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  • CARUSO: ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE FIRST LIVE BROADCAST OF AN OPERATIC EVENT --- WE PLAY THE SONG ENRICO CARUSO SANG THAT DAY FROM THE STAGE OF THE NEW YORK CITY METROPOLITAN OPERA COMPANY
  • NPR's Peter Overby reports that Lamar Alexander and other candidates have used non-profit groups to help boost their profiles with voters and fundraisers before officially announcing their candidacies. Alexander's supporters set up a satellite network to broadcast shows featuring Alexander and his GOP philosophy to party activists around the country. The network was not subject to campaign finance limits, but brought in big donations.
  • Reporter Richard Schiffman visits a monastery in Vermont, where men devote their lives to god and try to find peace by rising above base human nature. But sometimes, even in this monastic community, devotion can be a struggle.
  • Linda talks with Dr. William Hagland, sr. forensic anthropologist for Physicians for Human Rights. He tells about his work to exhume bodies in the village of Kibuye, where Tutsis were slaughtered inside a church in April of 1994. Hagland's team of scientific investigators are gathering data for the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda.
  • What do successful companies and Tony Bennett have in common? They stick with what they know best, ballads for the singer, a good product for the companies. They keep things simple -- a single microphone, spartan offices, and a commitment to quality and customer service.
  • NPR's Mike Shuster reports on President Clinton's trip to Bosnia where the President spoke to U.S. troops now serving there. Shuster also spoke with troops who say they're glad to be involved in the Bosnia mission.
  • Five years ago this weekend, the U.S. was about to go to war with Iraq. For the record, we play excerpts from the Congressional debate that preceded a vote authorizing President George Bush to use force. We hear from republican Robert Michel, who was Senate Minority Leader; and from Congressman John Lewis, a democrat from Georgia.
  • are expected to allow mass grave sites around Srebrenica to be excavated. Bosnian Serbs overran the Muslim town in July 1995, expelling over 20,000 women and children. Up to 8,000 men are still unaccounted for and many are feared killed or held captive.
  • to disarm both sides in the Northern Ireland conflict.
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