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(09/25/03 5:00am)
Charles Village is on course for a big make-over. After years of talk, an official presentation of the Charles Village Project was made at the Student Council (StuCo) meeting Tuesday, marking the official unveiling of the neighborhood redevelopment project.
(09/18/03 5:00am)
The Johns Hopkins University lost $4.9 million dollars in state funding this year from the Sellinger Program fund, a Maryland state endowment for private universities.
(09/11/03 5:00am)
Four years after their freshman orientation, the Class of 2004 returned this year for orientation, senior style: Disorientation.
(09/04/03 5:00am)
We Hopkins students are known traditionally for our brains, not our brawn. The University gains renown for its science, not its sports. It used to be that, here, only varsity athletes worked out. The rest of us made do toning mental muscle.
(09/04/03 5:00am)
Hampden. For such an inconspicuous little neighborhood, it is the American mecca of mullets, big hair, spandex pants, snapping bubble gum and bad "Bawl-mer" accents. Just a hop, skip and jump away from campus, this town sparkles in a fabulously tacky, hometown glory that features everything from soda fountains to thrift stores to homemade apple pie.
(09/04/03 5:00am)
After complaining for years about the poor dining options on campus, students return this fall to find a fully renovated food court in Levering Hall. The food court held its Grand Opening Tuesday to rave reviews.
(05/01/03 5:00am)
One month after April Fools Day, one bad joke is still ringing sour. Pranksters who sent out false e-mails to freshmen that claimed to be from the Office of Academic Advising are still at large, despite continued University investigation.
(04/17/03 5:00am)
If all goes well with a trial advising program set to start this fall, a new generation of freshmen may soon have a little more help as they face huge college lecture halls and 20-page papers for the first time. The Office of Academic Advising will implement a small pilot program of Freshman Study Groups (FSG) next semester to test whether upperclassmen mentors can ease the freshman transition to college academics.
(04/10/03 5:00am)
Unexpectedly falling in time with the American overthrow of Baghdad, the French ambassador Jean David Levitte explained his country's opposition to the war with Iraq Wednesday.
(05/02/02 5:00am)
Supporters of Amendment A are awaiting the final decision on the eight campaign violations they filed against the Amendment B campaign prior to last week's Student Council (StuCo) Referendum election. Director of Student Involvement Dr. Bill Smedick said he plans to announce his decision Monday, after consulting with student Board of Election (BoE) co-Chairs Erika Stoddard and Fahad Khan. Smedick's decision will be final.
(04/18/02 5:00am)
An open town meeting addressing the role of ethics at Homewood was held last night at 8 p.m. in Remson Hall. The discussion, hosted by Deans Dan Weiss and John Bader, attracted an attendance of about 40 undergraduate and graduate students, faculty and community members who spoke about the presence of ethics violations on campus and the conditions needed for improvement.
(04/18/02 5:00am)
In celebration of Israeli Independence Day, the Coalition for Hopkins Activists for Israel (CHAI) hosted a rally outside of the Milton S. Eisenhower Library (MSE) at noon yesterday. Given the timing of the holiday to the recent outbreak of violence in the Middle East, the rally also took the opportunity to promote a pro-Israel counter-point to last week's Middle East peace rally. The six graduate student organizers of that rally had denied CHAI their request to speak after the April 10 event.
(04/11/02 5:00am)
A rally for peace in the Middle East was held outside of the Milton S. Eisenhower Library (MSE) at noon on Wednesday, attracting a crowd of about 100 spectators.
(03/14/02 5:00am)
People here at Hopkins are always raving about how close Baltimore is to D.C. and New York.
(11/29/01 5:00am)
If the looming proximity of exams has been nourishing a growing sentiment of scholarly revolt, the town of Alexandria, Va. just might offer enough diversion to inspire impulsive submission to the rebel call. Just a half hour south of Washington, D.C and an hour and a half drive from Baltimore, this quaint town of colonial fame boasts the shops, the food, the bars, the crafts and the history necessary for a fantastic getaway not only from campus stress, but from this entire century.
(11/08/01 5:00am)
By now, you all know the Inner Harbor - its shops, its boats, its skyline. You know Fells - its clubs, its bars and its annual hosting of the ultimate Halloween costume party. You know Little Italy - the pasta, the gelati, the romantic little dates. But Greek Town? You probably gave it as much a passing thought as you did Baltimore's non-existent Chinatown.
(11/01/01 5:00am)
Ready or not, here they come: Before you know it, your family will be at the door. There will be the U-Haul parents, arriving with extra bookshelves, jumbo packs of granola bars and the winter sweaters you left behind. There will be the parents who want to meet all your friends, scope out your roommates and make sure you're eating right and getting enough sleep. There will be the siblings who want to see where you go to class and where you eat and where you hang out in Baltimore.
(10/25/01 5:00am)
College is said to be the best four years of your life. No matter where you are, there are those classic experiences that we're all expected to have: the Road Trip, the Party, the Relationship.
(10/18/01 5:00am)
For all of us who have yet to outgrow dreams of fair princesses and gallant knights, there remains a place where you can still play make-believe for a day. The annual Maryland Renaissance Festival is underway in its 25th year of fun and fantasy, Henry XIII-style.
(10/11/01 5:00am)
Whether you're in it for the food, for the bar, or for the trip away from Charles Village, a visit to Bill Bateman's Bistro won't disappoint you. With a far-ranging reputation for the best wings in town, this chill Towson University-version of our own Rocky Run is always the place to be. Bateman's, as loving patrons tend to nickname it, attracts enough customers to merit a waiting list for dinner and lunch every day of the week. Unless you're there for their famed all-you-can-eat wings on Monday nights, when private school lacrosse boys from the area flock through the door in masses of upside-down and backwards Abercrombie visors, the wait shouldn't be more than an hour for a group of four. As the crowds will prove, the wait here is totally worth it because the food is good and there's lots of it.