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  • We speak with NPR enthusiast Sen. Jake Oliveira about some of the many issues on his agenda, and we hear about the amalgam of art, history, education, and racial justice that will be the Power of Truths festival.
  • This week Carrie Saldo talks with panelists about connecting western Mass. to Boston, local control of Holyoke schools, demand for mail-in ballots, and abolitionist David Ruggles.
  • The folx from the Northampton Arts Trust tell us about their reopening at 33 Hawley St. After that, we talk moon real estate with Mr. Universe, Salman Hameed, and finish our show with Smith College professor Naila Moreira to discuss the environmental impacts of solar farms.
  • In the first episode of The Rundown with Carrie Saldo, a police search for a book in a middle school classroom sparks questions and concerns about censorship and government overreach, western Mass. museums pull objects from display after new federal rules require tribal consent.
  • Guest host Jill Kaufman talks to panelists about racist allegations at Southwick Regional School, Gov. Maura Healy's Supreme Judicial Court nomination, and more. Carrie Saldo interviews local activist Mpress Nembhard.
  • We talk to the Easthampton Theater Company on their latest production, to the local composer and librettist on their surreal opera, and to the heads of Go Fresh Mobile Market.
  • We talk with Keith Beauchamp about his film, "Till," and discover the history behind Martin Luther King Jr. Day with Clark University Professor Ousmane Power-Greene.
  • We talk with folx from the Conway School in Northampton about education in ecological municipal planning and discuss keeping former President Donald Trump of ballots with Free Speech for People president John Bonifaz.
  • We hear from the Black Legacy Project's mission toward racial equity through music, talk about Smith College's efforts to include more plant based options, and chat with Rep. Jim McGovern on his weekly Capitol Hill rundown.
  • We take a look at humane animal husbandry at Walker Farm at Whortleberry Hill, a new children's book by authors Gwen Agna and Shelley Rotner, and the healing properties of music with Lonnie Holley.
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