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    vassar college

    Explore " vassar college" with insightful episodes like "A Writer's Balance: Creativity, Self-Care, and the Journey of Publishing with Chloe Benjamin", "Episode 8 American College Campus Part 2", "Episode 7 American College Campus Part 1", "Actor Conner Marx: Co Star of the NBC series, NEW AMSTERDAM Ep# 108" and "Celebrity Guest Interview with Actress | Producer | Writer - Julie Chapin" from podcasts like ""The Bookshop Podcast", "Altered Mobillity", "Altered Mobillity", "A Mick A Mook and A Mic" and "The Mara Prose Podcast"" and more!

    Episodes (7)

    A Writer's Balance: Creativity, Self-Care, and the Journey of Publishing with Chloe Benjamin

    A Writer's Balance: Creativity, Self-Care, and the Journey of Publishing with Chloe Benjamin

    As the leaves turn and the air grows crisp, we're reminded that change is the only constant, a truth Chloe Benjamin knows all too well. This week on The Bookshop Podcast, join me for a profound journey with the author of The Anatomy of Dreams and The Immortalists as we navigate the intertwining paths of creativity and self-care. Chloe opens up about the alchemy of storytelling sparked in her youth and the vigilant balancing act between the fervor of art and the necessity of wellness, a dance many of us know too well. Her insights provide a map for writers and dreamers to chart a course through the tumultuous waters of a freelance career, steering clear of the siren call of commercialized self-care and wellness.

    Venture further into the heart of Chloe's work as we discuss the rich tapestry of The Immortalists. Chloe's dedication to authenticity breathes life into historical narratives, and her exploration of mind-body techniques presents a beacon of hope for those seeking solace from their internal storms. This episode is a testament to the transformative power of literature, allowing us to reflect on the threads of our own lives which mirror the characters we come to cherish.

    Completing our literary odyssey, we lift the veil on the often enigmatic world of publishing, offering solace and guidance to emerging writers navigating this labyrinth. Chloe's experience demystifies the journey from penning the first word to holding a published book in hand. Our conversation expands to celebrate the written word's power to heal, inspire, and transport us to realms unknown, with recommendations that will ignite readers' imaginations and perhaps even inspire a few to embrace the meditative quietude that has touched Chloe's life. So, settle in with your favorite feline companion and prepare to be whisked away by one of my favorite contemporary authors as we converse about life, health, and writing on this episode of The Bookshop Podcast.

    Chloe Benjamin

    The Anatomy of Dreams, Chloe Benjamin

    The Immortalists, Chloe Benjamin

    #22 – Chloe Benjamin The Sewanee Review

    Vita Nostra, Marina & Sergey Dyachenko

    Assassin of Realty, Marina & Sergey Dyachenko

    Braiding Sweetgrass, Robin Wall Kimmerer

    LIN Health

    The Sparrow, Mary Doria-Russell

    FeedSpot 20 Best Bibliophile Podcasts

    Support the show

    The Bookshop Podcast
    Mandy Jackson-Beverly
    Social Media Links

    Episode 8 American College Campus Part 2

    Episode 8 American College Campus Part 2

    Notes for episodes 7 and 8
    American College and University Campus

    In episodes 7 and 8, we look at the history of the American college and university campus from the commencement of British American settlement through modern times. The open and public spaces of campuses, as well as the design of buildings and overall layouts, reflect societal trends, philosophies, and prejudices as much as the changing purpose of higher education itself. We explore starting with the first colleges, their charters and founding as institutions meant to educate upper class white men through the post World War II period that has seen a democratization of higher education.  

    Our moments in equity for these two episodes look at how college establishment and funding were intimately connected to the slave trade, slave labor, and the profits from the sale of slaves in the British colonies and in the pre-Civil War United States.

     

    Resources

    Paul Venable Turner, Campus: An American planning tradition (MIT Press 1987)

     

    A History of Stanford, Stanford University (Undated) – https://www.stanford.edu/about/history/ 

     

    College of William & Mary, Wikipedia (Updated Feb. 17, 2022) – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/College_of_William_%26_Mary 

    Royal Charter (Feb. 8, 1693) [posted on Internet Archive Wayback Machine (Updated Mar. 26, 2012) – https://web.archive.org/web/20120529035803/http://scdb.swem.wm.edu/wiki/index.php/Charter#Transcription_of_the_Royal_Charter]

     

    History, Columbia University in the City of New York (Undated) – https://www.columbia.edu/content/history 

     

    Frederick Law Olmsted: College and School Campuses, National Park Service (undated) –  https://www.nps.gov/frla/learn/historyculture/college-campuses.htm 

