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Here are the Capital News Service stories tentatively scheduled to move Friday, Nov. 6. If you have any questions, please call Rafael Lorente in the Annapolis bureau at 410-626-1008 or Adrianne Flynn in the Washington bureau at 202-628-1677, or you may e-mail us at rlorente@jmail.umd.edu or aflynn@jmail.umd.edu.^

Eds: Photos and video with stories as noted below are available at http://www.journalism.umd.edu/cns/wire/extras/. Login: cns. Password: goterps. Broadcast-quality video packages are available at http://cns.umd.edu/tv through the College Park broadcast bureau.<

^Eds: Capital News Service is also blogging at Maryland Newsline (http://www.newsline.umd.edu/blog/) and sending Tweets from www.twitter.com/CNSmd.<

SNIPER MEMORIES

ROCKVILLE - For witnesses to his crimes, the scheduled execution next week of the Beltway Sniper, John Allen Muhammad, elicits contrasting emotions. But the one thing they all agree on is that they will never forget the terror of those days in October seven years ago. Slug: CNS-Sniper Memories. About 850 words. With photos.

By Christopher M. Matthews.<

PERVIOUS CONCRETE

WASHINGTON - Over the next couple of months, Queen Anne's County will install six parking lots worth of pervious concrete -- the largest installation on Maryland's Eastern Shore. Pervious surface storm water runoff accounts for 16 percent of the Chesapeake Bay's nitrogen load. And pervious concrete is here to help change that. Slug: CNS-Pervious Concrete. About 650 words.

By Aleksandra Robinson.<

WINE BOOM

ANNAPOLIS - A patchwork of county alcohol regulations continues to frustrate Maryland's winery owners, but that has not stopped newcomers from joining the state's burgeoning wine industry. Kevin Atticks, executive director of the Maryland Wineries Association, has helped new wineries get off the ground and hopes the Maryland General Assembly will pass legislation next year to address some of the law's inconsistencies across the state. About 600 words.

By David M. Johnson.<

- 30 -

TED CONFERENCE

BALTIMORE - At a time of climbing anxiety and a seemingly unrelenting torrent of bad news, the TEDx MidAtlantic conference explored the excitement of new ideas and great discoveries. Held Thursday in Baltimore and featuring a cavalcade of scientists, business leaders and artists discussing their work, the event served as a reminder that, in Maryland and elsewhere, smart and passionate people are doing extraordinary things. About 600 words.

By Bobby McMahon<

Copyright © University of Maryland Philip Merrill College of Journalism

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