Story Archives of 'Dartmouth College'

Dartmouth Doctors say Drug Labels Leave Out Essential Information

By Elaine Grant on Friday, October 30, 2009.

Two Dartmouth doctors argue that drug labels don’t tell you how well your medications work or how safe they really are.

Worse yet, they don’t tell your doctors everything they need to know.

A little-known piece of legislation based on their work is included in a Senate health care overhaul bill.

And as health reporter Elaine Grant has learned, that could eventually change the way the pharmaceutical industry labels drugs.

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Sculpting Agent Orange's Legacy

By Avishay Artsy on Thursday, October 15, 2009.

From 1961 to 1971, the United States military sprayed millions of gallons of defoliants and herbicides over south Vietnam. Agent Orange was the most commonly used defoliant. It was later found to be contaminated by dioxin, a human carcinogen. It permanently altered the landscape, as well as the bodies of millions of Vietnamese.

A graduate student at Dartmouth College recently visited the country to capture the legacy of Agent Orange through a unique process she calls "documentary sculpture." Our producer, Avishay Artsy, went to have a look.

(Photo by Kirk Torregrossa)

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The Dartmouth Atlas Project

By Laura Knoy on Sunday, August 16, 2009.

The Dartmouth Atlas Project has been quoted by the left and the right during our national health care debate. The Project explores how medical costs and health outcomes vary widely across the country. Researchers say more access to care and more spending often do not mean healthier populations; in fact, sometimes the more health care you get, the worse off you are. We’ll look at health care spending, health care results and how this report could affect the health care debate.

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Outgoing Dartmouth College President James Wright

By Laura Knoy on Wednesday, June 3, 2009.

In his 11 years as president, James Wright has succeeded in making Dartmouth more diverse while opening up better financial aid options for middle class students and those who have served in the military since 9-11. We'll talk with President Wright about his time at Dartmouth and what may be ahead for the college.

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eighth blackbird

By Virginia Prescott on Wednesday, May 6, 2009.

In 1996, six young musicians at Oberlin College came together to play chamber music. Rather than calling themselves The Oberlin Sextet, they wanted to come up with a more creative name. Red Wheelbarrow and Tastes Like Chicken were contenders. Fortunately, they kept looking. Violinist Matt Albert suggested eighth blackbird, inspired by a Wallace Stevens’ poem, and it fit. The group has since won a Grammy Award and comissioned a piece from composer Steve Reich that went on to win a Pulitzer Prize this year.

Unlike many chamber groups who sit politely behind their music stands, eighth blackbird memorizes its music and moves around the stage. They've even worked with choreographers like Susan Marshall.

eighth blackbird will bring their vibrant and evocative chamber music to the Hopkins Center this Friday as part of a week-long residency at Dartmouth College. Today we’re joined by pianist Lisa Kaplan and flutist Tim Munro.

(Photo by Luke Ratray)

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Dartmouth Researcher Discovers Life Deep Beneath the Ice

By Elaine Grant on Wednesday, April 22, 2009.

A Dartmouth researcher has discovered microbes living in an ancient reservoir trapped under a glacier in Antarctica. The bacteria are surviving without light or oxygen in an ecosystem that would not seem capable of supporting life.

And as NHPR’s Elaine Grant reports, the findings may help us understand how life could exist on other planets.

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Theater Without a Stage

By Virginia Prescott on Wednesday, November 5, 2008.

Theater-goers know the routine: You make sure you have your tickets before you leave the house, or you pick them up at the box office. You hand them to the usher, who pilots you to your seats. You speak in hushed tones under the soft glow of the house lights as you wait for the performance to start. Then eventually the lights dim, the curtains part, and the actors take over.

Nothing wrong with the traditional theater experience, of course. But don’t expect that scene if you’re headed to Dartmouth this weekend to see “Etiquette”. This is not your typical performance. Your first tip might be that the venue is a bookshop, not a theater. And that’s just the beginning. In “Etiquette”, there is no audience, aside from yourself. And there are no actors, aside from you and a partner.

“Etiquette” is the brainchild of Ant Hampton and Silvia Mercuriali. They’re the two core members of the art collective Rotozaza, and they’re bringing “Etiquette” to the Dartmouth Bookstore from November 8-16 (more info). Co-creator Ant Hampstom joins Word of Mouth to describe the experience. We also hear from someone who’s participated in “Etiquette”, New York Times reporter Melena Ryzik. She tried it out at the Under the Radar Theater Festival in New York in January, and she produced a segment about it for Urban Eye, the paper’s online video series. Click here to watch Melena’s video about her experience with "Etiquette."

(Photo courtesy of Ant Hampton)

New Hampshire Scientists Study Global Warming

By Laura Knoy on Wednesday, August 27, 2008.

Researchers from Dartmouth College have been traveling between the North and South Poles to study the effects of global warming. They dig down deep into the polar snow to collect samples they hope will answer questions about the polar ice caps, the atmosphere and more. We’ll talk to these scientists and others in the Granite State who are helping us understand global warming.

Guests

Dartmouth Building Proposal Raises Questions

By Abby Goldstein on Wednesday, July 23, 2008.

It’s not all that uncommon for modern architectural design to clash with the local expectations of a community - especially what that community houses a college. A new building proposal at Dartmouth is straining town-gown relations between the school and some residents of Hanover. Dartmouth released plans for a new, $52 million visual arts center last week.

The design by a Boston architectural firm Machado and Silvetti Associates calls for more than 99 thousand square feet located downtown. The school says it would provide a “new gateway” for the college on the southern end of town.

But one member of the committee that acts as liason between the school and the town told the student newspaper The Dartmouth, "it’s creating an urban landscape in what used to be a traditional New England town. It’s gaudy and southwestern, and we’re not. It’s going to look funny with snow on it."

Word of Mouth’s architectural conitributor Don Kreis joins us to give us the details. His day job is with New Hampshire’s Public Utility Commission, where he’s general council.

The modern building proposal in Hanover seems downright tame, though, compared to what’s on top of a contemporary art museum in Paris right now. A pair of Swiss artists has created a single-room hotel and set it atop the Palais de Tokyo. The piece of interactive art allows one exclusive couple to spend the night in what may be the world’s first portable hotel. John Laurenson of Deutsche Welle Radio checked in to Hotel Everland to find out more.

Robots Assist Surgeons to Bypass Patients' Clogged Arteries

By Dianne Finch on Tuesday, June 24, 2008.

For about 40 years, the sternotomy has been the gold standard for open heart surgery.

Chest bones are split and patients’ ribs are stretched open to allow access to the chest cavity.

The practice is still widely used, but many doctors are looking for less invasive methods.

A few surgeons in the nation are using some nimble-fingered robots to help repair hearts.

But as NHPR’s Dianne Finch reports, not all surgeons are pleased with that idea.