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Nashua Network Nation
An Informative and Spirited Forum for Nashua
Untitled Document

Bon jour. Nashua Network Nation is a moderated forum (a sounding board or bulletin board) which gives people the opportunity to express their views, ideas, questions, or concerns relative to Nashua, N.H., and its surrounding area -- a local weblog or blog, if you will.

Any comments which are deemed: vulgar, inappropriate, libelous, slanderous, or in bad taste WILL NOT be posted here. With respect to the aforementioned statement, you may choose to post messages anonymously using an alias.

Opinions expressed on Nashua Network Nation solely reflect those of the participants, and are not necessarily shared by the management of this message board.

Google (or Ask.com, Lycos or any other search engine) keywords:

VoyForums: Nashua Network Nation

_______________________________________________________________________________________

LINKS: Please check out these fascinating and informative local websites, which come highly recommended by the management of this forum: Official Website of Nashua; Popular Nashua Restaurant Directory; Obituaries; Nashua Weather Forecast; SmartWater.org; Politics NH.com; Search&Dine.com; Nashua Telegraph; the Hippo; NH Union Leader; WMUR Channel 9; New Hampshire.com; Nashua Street Map; Official State of New Hampshire Website; Nashua Pride baseball team; Consumerist.com (consumers get revenge on businesses); Nashua Advocate; WDER 1320 AM; School/Storm Closings; and Official Federal Government Website.

Issues-related websites that have absolutely nothing to do with local stuff but deemed worth checking out anyway are: Town Hall.com; Common Cause; Vote.com; Vote Smart; Wonkette; Bob Kohn's Media Watch; Moxie; Fact Check.org; Move On.Org; Michael Moore; Stop Hillary Clinton; The Huffington Post; Front Page Magazine; Citizens Against Government Waste; Washington Times; The Drudge Report; NewsMax; World Net Daily; National Review; MSN Slate Magazine; The Weekly Standard; Rush Limbaugh; Christian Coalition; Bill O'Reilly; The Savage Nation; Sean Hannity; Laura Ingraham; Ann Coulter; and Newt Gingrich.

Some of my personal favorites sites include: New Beginning Fellowship; Truth or Tradition?; i Believe.com; Teen Challenge; Youth Storm (local Christian youth ministry); Unclaimed Money/Property; New England Patriot's Fan Club; Boston Red Sox Fan Club; Snopes.com (urban legends); The Smoking Gun; Lost 45s; Through the Looking Glass; Person Locator; Jokes.com; Bitter Waitress; D-Tension; New England Stone Masonry; Whatever Happened To?; and Dead or Alive?.

If you're in the mood for chat rooms and message boards on the national scene, we strongly recommend: Free Republic; and Lucianne.com.

_______________________________________________________________________________________

"Behold, I send you forth as sheep in the midst of wolves: be ye therefore wise as serpents, and harmless as doves."

-- Matthew 10:16


http://www.voy.com/166237/

Subject: HippoNashua reader's poll for 2005 Best of Nashua awards


Author:
Mike Barnicle wannabe
[Edit]

Date Posted: 16:16:02 03/07/05 Mon

The HippoNashua weekly newspaper has conducted its annual reader's poll for the 2005 Best of Nashua awards. Due to the rather lengthy nature of the recipients, along with an explanation to each one, we will place the final results on a link to this string, immediately following this posting. If you have any comments or criticisms of these particular choices, then please, by all means, feel free to weigh in with your opinions. We'd love to hear from you.

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Replies:
Subject: What's happening late night in Nashua


Author:
Mike Barnicle wannabe
[Edit]

Date Posted: 01:59:56 04/16/05 Sat

Nashua's weekly freebie publication, the Hippo, did a feature in its 4/14-20/05 edition titled, Late Night Nashua: Where to eat, shop, play and get coffee after hours. Due to the lengthy nature of the article, we put it in a link immediately following this posting. By all means, feel free to weigh in with some comments of your own about these particular choices.

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Replies:
Subject: New school superintendent Julia Earl will start at annual gross salary of $125K


Author:
Mike Barnicle wannabe
[Edit]

Date Posted: 22:53:27 08/08/05 Mon

published in Boston Sunday Globe, Globe NorthWest, 8/7/05)

SUPERINTENDENT CONTRACT — Julia Earl, the new superintendent of schools, will make a base salary of $125,000 in her first year, the highest amount allowed under a salary cap set by the Board of Alderman. Earl also will receive a travel allowance of $500, 20 vacation days, four personal days, and 15 sick days, according to provisions of a contract signed recently by Earl and the Nashua Board of Education. Earl, a former associate superintendent for a suburban district outside Houston, will start her job in Nashua on Sept. 1. She has a three-year contract.

