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  • Pshychologist and commentatro Drew Westen, in light of the recent Freud bashing that has been going on, defends the man.
  • NPR's Anne Garrels reports that Russian President Yeltsin's former top economic advisor has issued a dire warning about Russian politics. Anatoly Chubais ((Chew-BIGH-ess)) today told Western businessmen and political leaders that there will be bloodshed if the Communists come back to power in the June presidential elections.
  • on new Pentagon precautions to protect troops from landmines in Bosnia.
  • Commentator Andrei Codrescu is desperately trying to finish a novel and wonders if he needs a relief novelist to come in and tie up all the loose ends and loose characters he has created.
  • NPR's Jim Zarroli reports that New York city landlords and striking building maintenance workers resumed negotiations today. Some 30 thousand maintenance workers, elevator operators, janitors and other personnel have been on strike. Labor Secretary Robert Reich participated in the negotiations today in hopes of forcing a settlement.
  • President Clinton submits his budget outline for Fiscal Year '97 today. NPR's White House correspondent Mara Liasson reports it's one of the least consequential budget submissions in US history because the White House and Congress are still deadlocked over the Fiscal Year '96 budget.
  • with the issue of tort reform. Spurred by negative reaction over the state's high punitive damage awards, the governor wanted a cap of $750,000 in some cases. The business community wanted a smaller cap for all cases.
  • NPR's Joanne Silberner looks at the Medicaid compromise unanimously agreed to by the nation's governors. It gives states more power in administering the program while guaranteeing that certain nation-wide benefits for the poor and disabled are maintained.
  • There's a book just out called The Here and Now. It's about a chance meeting that turns one man's world upside down. Our reviewer Alan Cheuse thinks author Robert Cohen has done a masterful job with this book, which he finds comic and suspenseful. (Scribners)
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