Episodes
Wednesday Jun 01, 2022
Park Week
Wednesday Jun 01, 2022
Wednesday Jun 01, 2022
Hartford native Frederick Law Olmsted is famous for his work in designing Central Park, but he was also a driving force behind human-shaped landscapes from Niagara Falls State Park to Smith College to the Institute of Living. Sohyun Park, assistant professor in the Department of Plant Science and Landscape Architecture in the College of Agriculture, Health and Natural Resources, recently cohosted a symposium on Olmsted as part of a year-long celebration of the 200th anniversary of his birth. Park tells us about the lessons Olmsted's work holds for landscape architects today, from public accessibility to social justice.
Tom and Julie also spend some time pondering the difference between AM and FM, and Tom makes a rash promise to file a public records request.
Wednesday May 18, 2022
Pursuing History, from Israel to Eastern Connecticut
Wednesday May 18, 2022
Wednesday May 18, 2022
Stuart Miller, a professor of Hebrew, History, and Judaic Studies and Academic Director of the Center for Judaic Studies and Contemporary Jewish Life, has been a force at UConn since 1982. Professor Miller is an expert in the history and literature of the Jews of Roman and Late Antique Palestine and throughout his career has worked closely with archaeologists, having served for many years on the staff of the Sepphoris Regional Project in Israel. Now, as he prepares to retire, we get a chance to talk with him about his remarkable career, touching on everything from the evolution of Judaic studies to the essence of the professorship to the peculiar thrill of being associated with an ancient toilet.
Wednesday May 04, 2022
Schoolhouse Showdown: The Fight(s) Over American Education
Wednesday May 04, 2022
Wednesday May 04, 2022
Preston Green is a professor of educational leadership and law at the University of Connecticut and the John and Maria Neag Professor of Urban Education at the Neag School of Education. He's a nationally recognized expert on school choice, charter schools, and the complex legal landscape of American public education. He's also a great follow on Twitter, and a fun person to talk to about issues that are at the forefront of American politics. He stops by this week to talk about the Supreme Court, charter schools, the fight over school curricula, and more. And, with commencement hoving into view, Tom and Julie take a look back at the "naughty generation" of 1927.
Wednesday Apr 20, 2022
Master of Puppets
Wednesday Apr 20, 2022
Wednesday Apr 20, 2022
John Bell is an associate professor in the Department of Dramatic Arts, the director of the Ballard Institute & Museum of Puppetry, and one of the most fun guests we've ever had. He stopped by to tell us about the astonishing diversity of puppeteering traditions, the everyday objects that serve as puppets without being thought of that way, and even why some people are creeped out by puppets. He also fills us in on some great opportunities to watch live performances on campus by the world-famous Bread and Puppet Theater in April.
Wednesday Apr 06, 2022
Blue and White, Blue and Yellow: A UConn Student Responds to the Invasion of Ukraine
Wednesday Apr 06, 2022
Wednesday Apr 06, 2022
This week we return to the fabled UConn 360 Studio for a talk with Victoria Kostour '22, a first-generation Ukrainian-American and the president of the Ukrainian Student Association. She tells us what it's been like to watch the war in Ukraine from here in the United States, how she and her fellow students have responded with activism and organizing, and how the UConn community has supported her. We also find a very old copy of the Daily Campus, which helps us learn about a bygone campus protest and a mysterious restaurant with a gruesome name.
Wednesday Mar 23, 2022
Facing Anti-Asian Hate in and out of Academia
Wednesday Mar 23, 2022
Wednesday Mar 23, 2022
This week we're joined by Jason Oliver Chang, Associate Professor of History and Asian American Studies, to talk about the pop-up course on anti-Asian racism he helped create for UConn; the increase in anti-Asian racist incidents and attacks since the start of the pandemic; and the role of scholarship in maintaining a strong democracy. We also take a stroll on Tom's History Sidewalk (real name pending) to the first visit by a foreign head of state to UConn.
Wednesday Mar 09, 2022
Healthy Democracy, Healthy People
Wednesday Mar 09, 2022
Wednesday Mar 09, 2022
This week, we sit down with Tanya Rhodes Smith, director of the Nancy A. Humphreys Institute for Political Social Work in the UConn School of Social Work. She tells us about how social work is inherently political, how social workers can help make positive changes for individuals and society, and how research indicates that higher rates of voter participation correlate with better overall health in people. Also, back by semi-popular demand, we journey into the mists of UConn's past for a new installment of something we're not calling Tom's History Corner.
Wednesday Feb 23, 2022
Meet the Man Behind those Horsebarn Hill Sunsets
Wednesday Feb 23, 2022
Wednesday Feb 23, 2022
This week, we talk with Milton Levin '04 Ph.D., Associate Research Professor in the Department of Pathobiology and Veterinary Science, about his research work, but also about the thing UConn's roughly 90,000 Instagram followers will recognize instantly: his breathtaking pictures of campus locations, especially Horsebarn Hill. Professor Levin tells us how he got interested in photography, what it's like to teach yourself to pilot a drone, and what he looks for when he goes for a walk and brings his camera along.
Wednesday Feb 09, 2022
Celebrating 50 Years of PRLACC
Wednesday Feb 09, 2022
Wednesday Feb 09, 2022
This week, we welcome Fany Hannon, Director of the Puerto Rican/Latin American Cultural Center, which is celebrating its golden anniversary this year. Fany talks about how the Center emerged from the civil rights movement of the 1960s and 1970s, what it's been like trying to keep a student-oriented organization running during a global pandemic, and why so many generations of Latinx Huskies consider PRLACC a home away from home.
Wednesday Jan 26, 2022
Building Strong Communities and Drinking Hot Sauce on Twitter
Wednesday Jan 26, 2022
Wednesday Jan 26, 2022
In this episode, Matt Necci '03 (CLAS), an attorney and UConn Twitter all-star, talks about what it means to be really involved with a community, his work with the Husky Ticket Project, why he's optimistic about Hartford, and more. He also talks about what it was like to be in the scalding, vinegary center of the Hot Sauce Challenge phenomenon of spring 2021.