– James Vaznis

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Subject: Internet truly gives consumers more power than ever before


Author:
Mike Barnicle wannabe
[Edit]

Date Posted: 21:16:48 10/15/06 Sun

(Wannabe Note: I caught this particular segment on ABC’s 20/20 last Friday night and it just blew me away. Where consumers were once relegated to simply taking a business to either Small Claims Court, or writing a letter to either the Better Business Bureau or the State Attorney General’s office, the Internet has apparently provided some of these disgruntled individuals with some very quick and successful results. Also, we’ll now add the Consumerist website – www.consumerist.com as a new link on this message board. Please feel free to check it out.)

Viral Video: Consumer Revenge

Companies Beware -– Here Comes the Little Man Ready to Knock You Out

By JOHN STOSSEL and POLLY KREISMAN
ABC News
Oct. 13, 2006
— Many consumers are realizing that the internet acts as a powerful tool to talk back to companies.

Savvy companies are listening, because they know just how damaging the internet can be to brand recognition.

More and more consumers are video taping their encounters that document funny or downright bad customer service and posting that video to the web. Viral video can get millions of hits a week, causing some companies to have a knee-jerk reaction and make necessary changes to mend the consumer problem. So some complaining consumers have actually helped make changes to company policies. Why? Because smart companies realize consumer attitudes can live on the internet forever and ever, wrecking havoc on their companies bottom line forever and ever.

Here are some consumers who have done just that—talk backed and gotten companies to listen.

Repairman Asleep on Customer's Couch

Last June, a Comcast customer, who doesn't want his picture shown, was surprised when the repairman that came to his house to fix his cable service? went to sleep on his couch.

The repairman fell asleep because when he tried calling Comcast, he spent over an hour on hold!

So the customer took a video of the sleeping repairman and added a music track by the Eels and posted it to his blog along with a list of his complaints about Comcast.

Within days, his video shot around the internet like a rocket, appearing on many web sites. Hundreds of thousands of people watched it, including Comcast executives, who immediately fired the sleeping repairman, sent someone else to fix the modem, and revamped its customer service.

What Don't You Understand About "Cancel"

Well, right around when that Comcast repairman was sleeping, Vince Ferrari was trying to cancel his America Online account. Ferrari says he wanted to cancel his account which he paid $15 a month for because he wasn't using it. He had heard that cancelling an account with AOL was not easy and he soon found that to be true. Here's an excerpt from the 21 minute taped conversation Ferrari had with John, the AOL representative.

AOL REP:: Hi, this is John at AOL, how may I help you today?
FERRARI: : I wanted to cancel my account.
AOL REP:: What was the cause of wanting to turn this off today?
FERRARI:: I just don't use it anymore.
AOL REP:: Is that for business or for—for school?
FERRARI:: Dude, what difference does it make? I don't want the AOL account anymore.

But the AOL "retention specialist" just would not let him cancel.

AOL REP: : Well, explain to me what's — why…
FERRARI: : I'm not explaining anything to you. Cancel the account. AOL REP:: Okay. Well, what's the matter, Vincent? I am trying to help.

Help? It took John 21 minutes to "help" Ferrari simply cancel his account.

"It used to be if a company did something wrong, you go, well, I'm gonna have to eat it because they're never gonna admit to it," Ferrari said. "But, now, it's like, you know, a lot of people can kind of get together, and say, 'Yep, it happened to me."

Years ago, there wasn't much that Ferrari could do about it, but today he can plaster it on the internet. And he did just that. A million hits later, AOL apologized to Ferrari, fired the retention specialist and told its phone operators to make it easier for people to cancel.

A Consumer Party Worldwide

Through the magic of the internet you don't even have to be in the country to talk back. Just look at Capt. Eric Wright who, while serving in Iraq, had a run-in with Hewlett-Packard. He called the company to complain about his broken printer. Wright was outraged when he called HP and had to pay to get the company to tell him how to fix his printer.

He made a video of his experience and once that video went viral, Wright says HP sent him a new printer, thanks to the direct communication between consumers and companies that the internet provides.

Popken calls what we're experiencing, "a consumer party." A consumer party that gives consumers more information is a good thing. But wait a second, this isn't exactly Consumer Reports. There are no editors checking to see whether complaints are valid — anyone can say anything.

When reviewing consumer complaints on the internet, it's also worth remembering that some people are impossible.

