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  • NPR'S TREVOR ROWE REPORTS FROM NEW YORK THAT MANY VIEW THE U.N. MISSION IN SOMALIA AS A FAILURE AND THAT IT WILL HAVE A LASTING EFFECT ON FUTURE RESPONSES TO HUMANITARIAN AND POLITICAL CRISES.
  • We take a moment to solicit phone calls about what kind of music our listeners clean their house to. 1:00 Funding Credit Cross Promo Station Break (:59) Forward Promo
  • For the past 350 years, the people of New England have held town meetings as a forum to thrash out local issues and vote on them. Some consider these meetings the oldest and purest form of democracy in the United States. But Leda Hartman reports that in New Hampshire, this venerable institution may come to an end if the state legislature passes a law that allows local issues to be resolved by secret ballot.
  • Jacki speaks with Professor Dirk Vandewalle of Dartmouth College..and Algerian artist TAhar Bouqeterie about the recent violence in Algeria. More than 30-thousand people have been killed in that conflict.
  • FROM LONDON, NPR'S ANDY BOWERS REPORTS THAT LAST NIGHT'S RULING BY THE U.S. SUPREME COURT THAT STAYED THE SCHEDULED EXECUTION OF CONVICTED MURDERER AND RAPIST CLARENCE LACKEY IS SUPPORTED BY THE BRITISH BAR WHICH, THIS WEEK, FILED A FRIEND OF THE COURT BRIEF ON HIS BEHALF.
  • Maria Hinojosa reports that law enforcement is increasingly relying on the use of informants to catch people suspected of crimes. The problem is that often those informants have criminal records themselves and have been known to lie to law enforcement about what they've discovered, which, in some instances has meant that innocent people have been dragged through criminal proceedings.
  • Jacki talks to Jean Bach, producer of the documentary film, "A Great Day in Harlem," which tells the story of a famous photograph of 57 jazz musicians taken in front of a Harlem brownstone in 1958. A young novice photographer, Art Kane, put the word out that the jazz musicians in New York City should all show up at a certain corner one summer morning... and the gathering became a jazz family reunion as much as a photo shoot.
  • SCOTT SIMON SPEAKS WITH MIKE VEECK (VECK), OWNER OF THE ST. PAUL SAINTS MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL TEAM, ABOUT THE EFFECT THE MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL STRIKE IS HAVING ON MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL. AND SYNDICATED CARTOONIST JEFF McNELLY READS FROM HIS RECENT WORK, A TAKE-OFF OF "CASEY AT THE BAT."
  • Daniel talks to Goeran Carstedt, President of Ikea North America about his company's take on American lifestyles. According to an Ikea report Americans center all their furnishings around the television...which is getting bigger and bigger. By contrast in Ikea's homebase Sweden, people tend to centre their lifestyles around a dining room sets..they talk more and watch T.V. less.
  • Daniel talks with NPR's Maria Hinojosa, who covered the economic and refugee crises in Cuba six months ago and returned to the island recently to find significant changes in both Cuba's economy and mood. State-sanctioned farmers' markets are flourishing, food is plentiful and Cubans appear upbeat, Hinojosa says. But with the Castro dictatorship still in power, these changes have no legal protection.
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