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(04/25/07 5:00am)
Professor Steven David sat in his office in a checkered shirt and khakis, listening to the cuckoo clock on his wall tweet out the next hour. The wind blustered outside, but inside it was sunny and warm as the professor of contemporary international politics talked about his roots, his inspirations and his career.
(03/02/07 5:00am)
Dick Horne, the owner and curator of the American Dime Museum, straightened the fluorescent lamp over a display of shrunken heads and mourning hair jewelry.
(11/30/06 5:00am)
After reading the Middle East headlines of recent weeks, I am tempted to lose myself in flights of fancy.
(04/27/06 5:00am)
John Shields, the chef and owner of Gertrude's restaurant in the BMA, said that he recently took a $20 bag of groceries and calculated that it had travelled 20,000 miles.
(04/13/06 5:00am)
If you've ever ordered Cloak and Dagger or a Charles Villager sandwich at Eddie's Supermarket on St. Paul Street, you've probably met Lucy, the bubbly deli worker behind the counter.
(03/30/06 5:00am)
Washing hands is not a regulated procedure in many foreign hospitals, said Charles Cummings, vice president for medical affairs at Johns Hopkins Medicine International.
(03/15/06 5:00am)
For two years, professor and anthropologist Pamela Reynolds studied Crossroads, a shantytown in South Africa.
(02/23/06 5:00am)
When Professor Betsy Bryan and her team were excavating in Egypt, the aerial photographs they took of the temple site revealed a light line running in a rectangle across the ground. Thinking it was an architectural structure of some sort because of its regularity, the team of Hopkins students, along with Egyptian workers, began digging to uncover it, said Bryan, a professor in the Near Eastern Studies department.
(09/15/05 5:00am)
In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Johns Hopkins University accepted 29 refugee students and blended resources from the Medical and Public Health schools to send medical teams to assist in Gulf Coast relief efforts.
(09/15/05 5:00am)
An hour before departure time, a crowd gathered outside the main train station in Przemysl, a Polish border town. Instead of the usual array of rolling suitcases and sleek garment bags, this denim-clad collective pulled bulging burlap bags and tarp-covered carts up to the entrance.
(04/21/05 5:00am)
It was the end of the first period. The opposing team missed a shot by a hair, and the fan-favorite team was off, sprinting to beat the clock, passing, skirting around the other players.
(03/03/05 5:00am)
Senior Rodrigo Yano said he applied to Teach Baltimore, a summer program that allows college students to teach at elementary schools in inner-city neighborhoods, because he wanted to work with children from an urban environment.
(02/10/05 5:00am)
Hopkins is well known for its undergraduate research opportunities. In fact, prospective students regularly list undergraduate research as a motivating factor in applying to the school. Yet many students - freshmen and upper classmen alike - are unaware of how to get involved.
(02/03/05 5:00am)
A paintbrush, a rake, a pair of paint-splattered work gloves. And the desire to make a corner of the world a little more beautiful.
(12/02/04 5:00am)
You're running out of time. Looming deadlines, finals, papers -- everything is piling up. On top of schoolwork, you also need to somehow find the time to get presents for family and friends.
(11/18/04 5:00am)
Maybe, for once, it's time to listen to your parents, who tell you that learning about the life cycle of the dung beetle isn't going to take you very far in real life. If you've thought at all about what happens after Johns Hopkins, consider taking an experiential learning class during Intersession.
(11/04/04 5:00am)
We need to lay down some rules here. Cell phone usage has gone from a phenomenon exclusive to the rich to being so common that dorm room phones are nearly obsolete and friends' numbers are just an address book away.
(09/30/04 5:00am)
After wandering through the maze of booths at the Student Activities Commission (SAC) Fair, after scrolling for hours through the mile-long online list of student groups, after questioning friends and faculty, you've decided that your passion for origami or scuba diving or watching film noir is not represented on campus. So you want to start a club.