PodParley PodParley

New Leadership at a Cherished Institution

An episode of the Boston Found podcast, hosted by Meet Boston, titled "New Leadership at a Cherished Institution" was published on January 8, 2025 and runs 27 minutes.

January 8, 2025 ·27m · Boston Found

0:00 / 0:00

Casey Soward discusses his vision and goals for Boch Center after taking over the leadership reins from an industry legend. https://www.bochcenter.org/ https://www.meetboston.com/podcast/

Casey Soward discusses his vision and goals for Boch Center after taking over the leadership reins from an industry legend.

https://www.bochcenter.org/

https://www.meetboston.com/podcast/

Bibliographical

Jan 2, 2026 ·8m

Part First I

Jan 1, 2026 ·18m

II

Dec 31, 2025 ·8m

III

Dec 30, 2025 ·6m

IV

Dec 29, 2025 ·14m

V

Dec 28, 2025 ·10m

The Zach Johnston Sports Podcast: Home For Boston Sports News & Updates Zach Johnston Zach Johnston (bostonsportszach) has over 3,200 followers on TikTok, is the Founder and Co-Owner of BostonSportsNetwork on Instagram, and has been supplying others with Boston Sports knowledge since he was 4 years old. Tune in to the Zach Johnston Sports Podcast as Zach will be suppling consistent coverage of all Boston Sports. John Caldigate by Anthony Trollope Loyal Books After a rather dissolute youth and having been disowned by his father, John Caldigate sets sail for Australia with his friend Dick Shand hoping to make his fortune in the goldfields in New South Wales. On the voyage, he meets Euphemia Smith and they conduct an indiscreet affair aboard. After various problems, Caldigate literally strikes gold and returns to Sydney where he meets Euphemia again and they settle, living as man and wife. After a time, they quarrel and Caldigate returns to England. On his return, Caldigate meets and marries a previous acquaintance, Hester Bolton, and they have a son. He sets himself up as his father’s heir and life seems perfect. However, Euphemia suddenly reappears and claims they were married in Australia, making Caldigate a bigamist and his son illegitimate. Caldigate is tried, found guilty and sent to prison, still protesting his innocence. His wife stands by him. However, his innocence is proved when a postmark on a letter vital to the prosecution case Hazard of New Fortunes by William Dean Howells Loyal Books Howell’s novel is set in New York of the late nineteenth century, a city familiar to readers of Edith Wharton and Henry James. Basil March, a businessman from Boston of a literary bent, moves with his family to New York to edit a new journal founded by an acquaintance. Its financial support, however, comes from a Mr. Dryfoos, a Pennsylvania Dutch farmer suddenly become millionaire by the discovery of natural gas on his property, and now living in New York with his family in a style he hopes will befit his new wealth.Is it his new fortune that presents a hazard? Or is it the new wealth of New York City in the Gilded Age? Both March and his literary creator are increasingly aware of some of the social and economic contradictions that beset the city of the time (though some of Howell’s analysis sounds as if it well might fit New York today). Characters such as, among others, Dryfoos’s children, a German socialist immigrant who fought for the Union cause, an impoverished Southern colonel The Naturewoman Upton Sinclair The Mastersons, a wealthy Bostonian family, await the arrival of their cousin Anna in the wake of her grandfather's death. Though born in Boston, Anna, who prefers the name Oceana, spent most of her life on a tropical island in the Pacific with her father. A free spirit, her practices and values surrounding proper dress, romance, and entertainment clash with those of her conservative relatives. What will happen as patience and tolerance wear thin for both parties when alluring Oceana catches the eye of a married man?Upton Sinclair, though best known for his novel The Jungle, an expose of the meatpacking industry, was also a playwright whose works for the stage reflect the same progressive viewpoints found in his other writing. Published as part of the collection Plays of Protest in 1912, this play was heavily influenced by the character of "Nature Man," an American hippie in Tahiti, from Jack London's book The Cruise of the Snark. This production is dedicated to Denny Sayers. (
URL copied to clipboard!