Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Despite storm damage, ski resorts ready for business


Despite storm damage, ski resorts ready for business

Published: Wednesday, December 07, 2011, 9:01 AM



New buyer for NH resort where 1st ballots are cast


New buyer for NH resort where 1st ballots are cast

By Kathy McCormack
Associated Press / December 7, 2011



CONCORD, N.H.—After two failed deals this year, the stately resort where New Hampshire's the first-in-the-nation presidential primary ballots have been cast for 50 years has been sold to two businessmen for $2.3 million.
The Balsams Grand Resort Hotel in Dixville Notch, a remote, Victorian- and Alpine-style complex about 20 miles from Canada, has been sold to Dan Hebert and Dan Dagesse. The sale was announced Wednesday by the Tillotson Corporation, which owned the nearly 150-year-old resort and surrounding property.
Dagesse, who owned auto dealerships in the Northeast, including some in northern New Hampshire, and Hebert, who owns a construction business in Colebrook, have been interested in preserving the hotel for more than a year.
"We care deeply about restoring the Balsams Grand Resort Hotel to its full glory as a world-class destination resort and seeing it thrive for decades to come," Hebert said. "We want to provide a stable operation that we can all be proud of."
The hotel is known for its wood-paneled Ballot Room, where residents of the tiny community are the first to cast their votes for president at midnight on New Hampshire's primary day and on the nation's Election Day. The owners say the Balsams will be closed for renovations for up to 18 months, but the Ballot Room, filled with a time capsule of political articles and cartoons from presidential campaigns and a special glass-encased ballot box, will be open for the Jan. 10, 2012 presidential primary.
"We will make that happen," said Scott Tranchemontagne, a spokesman for the buyers.
The Tillotson family, whose patriarch ran a rubber factory and is credited with inventing the latex balloon, bought the resort in 1954. Before he died in 2001 at age 102, Neil Tillotson specified that the resort and other assets be sold or given away and the proceeds given to charities. But the hotel has been operating at a loss for years, and the money has been coming out of the assets of a family trust.... MORE

PHOTO CREDIT: http://bobdonpaul.com

Put some zip into your December at Gunstock

Put some zip into your December at Gunstock  Posted by Heather Burke  December 7, 2011 01:52 PM


Tired of waiting for serious snow to go skiing? I got my vertical fix without the snow last weekend. I felt the wind zip by me as I descended Gunstock Mountain, with stunning views of the White Mountains, and the sensation of flying downhill. Ziplining at Gunstock satisfies that craving to soar down the mountain, providing that multi sensory adrenaline rush rivaling any ski descent...... MORE

Judge denies Occupy Boston's bid to bar eviction



BOSTON -- A judge rejected a request by Occupy Boston for an injunction barring the city from removing protesters from their encampment in Dewey Square.

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Brief Glitch Let Facebook Users See Private Photos


Problem Described As Bug In New Computer Code

What's been described as a bug in some new computer code briefly allowed Facebook users to snoop on the private pictures of other members.
The glitch, which Facebook discovered Tuesday, was part of the site's tool that lets users report offensive contents. Clicking on a user's profile picture, then reporting it to Facebook as containing nudity or other inappropriate content, was then prompting Facebook to show other photos from that user's account and asking whether they, too, were offensive.

Read more: http://ow.ly/7R3f0