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Views from the Green - Dartmouth College

Views from the Green - Dartmouth College

A weekly Education and Higher Education podcast
Good podcast? Give it some love!
Views from the Green - Dartmouth College

Views from the Green - Dartmouth College

Episodes
Views from the Green - Dartmouth College

Views from the Green - Dartmouth College

A weekly Education and Higher Education podcast
Good podcast? Give it some love!
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Episodes of Views from the Green

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Late-night talk show host Conan O'Brien delivers the keynote address at the 2011 Dartmouth Commencement.
Alexandra Heywood, a Russian language and literature major from Potomac, MD, was one of two valedictorians to speak at the 2011 Dartmouth Commencement.
President Jim Yong Kim speaks to the graduating Class of 2011.
Nicole Yunger Halpern, a modified physics major from Tampa, Fla., was one of two valedictorians to speak at the 2011 Dartmouth Commencement
Jamie Berk '11 discusses the writing of his book “Making It: The Unfinished Story of the Music Business” for his Senior Fellowship project.
Anise Vance '11 discusses his Senior Fellowship project, “Tracing Traumatic Histories: Segregation, Post-Memory, and the Creation of Black Identities.”
Adeline "Addie" Gorlin '11 talks about her Senior Fellowship project "88 Voices... Now We Can Have a Conversation (Formerly Known as Talking to a Chimookoman).
Professor of Studio Art Esmé Thompson discusses her current exhibition at the Hood Museum, “Esmé Thompson: The Alchemy of Design.”
The Dartmouth Jewish Sound Archive (DJSA) is a repository of sound recordings related to Jewish music, culture, society, and history. It was established in 2002 by Professor of Engineering Alex Hartov and Professor of Asian and Middle Eastern L
In this podcast, Mellon Postdoc Shalini Ayyagari discusses her research and documentary film on the Manganiyar of Rajasthan, India, a Muslim musician community whose patrons are Hindu farmers.
Ethnomusicologist Ted Levin, the Arthur R. Virgin Professor of Music in Dartmouth’s Department of Music, recently returned from Beijing where he recorded the tenth volume of “Music of Central Asia” in December. This is the final installment in
Dartmouth’s work in Haiti continues through such groups as Dartmouth Haiti Response (DHR), Students at Dartmouth for Haiti Relief, and Dartmouth for Clean Water. A team of DHR members made an assessment trip to Haiti in October to help determin
In this podcast, Joe Broemel, Dartmouth senior project manager, and David Andronico, project engineer with general contractor Bond Brothers, discuss the construction of the Class of 1978 Life Sciences Center. Currently at the halfway point (gro
Seddon R. Savage, a pain consultant with the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Manchester, N.H., has been involved in clinical, education, and policy work around opioids, pain, addiction, and prescription drug misuse for the past 25 years. In
The Dartmouth baseball team (26-17) won its second straight Ivy League title on May 9, beating Columbia two games to one in the best-of-three series in New York City. Led by six All-Ivy players, including Ivy League Co-Rookie of the Year Chris
For the sixth summer in a row, Dartmouth students will board the Big Green Bus in a few weeks to spread their message of sustainability and energy conservation. This year's crew leaves Hanover on June 18 for their annual cross-country trek. In
Before Dartmouth was an Ivy League school, it was an Indian school. Dedicated to educating Indians in the region, its mission was to aid Indians in assimilating into 18th century life. Did the college accomplish its goal? Colin Calloway's recen
In this podcast, Ryan Calsbeek, an assistant professor of biological sciences, and Robert Cox, post-doctoral researcher, explain how lizards provide insight into evolutionary processes, and why The Bahamas is an ideal location for field researc
Peter W. Travis, the Henry Winkley Professor of Anglo-Saxon and English Language and Literature at Dartmouth, is the winner the 2009 Warren-Brooks Award for Outstanding Literary Criticism, for his book Disseminal Chaucer: Rereading the Nun’s Pr
As the debate over health care in the United States rages on, Dartmouth Professor of Economics Douglas O. Staiger, has made an interesting discovery that's sure to be part of the conversation: physicians are working less hours over the past 10
Reducing carbon emissions is at the heart of climate change mitigation. There is a nascent and growing scientific interest in carefully measuring the carbon involved in developing and producing alternative energy and burning alternative fuels,
Investigators from Dartmouth Medical School (DMS) have reported results of a clinical trial showing that a new vaccine against tuberculosis, Mycobacterium vaccae (MV), is effective in preventing tuberculosis in people with HIV infection. The Da
The immersive nature of role-playing video games such as World of Warcraft have created a connection so strong for some dedicated players that their brain responds to their avatar, or self-created visual identity, the same as it does to their o
In her latest book, Misplaced Objects, Professor Silvia Spitta examines the transformative movement of objects that has taken place between Europe and the Americas since 1492. One of the migrations from Europe to North America that has had a ma
In this podcast, Professor of Biological Sciences Matthew Ayres talks about his studies of insect population ecology, and what he’s learning about how climate influences forest pestilence from bark beetles and other species. He also describes h
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