NH OUTLOOK, Tuesday, 1/15/2002
script iconPreshow script iconIntro Mt. Washington
script iconHeadlines script iconMt. Washington
script iconBudget Cuts script iconIntro Dayton
script iconIntro gambling script iconTag Twain
script icontag script iconNext Outlook
script iconJudicial Conduct script iconGoodnight
script iconSegway script iconfounders
script iconIntro Trauma script iconkey:government:state
script iconTag script iconkey: health
script iconHospital expansion script iconkey: culture/arts
script iconBusiness Outlook script iconwebsite
script iconWall Street Stocks script iconTonight 10:00
script iconNH Stocks script iconWEB PROMO
script iconManchester Airport script iconweds daytime


script iconPreshow
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Next on New Hampshire Outlook.
Trauma care It's something we don't think much about until we need it. Find out why not all hospitals provide the same care.
Plus - the great debate at the state house- Is expanding gambling a sure bet or a ticket to trouble
And. find out from Walpole writer Dayton Duncan about Mark Twain's New Hampshire connection.
script iconHeadlines
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Welcome to New Hampshire Outlook. I'm Allison McNair.
script iconBudget Cuts
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In the wake of declining state revenues, Governor Jeanne Shaheen has won legislative approval for six-point-five-million-dollars in budget cuts. Almost six-million of that will come from state agency budgets. And 800-thousand-dollars will be saved by delaying aid payments to the state's university system. Some members of the joint Fiscal Committee say those cuts might not be enough. Preliminary estimates for business tax revenues show a 30-million-dollar shortfall. Shaheen is urging caution, saying that some economists think the recession may soon be over.
script iconIntro gambling
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Should New Hampshire bring in video slot machines to boost state revenues? That was the focus of debate in Concord Tuesday as a House committee took up four bills that would expand gambling. Producer Richard Ager has this report.
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For more information on the gambling bills under discussion and to view videostreaming of experts on the issue, visit our website at nhptv.org.
script iconJudicial Conduct
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Two state Supreme Court justices did not violate ethics rules during the Judicial Conduct Committee's investigation of Chief Justice David Brock last April.
That was the ruling issued Tuesday by a special panel of the J-C-C. Justices John Broderick and James Duggan had talked to the committee's lawyer on Brock's behalf. The panel said that while not good for public perception, there were no ethics violations. Broderick and Duggan had asked for the review of their actions. In a written statement,, the justices said they were pleased with the decision of the J-C-C panel.
script iconSegway
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A legislative committee is paving the way for Dean Kamen's Segway scooter to zip around in New Hampshire.
The scooter is being tested this week in Florida. But here in the Granite State on Tuesday a Senate committee approved a bill that will allow the scooters on sidewalks and roads. Riders would have the same rights and duties as pedestrians but would be required to yield the right-of-way to walkers.
Governor Jeanne Shaheen supports the bill. She says the Segway is an example of the kind of technology New Hampshire can produce. The bill now heads to the full Senate.
script iconIntro Trauma
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It comes on quickly and without warning. In many cases it's deadly. We're talking about Trauma. Its victims are men, women and children.
Richard Ager and Producer Phil Vaughn take you inside the trauma units at three New Hampshire hospitals - Concord, Lakes Region and Dartmouth-Hitchcock. You'll get to know how the units operate, understand the different levels of care and meet some of the professionals who work hard to save lives.
script iconTag
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One comment we heard often from the medical staff was that trauma, in most cases is preventable. Their advice - buckle up and wear a helmet.
script iconHospital expansion
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Here's a note about one of the hospital's profiled in our report:
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center has won approval for a 224 million dollar expansion.
After more than five hours of debate The Lebanon Planning Board approved the plan just after midnight Monday.
The expansion will increase the hospital's square footage by nearly 40
percent and increase the number of outpatients served by 35 percent.

script iconBusiness Outlook
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Cheaper prices at the gas pump and curtailed spending on sporting goods and home improvement nudged December U.S. retail sales slightly lower. Still, the performance was much better than earlier predictions for a gloomy holiday spending season.
script iconWall Street Stocks
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On Wall Street, the Dow gained 33 points by the close of trading to 99-hundred-24. The Nasdaq rose ten points. And the S and P 500 advanced eight points to eleven-46.
Dow Jones \9924.15\+32.73\NYSE\582.63\+3.59\AMEX\835.52\+5.73\Nasdaq\2000.91\+10.17\S&P 500\1146.19\+7.78\Wall Street
script iconNH Stocks
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Here's a look at stocks of interest to New Hampshire investors. General Electric rose eighty- one cents. Lockheed Martin was up ninety cents. Shares of Tyco sank four dollars and thirty- five cents. M-B-N-A rose sixty- seven cents. And Texas Instruments ended the day down sixty- eight cents.
General Electric Co.\38.71\+0.81\Lockheed Martin\48.50\+0.90\Tyco Intl.\48.05\-4.35\MBNA Corp.\35.47\+0.67\Texas Instruments\26.41\-0.68\NH Stocks\Source: yahoo.com
script iconManchester Airport
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A record number of travelers passed through Manchester Airport last year.
More than three-point-two million passengers used the airport. That's two percent more than in 2000. And last month's numbers were up more than five percent from the previous December. Airport Director Kevin Dillon attributed the increase to the airport's quick recovery following the September terrorism.
Friday Manchester joins airports around the country when it begins security checks of every piece of luggage on planes.
script iconIntro Mt. Washington
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It was a mixed bag of weather around the state Tuesday. To find out what lies ahead we checked in with Katie Koster at the Mount Washington Observatory.
script iconMt. Washington
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Mount Washington Observatory\Tuesday On The Summit\Freezing fog/ Blowing snow\High: 21 degrees\Peak Gust: 48 mph\Visibility: 150 feet
Overnight\North\Fog and snow \Lows: near 20\Winds: NW 5 - 10 mph
Overnight\South\Fog and occasional snow\Lows: 20 - 25\Winds: NW 5 - 10 mph
Wednesday\North\Snow showers ending in pm\Highs: 23 - 28\Winds: NW 10 - 15 mph
Wednesday\Central\Partly sunny\Highs: 30 - 35\Winds: NW 10 - 20 mph
Wednesday\South\Partly sunny\Highs: 33 - 38\Winds: NW 10 - 20 mph

