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Today On WNHH Radio

The latest shows on WNHH radio:

On In Transit,” host Aliyya Swaby welcomes SCSU professor Jonathan Wharton, as well as Long Wharf’s John Pescatore, to discuss the boathouse coming to Long Wharf. To listen, click on the audio above, or check out WNHH’s new Elm City Lowdown” podcast on Soundcloud or iTunes.

On this Mayor Monday edition of Dateline New Haven,” Mayor Toni Harp and host Paul Bass discuss the search for a new fire chief, the search for neighborhood parking spots, an upcoming clean city” campaign, and food policy. To list, click on the audio above, or check out WNHH’s new Dateline New Haven” podcast on Soundcloud or iTunes.

Rick Dunne, a Derby resident and executive director of the Naugatuck Valley Council of Governments, joins Valley Navel Gazing” hosts Eugene Driscoll and Ethan Fry to talk about the sale of the Healey For in Ansonia and the latest on O’Sullivan’s Island, a contaminated property in Derby. To listen, click on or download the audio above.

Radio is restless! With an eye on the recent opening of a Bernie Sanders campaign office in Hartford, host Katie Toth kicks off a new Restless Radio” broadcast by interviewing Gayle Alberda, political scientist at Drake University. She also speaks with Lesley Hazleton, self-described accidental theologist,” who will be reading from her new book The Agnostic Adventure: How Mystery and Doubt Keep Us Human on April 7 at Yale’s Mason Laboratory, located at 9 Hillhouse Ave. To listen, click on the audio above, or check out WNHH’s new Elm City Lowdown” podcast on Soundcloud or iTunes.

You think you have a tough Monday to Friday slog? Join This Day in New Haven History” hosts Allan Appel and Jason Bischoff-Wurstle as they time travel back to 1913 to witness the fight of factory workers in New Haven, Bridgeport, and Lawrence, Massachusetts to improve grim hours and working conditions in textile factories. Men were fighting for 40 hours a week, but the huge numbers of non-English speaking and desperate women and kids under 18, who filled the burgeoning clothes factories, had it even worse. To listen, click on or download the audio above.

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