One woman, who will remain nameless, called 9-1-1 during her bad episode at Burger King. Here's how that conversation went.

WOMAN: "Yea, I'm over here at Burger King. I asked her four different times to make me a Western BBQ Burger. Ok. They keep giving me a hamburger with lettuce, tomato, and cheese and onion. And, I said, I'm not leaving! I want a Western Burger!"
9-1-1: "Okay. What is it exactly you want us to do for you?"
WOMAN: "Send an officer down here! I want them to make my."
9-1-1: "Ma'am! We're not going to go down there and enforce your Western Bacon Cheeseburger."

This conversation, and others like it — perhaps not quite so extreme — are also available in cyberspace forever. For a company that can be both good and bad.

One Consumer Changing Company Policy

Three years ago, the battery died in Casey Neistat's iPod.

"I called Apple and I said my battery's dead what do I do and they said buy a new iPod, that's 400 dollars," Neistat said.

So he and his filmmaker brother made a video that showed Neistat stenciling iPods irreplaceable battery last only 18 months on top of iPod ads around New York City, paired with the music track of Northwest Airline's Express Yourself.

Within a week the video got a million hits and Apple changed its battery warranty. However, the company says the video had nothing to do with that, but policy change or not, the video still plays smearing iPod forever.

"The fact of the matter is they were doing something that was unfair," Neistat said. "So let people see the website, let people see the movie and maybe then when they get screwed over a product they know they have a place for it."

Internet as a Microphone for Consumers

Popken is calling this audio visual consumer revenge.

Popken runs consumerist.com, which lists 18 different consumer tips and complaints a day.

"It's you know up with the little guy," Popken said. "He can share his experience with others and become empowered."

So there you have it. The internet is giving consumers new power. But not all of the complaints are relevant or trustworthy.

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Subject: What happened to Hooter's restaurant?


Author:
Stuart Pead
[Edit]

Date Posted: 20:49:48 06/28/07 Thu

Went to Hooter's on Spit Brook Road the other day -- nobody was in the parking lot, and there was a sign on the front door stating they were Closed, and vendors or employees could phone some lawyer out of Massachusetts. Does anybody know what really happened @ Hooters? I always thought that place was just a sexual assault lawsuit waiting to happen.

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Replies:
Subject: Pam Smart hopes Gov. Lynch will get her out of the slammer


Author:
Mike Barnicle wannabe
[Edit]

Date Posted: 21:05:09 02/23/05 Wed

(posted on, www.Boston.com, 2/21/05)

Smart reflects on prison, pregnancy and suicide

BEDFORD HILLS, N.Y. -- Pamela Smart says media attention helped land her in prison, but now her lawyers hope it will help get her out.

Smart, 38, has asked Gov. John Lynch and the Executive Council to pardon her from the life without parole sentence she received after being convicted in 1991 of convincing her teen lover and his friends to murder her husband a year earlier.

She has granted few media interviews, but invited a reporter from the Portsmouth Herald to visit last week, not as a reporter, but as a regular visitor, the Herald reported, to avoid the lengthy process for admitting media at the Bedford Hills Correctional Facility.

"No paper or pen was allowed and the interview was written from memory," wrote reporter Elizabeth Dinan.

Smart's lawyers are urging her to talk publicly as her pardon request comes before the state; especially about the fact that she's serving life without parole for being an accomplice to first-degree murder while the confessed murderer, Billy Flynn, has a shorter sentence.

Smart said she has declined other requests, according to the Herald.

"She's sick of her own story, she says, adding, 'They hate me in New Hampshire,'" the paper reported.

Smart still denies involvement in the plot, but she says she regrets her affair with Flynn, who was 15 at the time.

She has argued in several rejected appeals -- and the current pardon request -- that she did not get a fair trial, in part because of the pervasive media coverage. She also maintains the sentence was too harsh.

Smart said the commutation request is largely the effort of her mother, Linda Wojas, who has made her daughter's fate her own life's work.

Because of that, Smart says she's considered suicide, several times, so her mother could bury her and have her own life back, she said.

Smart also talked about her own desire to become a mother.

The prison allows conjugal visits between married inmates and spouses, and Smart has received mailed marriage proposals. But she says she's never seriously considered them, knowing any letters or conversations might be sold to newspapers.

Sex with prison guards is the way she says she could conceive a child, insisting that's been a real option since transferring to Bedford Hills from the state prison for women in Goffstown, N.H., 12 years ago.

Smart said she decided against having a child in prison because, after one year in a prison nursery, the baby would have to live with Smart's already overburdened mother, the paper reported. Besides, Smart says, "there's no room in my head right now" for sexual relationships.

