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Brook Trout Spawning

By Iain MacLeod on Friday, October 17, 2003.

Brook Trout choose this time of year to begin spawning. Iain tells you where to go and what to look for in local brooks and streams.

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Anglican Summit

By Laura Knoy on Friday, October 17, 2003.

Anglican and Episcopalian world leaders met at a two day global summit in London, England this week to discuss the future of the communion. The meeting was called in light of recent events, including the approval of Gene Robinson, an openly gay Episcopal priest, as New Hampshire's next Bishop. Find out what decisions came out of the summit and where the church goes from here. Laura's guest is the Reverend Doctor Ian Douglas, Professor of World Mission and Global Christianity and Director of Anglican, Global, and Ecumenical Studies at the Episcopal Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts. We'll also hear from the Reverend Hays Junkin, President of the Standing Committee for the New Hampshire Diocese and Diane Knippers, Board Member of the American Anglican Council and President of the Institute on Religion and Democracy.

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An Award Winning Sci-Fi Writer

By John Walters on Friday, October 17, 2003.

Nottingham resident James Patrick Kelly's short stories are collected in his book, "Think Like a Dinosaur." Many of his stories take place on Earth in the near future, in settings that are familiar but profoundly different. It gives him a new perspective on current issues and the human condition.

www.jimkelly.net

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Mommy Rule #1: Be Prepared

By Lois Shea on Friday, October 17, 2003.

A half-century ago, before people could download music on computers, a mother in New Jersey bought her seven-year-old son his first guitar.

Writer Lois Shea offers this ode to mommies......and to rock and roll.

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Kazanon: A Trojan Horse for Spammers?

By Brian McWilliams on Friday, October 17, 2003.

Last month the Recording Industry Association of America filed lawsuits against hundreds of Internet users.

The RIAA accused them of illegally trading digital music files over the Internet using programs such as Kazaa.

The day after the RIAA filed its lawsuits, a company in Stratham sprang into action.

Odysseus Marketing created a Web site offering a free program that it says will enable Internet users to share music files anonymously -- and avoid prosecution.

But as NHPR's Brian McWilliams reports, the software appears to be nothing more than a Trojan horse from a man with a dubious past.

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