Buffalo News: For Lou Hancherick, who lives in the countryside amid picturesque hillside vistas and gas wells 30 miles north of Pittsburgh, the dangers of fracking came clear when the water didnt. Eighty miles to the south, Pam Judy turned against hydraulic fracturing when a natural gas compressor station moved in next to her hillside home, and the sore throats and headaches began. And near Pennsylvanias border with Ohio, Maggie Henry finds her organic farm pinched between a fracked gas well and a new cryogenic...