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  • Chef Gail Sokol is back to teach us the ins and outs of laminated dough. Joe Donahue hosts.
  • We welcome Dr. Geovani Faddoul, a transplant nephrologist at Albany Med. Call with your question. 800-348-2551. Ray Graf hosts.
  • Joining us is Dr. Raj Murthy of Nuvance Health. Dr. Murthy specializes in pain management, regenerative and rehabilitation medicine. Ray Graf hosts.
  • Chef Ric Orlando is back to share his ideas about what to do with all the good stuff that is being harvested right now. Ray Graf hosts.
  • We are joined by Dr. Rebecca Stetzer, a geriatrician from The Alzheimer's Center at Albany Medical Center.
  • We are joined by Dr. Jonah Marshall of St. Peter’s Health Partners. Dr. Marshall specializes in urologic oncology, nerve-sparing prostate surgery and complex kidney surgery. He focuses both on cancer control and overall quality of life. The number to call with your question is 800-348-2551. Ray Graf hosts.
  • We welcome back Food Friday faves Bruce Weinstein and Mark Scarbrough. They are the authors of dozens of cook books and are masters at navigating kitchen technology. Today they want to talk about the magic that can happen with air fryers. Call in. 800-348-2551. Ray Graf hosts.
  • We're joined by Dr. Ragavan Siddharthan, a colorectal surgeon with Capital District Colon & Rectal Surgery. Dr. Siddharthan provides evaluation and treatment of the full range of colon and rectal conditions requiring surgery. Call at show time (2pm) with your question. 800-348-2551. WAMC's Ray Graf hosts.
  • Author Jeremy Bushnell will present his new novel, Relentless Melt, tonight at the Odyssey Bookshop in South Hadley, MA. He will be joined in conversation by Christopher Boucher.The book is described as: "Stranger Things" meets the Golden Age of Detective fiction in a supernatural detective thriller that introduces Artie Quick, a sales assistant at Filene’s in Boston, who moonlights as an amateur detective.
  • Earth's sister planet has heated up the evening sky all year. No doubt you've seen that dazzling "star" after sunset: This has been its best showing since 2015. This eight year interval is no accident. So happens, Venus takes 224.8 days to orbit the Sun, so that 13 of its “years” (13 x 224.8) is the same number as eight Earth years (8 x 365.25). They both work out to 2,922 days. What this means is that after eight years, we on Earth see an exact duplicate of Venusian behavior.
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