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ArchivesTurtle Crossing Time Once AgainBy Rosemary Conroy on Thursday, June 1, 2006.With turtle mating season underway, be on the look out for turtles crossing the road. You may even want to consider helping them along. FEMA Opens Offices for Victims of Last Month's FloodBy Debra Daigle on Thursday, June 1, 2006.Even as New Hampshire skies threaten more heavy rains, hundreds of people are flocking to newly-opened regional FEMA offices, looking for help recovering from the floods of two weeks ago. NHPR Correspondent Debra Daigle spent some time at the Manchester FEMA office and files this report. Lawmakers and State Employees Want ParkingBy Dan Gorenstein on Thursday, June 1, 2006.State employees and lawmakers are desperate for more parking spots around the statehouse in Concord. And they've got their eye on two government lots a stone's throw from the capitol campus. A study committee has proposed a $40 million dollar project to build two multi-story garages, two office buildings and convert a street into a pedestrian walkway. New Hampshire Public Radio's Dan Gorenstein reports not everyone thinks the deal will fly. The Culture of CatholicismBy Liz Bulkley on Thursday, June 1, 2006.New England author Monica Wood writes about the church from the inside out in her book Any Bitter Thing. We'll explore her surprising perspective as a former practicing Catholic. And, we talk with Professor Michele Dillon from the University of New Hampshire about why some people think the Catholic identity as a whole is changing in New Hampshire -- and the United States. Dillon studies and writes about the sociology of religion and is the author of the book Catholic Identity. Sudoku-maniaBy Laura Knoy on Thursday, June 1, 2006.It’s all numbers and no math, it takes brains but doesn't take knowledge, it’s Sudoku. Short for the Japanese phrase "the digits must remain single", the object of Sudoku is to successfully place the numbers one through nine on a nine by nine boxed grid where every row, every column and every three by three box contains each number once. Although Sudoku puzzles first were published in the US in 1979, and caught on in Japan in the mid eighties; it wasn't until last year that Sudoku became an international phenomenon, and a piece of its history can be traced back to Northern New Hampshire. Today on the Exchange we look at the popularity of Sudoku, how to play it and explore its relationship to the Granite State. Laura's guests are Wayne Gould, Former lawyer and judge who developed the computer program now used for Soduku. Wayne Gould also manages the website, sudoku.com. Peter Winkler, Professor of Math and of Computer science and Albert Bradley 3rd Century Professor in the Sciences at Dartmouth College. Peter Winkler is also the author of "Mathematical Puzzles: A Connoisseur's Collection". We'll also be joined by Mark Guerringue, Publisher and Co-founder of the Conway Daily Sun, the first newspaper to publish a Sudoku puzzle and Will Shortz, Puzzle editor for the New York Times, puzzlemaster for NPR's Weekend Edition Sunday and author of 23 books on Sudoku. |
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