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(04/05/18 3:57pm)
Five months after the University decided to end the Russian major and minor following the Spring 2018 term, the Center for Language Education (CLE) announced that it will be offering restructured Russian courses and hiring a new faculty member.
(02/15/18 4:28pm)
In celebration of Black Heritage Month, the Office of Multicultural Affairs (OMA) hosted an exhibit by Paul Rucker, a Baltimore-based artist whom Baltimore Magazine named the city’s “Best Artist” of 2015. The exhibit ran from Feb. 8-9.
(02/01/18 5:00am)
Last year, psychologist John Gartner, a former assistant professor at the Hopkins School of Medicine, made national news after declaring that U.S. President Donald Trump was mentally unfit for office due to malignant narcissism and paranoid delusions.
(12/07/17 4:55pm)
The second Commission on Undergraduate Education (CUE2), a group of faculty, staff, alumni and current undergraduates, has been working since April to evaluate the state of undergraduate education at Hopkins.
(11/09/17 7:49pm)
Associate Professor of Philosophy Chris Lebron spoke about his latest book The Making of Black Lives Matter: A Brief History of an Idea on Tuesday, Nov. 7 at Red Emma’s Coffeehouse. Lebron will be teaching an undergraduate course titled “The Making of Black Lives Matter” next semester.
(11/02/17 4:23pm)
Thiruvendran Vignarajah, the Deputy Attorney General for the State of Maryland and candidate for State’s Attorney for Baltimore City, gave a talk called Justice for All in the Age of Trump. The event was hosted by the Hopkins College Democrats on Wednesday.
(11/02/17 2:59pm)
Thiruvendran Vignarajah, the Deputy Attorney General for the State of Maryland and candidate for State’s Attorney for Baltimore City, gave a talk called “Justice for All in the Age of Trump.” The event was hosted by Hopkins College Democrats on Wednesday.
(10/19/17 6:40pm)
Salima Ikram, a visiting professor of Egyptology from Yale University, held a talk on Egyptian food and drink in Mudd Hall on Tuesday. Ikram studied Egyptology and Archaeology at Bryn Mawr College and earned her Master’s and Ph.D. from Cambridge University.
(10/12/17 4:21pm)
The Hopkins Alumni Association held the annual Young Alumni Weekend (YAW) from Friday, Oct. 6 to Saturday, Oct. 7. Throughout the weekend, alumni returned to Hopkins to reconnect with friends and meet with current Hopkins students.
(10/05/17 5:35pm)
FORCE, a Baltimore-based activist group, brought the Monument Quilt to Hopkins on Wednesday as a public display of support for survivors of sexual assault. The Monument Quilt is a collection of 2500 squares of fabric with stories, reflections and words of advice. A selection of these squares were arranged across the Beach to spell out “You are not alone.”
(09/28/17 4:10pm)
The Student Government Association (SGA) discussed the Monument Quilt Project, a national art installation aimed at raising awareness about sexual assault, as well as the passage of the smoking cessation bill. They also addressed academic freedom and crime reporting during their weekly meeting on Tuesday.
(09/21/17 4:37pm)
College students from around the country came to Homewood campus last weekend to participate in the HopHacks Fall 2017 hackathon. Working in teams, they had 36 hours from 9 p.m. Friday to 9 a.m. Sunday to design and code a technological product.
(09/14/17 4:10pm)
At their second meeting of the semester on Tuesday, the Student Government Association (SGA) discussed several initiatives they will hold in partnership with the University administration. These included the annual SGA-Administration Dinner, a new Krieger School of Arts and Sciences (KSAS) Curriculum and a new SGA-led initiative on improving civic discourse on campus.
(09/07/17 1:49pm)
At its first weekly meeting of the year, the Student Government Association (SGA) welcomed guest speaker Stanley Andrisse, a postdoctoral fellow at the School of Medicine.
(04/27/17 1:39pm)
Hippocrates Med Review (HMR), a new student-run journal that seeks to make medical topics more accessible to the public, launched its online publication on Saturday, April 21.
(04/13/17 3:51pm)
The first annual MEDTalks conference invited a group of eight professionals, with backgrounds in medicine, research and community health, to discuss how their studies could be applied.
(04/06/17 2:13pm)
Paul Ferraro, Bloomberg Distinguished Professor of Business and Engineering, gave a talk on his ongoing research about the effects of human behavior on anti-poverty programs and the environment, namely deforestation. Over 30 people attended the lecture, which took place on Thursday, March 30 at Olin Hall.
(03/30/17 4:20pm)
In 1989, Dan-el Padilla Peralta, an associate professor of classics at Princeton University, began his life as an undocumented immigrant in New York City when his parents overstayed a tourist visa.
(03/09/17 3:54pm)
A group of roughly 30 Hopkins graduate and undergraduate students gathered at the top of the Beach and walked to People’s Park at 2011 N. Charles Street to join a larger protest march to mark International Women’s Day in Baltimore on Wednesday afternoon.
(03/02/17 3:49pm)
The Black Faculty & Staff Association (BFSA) hosted its first Black History Month Student Oratory Competition at Arellano Theater on Feb. 23. Four judges evaluated a series of student speeches. They stressed that the purpose of the competition was to give students a voice.