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  • WSHU’s Ebong Udoma spoke with CT Mirror’s Keith Phaneuf to discuss his article, “CT says its tax system is unfair, but changes would mean tradeoffs,” as part of the collaborative podcast Long Story Short.
  • Commentator David Bouchier thinks that money should be more beautiful.
  • Long Island law enforcement lay out the rules around e-bikes. Police are investigating heavy gunfire in Bridgeport from over the weekend. Contamination at a Sag Harbor property is sticking around a decade after clean up. Plus, the latest from WSHU’s the Making of U.S.
  • Did you know Long Island played a pretty big role in the American Revolution? A nearby salt marsh restoration project could serve as an example for others around the region. Plus, the Bridgeport community wants librarians back in schools.
  • The Gilgo Beach serial killer has been sentenced to life in prison. New York city will celebrate the Knicks tomorrow with a ticker tap parade. Plus, with older power plants shutting down in New York, advocates say there’s not enough new power to fill the gap.
  • Tomorrow is Juneteenth — a look at today's Hartford celebration. Five Long Island school districts hold budget re-votes. Plus, the Gilgo Beach serial killer has been sentenced — at look back at the case that spanned over a decade.
  • Commentator David Bouchier reacts gloomily to yet another report on declining literacy.
  • WSHU’s Ebong Udoma spoke with CT Mirror’s P.R. Lockhart to discuss her article, “The state is pouring millions into the emerging quantum industry in the hopes of unlocking new economic growth — and becoming a global leader,” as part of the collaborative podcast Long Story Short.
  • Long Islanders will choose candidates for three congressional districts tomorrow. A Bridgeport community celebrates Cape Verde’s historic World Cup debut! Plus, Connecticut is pouring millions into the emerging quantum industry.
  • It’s 1939, and Flushing, Queens, is buzzing with preparations for The World’s Fair. But the festive energy takes a grim turn when one of the mural artists is found dead. Police Officer Brian Fitzgerald is on the case. But who among the artists, politicians, and dignitaries could be a murderer? WSHU's Book Critic Joan Baum says author Helen Harrison's latest mystery novel A Fair Corpse immerses the reader in the rich art community of the late 1930's and in a world teetering on the brink of World War II.
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