Episodes
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Wednesday Apr 07, 2021
A Case of U(Conn)
Wednesday Apr 07, 2021
Wednesday Apr 07, 2021
This week, we're celebrating the 50th anniversary of Joni Mitchell's album "Blue" with music professor Peter Kaminsky, who has organized a virtual conference at UConn to explore the legacy of the landmark recording; we're talking with Aswad Thomas '15 MSW, national director of Crime Survivors for Safety and Justice, about how his experience as a victim of gun violence led him to a life of advocacy and activism; and we're going back to the 1930s to meet Harrison "Honey" Fitch, the first Black basketball player in UConn history, and the ugly encounter with racism he experienced that made national headlines.
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Wednesday Mar 24, 2021
Writing Through Dark Times
Wednesday Mar 24, 2021
Wednesday Mar 24, 2021
This week, Crystal Maldonado '10 (CLAS) stops by to talk about how bleak times helped inspired her critically-acclaimed YA novel "Fat Chance, Charlie Vega"; we speak with History Professor Alexis Dudden about attempts to discredit the experience of women who were forced into sexual slavery during World War II; and we learn about the brief period in history when UConn experimented with running the kind of place where everybody knows your name.
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Wednesday Mar 10, 2021
The Battle of Horsebarn Hill
Wednesday Mar 10, 2021
Wednesday Mar 10, 2021
This week, we talk with distinguished political commentator Stu Rothenberg '77 Ph.D. about the latest happenings in a sleepy little town called Washington, D.C.; in the latest installment of our Brave Space series, Political Science Prof. Christine Sylvester interviews Timothy Bussey '18 Ph.D. about their work in the diversity, equity, inclusion and LGBTQIA+ fields; and we hear about a time not so long ago when the UConn community split over the proposed location of a vaccine research facility.
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Wednesday Feb 24, 2021
The Trouble With Phubbing
Wednesday Feb 24, 2021
Wednesday Feb 24, 2021
This week, we talk to Ryan Allred '20 Ph.D. about "phubbing": the act of being too distracted by your phone to give your full attention to the person right in front of you. We also talk with Professor Nathanael Okpych about his book "Climbing a Broken Ladder," which provides insight into how children in foster care can be provided with better opportunities to succeed in college. Finally, we visit 1935, a time when the University was convulsed by debate over, well, debate itself.
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Wednesday Feb 10, 2021
The Voice of the Huskies
Wednesday Feb 10, 2021
Wednesday Feb 10, 2021
This week, we hear from a voice that's very familiar to Husky fans - John Tuite, the PA announcer whose booming tones are an inseparable part of the gameday experience. We also talk with Professor Sandra Chafouleas about ways parents can support their kids during the uncertainty and stress of pandemic-era schooling, and we learn about a member of the Class of 1941 who became a famous foe of the Luftwaffe.
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Wednesday Jan 27, 2021
Banquet Brawl
Wednesday Jan 27, 2021
Wednesday Jan 27, 2021
This week, we speak with School of Fine Arts faculty members Cora Lynn Deibler and Earl MacDonald about the new collaborative work of animation "By Our Love"; student Tomaso Scotti tells us about what it's like to host the My First Year Story podcast; and we learn about a bygone student tradition that is probably best left in the past.
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Wednesday Jan 13, 2021
Stop the Car, There's a Nuclear War!
Wednesday Jan 13, 2021
Wednesday Jan 13, 2021
This week, we talk with Prof. Sharde Davis and Mason Holland '23 (CLAS) about UConn's newly-launched course on antiblack racism; John Bell, director of the Ballard Institute & Museum of Puppetry drops by to talk about engineering and puppetry; and we learn about how the University prepared for nuclear attack at the dawn of the 1960s.
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Wednesday Dec 23, 2020
Sculpting a UConn Tradition
Wednesday Dec 23, 2020
Wednesday Dec 23, 2020
This week, we talk with Larry Wasiele, the sculptor who created the iconic statue of Jonathan that stands in front of Gampel Pavilion, and we look back on a year that many of us would just as soon forget.
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Wednesday Dec 09, 2020
Buying Local, Listening Local, Newspapering Local
Wednesday Dec 09, 2020
Wednesday Dec 09, 2020
This week, we hear from Kenneth Fuchs, professor of music composition, about his new recording with the United States Coast Guard Band; Donald Pendagast '20 MBA talks about how his Curated CT startup is helping local businesses; and we travel back to a time when a house ordered from a Sears catalog was the center of UConn student journalism.
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Wednesday Nov 25, 2020
Back to the Big East
Wednesday Nov 25, 2020
Wednesday Nov 25, 2020
Big East basketball is back! We hear from a variety of voices about the significance of UConn's return to the conference where we became a national powerhouse; we talk to Avinoam Patt, Doris and Simon Konover Chair of Judaic Studies and Director of the Center for Judaic Studies and Contemporary Jewish Life, about the critical importance of understanding the Holocaust in relation to contemporary events; and we learn about the time UConn stood up for Keystone State Huskies.