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  • Conservative luminary Max Boot explains why he left the Republican Party and is urging people to vote against the modern GOP.
  • These cookbooks take readers on trips around the world, learning the secrets and treasured recipes of cooks from varied cultures.
  • Host Bob Edwards talks with Peter Marks who writes about political ads for the "New York Times." They discuss the content of television ads run by the Presidential candidates and their parties during the remaining weeks of the Presidential race.
  • Commentator Jeff Biggers explains why he plans to vote for Green Party Presidential candidate Ralph Nader. He says his parents and siblings are going to vote for Al Gore, and they're trying to persuade him to do the same.
  • Robert Siegel talks with NPR's Jennifer Ludden in Jerusalem about today's vote by members of Israel's Labor Party to join a national unity government with supporters of Prime Minister-elect Ariel Sharon.
  • Host Bob Edwards speaks with Republican political consultant Greg Mueller about the mood of the Republican party now that President George Bush has served almost a full month in office.
  • NPR's Melissa Block talks with consumer activist Ralph Nader, who ran for president as the Green Party candidate in 2000, about the possibility of his running for president in the 2004 elections.
  • On his first full day in office, President George W. Bush started the day at Sunday service at Washington National Cathedral. NPR's Emily Harris reports that the party's over and the real work begins.
  • Former Congressman Mickey Edwards (R-OK) says there IS life after losing an election, although losing is no fun. Edwards says the winner of the presidential election will have to reach across party lines, but he thinks Congress will revert to business as usual.
  • NPR's Madeleine Brand reports on yesterday's rally in Washington, D.C. for Green Party Presidential candidate Ralph Nader. Nader spoke to 10-thousand of his supporters.
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