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  • JOYCE JOHNSON CONTINUED.Jazz critic Kevin Whitehead reviews –The Complete Blue Note Horace Parlan Sessions— (Mosaic).12:58:30 NEXT SHOW PROMO (:29) PROMO COPY On the next Fresh Air writer JOYCE JOHNSON talks about her relationship with Beat Icon Jack Kerouac. JOHNSON met Kerouac in 1957, 9 months before Kerouacs novel –On The Road— was published. JOHNSONs new book –Door Wide Open,— includes letters she and Kerouac wrote each other during their affair. Thats coming up on the next Fresh Air.
  • Host Bob Edwards talks to NPR's Eric Weiner about the upcoming G-8 summit on world economy in Okinawa, Japan. Leaders from around the world gather for the three-day summit which opens tomorrow, to discuss how to ease the burden of debt and poverty of the world's poorest countries.
  • Scott Horsley of member station KPBS reports on aggressive trial lawyers who've sued the tobacco and gun industries and are now considering class action lawsuits against health maintenance organizations, drug makers, and liquor distillers. One such attorney is Dick Scruggs from Mississippi, who led the suit that won a 246-billion-dollar settlement for the states against cigarette makers and a 400-million-dollar fee for himself. Supporters of such lawsuits say they help reduce corporate irresponsibility Some critics say they're motivated by greed; other critics say that legislatures, not courts, should make social policy
  • Commentator John Ridley says he doesn't trust Texas Governor George W. Bush's new-found and avid interest in including minorities in his campaign. And he says the selection of three minority co-chairs for the Republican convention is no coincidence.
  • Charlotte Renner of Maine Public Radio reports that although their numbers are dwindling, classic lakeside camps continue to be a favorite way for kids to spend their summer vacations. Still, many camps say it's hard to stay in business because of rising costs.
  • NPR Business reporter Steve Krueger reports on the latest developments on the dispute between the Screen Actors Guild and American Federation of Television & Radio Actors. Today, both sides are scheduled to meet with federal mediators in New York in a new bid to resume contract talks.
  • NPR's Linda Gradstein reports on regional reaction to the protracted Middle East peace negotiations at Camp David, Maryland.
  • Alex Van Oss reports on a new exhibition featuring the work of Romain Brooks, a bohemian painter who worked in Paris in the early twentieth century. Though she painted seemingly traditional society portraits, she painted them so passionately that she's been called the Thief of Souls. The exhibition continues at the National Museum of Women in the Arts through September 24th.
  • NPR's Allison Aubrey reports that many new parents, especially black parents, aren't aware of how to avoid Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, and as a result hundreds of babies die every year. The government says a new public health campaign geared towards the African- American community is necessary to avoid these preventable deaths.
  • Host Bob Edwards talks to NPR's Ted Clark about the latest development in the Middle East peace talks. Prime Minister Ehud Barak and Palestinian leader Yaser Arafat are continuing their negotiations after the White House announced it had ended in failure.
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