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ArchivesNew Law's Solar Energy Requirement Sets PSNH on EdgeBy David Darman on Thursday, June 21, 2007.New Hampshire's new Renewable Portfolio Energy law requires utilities begin buying power from renewable sources starting next year. Eventually that power could come from wind, biomass or hydro sources. It also requires solar energy to be part of the renewable total. The state's largest utility says the solar goal is probably unrealistic. But state officials, environmentalists and the solar industry disagree. New Hampshire Public Radio's David Darman has more. New Hampshire's Representatives Want a Chance to Vote on the Iraq WarBy Matt Laslo on Thursday, June 21, 2007.Democrats in both chambers of Congress are ramping up efforts to end the Iraq War. NHPR Correspondent Matt Laslo reports from Washington on what proposals are on the table ... and what New Hampshire lawmakers have to say about them. Boys and LiteracyBy Liz Bulkley on Thursday, June 21, 2007.Boys are influenced by popular culture differently from girls. We'll look at how their general preferences for adventure stories -- with battles and violence -- can work against them, especially within the traditional school system. Our guests are Ralph Fletcher, author of Boy Writers: Reclaiming Their Voices and UNH Professor Tom Newkirk, author of Misreading Masculinity: Boys, Literacy, and Popular Culture. *****This program was originally broadcast on December 19, 2006 Religion and Nationalism in IraqBy Laura Knoy on Thursday, June 21, 2007.Present-day Iraq represents a volatile mixture of the forces of religion and nationalism. The major groups, the Sunni, Shia and Kurds are locked in a sharply divided contest over the definition of national identity and the distribution of national power, as well as the control of territory. This struggle in Iraq shows symptoms of religious nationalism. A new book compares the experience in Iraq to other cases, like Bosnia and Herzegovina, Sri Lanka and Sudan, where religion and nationalism have come together in a lethal way and tries to see how ethnicity and religion compete to define national ideals. Guest
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