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  • Noah talks to John Shattuck, Assistant Secretary of State for Human Rights, about his trip to Srebrenica over the weekend. Shattuck describes visiting the warehouse where hundreds of Muslims were believed to have been slaughtered.
  • TV critic DAVID BIANCULLI. Subject TBA.REV. :Film critic JOHN POWERS reviews the new film by the Coen Brothers, "Fargo."
  • NPR's John Greenberg reports on an interview Hillary Rodham Clinton gave to NPR's Weekend Edition Saturday. Mrs. Clinton discusses her troubles over the Whitewater and White House Travel office disputes.
  • NPR's John Ydstie reports that an unemployment report released today suggested that economic growth in the U-S is slowing. There had been concern that the growing economy would spark high inflation.
  • Reviewer Alan Cheuse discusses a new book by first-time author Marly Swick, which focuses on the changes that occur within a midwestern family, touched off by the assassination of John Kennedy in 1963.
  • NPR's John McChesney reports that computer-maker Apple is expected to announce a restructuring that will involve selling off parts of the company and substantial layoffs. A decision could come later today or tomorrow.
  • Host Lisa Simeone talks with John Gilliland, Deputy President of the Ulster Farmer's Union, about continuing concerns over the impact of Foot and Mouth Disease in Northern Ireland.
  • Actress Catherine Keener was nominated for an Academy Award for her role in Being John Malkovich. She starred in the independent films The Real Blonde, Walking and Talking, Living in Oblivion and Lovely and Amazing.
  • Critic at large John Powers considers Katamari Damacy, a PlayStation game from Japan.
  • A wartime mandate is shifting the FBI's mission and training. NPR's John McChesney recently visited the FBI Academy in Quantico, Va., and found the bureau on a crash course to address the challenge of terrorism.
  • NPR's John Ydstie reports from Lyon on the economic talks among the G-7 leaders which produced some progress in the effort to reduce debt burdens for some of the world's poorest countries.
  • NPR's John Nielsen reports on the status of the investigation into the crash of TWA flight 800. Federal investigators still have no concrete evidence that a terrorist attack caused the crash, but they're looking closely at the possibility.
  • - Daniel talks to John Shattuck, Assistant Secretary of State for democracy, human rights and labor, about the situation in Burundi, where violence among the country's Hutu and Tutsi ethnic groups is claiming some hundred people a day.
  • NPR's John Ydstie reports the stock market was unusually volatile today...losing more than 160 points today before recovering. Positive news on inflation and industrial production did little to calm jitters on Wall Street.
  • 36 years ago then Vice-President Richard Nixon and Senator John F. Kennedy were running for President. For The Record, we offer you a sample from the first of their four debates.
  • - NPR's John Nielsen reports on the crash of an Air Force C-130 cargo transport plane which was leaving Jackson Hole, Wyoming, as President Clinton ended his family vacation in the area.
  • NPR's John McChesney reports the energy crisis in California has sparked new interest in alternative sources for electricity. One of the most promising is a device called a fuel cell.
  • Fuzzy math? No ...we need to get used to fuzzy truth. Steven Goodman, a doctor and biostatistician at Johns Hopkins Schools of Medicine and Public Health has this commentary.
  • All Things Considered begins to air portions of the stump speeches of Presidential candidates. We hear from Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry, who is running for the Democratic nomination.
  • Many Black parents and teachers applaud the change but wonder how it will be implemented.
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