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High Oil Prices Affecting School Budgets

By Amy Quinton on Tuesday, September 27, 2005.

The high cost of fuel is putting a squeeze on school district budgets across the state.
Though the school year has just begun, administrators say they fear increased fuel prices may burn through their annual budget for bus transportation or heating this winter.
As New Hampshire Public Radio’s Amy Quinton reports, districts are struggling to find creative ways to cut back.

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Beyond Prison: Part Two

By Dan Gorenstein on Tuesday, September 27, 2005.

This week, we are presenting the series, "Beyond Prison" – a story about the power of friendship and two inmates who fed each other's hopes behind bars.

Yesterday, we met James Gilbert, a teenager who was in and out of residential homes from the time he was 11.

At 19, he was arrested for selling cocaine and sentenced to up to four years in the Concord prison.

Now, James has been shipped to the state's drug and rehabilitation facility in Laconia

This is his one chance to leave prison in less than a year.

New Hampshire Public Radio's Dan Gorenstein picks up the story.

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The Life and Music of Dmitri Shostakovich

By Laura Knoy on Tuesday, September 27, 2005.

This week marks the 99th birthday of Dmitri Shostakovich, one of the best known composers of the Soviet era. Shostakovich's repertoire includes 15 symphonies, 15 string quartets and many other works from chamber pieces to operas. But it was the composer's relationship with his country's communist government and its leader Joseph Stalin that inspired his music the most and that people still discuss and debate today. Sometimes Shostakovich's music seems to praise his country, sometimes even lifting up Stalin and yet other times his music speaks out loudly to the persecution of his home people and the social injustices he saw around him. Today we look at the life and the music of Dmitri Shostakovich and explore the love/hate relationship music has historically had with the world's politics. Laura's guest is Harlow Robinson, Professor at Northeastern University in Boston, author of two books on Sergei Prokofiev and a regular contributor for the Metropolitan Opera Broadcasts and lecturer for the Boston Symphony Orchestra.

Shostakovich Playlist

Symphony No. 1 in F. minor - performed by the Philadelphia Orchestra conducted by Eugene Ormandy

Polka from The Age of Gold, Op 22, - performed by Andre Kostelanetz and his Orchestra

Piano concerto No. 1, for piano, trumpet & strings, in C minor, Op. 35 - performed by Dmitri Shostakovich

Lady MacBeth of Mtsensk - performed by Mstislav Rostropovich, Dimiter Petrov, Nicolai Gedda and the London Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Galina Vishnevskaya.

Symphony No. 5 in D minor Op. 47 from the CD “Shostakovich: Symphony Nos. 5 & 9 - performed by the New York Philharmonic and conducted by Leonard Bernstein

Symphony No. 7 in C major Op. 60“The Leningrad Symphony”– perfomred by the USSR State Symphony Orchestra, Yevgeny Svetlanov, condouctor

Quartet No. 8 - Performed by the Manhattan String Quartet from the CD “Shostakovich String Quartets 3 and 8 – Manhattan String Quartet

Symphony No. 13 in B flat minor Op. 113 “Babi Yar” - From the CD “Shostakovich: Symphony No13, Op113; Yevtushenko: Babi Yar [Recitation] performed by the New York Philharmonic and the Men of the New York Choral Artists, conducted by Kurt Masur

Excerpt “The Ghost” from the film score of “Hamlet” - composed by Dmitri Shostakovich

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Portsmouth Mayor Evelyn Sirrell

By Liz Bulkley on Tuesday, September 27, 2005.

Evelyn Sirrell has been mayor of Portsmouth since 1998, and she served as city councilor for six years before that. But now the 74-year-old politician is stepping down and says she won't seek a fifth term. We'll talk with "the People's Mayor" about her tenure in office, her battle to keep the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard open, and her city's scuffles over the statewide property tax.

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