What is in her head is a battle between resignation to life behind bars and a fight to go free. She takes medication to control anxiety.

Smart has earned two masters degrees behind bars -- one in literature, the other in law. But she insists she is no model prisoner, learning from fellow inmates how to commit a host of crimes and having scrapes with inmates.

In 1996 Smart was assaulted by two inmates who, according to reports at the time, suspected her of reporting their prison affair to the jail superintendent. Smart needed plastic surgery for a fractured eye socket and had a steel plate implanted in the side of her face.

Smart recently was transferred from her inmate tutoring job to working and living with the prison's mentally ill inmates. She said she likes her new role helping the women cope with their illnesses and prison.

Meanwhile, the attorney general's office in New Hampshire has been collecting opinions on Smart's pardon request from the trial judge, prosecutors, the victim's family and prison officials. The governor and Executive Council will decide whether to hold a hearing.

Two of the five councilors, Ray Burton and Peter Spaulding, have said they oppose Smart's request.

"I think she's got two chances -- slim and none," Spaulding said.

Information from: Portsmouth Herald: http://www.seacoastonline.com

© Copyright 2005 Associated Press.


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Replies:
Subject: Pam/Billy


Author:
Tammy
[Edit]

Date Posted: 06:23:07 09/04/06 Mon

I believe Pam should be granted a lesser sentence due to the fact 'Flynn will be out'. Fair is Fair. The whole world has to admitt "She got screwed by all the media coverage". The state of newhampshire had enough nerve to move her to a New York State Prison....Y not send her to another state for another trial......give her the pardon!!!!!

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Subject: Radio


Author:
Concerned listener
[Edit]

Date Posted: 15:47:07 04/17/06 Mon

What is going on at ESPN 900. What happen to Marty and Mutt?

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Replies:
Subject: Work Out World fitness center's ads accused of being fraudulent


Author:
Mike Barnicle wannabe
[Edit]

Date Posted: 08:47:58 02/24/06 Fri

(posted on, www.wcvb.com , 2/22/06)

Health Club's Coupons Anger Some Consumers

Club Manager Defends Advertising


BOSTON -- Some consumers are upset about a Massachusetts' health club chain's coupons for gym memberships.

NewsCenter 5's Susan Wornick reported Tuesday that some consumers say Work Out World is trying to trick them into joining.

"I saw this coupon," Vita Cyr said.

The coupon offered a two for one deal for $19.99 per month.

"Then, it says, 'free enrollment,'" Cyr said.

But when Cyr and a friend went to Work Out World, they were told the offer was sold out.

Cyr said that when she returned home, there was a flyer from Work Out World that offered a deal to the "first 30 members" who signed up.

"I'm so angry and aggravated," Erin Delaney said.

Delaney was also intrigued by a Work Out World coupon. But once inside, a salesman explained that the coupon really meant seven free days to cancel after you sign up.

The $19.99 didn't include other charges, which brought the total to join the gym to more than $900. Delaney felt deceived, but she signed up anyway because the gym was close to her home. Then, when she decided to cancel, it took repeated, unanswered phone calls, threats and two weeks for Delaney to get her money back.

"I felt like it was misleading. It's false advertising," Delaney said.

Work Out World let NewsCenter 5 tour a gym, and a district manager defended the company's coupons, though he didn't want to show his face on camera.

"What we're talking about is advertisement," Work Out World's Darren Martin said.

Martin admitted the gym's various offers are designed to get people into the gym to sign up for memberships that, in reality cost, hundreds of dollars. He insisted the coupons are clear.

One offer says "$10 per month. No enrollment fees" in big letters. But Martin said that a small notation on the coupon refers to small print, which says there is an enrollment fee for this deal. A small asterisk at "no enrollment fee" explains that it's based on $49.99 per month.

Massachusetts Consumer Affairs' Janice Tatarka said that the coupons make it look like it's pretty in expensive to join Work Out World.

"They're not going to have a long relationship in Massachusetts if they don't clarify," Tatarka said.

The Attorney General's office has received dozens of complaints about Work Out World -- 50 just in the last three years about things such as the gym's cancellation policy and misrepresentation of the gym's membership deals.

Now, it's up to the Attorney General's office to do something. For the record, state law gives consumers three days to cancel any gym membership.

Copyright 2006 by TheBostonChannel. All rights reserved.

