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  • still haven't been decided two weeks after polling day -- that's because election officials haven't finished verifying thousands of so-called provisional ballots.
  • Susan talks to report Alice Furlaud about the tradition of the President throwing open the White House doors on New Years.
  • " Breaking the Waves," and its director, Lars von Trier, who has withdrawn from public view since the success of the film.
  • Linda talks with Charles Gasparino, a reporter for the Wall Street Journal . They discuss the strong stock market of the last ten years, and how investors who have never experienced a "bear market" may react when the economic indicators experience a downward turn.
  • Wilson was a pioneer in photomicrography ...that was when he was a farm kid fooling around with a hand-me-down microscope and an old bellows camera in the 1880's. His greatest distinction, though, was coming up with the theory that no two snowflakes are alike. Harriet Baskas visited the Jericho, Vermont, Historical Museum, which devotes half of its collection to "The Snowflake Man" and his photographs.
  • Edward Lifson is in Belgrade, where police stopped students from marching, but an estimated 60,000 anti-government demonstrators rallied. The coalition of opposition parties, which has sponsored marches for more than five weeks, got a psychological boost today from a report issued by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. The OSCE report was released following a week of investigating poll results from the November 17th municipal elections that were annulled by the government and Yugoslav courts. The OSCE today said the opposition parties won those elections fair and square.
  • Susan looks at the difference between stage and screen acting according to actor Derek Jacobi.
  • NPR's Ed Lifson reports on the demonstrations in Belgrade.
  • NPR's Claudio Sanchez reports that President Clinton wants to send thousands of tutors out to help kids learn to read. Experts in the field say these tutors will help kids practice their reading, and that could make a big difference. But they say that kids with the most serious reading problems will still require trainined professionals to deal with their problems, and the President's proposal won't help them.
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    LIANE HANSEN EWSCASTERS: PE
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