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  • a biologist who's been studying a band of gray wolves in Glacier National Park in Montana for the past 17 years. Boyd talks about the relationship between the wolves and the people who live nearby.
  • NPR's Linda Gradstein reports that in the wake of Sunday's suicide attacks in Israel, Israelis are demanding that the PLO crack down on Muslim extremists, and make the terrorist organization, Hamas, illegal.
  • for the Republican Presidential nomination. Buchanan has based much of his campaign on the notion that large corporations and banks are profiting at the expense of workers and their families, and that those multinational companies have undue influence over government policy.
  • industry's annual awards ceremony that feted the best in CD ROMs.
  • SCOTT REMARKS ABOUT THE HOLIDAY THIS WEEK THAT CELEBRATED THE BIRTHS OF OUR GREATEST PRESIDENTS.
  • In today's competitive world of produce - maintaining ideals about the quality and flavor of the fruits you grow has become increasingly difficult. David Mas Masumoto has had to compromise his ideals in order to keep making money off his peach orchard in southern California and in doing so is slowly weeding out a variety of peach his father began growing and one Masumoto still maintains is far better than any peach available today. In his book "Epitaph for a Peach" Masumoto writes about the demise of the "Suncrest" variety. "Epitaph for a Peach" is published by HarperSanFrancisco.
  • Daniel talks with Journalist David Shipler and Michael Dawson, professor of political science at the University of Chicago. Both Shipler and Dawson have researched Black American attitudes toward government and the criminal justice system.
  • SPORTS: SCOTT SIMON TALKS WITH WEEKEND EDITION'S SPORTS COMMENTATOR RON RAPOPORT ABOUT THE NBA PLAYOFFS, WHICH THIS WEEK SAW CHICAGO BULLS' MICHAEL JORDAN'S MAGIC FIZZLE.
  • NPR's Don Gonyea reports on a recent trend among the big automakers of maintaining large reserves of cash, rather like rainy day funds, to serve as a financial cushion during the next recession. In the past the companies have had little in the way of cash reserves and have had to cut back on new projects when sales were down.
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    ALL STATIONS FROM: MARTA HAYWOOD RE: WEEKEND EDITION SATURDAY/SECOND RUNDOWN DATE: JUNE 17, 1995 HOST: SCOTT SIMON NEWS: BILL REDLIN, LAURA KNOY
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