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  • about campaigning among Republican candidates for tomorrow's Arizona Primary. The winner will get all 39 delegates to the national convention.
  • Linda Wertheimer speaks with Andrew Beyer, staff writer for the Washington Post, about the surprise victory of a colt named "Built for Pleasure" in Saturday's "Fountain of Youth Stakes." The colt scored a 143-1 upset, casting doubts on the prospects of some of the leading Kentucky Derby candidates.
  • SIMPLE.Robert talks with Tom Oschenslager,(OSH-EN-SLANHG-ER), is a tax partner the accounting firm Grant Thornton in Washington DC. He spoke to us from his office. 3. LIGHT & LAG. Noah talks with Dr. Charles Czeisler (SIZE-ler), Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, and senior author of a new study on human response to light. The study, published today in the journal Nature, shows that normal levels of indoor light, not just bright light, can reset the human biological clock. Czeisler says that, thanks to Edison, our bodies are in a permanent state of jet lag.
  • WEEKEND EDITION SPORTS COMMENTATOR RON RAPOPORT TALKS ABOUT MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL'S SPRING TRAINING, WHICH IS IN FULL-SWING. WHAT'S DIFFERENT THIS YEAR IS THAT THINGS SEEM VERY CALM.
  • Two bombs went off in Israel today, killing at least 24 eople. It's the largest number of Israeli deaths in a terrorist attack since he signing of the Israeli-PLO peace accord. An initial blast on a crowded bus n Jerusalem was followed by a second blast in the coastal town of Ashkelon ASH-keh-lohn). Linda Gradstein reports.
  • A portion of a "Citizen's Issues Forum" in Phoenix co-sponsored y member station KJZZ and the NPR Election Project. Reporter Laura Carlson oderated the session and spoke with citizens about a number of issues including mmigration, free-trade, and the effect of Pat Buchanan on the Republican party
  • WAY - Daniel talks with two men from Northern Ireland, one Protestant the other Catholic, about the effect yesterday's bombing in London by the Irish Republican Army might have on the peace talks. Liam Maskey, a Catholic, is with the community group 'Intercom' which works with at-risk youth in Catholic neighborhoods in Belfast. And, Mark Armstrong is with the "Youth Stadium Club", a group which works with at-risk youth in Protestant areas of the city. Both men were shocked and disappointed by the bombing but remain hopeful that the peace talks will continue and the ceasefire will resume.
  • Daniel talks about Pope John Paul the Second's trip to Central America with the BBC's David Willey. Willey traveled with the Pope when the Pontiff last visited Latin American in 1983, and he says the Roman Catholic Church in the region has become much more conservative over the years, eschewing reform and supporting incumbant governments.
  • LIANE HANSEN
  • Robert speaks with reporter Tina Daunt, who covered the trial of rap music star Snoop Doggy Dogg for the Los Angeles Times. His acquittal on murder charges and mistrial on manslaughter charges have raised questions whether prosecutors can win a conviction against a celebrity defendant.
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