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Although the NCAA has long maintained that its players are “student-athletes” who were in school primarily to study, college sports has grown into a multibillion-dollar industry that richly rewards coaches and schools while the players remained unpaid amateurs.
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Brave Little StateA smattering of Vermont and New Hampshire towns on either side of the Connecticut River are known collectively as the “Upper Valley.” We set out to find why.
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Krista Patronick of Hanover intends to drive around the Upper Valley on Wednesday, delivering cards and roses to people who’ve lost their partners.
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John Harrison traveled Vermont as a preacher in the 1880s. A racist name in town records preserved his memory.
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Elizabeth Carpenter-Song kept in touch for years with families she met at a shelter in 2009.
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On an assignment for a summer camp project, student journalists walked around White River Junction and spoke with people about how they’re feeling in the aftermath of the flooding. This is what they said.
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Host Mikaela Lefrak chats with journalist Matthew Hongoltz-Hetling about his new book on the fringes of American medicine.
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Vittles House of Brews hosts a monthly event, called "Out in Bradford," specifically for queer people and friends to just hang out.
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If you type in “Vermont” and “volcano” into an online search engine, the internet will tell you that Mount Ascutney is the state’s “most famous volcano.”But geologists say … that’s not quite right.
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Two long abandoned copper mines in Orange County have finally been slated for cleanup. When those projects are finished, they will mark the end of an industry that ran from the mid 1800s through the 1950s in Vermont.