     

    Judith Schiff, Resources on Yale History: A Brief History of Yale, Yale University Library (Updated June 22, 2021) – https://guides.library.yale.edu/yalehistory 

     

    Rebecca Woodham, David J. Trowbridge, and Clio Admin, Nott Memorial, Union College, Clio: Your Guide to History (August 1, 2021, accessed Mar. 15, 2022) – https://theclio.com/entry/6225 

     

    Benjamin Henry Latrobe (1764-1820), Dickinson College Archives & Special Collections (2005) – https://archives.dickinson.edu/people/benjamin-henry-latrobe-1764-1820 

     

    Benjamin Henry Latrobe, Wikipedia (Updated Nov. 23, 2021) –  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Henry_Latrobe 

     

    Lisa Chase, Imagining Utopia: Landscape Design at Smith College, 1871-1910, 65 New England Quarterly no. 4, p. 560 (Dec. 1992) – https://garden.smith.edu/sites/garden/files/imagining-utopia-lisa-chase.pdf 

     

    Jim McCarthy, Spotlight on…Gallaudet University, National Association for Olmsted Parks (Mar. 14, 2022) – https://olmsted200.org/spotlight-on-gallaudet-university/ 

     

    Rebecca Beatrice Brooks, History of Cambridge, Massachusetts, History of Massachusetts Blog (May 30, 2021) – https://historyofmassachusetts.org/cambridge-ma-history/ 

     

    Brief History of Cambridge, Mass., Cambridge Historical Commission (undated) – https://www.cambridgema.gov/historic/cambridgehistory 

     

    Harvard Square is famous for a lot of things, History, Harvard Square Business Association – https://www.harvardsquare.com/history/ 

     

    John Harvard (clergyman), Wikipedia (Updated July 28, 2022) – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Harvard_(clergyman) 

     

    Michael Johnson, 94 University Place: Old Mill, Burlington 1830 (Undated) – https://www.uvm.edu/histpres/HPJ/burl1830/streets/university/oldmill.html 

     

    Prof. Thomas Visser, Old Mill, University of Vermont (Undated; based on a professional report on the history of Old Mill prepared in 1988 by Thomas Visser and MaryJo Llewellyn of the UVM Historic Preservation Program's Architectural Conservation and Education Service.) – https://www.uvm.edu/~campus/oldmill/oldmillhistory.html 

     

    Vassar College, Wikipedia (Updated July 5, 2022) – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vassar_College#History 

     

    Historic Horseshoe, South Carolina, University History, University of South Carolina (Undated) – https://www.sc.edu/about/our_history/university_history/historic_horseshoe/index.php 

     

    Lydia Brandt, University of Virginia, Architecture of the, Encyclopedia Virginia (Dec. 14, 2020) – https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/university-of-virginia-the-architecture-of-the/ 

     

    History and Traditions, Washington University in St. Louis (Undated) – https://wustl.edu/about/history-traditions/#:~:text=In%201853%2C%20prominent%20St.,of%20immigrants%20flooded%20into%20St

     

    Smith College, Wikipedia (Updated Aug. 4, 2022) – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith_College 

     

    Smith History, Smith College (Undated) – https://www.smith.edu/about-smith/smith-history 

     

    Moments in Equity

     

    Stephen Smith and Kate Ellis, Shackled Legacy – History shows slavery helped build many U.S. colleges and universities, American Public Media Reports (Sept. 4, 2017) – https://www.apmreports.org/episode/2017/09/04/shackled-legacy 

     

    Yoruhu Williams, Why Thomas Jefferson’s Anti-Slavery Passage Was Removed from the Declaration of Independence, History.com (June 29, 2020) –

    Episode 7 American College Campus Part 1

    Episode 7 American College Campus Part 1

    Notes - Episodes 5 and 6

    Colleges and common space

    In episodes 5 and 6, we look at the history of the American college and university campus from the commencement of British American settlement through modern times. The open and public spaces of campuses, as well as the design of buildings and overall layouts, reflect societal trends, philosophies, and prejudices as much as the changing purpose of higher education itself. We explore starting with the first colleges, their charters and founding as institutions meant to educate upper class white men through the post World War II period that has seen a democratization of higher education.  

    Our moments in equity for these two episodes look at how college establishment and funding were intimately connected to the slave trade, slave labor, and the profits from the sale of slaves in the British colonies and in the pre-Civil War United States.