script iconIntro Dayton
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Monday and Tuesday this week, New Hampshire Public Television joined stations across the country in airing Ken Burn's newest documentary film: Mark Twain. Burns works out of his studios in Walpole.
One of the co-producers and writers of the film is Dayton Duncan. I travelled to Walpole to talk with him about how this documentary is different from the others he's worked on.
script iconTag Twain
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Dayton Duncan is working with Ken Burns on a documentary about Horatio Nelson Jackson - an eccentric Vermont doctor who made the first trancontinental automobile trip in 1903. The film is due out in 2003.
script iconNext Outlook
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On the next New Hampshire Outlook -
Could your well run dry in the drought? See who is at risk and what's being done. Plus we'll look at the forecast with the state's climatologist.
script iconGoodnight
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That's it for this edition of our program. For all of us here at New Hampshire Public Television, I'm Ally McNair. Thanks for joining us. We'll see you next time on New Hampshire Outlook.
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 iconkey:government:state
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NEW HAMPSHIRE OUTLOOK Air Date/Time:1/15/02 / 2200
HOST: Allison McNair Length: 3:52 minutes
In addition to a summary of the day's top New Hampshire stories, this edition of New Hampshire Outlook, NHPTV's nightly news magazine, included a report on a debate that took place in a House committee in respect to the controversy over expanded gambling in the state of New Hampshire.
PRODUCER/REPORTER: Richard Ager
NAME OF PARTICIPANTS:
Rep. Warren Henderson\R - Exeter
Rep. Corey Corbin\R - Sandown
Jim Rubens\NH Coalition Against Expanded Gambling
Dave Delisle\Pres. NH Thoroughbred Breeders Assoc.
James Green\Thoroughbred Breeder
Ed Callahan\GM - Rockingham Park
Doris Ballard\Concord Resident
Mike Whalley\Deputy House Speaker
script iconkey: health
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NEW HAMPSHIRE OUTLOOK Air Date/Time:1/15/02 / 2200
HOST: Allison McNair Length: 8:57 minutes
In addition to a summary of the day's top New Hampshire stories, this edition of New Hampshire Outlook, NHPTV's nightly news magazine, included a report on Trauma. The report goes inside of three trauma units in New Hampshire hospitals. The report covered how the units operate, the different levels of care, and who the professionals who work in trauma are.
PRODUCER/REPORTER: Richard Ager and Phil Vaughn
NAME OF PARTICIPANTS:
Paul Racicot, MD\Lakes Region Hospital
Jean Proehl, RN\Dartmouth-Hitchcock
Lakes Region Hospital, Laconia\Level III
Suzanne Prentiss\NH Trauma Coordinator
Concord Hospital\Level II
Dartmouth-Hitchcock, Hanover\Level I
John Sutton Jr., MD\Dartmouth-Hitchcock
Sharon Phillips, RN\Concord Hospital
Bryce Lambert, MD\Concord Hospital
John Hinds\Dartmouth-Hitchcock
Jean Proehl, RN\Dartmouth-Hitchcock
script iconkey: culture/arts
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NEW HAMPSHIRE OUTLOOK Air Date/Time:1/15/02 / 2200
HOST: Allison McNair Length: 5:36 minutes
In addition to a summary of the day's top New Hampshire stories, this edition of New Hampshire Outlook, NHPTV's nightly news magazine, included a story on Dayton Duncan. He is a co-producer and writer of the film "Mark Twain", and we traveled to his Walpole home to talk about how this documentary is different from the others he's worked on in the past.
PRODUCER/REPORTER: Allison McNair
NAME OF PARTICIPANTS:
Dayton Duncan\Co-producer/writer - "Mark Twain"
script iconwebsite
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For information on our program, and links to our guests and interviews,
visit our web site at nhptv.org.
You can also see and hear streaming video of our broadcasts.
If you've got a story idea or comment on our program you can call us at 800-639-2721.
script iconTonight 10:00
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Tonight on New Hampshire Outlook.
Trauma care in the Granite State. See why not all hospitals provide the same care.
Tonight at 10pm on New Hampshire Public Television.
script iconWEB PROMO
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OnCam:Ally
Tonight on New Hampshire Outlook.
Could your well run dry in the drought? See who is at risk and what's being done.
Tonight at 10pm on New Hampshire Public Television.
script iconweds daytime
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Tonight on New Hampshire Outlook.
Could your well run dry in the drought? See who is at risk and what's being done.
Tonight at 10 only on NH Outlook.
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