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  • NPR's Steve Inskeep reports from Portland, Oregon where he's covering George W. Bush's presidential campaign.
  • Host Bob Edwards talks with Republican presidential candidate George W. Bush about his life on the campaign trail. For an extended version of this interview, click here.
  • It's been 31 years since Top Gun. Cruise told an Australian TV show that a sequel will start filming "probably in the next year."
  • NPR's Andy Bowers talks to Jim Wessling, whose company has produced a George W. Bush doll that speaks 17 lines by the president. Wessling says the doll is a big seller and he has plans for other presidential dolls.
  • Host Lisa Simeone talks with historian David Levering Lewis, author of W.E.B. DuBois: The Fight For Equality and the American Century, 1919 to 1963. This new book explains why 1919 was not just a pivotal year in the making of this country but also important in the life of DuBois.
  • When former President Bill Clinton met with George W. Bush before leaving office, he told his successor that Osama bin Laden, the Middle East and North Korea posed more of a threat to U.S. national security than Iraq, Clinton says. In the first part of a two-part interview, Clinton also tells NPR's Juan Williams that bin Laden dominated intelligence discussions at the White House.
  • NPR's Peter Kenyon profiles George W. Bush. The Republican presidential candidate often speaks about the influence of his upbringing in West Texas and his experiences as owner of a major league baseball team in shaping him into a leader. But Bush is also a third generation politician, the grandson of a U.S. Senator and the son of a U.S. President.
  • Georgia looms large in politics — both in the ongoing Jan. 6 committee's work, and in upcoming elections.
  • Voters are more concerned with inflation, according to Democrats in competitive races who are trying to gauge how the hearings will affect November's midterms.
  • Robert Siegel talks to NPR's Don Gonyea about President Bush's economic speech today in Michigan, before the Kalamazoo Chamber of Commerce. The president tried to make the case that quick action -- and especially a retroactive tax cut -- is what the sagging economy needs.
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