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Subject: '05 Nashua Election -- ballot questions & candidates


Author:
Mike Barnicle wannabe
[Edit]

Date Posted: 17:14:05 10/23/05 Sun

The following link will give you a sample of the verbatim ballot that you will see at the elections on Nov. 8th. Please take a few moments to study this material before you cast your vote:

November 8th Ballot Referendum Questions & Candidates


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Subject: "O'Reilly Factor" whacks Union-Leader for refusing to defend its editorial stance on sex offenders on TV


Author:
Mike Barnicle wannabe
[Edit]

Date Posted: 21:30:50 08/22/05 Mon

(published in, New Hampshire Union-Leader, editorial, 8/17/05)

Tougher sex laws:
Lynch looks into it

WHAT IS
right for Florida might not be right for New Hampshire, and that goes for laws as well as coral-colored stucco homes and flip-flops in November.

Gov. John Lynch wants to toughen the state's sex offender laws, and some activists are urging him to copy, word for word, Florida's latest attempt to crack down on child sex offenders, called the Jessica Lunsford Act. But Lynch is right to have the attorney general's office study the issue before he crafts a bill.

Florida forbids convicted sex offenders from living within 1,000 feet of a school, playground or day care center. That law was on the books when 9-year-old Jessica Lunsford was abducted and killed, allegedly by a mason's helper who worked on her school and stayed at a house near Lunsford's.

Florida's new law requires construction workers and other school contractors to undergo background checks before being let on campus. The law also sets a penalty of 25 years to life for anyone convicted of sexual assault against children younger than 13. In New Hampshire, the penalty for sexual assault against a minor age 13 and younger is 10 to 20 years.

The Miami Herald reported yesterday that Florida schools will incur massive expenditures for background checks on every construction worker, class ring salesman, etc. The Orlando Sentinel reported on Sunday that boundaries around schools probably will have little effect because the vast majority of people who commit sex crimes against minors violate neighbors, friends or family members, not strangers. These are just two cautionary tales that back up the governor's desire to study the issue.

One thing the governor can do now is see that existing laws are enforced. He also should encourage communities to check registered sex offenders more often than once a year. A few months ago Manchester police began a policy of visiting the city's registered sex offenders four to five times a year. So far they report a 12 percent reoffense rate, down from 16 percent last year.

Whatever new laws hit the books next year, people should not expect the crimes to stop. One Manchester detective reminded us to remind the public that laws such as the sex offender registry do not stop predators. Anyone expecting a panacea will be disappointed.

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Replies:
Subject: "God finally got my attention"


Author:
Mike Barnicle wannabe
[Edit]

Date Posted: 15:39:30 08/21/05 Sun

(published in, The Broadcaster, 7/28/05)

Life-altering incident led Calif. man to New Beginning as Nashua pastor

By JOHN COLLINS
The Broadcaster


NASHUA -- It's been a year of milestones for one of the newest members of the local clergy, Pastor Jeff Muster of the New Beginning Fellowship in Nashua.

The church, a branch of the nationwide Assemblies of God ministries, recently celebrated its first year at its 6 Spruce St. location. Also, Muster and his wife, Marilyn, are celebrating 25 years of marriage this year. Muster, who delivers a sermon on topics of current interest at each of his church's weekly Sunday services, paused on the one-year anniversary of New Beginning to reflect on the dramatic new beginning that he and his family made in their own lives six years ago, due to a momentous life-changing event that triggered the Musters' move from the West Coast to New Hampshire.

"When we were first married, and as our children came along, I relied heavily on the Lord to meet our needs," said Jeff, a laser technology salesman who like his wife was raised in California. "But then I began to want more than what the Lord said I needed, so I pursued wealth and all the world had to offer."

Pursuing wealth was something Jeff did well. In the 1990s, Muster's income shot up to more than $200,000 per year. It was in the midst of this time of his greatest financial success that Muster said "God finally got my attention."

On that fateful day in 1998, two Los Angeles County Sheriff's officers knocked on Jeff and Marilyn's door with the news that a woman had run a stop sign, resulting in a head-on collision with a vehicle carrying both their son, Chris, and daughter, Amy.

"Our 14-year-old daughter was being transported by helicopter to one hospital and our 17-year-old son was in the air on his way to another," Jeff recalled. "We were told, 'Your son will not make it through the night.'"

Amy was able to return home a few days after the accident, but their son remained in a coma.

"My son's ICU room became, for me, the belly of Jonah's great fish," Muster said. "The smell, the strange cadence of the respirator, the dim lights -- all of these reminded me of Jonah. God sent Jonah that big ole fish to swallow him whole, so he'd be set apart and given time to think that he would return to obedience. My boy's ICU room affected me the very same way."

