By Line search: By REBECA PEREIRA
By REBECA PEREIRA
Kathleen McKay is able-bodied and young.
By REBECA PEREIRA
The average license plate, like a muddled Rorschach test, is often an indecipherable jumble of numbers and letters. Granite Staters like to add a little more flair.
By REBECA PEREIRA
Two weeks into Elsy Cipriani’s new job as executive director of the New Hampshire Food Bank, onboarding has not been easy.
By REBECA PEREIRA
At the polls on Tuesday, Richard Martell, an Allenstown homeowner, reflected on voting in Town Meeting as an avenue for “keeping control of what’s going on in the community.”
By REBECA PEREIRA
Two Canterbury parents are facing off for a seat on the Shaker Regional School District School Board, which oversees Canterbury and Belmont schools. On the town side, Calvin Todd is running unopposed for selectman
By REBECA PEREIRA
Seven candidates are running to fill two seats on the Allenstown Select Board. Three candidates could not be reached, as the town administrator and town clerk refused to release contact information for the candidates, citing individual privacy concerns despite their efforts to seek office and govern the town.
By REBECA PEREIRA
By his own admission, Alton Brown’s newest book was a happy accident. Brown had been repairing a manual typewriter, lubricating a wayward ‘J’ key, when he loaded the machine with paper and began testing out its functionality. That day, he typed the first of the 39 essays that would make up “Food for Thought,” his tenth literary venture.
By REBECA PEREIRA
Alton Brown is not retiring.
By REBECA PEREIRA
From her mother’s perspective, Allison Girouard is an activist in her own right.
By REBECA PEREIRA
In Canterbury, a waiting game is underway.
By REBECA PEREIRA
Leon Taylor’s home in Weare has seen decades of family celebrations. On Sunday, Taylor expected to revisit the familiar rituals of those previous occasions — dinner, cake, ice cream and pleasant conversation — when his children brought him into his front yard.
By REBECA PEREIRA
In 2022, after more than two decades behind the moderator’s podium, Dennis Fowler retired from overseeing Allenstown’s deliberative sessions. As he approached the microphone on Saturday, he was free to slough off the obligatory cloak of impartiality that came with the position.
By REBECA PEREIRA
Mara Turbal’s squeals traveled the immensity of the Warren B. Rudman federal courthouse, where her parents, Anastasiya and Kiryl Turbal, swore an oath of “true faith and allegiance” to the United States.
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