September 10, 2012: Afternoon
- More and more, the FBI is becoming dependent on informants, who aren't subject to the same regulations as agents.
- Opinions clash as Shell begins Alaska drilling.
- Salman Rushdie on life under fatwa.
- Chemist who invented the Pill talks about his new play and how he turned to lit to spite his English prof girlfriend.
- Monopoly to release an edition honoring Alan Turing, who loved the game.
- Jimmy Carter becomes the longest-serving ex-president.
- Why cave bacteria that survive outside friendly lab conditions could help develop antibiotics to fight drug-resistant superbugs.
- Explainer on the bubonic plague: It's still around, and a seven-year-old in Colorado just survived it.
- Professor plays pranks on unsuspecting pedestrians in the name of science.
- Robert Fripp switches from music to business.
- Goodnight Keith Moon.
- Following the Paralympics, British gyms expect an upswing in disabled visitors, who may find facilities don't meet their requirements.
- Actors written out of Mad Men air their feelings.
- Interview with the psychotherapist who shaped the first four seasons of Mad Men.