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A famous father casts shadows over painful memoir In Poetic License, the daughter of poet Richard Eberhart works to reconcile the love and loathing he inspired. By Jeri Theriault Share When she was a little girl, Gretchen Cherington, the daughter of poet Richard Eberhart, spent every summer with her family at Undercliff, a Down East cottage in Brooksville, Maine. Her parents loved to host parties and these idyllic summers included a steady parade of visitors drawn from the glitterati of 20th-century American letters – Mary McCarthy, Cal Lowell, Phil Booth, E.B. White, Donald Hall, Walker Evans, Buckminster Fuller, Maxine Kumin. ....
Jesse Casana, professor and chair of the department of anthropology “ Share May 03, 2021 by Amy Olson An analysis of fecal samples shows New England rural elites had parasitic infections. In June 2019, the Digging Dartmouth project is set up on the lawn outside Dartmouth Library s Baker-Berry Library and the former site of the Ripley/Choate House. (Photo by Eli Burakian 00) Jesse Casana, professor and chair of the department of anthropology (on the left); Keira Byno 19; and Elise Laugier, a graduate student student in Ecology, Evolution, Environment and Society (standing in the privy); work on excavating the privy once attached to the Ripley/Choate House. (Photo by Eli Burakian 00) ....
E-Mail IMAGE: Hazard & Caswell bottles from an apothecary in Newport, R.I., that contained a medicinal concoction marketed as a cure for digestive and other ailments. view more Credit: Photo by Austin Chad Hill. In the early 19th century in North America, parasitic infections were quite common in urban areas due in part to population growth and urbanization. Prior research has found that poor sanitation, unsanitary privy (outhouse) conditions, and increased contact with domestic animals, contributed to the prevalence of parasitic disease in urban areas. A new study examining fecal samples from a privy on Dartmouth s campus illustrates how rural wealthy elites in New England also had intestinal parasitic infections. The findings are published in the ....
April 20, 2021 by Bill Platt Anthropology of medicine class explores historic epidemics under COVID restrictions. (Photo by Robert Gill) PreviousNext In a normal year, Associate Professor Sienna Craig s first-year seminar, The Values of Medicine, exploring the history of western medicine across centuries, through an anthropological lens, would have brought students to Dartmouth Library s Rauner Special Collections Library to research rare manuscripts and artifacts, such as a book written by a witness to the 1665 London plague; public health handbills and posters from the 1832 cholera epidemic; and popular magazine advertisements from the late 19th-century related to female hysteria. Under the restrictions of the COVID-19 pandemic, the winter-term class still did original research in the collection, except that the students were encountering the materials from across campus or around the globe, and their four culminating projects are now on display dig ....