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  • Jeff Rice of member station KUAZ in Tucson, Ariz., visited Tohono Chul Park for its annual "Queen of the Night" celebration, and sent this audio postcard. Rice spoke with visitors who came to the park to enjoy the cereus, a fragrant cactus flower that blooms only one night a year.
  • NPR's Mexico City Correspondent Gerry Hadden reports on President-elect Vicente Fox's efforts to put together a cabinet as he prepares to take over the nation's top job. Fox brings a businessman's experience and priorities to a position that has been dominated by politicians and cronism for more than 70 years.
  • Liane talks with Chinese actress and author Anchee Min about her new book, Becoming Madame Mao, a biography of Jiang Ching, the fourth wife of the late Chinese Premier Mao Tse Tung. ("Becoming Madame Mao" is published by Houghton Mifflin.)
  • Host Bob Edwards talks to NPR's Ted Clark about the Middle East Peace Summit at Camp David, Maryland. President Clinton characterized the current talks as the most difficult negotiations he's ever encountered. The President has devoted several days to the discussions. On Wednesday, he's scheduled to fly to Tokyo, where he'll take part in the G-8 Summit.
  • NPR's Alex Chadwick remembers a talented producer of documentary programs. Josh Darsa died last Fridayat age 67. He was responsible from one of NPR's earliest hallmark documentaries "Cowboy."
  • The Rolling Stones hit the top of the charts 35 years ago this weekend with the song "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction." We hear an excerpt of the song.
  • Tomorrow, a 19-year old princess from Bahrain will ask a U.S. immigration judge if she can remain in the country with the U.S. Marine who smuggled her out of the kingdom last year. Host Jacki Lyden talks with Dwight Davis of the San Diego Union Tribune about the case that could cause a riff between the U.S. and the royal family of Bahrain.
  • NPR's Sharon Ball reports on the numerous political candidates who made appearances at the NAACP convention last week ... in some form, all adopted a style of speaking inspired by preachers ... some had more success than others.
  • Writer Jeff Goodell grew up in the heart of California's Silicon Valley, in a sleepy town named Sunnyvale. Suddenly, the computer revolution took off, changing Sunnyvale from a community of orchards and tract homes, to one of start-ups and millionaires. At the same time the computer industry was skyrocketing, Jeff Goodell's parents got divorced, his father's landscaping business started to fail, and his brother developed a decades long substance abuse problem. Host Jacki Lyden speaks to Goodell about his book, Sunnyvale, which tells how the rise of Silicon Valley, and the fall of his family are intertwined. (Sunnyvale: the Rise and Fall of a Silicon Valley Family; Random House, 2000)
  • NPR's Joshua Levs reports from member station WABE in Atlanta on To Conserve a Legacy a new traveling exhibition of African-American artwork. For years, black colleges and universities collected many paintings, sculptures, prints, and photographs from students, teachers, or independent artists. Together, two hundred of these works chronicle the expression of blacks during different times in the nation's history. The exhibit is currently in Atlanta, and is scheduled to go to Durham, North Carolina, Nashville, and Norfolk, Virginia.
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