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Hundreds of Johns Hopkins alumni and friends gathered in Atlanta on September 23, 2007, to share stories of discovery and discuss issues of the day.
If you missed the event, and even if you attended but want to hear the "idea foum" academic conversations again, download the audio and video recordings below. (Just click "Play" and the recordings will download to your computer. Downloading may take up to a minute or more).
Alternatively, you can subscribe to podcasts of the recordings using free software like Apple iTunes. This allows new recordings to be delivered automatically to your computer. And if you have a MP3 player, you can save the files to your portable media device and listen to podcasts from Johns Hopkins anywhere, anytime.
Subscribe through iTunes. If you're using other podcasting software, copy and paste the feed below in your preferred tool:
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www.johnshopkins.edu/podcasts/podcasts.xml |
What is podcasting? | Learn more (link to Wikipedia)
If you're using iTunes, once "Podcasts from Johns Hopkins" downloads, click the arrow on the left for a list of all the Hopkins podcasts currently available. Click "Get" to download the files to your computer.
In iTunes, be sure to search "Johns Hopkins" for other podcasts from Hopkins, including news from Johns Hopkins Medicine and the Bloomberg School of Public Health.
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Medical Horizons
Length 28 minutes
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Play Audio File
Johns Hopkins clinicians, researchers, and educators are breaking new ground in top-priority fields like cancer, the brain sciences, computational medicine, and pediatrics. Listen to a panel discussion on the ways that medicine and technology are being used to improve, and ultimately save, lives.
Moderator:
David Nichols, M.D. (Bus ’00 M.B.A.)
• Mary Wallace Stanton Professor of Education
• Professor of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine
• Vice Dean for Education, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University
Presenters:
Jennifer Elisseeff, Ph.D.
• Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Whiting School of Engineering, Johns Hopkins University
• Assistant Professor, Department of Orthopaedics, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University
Douglas Kerr, M.D., Ph.D.
• Associate Professor, Neurology and Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University
• Director, Johns Hopkins Transverse Myelitis Center, Johns Hopkins Hospital
William G. Nelson, M.D., Ph.D. (Med ’87 M.D., Ph.D.)
• Professor of Oncology, Urology, Pharmacology, Medicine, Pathology, and Radiation Oncology, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University
• Associate Director for Cancer Research, Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center, Johns Hopkins Medicine
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Looking East
Length 42 minutes
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Asia is emerging (some would say reemerging) on the world stage, but this rise is more complex than headlines suggest. Within the region --- and even within nations --- there is tremendous economic growth and persistent poverty, increased engagement with the West and growing nationalism, a nascent civil society and single-party rule. As some countries struggle to provide citizens with basic services, others are positioning themselves as centers of artistic capital. Hopkins scholars offer regional snapshots and provide insight into what to expect in coming decades.
Moderator:
Jessica P. Einhorn, Ph.D. (SAIS ’70 M.A.)
• Dean of The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University
Presenters:
Rina Agarwala, Ph.D.
• Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, Zanvyl Krieger School of Arts and Sciences, Johns Hopkins University
Gilbert M. Burnham, M.D., Ph.D.
• Professor, Department of International Health, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University
Donald Oberdorfer
• Chairman, U.S.-Korea Institute at SAIS;
• Journalist-in-Residence, The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University
Jeffrey Sharkey
• Director, Peabody Institute of the Johns Hopkins University
More Information
Call 1.888.JHU.TOUR or e-mail events@jhu.edu for more information.
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