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  • True History: Cavalcade of America “Juliet in Pigtails” 10/24/50 NBC, Hallmark Hall of Fame “George Gershwin” 9/20/53 CBS.
  • Comedy: Charlie McCarthy Show 10/19/47 NBC, Burns and Allen “Guest: Fred Astaire” 2/15/44 CBS / AFRS.
  • Comedy: Milton Berle Show 11/4/47 NBC, Fibber McGee and Molly 1/15/52 NBC.
  • The Justice Department secretly subpoenaed Apple in 2018 for account information of then-White House Counsel Don McGahn as well as his wife.
  • In the immortalized-by-meme words of Usher: Watch this.
  • Science Fiction: Two Thousand Plus “When the Worlds Met” 5/3/50 MBS, Exploring Tomorrow “The Martian Queen” 4/2/58 MBS, Biography in Sound (Excerpt of “Ticket to the Moon” episode) 12/4/56.
  • With a few months left before the presidential election, voter ID laws are in limbo in a number of states. Critics say the laws disenfranchise eligible voters, supporters say they prevent voter fraud. Guest host Viviana Hurtado discusses the court challenges and national implications with NPR's Corey Dade and Pennsylvania activist Bob Previdi.
  • A controversial 5-4 decision by the U.S. Supreme Court this week affirmed that citizens can be arrested for refusing to give their names to police. That's raised a number of constitutional questions of special concern to communities of color. NPR's Tavis Smiley hashes out the issue with Conrad Hafen, Nevada's senior deputy attorney general who argued the case on behalf of the state, and Laurie Levenson, a former assistant U.S. attorney and current law professor at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles.
  • A federal court is battling Apple over encryption. The Mozilla Foundation launched a pro-encryption campaign. Steve Inskeep talks to Mark Surman, the foundation's executive director.
  • Many doctors and patients expect too much from prescription opioids as pain relievers, some physicians say. These expectations need to be reined in to curtail drug abuse and overdoses that claim more than 16,000 lives a year in the U.S., they say.
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