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| Latest Weather Underground Organization News |
2008: The stories that defined the year
Oh, 2008, it’s with mixed feelings that we bid you adieu. We’re both sad and glad to see you go. This past year brought big stories, from the Olympics to a brushfire war in Georgia, through the economy to terror attacks in India; everything seemed to be in play.
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The show must go on
Just as the nation is feeling the pinch in lost jobs, local arts groups are tightening their belts and slashing their budgets, while scrambling to protect the quality of their offerings.
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The show must go on
Just as the nation is feeling the pinch in lost jobs, failing mortgages and tanking retirement accounts, local arts groups are tightening their belts and slashing their budgets, while scrambling to protect the quality of their offerings.• Cool music, theater, dance coming in 2009
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Pipeline builder to pay state $1.1 million for violations
Enbridge Energy Partners, owners of a 321-mile oil pipeline in Wisconsin, will pay $1.1 million to settle state officials' allegations that the company broke numerous environmental laws during construction in 2007 and 2008.
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Businesses fear possible tax hikes in ’09 legislative session
David Juvet, senior vice president of the Business and Industry Association of New Hampshire, best summed up the stance of many business groups awaiting the start of the 2009 legislative session: “First, do no harm.”
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Sorting through the mess that was 2008
Few would dispute that the top story of the last year was the extent to which the foreign community pulled together.
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END OF THE YEAR: State Supreme Court Says Same-Sex Couples Have Constitutional Right to Marry...Lee Edmon Becomes ...
1— Jean M. Lawler, who became the first female partner at Murchison & Cumming, LLP in 1993, took over as managing partner of the firm. 3—Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger reappointed Michael Hersek as state public defender....Two denials of parole to a former motorcycle club member by then-Gov.
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Africa: Public-Private Partners Bolster Geosciences Training in Africa
Washington, DC — Beneath the surface of Earth's second-largest continent is a wealth of minerals, petroleum, water and geothermal energy.
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