9th Annual Johns Hopkins Chili Cook-Off
If you think you can make the best chili or dessert at Hopkins, why don't you enter the 9th Annual Johns Hopkins Chili Cook-Off?
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If you think you can make the best chili or dessert at Hopkins, why don't you enter the 9th Annual Johns Hopkins Chili Cook-Off?
Even Neil Patrick Harris couldn't save the disaster that was A Very Harold and Kumar 3D Christmas. The third installment of the Harold and Kumar series takes place six years after the second film in the series, Harold and Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay ends. Harold (John Cho) and Kumar (Kal Penn) are now estranged, with Harold having become a successful businessman on Wall Street while Kumar lazes around at home, smoking weed and bumming around. They are reunited when Kumar receives a package meant for Harold, and he travels to Harold's to deliver it.
It is commonly accepted that humans, and primates in general, are a relatively unmatched species when it comes to the brain. For example, a primate's brain has a larger pre-frontal cortex — the area used for making decisions and where personality is housed, something which is thought to be specific to primates and humans.
Staying at Hopkins over Thanksgiving and don't know what to do?
The Office of Multicultural Affairs presents Culture Show 2011 this Saturday at 6 p.m. in Shriver Hall.
Two months after the fall show line-up returned to televisions everywhere, Bones — a crime procedural featuring Temperance Brennan, a forensic anthropologist at the Jeffersonian Institute, and her unconventional partnership with FBI Special Agent Seeley Booth — began its seventh season.
It is generally assumed that everyone has a stable IQ (intelligence quotient) score, thereby making it a standard measure of intelligence for teenagers everywhere. Those who perform badly in IQ tests as teenagers are written off as being unable to do as well in future endeavors, like getting into a highly ranked college or finding a job. Those who do well in such tests can get complacent, believing that they are "naturally smart" and are destined to do well.
If you're a theatre buff and you want more live acting in your life, beyond what the multiple student acting groups offer on campus once every couple of months, Baltimore is a good place to be.
No one can deny that Baltimore is the center of activity the weekend leading up to Halloween. However, if you're not looking to go out to celebrate Halloween, there's a lot you can do without ever leaving Hopkins.
Go on the award winning walking tour in Fell's Point and learn about the ghosts and supernatural events that have haunted the history of this maritime village.
This past weekend, Steven Blier brought his audience on a journey of yearning and time during the New York Festival of Song at the George Washington University in Washington D.C.
As part of Free Fall Baltimore, the Homewood Museum is offering a free 45-minute walking tour.
October brings with it a series of fairs and festivals to the Baltimore area, each celebrating a different aspect of culture in Charm City.
Free Fall Baltimore is back for its 6th annual month-long celebration of culture in Baltimore.
Three months after the season three finale of Castle left its viewers with a nail-biting finale, the crime fighting series is back with a bang.
The Chesapeake Chapter of the United States Lighthouse Society is once again hosting the 2011 Maryland Lighthouse Challenge.
At an event hosted by the Coalition of Hopkins Activists for Israel (CHAI), Dr. Jonathan Schanzer will be talking about the history of Palestine and discussing the implications behind their effort to seek statehood.
Most of the shows that are familiar and well-loved — How I Met Your Mother, Bones, Glee — ended their seasons last May, leaving a giant hole in many people's TV schedule for the summer.
One of the biggest student run events of the semester is happening on Sunday, September 11 in Shriver Hall: the Indian Ocean Concert.
HampdenFest, a local neighborhood arts festival, kicks off on Saturday for nine hours of food, arts and crafts and films, beginning at 10 a.m. and ending at 7 p.m.