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  • 2: We pay tribute to ANDREY HEPBURN, who died yesterday from colon cancer, with a excerpt from a 1988 Fresh Air interview.
  • Rock critic KEN TUCKER reviews new CD''s by two country singers who go beyond their country-singer label: "Everytime You Say Goodbye," by Allison Krause, and "Culture Swing," by Tish Hinojosa (Ina-HOAS-ah). (Both on the Rounder label).
  • Chancellor of the New York City school system, JOSEPH FERNANDEZ. He's been a controversial figure: he's made condoms available in the public schools, and approved a multi-cultural curriculum, "Children of the Rainbow," that teaches respect for gays and lesbians. FERNANDEZ is Puerto Rican and grew up in Spanish Harlem. He was a gang member and a heroin addict. Later he joined the Air Force, where he kicked the habit, and attended college on the G.I. bill. He's got a new book, "Tales Out of School: Joseph Fernandez's Crusade to Rescue American Education" (Little, Brown & Co.).
  • TV critic DAVID BIANCULLI previews the new cop show, Homicide, which premieres this Sunday night. It''s the latest project of Barry Levinson, the director of such films as Diner, Rain Man, and Good Morning, Vietnam.
  • 2: Spokesperson for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), YETTA SORENSEN. She's based in Zagreb, Croatia. Terry speaks with her from Croatia about the organizations relief efforts in the former Yugoslavia. Their work has been extremely dangerous there. In May one of their relief convoys was attacked and a ICRC delegate was killed and the organization pulled out of the area until mid-July. Last December, in response to the "ethnic cleansing" in Bosnia-Herzegovina, the ICRC issued an unprecedented public statement condemning the atrocities there.
  • Rock historian ED WARD remembers the year 1973.
  • 2: Journalist DAVID REMNICK talks with Terry about the impact of History on today's Russia. REMNICK was in Moscow recently and wrote the article, "Yeltsin's Tightrope," for The New Yorker. (May 10, 1993 issue). REMNICK also covered the Soviet Union for The Washington Post from 1988-1990.
  • Broadway lyricist SHELDON HARNICK. He wrote the lyrics for the 1963 Broadway hit "She Loves Me." A revival of "She Loves Me" opens on Broadway on June 10. Harnick also wrote the lyrics for "Fiddler On The Roof." (Rebroadcast. Originally broadcast on Monday, December 12,
  • Ethnobotanist MARK PLOTKIN. He has a new book about what he learned about botany and medicine from the Medicine Men of the tropical rain forests. His new book is "Tales of a Shaman's Apprentice," published by VIKING
  • 2: Co-founder of the working women's advocacy group, "9 to 5," KAREN NUSSBAUM. She helped found the group 20 years ago. Marty will talk with her about the the changing role of women in the workplace in the last twenty years, and about the concerns of women in the workplace, like childcare.
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