In that ICU Jeff said, "I decided to turn back to and follow Jesus again."

By "the grace of God," Muster said their son walked away from a treatment center six months after the accident, but before he did doctors there told Jeff and Marilyn their son needed a new start somewhere else because the same surroundings would be too much for him.

At first, the doctor's advice was difficult for Jeff Muster to accept. "We knew moving would mean leaving my job and that was not possible with a half-a-million dollars of medical bills yet to be paid by our insurance," said Jeff. "(But) we knew the Lord could make sense of things, so we prayed, and then just a day later I received a call out of the blue asking me to come to a company meeting in Massachusetts. Two days later in the meeting, I was being asked to move to the East Coast. Only Marilyn, the Lord and I knew we needed to move! God has done miracle after miracle in our lives, yet I'm still amazed each time."

Two years after the Musters made their move East, the company Jeff was managing was purchased by a competitor. In November 2000, he lost his job. "When it happened, I just got on my knees and cried out 'Lord, I've messed up the first 38 years of my life selfishly following my desires. I now completely surrender myself to you. My life is yours!"
At New Beginning Fellowship, Muster believes his mission is to see the Lord bring a new beginning to numerous lives -- just as He gave a new beginning to theirs.

As for his son, Muster said Chris still struggles from the psychological and physical effects of the head injury. At the same time, the emotional bond between father and son has been strengthened by their frequent discussions about life and the accident that changed their lives. Jeff Muster recently shared the details of those father-son conversations with members of his church.

"I was up kind of late last night," Muster announced to about 30 church members as he began his weekly sermon on June 26. "My son and I were having more conversation. He's really in a hurting place right now. He's struggling with his head injury right now. He's struggling with the fact that he can't do things as easily as he used to. He told me he feels like whenever he goes anywhere, 'There's a sign on my back, and the sign says I'm different.' I said, 'Chris, every one of us feels that way at times -- that we have a big sign on our back that says, I'm different.' I told my son, 'You know, Chris, it's a decision process, that's all it is. How are you going to deal with your difference? How are you gonna do it? Are you gonna grumble and complain about that difference in life? Or are you gonna give that difference to Jesus and say, Use it; use it for your glory, Almighty God!'"

The remainder of Muster's 44-minute sermon that day was devoted to human beings dealing with their imperfections. But for him and his family, the New Beginning Fellowship pastor says they are now living in the perfect place, New Hampshire.

"I would say coming to New England was probably the best thing that happened to myself and my family," said Muster.

For more information, call (603) 889-5907; or visit www.NewInChrist.org

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Subject: New owner hopes to revive WSMN


Author:
Mike Barnicle wannabe
[Edit]

Date Posted: 01:03:12 08/08/05 Mon

(published in, Boston Globe, Globe NorthWest, 8/7/05)

By Meg Villeneuve
Globe Correspondent


Nashua's first radio station has been dark since January, but with an initial investment of $250,000, Tom Monahan feels certain that he can restore WSMN to glory.

Monahan, owner of Absolute Broadcasting, said that when the station goes back on the air it will focus on local news and talk. The lifelong Nashua resident believes that WSMN and its sister station WSNH, a sports station that is on the air, will fill a niche.

''We believe the two will become destination stations," he said. ''If you want Howard Stern, listen to satellite. But if you want to hear the Red Sox game or find out if there are school closings, come to us."

In June, the 54-year-old real estate developer announced that he had started working with the Federal Communications Commission to transfer the radio station's license.

Absolute Broadcasting is awaiting FCC approval for the purchase of both stations. Currently, Absolute operates WSNH under a lease agreement with the previous owner, WSMN Broadcasting LLC.

The license transfer was just one hurdle.

With declining ratings, WSMN Broadcasting decided to cash in on the hot property market by selling the station's land in January. So Monahan now is looking for a new home for both stations.

Until a new site is found, WSMN will simulcast with WSNH out of the Indian Head Plaza in downtown Nashua. Monahan said he hopes to stay in downtown Nashua, perhaps in a Broad Street building he owns.

After its founding in 1958, WSMN became a fixture here.

''Many generations of Nashua residents have grown up listening to WSMN, relying on the station for community news and information," said Mayor Bernie Streeter. ''We felt a real sense of loss when WSMN went off the air several months ago."

Long before cable access television stations, AM 1590 broadcast the city's Board of Aldermen meetings. At the time, each board member would have his or her own microphone, which didn't have off switches.

''We sometimes heard what members said under their breath, and not all of it was nice," recalled Ed Lecius. In 1959, Lecius' father was one of the partners at WSMN.

