Some New Hampshire Residents Turn to Massachusetts for Psychiatric Crises

By Dianne Finch on Wednesday, July 2, 2008.

This week Catholic Medical Center in Manchester officially closed its inpatient psychiatric unit.

They cited underutilization as the reason for the closure, but several studies reveal rising needs for mental health services in New Hampshire.

The problem is severe enough that many patients are heading to Massachusetts to find the help they need.
NHPR’s Dianne Finch has more.

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The Future of New Hampshire’s Water

By Laura Knoy on Friday, July 25, 2008.

As New Hampshire grows we’re learning more about the hazards facing water quantity, quality and infrastructure and are exploring new ways to combat them. Hydrologists, environmentalist, inventors, and water groups are working hard on this effort, thinking up new technologies, new ideas and new plans so we’ll have enough clean potable water for our future. We conclude our series by exploring the future of our state’s drinking water and what some in the state are doing about it.

Guests

We'll also hear from

  • Dean Kamen, founder and owner of DEKA Research and Development Corporation in Manchester; he has invented a water purification device called the Slingshot that can take any kind of polluted water and transfer it to potable water by using minimal energy
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The Lonesome Whip-poor-will

By Scott Fitzpatrick on Friday, July 25, 2008.

The whip-poor-will is not as pervasive in New Hampshire as it once was, but as Scott explains it's no less awe-inspiring.

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The Quality of Our Water in New Hampshire

By Laura Knoy on Thursday, July 24, 2008.

Right now most of New Hampshire’s drinking water sources are well protected, but in the future we may need to draw from rivers and lakes that suffer from storm water pollution, run-off problems and the hazards of development. In the next installment of our series on drinking water we look at the quality of our drinking water, threats to water quality and how they're cleaned up before reaching our tap.

Guests

  • David Paris, Water Supply Administrator for Manchester Water Works Water Treatment Plant
  • Bernie Lucy, Senior Engineer at the Drinking Water and Groundwater Bureau at New Hampshire’s Department of Environmental Services

We'll also hear from

  • Andrew Nelson, owner of Nelson Analytical Labs, a full service water and environmental testing laboratory in Manchester
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Facing the Future of the Merrimack

By Jon Greenberg on Thursday, July 24, 2008.

This week, New Hampshire Public Radio is looking at water in the Granite State. NHPR's Jon Greenberg has been focusing on the Merrimack River. Yesterday, we met three people who, in different ways, are building on the success of the 1972 Clean Water Act..

The Merrimack faces new challenges today, driven mainly by the state’s growing population. In our final installment, we look at how the natural limits of the river are beginning to shape how the state grows.

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McCain Returns, Criticizes Obama on Iraq

By Josh Rogers on Wednesday, July 23, 2008.

McCain rips Obama on foreign policy as Illinois Democrat travels overseas. The attacks come as UNH poll finds the candidates in a near dead heat.

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Astronomical Medicine

By Abby Goldstein on Wednesday, July 23, 2008.

Some of the most exciting and groundbreaking work being done at the forefront of science and technology is happening where disciplines intersect.

One example we came across involves a young researcher at Harvard who’s just two years out of her undergraduate program in astronomy. Michelle Borkin found that using 3D visualization software commonly used in medicine could also reveal the hidden secrets of the cosmos. She’s a research assistant at Harvards's Initiative in Innovative Computing, where she's helping to pioneer a new field called "astronomical medicine." And she joins Word of Mouth to explain just what this field entails.

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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.

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Gadget Nation

By Abby Goldstein on Wednesday, July 23, 2008.

Last night I cooked hot dogs. They were good enough, but if I’d had the Octodog, I could have made them look like octopi. Curious? So was I. And what about Clocky? It's an alarm clock that rolls away from you when you hit the snooze button, forcing you to get out of bed and chase it down the next time it goes off. Or what about a metal crank that you put in your jar of natural peanut butter that mixes it up without making a mess?

The Octodog, Clocky and the peanut butter mixer are all inventions chronicled in a new book called Gadget Nation, a journey through the eccentric world of invention. Its author, Steve Greenberg, is a self-confessed gadget junkie, a former reporter for HGTV, a freelance writer and member of a family of patent filers.

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Taking On "Different Trains"

By Abby Goldstein on Wednesday, July 23, 2008.

Steve Reich is perhaps the preeminent composer living today, and one of his most heart-wrenching and affecting works is called "Different Trains for String Quartet and Tape". It tells the story of Steve Reich's early childhood - his train trips between the East and West coasts to visit his separated parents - and also of the train trips Jews were forced to take during the Holocaust.

The piece, commissioned by the Kronos Quartet in 1988, is notoriously difficult to play. But the Borromeo String Quartet recently took up the challenge. Jenny Attiyeh, producer of the podcast and public radio interview program Thoughtcast, attended a rehearsal at the New England Conservatory, where the Borromeo is currently in residence.

(Photo by Liz Linder)

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