     

    Resources

    Paul Venable Turner, Campus: An American planning tradition (MIT Press 1987)

     

    A History of Stanford, Stanford University (Undated) – https://www.stanford.edu/about/history/ 

     

    College of William & Mary, Wikipedia (Updated Feb. 17, 2022) – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/College_of_William_%26_Mary 

    Royal Charter (Feb. 8, 1693) [posted on Internet Archive Wayback Machine (Updated Mar. 26, 2012) – https://web.archive.org/web/20120529035803/http://scdb.swem.wm.edu/wiki/index.php/Charter#Transcription_of_the_Royal_Charter]

     

    History, Columbia University in the City of New York (Undated) – https://www.columbia.edu/content/history 

     

    Frederick Law Olmsted: College and School Campuses, National Park Service (undated) –  https://www.nps.gov/frla/learn/historyculture/college-campuses.htm 

     

    Judith Schiff, Resources on Yale History: A Brief History of Yale, Yale University Library (Updated June 22, 2021) – https://guides.library.yale.edu/yalehistory 

     

    Rebecca Woodham, David J. Trowbridge, and Clio Admin, Nott Memorial, Union College, Clio: Your Guide to History (August 1, 2021, accessed Mar. 15, 2022) – https://theclio.com/entry/6225 

     

    Benjamin Henry Latrobe (1764-1820), Dickinson College Archives & Special Collections (2005) – https://archives.dickinson.edu/people/benjamin-henry-latrobe-1764-1820 

     

    Benjamin Henry Latrobe, Wikipedia (Updated Nov. 23, 2021) –  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Henry_Latrobe 

     

    Lisa Chase, Imagining Utopia: Landscape Design at Smith College, 1871-1910, 65 New England Quarterly no. 4, p. 560 (Dec. 1992) – https://garden.smith.edu/sites/garden/files/imagining-utopia-lisa-chase.pdf 

     

    Jim McCarthy, Spotlight on…Gallaudet University, National Association for Olmsted Parks (Mar. 14, 2022) – https://olmsted200.org/spotlight-on-gallaudet-university/ 

     

    Rebecca Beatrice Brooks, History of Cambridge, Massachusetts, History of Massachusetts Blog (May 30, 2021) – https://historyofmassachusetts.org/cambridge-ma-history/ 

     

    Brief History of Cambridge, Mass., Cambridge Historical Commission (undated) – https://www.cambridgema.gov/historic/cambridgehistory 

     

    Harvard Square is famous for a lot of things, History, Harvard Square Business Association – https://www.harvardsquare.com/history/ 

     

    John Harvard (clergyman), Wikipedia (Updated July 28, 2022) – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Harvard_(clergyman) 

     

    Michael Johnson, 94 University Place: Old Mill, Burlington 1830 (Undated) – https://www.uvm.edu/histpres/HPJ/burl1830/streets/university/oldmill.html 

     

    Prof. Thomas Visser, Old Mill, University of Vermont (Undated; based on a professional report on the history of Old Mill prepared in 1988 by Thomas Visser and MaryJo Llewellyn of the UVM Historic Preservation Program's Architectural Conservation and Education Service.) – https://www.uvm.edu/~campus/oldmill/oldmillhistory.html 

     

    Vassar College, Wikipedia (Updated July 5, 2022) – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vassar_College#History 

     

    Historic Horseshoe, South Carolina, University History, University of South Carolina (Undated) – https://www.sc.edu/about/our_history/university_history/historic_horseshoe/index.php 

     

    Lydia Brandt, University of Virginia, Architecture of the, Encyclopedia Virginia (Dec. 14, 2020) – https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/university-of-virginia-the-architecture-of-the/ 

     

    History and Traditions, Washington University in St. Louis (Undated) – https://wustl.edu/about/history-traditions/#:~:text=In%201853%2C%20prominent%20St.,of%20immigrants%20flooded%20into%20St

     

    Smith College, Wikipedia (Updated Aug. 4, 2022) – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith_College 

     

    Smith History, Smith College (Undated) – https://www.smith.edu/about-smith/smith-history 

     

    Moments in Equity

     

    Stephen Smith and Kate Ellis, Shackled Legacy – History shows slavery helped build many U.S. colleges and universities, American Public Media Reports (Sept. 4, 2017) – https://www.apmreports.org/episode/2017/09/04/shackled-legacy 

     

    Yoruhu Williams, Why Thomas Jefferson’s Anti-Slavery Passage Was Removed from the Declaration of Independence, History.com (June 29, 2020) –

    Actor Conner Marx: Co Star of the NBC series, NEW AMSTERDAM Ep# 108

    Actor Conner Marx: Co Star of the NBC series, NEW AMSTERDAM  Ep# 108

    On September 11,2001, FDNY Battalion Chief Rich Alles responded to the World Trade Center twenty minutes after the second collapse. His assignment entailed the supervision of search and rescue units for the entire two weeks of the operation.  He witnessed untold horrors.  Now retired with the rank of Deputy Chief, Rich helped lobby Congress for the 9/11 Health and Compensation Act (The Zadroga bill).