In a phone interview, Lecius recalled tagging along with his father to press conferences; as a teenager he began working next to his father doing the play-by-play of the local sports games.

''I grew up with the station," he said. ''Everyone knew my dad's voice, and on snow days we all waited to hear if school was canceled."

Lecius now works as a public information officer for the Nashua Police Department. However, he still finds himself drawn to the microphone, and once WSMN is on the air, he said he plans to cover some of the local football games.

''The area is in a need for local news and local reporting," he said.Lecius is not the only broadcaster who is pleased about the station's comeback.

Seventy-six-year-old retired broadcaster Frank Teas said he is thrilled that the station will soon be back on the air.

''It's a remarkable achievement to own two stations," said Teas. ''And it is great that [Monahan] plans to provide local news."

Teas said he once auditioned to do vocal impersonations on ''The Ed Sullivan Show," and was told that his act needed work. But he found a solid niche at WSMN. He was the first to be heard on AM 1590 -- hosting the morning show, covering all the sports teams, and even selling ads. He joined the station in 1958 and retired in 2002.

In addition to the morning show, Teas hosted ''The Bargain Box," a kind of daily yard sale. Monahan likened it to a radio version of eBay. And while the format of shows for the new WSMN is still being worked on, there's talk of bringing back ''The Bargain Box."

''We are also considering some syndicated shows, but the goal is to keep it local," Monahan said.

Meg Villeneuve can be reached at megv@globe.com .

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Subject: Osama’s “Letter to America”


Author:
Mike Barnicle wannabe
[Edit]

Date Posted: 14:53:08 07/25/05 Mon

With the fourth anniversary of the 9/11 tragedy rapidly approaching, we decided to run this letter from Osama bin Laden, which was posted on the British website, Observer Worldview on 11/24/02. The letter first appeared on the Internet in Arabic and has since been translated and circulated by Islamists in Britain.

Due to the rather lengthy nature of this letter, we decided to post this in a message immediately following this one on this same string.

WE CERTAINLY DO NOT CONDONE NOR ENDORSE ANY STATEMENTS MADE IN THIS LETTER. Nashua Network Nation’s objective to posting this letter on this forum is to simply inform and educate as many people as possible as to the type of mind-set we’re dealing with here. Personally, it appears as though this War on Terrorism isn’t going to end anytime soon but, as always, examine the contents for yourself and draw your own conclusions.

WARNING: If you’re the type of individual who easily gets offended, especially by anti-American or anti-Jewish commentary, you might want to consider refraining from clicking on and reading this letter in question. Otherwise, fasten your seatbelt and brace yourself for the ride.

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Subject: Summer '05 fun events set for Nashua area


Author:
Mike Barnicle wannabe
[Edit]

Date Posted: 20:23:07 06/05/05 Sun

Nashua weekly publication, the Hippo recently ran a feature of various fun type events scheduled in the Nashua area over these next few summer months. Due to the lengthy nature of this article by Amy Diaz, we decided to run it in its verbatim entirety on a post immediately following this one.

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Subject: The "L I T T L E" things


Author:
Mike Barnicle wannabe
[Edit]

Date Posted: 20:29:49 03/07/05 Mon

As you might know, the head of a company survived 9/11 because his son started kindergarten.

Another fellow was alive because it was his turn to bring donuts.

One woman was late because her alarm clock didn't go off in time.

One was late because of being stuck on the NJ Turnpike due to an auto accident.

One of them missed his bus.

One spilled food on her clothes and had to take time to change.

One's car wouldn't start.

One went back to answer the telephone.

One had a child that dawdled and didn't get ready as soon as he should have.

One couldn't get a taxi.

The one that struck me was the man who put on a new pair of shoes that morning, took the various means to get to work but before he got there, he developed a blister on his foot. He stopped at a drugstore to buy a Band-Aid. That is why he is alive today.

Now when I am stuck in traffic, miss an elevator, turn back to answer a ringing telephone...all the little things that annoy me, I think to myself, this is exactly where God wants me to be at this very moment.

Next time your morning seems to be going wrong, the children are slow getting dressed, you can't seem to find the car keys, you hit every traffic light, don't get mad or frustrated; God is at work watching over you.

May God continue to bless you with all those annoying little things and may you remember their possible purpose.

Pass this on to someone else, if you'd like.

There is NO LUCK attached. If you ignore this, it's okay:

God's Love Is Not Dependent On E-Mail !! (that's the cool part)

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Subject: Welcome to, Nashua Network Nation


Author:
The Moderator
[Edit]

Date Posted: 23:21:04 11/20/04 Sat

Hey everybody.

