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  • All Things Considered host Robert Siegel speaks with Sari Nusseibeh, the newly appointed top political representative for the Palestinian Authority in Jerusalem, on the path for peace and the need for moderation and reason in the Middle East.
  • In a gravity-defying move, rapidly revolving hard-boiled eggs will push themselves upright and spin like a top. NPR's Joe Palca explains the science for All Things Considered.
  • NPR's Don Gonyea reports on President Bush's visit to Florida. The president spent most of his time there discussing education. Though Bush faces struggles on many issues, he made it clear that education is one of his top priorities.
  • Senior news analyst Daniel Schorr says that the resignation today of two top HHS officials over the welfare reform bill indicates that the President has not yet resolved the welfare issue.
  • NPR'S Eric Westervelt reports that a federal judge in Philadelphia today ruled that two former top city officials do not have to pay damages to surviving members of the group MOVE, for the city's 1985 bombing of their home which killed 11 people.
  • Declines in the country's top wheat-producing state are likely to mean higher prices for flour, bread and pasta.
  • A gunman killed 10 people at Tops Market, a grocery store in Buffalo, New York. Officials have called it a hate crime.
  • Chef Kathy Gunst shares her favorite Passover dessert recipes, including matzah brittle, coconut macaroons and meringue cake.
  • Last fall, Gunst traveled to northern Italy with Jovial Foods to learn about how olive oil is made and used. When she came back, she created three new recipes that use olive oil as a flavorful ingredient rather than a cooking fat.
  • Miranda weighs in about Disney, mixtapes and why he won't try to top the success of Hamilton. Chazelle discusses the brash, defiant and "almost avant-garde" nature of musicals.
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