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  • The Postal Service is facing increasing attacks against its workers, especially on days when government checks are mailed. The wave of attacks first became evident on the West Coast, but quickly spread to other regions. NPR's John Nielsen looks at what the Postal Service is doing to try to protect letter carriers and other endangered employees.
  • in Goma and a Zairean Tutsi rebel about how the recent Hutu-Tutsi conflict has affected them.
  • Excerpt of a speech given by Presidential candidate Bob Dole at an appearance in Rutherford, New Jersey. He appeared with New Jersey Governor Christine Todd Whitman. Dole talked about his proposed fifteen percent tax cut.
  • ttp://www.npr.org/programs/wesun/wesun.html
  • Danny speaks with Janet Fleischman of Human Rights Watch about an unreported aspect of the Rwandan genocide. Reviewing a new Human Rights Watch report that she co-authored, Ms. Fleischman says Hutu death squads not only murdered up to a million members of the Tutsi minority, but also raped tens of thousands of Tutsi women. Fleischman says the rapes were part of the systemic Hutu campaign of genocide against the Tutsis.
  • Scott reads letters from listeners.
  • Last week, California voters passed a ballot proposition legalizing medical marijuana. For some time, the main active ingredient in marijuana has been available as a prescription pill. Advocates of marijuana as an antidote to nausea of chemotherapy, migraines, the pain of arthritis and many other aliments say that smoked marijuana delivers more reliable and regulatable relief than the pill form. However, many physicians feel that smoking is harmful and marijauna should not be prescribed by doctors.
  • Host Jacki Lyden speaks with Fred Barnes of the Weekly tandard magazine and Carl Cannon of the Baltimore Sun about some of the topics n the news of the past week, including President Clinton's re-election and trategy for a second term, along with comments made by ABC's David Brinkley bout the President.
  • Reviewer Alan Cheuse discusses a new book by first-time author Marly Swick, which focuses on the changes that occur within a midwestern family, touched off by the assassination of John Kennedy in 1963.
  • Last night the week-long Canadian Auto Workers strike against General Motors spread to every G-M plant in Canada. N-P-R's Don Gonyea reports that because the world's largest automaker stockpiled parts normally produced in the Canadian factories, analysts expect that US assembly plants won't be seriously affected until next week at the earliest.
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