So what are the big issues going on right now in Nashua? How about New Hampshire? How about the USA? How ‘bout them Red Sox, & Patriots?

Feel free to utilize this sounding board to tell all the people of Nashua how you REALLY feel about a particular topic – just so long as it’s not too vulgar and not too libelous.

If you have any problems with posting a message on this site, please scroll and click on the, “Contact Forum Admin” line on this board and I’ll try and point you in the right direction.

Together, I believe we’ll have lots of fun exchanging thoughts and ideas with each other here on, Nashua Network Nation.

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Subject: 23 things you should never state on a vehicle accident claim


Author:
Mike Barnicle wannabe
[Edit]

Date Posted: 00:07:17 01/16/05 Sun

The following are actual statements found on insurance forms where vehicle drivers attempt to summarize the details of an accident in the fewest words possible. The instances of faulty writing serve to confirm that even incompetent writing may be highly entertaining.

* Coming home, I drove into the wrong house and collided with a tree I don’t have.

* The other car collided with mine without giving warning of its intentions.

* I thought my window was down, but I found out it was up when I put my head thru it.

* I collided with a stationary truck coming the other way.

* A truck backed thru my windshield into my wife’s face.

* A pedestrian hit me and went under my car.

* The guy was all over the road, I had to swerve a number of times before I hit him.

* I pulled away from the side of the road, glanced at my mother-in-law, and headed over the embankment.

* In my attempt to kill a fly, I drove into a telephone pole.

* I had been shopping for plants all day and was on my way home. As I reached an intersection, a hedge sprang up obscuring my vision and I did not see the other car.

* I had been driving for 40 years when I fell asleep at the wheel and had an accident.

* I was on my way to the doctor with rear end trouble when my universal joint gave way causing me to have an accident.

* As I approached the intersection, a sign suddenly appeared in a place where no stop sign had ever appeared before. I was unable to stop in time to avoid the accident.

* To avoid hitting the bumper of a car in front, I struck the pedestrian.

* My car was legally parked as it backed into the other car.

* An invisible car came out of nowhere, struck my car and vanished.

* I told the police that I was not injured but on removing my hat found that I had a fractured skull.

* I was sure the old fellow would never make it to the other side of the road when I struck him.

* I saw a slow-moving, sad-faced, old gentleman as he bounced off the roof of my car.

* The pedestrian had no idea which direction to run, so I ran over him.

* The indirect cause of the accident was a little guy in a small car with a big mouth.

* I was thrown from my car as it left the road. I was later found in a ditch by some stray cows.

* The telephone pole was approaching. I was attempting to swerve out of its way when it struck the front end.

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Subject: Wisenheimer 3:16 --- Points to ponder


Author:
Mike Barnicle wannabe
[Edit]

Date Posted: 02:00:22 12/12/04 Sun

Who was the first person to look at a cow and say, "I think I'll squeeze these dangly things here, and drink whatever comes out?"

Who was the first person to say "See that chicken there....I'm gonna eat the next thing that comes outta it's butt."

Why do toasters always have a setting that burns the toast to a horrible crisp, which no decent human being would eat?

Why is there a light in the fridge and not in the freezer?

If Jimmy cracks corn and no one cares, why is there a song about him?

Can a hearse carrying a corpse drive in the carpool lane?

If the professor on Gilligan's Island can make a radio out of coconut, why can't he fix a hole in a boat?

Why do people point to their wrist when asking for the time, but don't point to their crotch when they ask where the bathroom is?

Why does your OB-GYN leave the room when you get undressed if they are going to look up there anyway?

Why does Goofy stand erect while Pluto remains on all fours?
They're both dogs!

What do you call male ballerinas?

Can blind people see their dreams? Do they dream??

If Wile E. Coyote had enough money to buy all that Acme crap, why didn't he just buy dinner?

If quizzes are quizzical, what are tests?

If corn oil is made from corn, and vegetable oil is made from vegetables, then what is baby oil made from?

If electricity comes from electrons, does morality come from morons?

Is Disney World the only people trap operated by a mouse?

Why do the 'Alphabet song' and 'Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star' have the same tune?

Do illiterate people get the full effect of alphabet soup?

Why do they call it an asteroid when it's out side the hemisphere, but call it a hemorrhoid when it's in your rear?

Did you ever notice that when you blow in a dog's face, he gets mad at you, but when you take him on a car ride, he sticks his head out the window?

Does pushing the elevator button more than once make it arrive faster?

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