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(04/22/04 5:00am)
Time has swallowed the old days of the E-Level bar and late-night drinking on the Beach, but come Spring Fair weekend, one of Hopkins' last well-loved traditions returns. When Fair opens this weekend, the President's Garden will transform once again into its Spring Fair weekend persona: Beer Garden.
(04/15/04 5:00am)
Commencement may be the big day, but ever since the Class of 2003 revived Senior Week last year, the week leading up to it is becoming just as big of a deal. The Class of 2004 has built on the tradition and unveiled plans for Senior Week 2004 in an e-mail to seniors earlier this week.
(04/08/04 5:00am)
It wasn't out on 34th Street and the spring rain was hardly a party, but the Cultural Block Party had enough free food and dancing to attract lunchtime crowds of students Friday afternoon.
(03/31/04 5:00am)
On the outside, Washington, D.C. is monuments, museums, bureaucrats and tourists. Beyond the freeze-dried ice cream at the Air and Space Museum and a hurried peek past the White House security barricades, the nation's capitol takes second place for traveling urbanites. Unless you dig a little deeper.
(03/11/04 5:00am)
I have to admit that I ended up at Coburn's Tavern and Grill by default. My friend came in to town to visit this weekend from D.C., and I'd promised to take her to Nacho Mama's, where she could feast on the infamous hubcap margarita and some of Baltimore's best Mexican food in one quirky little restaurant. However, we arrived there at 8:30 p.m. on a Friday to find an exhausted and unpleasant hostess and a 1.5 hour wait.
(03/11/04 5:00am)
Baltimore certainly isn't Paris or New York when it comes to independent art. The galleries are not nearly as numerous or high-profile, and the number of art patrons and buyers is tiny. So when Anthony and Melinda Walker, two Hopkins nurses and would-be art connossieurs, announced the opening of their new project, Gallery ID8, it was and intriguing opportunity: a new marketplace for art and potentially a refreshing view of how a gallery should be run.
(03/04/04 5:00am)
This is the final article of the series.
(02/26/04 5:00am)
The Board of Elections (BoE) will hold campus-wide elections for the Student Council (StuCo) Executive Board online this Sunday and Monday. Just redrafted into the StuCo bylaws on Tuesday, the BoE faces continuing student concern about the legitimacy of changing campaign policies and running elections while they are still without official regulatory bylaws.
(02/19/04 5:00am)
This article is the second in a series on the Woodrow Wilson Fellowship, its creation, its students and their research. This article begins to spotlight the heart of the program: the scholars themselves and those who would have been.
(02/19/04 5:00am)
While Howard Dean's impassioned presidential campaign might have been too wild to maintain widespread momentum, his unique focus on energizing college-age voters is one campaign that need not die out. Eighteen years old, and the Constitution says you get a say in who takes office.
(02/12/04 5:00am)
With Student Council (StuCo) still in the midst of recreating its bylaws, the Student Activities Commission (SAC) remains in existence under provisional terms but has recommenced regular activity. The SAC announced several policy amendments at their General Assembly (GA) meeting Monday and must now wait to be rewritten into the StuCo bylaws and to have their budget for next year approved.
(01/29/04 5:00am)
This article is the first in a series on the Woodrow Wilson Fellowship, its creation, its students and their research. Future articles will spotlight the frustrations and triumphs of various Wilson fellows as their projects have progressed over the years.
(12/04/03 5:00am)
Despite Diebold's announcement Monday to drop all copyright suits in relation to its exposed company memos, Hopkins has reiterated its decision to forbid students from posting the controversial memos on University Web space.
(11/20/03 5:00am)
The beginning and end dates of construction for the Hopkins block of the Charles Village Project have been delayed to allow more time for planning. Demolition of buildings on the west 3300 block of St. Paul St., initially scheduled for early spring semester, will begin this summer. The finish date has been moved from late summer 2005 to early summer 2006.
(11/13/03 5:00am)
In a verdict that mirrors that of other college campuses, including Swarthmore College and Harvard University, University lawyers determined last Thursday to prohibit students from posting controversial Diebold company memos on University Web space.
(11/06/03 5:00am)
An electronic campaign initiated two weeks ago by Why War?, a national student activist group, has sparked students from 50 universities nationwide to host copies of 15,000 internal company memos from the Diebold Election System which demonstrate insecurity and unreliability of their voting machines. As Diebold launches a legal battle against schools with participating students, citing copyright laws and demanding that colleges remove these postings from their servers, Hopkins, too, must now deal with whether to accept these postings on the University server.
(10/16/03 5:00am)
As quickly as it began, it's over. One week after the implementation of tight emergency restrictions on student group funding, the Student Activities Commission (SAC) has declared themselves out of the "Red Zone."
(10/09/03 5:00am)
Student groups are in the "Red Zone."
(10/02/03 5:00am)
Midnight runs for Royal Farms chicken will no longer be in the horoscope for incoming Hopkins students. If all goes according to plan, Hopkins will raze Ivy Hall and begin reconstruction on the Hopkins component of the Charles Village Project in January 2004.
(09/25/03 5:00am)
When Hurricane Isabel raged up the East Coast last Thursday, there was probably more partying in Charles Village than rain. By Friday, most students had laughed it off.