivesThe Science and Lore of Maple SyrupBy Laura Knoy on Thursday, March 25, 2004.'Tis the season in New England where metal buckets adorn Maple trees, sugar shacks are ablaze with activity and the sweet smell of maple syrup is in the air. Today we'll talk about everything you ever wanted to know about maple sugaring in New Hampshire. Mike's guests are Sumner Dole, Extension Educator of Forest Resources at the University of New Hampshire and Dick Uncles, Bureau of Markets Supervisor at the New Hampshire Department of Agriculture, Markets and Food. He'll also talk with Paul Messer, Owner of Sunday Mountain Maple Farm in Orford. Have Brushes, Will TravelBy John Walters on Thursday, March 25, 2004.A painter who claims to hate traveling has written a "travel book" illustrated with his own brightly colored landscapes. What's that all about? Wolf Kahn's America: An Artist's Travels is actually a record of the American locales Brattleboro resident Wolf Kahn has visited over the past forty-odd years in order to teach a workshop, attend an exhibition of his work or fulfill a commission from a wealthy patron. A refugee from Nazi Germany, born in 1927, he says he prefers the comforts of home to the anxieties of travel, but he finds visual inspiration everywhere he goes- even in a restaurant parking lot overlooking a marsh. The painting sites range from Maine to Florida, with excursions to Yosemite and New Mexico. Wolf talks about his why and how he paints... and spending his life "learning the ropes" after a junior high encounter. Legislature Approves Benson Budget CutsBy Josh Rogers on Thursday, March 25, 2004.Two executive orders trim current state spending by 4.4 million dollars. The orders come as the state faces a budget shortfall that is expected to reach more than 6 million dollars by July. Laid-Off Jac-Pac Workers Search for WorkBy Raquel Maria Dillon on Thursday, March 25, 2004.It's been seven weeks since the Jac-Pac plant in Manchester closed and left 550 workers unemployed. The state Employment Security Department could not absorb this vulnerable population of mostly immigrant workers. So state officials got a federal emergency grant worth 2.4 million dollars to boost their unemployment services. In a matter of weeks, a new job training and placement center opened downtown. It will stay open for the next two years, or as long as workers need it. As New Hampshire Public Radio's Raquel Maria Dillon reports, the former Jac-Pac workers who gather there are desperate to start working again soon. |
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