NH OUTLOOK ROUNDTABLE EDITION, Friday, 8/31/2001
script iconPre-Show script iconIntro Mt Washington
script iconRoundtable script iconMount Washington
script iconOther News script iconMake A Wish
script iconFish Warning script iconMake a Wish Tag
script iconPlant Closing script iconTease Monday
script iconJailed Juveniles script iconGoodnight
script iconBusiness Outlook script iconFounders
script iconWallstreet script icontonite 11:30
script iconNH Stocks script iconCensus - poverty


script iconPre-Show
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Next on New Hampshire Outlook tonight.
The week in review.stories behind the headlines with journalists from around the state.
script iconRoundtable
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Tolls and Taxes 6:00
North Country update 4:00
ethicist/disabled dispute 5:00
Congressional luncheon 2:00
Republican ad oops 2:00
Lottery tickets 2:00
script iconOther News
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Here's a look at other stories making news this Friday.
script iconFish Warning
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A warning from state public health officials tonight about eating freshwater fish. A new study shows most of the fish in the granite state are contaminated with mercury. The major source - mercury in air pollution that falls into waterways in rain and snow. Mercury can cause neurological problems in infants and children. The state urges everyone to limit the amount and size of freshwater fish they eat. Specifically, the state says pregnant and
nursing women, or women who may get pregnant, should only eat one eight-ounce meal of fish a month. Children under seven should be limited to one three-ounce meal a month. And everyone else should eat no more
than four eight-ounce meals of freshwater fish a month.

script iconPlant Closing
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As we mentioned briefly in Roundtable, the last of three major leather manufacturers
along the New Hampshire-Maine border is closing its doors. Prime Tanning will close its plants in
Rochester and Berwick, Maine, by the end of the year, putting 550 people out of work. The company president says the leather-processing company will sell the Rochester factory and convert the Berwick facility into a product development center employing about 50 people.

script iconJailed Juveniles
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16- or 17-year-olds who are convicted in juvenile court can't be held in adult jails without a jury trial. That decision today from the state supreme court. The practice was challenged by a 16-year-old who was sentenced to an adult jail on an assault conviction. The case had been handled in juvenile court, without a jury. The high court found the state law that allowed the incarceration unconstitutional.
script iconBusiness Outlook
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Factory orders rose a-tenth of a percent - that gave investors an excuse to snap up bargains - but many market watchers say the uptick was little more than a temporary burst of buying.
script iconWallstreet
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The dow ended the day up 30 points. The Nasdaq was up 13 points. And the S & P 500 edged up four and a half points.
script iconNH Stocks
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Here's a look at stocks of interest to NH investors. Anheuser Busch closed down 83 cents.Autodesk was up 57 cents. GE was up 78 cents. State Street Corporation was up 54 cents a share. Timberland rose 67 cents.
script iconIntro Mt Washington
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With the long weekend ahead of us we wondered what's in store for us weatherwise. Earlier we checked in with meteorologist Nicole Pllette of the Mount Washington Observatory.
script iconMount Washington
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Mount Washington Observatory\Today on the Summit\Temperature:55 degrees\Winds: S 20 mph\Fog\Visibility: zero
Tonight\Statewide\Chance of showers\Lows: near 60\Winds: S 5-10 mph
Tomorrow\Statewide\Partly sunny \Highs near 70\Winds: NW 15 - 25 mph
script iconMake A Wish
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A seriously ill Somerwsworth girl is watching her imagination become reality.
With crayon and paper, 4 year old Kylene DeSmith drew an imaginary castle playground. Now, with the help of the Make A wish Foundation and Learning Structures Incorporated, Kylene's rainbow castle is being built in her own backyard.
script iconMake a Wish Tag
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If you'd like information on the Make A Wish Foundation you can call them at 623-wish ot log on at wish-dot-org-backslash New Hampshire.
script iconTease Monday
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Monday on New Hampshire Outlook.
As the new school year begins, we'll talk about quality in education in a special roundtable discussion with teachers.
script iconGoodnight
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That's all for this edition of Outlook tonight. Thanks for joining us.
For all of us here at New Hampshire Public Television, I'm Allison McNair.
Stay tuned for New Hampshire Crossroads Classics.
We'll be back Monday at 7:30.
script iconFounders
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Thanks to our founding sponsors who have provided major funding for the production of New Hampshire Outlook:
New Hampshire Charitable Foundadtion
Public Service of New Hampshire
Alice J. Reen Charitable Trust
Putnam Foundation
Stratford Foundation
script icontonite 11:30
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Tonight on New Hampshire Outlook.
The week in review - journalists from around the state talk about the stories behind the headlines.
Tonight at 11:30 only on New Hampshire Outlook.
script iconCensus - poverty
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The census bureau has released numbers that show New Hampshire has fewer people living in poverty than anywhere else in the country. According to those numbers, seven-point-five percent of New Hampshire residents lived in poverty in 1998. That's in contrast to an average of 12 percent nation-wide. In 1998, the poverty line for a family of
four was 16 thousand 660 dollars a year.
AP-NH--Poverty
dewap
N.H. has lowest poverty rate in country
-- Census Bureau figures show New Hampshire has
the lowest poverty level in the country.
The figures actually refer to 1998, and say seven-point-five
percent of New Hampshire residents lived in poverty. The national
level was 12-point-seven percent.
The poverty threshold differs by household, depending mainly on
the size of the family. In 1998, the poverty line for a family of
four was 16 thousand 660 dollars a year.




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