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(10/21/09 5:00am)
On Monday, the City Council passed a bill banning the sale of flavored wrapping paper for tobacco. The bill is currently under review by the city law department, according to Joe Yang, Assistant Director of Media Relations for the Mayor's office.
(10/07/09 5:00am)
For Ishmael Khaldi, his story is the story of Israel.
(10/01/09 5:00am)
Enrollment in the Army Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC) at Hopkins' Blue Jay Battalion is on the rise.
(09/23/09 5:00am)
If you have a class with Glenn Blake, be prepared to kill your darlings.
(09/20/09 5:00am)
Police have apprehended the person who allegedly sent the sounds of gunshots echoing just one block away from Hopkins dormitories last Sunday morning.
(04/29/09 5:00am)
Despite the economic downturn, a federal stimulus bill will enable Hopkins to host a job fair this Saturday in search of science professionals to fill positions that may open as a result of federal grant money.
(04/22/09 5:00am)
In-depth examination of a subject was the focus of the Foreign Affairs Symposium (FAS) last Tuesday, when Hopkins hosted Jane Evelyn Atwood, a world-renowned American photojournalist based in Paris, France.
(04/22/09 5:00am)
Hopkins is discussing plans to participate in the yellow ribbon program, a new provision of the GI Bill that will offer increased financial aid to veterans at participating institutions.
(04/15/09 5:00am)
Interpretive disagreements were the focal point of the Foreign Affairs Symposium (FAS) event last Monday night, when leading political science professors spoke about the lasting legacy of the Bush administration in foreign policy.
(04/08/09 5:00am)
The financial crisis has hit the Baltimore City Police Department, leading to budget cuts for the new fiscal year.
(04/08/09 5:00am)
The interplay of religion and politics stood at the center of the Foreign Affairs Symposium's (FAS) event last Friday night. FAS played host to John Micklethwaite, the editor-in-chief of The Economist, and his colleague Adrian Wooldridge, the magazine's Washington bureau chief.
(04/02/09 5:00am)
Despite the cancellation of one of its speakers, the Foreign Affairs Symposium's (FAS) fourth event of the year, a panel on the global financial crisis, had what co-chair Claire Cravero called "a great turnout." About 200 people were present. Two different Hopkins professors were able to step in and contribute in place of the absent Willem Buiter.
(03/25/09 5:00am)
Kristina Johnson, Hopkins provost and senior vice president for Academic Affairs, was recently nominated by President Barack Obama to serve as undersecretary of the Department of Energy.
(03/12/09 5:00am)
The first thing that Robert Kagan, last night's Foreign Affairs Symposium (FAS) speaker, did after thanking the audience was to acknowledge the challenges facing the United States and the world today.
(03/12/09 5:00am)
"I have felt all along that this was a shameful blot on the record of U.S. justice," Wayne Smith, Hopkins political science professor and former chief of the U.S. Interest Section in Cuba, said.
(03/05/09 5:00am)
Early this April, Major Heather Levy, member of the cadre for the University's Army Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC), hopes to set a new record for the deepest cave expedition as a member of a team organized by the United States Deep Caving Team (USDCT).
(03/04/09 5:00am)
California to consider taxing marijuana
(02/25/09 5:00am)
The panel "America and the Middle East: Moving Forward," hosted last night by the Hopkins College Democrats and co-sponsored by the College Republicans, the Coalition of Hopkins Advocates for Israel (CHAI), JHU Votes, the Muslim Student Association (MSA) and the Black Student Union, had been a goal for its organizers for some time.
(02/20/09 5:00am)
In light of the global financial crisis, many universities are beginning to offer incentives to employees who are willing to retire, but so far, Hopkins has not extended - and has no plans to extend - such offers to its faculty.
(02/18/09 5:00am)
Military veterans may soon receive more funds for tuition due to a new program that will supplement funds from the GI Bill, known as the yellow ribbon program.