
Tom Kuser
WSHU Morning Edition HostTom has been with WSHU since 1987, after spending 15 years at college and commercial radio and television stations. After a short stint as classical music announcer, he was given the task of rebuilding and expanding the news department. Under his direction, the news staff began a tradition of award-winning coverage. Tom has won several Associated Press awards for his own feature reporting, too. He became Program Director in 1999, and has been local host of NPR’s Morning Edition since 2000.
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WSHU’s Morning Edition host Tom Kuser spoke with Dr. Valerie Brutus, a breast surgeon with Hartford HealthCare Cancer Institute at St. Vincent’s Medical Center in Bridgeport.
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In his new book Leading Lady: A Memoir of a Most Unusual Boy, Charles Busch, shares stories from his childhood and life as a writer, playwright, director, drag actor, and cabaret performer.
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In his new book Leading Lady: A Memoir of a Most Unusual Boy, Charles Busch, shares stories from his childhood and life as a writer, playwright, director, drag actor, and cabaret performer.
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The novel, Between Two Moons, tells many stories all at once. The Full Story Host Tom Kuser explores all those narrative threads with author Aisha Abdel Gawad.
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The novel, Between Two Moons, tells many stories all at once. There’s the coming-of-age story of 3 siblings growing up in Brooklyn. Morning Edition Host Tom Kuser speaks with the author Aisha Abdel Gawad.
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The Full Story host Tom Kuser takes a closer look at the human impact of the Sheff v. O'Neill settlement. He spoke with Elizabeth Horton-Sheff, one of the parents who filed the lawsuit on behalf of their children in an effort to make the Hartford school system more equitable.
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The Full Story host Tom Kuser takes a closer look at the human impact of the landmark Sheff vs. O'Neill settlement with Elizabeth Horton-Sheff, the lead plaintiff in the lawsuit.
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In a move to expand financial literacy in the state, Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont has signed a bill that would make it mandatory for high school students to take a personal finance course to graduate.
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In a move to expand financial literacy in the state, Governor Ned Lamont has signed a bill that would make it mandatory for high school students to take a personal finance course to graduate.
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Last year the landmark lawsuit, Sheff v. O’Neill was finally settled after 30 years of litigation. Morning Edition host Tom Kuser speaks with Martha Stone, a lead attorney in the case for an update on the settlement.