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  • BILL REDLIN & DALE WILLMAN
  • This hotline is for WEEKEND SUNDAY ONLY; also, PUZZLE answers will OT be accepted on the comment line -- they must be MAILED IN!! Also, please emind listeners who respond to the PUZZLE via e-mail to include their street ddress and phone number.
  • Linda Gradstein reports from Jerusalem that in two separate attacks in Israel today Palestinian suicide bombers killed at least 25 people, including 2 americans, and injured more than 80. It was the bloodiest day since Israel and the P-L-O signed their first peace agreement three years ago. The militant Hamas Movement claimed responsibility for both attacks.
  • NPR's Martha Raddatz reports on the decision by the Navy to ground all F-14 fighter planes for the next three days. An F-14 Tomcat crashed in the Persian Gulf near the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz today. There were no fatalities in the crash today, but seven people died in two other F-14 crashes in recent weeks.
  • NPR's Anne Garrels reports from Moscow that Russia is receiving a big investment from the West. Despite the uncertainty as the nation heads into the presidential election season, the International Monetary Fund has agreed to lend Moscow more than ten-billion-dollars.
  • Jacki reports on the turmoil in the Canadian province of Ontario over budget cutbacks. The Conservative government of Premier Mike Harris has cut about 8-million dollars in spending so far in an effort to curb a 100-million dollar debt. On Friday and Saturday, tens of thousands of union workers rallied in Hamilton, Ontario to protest government policies. The province faces a strike by members of the Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU) at 12:01 Monday morning. Union offices warned the walk-outs would escalate, with as many as 55-thousand of the province's 81-thousand union workers off the job by mid-week.The chief issue in contract talks between the union and the government is job security. On Friday, the government announced an 18-percent cut in provincial hospitals and as many as 20-thousand layoffs of hospital workers during the next year.
  • NPR'S ANDY BOWERS REPORTS ON A CHECKPOINT IN BOSNIA WHERE MUSLIM, SERB, AND CROAT SOLDIERS ALL GREW UP TOGETHER.
  • TREVOR ROWE REPORTS THAT THE U.N. IS INCHING CLOSER TO CREATING A CONTINGENCY FORCE FOR POSSIBLE INTERVENTION IN BURUNDI, WHERE ETHNIC VIOLENCE CONTINUES TO BE DEADLY.
  • NPR Senior News Analyst Daniel Schorr received an invitation in he mail this past week to join the Republican Presidential Trust, and wonders hy the Republicans are asking him.
  • NPR's Brian Naylor reports that the eight men seeking the Republican presidential nomination spent the last day before New Hampshire's first-in-the-nation primary at a series of media events, speeches and rallies. Public opinion polls show that Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, commentator Pat Buchanan and former Tennessee Gov. Lamar Alexander are in a close race for the state's sixteen delegates.
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