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  • September 18, 2013: screenwriter and best-selling author Delia Ephron talks about life, love, writing, movies, family and about her relationship with…
  • Tamerlan Tsarnaev died after a gun battle with police. A friend, who's also now dead, told investigators that Tsarnaev was involved in a 2011 triple murder. Tsarnaev and his brother Dzhokhar are the lone suspects in last April's bombings at the Boston Marathon.
  • In the years since lawmakers bailed out the financial system in 2008, have we moved beyond "too big to fail"? Or would taxpayer money still have to come to the rescue in another financial crisis? A group of experts debates the wisdom of breaking up the largest banks for Intelligence Squared U.S.
  • Feeling a disconnect with their culture and ethnicity, many young Americans are going back to their heritage languages to bridge the gap. But identity isn't as simple as what language we speak.
  • Veteran actress Alfre Woodard shares the music that keeps the rhythm in her life, as part of Tell Me More's "In Your Ear" series.
  • Leaks by Edward Snowden, the former National Security Agency contractor, revealed the agency was monitoring vast amounts of telephone and Internet conversations both in the U.S. and around the world. The revelations have sparked a debate over the scope of the NSA's activities and whether they are legal.
  • The small slip normally wouldn't matter if Thomas Menino wasn't renowned for his erroneous sports references.
  • More questions keep coming in about the Affordable Care Act. Julie Appleby of Kaiser Health News joins us to sort through some of the questions we've received.
  • New Jersey firefighter Capt. Bill Lavin is building 26 playgrounds for each of the 26 victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, in communities hit hard by superstorm Sandy.
  • Compared to other states, relatively few people have signed up for health insurance through Maryland's health exchange. Many say Maryland's identity verification system is to blame.
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