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ArchivesSecurity in CyberspaceBy Laura Knoy on Thursday, January 30, 2003.An internet worm wreaked havoc last weekend, knocking ATMs out of order and infiltrating government websites. Laura talks with James McKim, ISRG, Inc. http://www.isrginc.com and Vice-Chairman of the Software Association of New Hampshire www.swanh.org and and Nancy C. Hanger, Windhaven Press www.windhaven.com and writer for Byte Magazine http://www.byte.com and WIRED News http://www.wired.com. NCLB: Who Will Pay the Bill?By Jon Greenberg on Thursday, January 30, 2003.The nation’s new education law, No Child Left Behind, passed with strong bipartisan support a year ago. Senators with ideologies as different as Massachusetts Democrat Ted Kennedy and New Hampshire Republican Judd Gregg joined forces to bring more testing, ambitious teaching goals, and more money to the nation’s schools. But since then, that bipartisan spirit has evaporated and the chief reason is – the money. Democrats say the law is under-funded. Republicans argue that the increases have been more than generous. Here in New Hampshire, concern over the law’s fiscal consequences has drawn strong reactions from towns, state lawmakers, and educators. It has also drawn a vigorous defense from No Child Left Behind’s chief Republican sponsor, Senator Gregg. In the last part of our series on the new education law, NHPR’s Jon Greenberg outlines the debate over money and No Child Left Behind. Finding New Uses for Old Mill BuildingsBy John Walters on Thursday, January 30, 2003.Jim Cropsey is a developer with an unusual specialty. He takes abandoned industrial buildings and renovates them for new use. It can be a great way to bring new life to troubled communities. He talks about the ups and downs of adaptive re-use and his current project in downtown Tilton. |
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