The beauty of not over-planning your trip
There’s something to be said for spontaneity.
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There’s something to be said for spontaneity.
Dear Leah: You are oblivious.
For the first time last weekend, I saw the city of Baltimore. Or at least a more complete picture of it.
Whether we like to admit it or not, most of us spend a ridiculous amount of our time planted at a desk in the library or squished into a dorm room that practically requires a shoehorn to squeeze in and out of.
I came to the realization this morning that among all of today's appliances and machines, the elevator is by far the most infuriating.
Play these tried-and-true practical jokes on your friends any day of the year!
Five years after the Commission on Undergraduate Education (CUE) issued a comprehensive report aimed at improving the social and academic life of undergraduate students, several of the committee's recommendations remain unfulfilled.
CBS News correspondent Kimberly Dozier has survived a car bomb attack in Baghdad, covered the hunt for Osama bin Laden from Afghanistan, and reported on the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian violence, but she still faces an enormous challenge: keeping increasingly uninterested Americans aware of developments in Iraq and the Middle East.
A mix of students, faculty members and locals filled the Glass Pavilion on Wednesday night for a panel discussion of the rise of socialism in Latin America.
A world traveler and Excellence in Teaching Award nominee, versed in six languages, Professor Liman Lievens settled at Hopkins to follow in her father's footsteps: to teach Mandarin Chinese.The News-Letter spoke with Lievens about her travel experiences, her family life and her experience transitioning from Chinese to American culture.
What began as a "coffee-table discussion" between Director of National Intelligence Mike McConell and political science professor Steven David soon devolved into a tense back-and-forth Wednesday afternoon, with frequent jabs over issues such as waterboarding, warrantless wiretapping and nuclear proliferation.
Hopkins's only sorority house will be closing its doors this year due to deteriorating conditions.
Baltimoreans typically equate the neighborhood of Hampden with anything eccentric or unique. A small working-class neighborhood west of Wyman Park, Hampden exudes a style a la 1950s retro charm, affordability and Baltimore (pronounced "Bawl-mer") attitude. Needless to say, it should not come as a surprise that this neighborhood known for its boutiques, beehive hairdos and "Hon" bumper stickers has developed a quirky Christmas custom of its own.
Police do not believe that the two recent incidents involving robbery at gunpoint in the Homewood area are related to one another.
Enrollment in the Blue Jay Battalion, Hopkins' Army ROTC, has hardly been affected by the prospect of serving in Afghanistan or Iraq.
Asking an average Hopkins student about Roland Park neighborhood usually elicits a simple shrug or a wave in the general direction of West University Parkway. However among those Hopkins students who are athletically inclined, Roland Park is a much more frequent destination. ?