    Still maintaining an active presence at Ground Zero, Rich brings extensive firsthand expertise to any forum relative to 9/11 victims’ benefits.

    Chief Alles will be joined on our podcast by Michael Barasch, Esq. of Barasch and McGarry law firm.

    Michael has spearheaded the effort for monetary compensation for victims of 9/11. Along with Jon Stewart, Michael has had extraordinary results demanding satisfaction and justice for all affected on that tragic day.

    This week’s 9/11 podcast will discuss victims’ eligibility for the plan, along with little-known valuable information for victims and their families who have yet to enroll, and even for victims who have already received compensation.

    Please join Mick and Mook on 9/7 for this informative and important podcast.

    Celebrity Guest Interview with Actress | Producer | Writer - Julie Chapin

    Celebrity Guest Interview with Actress | Producer | Writer - Julie Chapin

    Julie Chapin spent three decades as a corporate attorney, and after retirement in 2010, she was compelled to return to her acting roots.  She studied at Vassar College, just a few years behind the great Meryl Streep, combined with the tutelage of Bruce Ornstein, widely known for his appearance in Saturday Night Fever, who has taught actors like Sam Rockwell and Helen Slater.  Mara Prose and Julie discuss Julie's journey to identity, success, and bliss within the entertainment industry.

    Food and Religion: From the Garden of Eden to the Legacy of Gefilte Fish

    Food and Religion: From the Garden of Eden to the Legacy of Gefilte Fish

    Food and religion collide in many ways - from fasting to feasting and through strict rules, symbolic dishes, and traditional foodways that span across centuries. Today, we look closely at this relationship, examining what holy texts and historical circumstances can tell us about how we eat today. We explore the legacy of Ashkenazi Jewish cuisine, look at the Impossible pork dilemma for those who abide by halal or kosher restrictions, travel to the Garden of Eden to see if there was any meat, and get to know the devil’s relationship with dieting. 

    Further Reading:

    This episode featured Meat and Three bonus episode, Fasting and Feasting in Quarantine

    Find Jeffrey’s company, the Gefilteria, here and check out his book, the Gefilte Manifesto here.

    To learn more about Jonah Goldman’s coverage on Impossible Pork not being certified by OU and IFANCA, read his article in The Counter.

    Victoria Moran is an American author and speaker, specializing in both spirituality and veganism. Check out her cookbook, The Main Street Vegan Academy Cookbook, and her website

    If you were intrigued by the subtle plug of Klaus Yoder’s podcast Seven Heads Ten Horns, you can listen to it on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Sara Mathes mentions that she found herself neck deep in a YouTube video posted by televangelist, Katie Souza. The video is called “Satan Uses Food to Kill Us,” just in case you want to do the same. The segment was also informed by readings from Ken Albala’s edited volume, Food and Faith in Christian Culture.

    Keep Meat and Three on the air: become an HRN Member today! Go to heritageradionetwork.org/donate

    Meat and Three is powered by Simplecast.

    E92: Marcia Bateson-The Humanity in Success

    E92: Marcia Bateson-The Humanity in Success

    As part of the TAP Series, we are presenting this week, the Chair of The President's Circle, Marcia Bateson.


    Marcia has close to three decades of experience in strategic, leadership and managerial, roles for corporations and not-for profit organizations. Since 2002, Marcia has worked with top organizations, not-for-profits and Fortune 50 financial firms. She advises on strategy, organizational redesign, business, operational and financial solutions to major issues and guides toward risk-mitigated implementation.

    As CFO for JPMorgan Partners Marcia overhauled its outdated infrastructure and integrated 6 acquisitions while keeping the division fully operational. She served as COO of JPM’s Asset Management  where she re-engineered the business and financial infrastructure - which increased profit by 2.5X on flat revenue. When JPM sold Securities Services to BoNY, as COO, she managed the transfer of $1T  in securities, 800 clients, and 800 professionals.

    Marcia graduated from Vassar College phi beta kappa. She currently serves on multiple boards including NR-International, The Regional Plan Association, Holton-Arms School, Ceres Presidents Council, and she is active in the investment community in New York City.

    Learn more about Marcia and TAP at:

    MARCIA BATESON (theaccelerationproject.org)

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