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Other segments from the episode on June 15, 1988
Philosopher and Detective Josiah Thompson.
Detective Josiah Thompson. Thompson was a tenured professor of philosophy at Haverford College when he applied for a job at a San Francisco detective agency. He has since left academia and works full-time as a private eye. He's written an account of his work titled Gumshoe: Reflections in a Private Eye. Thompson's cases run the gamut from recovering money from an attic in a drug case to saving an innocent man from the gas chamber.
White South Africans Who Fought Apartheid.
Screenwriter Shawn Slovo. Her first film, "A World Apart," is the autobiographical story of the relationship between a white woman, committed to fighting apartheid, and her 13-year-old daughter, who is struggling to cope with the political choices her mother has made. Slovo's parents were early members of the outlawed African National Congress; Her mother reported on the injustices of apartheid for alternative newspapers, while her father defended blacks in the court system. Slovo's mother was murdered in exile by a parcel bomb.
There's Little to Fault in Clarke's Biography of Truman Capote.
Book Critic John Leonard reviews Capote: A Biography, the biography of the American writer Truman Capote that was 14 years in the making. The author is Time magazine writer Gerald Clarke.
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