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ArchivesPortsmouth Naval Shipyard SparedBy Julie Donnelly on Wednesday, August 24, 2005.After a very long process, supporters of the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard breathed a sigh of relief today as the Base Realignment and Closure Commission decided to reject the Department of Defense's recommendation to close. Just one of the nine commissioners agreed with Secretary Rumsfeld that the base was unnecessary to the future of the Navy. NHPR Correspondent Julie Donnelly reports from Washington. Portsmouth Shipyard to Stay OpenBy Shay Zeller on Wednesday, August 24, 2005.The Portsmouth Naval Shipyard survived another close call today. The Pentagon wanted to close it, but this morning a federal commission decided against that. This isn't the first time the shipyard has survived in the face of closure. We'll talk with Former Shipyard Commander Peter Bowman about why Portsmouth keeps dodging the bullet. Bowman served on the base closure commission in 1993. Young FarmersBy John Clayton on Wednesday, August 24, 2005.With high land costs and more lucrative job opportunities in the white collar sector, it's getting harder and harder these days to attract young farmers into the business. The Granite State has been helping young farmers get and stay into the business for years. We'll have a panel of young farmers on to talk about their experiences, why they do it, and what they see as the future of farming as well as what the Granite State is doing to help keep them in business. Union Leader columnist John Clayton hosts. His guests are Greg Berger, who started working at Spring Ledge Farm in New London in the tenth grade and purchased the farm this year from the Clough family. Greg is thrity four years old with a wife and two kids and a degree in Plant Science from The College of Agriculture at Cornell University. Beth Hodge, who with her sister Courtney, purchased Echo Farm in Hinsdale in nineteen ninety and now co-manage it along with the Schofield family. Beth is thirty years old and Co-Manager of the farm and Director of Marketing for their pudding line, which was started in 1997. Her sister is twenty eight. Keith Chapin, who co-owns Pinball Dairy in Alstead with Keith Kimball. They purchesed the farm in 2003. Previous to that, Keith worked as a cow herder at a farm in New York. Keith is twenty nine and his business partner, Keith Kimball, is twenty eight. Gary Matteson, who owns and operates New England Anenomes, a flower farm in Epsom. He is Chair of the Legislative Committee for the New Hampshire Farm Bureau and Director for Northeast New Hampshire for the Farm Credit Bureau. Shipyard Workers Celebrate BRAC DecisionBy Roger Wood on Wednesday, August 24, 2005.A celebration broke out shortly after the Base Realignment and Closure Commission vote to keep the Portsmouth Navy Yard open. NHPR correspondent Roger Wood was in front of the yard’s main gate and filed this report. |
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