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  • The trial of former Ku Klux Klansman Thomas Blanton, Jr., continues in Birmingham, Alabama today. He's accused of participating in the bombing of the 16th Street Baptist church in 1963 which killed four black girls. Host Lisa Simeone speaks with NPR's Debbie Elliott who is covering the trial, where the prosecution has wrapped up.
  • NPR's Debbie Elliott reports on the defense of former Ku Klux Klansman Thomas Blanton Jr. in the Birmingham, Alabama church bombing trial. Blanton is charged with murder in the 1963 bombing of the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church. Fours girls died in the blast. The defense says prosecutors have produced nothing that directly links Blanton to the crime.
  • The work of the artist formerly known as James Jewell Osterburg Jr. is collected in a new CD, A Million in Prizes: The Iggy Pop Anthology. Iggy Pop's career began in the late 1960s as frontman for The Stooges. A solo career produced more pioneering music even as Pop overcame a heroin addiction.
  • Walter Iooss Jr. has been a photographer for Sports Illustrated for more than four decades, and tells NPR's Juan Williams that of all the sports he's covered over the years, baseball remains closest to his heart. Williams and Iooss discuss the photographer's latest book, Classic Baseball -- see some of the photos from the book, and listen to an extended version of the interview.
  • Classical music critic Lloyd Schwartz reviews some silent musical scores by the Alloy Orchestra. They write and perform new music for silent films. Schwartz looks at their scores for the Buster Keaton films, The General and Steamboat Bill, Jr. (on DVD, Image Entertainment).
  • Linda talks to Henry Louis Gates, Jr., a professor of Afro-American studies at Harvard University and the editor of the Norton Anthology of African American Literature. They discuss this new addition to the Norton Anthology series, and the need for an anthology of the best African-American writing.
  • Commentary from Andrei Codrescu tells the tale of his friend George...who's about to have his first name interdicted by John Kennedy Jr because's George's on-line name is like John John's magazine on-line name...can you have exclusive rights to a name.
  • Linda talks with Judy Cockerton, owner of No Kidding, toy stores in Massachusetts about what toys are popular this holiday season. She says Lego's Soccer Championship is scarce and parents call her everyday to ask about it. Razor scooters are still popular. Among the hot games this year are Apples to Apples Jr. and Sequence.
  • ST.JOHN BURIAL - On Sunday, the ashes of William Wallace Brown, Jr., a man who was once homeless, will be interred at St. John Episcopal Church near the White House. Brown became a member of the "church of the presidents" when former President George Bush invited him in to pray one Sunday morning.
  • On Morning Edition, NPR's Bob Edwards interviews George Zambelli Jr., whose grandfather emigrated from Italy to start a fireworks manufacturing business now into its fourth generation. "It's a way to paint the skies," Zambelli says.
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