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  • to recommendations that the government change the way it calculates inflation. The effect would be felt by recipients of Social Security and other government benefits.
  • may loosen standards that define exactly what ingredients can be in certain foods -- a move that alarms consumer advocates.
  • John Reznikoff collects hair. The president of University Archives, a company that buys and sells valuable manuscripts, currently has 101 hair locks in his collection that originate from a wide range of celebrities, from George and Martha Washington to Geronimo to England's King Charles I. Daniel talks with Reznikoff, a Nobel Prize-winning scientist who is currently allowing some of his hair samples to be used for their DNA in "DNA Jewelry," which Reznikoff is now marketing.
  • NPR senior news analyst Daniel Schorr examines a piece of the "Watergate puzzle": the pardon of former President Richard Nixon. He retells the story through the words of former Nixon lawyer Leonard Garment. Garment's memoir, "Crazy Rhythm", is due to be published next month.
  • Daniel speaks with Tom Rollins, the President of the Teaching Company in Springfield, Virginia. Rollins prides himself for having the best collection of college lectures by America's superstar teachers. Rollins travels to colleges and universities around the country to determine the best lecturers in fields ranging from astronomy and Western Literature to Algebra One.
  • reports on a unique musical contribution the pioneer Mormons made to western folklore -- music about the making of a new civilization... and about the trials the Mormons underwent for their beliefs.
  • POST-CHRISTMAS SALES: Essayist Diane Roberts goes shopping in the irst few days after Christmas.
  • One of President Clinton's top goals for his second term is to improve the nation's education system. NPR's Mara Liasson reports that in the coming year, the president will push for the passage of a college tuition tax credit and for federal funding of a national literacy program, in an effort to stop the slide of America's elementary and secondary schools.
  • into a program aimed at encouraging peasant farmers to dig up coca plants and grow mainstream crops instead, as well as helping the military destroy illegal facilities.
  • in Tibet.
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