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.
UConn's Most Mysterious President (Or Was He?)
The Night They Drove Old Dairy Down
Students, Scholars, and Masters
A Look Back At the "Lady Principal" Era
A Song In Our Hearts
Getting Muddy With the Wizard of Ooze
Revolution-Era Murderers
When Irish Fashion Swept the USA
Episode 27: Yearbook? More Like Jeer-book
Episode 26: Talkin' National Flag Blues
Episode 25: Sparking JOY!
Episode 24: Extremism in Defense of Jonathan is No Vice
Episode 23: Oiled Up for 2019
Episode 22: Space Campus
Episode 21: Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea
Episode 20: When Raba Daba Ruled Storrs
Episode 19: Secrets of the Homecoming Goat (LIVE)
Episode 18: Dogs and Cats, Living Together
Episode 17: A Visit From Miss Connecticut
Episode 16: Sweet Science
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